Council of Constance Part 1

The Council of Constance marked a pivotal moment in the history of the Catholic Church and the history of Europe in general.

One issue on the agenda was the ongoing schism that the council of Pisa had failed to resolve. Another the reform of the increasingly corrupt clergy all the way up to the pope himself. And then there were a number of individual questions this gathering of thousands had to address.

Whilst all these were crucial questions, the way the council constituted itself foreshadowed a fundamental change in the way European saw themselves.

This part 1 deals with the establishment of the council and the removal of the popes, most importantly the pope who had convened the council on the first place, John XXIII and his counterpart, the emperor Sigismund.

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TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 171 – The Council of Constance Part 1 – Cleaning House, which is also episode 8 of season 9 “The Reformation before the Reformation”.

On a cold night in October 1414 a most unusual procession appeared near the village of Klösterle on the Arlberg pass. Not an army but almost as large. 600 men, some soldiers and bodyguards, a few high ranking aristocrats but mostly men of the cloth. Clerics, doctors of theology but also abbots, bishops and archbishops as well as the true princes of the church, cardinals, dozens of them. And at the center of the procession an enormous cart and in it the true lord of all of Christendom, the bearer of both swords, pope John XXIII.

The roads they had travelled on for days were terrible. Whatever was left of the old roman infrastructure had long been buried underground or had deteriorated so badly, it had gone out of use. So through the autumn mud the processions ploughs on. Just as they were passing the hamlet of Klösterle, in the holloway that masked as one of Europe’s busiest north-south connection the attendants watched in panic as the right hand side wheels of the papal wagon climbed the bank of the road. Before anyone could reign in the horses and prevent disaster, the carriage rose, went past the point of vanishing stability and with a terrifying thump landed on its side. The holy father was thrown out of his vehicle and lay buried deep in the snow. His lords and bishops run to him and ask: “Oh Holy father, has your holiness been harmed?” and he responded “here for devil’s sake I lie”.

Shaken but unharmed the vicar of Christ kept going. As the panorama widened and he could see the city of Bludenz down in the valley that leads to the lake and the city of Constance he uttered, full of premonition “So this is where they catch the foxes”.

And the old fox was right to be worried. For a year later he will find himself in prison in Mannheim, then just a solitary tower by the shore of the Rhine. How that happened and why he is now resting in a magnificent monument in the Baptistery of Florence paid for by the Medici family and bearing the inscription: John the XXIII former pope, Died in Florence A.D. 1419, on 11th day before the Calends of January is what we will look at in this episode!

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Here we are, the pope John XXIII is travelling across the Alps to go to a general church council in Constance. Which begs just one question – why? Why would Baldassarre Cossa, elected pope and recognized as head of the church in dozens of lands, born on the sundrenched island of Procida near Naples call a church assembly to discuss the schism and in a foggy mid-sized town in the German lands to boot?

Well, the answer is, he didn’t. Or at least he did not call a church council to debate the schism. As far as John XXIII was concerned, the schism was done and dusted. The Community of the Faithful had come together in Pisa in 1409 and had deposed the two competing contenders, Gregory XII and Benedict XIII and had replaced them with his predecessor Alexander V. And he, Baldassarre Cossa had been canonically elected as the successor of Alexander V. The fact that Gregory XII and Benedict XIII were still around claiming supremacy was a logistical and maybe military problem, but not one we need a church council for.

So the reason he did still call a church council had to do with one of the provisions of the previous council the one in Pisa. The Pisan gathering had made pope Alexander V swear he would call another council within the next three years to deal with the open issue of church reform. Because in all that debate about how to put an end to the schism, the important issue of how can we make a church a little less corrupt had fallen off the agenda.

That was why John XXIII found himself in a bind to call a church council. And he wasn’t opposed to the idea. Presiding over a major reform council would elevate him on to the level of the great popes Innocent II &III, Alexander III and  Gregory X. That would make everybody forget his – how can  say that politely – somewhat checkered past.

But as so often, Pope John XXIII struggled to find a suitable venue for his grand ecumenical council. Initially he wanted to do it in Rome, after all his capital and a categorical statement that the time when the Pope had to live away from the eternal city was now well and truly over.

The problem was that John XXIII had to live away from the eternal city except for very brief periods. His neighbor, King Ladislaus of Naples kept conquering papal lands and sacking Rome on regular intervals. That is the same Ladislaus who had inherited and pursued a claim on the crown of Hungary from his father Charles the Short who was made even shorter by Elisabeth of Bosnia. If that last sentence was complete gobbledygook for you, listen back to episode 169.

A lasting peace with Naples was unlikely. Pope John XXIII did not like Ladislaus of Naples very much ever since Ladislaus had his two brothers hanged as pirates. Ladislaus did not like the pope very much, because he could.

With Rome off the list of suitable venues, John needed to find a neutral place in Italy. But by then, the peninsula was in the grip of near perennial war. Many of the former communes have become principalities ruled by local strongmen. And strongmen do what strongmen are wont to do, they go after other people’s lands, cities and treasure until there are armies crisscrossing the land from early spring to late autumn.

Enter stage left our old friend Sigismund of Luxemburg. By now this extremely intrepid man had not only secured his reign over Hungary but had finally achieved his great ambition and had become king of the Romans. And best of all, his hated half-brother Wenceslaus was still around to see it happening.

How did he become King of the Romans, that was simple. Nobody really wanted the job any more. The reign of Rudolf of the empty pocket had shown beyond any doubt that there was no money left to establish any kind of imperial authority. Only the very, very richest could afford to don the imperial coronation mantle. And even after 4 decades of infighting and mismanagement, the house of Luxemburg was still the richest of the great eligible families of the empire. And being a squabbling lot, two Luxemburgs put their hat in the ring, Sigismund, king of Hungary and Jobst, margrave of Moravia. Weirdly, Jobst had the inferior title but a lot more money. But what he lacked was longevity. Both were elected by a mixture of correct and incorrect prince-electors but Jobst died in 1411. Sigismund had the election repeated and was confirmed by all.

Being king of the Romans and future emperor came with the role supreme protector of the church. And whilst John XXIII may think the schism is over, Sigismund did not see it like that. He had to deal with the fact that some imperial principalities, the Palatinate and Baden for instance kept their allegiance to the deposed pope Gregory XII. So this needed to be cleaned up. And he knew that one way to gain true control over the empire and with it the leverage to initiate much needed imperial reform, was to rescue  Holy Mother church.

That is why Sigismund pops up in Lodi in Northern Italy in December 1413 to discuss the long overdue church council with the pope. By now John XXIII had considered Bologna and even Avignon of all places, but both had been turned down by his advisors as either too dangerous or totally inappropriate.

At which point Sigismund suggested they all come over to his yard. Yard being the word my teenage son uses to describe a home and I thought I use it since I am a bit tired of using the same words again and again.

To tell what happened next, I have to introduce the chronicler Ulrich Richental. He was a citizen of Constance and he wrote a very detailed account of the council that – despite some biases – is still the #1 source for the events during that period. Richental is a big fan of Sigismund not so much of the popes. So he does make things up occasionally, like the road accident at the start of the episode. But he does it so nicely, I couldn’t stop myself pretending it did actually happen.

And here is Ulrich’s account of the two heads of Christendom discussing the venue for the most momentous event of the 15th century:

When Sigismund proposed to come to Germany John XXIII responded: “I cannot convince my cardinals to travel north across the Alps”

Sigismund: “In that case I cannot get the princes and electors to travel south across the Alps”

Gridlock

Sigismund then turns to one of his entourage, the duke of Teck: “Isn’t there an imperial city close to the Alps?  Teck: “Sure Sire, the city of Kempten”. At which point a count of Nellenburg intervenes: “nah, there is not enough food in Kempten. But there is another city, just an hour’s ride away, Constance on the lake. They have a bishopric and everything”

Sigismund: “Holy father – do you like Constance?”

John XXIII: “Oh my beloved son, I do like Constance”

That’s it – That is how that went down – Richental told us so, so definitely true!

That is why on the 27th of October Pope John XXIII and his entourage of 600 entered the city of Costance under a golden baldachin carried by four eminent burghers of the free imperial city. The Imperial bailee performed the service of the groom and a group of schoolchildren sang appropriate hymns. The pope grateful for the friendly welcome blessed the congregation.

Everything was going swimmingly. The pope and his immediate entourage was given accommodation in the bishop’s palace opposite the cathedral. The others were distributed amongst the homes of the locals who were all too happy to AirBnB their spare rooms for outrageous rents.

Because it wasn’t just the 600 papal delegates, which included humanists like Leonardo Bruni and Poggio Bracciolini as well as the various prelates. There were also a total of 3 patriarchs, 23 cardinals, 27 archbishops 106 bishops, 103 abbots, 344 doctors of theology, all of whom came with their scribes, procurators and administrators of various kinds. Then there were the princes, a full complement of the prince electors, the dukes of Bavaria, Austria, Schleswig, Mecklenburg Lothringia and Teck as well as  a further 676 noblemen Those who did not come themselves like the kings of France, England, Scotland, Denmark, Polen, Naples, Castile and Aragon, sent representatives, as did the patriarch of  Constantinople and the emperor of Ethiopia. And then there were all these people who came hoping to make some money of this incredible gathering, goldsmiths, cobblers, furriers, blacksmiths, bakers, shopkeepers, apothecaries, moneylenders, buglers, pipers, entertainers, barbers, heralds, merchants of any kind and the often mentioned whores and public girls. All of them needed to stay somewhere and somehow all of them did.

The city museum at the Rosgarten hosts a wonderful model of Constance from around the time of the council which gives a great idea of its size or lack of it. Constance had maybe 6-8,000 inhabitants at the time which isn’t huge now and wasn’t even at that time. Places like Augsburg or Nurnberg were more than twice the size. How many people came in total to the council is hard to determine, in particular since our friend Richental tends to exaggerate a bit. Plus not everyone stayed all throughout the 3 years and some the council lasted. In one of my secondary sources they talk about 5000 monks and 16,000 priests which would suggest a total number of 25,000-30,000 new arrivals. I struggle to believe that but it is likely that the population at least doubled during that period and maybe more than tripled in the initial phase.

Given there is so much information available about Constance during that period, I may dedicate a future episode to the conditions not just during the council, but more generally. We have not done a Germany in the year 1400 episode yet, so this may be a good one.

But for now we leave the cramped conditions behind and go back to the high politics.

The pope was here, but the emperor had not yet arrived. The reason for the delay was that Sigismund had been elected three years earlier but had not yet been crowned, not even as king of the Romans. That had to happen before he went toe to toe with the pope. So on November 8, 1414 he was crowned in Aachen and then progressed south towards Constance. In Strasburg he told everyone that he and John were like totally aligned on everything. From there he took the road along the Neckar valley to Stuttgart and then down to the lake where he arrived in Űberlingen at midnight on the 24th of December.

He had called ahead and asked for transport to cross the lake. So in the middle of Christmas eve the boatmen of Konstance set off across the lake to bring their emperor into their city. It was  3 in the morning when he finally arrived with his wife, several princes and their attendants all loaded up on torchlit boats. The city council came to the harbor to greet him and led him to the town hall where he was given a drink. And then they dashed across the square to the cathedral where – and that is still hard to believe – the pope was waiting for him. John XXIII had halted Midnight Mass for the emperor. And not only that, he had allowed Sigismund to do what the Luxemburg rulers have been doing since Karl IV, he let him read the gospel according to Luke where it says “In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world.” He read this whilst wearing his crown and holding the imperial sword. No previous pope, not even the king of France had allowed such a display to go ahead. Nobody wanted to be reminded that even the bible acknowledged that the empire was an institution older than the papacy and one that was meant to rule the whole of the Roman world.

John XXIII left no record of his thoughts that night.

The council had started debating before Sigismund had arrived, but as the cardinal Fillastre noted, nothing of substance had yet been discussed, because nobody aka the pope himself, wanted to touch on the actual subject, the unity of the church and the continued schism.

That being said, the council wasn’t stalling. If you think about the sheer scale of what was going on. These thousands of delegates are pushed together into this mid-sized medieval town. The grand debates take place in the Münster, the cathedral, but few delegates get the chance to address the whole council. So they start to meet in smaller groups to debate specific issues, initially spontaneously and after a while in a formal structure of committees and working groups. But what also happened was that factions were forming. And these did not form around political programs or theological perspectives, but along geographic and cultural lines.

The council was establishing nations. The idea of nations came from the way medieval universities were organised as we have heard about Paris and Prague in previous episodes. And since most delegates had studied at university or were practicing academics, these divisions appeared natural. They were also a way to break up the hierarchy structure of the church that monopolised decision making in the hands of the pope and his college of cardinals.

But is not just that, it is also a sign of a changing world. Whilst on the outset it looked as if the council was resurrecting the idea of a unified Christendom under one pope and one emperor, the reality was that this concept was fading away not just as a political structure but also as a cultural entity. Instead the peoples of europe were developing separate identities. We are still centuries away from people seeing nationality as one of their primary defining characteristic and source of belonging, but there is clearly something shifting.

The vernacular has taken over from Latin on much of the cultural and administrative output of the times. For instance our chronicler Richental writes his work in German, more precisely in his native dialect. It’s not that he does not know Latin, more that he does not feel he needs to use it to be taken seriously. In Italy we have Dante and in England Chaucer who elevate the vernacular to a literary language, whilst French has become the language at the court of the Valois. I am not that familiar with developments in Poland and Hungary, but as we have seen last week, the Czech language has become a crucial marker of belonging in Bohemia.

Still the nations that form in Constance were not yet as rigidly defined by etymology and culture as modern nations are. The conciliar nations are created through a mixture of political significance, compass orientation and language. There were in the end five. There was Italica, Gallicana, Germania which included Scandinavia, Poland, Lithauania, Croatia, Hungary and Bohemia, Anglca which was England, Scotland and Ireland and Iberica, which comprised the various Spanish kingdoms and Portugal.

There were discussions about the structure of these nations, but interestingly from the Iberian side. Aragon wanted to be its own nation. That was turned down because in that case Castile and Portugal would also have their separate nations. And if that happened the Germanica nation would splinter as well, making the whole concept of nations unworkable.

Do you remember the cardinal Fillastre, the one who had been moaning that nothing was moving forward in this great church council? Well, in January 1415, two months into the debates he had had enough. He issued an treatise stating that all three popes should resign. And that the council had the power to force all three popes to step down if that was in the interest of the unity of the church.

The response from John XXIII and his supporters was the obvious. Sorry, last time we did that and deposed two popes, we got three. Why do you think by deposing three you will not end up with four? And what was wrong with me as pope?

Well on the last question, quite a lot, an awful lot. Most it were rumours at the time, but still. He might have been a pirate in his youth, after all his brothers had definitely been. Pope Alexander V, the one the council of Pisa had chosen had died only days after having lunch at the house of the man who became his successor. Then the bribes that were paid to the cardinals at his election were legendary, almost as legendary as his income from the sale of church benefices once he was made pope.

John XXIII’s opponents put together a list of 18 accusations, each one of them pretty damning.

But that would not have meant that he was done for. He had made sure that the majority of the participants at the council were Italians and the Italians would be very wary to opening up the ballot again, potentially ending up with a Frenchman who could take the church back to Avignon.

But that line of defence crumbled when Sigismund used his immense charm and power of persuasion to introduce a change in the voting process. No longer should it be by heads or by rank, but by nation. Each of the five nation was to have one vote, as would the college of cardinals.

Voting by nations totally undermined the church hierarchy, because suddenly the archbishops and bishops find themselves acting alongside the priests, monks and doctors of their nation, rather than with their brother bishops. And where it was even harder to take was for the cardinals. They had become accustomed to being a sort of cabinet of the church that would make all the major decisions along with the pope. But here in the council, they were relegated to having just one vote that ranked equal to any one of the nation’s votes.

John was a smart politician and he realised the non-Italian nations had a majority. His line of defence had crumbled and the game was up. So to avoid the publication of the 18 accusations he agreed to resign. Conditions were negotiated over for another 2 weeks but then, at the end of February 1415, three months after he had seen the fox trap from his vantage point above Bludenz, that trap had snapped shut. Pope John XXIII declared his resignation.

Immediately after that Sigismund put Constance into lockdown. The deposed pope must not be able to escape. Because if he escaped and gathered new supporters he could dissolve the council that he had called in the first place. And if he did that, the horror scenario of four popes would almost certainly materialise.

And what happened, well, what do you think? The pope escaped. Disguised as a groom and sitting on – for added humiliation – on a tiny horse.

As we heard at the beginning, John had had had his premonitions when he crossed the alps. So he took out life insurance. With Frederick of Habsburg, the duke of Austria. Frederick promised to help and protect him should the worst happen.  And the worst had happened. So it was to neighbouring Schaffhausen, one of the duke’s possessions that ex-pope John XXIII or to give him his correct name, Baldassare Cossa went. The helpful duke immediately came to his side to face down Sigismund and the council members.

Sigismund did not waste a second. He gathered the imperial princes who were in Constance anyway and formed an imperial court. The court gave Frederick 3 days to show and defend himself and when he failed to come they condemned him. They put duke Frederick of Austria in the imperial ban. He was made an outlaw, his vassals released from their oaths and an imperial army was gathered. 10 days after the spectacular flight of the pope, Sigismund’s forces oved on the gates of Schaffhausen.

Baldassare Cosssa fled on to Laufenburg another 30 miles down the Rhine but that was no solution, so on he ran towards Basel. But before he left Laufenburg, he issued a papal bull revoking his resignation and dissolving the council.

At that point the future of the church and the future of Sigismund hung in the balance. If the majority of the council attendants recognised his dissolution order it was over.

At that point the church and the universities had been discussing the role of the council and its relationship with the pope for decades. The schism created by the selfishness of cardinals and popes had undermined Holy mother church to a point a Gregory VII or an Innocent III would barely have recognised her any more. It was time for the congregation of the faithful to put their foot down. The council agreed the decree Haec Sancta which became a sort of Magna Carta of the church. Its opened with (quote)

“First [the council] declares that, legitimately assembled in the holy Spirit, constituting a general council and representing the catholic church militant, it has power immediately from Christ; and that everyone of whatever state or dignity, even papal, is bound to obey it in those matters which pertain to the faith, the eradication of the said schism and the general reform of the said church of God in head and in members.” (end quote)

It banned the pope from dissolving the council, from moving the curia from Constance or to do anything that would undermine its power.

The ecumenical council continued and Baldassare Cossa kept running. Until he could run no more. He was caught near Radolfzell and brought back to Constance to stand trial. The ruling was no surprise. He was convicted and declared unworthy, useless and dangerous and stripped of all his church offices. The next four years he spent as a prisoner of the count Palatinate in a customs tower at Mannheim. In 1419 he paid an enormous ransom and was allowed to return to Rome where he submitted to the new pope Martin V  who made him a bishop and cardinal again. He died shortly afterwards in Florence. His memorial in the great Baptistery is a spectacular piece created by the renaissance masters Donatello and Michelozzo. Who paid for it? Not Baldassare Cossa, but Florentine bankers including the Medici family who one can only assume owed the pope their rise to the top of the financial industry in Italy. And yes, the name John XXIII was taken off the official list of popes, which is why we have two popes called John XXIII, the last one reigning from 1958 to 1963 as one of the most popular and sympathetic figures of recent church history and – ironically – a pope who presided over a church council.

That left the council with still two false popes, Gregory XII and Benedict XIII, who needed to be removed before a new, universally recognised pope could be elected and unity of the church could be restored.

Gregory XII was relatively easy. He was already a thousand years old, had lost all support in Italy and had been elected with the explicit provision to resign when asked. All he demanded was that he would not be deposed by a council that had been called by his enemy, the no longer pope John XXIII. So a weird charade took place. Two of Gregory’s ambassadors arrived in Constance and formally called a council in the name of Gregory XII. The council then reconstituted itself, now as one called by Gregory XII. It endorsed all previous decisions. And then they read a letter from Gregory resigning as pope. That was it. Gregory XII stepped back into the college of cardinals and died two years later. His much more modest memorial is in the small town of Recanati in the Marche. But he remained on the list of canonical popes.

One effect of this strange castling was that Sigismund was no longer the president of the council. He had taken that role during the proceedings against Baldassare Cossa, but now that a viable pope had resumed the reigns, if only for a technical second, he was no longer needed.

The task he took up instead was to rail in the last of the popes, the Avignon pope Benedict XIII. This was the most stubborn of the whole lot, who never yielded, not even when he had lost the support of the French. By 1415 he was living in Aragon, enjoying the support of his last remaining ally, king Alfonso V.

Benedict XIII agreed to meet with Sigismund who had come to Perpignan to speak to him directly. But this time the legendary charmer failed. Yes, Benedict XIII promised to resign but only under one condition. Since he was the only surviving cardinal who had participated in the election of Urban VI, back in 1378, he was the only truly legitimate cardinal in the whole world. All other cardinals have been appointed by contested popes. Therefore he was the only person in Christendom entitled to elect the new pope. He promised would do so within 24 hours and promised not to elect himself. Let’s say, argument was compelling, but there wasn’t the resounding support that Benedict might have expected.

Sigismund gave up on the stubborn Spaniard. Instead he worked on the Iberian monarchs and by December 1416 King Alfonso V of Aragon abandoned his pope and submitted to the council of Constance.

And that was all that really mattered. Benedict went to Peniscola a town and castle overlooking the sea between Valencia and Barcelona where he would spend the next 8 years ranting and raving against the council, the king and everybody else. When he died his ragtag band of cardinals elected a new pope they called Clement VIII. It took until 1429 before this pope finally resigned. The last negotiator who brought this sorry tale to an end was an Aragonese bishop by the name of Alfonso de Borgia. He would later rise to become pope Calixtus III who paved the way for his nephew Roderigo Borgia, Alexander VI the most notorious of the Renaissance popes.

Hurrah – we have done it. The Schism is over. Three popes are gone. But we still need a new one, and ideally one that everybody will agree on. Spoiler alert, they will find one. But the council is not done. There are still many other matters to discuss, including the matter of a certain Jan Hus, a complaint from the Teutonic Knights and some Frenchmen wanting clarification on the term Tyrannicide. So, there will be a part 2 of the Council of Constance which I hope you will join us again next week.

And before I go just a quick reminder, the website to make a one-time donation or sign on for Patreon is historyofthegermans.com

Jan Hus and the Seeds of Reformation: A Tale of Faith and Revolt

Jan Hus emerges as a pivotal figure in the early Reformation, representing the clash between the burgeoning calls for reform and the entrenched power of the Catholic Church. Born around 1372 in what is now the Czech Republic, Hus began his journey as a humble student at the University of Prague, eventually becoming a prominent preacher at the Bethlehem Chapel. His growing influence was fueled by his criticisms of clerical corruption, particularly the practice of simony and the Church’s exploitation through indulgences. As tensions escalated between the Czech reformers and the German-speaking clergy, Hus found himself increasingly at odds with both the Church and the monarchy, leading to his eventual excommunication. The episode delves into how Hus’s teachings and the socio-political climate of Bohemia set the stage for a rebellion that would reverberate through the subsequent centuries, culminating in his fateful summons to the Council of Constance.

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TRANSCRIPT

Quote “Master Jan Hus, preacher of the Holy Scriptures from the chapel of Bethlehem, was also present at this council, who in his preaching continuously criticized and exposed the hypocrisy, pride, miserliness, fornication, simony, and other sins of the clergy, in order to bring the priesthood back to the apostolic life. He was immensely hated by these pestiferous clerics.”

This is how Laurence of Brezova introduced the great reformer and Czech national hero Jan Hus in his 15th century chronicle of the Hussite uprising.

Why should we care about the trials and tribulations of another holy man railing against corrupt prelates and the subsequent “quarrel in a faraway country, between people of whom we know nothing”.

Well, that quote itself should be reason enough. It is from Neville Chamberlain speech of September 27, 1938 weighing the importance of protecting Czechoslovakia against an expansionist Nazi Germany.

But Jan Hus is interesting beyond his status as a towering figure in Czech history. When he came to Prague in 1390 he was just another ambitious young man from a modest background who wanted to rise up in the world on the back of intelligence and hard work. But by the time he leaves for his fate at the Council of Constance in 1414 he has been excommunicated, exiled and unwillingly or willingly become he face of a brewing revolt against king and clergy. This is a story about collapsing certainties and emerging truths, about individual beliefs and institutional order. About what the community of the faithful is supposed to be and who is in and who is out.  And its tentacles reach deep into the next centuries…

Before you can meet master Jan Hus and his fellow Bohemian reformers I will now subject you to a brief treatise on history podcasting. There are now 3.5 million podcasts, though only 380,000 are classed as active. That means if you were inclined to give every one of these active shows a 5 minute listen you would be listening all day all night for 3 years and 7 months, 11 days and 8 hours and 42 minutes. And that is why so many great shows give up, they simply cannot find anyone willing to invest five minutes to find out whether it is any good. So how do people find podcasts? Simple, 30% of podcast listeners come to a show on a personal recommendation from friends and family. So, if you know anyone in your wider circle who may enjoy the History of the Germans, tell them about the show. It makes a huge difference. As does the generous support of our patrons who have signed up on historyofthegermans.com/support. This week we thank Ryan B., Mick, fan of my singing voice, Mark G., Tim T of knightly crusader stock, Tiia Reinvald and CS.

And then we have a few corrections. Last episode I said that Wenceslaus IV was Sigismunds stepbrother. That was obviously wrong, they were half brothers. An even more significant error was picked up by listener Raluca and some others. Vlad the impaler, aka Dracula was Mircea the elder’s illegitimate grandson, not his son as I stupidly claimed. And it was also not Mircea’s honor but Vlad’s father’s membership of the order of the dragon that brought about the nickname “little dragon”. I should just stop trying to pointlessly spice things up with random facts I picked up from secondary literature. Again I promise to do better next time and will fail again.

And with that – back to the show

Jan Hus was born probably around the year 1372. His father was called Michael, but we do not know what he did as an occupation. Of his mother we do not even know her name. Even his own name is an invention, he called himself after his home village of Husice, Goosetown which is why his surname is actually goose, uncomfortably prophetic.

In 1390 he started his studies at the university of Prague. He would later say that he spent far too much time playing chess and that he occasionally participated in carnival processions. That is the medieval equivalent of running through a field of wheat – a reference for our British listeners. For the rest of you, Jan Hus was a bit of a swot. Not that much of a surprise given he was a poor boy from the provinces trying to get a job in the church. An ambition he was certainly not alone in. After all, the church was one of, if not the largest employer in a city like Prague and many coveted a comfortable vicarage or – even better – just the income from a parish without doing anything. And he had come to the right place.

Prague in 1390 was a city on the move.

Thanks to emperor Karl IV’s grand plans his capital of Prague had grown from about 10-15,000 inhabitants to one of northern Europe’s largest cities with a population of nearly 40,000. Building work on the New Town had begun in 1347 but was still ongoing in 1390.

The emperor had endowed the new city’s churches with some of the greatest pieces of his immense collection of relics. These included such items of reverence like a fragment of the staff of Moses, a finger of St. Nicholas, the head of St. Wenceslaus, half of St. Sigismund and the most venerated of them all, the breastmilk of the Virgin Mary. That was on top of the imperial regalia that included the holy lance and purse of St. Stephen to name just two.

These holy objects attracted pilgrims by the thousands, even tens of thousands. Praying before a holy relic was one of the few ways one could cut down the thousands and thousands of years in purgatory the average sinner had to endure. But it also attracted a lot of permanent residents who sought not just work and advancement but also spiritual nourishment from the presence of so many objects of veneration. Prague had become a holy city, a second Rome, just as Karl IV had intended.

The other major draw of the city and the reason Jan Hus had come to the shores of the Vltava was its university, the first to be founded in central Europe. Thanks to the sponsorship of Karl IV and then even more significantly, his son Wenceslaus IV, it had become one of the great centers of learning in Europe. Students from the lands of the crown of Bohemia as well as Germans and Poles came to train with some of the great doctors of theology and law.

The purpose of the university had been two-fold. One was simply to elevate the status of the city of Prague. If Paris, the capital of the French monarchs had a university then the home of the emperor needed one too. The other, more prosaic objective was to produce a class of well-educated bureaucrats and clergymen that could be deployed in the increasingly sophisticated management of the Bohemian state. As for Jan Hus, he was very much in this latter category.

Organizationally, the university of Prague, like all medieval universities, was split into different nations. These nations were usually established along linguistic and cultural lines. In Prague there were four of them, Bohemians, Bavarians, Poles and Saxons. Since the Polish nation was mainly staffed with German speaking Silesians, three out of the four nations were actually German speaking, giving them dominance over the Czech speaking members of the university.

The situation at the university was replicated across much of Prague. German-speaking immigrants had come on the invitation of king Ottokar II in the 1250s and had gradually obtained leadership positions in civil society. They dominated trading and manufacturing, as they did across much of central europe. The German speaking merchants had developed efficient trading networks based on trust and cultural affinity, if not intermarriage. Goods and money moved across these networks comparatively efficiently based on a system of mutual trust and social control. We did a couple of episodes about that in the season on the Hanseatic league, particularly Episode 119 if you want more detail on how these networks functioned. Access to the network was extremely difficult for anyone not speaking German and not being immersed in the culture. And competing against these networks as a sole trader was even more difficult.

Beyond just trading, these German merchants also provided loans to the government and the church. These loans were secured by pawns, often estates, mines and other money generating assets, which then gradually shifted into the hands of this German-speaking upper class. Being the source of finance, the bankers also had ready access to the king who would bend the state to their will.

Bottom line, many Czechs outside the nobility, felt as second class citizens in their homeland and language was an important marker of this division. That occurred despite both Karl IV and Wenceslaus IV making a point of speaking Czech as well as German and French at court.

If you combine these three things, a religiously motivated citizenship, a university that churns out progressive ideas and a population chafing up against a linguistically and socially superior group and you have a medieval powder keg.

The long fuse that will ultimately explode the device was lit a long time before Jan Hus first set foot into the golden city. It all began in a notorious brothel on a street called Venus street. That is where John Milic, a canon of St. Veits cathedral who had an epiphany, began dissuading the prostitutes from their illicit lifestyle and offered them shelter. Milic became a very popular paster, much admired for relentlessly laying out the hypocrisy of the official church. Having good contacts amongst the ladies of the night, he exposed their clerical customers, one of whom had even built a separate entrance to his house to facilitate his partying. But where he really hurt the clergy was when he exposed the rampant simony in its ranks, the purchase of spiritual appointments for money. That was something the population hated even more than the lack of sexual probity.

Despite or maybe because of his relentless criticism and demands for reform, Milic was popular with the highest ranks of society, even with the emperor himself, so popular indeed that Karl overlooked that Milic had once called him the antichrist.

Under imperial protection, Milic built up a community of preachers, often laymen rather than trained clergy who spread his ideas. This community moved into the brothel where Milic had started preaching and that had now become a home for rescued women. He called this community his new Jerusalem and acquired more and more of the surrounding buildings.

Milic preached not just in Latin as was commonplace at the time. He firmly believed that the faithful should understand the word of god and should hence be preached to in their own language, namely Czech and German, the two main languages used in Prague. Milic also demanded that the bible should be translated into Czech, though he never got round to doing it. Another of his ideas was that everyone should receive the sacraments as often as possible, in particular the eucharist, to be closer to the spiritual body of Christ. This focus on the spiritual body then led him to question whether all these dusty relics had any real relevance, and even the veneration of saints was in his eyes a distraction from the true faith.

His community of the new Jerusalem did however not survive its founder’s death in 1374. But his ideas continued to circulate. One of his disciples, a certain Matthew of Janov pushed Milic’s ideas even further. Matthew was another one of those ambitious men who had studied at university, in his case, even at the famed university of Paris, and had returned to Prague in the hope of a plumb job with the church. But that did not work out and instead he became a radical critic of the holders of such offices.

He embraced Milic’s criticism of the worldly clergy, the focus on regular prayer, the eucharist and the use of the colloquial language. But by now the schism had happened and many of the ideas we discussed in our episode about the impact of the schism on European thought had begun circulating. When he was in Paris he witnessed the debates at the university about whether a church council was superior to the pope and by 1390 he had heard that the French church had subtracted itself completely from papal obedience.

This terrified him and he was looking for reasons why the church had ended up in such a calamitous place. He zoomed in on the year 1200 when the church abounded in the greatest riches and glory and when “magna Mulier formicaria” the whore of Babylon took her seat upon the scarlet beast, and antichrist extended his swollen body throughout the church. What he meant was the pontificate of Innocent III , the most powerful of the medieval pope and convener of the fourth Lateran council – and initial sponsor of emperor Frederick II – Episode 75 if you are interested.  

According to Matthew of Jenov the primitive church of the apostles who had been poor and dedicated to the people had been distorted by “Greek rules, Aristotelic justice and Platonic sanctity”. What he meant by that were the rules and regulations of canon law and scholastic theology that obfuscated the true faith and in the process made its practitioners rich and powerful. His opposition was against the lawyers who had taken hold of not just the papal administration but the papal throne itself.

Into this already febrile climate of anticlerical, anti-papalist sentiment dropped the teachings of John Wycliff. Wycliff was an Englishman, a professor in Oxford whose theories we have already encountered in episode 168. His thoughts travelled down to Prague through the entourage of Anne of Bohemia, the sister of Wenceslaus and Sigismund who had married King Richard II of England in 1382.

Wycliff’s ideas poured oil on the fire of the Bohemian reform movement. Bohemian scholars would travel to Oxford and bring back treatises that members of the Prague university debated, translated into Czech and adapted into their own thinking.

They zoomed in on one particular element of Wycliff’s investigation, the question of what the church was. The sanctioned view was that the church was the community of the faithful and that Christ had put St. Peter in charge of this community when he said that Peter was the rock on which he built his church. And St. Peter had thereby inherited all of Christ’s powers in the temporal world, to bind and to loose. And that power passed through him to every one of his legitimate successors. That was the justification for Gregory VII’s claim that all monarchs are to kiss his feet and that he could depose them, even the emperor and Boniface VIII statement that there was no salvation outside the Roman church.

This stringent argument fell apart when the Western schism appeared. We now have two popes, but only one could be the true successor of St. Peter. As the schism progressed and the popes refused to yield as we discussed, the only viable solution was to call a church council that would decide who was the true pope and depose all the false popes, which is what they did in 1409 in Pisa.

Now by doing this the church council claimed to represent the community of the faithful, the holy church itself, that ranked above false and corrupt popes. If these popes could be ousted on account of their sinful claim on St. Peter’s throne, then they weren’t members of the Holy Church any more. Which leads to the next question, which is – who is a true member of the holy church?

That will only be conclusively revealed at the last judgement, when the faithful are admitted to heaven and the sinful are cast down to hell. That does not help because we need to find out right here and now who is one of the faithful and hence a member of holy church with a vote on who should be pope and who is a black sinner who can be ignored. And that runs into a major problem. It would not be just preposterous but outright blasphemous to preempt the final judgement by stating that John was a faithful and Jack was a sinner. So the only thing we can do right now is to look for the signs. Someone whose demeanor and actions emulates the teachings of Christ is more likely to be predestined to heaven, whilst someone living a dissolute life was more likely to end up in hell.

That makes a lot of sense, but is totally explosive. Because if you come across a drunken, fornicating bishop, who acquired his post through simony,  well that guy is unlikely to be one of the faithful. If he is not one of the faithful, then he is not a member of the church. If he is not a member of the church he cannot tell me what to preach or who to preach to. Meanwhile someone with an impeccable lifestyle and deep faith but no church license would be not just entitled to preach but should be listened to above the debauched prelate.

What Wycliff proposed would lead to a complete dissolution of discipline in the church in its current state of corruption, which is why he proposed a fallback. The temporal authorities, the kings and princes were to maintain the discipline in the church until such time that it was completely reformed.

That was grist to the mill of the Bohemian reformers, who had been looking for the theological justification for their rejection of the corrupt prelates at the top of the church.

Jan Hus was one of these Bohemians who picked up and digested Wycliff’s theses. There is a tremendously complex debate about what of Wycliff’s theses Hus exactly endorsed and which ones he did not. That mattered for the legality of the judgement that led to his execution at Constance, but did not matter much for what went down in Bohemia. Bohemia embraced much of Wycliff’s theses.

But I am jumping ahead.

Last we saw Jan Hus the person was in 1390 when he arrived in Prague. He studied at university and by 1401 was ordained as a priest and took holy orders. He preached in a number of churches in the Old Town before he was appointed the main preacher at the Bethlehem chapel. The Bethlehem chapel was an unusual set-up. Though called a chapel, it was huge, able to take 3,000 worshippers. The reason it wasn’t a full church was because it was a private chapel created and funded by two pious Prague merchants. That made it on the one hand less prestigious than a full parish appointment, but left Jan Hus with a  lot more freedom than an ordinary priest.

When he took up the role in 1402, Jan Hus was well within the mainstream of the Bohemian clerical set-up. Though many ideas the reformers promoted were radical and not in line with general church doctrine, the majority of the established church, all the way up to the archbishop were supportive of their demand for reform. They even tolerated the preaching in Czech practiced by the reformers and something Jan Hus did very much from the beginning.

But though he had helped translate some of Wycliff’s works, his theological writings of that time were fairly tame.

What radicalized him were a sequence of events that unfolded over the coming decade.

In 1405 he became part of a commission to investigate a miracle a parish priest of a burned down church claimed to have witnessed. Something about a bleeding host. What Hus uncovered was a greedy priest who had made the whole thing up to raise money for the rebuilding of his church and the recovery of his main income stream. That investigation led him then to doubt not just the veracity of some of the relics but also whether any relics, in particular those directly physically related to Christ himself were compatible with scripture.

At the same time his career as a preacher was going great. Bethlehem chapel filled up with worshippers not just on Sundays but also on workdays. Jan Hus was a gifted orator and had a knack to convey rather complex theological ideas in a way the common people could understand. His most famous quote is: “Seek the truth, hear the truth, learn the truth, love the truth, speak the truth, hold the truth and defend the truth until death.” And at another point he said “Love the truth. Let others have their truth, and the truth will prevail.” This made it even into the national motto of the Czech Republic “truth prevails”.

When I first read this I stumbled over the term “their truth” which is one of my bugbears. There is no such thing as my truth. There a facts and fiction. But then I do not think that Jan Hus was talking about the modern idea of “my truth”. For him, like his contemporaries faith was truth and truth was faith. There was no differentiation between scientific truth and faith as we see it today. So the correct interpretation of these statements would be to replace the word truth with faith. And then these statements take on a different and a much more amenable connotation. Hus was prepared to die for his truth, his faith, when he said “defend the truth until death”but he did not want to do harm to those who held different beliefs. He demanded “Let others have their truth, their faith”. Because he believed that they would come around to his beliefs sooner or later. And there is another one of his statements I like: quote “From the very beginning of my studying I made it a rule that whenever, in any matter, I heard a sounder viewpoint, I abandoned the one I had – since I know well that we know far less than what we do not know.” Or to say it with Keynes, if the facts change I change my opinion, what do you do? So whatever his teachings are later used for, he himself was no fanatic.

I like that and so it seems did many inhabitants of the city of Prague. And what they also liked was that he would celebrate the eucharist almost every time as Milic and his reformers had demanded. That went straight against church rules that wanted to restrict the sacrament to only once a month.  Hus responded quote: “if ever a pope should command me to play on the flute, build towers, to mend or weave garments, and to stuff sausages, ought I not reasonably judge that the pope was foolish in so commanding” end quote.

Alongside this thriving business, Hus kept a role at the university. He published further treatises which now incorporated elements of Wycliff’s thinking. How much and how far away from the official doctrine these views were is again ultimately irrelevant. What mattered was that Hus was increasingly seen as one of the followers of Wycliff.

In 1409 tensions at the university boiled over. The Czechs who were the most numerous nation kept getting voted down by the three German-speaking groupings. And this was not just a linguistic and social conflict but also a theological one. Whilst the Czechs embraced Wycliff and became increasingly radical, the Germans stuck with the orthodoxy. When it became clear that the squabbling parties could not reach compromise, they brought their case before King Wenceslaus IV. By now Wenceslaus had succumbed to full on alcoholism, so it is unclear how much of the proceedings he really understood. But his wife Sophia was very much on the side of the Czech reformers. The crown also needed the university’s support as they wanted to transfer their allegiance from the Roman pope Gregory XII to the Pisan pope Alexander V. The Germans were leaning to the Roman pope, the Bohemians to the Pisan. So the crown passed a decree that from now on the Czech nation’s vote would count as much as the vote of the other three nations combined. That outraged the German-speaking nations and they simply walked out. Many of these doctors and students left for the recently founded universities of Leipzig and Heidelberg, which propelled these schools up the European academic rankings, whilst the university of Prague turned into a more provincial institution catering for Bohemians only.

What also happened was that the king appointed Jan Hus as rector of the University. And since the university was now free to embrace Wycliff’s theories, Jan Hus as its rector became the face of Wycliff’s theories in Bohemia, irrespective of his personal conviction.

Over the next 3 years the university doctors embraced more and more radical ideas. That triggered a backlash by the archbishop who referenced 45 Wycliffian theses that had been declared heretic. In this debate the king sided again with the reformers against the archbishop. This time it was mainly for monetary reasons. In the tradition of Matthew of Janov, the reformers supported the idea that the king should not only maintain discipline in the church, but should also cleanse it from the swollen body of antichrist, aka take away all the church’s lands and estates. And that was exactly what Wenceslaus did. He took the reins of the church, forced the archbishop into submission and diverted the church funds into his own pocket.

This alliance between king and reformers fell apart, as one would expect, over the same thing it had kept it together in the past – money. The new Pisan pope, John XXIII had declared a crusade against king Ladislaus of Naples, the one who had attempted to take the crown of Hungary from Sigismund and whose father had died trying. To fund this most Christian effort John was selling indulgences all across the lands of his obedience, including Bohemia. As we mentioned in episode 168, indulgences had become key to papal finances now that the church was split into three and many obediences regularly refused to pass through tithes and other incomes. The  indulgences of 1412 were so egregious, they truly shocked Jan Hus. Already deeply skeptical of saints and relics, this blatant money grab pushed him over the edge. He began to equate John XXIII with antichrist and declared all prelates selling these papers corrupt. And when he found out that Wenceslaus was supporting the indulgences because he had been promised a cut of the profits, he condemned his king as well.

The pope immediately excommunicated Hus. The king was still more interested in continuing the cooperation and first tried to calm him down. But Hus kept preaching against indulgences, called the archbishop a Simoniak, which was true, and just generally turned from a useful tool of royal politics to a genuine nuisance.

After Wenceslaus had tried several time to get Hus back on side, he sent a brutal message. Three of Hus’ young supporters had protested against the selling of indulgences and stopped the pardoners from going about their business. The king had them arrested and the next day, he had them hanged. Meanwhile the  pope had declared an interdict over the city of Prague, banning all church services and sacraments for as long as Jan Hus was allowed to preach.

That was too much for Jan Hus. To protect his friends and fellow citizens, he went into exile.

In the following 2 years, from 1412 to 1414 he did write like a man possessed. He published no fewer than 15 books, the culmination of the previous decade of thought. The most important one was de ecclesia, about the church.

There he compared the church to a field where wheat and weeds grow together. But only the wheat, the good parts belongs to the actual church. And if the church itself was unable to pull out the weeds, it falls to the king to do that, and if the king was unwilling or unable to do it, it was down to the laity to clean up the field. And since most of the weed, the corruption in the church stems from the property they had obtained over time, that should be all be given over to the secular authorities.

This is where the rubber hit the road. Dietrich von Niem, a German chronicler called Hus’ ideas as great a threat to Christendom and papal power as the Qur’an. And it was this book that the judges in Constance used most extensively to prove the heresy of Jan Hus.

These books, but even more the relentless persecution by the church had made Hus the face of the Bohemian dissent, a dissent that was about to tip over into revolt. As early as 1412 pamphlets were circulating that mixed religion with violence. They declared that all those intended to be Christian were to take up swords and be prepared to wash their hands in the blood of God’s enemies. Jan Hus they declared was no longer a timid goose, but a ferocious lion prepared to confront the papal antichrist and all its wickedness. There is no evidence that Hus endorsed or encourages such talk, nor is there evidence that he made efforts to stop it.

It is in late 1414 that Jan Hus is summoned to the council of Constance that had gathered since November of that year. He was asked to come and subject his teachings to review by the doctors and senior clergy at the greatest of church councils. Sigismund, by now elected king of the Romans and presiding over the council promised Hus safe conduct.

One cannot know whether Hus believed Sigismund’ promise or whether he willingly walked straight into his martyrdom. This again mattered as much or as little as the question whether or not he was guilty of heresy. Because what mattered was what the people back in Prague believed happened and what actions these beliefs triggered.

Some of that we will find out next episode when we finally talk about the great council of Constance. I hope you will join us again.

In the meantime, should you feel so inclined, listen back to some of the older episodes when we talked about Bohemia, for instance way back in episode 26 when we look at the murderous Bohemian succession crisis in the early 11th century, episode 54 when a Bohemian ruler tilts Barbarossa’s campaign in Italy in favour of the Germans, or some of the more recent ones, like episode 140 about the fight between Rudolf of Habsburg and the Golden King Ottokar II. And what you could also do is make a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support, just in case you feel like it.

Sigismund of Luxembourg emerges as a pivotal figure in the late Middle Ages, grappling with the dual crises of the Schism and the Ottoman threat while navigating a complex web of political intrigue. Born into the powerful House of Luxembourg, his journey is marked by ambition, charm, and a significant lack of funds, which shapes his tumultuous rise. The episode delves into his early life, including his education and the challenges he faced within his family, particularly the rivalry with his brother Wenceslas. As Sigismund seeks to secure his position through marriage to Maria, the heiress of Hungary and Poland, he encounters fierce opposition, especially from his mother-in-law Elizabeth. The narrative unfolds with Sigismund’s relentless pursuit of power, ultimately leading to his coronation as King of Hungary, albeit under precarious circumstances that reveal the intricacies of 14th-century politics and the personal struggles he faces along the way.

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TRANSCRIPT

The late 14th and early 15th century was a period of upheaval, the certainties of the Middle Ages, that the pope ruled the world and that knights were invincible were crumbling away, the long period of economic growth, of eastward expansion and conversion of the pagans made way for war, plague and famine. The church was split in half and the Ottomans were coming.

This was an age that called forth larger-than-life characters: Joan of Arc, fierce and holy; Henry Bolingbroke, seizing a throne; Jadwiga and Jogaila, uniting kingdoms; the audacious Gian Galeazzo Visconti and fiery Cola di Rienzo; the ever-scheming John the Fearless and Jacob van Artevelde; the tragic Ines de Castro and the unflinching Jan Žižka.

Into this glittering and turbulent lineup steps a man whose reputation has not exactly been polished by time. Despised in his kingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia and even Constance, the city that owes him so much, decided to remember him as a fat naked crowned guy with skinny arms and legs, worn-out face, forked beard and disproportionate genitalia balancing on the hand of a nine-meter-tall sex worker. No, I am not making this up.

Sigismund, because that was his name, was a true enigma of the late Middle Ages. He had inherited his father’s charm and ruthless cunning, his knack for negotiating compromise in impossible situations, and his unshakeable belief in his role as the head of Christendom. But what he hadn’t inherited was his father’s performative piety, his zeal for relics, his asceticism—or his wealth. Instead, Sigismund was left with a volatile mix of ambition, enormous self-confidence, a lust for life, and, crucially, a chronic shortage of funds.

Yet despite his flaws, he took on Christendom’s two greatest crises—the schism and the Ottoman threat—and in doing so, managed to create a third…This is his backstory.

But before we start let me tell you that adverts on podcasts have now reached 7.2% of the total length of shows and in the most popular shows reached 10%. That means if this episode had podcast ads, you would have to skip through 4 minutes of a mix of me droning on about VPNs or dodgy mental health services. I guess you know how to prevent that. Do what Yordi V., Adam F., Risch S, John R., Karen G. and Edward R. have done, go to historyofthegermans.com/support and make a one-time donation. For that you gain my eternal gratitude but most importantly the thanks of all your fellow listeners who you protect…

With that, back to the show.  

Sigismund was born on February 15th, 1368, the second surviving son of emperor Karl IV. We have heard enough about his father, so he needs no introduction, but his mother was no less remarkable.

By most accounts, she was a striking beauty, a full thirty years younger than her husband and, by all testimonies, deeply devoted to him. Though her frame seemed slight—”of weak appearance,” as one chronicler delicately put it—her strength was legendary, the kind spoken of in awe-struck whispers. She could twist horseshoes as if they were mere ribbons, shatter swords as easily as snapping a twig, and rend chainmail with her bare hands. Her son, Sigismund, was no stranger to physical prowess himself, though even his strength paled when measured against hers.

How much he saw of her is unclear, but probably not a lot. Like most princely children during this period he was likely raised by wetnurses and servants in one of the imperial castles, like the magnificent one at Karlsteijn, whilst his parents pursued the itinerant lifestyle of medieval monarchs.

By the mid-14th century, princely education had taken on a new dimension. Young aristocrats and future rulers still learned the essentials—swordsmanship, jousting, hunting—but this wasn’t the whole picture anymore. Sigismund, along with his brothers, was taught to read and write—a skill not taken for granted among nobility a hundred years earlier. Being groomed for a leadership role in the multicultural realm of the house of Luxemburg, languages were a priority. He was fluent in Latin, German, Czech, Hungarian, French, Italian, and possibly Polish as well. His education even included a respectable grounding in theology and both canon and Roman law, giving him a broad base of knowledge that would serve him well as a ruler.

Though he did neither became a writer or embarked on grand building projects like his father, Sigismund’s contemporaries couldn’t help but notice—and remark upon—his relentless curiosity, sharp intellect, and remarkable drive. Even from a young age, he was known for probing questions and an eagerness to master every topic placed before him.

Sigismund appeared in the historical records for the first time in 1373 when he was enfeoffed with the margraviate of Brandenburg, alongside his two brothers. In 1376 he showed up at his brother Wenceslaus coronation as king of the Romans. As Margrave of Brandenburg and Arch Chamberlain of the empire the eight year old was entrusted with carrying one of the imperial regalia, the sword of St. Maurice at the head of the procession.

Sigismund was still only 10 and his brother Wenceslaus 17 when their father must have noticed that the two of them were not getting in. Where Sigismund was full of energy, ambition and ideas, Wenceslaus was pondering and slow. A terrible constellation in a system of Primogeniture, where the obviously less qualified was to inherit everything and the smart one is left with nothing.

Karl IV tried to pre-empt potential conflict by giving Sigismund both a task and resources to achieve it. The task was for him to acquire the crowns of Hungary and Poland through marriage to Maria, the eldest surviving daughter of Louis the great the king of Hungary and Poland.  And the resources to push through his claim was the Margraviate of Brandenburg, the territory Karl IV had only recently acquired from the house of Wittelsbach for the astronomic sum of 500,000 Mark and Sigismund now received in sole ownership.

And he made the brothers exchange letters in which they pledge to forever honestly and truly support each other, exercise their vote in the college of Electors jointly and that under no circumstances would they attack each other’s castles and cities.

Not exactly watertight, but the best Karl could do in the few months he had left.

Let’s have a look at where Sigismund stood in November 1378 when his father breathed his last.

Being margrave of Brandenburg sounds great, after all future holders of the title would indeed build an empire out of this poor soil. But in 1378 it had 200,000 inhabitants most of them battered and impoverished after the decades of feuds and civil wars that had followed the death of margrave Waldemar, the last of the descendants of Albrecht the Baer who had founded the principality way back in 1157 (episode 106 if you are interested).

As for his claim on the Hungarian and Polish crowns, that wasn’t nailed down pat either. Karl had agreed with king Louis I of Hungary that Sigismund would marry his daughter Maria. That was in 1372 and 1375, when Maria’s elder sister Catherina had still been alive. And Catherine was to marry Louis of Orleans, the younger son of King Charles V of France. King Louis of Hungary had even got his vassals to swear fealty to Catherine, not Maria in case of his demise. In one of his last acts, Karl IV resolved that issue in a secret pact with the king of France that granted the French crown de facto control of Provence and the Rhone Valley in exchange for letting Sigismund and Maria succeed Louis of Hungary. We discussed that bit of skullduggery in more detail in episode 163.

I hope you understand why there are so many episodes about all these goings on in the late 14th century. It is just unspeakably complex with dozens upon dozens of players in the empire, in Poland, Hungary, France, Naples, Rome, Avignon, Constantinople, all with their own backstories. It is like Balzac’s novels where protagonists show up here and then there and then their get their own novel where others from previous plots show up, or for the modern listener, it is like the Marvel Universe. But do not worry, the Avengers endgame is in sight.

But first we need to get through Sigismund’s backstory.

By some miracle this complex web of arrangements between Prague, Paris and Buda survived the death of its creator Karl IV. In August 1379 Louis of Hungary and Wenceslaus, king of the romans hosted the official engagement of 11-year old Sigismund and 8-year old Maria heiress of the crowns of Hungary and Poland. The actual marriage was planned for 1382 when Sigismund would be 14 and hence and adult and Maria 11, apparently old enough for conjugal duties. Louis publicly recognised Sigismund as his chosen successor and took the young man in to live at his court.

That arrangement suited all concerned. For Wenceslaus, it was the perfect opportunity to send away his little brother, whose charm, good looks, and boundless energy were beginning to grate against his own surly, lethargic disposition. And for Louis, the greatly admired  chivalric king of Hungary, this was a golden chance to shape his young son-in-law into a fitting heir, grooming him with the skills and values that would one day serve as the backbone of his vast realms.

Just to recap where Louis came from and more importantly, what Sigismund hoped he would bring to him. Louis was from the house of Anjou, the cadet branch of the French royal family that had wrestled Sicily out of the hands of the Hohenstaufen – and had killed young Konradin.

Louis’ father had become the first Anjou king of Hungary pretty much the same way Sigismund was aiming to gain the crown, in the horizontal. Louis succeeded him in 1342 and reigned for 40 astonishingly successful years. He pursued broadly speaking three main policy aims.

The first was to expand Hungary southwards into the Balkans and along the Dalmatian coast. This worked really well. He picked up parts of Stefan Dusan’s  Serbian empire after the great ruler had died in 1355, established suzerainty over Transylvania and Walachia, became king of Croatia and took on the overlordship of Ragusa, modern day Dubrovnik. His zone of Influence comprised modern day Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Romania, Moldova and parts of Bulgaria.

His second ambition was to regain his family’s homeland, the kingdom of Naples that was ruled by the childless queen Joanna I he accused of having killed his brother. But that effort was not quite as successful. He did invade a couple of times, burned and plundered but could not oust queen Joanna against the opposition of the papacy. All he left behind was a shedload of bad blood between the Neapolitan side of the family and his own.

The third leg of his policy was Poland. Its king, Kasimir the Great had consolidated the once fragmented kingdom but found himself without a male heir. Louis supported Kasimir in multiple campaigns and formed an attachment that convinced the Polish king to name him his successor. And in 1370 he was crowned king of Poland in Krakow.

Louis realm was in other words huge and thanks to its mineral wealth that the clever Nurnberg merchants were exploiting, extremely rich. (for how they managed that, check out episode 153)

This sounds almost perfect. Young Sigismund lives at one of the most splendid courts in europe under the wing of his father in law, one of “great kings” of the 14th century who is willing to hand him all of it on a silver platter. What else can a bright, ambitious 11 year old want.

But there is no such thing as a free royal banquet. Whilst Louis really liked him, not everybody shared the kings enthusiasm for the bouncy little prince. And those who did not were all called Elisabeth.

The first of these Elisabeths was king Louis’ mother, a sister of the much beloved king Kasimir III of Poland. As much as her son was shrewd and capable, she had a habit of rubbing people up the wrong way until they lashed out. Her intervention in the kingdom of Naples cost her youngest son Andrew his life and her attempts at establishing a regency in Poland after her brother’s death nearly cost her hers. Not even her son Louis liked her very much and she retaliated by hating his chosen successor, young Sigismund.

That problem resolved itself when Elisabeth of Poland died just a year after Sigismund had arrived in Hungary. But her disaffection of the young man passed on to the next Elisabeth, Elisabeth of Bosnia, the wife of king Louis and therefore Sigismund’s mother in law.

Why she first disliked him, then despised him and finally fanatically hated him has never been properly explained. He might have slighted her in some way or done something foolish in the exuberance of youth. Or she simply hoped for something better for her daughter. After all, the couple was only engaged, not yet married. And better could mean a man who would be more caring and respectful to her darling daughter, or someone less forceful and younger who would allow her to establish her own regency once king Louis was dead.

What turned this from a bad 1960’s mother-in-law joke to full blown Greek tragedy was that Elisabeth passed her hate for young Sigismund on to her daughter Maria, the woman he was going to marry.

In 1382 King Louis declared Sigismund officially as his heir in Poland and  called on his vassals to swear an oath to serve him faithfully. Sigismund was given the command over a small contingent of soldiers and the task to calm down some minor disturbance and to prepare his ascension to the Polish throne.

Aged 14, Sigismund’s political career had begun

….Music?

And he was not given much time to settle in. He arrived in Poland in July 1382. The country was in chaos. Though properly crowned and everything, his father in law had not really gained much of a foothold in Polish politics. The regents he had deployed there were universally hated and were confined to the few castles they held. The magnates fought them and also amongst themselves.

The Polish nobles did not like the idea of an absentee landlord king who regarded Polish affairs as secondary. Polish affairs meaning getting the lands back the Teutonic knights had acquired over the years (episodes 130-138 if you are interested) .

They all agreed Louis wasn’t the king who would do it, but hoped things would improve once the old man had shuffled off his mortal coil. What they did not agreed on was what should happen then. One group was broadly amenable to Maria and Sigismund taking over, provided they would live in Poland. Others believed Poland should break with the house of Anjou and choose its own dedicated ruler.

This question became a lot more acute a lot earlier than anybody expected – because king Louis the Great of Hungary died in September of that same year.

Sigismund immediately demanded that the magnates of Poland recognise him as their lord, which some did before really thinking about it. The nobles of Wielkopolska had considered the situation more thoroughly and said, yes they would happily swear allegiance, but only if Sigismund promised to permanently reside in Poland. That was a no go for Sigismund, since it would mean abandoning the hope to ever becoming king of Hungary. And Hungary looked a lot easier since his future wife, Maria had just been recognised and crowned as king, not queen of Hungary without the slightest delay or hick-up.

Sigismund’s refusal prompted the nobles to form an alliance that demanded that if they were to recognise any of Louis’ daughters, it would be the one who was prepared to reside permanently in Poland. If neither were prepared to do that, well then – they would choose someone amongst themselves to be  their king.

If Sigismund ever had a chance to push back against the Polish nobles’ demands, it was taken away when his enemy mother -in-law Elisabeth pulled the rug from under him. She wrote to the Polish nobles, thanked them for their loyalty to the house of Anjou and promised them to select one of her daughters to come to Poland very soon. But in the meantime she urged them not to do anything rash, in particular not to recognise Sigismund as king.

So  much for familial loyalty. Sigismund sat down with the grand master of the Teutonic Knights who told him that the idea of becoming king of Poland was for the birds. You better go back to Hungary.

Oh yes. Let’s go back to Hungary. That is where his bride would be waiting for him and now that he had turned 14 and was an adult, the marriage could finally proceed. And once married he would be crowned king and everything would be as old king Louis had wanted.

But, not so.

There were three main parties amongst the Hungarian nobles and only one of them could see Sigismund wearing the holy crown of St. Stephen.

The Garai family wanted Hungary to align more with France, basically revive the old plan of bringing in the French duke of Orleans as the new king. The equally powerful Lackfi family preferred a closer alignment between Hungary and the empire as a way to fend off the ottoman threat that was slowly but surely coming up the Balkans. And finally there were the Horvati who preferred the king of Naples, Charles III, called the Small as their new ruler. Charles was a pretty ruthless man who had grown up in Hungary and had at some point been Louis’ designated successor.

Whilst Sigismund had been detained up in Poland, the queen mother Elisabeth had made herself regent on behalf of her 11-year old daughter. And she had sided with the pro-French party of the Garais. Envoys were on their way to Paris to negotiate a new marriage for little Maria, replacing Sigismund with duke Louis of Orleans.

If Maria married Lous of Orleans that would have been curtains for our friend Sigismund. Without a marriage to Maria he was just a foreign prince with no claim on the Hungarian or Polish crown, and not even a particularly wealthy one at that.

Elisabeth would have loved to call off the engagement right away and send Sigismund back home to Brandenburg, but did not dare to do it yet since the two other factions, the pro-imperial Lackfis and the pro-Neapolitan Horvatis were stirring up revolt. So she did the second best thing and sent him to Poland.

Sigismund went in the hope he could still convince his mother-in-law of his suitability as ruler and win the heart of little Maria. That wasn’t a great plan, but at least it was a plan.

What is less clear is what game Elisabeth was playing in Poland. Elisabeth knew she had no resources to force the Poles into recognising Maria as king unconditionally. So it was either sending her younger daughter Jadwiga up to Krakow or to give up on the Polish crown entirely. But she did neither, she tried to stall the Poles. That gave the anti-Hungarian party in Poland the justification to strike and they proposed one of their own as king. A full-blown civil war broke out in Poland. The pro-Hungarian party asked Elisabeth for help and she sent Sigismund with an army of 12,000 to put thing back in order in the north.

Sigismund burned and pillaged the oppositions lands but failed to take Krakow. So negotiations resumed and Elisabeth finally promised to send Jadwiga after all. A time was set for Jadwiga to be handed over, but then Elisabeth stalled again. And again she sent Sigismund to deal with the Poles, but this time without an army.  

Sigismund met the members of the Sejm who were now seriously angry and even those loyal to the Hungarian royal house had enough. If Elisabeth does not want to let Jadwiga become king, that is fine, we will just go with the Polish candidate, thank you very much.

It was Sigismund who talked them around. This is the first time his charm and diplomatic skill came to the fore. After long and arduous negotiations, and – knowing Sigismund probably including some serious partying – he and his mother in law is given one last and absolutely, completely final extension.

So, on October 15th, 1384 the beautiful Jadwiga is crowned king, not queen of Poland. Shortly afterwards she married Jogaila, the grand prince of Lithuania, creating the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The amazing thing is that this great political juggernaut would never have come into being had Sigismund taken the Polish crown and promised to stay in Krakow.

Having saved the kingdom of Poland for the house of Anjou, having proven his allegiance to Elisabeth and her daughters by forsaking the Polish crown he once believed should be his, Sigismund returned to Buda to rapturous applause, his mother-in-law offering him the kiss of peace and young Maria getting excited about her upcoming nuptials.

Oh no, none of that. You completely underestimate how much the queen mother Elisbeth hated Sigismund. In 1385 she struck what she thought was the final blow that would rid her of that pesky Luxemburger. She called the engagement between Sigismund and Maria off. Immediately thereafter Maria married Louis of Orleans by proxy.

Now the chips are really down . Sigismund is outplayed, his grand plan is in tatters. But then  Sigismund, still only 16, can be very, very determined if he wants something badly. And he wanted the crown of Hungary very, very badly.

So badly, he did go for help to the man he never ever wanted to be dependent upon, who he not necessarily despised but regarded as mediocre and undeserving of the wealth and honours he had received, his stepbrother, King Wenceslaus.  Wenceslaus, as it happened, was riding high at this point in his reign. He had concluded the general peace of Eger, the great project their father had never managed to achieve, and was preparing his journey to Rome to obtain the imperial crown. Wenceslaus had the military resources to help.

And there were their cousins, the margraves of Moravia, Jobst and Prokop. They had inherited a very well run principality that was throwing up cash like nobody’s business. They had the means to bankroll Sigismund’s claim on the Hungarian crown.

Looks like the Luxemburg family is pulling together to put one of them to obtain the holy crown of St. Stephen…well, that is what the Habsburgs would have done. The Luxemburgs – different kettle of fish. Yes, dear brother and cousin, we are happy to help, but it’ll cost you. And dearly. Sigismund had to pawn them big chunks of his margraviate of Brandenburg and hand over some of his various rights, castles and income streams.

Having been stripped down by his relatives, he did at least gets his army and with that he returned to Hungary to force the queen regent to give her daughter over in marriage to him. Not the most romantic move, but then love did not really get into this.

Whether the plan would have worked on its own, we will never know. Because events outside his control pushed little Maria into his bed anyway.

You remember there were three political parties in Hungary, the Garai who were pro French and allied with evil mother-in-law Elisbeth, the Lackfi who supported Sigismund and the Horvati who wanted Charles the Small of Naples on the Throne.

This Charles of Naples was a tough nut. Once he had been dismissed as Louis of Hungary’s heir presumptive he went to Naples where he captured and then killed his cousin Queen Joanna I. This effort had been sponsored by pope Urban VI. But Urban found out that Charles had double crossed him when he was casually torturing a brace of cardinals. So Charles attacked the pope and besieged him in Nocera from where the pope escaped by a hairs breadth. The late 14th century is no time for sissies and Charles may have been small, but he was definitely no sissy.

In 1385 this very much not a sissy Neapolitan landed on the Dalmatian coast to stake his claim on the Hungarian crown. His supporters, the Horvati raised their banners and they marched on Buda.

Elisabeth is panicking. Her regime had become quite unpopular for all the usual reasons, taxes, favourites etc. And her allies, the Garai alone weren’t strong enough to fend off the other two parties. She had no choice but to seek support from the man  who happened to be just about to muster a military force, even if that was the man she hated more than anyone else, our friend Sigismund. And Sigismund’s price was simple, marriage to the heiress Maria. In November 1385 the not very happy couple stood before a hastily prepared altar and were finally married.

Sigismund returned to Bohemia to take command of his troops whilst Elisbeth and Maria prepared the defence of Buda against Charles of Naples. As part of that they called an assembly of the Hungarian nobles, promised them remediation of all their grievances and asked for their support. But they refused. Instead they told her to make an arrangement with Charles of Naples.

So it happened that a month later Charles the small was crowned king of Hungary at Fehérvár where Hungarian kings have been crowned since time immemorial. But he did not stay king for very long though. Two months later, on February 7th, 1386 his cupbearer attacked him, injured him severely. He was thrown into a prison where the queen regent who presumably had paid the cupbearer had him killed. Not nice but effective.

That kicked off a civil war between the Neapolitan party and the party of the queen regent. And the queen regent also went back on her deal with Sigismund, refusing to support his coronation as king. Sigismund had to go back to his relatives and ask for even more money and even more troops. Which they provided, pulling even more chunks out of his inheritance.

Sigismund took his troops into Hungary and occupied the western part of the country to force Elizabeth to hand over his bride and get him crowned. At this point the queen regent called upon Sigismund’s brother, Wenceslaus to mediate in the conflict.

Wenceslaus did pass judgement as one would expect. Hungary was to pay some astronomical sum to pay for the cost of the war, Maria was to accept Sigismund as her husband for real now and he was given some property to live off. But what Wenceslaus did not demand, what he even precluded, was his brother’s coronation as king of Hungary. These two really did not get on that well.

Sigismund was now broke. He was only nominally margrave of Brandenburg, but all the income from the territory was going to his cousins. He even passed over the right to inherit Bohemia should Wenceslaus die without an heir. And for what – no coronation, a wife who hated him so much, even he did not want to enforce conjugal rights and no real position of power in Hungary.

But in this super volatile environment things can sometimes brighten up in rather unexpected and unpleasant ways. This way was paved by the foolishness of the queen regent. Her paladin, Miklos Garai felt that after Charles’ of Naples death and some successes against the Horvati, it was possible for the queens to come down to Dalmatia and to inspect their lands. But he was wrong. The land was not yet pacified. When the ladies travelled along with a small bodyguard, Janos Horvati came out of the bushes, killed the Garai and the rest of the guards and then carried the queens away into captivity.

Hungary was now without ruler and in the midst of a civil war. To fill the vacuum, the Hungarian magnates declared themselves the guardians of the realm and took control of the kingdom. And these guardians of the realm recognised Sigismund as captain of the Hungarian cause, though not as king.

The ladies’ position was very precarious. The widow of king Charles, the one Elisabeth had murdered bayed for her blood. Not being able to kill Elisabeth with her own bare hands, the queen of Naples ordered the Horvati to do the deed on her behalf. In mid-January 1387 Elisabeth, the daughter of the king of Bosnia, widow of king Louis the Great of Hungary, Poland and lots more was strangled before the eyes of her daughter and her body thrown in the castle’s ditch. Maria was 15 years of age when that happened. Sigismund had months to mount a rescue, but did not send his army to the castle where they were kept.

Elisabeth’s death convinced the Guardians of the realm that to properly incentivise him, they had to crown him king of Hungary after all. Still Sigismund had to make far reaching concessions to the nobles, including the promise only to appoint Hungarians to  key positions and to pardon everyone who had risen up against him or opposed him. The already quite modest royal power was further undermined by these promises, making Hungary more of an aristocratic republic than a kingdom. Sigismund had to reward his supporters after his coronation with expensive gifts. 85 of the 150 royal castles and manors passed on to the magnates. This financial and political weakness meant that Sigismund remained hampered in his rule of Hungary for decades. The way he tried to wriggle out of the clutches of the barons was by building up his own parallel bureaucracy that gradually took over tax collection and the management of the defence of the country against the Ottomans.

That being so, at least after 5 years of fighting and frustrations, Sigismund is finally king of Hungary.

Music

The first item on the to do list of the freshly elected and crowned king was to free his wife Maria from the clutches of the Horvati. This took until the end of 1387 and a month-long siege.

The married couple were finally united, but the relations remained cold, professional until her death in a riding accident in 1395. Sigismund may be charming and all that, but wooing a young girl who had just seen her mother getting killed due to her suitors reluctance to come to her aid would go beyond the capabilities of even the most accomplished of seducers.

The subsequent 5 years from 1387 to 1393 were taken up with defeating the Horvati and the reconquest of Dalmatia, which again was extremely costly. The Hungarian estates and magnates did not provide the funds he needed despite regular assurances. Sigismund finally bit the bullet and pawned all that he had left to his cousin Jobst for the astonishing sum of 565,263 Guilders. By doing that Sigismund had severed all his links to the Holy Roman Empire. He was now 100% committed to his kingdom of Hungary.  

The funds were enough to muster an army capable to defeat the Horvati and regain Dalmatia. Janos Horvati was captured, brutally tortured, pulled through the streets of the city of Pecs tied to the tail of a horse and then drawn and quartered.

This success did however not mean that Sigismund could now kick back and enjoy being king. As we heard last week, the Ottomans were coming. In 1389 they had defeated and then incorporated the despotate of Serbia. They were standing at the Hungarian border.

Sigismund’s predecessor, the great king Louis of Hungary had not worried too much about the Ottomans. He had fought and won a couple of battles against them and remained unconcerned. What he had not realised was that the Ottomans had learned from their early defeats against armies made up of armoured knights and had developed their unique combination of light cavalry and janissary infantry that prove so successful. After the battle on the Kosovo field in 1389 where the whole Serbian army perished, the major players on the Balkans woke up to the power of the Ottomans.

Sigismund was a player on the Balkans and he did understand that the Ottomans would be unstoppable unless he could muster an army far larger than anything Hungary alone could raise. Hence his involvement in the crusade that ended in the battle of Nikopol we discussed in the last episode.

After the crushing defeat at Nikopol Sigismund was rescued by two of his closest supporters, count Johann von Zollern and Count Herman of Cilli who commandeered a ship on the Danube to take him away.

From there Sigismund could have easily returned home to Hungary, but instead decided to take a little detour to see the famous sites of Constantinople. This was borderline on madness given the Ottoman army was standing undefeated on the Hungarian border, thousands of Christian knights had been captured and either enslaved or killed and his opponents in Hungary had gone  on manoeuvres.

That was the other side of Sigismund’s character. Whilst he could doggedly pursue an objective for years and bet everything in the outcome, sometimes he would suddenly drop everything and just give up, looking for adventures and opportunities elsewhere.  

Hence the spa trip to Constantinople where he was received with great honours by a deeply disappointed emperor Manuel II. Whilst his host was falling into despair, Sigismund dreamt up grand plans to defeat the Ottomans. He embarked on a journey across the levant, taking in Rhodes and the Greek islands before returning to Buda via Ragusa and Split.

Back home he had the magnate Istvan Lackfi and his nephew killed for barely provable treason. This act, together with his previous brutality against the Horvati made him despised by the Hungarians, a sentiment that continued to this day. And that sentiment was at least for a time mutual. The concessions Sigismund had granted at his coronation and the vast wealth he had to transfer to the Guardians of the Realm left him with very limited room to exercise actual power in Hungary. Tired of being pushed around by the magnates he began looking for new opportunities abroad.

..Music

His next project was to gang up with his cousins to unseat his step-brother Wenceslaus. We did discuss Wenceslaus demise in episode 165 so there is no point going through all of this complex story once again.

Wenceslaus was dealt a tough hand upon his father’s death and turned out being pretty bad at playing it. Between the simmering resentment of Bohemian nobles, discord with the church, his absence from the Empire, and his utter failure to address the schism in the papacy, Wenceslaus was left isolated, vulnerable, and ultimately a perfect target for Sigismund’s ambitions.

Sigismund had his hand in every one of the various conspiracies and uprisings that made his brother’s reign even more untenable than it needed to be. His comrades in crime were his cousin Jobst of Moravia and various Habsburg dukes. These guys would backstab and betray each other in a wild merry go around I simply cannot be bothered to recount. To call this self-destructive is an understatement of epic proportions. The house of Luxemburg, which once held a quarter of the empire and provided order and peace had formed an orderly circular firing squad.

By 1400, they’d managed to strip Wenceslaus of the rule of the hre, and they  nearly cost Sigismund his Hungarian throne as well.

The magnates of Hungary were disappointed with Sigismund’s constant trips to Bohemia and the mostly foreign administrators he left behind in Buda. So when he came down for a short visit, they seized him and locked him up in a castle. But then they had no idea what to do next. Some wanted to get Ladislaus of Naples,  the son of the murdered king Charles to return, others favoured a union with Poland, whilst a third party preferred a Habsburg duke. And cousin Jobst came down with an army claiming the Hungarian throne for himself. That was even by 14th century Hungarian standards an awful mess.

In the end they decided it was better to stick with their disappointing monarch than to embark on a civil war. Sigismund promised to do better, to fire his foreign advisers and spend more time in Hungary and in exchange, the Hungarians let him be.

Sigismund said, thanks. That was great fun and buggered off back to Bohemia where he spent another 2 years trying to oust his brother, double cross his cousins and merrily signing and breaking alliances with nobles and neighbouring monarchs.

In 1403 the Hungarian magnates had again enough of their absent monarch and rose up. King Ladislaus of Naples landed in Dalmatia. Sigismund came back with an army, and now it was the final showdown. His followers gathered support and Ladislaus – in fear if ending like his father – rushed back to Naples. Sigismund acted the magnanimous victor for once and received the members of the opposition back into the fold. But this time he did not apologise or promise to do better. Instead he removed the magnates one by one from their positions of power claiming, quite accurately – that they lacked loyalty to their lord. Meanwhile more and more Hungarians realised that the incessant infighting was seriously undermining their ability to defend the kingdom against the Ottomans.

For almost 7 years Sigismund gave up o wild goose chases and focused on his job in Hungary. He expanded the state apparatus, reorganised taxes and the church, introduced military reform that created the famous Hussars, suppressed the robber barons and unjust feuds and generally rebuilt the country. His most notorious reform was the creation of the order of the Dragon he bestowed on local magnates and allies, including Mircea the elder, the Voivode of Walachia. Mircea was so proud of the honour he asked people to call him Draco, Latin for dragon and his son Vlad became little dragon or Dracola in Latin, a name you may have heard before.

This period of benign rule in Hungary lasted until 1410 when King Ruprecht of the empty pocket, the rather ineffectual ruler of the Holy Roman Empire unexpectedly died. And with that the throne of the empire became vacant. And Sigismund, always on the lookout for another crown, another adventure another grand plan, put his large ermine hat in the ring.

But that is a story for another time. Next week we will meet the next and last important participant in the Council of Constance, Jan Hus, professor at the university of Prague, follower of John Wycliff and radical preacher. And I promise, once we have talked about him, we will finally come back into Germany, get to the shores of lake Constance and watch pope John XXIII, 3 patriarchs, 23 cardinals, 27 archbishops, 106 bishops, 103 abbots, 344 doctors of theology, 676 noblemen of high birth, 336 barbers, 516 buglers, pipers & entertainers and 718 whores and public girls determine the fate of Christendom.

Just before I go just a quick reminder about the website where you can support the show – it is historyofthegermans.com/support.

Hope to see you back here next week.

The 168th episode of the History of the Germans delves into the transformative period of the Ottomans from Osman to the Battle of Nicopolis. It highlights how Osman, the son of an Anatolian warlord, laid the foundations for what would become one of the world’s greatest empires, despite starting as just one of many Turkic beys in a tumultuous landscape. The narrative explores the cultural and military strategies that enabled the Ottomans to expand, emphasizing their approach of gradual assimilation and religious tolerance as they conquered predominantly Christian lands. The episode also recounts the dramatic Battle of Nicopolis in 1396, where a coalition of European knights faced the formidable Ottoman forces, leading to a catastrophic defeat for the crusaders. As the episode unfolds, it illustrates the lasting impact of these events on the geopolitical landscape of Europe and the Ottoman Empire’s rise as a dominant power in the centuries to follow..

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TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 168 – The Ottomans, from Osman to Nicopolis, which is also episode 5 of Season 9 – The Reformation before the Reformation.

For over 400 years, ever since the battle on the Lechfeld in 955, Western Europeans did not have to fear an enemy on their eastern flank. It was in fact the other way around. Christian warriors had expanded relentlessly – southward in the crusades, trying to wrest the Holy Land from Muslim rule; northward, where crusaders and knightly orders converted pagan Slavs by fire and sword; and eastward, as German speaking settlers spread across Central Europe and the Balkans.

But then, on a clear September morning in 1396, that era of unchecked expansion came to a dramatic halt. Outside the city of Nikopol in Bulgaria, the mightiest knights and princes of Europe gathered, their breastplates and polished helmets blazing in the rising sun. Their battle-hardened horses, bred to crush enemies underfoot, shifted restlessly, sensing the tension of the moment. This was not a battle against pagan tribal warriors or the defence of a crusading castle far away from home and hearth. This was something altogether new.

Before them stood an army unlike any they had ever faced. To men like the Count of Nevers—soon to be known as John the Fearless of Burgundy—this strange, audacious enemy had it all wrong. Their horse regiments were made up of lightly armoured archers, no match for the tank-like knights, and – what height of foolishness, their centre where their leader was clearly visible wasn’t held by elite cavalry, but by the weakest of medieval military forces, their infantry. And, these soldiers weren’t even free men fighting for their honour, they were slaves.

That the great prince and warrior thought will be a walk in the park. Nevers demanded the honor of leading the charge himself, envisioning the glory of victory and with it the greatest prize of all, the union of the Orthodox and Roman church that the emperor of Constantinople had promised should they defeat this new foe, they called the Ottomans…..

But before we can ride with John the Fearless into the lines of Janissaries, I have to tell you again, and I am sorry about that, but again, the History of the Germans is advertising free, except for these brief little skids. And that is thanks to the immeasurable generosity of our patrons who have signed up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support. And remember not to sign on using the Patreon app on your iPhone since Apple will now charge you an additional 30% for the privilege. If you want to avoid that, sign up using your trusty old home computer or go to Patreon.com using your internet browser. In the latter case just be careful you are not getting auto-redirected to the Patreon App.

And thanks so much to Mary Lee & Dan, Paul J., Robert B., Rokas V.,  Stefan S., Stuart S. and Tigram Z who have already taken the plunge and dodged the Apple bullet.

One last bit of housekeeping. The last two episodes I have been going on about a war of seven saints, a war many of you pointed out never happened. What did happen was a war of eight saints. I do apologise for dropping a Saint and accept the additional 10,000 years in purgatory this warrants..

With that, back to the show

Almost exactly a century before the knights of Christian Europe gazed upon the unfamiliar sight of turbaned riders and thousands of slave soldiers, a young man, the son of an Anatolian warlord visited his neighbour, the venerable Sheikh Edabali. The name of this young man was Osman. Having been fed and watered as an honoured guest, the young suitor had fallen asleep in Edabali’s garden and dreamt: quote  

“From the bosom of Edebali rose the full moon and inclining towards the bosom of Osman it sank upon it, and was lost to sight.
After that a goodly tree sprang forth, which grew in beauty and in strength, ever greater and greater.
Still did the embracing verdure of its boughs and branches cast an ampler and an ampler shade, until they canopied the extreme horizon of the three parts of the world. Under the tree stood four mountains, which he knew to be Caucasus, Atlas, Taurus, and Haemus.
These mountains were the four columns that seemed to support the dome of the foliage of the sacred tree with which the earth was now centred.
From the roots of the tree gushed forth four rivers, the Tigris, the Euphrates, the Danube, and the Nile.
Tall ships and barks innumerable were on the waters.
The fields were heavy with harvest.
The mountain sides were clothed with forests.
Thence in exulting and fertilizing abundance sprang fountains and rivulets that gurgled through thickets of the cypress and the rose.
In the valleys glittered stately cities, with domes and cupolas, with pyramids and obelisks, with minarets and towers.
The Crescent shone on their summits: from their galleries sounded the Muezzin’s call to prayer.
That sound was mingled with the sweet voices of a thousand nightingales, and with the prattling of countless parrots of every hue.
Every kind of singing bird was there.
The winged multitude warbled and flitted around beneath the fresh living roof of the interlacing branches of the all-overarching tree; and every leaf of that tree was in shape like unto a scimitar.
Suddenly there arose a mighty wind, and turned the points of the sword-leaves towards the various cities of the world, but especially towards Constantinople.
That city, placed at the junction of two seas and two continents, seemed like a diamond set between two sapphires and two emeralds, to form the most precious stone in a ring of universal empire.
Osman thought that he was in the act of placing that visional ring on his finger, when he awoke”
end quote

His host, the venerable Sheikh Edabali told Osman that this dream was a sign that he and his descendants would once rule one of the world’s greatest empires. And since he wanted to be along for the ride, Edabali joined the young man’s emerging confederation and gave him his daughter as his wife.

The rest is history. Under Osman’s successors all of this dream came true, maybe excluding the huge tree, the birdsong and the bountiful harvest.  

But how did they manage?

When Osman took command of his father’s little warband, world domination was nowhere on the horizon, not even as a fictitious dream. Osman was just one of dozens of Turkic Beys in western Anatolia squeezed in between the Mongols who had taken over from the Seljuk Rum Sultanate and the Byzantine Empire in the west. The sea routes were dominated by Genoese and Venetian fleets and remnants of the crusader states and their chivalric orders still clung on to bits of the Middle East.

To understand Osman’s journey, we must go back to the origin story of the Turks in Anatolia.

The Turkic peoples first emerged in the vast expanses of Central Asia in the sixth century—a people of the steppe, kin to the fearsome Huns, Magyars, and Mongols. They were born to a life on horseback, their existence defined by the rhythm of the open plains and the wild gallop of their hardy steeds. Their composite bows—masterfully crafted from horn, wood, and sinew—were powerful weapons of astonishing range, allowing the Turks to shoot with lethal accuracy even in the chaos of a high-speed charge. Like phantoms, they would advance, release a deadly volley, and retreat before their enemies could react, only to return in relentless waves, wearing their opponents down before swooping in for the kill.

Over the centuries horse archers have bested the armies of the settled empires of Asia and Europe again and again.  But once they had conquered these rich civilisations they faced a stark choice. Their military advantage was bound to the grasslands, their lean, swift horses dependent on the rich pastures of the steppe. And while their composite bows were marvels of engineering, they were also fragile. The glue that held the layers together could soften and lose its power in damp climates, leaving the Turks’ bows as vulnerable as they were fearsome.

One option was to return to their homelands, weighted down with spoils, and leave behind these fertile lands that promised permanence and power. Or, they could adapt to a settled life, integrating with the lands and cultures they had conquered.

The most successful of these horse archer empires did exactly that. They co-opted the existing elites into their empire, tasked them with the management of these complex societies, they recruited the engineers to develop their siege engines and used the artisans to design their palaces. Over time they mixed with existing population and created a new culture that combined elements of both.

This process repeated throughout history again and again, the Magyars in Hungary, the Bulgars, the Mongols in China, the Mamluks in Egypt and the Delhi Sultanate to name just a few.

One of these groups, a Turkic tribe called the Seljuks had gained a foothold in Mesopotamia which they expanded until in 1055 they were able to take over Baghdad, the capital of the Abassid Khalif, the leader of the Islamic world. They became the sultans, the protectors of the Khalif. And like other Turkic tribes before they integrated into their host culture, adopted Islam, learned Persian and built impressive mosques.

One subgroup of these Seljuk Turks then moved on further west into Byzantine Asia Minor. And they very much liked what they found there. An arid plateau with wonderful grassland for their horses and a climate that suited their composite bows. As they settled in, they ran up against the Byzantine empire who had ruled these lands for centuries. The conflict culminated in a great battle at Manzikert in 1071 where a huge Byzantine army was destroyed.  This defeat triggered emperor Alexis Comnenus request for help to pope Urban II that kicked off the Crusades.

But neither Byzantine armies nor crusaders could now shift the Seljuks out of central Anatolia. They settled down and established their capital at Konya where they reigned as the Seljuk Sultans of Rum, Rum being the Turkish and Arabic word for Rome.  In 1176 a last ditch attempt to remove the Seljuks and regain central Anatolia ended with the defeat at Myriokephalon.

If you remember, Barbarossa did defeat the Seljuks a few years later and took Konya in the third crusade, but that did not change anything as the emperor died a few weeks later and Konya returned to the Sultan.

When the Seljuks arrived in Anatolia, they numbered at absolute maximum about 500,000 whilst the population of Anatolia, once the richest part of the eastern empire was likely several million. Moreover, the Seljuks were Muslims whilst the population of Anatolia were overwhelmingly Christion, mostly orthodox but also Armenian and various smaller sects as well as a sizeable Jewish community.

And again, the classic steppe nomad pattern repeated itself. The Seljuks employed the local bureaucrats to run their new principality and allowed them to retain their religion and culture.

The Koran, like in fact the Bible, prohibits the forced conversion of unbelievers. And whilst the Christians did not aways adhere to that premise, Muslim conquerors in the pre-modern period by and large did. I very much doubt that was a function of some sort of moral superiority, but much rather down to the fact that the Muslim conquerors tended to be a comparatively small group in a sea of peoples adhering to a different religion. Tolerance was a necessity, not a choice. The same happened with the Normans of Sicily, coexistence of catholic, orthodox, Muslims and jews was the only viable option to build a sustainable political entity.

The Seljuk sultanate lasted 200 years and in this period transformed Christian Byzantine Asia Minor into Muslim Turkish Anatolia. Not by force but by a slow drip, drip of cultural infusion. As Muslim rulers they embarked on a huge building program, establishing Mosques and Madrassas in all the major cities. Sufi lodges called tekke appeared all over the countryside as did the Türbe. A Türbe is the tomb of a venerated person, a saint or sometimes just a very devout person of prominence.

Cut off from Constantinople Christian churches lacked educated priests and bishops and over time even the structures themselves deteriorated, partly from shortage of funds, general neglect and the frequent earthquakes. As churches collapsed, these Muslim structures took their place, impressing the population with their splendour and inviting them in.

And at the heart of this transformation was the magnetic figure of Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad —better known simply as Rumi. Born in the rich cultural crucible of Khorasan in Persia, Rumi was and is one of the world’s most celebrated poets, a Muslim jurist, and above all, a mystic whose influence would extend far beyond the lands of his birth.

Rumi believed that through music, dance, and poetry, one could come closer to the divine. His vision was that of unity—of the soul with God, of cultures with one another. This belief culminated in what would become known as the Mevlevi Order of the Whirling Dervishes. These dervishes, with their rhythmic, entrancing rotations and soulful melodies, were not merely performing rituals but embodying a path to transcendence, a surrender to the mysteries of the universe. And the people of Anatolia, weary of the divides that had marked their past, embraced this mystical vision of life.

The impact was profound. The Mevlevi Order Rumi founded spread across Anatolia, and with it, a new cultural synthesis emerged. Turkish language began to take root, blending with the linguistic traditions of those who had lived on this plateau for centuries. The kitchen transformed too, with Turkmen flavors—thick yogurts and the famous ayran drinks—joining Mediterranean tastes, creating a cuisine that balanced the settled with the nomadic. Within a few generations, the identity of Asia Minor shifted: it was no longer solely Byzantine Christian or entirely Turkmen. Instead, it had become its own thing, Turkish Anatolia.

This model of tolerance and gradual assimilation is what the Ottomans inherited from the Seljuk and that they will deploy across all the lands they will conquer.

If we compare the conquest and transformation of Anatolia with the conquest of Prussia by the Teutonic Knights we have discussed in episodes 130 following, we can see how the Turkish approach was much more sustainable. The forced conversions and aggressive immigration policies of the Teutonic Knights left the Prussian state susceptable to repeated uprisings and ultimately a defeat against a coalition of the locals and neighbours, something the Ottomans rarely experienced.

Despite all its achievements, the Seljuk Sultanate of Konya collapsed when the Mongols invaded in 1242, the same year they had appeared simultaneously in Poland and Hungary. The Sultanate broke down into dozens of small vassal principalities called the Beyliks.

To get away from the powerful Mongols, the beyliks moved westwards, infiltrating the ailing Byzantine empire. The power of the emperor in Constantinople had taken a devastating blow in 1204 when a western crusading army sacked the great city. In the wake of this crime, a Latin emperor reigned in Constantinople who spent most of his time fighting several Byzantine break-away principalities. Though the latin empire fell in 1262 and an orthodox emperor returned to the Blachernai Palace, the ancient realm was only a shadow of itself.

And it wasn’t set up to deal with these Turkish beys.

The Byzantines were used to fighting large, organised states much like themselves. It was all geared up for that one decisive battle. The emperors would muster an army, march to the area threatened by the Turks, offer battle, but nobody showed up. After a few weeks of marching back and forth the money ran out and the Byzantines returned to Constantinople. At which point the Turks returned and occupied the countryside and harassed the rich cities of western Anatolia. You do this a couple of times, and the urban population concludes that it made more sense submitting to the Beys who could provide safety and security rather than hoping for another Christian relief army.

And submission was made easy because the beys maintained the Seljuk policy of religious tolerance. Christian communities were allowed to retain their religion, their churches and bishops. Yes, they were second class citizens and had to pay a special tax levied on non-believers, but most cities along the shore of the Aegean were happy to take that if the alternative was constant low-level war, oppressive imperial taxes and in its wake – economic contraction.

Our man Osman was one of these Beys. His headquarters were in Söğüt, a small town, if not at the time just a village about 80 miles from Bursa and the sea of Marmara. His was neither the largest nor the richest of the Beyliks. So how did he end up founding an empire and all the other Beys disappeared down the Orcus of history?

The anonymous early ottoman writer whose chronicle is today preserved in the Bodlean library wrote about Osman’s success: quote “one must consider the following: that the sultanates of most other sultans came about through injustice towards their predecessors and by conquering, overpowering and subjugating the Muslims…But Osman Bey and his forefathers […] attacked the infidels in the borderlands with their swords, occupying themselves with Gaza and sustaining their communities with plunder” end quote.

This was long interpreted as Gaza, i.e., holy war being at the heart of Ottoman success. But one can also read it in another way. Osman was popular amongst the Turks of Anatolia, because he refrained from fighting other beyliks. So the other beys did not stop him  recruiting their fighters to come along on his campaigns. And he was a successful general who provided great opportunities for plunder.

The empire builders of the steppe, the Genghis Khans and Tamarlanes of this world were exceptional power brokers. How do you think Genghis Khan conquered the largest empire that ever existed? Surely not with just the few hundred members of his own tribe. He found a way to attract diverse groups to his great conquests, some were Mongols, other were Turks and even settled peoples who preferred to ride with the conqueror than being conquered.

And Osman was no different, just on a smaller scale. Many of those willing to ride with him were fellow Anatolian Turks, veterans of internecine warfare between the various beys, but also Mongols unhappy with their leadership and Byzantine soldiers dismissed by or otherwise disaffected with the emperor in Constantinople.

In just a few years after Osman had taken over, his coalition had become so powerful, the emperor sent his one and only field army to crush the upstart. This time the Turks did not disappear into the woods. At the battle of Bapheus Osman’s forces routed the Byzantines. This victory cemented Osman’s reputation as a great warlord and attracted even more fighters from all across Asia Minor to join his banner. Over the next 30 years Osman and his equally gifted son Orhan used  these forces to conquer the ancient province of Bithynia, once a heartland of the Byzantine empire. One by one its great cities fell to the Ottomans, Bursa in 1323, Nicea in 1331 and Nicomedia in 1337. Bursa became the first capital of the Ottoman state.

But this battle had a further impact as it set in motion a sequence of events that would accelerate the empire’s demise.

The emperor, Andronikus II had lost his last field army and like many of his predecessors had to reach out for western help. This time these helpers weren’t crusaders but an army of battle-hardened Catalan mercenaries, veterans of the wars between the kingdoms of Sicily and Naples.

Their leader was a man called Roger de Flor or Roger Blum, whose father had been a German, a falconer at the court of our old friend the emperor Frederick II. Andronikus II promised Roger gold and titles in abundance if he just got rid of that Turkish menace in western Anatolia.

Roger’s forces crossed over to Bithynia in 1304 in search of the Ottoman army. Osman saw the strength of this force and reverted back to type. He ran for the hills. The Catalans went here and there, always thinking that their foe would be around the next corner, but Osman never showed. Time went by and money ran out. The mercenaries did what mercenaries do and plundered the land, stealing indiscriminately from Muslims and Christians. The emperor protested. The mercenaries said, where is our money. The emperor said, do not worry, the cheque is in the post. The mercenaries believe the emperor needs a nudge and cross the Dardanelles and fortify Gallipoli. The emperor responds by having Roger de Flor murdered. The Catalans are now genuinely angry and besiege Constantinople. The Theodocian walls held, but that was the only good news. The Catalans devastated Thrace and finally cut out their own little place in the sun, the duchy of Athens.

The impact on the empire was devastating. The treasury was empty, Western Anatolia was lost for good, the European lands were in ruins. A sudden rush for Byzantine real estate ensued. The beys, the Bulgars, the Serbs, the Knights Hospitallers, the venetians, the Genoese they all got  a piece of that once great state. For a while it looked as if the Serbs under their leader Stefan Dušan had picked up the biggest chunk, would take over the capital and make themselves the successors of Constantine.

It is testament to the incredible resilience of this mortally wounded empire that it did not collapse right away. But things went into another tailspin when in 1341 John V, a child of eight became emperor. As was tradition, a drawn-out civil war ensued. In this war both sides used the best mercenary fighters the levant had on offer, which happened to be the Ottoman cavalry. And as before, money ran out before the mercenaries could be packed off home. These Turkmen reacted to the unpaid bills and broken promises in exactly the same way as the Catalans. They moved into the defences left behind in Gallipoli. The emperor said, give it back. They said, where is the money. The emperor said, cheque is in the post.

This time the mercenaries did not march on Constantinople, instead they did something that would ultimately break the 1000 year old empire, in 1354 they offered Gallipoli to their true lord, Orhan, the son of Osman.

And with that the Ottomans gained a bridgehead on the European continent. And as luck would have it, the then undisputed strongman on the Balkans, Stefan Dusan died in 1355 leaving the door wide open for Ottoman conquest. Again, city after city fell to Orhan and his son Murad I.

And again, the Ottomans deployed their well-honed tactics to bring the population on side.

The first point of order was indeed that, order. Orhan and Murad insisted on the strictest of discipline in the ranks of their army. No burning, plundering or raping was allowed. Then the orthodox population was again permitted to retain their religion, customs, bishops etc. And finally, the Ottomans brought the kind of stability the inhabitants of the collapsing empire craved. For a century now various rulers within it had fought each other, raised oppressive taxes to defend the borders and had given the Venetians and Genoese trade concessions that made them immeasurably rich.

Under Orhan and his successors, taxes were manageable, the roads safe, borders secure and trade flourished.

The Ottomans now had a veritable state which meant military tactics had to change. Retreating into the steppe and wearing out an enemy was no longer an option. The ottomans had to get set up for decisive pitched battles.

Their new military structure was based on two pillars, Sipahis and Janissaries.

The Sipahi were a cavalry force paid through timars. A timar was a share in the income from an estate the soldier received in exchange for his military service. That sounds a bit like a medieval fief, but was nothing of that sort. Ownership of the timar remained with the state and could be re-assigned should the timar-holder fail to show or was otherwise unfit for the job. Timar holders were rotated between Anatolia and the new lands conquered on the European side to prevent the establishment of close nit aristocratic family groups as had happened in Europe. And in order to undermine the social status of timar holders, the sultans and their generals would regularly assign timars to slaves or peasants who had shown bravery in the field.

Each timar holder had to show up with specifically prescribed equipment, which included a horse, weapons, light armour and a squire. They were organised into districts of hundred riders under a commander who then reported upwards to the provincial governor. Both the commander and the governor were chosen on merit and were awarded Timars to maintain their office and as compensation for their service. And like the other timar holders, they could be and were regularly rotated around the empire to stop them getting entrenched.

The second pillar of the Ottoman army were the famous Janissaries. These were slave soldiers recruited from subjugated lands. In their first iteration they were put together using prisoners of war made during the conquests mainly in the Balkans. But as early as the late 14th century the main recruitment model was the devsirme or collection. That meant every five to 12 years each province on a rotating basis had to hand over one boy for every forty households.

These boys, most of them Christians, received military training, a thorough education and converted to Islam. They were the elite force and personal bodyguard of the Sultan. Janissaries fought on foot, initially armed with bows and swords, later with various forms of firearms. Though they were technically slaves, they received a salary of 2 akce per day, which means roughly 700 a year, which was fairly generous. To put that in context, the timar’s for a cavalry soldier yielded from 500 to 3,000 akce but that had to cover  the cost of the equipment.

Slave soldiers were no Ottoman invention. Long before the Janissaries would make their indelible mark on Ottoman warfare, the practice of forging elite armies from men who had been taken as slaves was a well-established tradition across Asia. The Abbasid caliphs of Baghdad had their ghilman, while Egypt’s ruling dynasties had raised the famed Mamluks. This distinctive brand of soldier was bound not by tribal loyalties or regional ties but by the singular identity impressed upon them from a young age. Strangers to the local nobility and cut off from traditional kinship networks, they offered their loyalty not to their homeland or family, but to the commanders who had crafted them. If they felt attachment, it was for their fellow Janissaries who they had grown up with, trained with, lived with and fought with. Standing firm when other troops might falter, they fought with a resolve that came from knowing their brothers-in-arms would do the same.

On June 15, 1389 this new force was put to the test for the first time in an epic battle against the Serbs, a battle known as the battle on the Kosovo field.

The great Serbian leader Stefan Dusan had conquered large parts of Southestern Europe and had declared himself emperor of a multilingual and multiethnic realm that included not just Serbs but also Bulgars, Greeks and Albanians. But after his death in 1355 this empire declined and by 1389 had broken up into multiple territories, the largest of which was ruled by Lazar Hrebeljanović.

By 1380 Ottoman forces had defeated all the buffer states that stood between them and Lazar’s principality. A final showdown with the sultans was inevitable. Lazar had several years to prepare and by June 1389 the time for the decisive battle had come.

Lazar gathered all his forces and all his allies near Pristina on the field of Kosovo and squared up to sultan Murad I and his son Bayazid, the Thunderbolt.

How exactly this battle unfolded is overlaid with so much nationalist narrative that I will not even try to break it down. Bottom line is that the Turks won. Both commanders, the sultan Murat I and prince Lazar perished. Serbian lore has it that the sultan was killed by a nobleman called Milos Obilic, but Turkish sources have him losing his life in pursuit of Bosnian troops.

And again, the Turks were magnanimous in victory. Contrary to the commonly told story they did not dissolve the Serbian state. They left Lazar’s descendants in charge of what became known as the Despotate of Serbia, a client state of the Ottomans, but one where orthodox Christians could retain their patriarchs and way of life. Some sources even claim that Serbia enjoyed a cultural and economic renaissance under Ottoman rule.

At the next great battle, on September 25, 1396 Lazar’s son, Stefan Lazarevic was standing alongside his father’s foe, sultan Bayazid I when they surveyed the grand European army that had gathered outside Nikopol on the Hungarian border.

This was the first time a western European army went toe to toe with a Turkish force.

But before we talk about the actual battle, let’s talk about why we suddenly find French princes, Burgundian dukes and German nobles in a muddy Balkan field.

After the battle of the Kosovo, the situation for Constantinople had become completely untenable. They were surrounded on all sides by the Ottoman Turks. And likewise, the Ottoman Turks could not feel completely in control of their recently acquired empire when there was still a Byzantine emperor behind the mighty Theodosian walls who could attack their rear at any time. The situation needed to be resolved one way or another. In 1395 Ottoman forces began the siege of Constantinople.

The Byzantine empire had exhausted all its military and economic resources, but it still held one last trump card. Ever since the Eastern and Western churches had parted way in 1054  it had been a papal ambition to rejoin the two parts of Christ’s body. And that desire was even stronger now when there were two popes competing for supremacy of the western church.

The emperor Manuel II Paleologos knew this and made an offer to the Roman pope Boniface IX he could not refuse. If the bishop of Rome was to preach a crusade to free Constantinople, then he, emperor Manuel II would bring the orthodox church under Roman obedience. Even though all the diamonds on Manuel’s crown had been replaced by Swarovski diamonds, this was a prize that would confer immeasurable prestige on both the pope who achieved it and the military commanders who defeated the Turks.

And the timing was almost ideal. Because right around that time the French had subtracted their obedience from the obstinate pope Benedict XIII in Avignon, paving the way for a crusade to be preached even in the lands not following the Roman pope.

The call for a crusade was picked up enthusiastically. After 50 years of conflict between France and England and endless feuds in the Italy and the empire, Europe’s elite, the knights, dukes and princes knew only one way of life, and that was sticking swords into other people in the best possible chivalric taste. Echoing in their minds were the stirring words of the blind King of Bohemia:  “take me to the place where the noise of the battle is the loudest that I may strike one last stroke with my sword”

And in 1396 there weren’t as many options to go to war as their used to be. The Hundred Years’ war had gone into a temporary hiatus as the two kings were negotiating peace and marriage. The Prussian Reizen were less popular now that the Lithuanians had stopped being pagan. So, a crusade down to the Balkans sounded exactly what the doctor ordered.

The crusading army gathered in Buda. It comprised the host, king Sigismund of Hungary, the second son of emperor Karl IV, his Hungarian magnates and German nobles, the constable and the marshal of France, Lord Enguerrand de Coucy who fans of Barbara Tuchman’s distant mirror might remember, Ivan Stratismir, the tsar of Bulgaria, Mircea the elder the Voivode of Walachia and father of Vlad the Impaler, aka Dracula, the head of the knights hospitaller and most noble amongst them, John the count of Nevers and future duke of Burgundy. The army was also supported by Genoese and Venetian fleets. Estimates range from 17 to 20,000 troops.

This formidable force, the flower of European chivalry saw itself facing an Ottoman army of similar, maybe even smaller size. When the Turks moved into view, John of Nevers, insisted to charge them immediately. The seasoned Balkan rulers who had encountered the Turks before tried to dissuade him. King Sigismund demanded he postpones the attack for two hours so that his scouts could report back the exact size and position of the enemy.

But nothing can sway the mind of a 25 year old who has been born with a golden spoon in his mouth – the size of a spade. Nevers insisted and his knights, all shiny and full of vigour charged at the enemy. As they thundered down the field, the Ottoman cavalry on their swift horses shot one arrow after another into the mass of riders who could not retaliate in any way. Meanwhile the Janissaries also discharged their bows and arrows rained on the Burgundians and French.

If you have ever seen a phalanx of riders come at you, you will know that the only sensible reaction for anyone on foot is to run. That is why we have mounted police at demonstrations. But that is not what happened at Nikopol.

The Janissaries were positioned on top of a hill and organised in five to seven rows. As the knights crashed into the front row of Ottoman infantry, the line held and the janissaries killed the horses with sharpened sticks. The unhorsed knights should they have survived fought on on foot. Meanwhile the Ottoman cavalry had regrouped and attacked the flanks.

At that point the Hungarians, Germans and Balkan allies joined the fray, but got dispersed between attacking Turks and retreating Frenchmen.

The initial attack force had finally managed to push the Janissaries back when 1,500 Serbs under Stefan Lazarevic appeared. That is when the Burgundians and French surrendered. Sigismund realised that there was nothing left to do and he fled in a fishing boat up the Danube.

The battle was a catastrophic defeat for the crusaders. Thousands had perished, the richest had been taken hostage to be released against huge ransom payments. The remaining Balkan statelets fell under Ottoman rule. Sigismund could barely hold the Hungarian frontier. But the hero of the battle, the great tactician John of Nevers was given the honorific epithet “the fearless” for his chivalric madness.

Sultan Bayazed returned to his siege of Constantinople.

This should be by all accounts be the end of the empire of Constantinople that had lasted a 1000 years already. But the Byzantines were given another 50 year lease of life by someone who nobody expected – Timur or Tamarlane. This new ruler of the Steppe Nomads had come down through Persia and Iraq, had sacked Baghdad in 1401 where he left one of his much admired pyramid of human skulls and in 1402 he appeared in Anatolia. Bayazid rode out to meet him and was comprehensively beaten at the battle of Ankara. The victor of Nikopol ended his life in a metal cage Timur had devised for him. His sultanate was dismantled and split between two of his sons. It would take 30 years before the next great Ottoman sultan Mehmed I was able to stitch the Ottoman empire back together again.

From then on the combination of superior military infrastructure and tactics combined with a well-honed system to integrate newly subjugated populations into the empire made the Ottomans an irresistible force will that dominate imperial and central European politics all the way into the 18th century.  The fear of Turkish tents rising up outside Vienna will occupy the mind of emperors for the next centuries and is one of the reasons the reformation of 1525 could proceed largely unchecked.

But for now Timur has given europe a 30 year breather, enough to sort out the great schism and deal with the Hussite revolt. How that happened we will get to soon.

But before we get there we still have to do one more of these background episodes. Next week we will spend some more time with the man who we have just seen running away from the field of Nikopol, Sigismund, king of Hungary, soon to be king of the Romans and convener of the council of Constance. I hope you will join us again.

And just before I go, remember today, October 31st is the last day you can sign up on the Patreon app without incurring a 30% Apple surcharge. If you want to avoid that, use the Patreon website at patreon.com/historyofthegermans or go to my website, historyofthegermans.com/support.

The Political Fight for the Papacy

If you are a longstanding listener to the History of the Germans, you will already know that sometime in the late 14th century the catholic church broke apart into 2 and then 3 different obediences, three popes residing in different places and being recognised by different nations.

But what you may not know is how exactly this had happened. Why did the exact self-same cardinals elect one pope in April 1378 and another one 4 months later? Who was taking the lead in attempts to resolve the crisis and why did all these attempts fail for 40 years? How far did they go in forcing the various papal contenders to come to the negotiation table. How ridiculous were the popes’ attempts to wiggle out of that…

All that we will look into this week in part 1 of the story of the Great Western Schism at today.

TRANSCRIPT Part 1

Hello and welcome to the history of the Germans: Episode 166 – The Great Western Schism – Part 1, also episode 3 of season 9 – The Reformation before the Reformation

If you are a longstanding listener to the History of the Germans, you will already know that sometime in the late 14th century the catholic church broke apart into 2 and then 3 different obediences, three popes residing in different places and being recognised by different nations.

But what you may not know is how exactly this had happened. Why did the exact self-same cardinals elect one pope in April 1378 and another one 4 months later? Who was taking the lead in attempts to resolve the crisis and why did all these attempts fail for 40 years? How far did they go in forcing the various papal contenders to come to the negotiation table. How ridiculous were the popes’ attempts to wiggle out of that…

All that we will look into this week in part 1 of the story of the Great Western Schism

But before we start it is the usual big thank you to all our supporters who have either signed up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or who have made a one-time donation on histryofthegemans.com/support. It is you who keeps this show free and clear of ever more irritating advertising. This show does not expose you to online psychologists, room sharing or crypto exchanges. Has anybody ever found out why there is an inverse correlation between the quality of a brand and the ubiquity of its podcasting advertising? Anyway, today we thank Alex G., Bruno P. Djark A., Charles Y., Daniel N., Kurt O. and Kai B. who have already signed up.

And with that, back to the show

I occasionally choose to split my stories into two parts, one where I talk about what happened and one where I talk about what it meant for the political, economic or cultural fabric of society. When it comes to the Western schism, this is not an option, it is the only way to do it. Since resistance is futile, let’s start with part 1, what the hack happened.

Let’s go back to 1303. As you may remember – mainly because I mention it in practically every episode for the last 6 months, the popes had moved to Avignon after the Slap of Anagni – if you do not know what that was, go back to episode 92 – Papal epilogue.

For 70 years the popes resided in this gorgeous Provencal city, very much enjoying the safety and security that came with the French monarch being just across the river and the murderous Roman aristocrats hundreds of miles away. Though the popes did not intend to stay for long, they gradually built themselves suitable accommodation. The Palais des Papes, the papal palace in Avignon was begun by the rather austere pope Benedict XII and then hugely expanded by the much more worldly Clement VI and his successors. By the late 14th century the Papal palace covered 15,000 square metres making it the largest and most splendid residence in the whole of Europe. It was built both as a fortress and as a palace, so its walls were 3metres thick and it sports a total of 12 towers, one of which was originally 60 metres tall. At the same time it held a grand audience hall where the pope received ambassadors as well as an enormous papal chapel used for religious ceremonies and the conclave for the election of a new pope.  All very comfortable, safe and secure, basically the exact opposite of what Rome looked like at the same time.

But as there is no free lunch, not even for a pope, this safety and security came at a price. And that price was submission to the wishes of the French crown.

The first pope to reside in the South of France, Clement V was made to put his predecessor on trial for heresy on the French King’s demand. If that wasn’t enough, that same pope signed off on the dissolution of the Templars that resulted in a raid on this rich chivalric order by the French king and the burning of its Grand Master and several others.

So, not that comfortable after all. Clement V’s successors were working hard at extracting themselves from the French dominance. One of these efforts led to the election of emperor Henry VII, the forefather of Karl IV, Wenceslaus and Sigismund who lifted the house of Luxemburg from mere counts to the royal and imperial title. Episode 146 if you want to check it out.

But ultimately the pope could not really be independent as long as he remained within arrow shot of a French garrison. So all throughout this period the popes talked about going back to Rome. The problem was however, that Rome and the Papal states had slipped out of the control of the papal administration. Many of the larger cities, like Bologna, Ferrara and Perugia had first turned into city communes and then became Signorie ruled by autocratic dictators. Rome itself had also asserted its independence, being ruled by the a senate that was dominated by the great Roman families, the Colonna, the Orsini and several others. There had even been a popular uprising led by Cola di Rienzi or Rienzo that did however last only for a brief period. (see episode 159)

It took a Spanish Cardinal, Gil Álvarez Carrillo de Albornoz, who fought tirelessly over a period of 13 years, from 1353 to 1367 to restore papal control over the Patrimoni Petri. He made liberal use of sell swords who had been released from duty when the hundred-years war went into its hiatus. These men were in equal measure effective as they were cruel. And they were also entirely coin operated. As long as Albornoz had money, he was able to subdue one town or region after another. Whenever money was short, activity slowed down and the process went into reverse.

These companies of mercenaries were a serious menace, because if they had not secured a new contract for their services, they went freelance. They would appear before the gates of a city with their siege equipment and even guns and make an offer the citizens could not refuse, pay us some fine gold and we will go elsewhere or endure a siege followed by a sacking. The Companies did even threaten Avignon itself and forced the pope to pay them off, twice! And each time they received not only gold but also forgiveness for their sins.

But bottom line was that by 1365 the papacy had regained sufficient control of Rome that they could go back. The pope at the time, Urban V, left Avignon on April 30, 1367 and arrived in the Holy City on October 16th. Though the French king had told him that he would be crucified upon arrival, as St. Peter had been, Urban survived his journey.

He spent 2 years in Rome, but without Albornoz who had died in 1367, he was unable to control the rebellious cities. Even Rome rose up against him and by the end of 1370 he was back in Avignon, where he then promptly died – a punishment for his cowardice as various saints and mystics claimed.

The next pope, Gregory XI, vowed to get back to Rome for good. But it took him seven years to rebuild his authority in the papal states. It also did not help that relations between the church and Florence had deteriorated. That was in part due to the success of Gregory’s troops that left Florence feeling threatened. And in 1374 the pope prohibited the export of grain to Florence where famine had broken out. Anti-papal, or more specifically anti-French pope sentiment reached fever pitch culminating in a war between Florence and its oldest ally, the papacy. The Florentines called it the war of the seven saints, referring to their own leadership against a godless pope.

This war was going well for Florence. One papal city after another joined the Florentine League calling for a return of their ancient liberties. Ultimately only Rome itself stood with Gregory. To relieve his lands from occupation, Gregory hired two of the greatest mercenary companies of the time, the Bretons and John Hawkwood’s White Company. Just in case this sounds familiar, the “Golden Company” in Game of Thrones is modelled on Hawkwood’s soldiers. The two companies did meet with some success, mainly by burning down the countryside around Bologna and starving the city into submission.

The real turning point came when the Breton company was staying in their winter quarters in the small town of Cesena. As so often happened, one of the mercenary soldier ended up in a brawl with some local butchers. The brawl expanded as both sides called upon their friends for help. Within hours the citizens of Cesena  were running round shouting “death to the Bretons and the pastors of the church”. The papal legate who was in charge of these military operations, a certain Robert of Geneva withdrew his remaining forces to the citadel and called Hawkwood to come to his aid. And Hawkwood arrived a few days later with all of his 4,000 well trained mercenary men, their highly polished armour sparkling in the winter sun. By the time the day was out, the shine had come off their armour and their white surcoats were drenched in blood. How many citizens of Cesena perished in the massacre is unknown. People across Italy told each other about the countless women who had been raped, about babies whose heads were smashed against walls and unimaginable bestialities committed by these monsters. And they kept repeating the name of the man who had overall command at Cesena, the cardinal legate Robert of Geneva who they said had run around with his mercenaries shouting “I want blood, Blood! Blood! Kill them all!”. Remember this name, it may come back again.

The timing of the massacre at Cesena could not have been worse. Because just weeks earlier Pope Gregory XI had finally made landfall in Italy. There are multiple depictions of Gregory XI’s entry into Rome on January 17th, 1378, all showing him arriving at his splendid palace on a white horse or mule, handing out gold coins whilst bystanders, bishops, cardinals, monks and nuns watch adoringly. Not quite how it happened. Gregory XI arrived surrounded by 2,000 armed men. Upon brief inspection the Lateran palace, home of the popes for centuries was so dilapidated, there was no way the Holy Father could live there. So, the whole cavalcade turned and set off across the Tiber to the Vatican City. There suitable accommodation could be found. And that is where the popes have lived ever since.

The massacre of Cesena may have been another nail in the already rickety coffin of the papacy, in particular its French speaking popes, but it did break the spirit of the Florentine League. The war of the seven saints was over and the pope had regained the Patrimonium Petri.

And that is when he died.

What happened next has been disputed, less by contemporaries then by French and Italian historians for centuries.

Gregory XI, when he saw his end approaching issued a papal bull changing the terms of the papal election to make sure a new pope could be elected almost instantly after his death. Many authors interpret this as Gregory being afraid of a Schism and hence wanted a swift, if unconventional election. I find that quite honestly nonsense. If he had indeed been afraid of a schism, legitimacy of the newly elected pontiff should have been at the forefront of his mind. Hence he would have left instructions to make sure that every aspect of this conclave would be in accordance with the letter of canon law. By suggesting an expedient election, even one without a formal conclave if necessary, he made it even more likely the election would end up contested.

In any event, the cardinals decided to hold a formal conclave. They met in Saint Peters, all 16 of them. Four of them were Italians, one Spanish and the rest are often called French. However, within that group there were 5 from the Limousin region. The reason for that was that 3 of the last 4 popes had been from the Limousin area and these guys were all their nephews and other relatives. Hence the other French, led by Cardinal Robert of Geneva, the butcher of Cesena, there he is again! wanted anything but another Limousin pope. This faction also included the Spanish Cardinal, Peter de Luna, another name worth remembering.

As the conclave opened and the popes marched across St. Peter’s square they saw a large crowd of Romans who made their wishes clear – “Romano lo Volemo” we want a Roman. Some would later write that they shouted much harsher words than that, something along the lines of “If you do not give us a Roman, we will kill you all”.

Once the doors had closed the conclave begun in earnest. Robert of Geneva had already canvassed his colleagues and – realising his hands were still a bit too blood drenched to put on the papal mitre, is alleged to have declared that quote “We shall have no one else as pope than the archbishop of Bari”.  The Limoges faction too realised that they had no chance to push their own candidate. So the cardinal of Limoges rose and declared quote “I propose the election of a man to whom the people cannot seriously object and who would show himself favourably to us….I elect the archbishop of Bari to be pontiff of the holy and catholic church and this I do freely and willingly” end quote. Cardinal Orsini, another one who had hoped to move up in the church stakes, resigned himself to the inevitable, and declared he would vote with the majority.

Who is this archbishop of Bari everyone was so keen on? His name was Bartomolmeo Prignani. He was, as the name indicates, an Italian. Not a Roman, but a man from the kingdom of Naples. The reason everyone in the college of cardinals could so readily agree on him was that they all knew him. Prignano had spent the last 14 years in Avignon as a diplomat for the curia and was recently elevated to vice-chancellor for Italy, aka he was the guy with the key to the moneybox. He was an insider. Someone who had been useful and deferential to these great princes of the church in the past and who they expected he would continue to be exactly that.

There was only a bit of a technical problem. Prignano wasn’t in the Vatican and without his consent his election could not be formally concluded and announced. The cardinals immediately called for him to come to the palace along with a number of other prelates, so as not to give away their decision. It took a while for Prignano to get across the city that was teaming with people. The crowd outside was now getting restless. They saw prelates arriving, some of them French. Rumours went around the cardinals had chosen another Frenchmen. The shouts “we want a Roman, we want a Roman” grew louder and the crowd moved towards St. Peter.

Meanwhile the cardinals returned to a chapel inside the complex and moved to formally elect Prignano.

Now this is important, it was after the cardinals had elected Prignano that the crowd burst into the palace, demanding to see who they had chosen. They said “Bari”, but that was misunderstood for another name, a Frenchman. And Prignano was not there yet and could therefore not be shown to the crowd. In the absence of the elected pope, and most likely fearing for their lives, they dressed the 90-year old cardinal Tebaldeschi, a Roman well known to the crowd, in papal robes and shoved him onto the throne. The old man protested, shouting, I am not pope, and I do not want to be an anti-pope, the archbishop of Bari is pope.

Whether anyone heard him is unclear, because all the other cardinals had run away and left Tebaldeschi on his own with the mob. Some made it to Castel Sant Angelo, others went back to their fortified houses and the future pope, Bartolomeo Prignano, or as we should call him now, pope Urban VI, hid in a small chamber inside the bowels of the Vatican palace. The crowd sacked the palace and then moved to the home of poor Tebaldeschi. It was a longstanding Roman tradition that the people were allowed to clean out the home of a new pope on the night of his election, and they still believed that was Tebaldeschi.

The next day the cardinals, including Robert of Geneva, announced the election of Urban VI and though he wasn’t a Roman, the crowd was satisfied. Over the next few weeks various cardinals announced to all and sundry in Europe that they had freely and legally elected a new pope. On April 18th, 9 days after his election pope Urban VI is crowned and got to work.

And, oh golly, he turned out to be nothing at all what the cardinals had expected. Instead of being that meek and malleable man he had pretended to be for all these years in Avignon, he flipped over into full-on autocratic ruler. And not only that, he developed an unhealthy obsession with his former colleague’s finances.

In his easter Sunday sermon he condemned churchmen who were perennially absent from their posts whilst still collecting their benefices – a bit rich from a man who had been away from his archbishopric for 14 years. But Urban got the bit between his teeth. He tells the cardinal of Amiens that he should live a more modest life and please stop taking bribes from foreign ambassadors. And if not, he would strip him of his cardinal’s rank. He called cardinal Orsini a sot and had to be physically constrained from hitting the cardinal of Limoges in the face.

In the following weeks his outbursts became ever more extreme. He would have shouting matches, again with the cardinal of Amiens who he had singled out as the worst of the lot. One time when he was again screaming and cursing with his head turning from red to purple, Robert of Geneva demanded the pope treated his cardinals with a bit more respect – or else. Urban’s response was to threaten his cardinals with excommunication, even excommunication without the traditional three warnings.

One after another the cardinals slipped out of town under the pretext of the unhealthy climate. They gathered at Anagni. By August 13 of the 16 cardinals who had elected Urban VI were in this pleasant little town about 65 km from Rome. Of the other three who had elected Urban VI, one had died and two had returned to Avignon. They invited Urban VI to join them, but he refused.

It was apparent that Urban VI had not only changed, but in the minds of many cardinals had become mentally incapacitated. Modern historians are split down the middle, some believe he had a psychotic episode brought on by the sudden realisation of the enormity of his office, others see him as a pious pontiff trying to reform the church and weed out its corruption.

The cardinals faced a dilemma. Under canon law, the only reason for a deposition of a pope was heresy. And that charge could not be made to stick, in part because Urban VI had been a papal diplomat who had never voiced any theological opinions one way or another. Calling him incompetent or not compos mentis was simply not a viable argument under canon law.

But they did very much regret their choice and wanted to get rid of him. So they resorted to another canon law concept, which was that acts made under duress were invalid. On August 9, 1378 the cardinals declared the election of Urban VI null and void as it was made out of fear of the Roma mob outside. As a consequence the papal throne was vacant. The 13 cardinals present in Anagni then elected one of their own, the cardinal Robert of Geneva, the butcher of Cesena to be pope. Robert took the name Clement VII.

We could now go into a lengthy discussion about the legitimacy of this act and many historians have. Some argue that the fact the crowds broke into the Vatican and the cardinals only escaped by putting papal robes on cardinal Tebaldeschi proves that the threat to their lives was real. Others point to the cardinals treating Urban VI as pope in the months after the election and even admitting that quote “if he had behaved differently, he could have remained pope”.

For what it is worth, the catholic church believes that Urban’s election was valid and that all popes that followed the Avignon obedience were anti-popes. I personally could not care either way, nor did the contemporaries in the 14th century.

The only thing that mattered was that we now have two competing popes. This is not the first time this had happened, but on most previous occasions the schisms had occurred as a consequence of the conflict between the papacy and the emperor. This one is unusual, because it resulted from an internal conflict within the church. Being the total pedant I am, I would like to point out though that there was at least one precedent, the conflict between Innocent II and Anaclet II. That too was a conflict within the church or at least amongst rival factions in the city of Rome – episode 46 if you want to check back.

But I digress.

Robert of Geneva, now pope Clement VII left Italy after a few weeks and settled back into Avignon. And so did all the other cardinals. Urban VI compensated for the loss by appointing 24new cardinals. Clement VII took control of the papal administrative apparatus, which had largely stayed back in Avignon, whilst Urban VI built an entirely new papal infrastructure. The Western Christian world was now divided into the Roman obedience, i.e., lands that recognised Urban VI as the legitimate pope and the Avignon obedience, that are the parts who believed Clement VII was the rightful pope.

So, who was recognising which pope?

The loyalties of at least two geographies were fairly predictable. Almost all of Italy sided with Urban VI. After the massacre at Cesena, no Italian wanted Robert of Geneva as their spiritual guide. And these considerations were overriding even the political calculus that had compelled Florence and others to wage the war of the seven saints against the papacy. Queen Joanna of Naples was initially leaning towards Clement, but her people made it abundantly clear to her that they would not support such a stance and Naples -minus Joanna – went into the Roman  camp.

The key question was then whether France would side with Clement VII. Robert of Geneva was a cousin of King Charles V of France, and the rulers of France have never hid the fact that they preferred the papacy to remain in Avignon. The duke Louis of Anjou had warned Gregory XI against going to Rome, where he would “indeed cause great harm to the church were he to die there”. But Charles did take his sweet time to decide, calling an assembly of learned men and clergy to advise him. The French bishops abbots and university doctors knew what was best for them, and advised their king to support the pope in Avignon.

The rest was then tit for tat. If France supported Clement, then England sided with Urban. If England sided with Urban, Scotland sided with Clement. The empire was a more complex place with the house of Habsburg showing Clementine sympathies, and the Luxemburgs following Roman obedience, as did Poland and Hungary. The Spanish kingdoms went for Avignon, which meant Portugal went for Rome, and so forth and so forth.

Basically the papal schism became part of the political fabric of Europe, just another thing competing monarchs and princes could disagree on.

And almost as soon as the schism started, discussions began over how to end it.

These discussions did not emanate from the papal courts apart from demands that the respective other “false” pope stepped down, a proposal that obviously led nowhere.

The leadership in the discussion fell to the intellectuals of the day, which meant the doctors of the universities, and most senior amongst these, the university of Paris.

Since the popes and their courts did not differ in their interpretation of scripture, the debate wasn’t theological, but purely a question of canon law. And canon law, as we just heard did not contain provisions for the deposition of a pope except for heresy. And neither pope, for all their other failures, could be accused of heresy.

Therefore the simplest, if slowest option was to wait for one of the two pontiffs to die and then unify the church around the survivor. Urban VI was the first to die in 1389 after more of a decade of raging and ranting, tormenting and torturing. He fell off a mule and never recovered. He was not the most popular pope and his sarcophagus almost ended up as trough for the papal horses when St. Peter was remodelled.

But the opportunity to end the schism was lost, in part because king Wenceslaus failed to prevent the cardinals from electing a successor to Urban VI, who took the name Boniface IX.

In 1394 it was Clement VII’s turn to bite the dust. This time the powers to be reacted quickly. The royal council sent a letter to Avignon demanding the cardinals were to refrain from electing a new pope. The letter arrived, but the cardinals ignored it. Instead, they elected Pedro de Luna, the one Spaniard at the conclave of 1378 as pope Benedict XIII. The only nod to the royal demand came in the form of a solemn oath by the new pope that he would strive to resolve the schism, even if that involved his own resignation.

The policy of waiting for one pope to die clearly did not work.

The French government with the support of its clergy and university then pursued what they called the “via cessionis”, the idea being that both popes were made to resign at the same time. For that to work, the various monarchies supporting the two obediences needed to agree. And by 1397 it looked as if that could be achieved. A truce with England was concluded that brought king Richard II on board. The other prominent supporter of the roman pontiff was king Wencesalus IV. He too joined the coalition after that fatal meeting at Rheims, where he spent most of his time in state of drunken stupor. But hey, he seemed to have agreed.

So delegations went out to Avignon and to Rome demanding both popes resign. Guess what, neither did.

Now the French get really angry. If Benedict XIII wasn’t willing to go voluntarily, then he needed to be forced. In 1398 France declared what they called a subtraction, i.e., they decided they would no longer recognise Benedict XIII as the legitimate pope. 13 of his cardinals crossed the Rhone taking with them the papal seal.

But Benedict XIII was one of the most stubborn if not the most mulish man ever. Even though he had lost his most important supporter, he did not budge. The increasingly exasperated French rulers resorted to military might and besieged the papal palace in Avignon. It had been a long time since a temporal ruler had besieged a pope, the last was probably Barbarossa’s fateful siege of Rome in 1169. (episode 57)

But Benedict XIII still did not budge. The palais de Papes, as I mentioned at the beginning of the episode was as much fortress as it was palace. And even with guns, the French failed to take it. In the end the two sides came to a compromise. Benedict XIII was allowed to remain in his palace in Avignon, but under house arrest. French soldiers patrolled the city and blocked the gates. That less then dignified situation lasted until 1402 when Boniface escaped to Provence where he found protection. Several of the Spanish kingdoms that had deserted him returned to his obedience, even the cardinals trickled back into his camp and in 1403 the kingdom of France recognised him as pope again.

Meanwhile his adversary in Rome did not have a great time either. Boniface IX had inherited Urban’s quarrel with the kingdom of Naples that included a variety of exceedingly cruel murders, sieges and battles, all most unbecoming to a Pontiff.

Now that Benedict XIII was restored to power he felt magnanimous and sent a proposal to Boniface IX. The two contenders should first refrain from making new cardinals and then meet in person to end the schism. That did not happen becasue in 1404 pope Boniface IX died.

Everybody, including the leading churchmen had enough of the schism. The Roman cardinals offered not to elect a new pope if Benedict XIII resigned. Fat chance that would happen. Did I mention that Bendict XIII was a bit stubborn?

So the Roman cardinals elected Innocent VII who died a year later. Another opportunity. Again the cardinals on the two sides tried to get Benedict XIII to step down. Again, this intractable, pig headed, obstinate Spaniard said no.

But he at least offered to meet and discuss the abdication. As a stopgap the Roman cardinals elected Gregory XII whose sole purpose was to resign as soon as a deal was struck. Benedict XIII travelled to Italy to meet said Gregory XII at Savona. But on the appointed date, Gregory was 200 miles away in Siena. A new meeting was scheduled for Portovenere, but on that day Gregory was in Lucca and so it went another two or three times.

Finally Gregory XII dropped his guise and declared he would never resign and that his cardinals should stop scheduling these pointless meetings. Why did he do that? Not because he was convinced of his own superiority as pontiff, but because his greedy family wanted more time to suck the papacy’s treasury dry.

That was too much for Gregory’s cardinals who left him and met up with Benedict XIIi’s cardinals, who too were realising how intransigent their boss had become.

Having exhausted every other avenue, the church finally arrived at a solution that had already been proposed by two German theologians, Heinrich von Langenstein and Konrad von Gelnhausen. These had been the leading lights of the university of Paris and would later found the universities of Vienna and Heidelberg respectively. But way back in 1381 they had proposed to convene a church council to resolve the schism. At the time this was rejected as under canon law only the pope could convene a council. Heinrich and Konrad’s argued that it must be possible to convene a council in periods of the absence of a pope, for instance during the election period. And hence that there are circumstances a council can be convened without papal invitation.

It took until 1409 after all the endless back and forth, the failed meetings, the broken promises, that the university of Paris came round to their view. Papal invitation or not, the cardinals called a church council for March 1409 in Pisa.

And this was an impressive gathering, the largest church council since the great Lateran Council of 1215. 24 cardinals from both obediences, 84 archbishops and bishops plus the proxies of a further 102, 128 abbots and the proxies of 200 more, the general superiors of the four monastic orders as well as representatives of 13 universities across Christendom. And of course the ambassadors of all the great princes of europe, except for the Scandinavian, Scots, Neapolitans and the Spaniards.

To the surprise of pretty much no one, the council declared on June 5th 1409:

Quote “This sacred synod, acting for the universal church, and as court in the present case against Peter de Luna and Angelo Corrario, once known as Benedict XIII and Gregory XII….decrees they were and are schismatics, nourishers of schism and notorious heretics and that they have deviated from the faith and have committed notorious crimes of perjury by violating their oaths…For these reasons and others they have proved themselves unworthy of all dignity and honour, including those due to the papal office. …This synod deprives, deposes and excommunicates Peter and Angelo and forbids them to act as supreme pontiff. This synod declares the Roman see vacant”. End quote.

Hurrah, fantastic. The schism is over. Both popes are deposed. All we need to do now is elect a new one and mother church is at long last reunited.

And that they did. The cardinals of both obediences, holding hands in new found unity and, as representatives of the church council, elected Peter Philargi, the archbishop of Milan who took the name Alexander V.   

Their deed done the council declared to meet again in three years’ time to debate much needed church reform. Pope Alexander proceeded to Bologna to receive the allegiance of the city, the largest in the papal dominion.

Alexander V was 70 years of age, hence much younger than the recently deposed popes which made it such a shock when he died shortly after entering Bologna.

All could still have worked out fine had the cardinals accompanying Alexander V had chosen a more suitable successor. The one they chose was however Baldassare Cossa, a man of let’s say chequered past. He had been a naval commander in his youth and rumour had it that he did do a spot of piracy on the side. Other stories went around about his fondness of the ladies, whether he indeed had seduced 200 in Bologna as was claimed by his detractors is however doubtful, purely on the grounds of time constraints. Then there were the questions around Alexander V’s mysterious early death, the vast bribes paid to the electing cardinals and so forth.

John XXIII as the new pope styled himself entered Rome in 1411. The deposed Gregory XII cowered in the town of Gaeta but held on to control over bits and bobs in Italy, the empire, Poland and Lithuania. Meanwhile Benedict XIII could still rely on the Spanish kingdoms and Scotland. Despite all the effort, the schism still was not over.

In 1413  John XXII lost his hold on Rome when the Neapolitans marched in. The Pisan pope fled to Florence and began a peripatetic life that led him to Constance in 1414 where the next church council was to be held. But that is a story for another time. For now we freeze at the point where Europe has three popes.

Next week we will talk about what the implication of all these shenanigan were for the relationship between church and state, the relationship between monarchs and their diets and parliaments, the defence of europe against the Ottomans and the way people thought about god and all that.

If you want to pass the time until then by listening to old episodes, why not go back to the schism between Innocent II and Anaclet II in episode 46 or Barbarossa’s fateful siege of Rome in episode 57.

Before I go let me just remind you that you can support the podcast by going to histyoryofthegermans.com/support where you can either sign up as a patron or make a one-time donation. And just remember, from November Apple will add a 30% surcharge to your donation if you sign up using your iPhone. So go to your trusted old computer and do it there.

Transcript Part 2

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 167 – The Great Western Schism (Part II), which is also episode 4 of season 9 “the Reformation before the Reformation”

When the Great Western Schism was finally resolved at Pisa and Constance, Christendom rejoiced.

Or so we have been told. But was it really such a devastating, catastrophic event that left the papacy mortally wounded, so impaired that it crumbled when next the power of the pope “to bind and to loosen” was questioned?  Or was it just an affair, a temporary misunderstanding created by some drafting error in canon law that prevented the removal of an incapacitated pope?

Me thinks that is worth investigating even if it means diving deep into theology and canon law. But do not worry we will also do a spot of fiscal policy just to lighten things up a bit.

But before we start le me remind you that the History of the Germans is advertising free thanks to the generosity of our patrons. And you can become a patron too, either by signing up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support. And thanks so much to David W., Steven M., Kira V., Hanyu H., Marco C., Stephen and Anne Elise who have already taken the plunge

And with that, back to the show

Last week we looked at the sequence of events that made up the western schism up until and including the council of Pisa in 1409. But this is the same as looking at a bunch of revelers dancing on a suspension bridge. Yes, checking out their crazy moves and wild antics is entertaining, but the true story takes place underneath, in the vibrations that put the bridge into an uncomfortable motion, a motion that might or might not loosens the anchorages and weaken its structural integrity. Not much may be happening for weeks, months, even decades afterwards, but wait for the next time and the whole construction may collapse into the ravine…

That is what we are looking at today, the impact of the schism on the solidity and durability of the most powerful of medieval institutions, the church of Rome.

If you open up say the Encyclopedia Britannica or similar publication, you will find sentences like this quote:  “The spectacle of rival popes denouncing each other produced great confusion and resulted in a tremendous loss of prestige for the papacy.” Wikipedia goes one step further and says: quote “this dissension and loss of unity ultimately culminated in the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century”.

That is quite frankly what I always believed and have been taught in school. But reading modern scholars you will find a more restrained perspective. Donald Logan concludes in his Church in the Middle Ages Quote: “what happened then [i.e., in the 15th century] was not decay and decline, as often had been said, it was rather a period of unusual richness. A richness in which the church shared and to which it contributed”. Joelle Rollo-Koster a scholar who has spent a large chunk of her career on the Western Schism makes the point that for most peasants and burghers the schism was not a major source of anxiety. If they were living in the empire, they would have been told by their priest, their bishop and their king that the true pope was Urban VI and that the excommunicated usurper in Avignon was antichrist. And if you lived in France, you believed the same, just the other way around.

For most lay people there was no confusion. They weren’t asked to make a choice about either the obedience to follow or the content of the faith itself.

Even further on the “the schism did not matter” side is the Catholic Encoclypedia who calls it a “temporary misunderstanding…fed by politics and passions”. Well, they would, wouldn’t they. Or one of my favorites, the medievalist Walter Ullmann who reduces it to a “serious defect in the law of the church which provided no constitutional means of dealing with an obviously unsuitable pope”.

So, who is right, the ones who say the schism was a fatal blow to the papacy that became a major stepping stone to the Reformation or those who said it was an aberration that was repaired within a few decades, or are both sides right in their own way?

This is the History of the Germans Podcast, not the history of the papacy and certainly no seminar on canon law. So we have our limitations. But though we cannot get to the bottom of things, we can at least ask four fundamental questions which – at least in my view -determine whether something has fundamentally changed or not, namely:

  • Did the constitutional role of the pope change due to the schism?
  • Did the schism change role of the clergy?
  • Did the perception of the church by lay people change due to the schism?
  • Did the schism change the European political landscape?

Sounds fair? In which case, let’s dive right in.

Did the constitutional role of the papacy change because of the schism?

To answer that we need to first look at what the role of the pope had been before the schism. And that gets us straight back to pope Gregory VII, you know the one who had left emperor Henry IV to freeze outside the gates of Canossa for three days. If you are a very faithful and observant listener to the History of the Germans, you may remember that this Gregory VII had not only humiliated an emperor, but before doing so had put together 27 “statements of facts” about what a pope is and what he can do. Episode 32 if you want to go back.

And being a pope, Gregory VII conclusion was a little one-seded. A pope can do anything and anything he does is always right. He did elaborate a bit more and declared things like  “That of the pope alone all princes shall kiss the feet”, that he could depose bishops, kings and emperors  and that “the Roman church has never erred; nor will it err to all eternity”.

Gregory VII and after that his successors came  to this conclusion based on Matthew 16:18 and 19. That is the passage in the bible where Jesus said: “And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it. 19 I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.”

From that canon law concluded that Peter was the immediate successor of Christ, his vicar on earth, the holder of the keys to heaven. He had practically the right to bind anyone on earth which must mean he had unlimited power over both spiritual and temporal matters. This power, said Gregory VII was then handed down undiminished along the line of Peter’s successors.

Having absolute power over all Christendom, Gregory concluded in his statement  #19: “That he himself (i.e., the pope) may be judged by no one” and as #16 “That no synod shall be called a general one without his order”.

I am no theologian, but it might have helped Gregory to read on a further three verses in the same chapter where Jesus said to Peter:  “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.”  But hey, who wants to read that bit…

Bottom line is that Gregory VII had declared the pope all powerful and the church infallible. And that view was repeated over and over again until it was in actual meaning of the word, gospel. Everybody had forgotten that 30 years before Gregory the emperor Henry III had deposed 3 popes, not for heresy but for simony. or that previous emperors had called and presided over church councils or that church councils had judged popes, like they had done at the famous cadaver synod of 897.

The great imperial popes of the 12th and 13th century filled Gregory VII’s premise of absolute power over Christendom with political reality when they smashed the Hohenstaufen emperors. Even though this external political power may have been significantly weakened by the move to Avignon, the notion that the pope was the absolute ruler of the church, cannot be judged by anyone and was the sole convener of a general council remained canon law.

Arguably during the time in Avignon administrative control of the papacy over the local churches tightened considerably, in particular under the leadership of John XXII and Benedict XII.

So by 1378, everybody agreed, the pope was the absolute lord over the church. He could not be judged for anything, well apart from heresy which would place him outside the community of the faithful. And nobody could convene a church council, but the pope. This approach had served the popes well for 300 years since Gregory first wrote down his 27 statements of fact, but would turn into a never ending nightmare when the schism of 1378 hit.

Le’s just recap how all this came about. In April 1378 the cardinals had elected the archbishop of Bari, Bartolomeo Prignani as pope Urban VI. 4 months later the cardinals changed their minds and the exact self-same voters who had elected Urban VI declared Urban’s election to have happened under duress and was therefore null and void. That done they elected cardinal Robert of Geneva as pope Clement VII.

In the subsequent legal debate scholars argued furiously about whether or not the Roman mob was indeed baying for the cardinals’ blood and whether that had influenced their decision. But that is the wrong question. Because that was not the reason the cardinals started the schism.

The reason was that they were regretting their choice. They did not like how Urban VI treated them, that he shouted at them, demanded they change their lifestyle and threatened them with dismissal or excommunication. And some, if not the majority had genuine concern about the mental state of the new pontiff and the impact this will have on the church as a whole.

If the church had been a parliamentary democracy, the problem would have been easy to resolve. Urban had lost the majority support in the decision making body and that would be the end of him.

Even in a presidential democracy this problem can be resolved through an impeachment or a declaration of mental incapacity under the 25th amendment. Well, at least in principle.

But the church was neither a parliamentary nor a presidential democracy. It was the exact opposite. The pope was an autocratic ruler whose legitimacy came from nobody else than from god. Jesus had said so himself.

Therefore the only way to remove a pope was to claim he was a heretic. But that was not a viable way the cardinals could go, since Urban VI was all sorts of things, but he wasn’t a heretic. Hence they resorted to the last remaining legal construct, the general principle that legal acts performed under duress are null and void, which is what got us this rather pointless debate over the bloodthirstiness of the Romans.

So the real question is, why did the cardinals not create a new legal framework that included a process for dismissal of a pope for mental weakness? Well, that is where the rubber hits the road.

If there could be some sort of court that could rule that Urban VI had lost his marbles, well that would be a judgement that was explicitly ruled out by Gregory VII’s statement #19 that the pope quote “may be judged by no one”.

Ok, so why did they not do away with just statement #19 and declared that uncanonical? That does not work either. Because Gregory VII had formulated these not as theses of opinions or doctrines, but as “statements of fact”. Hence dropping one of the statements means all the other statements could be changed too. And once you change these, the whole concept of the absolute power of the papacy crumbles into dust.

And nobody wanted that, not the cardinals, not the bishops and abbots, not the doctors of the university of Paris. Why, because if the most sacred of monarchs in the Christian world could be made to stand trial like any mere mortal, the medieval world would be turned upside down. The moment the pope was elected and crowned he ceased to be a normal human, but an embodiment of the church. The same was true for kings. Ernst Kantorowitz who you may remember from episode 93 had highlighted that there were two bodies of the king, the earthly, temporal man of flesh and blood and the spiritual embodiment of the kingdom itself.

What is at stake here is not just the question of whether Bartolomeo Prignani or Robert of Geneva,  was the legitimate pope, but what it means to be a pope and what it means to be a king.

Figuring out how to end the schism had never been an intellectually difficult question. This was not an intractable conflict as we have them today between nation states or different kinds of religious or ethnic groups. Everybody agreed that there should only be one pope. And it was also clear that if the popes would not resign simultaneously that the way to move forward was a general church council. The two doctors Langenstein and Gelnhausen had proposed that as early as 1379. That was not the difficult part.

The difficult part was to decide to do it. Because by calling a general church council without a papal endorsement, and then empower the council with the right to judge and depose a pope, you tear apart Gregory VII’s statements of facts, the constitution of the Roman church they had adhered to for 3 centuries. It was a huge leap into the unknown which took 40 years and the exhaustion of all other possible avenues to a resolution before the cardinals were desperate enough to call the community of the faithful to Pisa for 1409.  

What were they afraid of? One was simply that if a church council representing the community of the faithful could decide the fate of a pope, could a parliament or imperial diet representing the community of his subjects depose a king? Would all this result in a complete reassessment of medieval society?  

Did it? Well what we do know is that in 1409 a general council of the roman church was called, not by either of the popes, and we know that this council was very well attended and that it decided to depose Benedict XIII and Gregory XII.

By doing so, the church had removed first statement #16 about the convocation of a council and statement #19 about judging the pope. And by doing so it had put into question not just these provisions, but the entirety of Gregory VII’s statements, the constitution of the papacy as it had existed until then.

So yes, the schism did change the constitutional role of the papacy. Later popes will work hard to roll back the conciliary movement, but the genie is out of the bottle. The successor of St. Peter is no longer the undisputed sole authority that can bind on earth what will remain bound in heaven. That is a big thing and another one of these doors we go through from the Middle Ages to the Early Modern period.

Now let’s go to question #2, did the role of the clergy change in the wake of the schism?

Now I have been going on about lay piety as a huge driver of not just church politics but medieval politics in general. We should never forget that at this time the afterlife was something of crucial, daily significance to everyone. Crucial and daily. These people did not build cathedrals capable to hold double the city’s population just to keep up with the Joneses, but out of a deeply felt desire to get closer to god.

And because the afterlife was of such immediate urgency, laymen placed so much importance on the intermediaries they were told they needed to interact with the powers above. They wanted their monks and nuns to observe the brutally harsh rules of St. Benedict and the other monastic founders. They wanted their priests to be pious, well read, celibate and morally upstanding. Why, because these were their advocates before god who were to make their case that they should have a shortened time in purgatory and be ultimately admitted to Elysium. And who wants to have a mumbling, stumbling advocate who only got the job because his dad had bought it for him?

By 1378 the laity had been demanding all these things for 300 years and instead of things getting better, things had gotten even worse. Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales which date from between 1387 and 1400, right throughout the time of the schism are full of tales of drunk monks, dissolute priests and greedy papal officials. So are the stories in Bocaccio’s Decameron, written a bit earlier and the Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles of Antoine de la Sale that were a little later. 

What to do? Sure one could demand another wave of church reform as had happened in the 10th, the 11th and the 13th century bringing us the Cluniacs, the Cistercians and the Dominican and Franciscan friars. But all of these had become fat and lazy, maybe not all, but many. What guarantees that another attempt would finally yield the desired outcome? So radical alternative notions did gain traction.

The first of these alternative thinkers was abbot Joachim of Fiore (1135-1202). He was one of those preachers of the Apocalypse who predict the end of the world for a specific date. His date was the year 1260 which obviously passed without much incident. But what sets him apart from your run-of-the-mill doom-monger and left a lasting impact was his idea of how the apocalypse would unfold.

Joachim of Fiore predicted that antichrist would first return as an evil pope. And that after his fall an eternal gospel would be revealed that would completely replace the organized church. Humankind would be granted direct knowledge of god and his words and deepest meanings. There would hence no longer be the need to speak to god through a priest.

Despite these rather explosive predictions, the church did not condemn his views wholesale and his writings kept circulating long after his death. His idea that the organized church could be done away with completely was picked up by the next generation of non-conformist thinkers. William of Ockham (1287-1347) and Marsilius of Padua (1275-1342) openly questioned the all-encompassing power of the pope as we have already heard in episode 151.

Marsilius believed that all temporal power came from the “human legislator” who conferred its exercise to the prince through a process of election. In this construct there was no place for temporal power of the pope and his clergy. Their role was confined to the spiritual world. His concept of the powerless church goes so far that no bishop or priest should have any coercive jurisdiction over any clergyman or layperson, even if that person was a heretic.

For Marsilius the schism would have been a piece of cake. He even stated explicitly in his main works the “Defensor Pacis” or Defender of the Peace, that any bishop or prelate could excommunicate a pope who was in breach of divine law and could call a general council that represented the community of the faithful. Gregory VII would be spinning in his grave.

Marsilius’ comrade in arms, William of Ockham summarized the criticism of temporal papal power most succinctly when he said quote: “If Christ had so ordained and disposed matters that the pope possessed a fullness of power of such an order that as to extend under all circumstances, over everything…, the law of Christ would be a law of terrible slavery..” end quote

Though Marsilius and Ockham had both been excommunicated, their writing circulated widely and were incorporated into the academic discussion.

One of those who picked up where they had left off was John Wycliff (1328-1384), a true radical. He believed not only that the church had no temporal power, but that it did not even exercised control over the spiritual activity. According to his teachings, everybody was allowed to preach and everybody was allowed to administer the sacraments, without the need of a church license. The only source of inspired teaching was to be the bible. And, to top it off, he demanded that old chestnut, that the church should live in apostolic poverty. Wycliff was popular with the leading men of England at the time because he gave them license to raid the churchmen’s houses, the abbeys and cathedrals. Wycliff’s thesis were quickly banned by the church, but he did enjoy enough royal patronage that he could end his days in relative comfort.

We will talk a lot more about Wycliff and how his thoughts travelled to Bohemia in a separate episode.

The one strain I wanted to follow here though led to a man whose writings are today almost forgotten but had been the absolute bestseller of the early days of printing. I am talking of course of Thomas à Kempis, a preacher born in Kempen in the Rhineland who was most active in what is today the Netherlands.

Though Thomas and his adherents remained within the official church, his teachings about the importance of the clergy were not far off Wycliff’s. He had been a Brethren of the Common Life, a congregation of men and women who did not take monastic vows, but who committed themselves to living  modest, even perfect lives. They were not necessarily anti-intellectual but they took the view that acts were more important than thoughts.

As Thomas a Kempis wrote: “It is not learned discourse but a life of virtue that brings you close to God. I would rather feel contrition than know how to define it”. His main works, the Imitation of Christ contains dozens and dozens of such straightforward suggestions about how to live a life that pleases god. It goes all out on “love thy neighbor” and “do not think of yourself as better than others, however obviously wicked they may seem”.

His works struck a chord with many lay people who were disappointed with the organized church and sought advice about what really mattered to their spiritual wellbeing.

As you know I am not a very spiritual, let alone an organized church person, but the more I read of Thomas a Kempis, the more I warm to him.  His preferred place was apparently in “hoexkens ende boexkens” meaning in a nook with a book. A man after my heart!

So how does that tie back to the schism? Well it does in as much as the schism was resolved by a church council, a congregation of the faithful. This congregation of the faithful had deposed the highest representative of the clergy in Christendom, the pope. If that was not only possible but also canonical, then the collective of the believers acting as one must rank above the clergy. Which means the individual sinner can gain access to God without the intercession of a priest.

That does not mean that the schism did away with clergy for good, except for heretics like the followers of John Wycliff, but it has definitely opened up routes of interaction with the deity that were previously inconceivable.

Ok, we are nearly done. The next topic to discuss is #3/4: Did the perception of the church change due to the schism?

I must say that I found Joelle Rollo-Koster’s argument that most people did not care that much about the schism itself quite compelling. The fact that there are two popes is only a problem if one is expected to make a choice between the two. But hardly anyone had to make this choice. The choice was made for you by your king who had sided with one or other obedience.

Sure, the antics of these popes were most undignified and damaged the honor of the office. But there is no denying that papal behavior before the schism did not have much to commend itself. The move to Avignon, the submission under the French crown,  the relentless persecution of the chosen emperor Ludwig the Bavarian, the loss of focus on church reform etc., etc., had already undermined the standing of the papacy before the schism had even begun.

But that does not mean the Schism had no impact. This impact did however not come through the propopagande machines, but rather prosaically through fiscal pressures. Yes, it is the money – again.

After the move to Avignon the church finances went through three main iterations.

When the popes first arrived, they had to urgently find a replacement for the revenues they used to draw from the papal states in Italy. These had not been very extensive to start with since the hold of the papal administartion over these places was at best pretty loose. But now, when they were hundreds of miles from Rome, they became non-existent.

The way they, specifically popes John XXII and Benedict XII made up for it was by creating a highly sophisticated administration that collected tithes, annates and all sorts of other church taxes across the christian world.  There is a reason the palais de papes in Avignon grew to 15,000 square metres. That was not to accommodate the cardinals who lived in their splendid mansions in Avignon or across the river in Villeneuve. The space was needed to house the hundreds of scribes, notaries and archivists who kept the great ecclesiastical money extraction machine running.

In particular the papal archives were of huge monetary importance. Having a database of how much each archbishop in the German lands paid in tithes to Avignon helped to figure out who was trying to cheat the system. A set of accounts going back decades helped to determine the expected annate, that first year income a new bishop had to send back to the papal coffres. A well-oiled system of courts that could provide quick and reasonable judgements provided a source of generous court fees. And so on and so on.

In these first decades in Avignon papal finance not only rebounded but became a fountain of coin comparable to any of the great monarchs  of the time.

Things got more challenging when Clement V came to the papal throne. He was a great noble, used to the finer things in life. So expenditure of the papal court went through the just recently rebuilt roof. If you go to Avignon and look at the beautifully frescoed rooms, that is all Clement V. At the same time the famines and ecological disasters of the 14th century deflated church incomes. Things got infinitely worse with the Black Death that wiped out a third of Europe’s population and created an agricultural depression.

Whilst the top line contracted, military expenditure spiraled upwards. On the one hand was the defense of Avignon itself that had become a preferred target of the mercenary companies. As a reward for their thievery the popes hired these same mercenary companies to help reconquering the papal states. War, as our old friend Karl IV kept saying, was by a country mile the most expensive activity one could undertake.

Therefore by the time Gregory XI made his less than triumphal entry into Rome in 1378, papal finances were already on their knees.

The schism, to say it mildly, did not help. The majority of the papal administrators and their archive had stayed behind in Avignon. Hence Clement VII could settle into an existing operational infrastructure. However, since his obedience was less than half of that of his predecessors had overseen and his expenses were roughly the same as before, his deficit snowballed.

But not quite as badly as that of his opponent in Rome. Urban VI and the Boniface IX had to recreate a whole papal administration from scratch without access to the expertise and crucial information left behind in Avignon. If that wasn’t enough, the political situation in Rome was infinitely more fragile than in Avignon. The Roman popes of the schism were involved in a constant military conflict with the kingdom of Naples meaning the papal court and all its administrators had to pack up their papers and desks and leave Rome on several occasions. That was the revenue side. On the cost side, the Roman popes had inherited the cost of controlling the papal states, meaning they had to foot the astronomical bill of the mercenaries.

Bottom line is that both the papacies were constantly broke, as was the third line of popes after the council of Pisa.

All these papal administrations had to squeeze their remaining sources of income ever harder. One was one was to declare a holy year for 1390 that brought almost 200,000 pilgrims to Rome, all spending freely and donating generously. That required a change of tack since Holy years were only supposed to take place every fifty years but by some ingenious calculation that was now 33 years which in an even weirder sort of mathematics gets us to 1390.

Calling a Holy Year outside the calendar is comparatively harmless. Where it got more problematic was when the papal administration demanded ever higher annnates. An Annate is the obligation to pay the first year’s income from a new benefice to the pope. That did not only go down badly with the new officeholder himself, but also with all his dependents who had to wait a year before the full benefit of the church income came to them. If a senior clergy on a collision course with the papacy wasn’t problematic in itself, it also encouraged the prelates to flog their flock hard to cover the shortfall.

And finally, there was the really big problem that really undermined the church, the indulgences. Indulgences were nothing new. They had first been used on a major scale to finance the first crusade in the 1090s. Many of the chivalric orders used indulgences as a means to fund their operations in the Holy Land.

The perceived benefit of indulgences relates to the concept of purgatory. Purgatory is a sort of holding pattern where the soul is being purified before it is admitted to heaven. This waiting period can be very long, thousands, if not millions of years. But help is at hand. You could drastically reduce the time in purgatory if you receive an indulgence, effectively a share of the treasury of merit the church had gathered through the great works of the saints.  These indulgences were initially granted to the faithful who had undertaken good works, for instance had gone on crusade. But very quickly these efforts could be replaced by a simple monetary transaction. The church developed detailed tables where you could see how many years of purgatory relief one would buy for how much money, not in the 16th century but much earlier.

As we go through the 14th century the financial pressures on the church under the schism led to a huge expansion in the sale of indulgences. The church created a dedicated job, the pardoner, a sort of travelling salesman in indulgences.

Though clearly a lot of people bought indulgences and believed they worked, still the whole system became subject to ridicule. In Chaucer’s Canterbury tales the Pardoner, the indulgence salesman, gives an honest account of his business, quote:

 “By this trick have I won, year after year,

An hundred marks since I was pardoner.

I stand like a clerk in my pulpit,

And when the ignorant people are set down,  

I preach as you have heard before

And tell a hundred more false tales.

My hands and my tongue go so quickly

That it is joy to see my business.

Of avarice and of such cursedness

Is all my preaching, to make them generous

To give their pennies, and namely unto me.

For my intention is only to make a profit,

And not at all for correction of sin.” End quote.

There you have it, the fiscal pressures of the schism drove up a massive expansion in the use of indulgences, and we all know where that ended.

There we are, only one last and final topic left: Did the schism change the European political landscape?

One of the most astounding moments in the story of the schism is when the kingdom of France “subtracted” its obedience from Benedict XIII in 1398. This term subtracting basically means that the kingdom of France no longer recognized pope Benedict XIII nor did they recognize any other pope. The official reason they did that was to force the pig-headed Benedict XIII to resign and thereby open the possibility for a reunification of the church.

This was a seminal moment in as much as it left the kingdom of Frace without a pope. Effectively a break with Rome, even if it had always been intended to be only temporary. This break with Rome had many features that we will find in the actual Reformation. For instance during the subtraction the king of France claimed what used to be the papal income for himself. Some churches and monasteries were expropriated to cover the cost of the ongoing 100 Years’ war or to pay for the lavish court.

The subtraction did not stick though. The crown squeezed the peasants and burghers even harder for church taxes and tithes than the papal administration had done. And they did not provide much in exchange. The prelates were still incompetent and corrupt, if not more so, the market squares were awash with indulgences, and, worse of all, the country was in a state of sin having definitely broken with Christ’s Vicar.

The population rebelled against the subtraction, supported by a fraction inside the dysfunctional French court and France returned to obedience under Benedict XIII. They did it again to support the council of Pisa, but that was a much shorter interlude.

But the precedent was set.

And there was something else. The decades of the schism where France had a different pope to its neighbors in England and the Empire created an even deeper sense of unity amongst the French, mainly the Northern French people.  I am still loath to talk about nationalism in the modern sense, but “nations” in a distinctly late medieval sense were becoming a source of identity during and because of the schism. And we see that not just in France but across Europe. Going back to the beginnings of the schism, it is the demand of the Roman people for a roman or at least an Italian pope and the opposition of Florence against a French pope that could be identified as signs of a beginning sense of national belonging.

At the council of Pisa the delegates sorted themselves into Nations similar to the nation concept you find at medieval universities. When we will talk about the council of Constance, the question what role these nations should play in the voting process will become crucial. There is clearly something afoot – which again is another step out of the Middle Ages into the early modern period.

That is it. Four out of four. The great Western Schism had changed the face of the church and the face of europe profoundly. It wasn’t just an affair, a temporary misunderstanding. It was a wild ride that loosened the anchorages of the medieval world. Not that the structure collapsed right away, but it was fatally weakened.

The schism was however not the only major event at this transition point. Once the imperial popes of the 12th and 13th century had crushed the emperors, they had inherited not just their rights, but also their obligations. And one of these obligations was to defend Christendom against foreign, specifically non-Christian invaders. That is what Otto I had done on the Lechfeld when he defeated the Magyars and what had won him the imperial crown.

Now it was the pope’s job to organize the resistance against the new threat from the east, the Ottoman empire. The Ottomans had crossed the Bosphorus in 1352 and had expanded rapidly across the Balkans, and by the time of the schism had surrounded Constantinople. The last Byzantines sent increasingly desperate messages to the west. In 1400 the emperor Manuel II Palaeologus came in person to Europe to ask for military assistance and even offered to bring Constantinople under the obedience of the bishop of Rome.

This Ottoman threat and how the king of Hungary, Sigismund of Luxemburg the son of Karl IV, half-brother of Wenceslaus the Lazy and future convener of the council of Constance deals with it will be the subject of next week’s episode. I hope you will join us again.

Before I go, just a last reminder that the History of the Germans is advertising free thanks to the generosity of all our lovely supporters. If you want to join this band of brothers waving the flag of history, you can do so by going to historyofthegermans.com/support and choose the option that best suits you.

The Decline of the House of Luxemburg

“And since these especially ruinous harms to all of Christendom are not to be tolerated or suffered any longer, so we have completely agreed – with a well-considered disposition, by means of much and various discussion and counsel, which we have earnestly undertaken concerning this among ourselves and with many other princes and lords of the Holy Empire, for the assistance of the Holy Church, the comfort of Christendom and the honour and profit of the Holy Empire – that we want fully and specifically to remove and depose the above-written Lord Wenceslas as a neglectful procrastinator, dismemberer and one unworthy of the Holy Empire from the same Holy Roman Empire and all the dignities pertaining to it with immediate effect.”  End quote

So concluded the Prince Electors of Cologne, Mainz, Trier and the Palatinate on August 20th 1400. King Wenceslaus IV, son of the great emperor Karl IV, king of Bohemia and duke of Luxemburg was to be deposed for his “evil deeds and afflictions [that are] are so clearly manifest and well known throughout the land that they can neither be justified nor concealed” end quote

How could that happen. Last time we looked at the house of Luxemburg, they directly held almost a quarter of the German lands, controlled two of the seven electoral votes, had manoeuvred themselves into pole position to gain the Hungarian and the Polish crown, with even a long-term option on Austria, Styria, Carinthia and Tyrol . But now, a mere 22 years later, the great second Carolingian empire lies in tatters. How is that possible? That is what we will look at today.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 165 – Wenceslaus the Lazy and Ruprecht of the Empty Pocket, which is at the same time episode 2 of season 9 “The Reformation before the Reformation”

“And since these especially ruinous harms to all of Christendom are not to be tolerated or suffered any longer, so we have completely agreed – with a well-considered disposition, by means of much and various discussion and counsel, which we have earnestly undertaken concerning this among ourselves and with many other princes and lords of the Holy Empire, for the assistance of the Holy Church, the comfort of Christendom and the honour and profit of the Holy Empire – that we want fully and specifically to remove and depose the above-written Lord Wenceslas as a neglectful procrastinator, dismemberer and one unworthy of the Holy Empire from the same Holy Roman Empire and all the dignities pertaining to it with immediate effect.”  End quote

So concluded the Prince Electors of Cologne, Mainz, Trier and the Palatinate on August 20th 1400. King Wenceslaus IV, son of the great emperor Karl IV, king of Bohemia and duke of Luxemburg was to be deposed for his “evil deeds and afflictions [that are] are so clearly manifest and well known throughout the land that they can neither be justified nor concealed” end quote

How could that happen. Last time we looked at the house of Luxemburg, they directly held almost a quarter of the German lands, controlled two of the seven electoral votes, had manoeuvred themselves into pole position to gain the Hungarian and the Polish crown, with even a long-term option on Austria, Styria, Carinthia and Tyrol . But now, a mere 22 years later, the great second Carolingian empire lies in tatters. How is that possible? That is what we will look at today.

But before we start, I want to thank all of you for your unwavering support throughout these almost 4 years. Without your encouragement and support, this show would have ended up on the pile of discarded podcasts long ago. I am particularly excited about the recognition this humble effort is receiving from the academic community. Specifically I want to thank professor Duncan Hardy who has given me an advanced look at his forthcoming book on Law, Society and Political Culture in Late Medieval and Reformation Germany, which is the source of the quotations at the top of this episodes and which will appear regularly throughout the upcoming episodes. Thank you so much! And at the same time I want to thank my patrons who have been so kind to sign up on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or have made a one-time donation at historyofthegermans.com/support. If you want to join them, you can do so at the price of jus a latté per month. But make sure you sign up from anything but your iPhone, as the evil kneecappers at Apple will charge you an additional 30% if you do so.

Special thanks today go to Chris E. J, Gilles L., John Thompson, Peter McCloskey, Martin Engelmann and Jim-V who have already signed up.

And with that – back to the show

An when I say back, we go all the way back to November 29, 1378. Emperor Karl IV lay on his deathbed, surrounded by his family and in particular his eldest son, Wenceslaus. Though Karl was an old man by the standards of his time, he was 62 years old when he passed, he only had his sons quite late in life. Wenceslaus, the eldest was 17, his half-brothers Sigismund and Johann were 10 and 8 years old. Apart from the three boys there were three sisters, Catherine, much older than the boys and married to Rudolf IV of Austria, plus Anne and Margaret, both still children. There were also some elder members of the House of Luxemburg, Karl’s brother Wenzel, the duke of Luxemburg and Brabant, and Karl’s nephews Jobst and Prokop of Moravia.

If we disregard Wenceslaus age, this was a pretty good setup from a dynastic point of view. Enough spare males to continue the family line should something untoward happen and two unmarried sisters to deploy for diplomatic gain.

Those of you who have listened to the last season will not be surprised to hear that Karl IV thought long and hard about this constellation and set everything up for success.

For one thing, he had given the younger sons enough assets and tasks to keep them from clashing with their older half-brother. Sigismund was engaged to Maria, the daughter and heiress to the kingdoms of Hungary and Poland, two of the largest and most difficult to manage monarchies in the whole of Europe. On top he was given the margraviate of Brandenburg, a land ravaged by decades of civil war that may need a lot of TLC, but came with a most valuable electoral vote. The youngest, Johann was given a modest duchy centred on the city of Görlitz, enough to live comfortably, but not enough to be a challenger to his brothers. His job was to support one of the other two – and being the spare should some unexpected harm befall any of them.

But most importantly, Karl IV had removed all obstacles previous sons of emperors had to deal with. Wenceslaus had been crowned king of Bohemia when he was barely 3 years old. At the age of 15 he was elected and crowned king of the Romans, an exercise that had cost his father literally millions, money he raised by handing over almost all that was left of the already much diminished resources attached to the royal title.

Hence when his father died, Wenceslaus immediately stepped up into the role of ruler of the empire. No tense election, no further bribes and no civil unrest. Just a smooth transition from father to son. The last time that had happened was almost 200 years ago, in 1190 when Henry VI took over from Frederick Barbarossa.

And when Wenceslaus came into the office on the Monday after the funeral, all was ready for him. His father’s advisors, some of whom had been with the house of Luxemburg for decades were happy to serve the young king. The chancellery, the office that kept the records and managed the correspondence was one of the most experienced and efficient in medieval Europe. The territories he ruled directly and that he could rely on for money and military resources were the richest and largest princely territories in the empire.

What could possibly go wrong? Well – everything!

What Karl IV could not protect his son from were the circumstances – and as Herodotus said, “Circumstances rule men; men do not rule circumstances.” You may counter with the great eastern philosopher Bruce Lee who famously said “To hell with circumstances; I create opportunities”. But that was the difference. Karl IV had been a Bruce Lee, Wenceslaus was not.

Much has been said and written about Wenceslaus, most of it less than flattering. But when he was 17, he was one of Europe’s best educated monarchs. He spoke multiple languages, had been tutored by some of the finest minds in the kingdom, including Johann von Jenstein, the bishop of Meissen and later archbishop of Prague, and his father had involved him in imperial politics a very young age.

And now this well trained and well set up young man was confronted with some of the most intractable problems of the already quite challenging 14th century. Two of these Problems were unfinished business left to him by his father and a further two had hit the in-tray more recently.

Let’s take them one by one:

First up is the thorny issue of the General Peace, the Landfrieden. As so often in history and current affairs, everybody wants peace but not everybody wants the same peace.

Karl IV and now Wenceslaus wanted a peace led by imperial institutions, meaning a structure where the imperial court and an imperial enforcement mechanism ensured that the roads and rivers are safe to travel on, feuding stopped and virgins, widows and orphans remain unmolested.

The cities liked the idea of safe roads and all that but were worried that the imperial courts and their police forces would be staffed with knights and princes, rather than their own people. Plus, so far no General peace had materialised despite decades of trying. Instead, the robber barons still stole all that was left of a traders wares after the extortionate princely tolls had been paid. So, the cities preferred to organise their protection themselves by forming leagues, first the Swabian League, then the Rhenish league and finally the Saxon League.

The princes too liked safe roads and rivers and all that, but would very much like to have their judges and their forces providing that peace. That would give them both the court fees and a hold over the cities to better shake them down for cash.

And finally, the knights, squeezed financially by the fallout of the Black Death, diminished socially by changes in military tactics and pushed around by both princes and cities resorted to robbery and feuding to make a living. So, I stand corrected, not everyone wanted peace, particularly not the knights. And to defend their ancient rights to plunder and robbery, or freedoms as they called it, they formed knightly associations like the Joergenschild in Swabia.

The second leftover issue was how to organise the kingdom of Bohemia. As I have been repeating to total exhaustion, being king of the Romans came with almost no resources. Hence to be an effective king of the Romans and later emperor, one needed their own territories in good order. Good order mainly means structured in a way that it produced enough coin to hire mercenaries, bribe electors and pay off competing claims. For Wenceslaus that meant he needed to turn the bundle of feudal rights he inherited into that we would recognise as a state, so not a medieval kingdom that worked through a cascade of personal obligations, but one where everybody below the king was a subject. This is what every monarch in Europe and every prince in the empire was trying to get to.

Karl IV had made a move into this direction in 1355 with his ambitious law code, the Majestas Carolina. But that project had to be almost immediately abandoned in the face of baronial opposition.

Bohemia was a particularly difficult place to introduce such a modern structure – in inverted commas. In Bohemia the great magnates, the barons, held their land free and unencumbered. They weren’t vassals of the king and as such they administered justice in their lands and if taxes were imposed, they kept as much as 60% if the funds raised for themselves. Bohemia was administered by a committee comprising the four great offices of state and the king that met four times a year. And the four great offices were usually staffed by members of the baronial class. Within the committee the king was just a first amongst equals.

The only parts where the king had sovereign authority was over his vassals who controlled a relatively small proportion of the kingdoms territory, his own estates and the Bohemian church.

Karl’s father, the blind king John of Bohemia had clashed hard with the Barons and ended up being forced to submit to their power. Karl too was unable to shift the formal structure, but by using his charm and cunning, and his elaborate concept of the crown of Bohemia as separate entity from the king as a person, he had been able to extract money, soldiers and even occasionally concessions from the barons. Wenceslaus wanted to keep pace with the rival dynasties in the empire, hence he believed he needed to break the power of the barons and streamline Bohemia along French or English lines.

Now we come to issue #3, the papal schism. For once, this was neither Karl’s nor Wenceslaus’ fault. But it was still Wenceslaus problem. As the schism became ever more intractable with Europe being split down the middle between supporters of the Roman and the Avignon Pontiff, the people were looking for an authority that could resolve the issue. And in search of an arbiter, public opinion harked back to the olden days when the emperor had been the shield and protector of the church. That concept may have dropped into the executioner’s basket when young Konradin’s head was forcibly disconnected from his body, but now that the world was in such dire straits, it was time to call the emperors back to their holy duty.

As if that was not enough, there was also #4 the dying of the great kings. It began with the death of Kazimir the Great of Poland in 1370, Waldemar Atterdag of Denmark in 1375, Edward III of England in 1377, obviously emperor Karl IV in 1378, Charles V, the Wise of France in 1380 and Louis the great of Hungary in 1382. Their successors were either young, like Richard II and Wenceslaus, female, like Jadwiga or Poland and Maria of Hungary or, most devastatingly, suffering from serious mental health issues in the case of Charles VI of France.

The succession crises this caused all across Europe created distractions that prevented the main actors from focusing on the great calamity that was the schism. And closer to home neighbours were dragged into protracted wars of succession. In Wenceslaus case that was the succession to the Hungarian and to a lesser degree the Polish throne.

Lots to do for the young hero of this episode.

And things are off to a reasonable start.

Wenceslaus proposed a concept for his general peace at his first diet in 1379. There was not as much resonance as he may have hoped, but it might be the beginning of something. The problem was that the different parties, the cities, the princes and the knights disagreed with each other on everything except for one thing, which was that they did not want what Wenceslaus wanted. In 1384 a peace was concluded between the princes and cities, the Heidelberger Stallung, which Wenceslaus rejected. But 3 years later Wenceslaus chancellor did endorse this solution, though we do not know where the king really stood on this..

Wenceslaus was politically close to the cities, in large part because that is where his parsnip was buttered. Of all the sources of income for a king of the Romans, the city taxes was the only thing left. But the cities did not want him. So, when he was trying to make himself the head of one of the city leagues, the Swabian league specifically, they turned him down.

That upset young Wenceslaus, but he did what he usually did in this situation, nothing.

Despite the Heidelberger Stallung, conflict between princes and cities worsened, leaving only a military solution. That happened on August 23, 1388 at Döffingen where a princely force led by count Eberhard of Würrtemberg routed the forces of the Swabian League. 3 months later the princes defeated the Rhenish League as well. Though they had won, the princes failed to impose their solution on to the country. The war had exhausted their resources.

At which point Wenceslaus could step in and declare his General Peace at Eger/Cheb which sets out that quote : “It has also been agreed, and we desire this before all other things, that when people travel through the Holy Empire or the areas encompassed by this land-peace, all roads, churches, monasteries, parsonages, churchyards, mills and especially all ploughs with horses and that which belongs to them and vineyards and fields and all things agricultural should be safe and be left in peace, and that nobody should attack, injure or damage them. And should anyone contravene this, it should be treated as robbery, and the land-peace should proceed against them as is written above.”

The empire was divided into seven circles each led by a superior officer appointed by the king. This officer would convene courts drawn from the cities and the princes to adjudicate.

That is a great result, one that had eluded his great father. Ok, he got there because the other parties were exhausted, so not exactly all his doing, but then, a success is a success. So congrats Wenceslaus.

Unfortunately that was the only bit of his reign that warrants congratulations.

Let’s move to agenda item #2, the Great Western Schism. What was Wenceslaus contribution there? Well, nothing I am afraid. The problem was that for him to have the authority to resolve the schism, Wenceslaus needed to be either a magnetic personality that everyone was willing to defer to or hold the imperial crown. Wenceslaus had neither. The personality issue is not exactly his fault, the lack of an imperial crown however sort of was. He had made multiple attempts to gather the funds for an imperial Romzug to get crowned by Urban VI and then later Urban’s successor. But all of these efforts came to nought. And the reason lay in part in his lack of drive and the other in his ability to make a right old mess of the other two problems, the general peace and the reorganisation of Bohemia. And whilst these problems remained at the forefront of royal policy, Rome had to wait. And whilst Christendom was waiting for the king of the Romans to get down to the Tiber, the schism became worse and worse. Again and again did the princes demand that Wenceslaus take the lead in resolving this fundamental crisis of Christianity. But he was dithering. He was officially a supporter of the Roman pope, by now Benedict the XIII, but when Benedict called upon him to protect him against Neapolitan incursions sponsored by the French and the Avignon popes, he failed to come help. Why, maybe because he did not want to annoy the French or maybe because he simply did not know what the right course of action was. This lack of decisiveness, the constantly shifting of allegiances without rhyme or reason was first confusing and then deeply irritating his negotiation partners.

So, what did he do all this time, from 1378 to 1400. Well mostly he tried to bring Bohemia to heel. His father had coalesced the Bohemian magnates around the idea of the Bohemian crown as a sacred object representing the kingdom itself. The barons were much more amenable to the idea of serving the kingdom and its patron, Saint Wenceslaus than the person of the emperor.

What Wenceslaus lacked was the ability to maintain ad exploit that elaborate intellectual structure. Instead he took the barons head on.

He watered down the role of the committee of the four great offices of state that ran the country. He created new offices that took over some of the Committee’s responsibilities. Then he staffed the new offices with loyal servants recruited amongst the lower nobility and even foreigners. Another move was that he claimed the right to seize lands of barons who had died without legitimate offspring. That was customary in the case of a vassals, but a terrible infringement of the ancient rights of the free Bohemian barons.

Things got even more heated when Wenceslaus got into a quarrel with the archbishop of Prague, his old tutor and advisor Johann von Jenstadt. This quarrel was as so often over land and privileges. It reached boiling point when Wenceslaus attempted to create a new bishopric separate from Prague staffed by one of his creatures. The archbishop countered this plan by electing someone else for the intended role. Wenceslaus had one of his famous tantrums and had one of the archbishop’s deacons, Johann Nepomuck arrested. Wenceslaus then had Nepomuck tortured, a process he seemingly participated in personally. And finally he had the severely injured prelate tied up and thrown off the Charles Bridge in Prague.

Nepomuck was canonised in 1721 and became the patron of Bohemia and the protector against floods and draughts, which is why you find his statue on so many bridges in catholic Germany.

The murder of Johann Nepomuck was a horrific crime that shocked most of europe, was later cited as one of the key reasons for his deposition, and pushed the Bohemian barons over the line. The question is, why Wenceslaus, who wasn’t a stupid man, did it.

By 1393 the king had badly deteriorated physically and mentally. He had suffered a severe illness in 1388. What made things worse was that his physicians recommended regular intake of alcohol to improve his humours, a prescription that send this already fragile individual down a path to severe alcoholism. In 1393 he narrowly survived a poison attack that further weakened him.

The barons used this weakness to present their grievances and when he refused formed a league of noble lords with the aim to gain control of the main offices of the kingdom, if need be militarily.

Wenceslaus turned to his half-brother Sigismund, the king of Hungary for help and the two signed an agreement to make each other the heirs to their respective kingdoms should one of them die without offspring.

That pushed Wenceslaus cousin, the margrave Jobst of Moravia over the edge, because Jobst had spent some fine gold to become the recognised heir to Wenceslaus. In his anger Jobst joined the league of Bohemian noble Lords and they took Wenceslaus prisoner and sent him to Austria for safekeeping. That was not such a great idea because the duke of Austria was persuaded by imperial princes, led by Ruprecht of the Palatinate, to let Wenceslaus go.

Once Wenceslaus returned to Bohemia, he acted like the proverbial elephant in the China shop, arrested his cousin Jobst of Moravaia, had a number of his enemies executed and even alienated his brother Johann of Goerlitz, pretty much the only member of his family he could trust.  

The whole thing could have resulted in massive civil war, had not been for some fortuitous deaths, including that of his brother Johann from unexplained poisoning. His other brother Sigismund came in as a white knight and negotiated a fragile peace between Wenceslaus, the noble lords and cousin Jobst of Moravia.

And that peace was indeed fragile. In 1397 Jobst had several of Wenceslaus advisors murdered and the lords kept Wenceslaus cut off from the revenues of the kingdom.

And with this we are gradually heading into the fateful year 1400.

But before we get there just a few words about problem #4, the succession to the great kings. We will go through the ins and outs of that in later episodes, but the important point for Wenceslaus was that it incapacitated all the major monarchies in his neighbourhood, France, Poland, Hungary and England. And he needed them to deal with the key challenges, in particular the schism. Moreover, his brother Sigismund was deeply involved with the Hungarian succession which drained Wenceslaus coffers and took up  a lot of headspace. As a consequence his foreign policy became increasingly erratic, swinging back and forth between France and England where the 100 Year’s War had resumed. In one of his worst miscalculations, he made Gian Galeazzo Visconti, the ruler of Milan, a duke. That might have been intended to smooth his way down to Rome, but had the opposite effect. The other Italian states, Venice, Florence in particular were extremely concerned about this improvement to their rival’s status and hence blocked any attempt of Wenceslaus to move south. Equally the imperial princes were appalled that such a parvenue and ruthless dictator was admitted into their exclusive club.

And that is where we are in the year 1397. The last time Wenceslaus had shown his face in the Empire had been in 1387. Since then, 13 years of nothing. Diets had taken place in his absence and had even sometimes been called without his permission. Even if asked to appoint an imperial vicar to deal with the most pressing affairs in his absence, he had either not responded or appointed members of his family who too were extremely busy with other things. The Landfrieden, his great achievement of the 1380s had not been extended and was effectively void. He was embroiled in Bohemian and Hungarian affairs. But the worst accusation was that he had not resolved the schism, not even made an effort to resolve it. The empire, represented by the Prince Electors, concluded that  they had no king.

Wenceslaus made one last ditch attempt. He called a diet in Frankfurt over Christmas of 1397. But that backfired badly. Wenceslaus wanted to join a French plan to depose both popes and elect a new one. The imperial princes told him in no uncertain terms that if he did that, they would depose him. He nevertheless travelled to Reims to negotiate with the French. Another catastrophe. He was stinking drunk most of the time and agreed to all that the French regent demanded. You want to marry your son to the sole heiress of the entirety of the Luxemburg possessions – sure, let’s do that. We should jointly solve the schism by firing both popes, let’s go ahead. And so on and so on.

That is where the prince Electors ran out of patience. This guy was not only useless, but dangerous. So they looked round for a suitable anti king. Their choice was King Richard II of England. But Richard turned them down. Richard had some issues of his own that left him with only 2 more years of on the throne.

After Richard’s refusal the prince electors decided to depose Wenceslaus and elect one of their won. Deposing an elected and anointed king was however no easy task. Negotiations over whether and how to do it had been going on for almost a decade, before the archbishops of Cologne, Trier and Mainz gathered together with the Count Palatinate on the Rhine and took the plunge. In an elaborate and properly legalistic document they list all of Wenceslaus crimes and shortcomings, all “unbecoming his title as Roman king” justifying his removal.

What is interesting about this document is not so much the fact that a king was deposed. That had happened before, most recently with Adolf of Nassau. But it is remarkable in as much as it tried to square this decision with the Golden Bull. Though the Prince Electors are clearly deviating from the Golden Bull, by referencing it, they reaffirming its status as the basic law of the empire. So, if anyone had won in this, it was the Golden Bull.

The one who did not win in all that was the man they elected to be Wenceslaus’ successor, Ruprecht of the Platinate. Ruprecht was an extremely competent, sober man with a solid political instinct. He had been the dominant figure in the empire during Wenceslaus long absence. He had been the one engineering the Heidelberger Stallung and also the one who had freed Wenceslaus from his Austrian jail. Putting together the coalition of Prince Electors that deposed Wenceslaus was very much his work. He, and his father had been behind the few bits of imperial policy in this period that did actually work.

And he had the right idea. He decided to go down to Rome, get crowned emperor and then wanted to organise a new church council to end the schism.

But what he had not counted on was Karl IV’s great legacy, the stripping down of the imperial assets. Ruprecht simply did not have the money to do anything. His attempt to go to Rome was funded by German and Italian bankers, but ran aground when the Visconti held him off at Brescia long enough for his funds to run dry. He had to return north. After that, he was completely broke. In tavern all across the land he was made fun of as Ruprecht mit der leeren Tasche, Rupert of the empty pocket. He spent his remaining years on the throne in petty feuds with the archbishop of Mainz and efforts to solidify his territories in the Palatinate. At least on the latter he was successful and when he died in 1410, he left behind a consolidated territory along the Rhine and the Upper palatinate around Amberg, a land large enough to fund the construction of the castle of Heidelberg. I spent much of my youth in Heidelberg and so may be biased, but even as a ruin it very much deserves its position a some of Germany’s greatest tourist hotspots. If you get there, seek out Ruprecht’s palace the Ruprechtsbau and impress people by knowing who he was and why he failed.

When Ruprecht died in 1410, nobody seriously suggested that Wenceslaus was still king. Another 10 years of fighting with Bohemian barons, murders, drunken debauchery and ever deeper hatred of his brothers and cousins had left the king with barely more than an empty title that nobody recognised any more.

A new king had to be elected. After the debacle of Ruprecht’s kingship, the imperial princes knew better than to waste their wealth and reputation on this hopeless task. The only candidates were two other members of the Luxemburg family, Sigismund, the king of Hungary and Jobst, the Margrave of Moravia, Wenceslaus closest relatives who had contributed as much to his downfall as his enemies. But that is a story for another time. Next time we will dig deeper into the papal schism, that great calamity of the 14th century that contemporaries thought was as terrifying as the plague.

And whilst you wait you may want to brush up on some of the earlier episodes where we discuss the backstory of how the church ended up in Avignon, that is episode 92 “papal epilogue” or you may want to take a look at the state of papal affairs in episodes 144 to 148 when we talk about Henry VII, his rise to power as a papal champion in defiance of the king of France and is then dropped by the papacy when things got to dicey.  

You can listen to all of these on historyofthegermans.com where you can also support the podcast by signing up as a patron or by making a one-time donation.

Season Opener

On 31st of October 1517 a hitherto unknown professor at the smallish university of Wittenberg published 95 theses. And by doing so, he unleashed a sequence of events that would fundamentally change the face of Europe and still defines communities and nations.

The interesting question about the 95 theses is not why Luther rote them, but why they had any impact at all. Martin Luther stands at the end of a mile long queue of learned and sometimes less learned men who railed against the decadence of the church, called for a return to the actual text of the bible and demanded that the clergy lives like the apostles. But somehow the message on that fateful day in 1517 gained traction across the Christian world in a way no previous attempt had.

Why? That is a question I believe will be the guiding line through the coming seasons. Something about the social, political, cultural, religious and economic landscape of early modern Germany must have provided the cinder on which protestant ideas could catch fire.

You will now ask, why is Dirk talking about the Reformation. The last season ended on the 14th century, a good 150 years before “the day that changed western Christianity”. Aren’t we supposed to go through this chronologically.

Oh yes we are. But as we are moving forward at our accustomed pace we will hit the Hussite revolt that started in 1415. This religious uprising has so many common threads with Luther’s reformation, it may be seen as a dress rehearsal for the actual Reformation. Luther himself declared in 1519 “Ich bin ein Hussite” I am a Hussite.

Spoiler alert, the Hussite revolt did not lead to the fraction of the catholic church, but that makes it even more interesting. What were the circumstances that led the people of Bohemia and many other parts of the empire to take up arms to defend their convictions, how come they were successful and by what means could a reconciliation be achieved? Knowing that will help us understand why a 150 years later such a settlement failed to materialize, dividing Europe into Protestants and Catholics and spurning some of the bloodiest civil wars in history.

To explore the causes and impact of this reformation before the reformation we will take a look at the decline of the house of Luxemburg, the emergence of the Ottoman empire, the creation of Burgundy as a political entity separate from France, the defeat of the Teutonic Knights and the great western schism with its resolution at the Council of Constance where amongst other things Jan Hus was convicted and burned at the stake. We will dive into Jan Hus’ and his predecessor’s thoughts and convictions as well as the military innovations of Jan Zizka and probably a lot more things I have not yet thought about.

That is quite a list of very diverse topics, which is why we will have to change the structure of our narrative. So far our storylines had mainly followed along with the lives of kings and emperors. Not necessarily because they were great men driving events, but because events centered around them, making their lives a good crutch to hang the story on. The period we are now entering was different. In the late 14th and early 15th century the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire were on many occasions tangential to the overall picture or even completely absent from the stage.

To give a proper account we will therefore have to look at things from multiple viewpoints. Events or people who have taken top billing in one episode may make cameo appearances in others, all in the hope of painting a broad picture of this fascinating period in history. It will be challenging, but also hopefully fun and interesting.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to Season 9 – Reformation before the Reformation – The Great Western Schism, the Hussite Wars and the rise of the Ottomans.

On 31st of October 1517 a hitherto unknown professor at the smallish university of Wittenberg published 95 theses. And by doing so, he unleashed a sequence of events that would fundamentally change the face of Europe and still defines communities and nations.

The interesting question about the 95 theses is not why Luther rote them, but why they had any impact at all. Martin Luther stands at the end of a mile long queue of learned and sometimes less learned men who railed against the decadence of the church, called for a return to the actual text of the bible and demanded that the clergy lives like the apostles. But somehow the message on that fateful day in 1517 gained traction across the Christian world in a way no previous attempt had.

Why? That is a question I believe will be the guiding line through the coming seasons. Something about the social, political, cultural, religious and economic landscape of early modern Germany must have provided the cinder on which protestant ideas could catch fire.

You will now ask, why is Dirk talking about the Reformation. The last season ended on the 14th century, a good 150 years before “the day that changed western Christianity”. Aren’t we supposed to go through this chronologically.

Oh yes we are. But as we are moving forward at our accustomed pace we will hit the Hussite revolt that started in 1415. This religious uprising has so many common threads with Luther’s reformation, it may be seen as a dress rehearsal for the actual Reformation. Luther himself declared in 1519 “Ich bin ein Hussite” I am a Hussite.

Spoiler alert, the Hussite revolt did not lead to the fraction of the catholic church, but that makes it even more interesting. What were the circumstances that led the people of Bohemia and many other parts of the empire to take up arms to defend their convictions, how come they were successful and by what means could a reconciliation be achieved? Knowing that will help us understand why a 150 years later such a settlement failed to materialize, dividing Europe into Protestants and Catholics and spurning some of the bloodiest civil wars in history.

To explore the causes and impact of this reformation before the reformation we will take a look at the decline of the house of Luxemburg, the emergence of the Ottoman empire, the creation of Burgundy as a political entity separate from France, the defeat of the Teutonic Knights and the great western schism with its resolution at the Council of Constance where amongst other things Jan Hus was convicted and burned at the stake. We will dive into Jan Hus’ and his predecessor’s thoughts and convictions as well as the military innovations of Jan Zizka and probably a lot more things I have not yet thought about.

That is quite a list of very diverse topics, which is why we will have to change the structure of our narrative. So far our storylines had mainly followed along with the lives of kings and emperors. Not necessarily because they were great men driving events, but because events centered around them, making their lives a good crutch to hang the story on. The period we are now entering was different. In the late 14th and early 15th century the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire were on many occasions tangential to the overall picture or even completely absent from the stage.

To give a proper account we will therefore have to look at things from multiple viewpoints. Events or people who have taken top billing in one episode may make cameo appearances in others, all in the hope of painting a broad picture of this fascinating period in history. It will be challenging, but also hopefully fun and interesting.

But before we start, I have to come to you cap in hand. The History of the Germans podcast is entirely free to anyone to enjoy, even to enjoy without advertising. Which means the funding has to come from somewhere. And that somewhere is the generosity of our patrons who make either ongoing monthly contributions from £2 a month on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or through a one-time donation on historyofthegermans.com/support. And let’s all thank Jean Louis S., Jocelyn H-S, Marina H., Mark S. Michael E. and Miroslav D. who have made such generous one-time donations.

And with that – back to the show

Last season we kicked off with a 10,000 feet overview of where we were, what had happened before and where the tides of history were ebbing and flooding. I think that worked quite well and gives listeners who are coming new to the History of the Germans a chance to catch up. If you are one of them, welcome!

Our starting point for this season is November 1378, most precisely the 29th of November, the day the emperor, king of the Romans, king of Italy and king of Burgundy, Karl/Charles/Karel IV breathed his last.

Why that date? Because we are at a point of transition from the Middle Ages to the early Modern period and Karl IV and his Golden Bull were in many aspects the end point of some key historical trends that had dominated the Middle Ages. But what does transition from Middle Ages to Early Modern actually mean? In what way is this new epoch different from what went on before? The answer is, in almost every possible aspect, economic, social, political and cultural.

Let’s start with the economy. The Middle Ages from the 10th century onwards were a period of sustained economic growth driven by a combination of improving climate conditions, the so-called medieval warm period, and a series of improvements to agricultural techniques, for instance the use of heavier ploughs drawn by horses something made possible by the invention of the horse collar and the horseshoe. Another key innovation was crop rotation that hugely increased yields. And social change, namely the replacement of slavery with serfdom and then with tenancy agreement that pushed productivity.

These improvements drove a rapid rise in population, which in turn brought more and more land under cultivation. For Britain where we have reasonable data, the population rose from 1 million to 5-6 million between the post Roman period and the year 1300. By then about 10.5 million acres had been put under the plough, again a roughly 3-fold increase. At these levels most regions in western Europe had reached saturation levels which led to a huge migration eastwards where almost 10% of the population of the empire left their overcrowded homes in the Rhineland, Flanders, Holland and elsewhere to search for pastures new in what is today east Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Czechia, the Baltic states, Prussia and even further afield.

The medieval warming period ended in the middle or end of the 13th century and by the 14th century Europe was gradually getting colder, a process called the little ice age that peaked in the 16th and 17th century and lasted until the mid-19th century. Severe famines as one has not seen for centuries began in the 1310s. Natural catastrophes became more common. The Grote Mandrenke, the great drowning of men in 1362 killed 25,000, sank the town of Rungholt in Frisia and turned 5000 square kilometers of land into a shallow sea on the Dutch coast, an area far larger than the Ijsselmer and Markermer that remain of it.

The biggest humanitarian disaster was however the Black Death, the plague that killed roughly a third of Europe’s population and kept returning in regular intervals for centuries.

The combination of these two effects, the climate and the plague meant that growth stalled and populations shrunk. Much of the land that had been cultivated in the 13th century was no longer viable in the 14th century. And it was also no longer needed as there were less mouths to feed.

This change in population and economics drove social change too.

The dramatic cull of people during the plague often hit the cities harder than the countryside as people lived close together. For some cities, the Black Death brought about rapid decline, some vanished completely. But those that survived quickly filled up again. They had not lost their economic advantages, which meant there were suddenly a large number of job openings. For many a peasant, tired of paying ever increasing rents to their landlord, life in the city became an attractive proposition. So, these surviving country dwellers left for the bright lights and freedom of the towns and cities. And that not just happen during the great Plague of 1348 to 1352 but again during the subsequent outbreaks that occurred every 10 to 15 years..

That in turn caused some serious problems for the landowners, in particular for the knightly class. They had so far benefitted from the population explosion that had created an almost inexhaustible supply of cheap labor to toil on their estates, either as tenants or as farmhands. But now that well had dried up, first through the disease and then the rural exodus that followed. If they wanted to keep their workforce they had to pay them a fair wage. The Bank of England did an analysis of wages going back to the 13th century and the period of the Black death was the only time before the industrial revolution when real incomes increased. Great for peasant’s pockets but a severe cut to the baronial profit margins, profit margins already depleted by a decline in prices. Prices had dropped because there were simply less people around demanding foodstuff.

As the knights, these embodiment of the medieval world saw their financial resources shrink, they experienced another, even harsher hit to their social standing. For centuries the knight in his metal cocoon riding his mighty warhorse was the Leopard Tank of his day, a weapon so powerful, only another knight could stand up to it. But that time was coming to an end. The battles of Morgarten,  Mühldorf and in Flanders had shown that infantry armed with halberds and cunning could inflict serious damage on armored riders. The success of the English longbowmen at Crecy and Poitiers should have penetrated the minds of the French nobility as much as it did their armor, though they still needed another reminder at Agincourt. Canons appear from the late 14th century, at which point the hegemony of the Knights on the battlefield is well and truly over.

Moreover, tactics changed. The amateurish armies of volunteers that were the mainstay of the Middle Ages were replaced by bands of professional soldiers. The practice began in Italy where the city councils got used to hiring Condottiere to fight their wars rather than sending their precious sons out to the battlefield. The Hundred Years’ war saw the rise of the Compagnie of mercenaries offering their services to either party in the conflict and the civil wars of the Interregnum in the empire were decided by who could hire and pay the best mercenaries.

As the knights declined, their role at the top of the tree, in the councils of the princes and emperors, was taken by the merchants, bankers and lawyers. When in the 12th century Frederick Barbarossa’s main advisers had been the duke Otto von Wittelsbach and Rainald von Dassel, the archbishop of Cologne, 200 years later emperor Karl IV’s chancery was staffed with lawyers from the lower nobility or the city patricians. He listened more to the advice of his Nurnberg bankers who could provide him cash to pay for mercenary armies or his acquisitions, and in whose mansions he rather stayed, than in some drafty castle.

The rise of the merchants and bankers was no coincidence. Trade networks expanded in the 13th and 14th century, ships had become larger, transport costs were falling meaning profits for merchants in the major centers were going up and up. Shipping bulk goods, wheat, herring, wood, ash, base metals even ore became viable businesses alongside the long established trade in spices, furs and beeswax. This was the height of the power of the Hanseatic League that gained a near monopoly on the East-West trade all the way from Novgorod and Bergen to Bruges and London.

A specific area of growth for the German cities, and Nurnberg in particular, were advances in metallurgy. Mining and smelting had always been a key industry in the German lands ever since the silver mines of Goslar opened in the 10th century. But in the 14th century new technologies were developed. One particular breakthrough exploited the fact that most copper ore in Europe contained traces of silver. The secret “Saiger” process developed by a Nurnberg merchant enabled them to separate the two metals. It made the copper purer and hence more valuable and left behind an amount of silver as a windfall. This process was extremely lucrative. Traders could make six times from the sale of the copper and silver than they had paid for the ore.

As economic activity in the cities thrived, they were able to translate this into influence and political independence. Under the feudal system that prevailed across Europe, cities were subject to the ownership rights of the prince on whose territory they were located and whose forefathers had often founded them in the first place. But over time some cities have been able to shake off their overlord. Places like Cologne, Regensburg, Mainz and Strasburg had paid off and chased off their bishops who had once ruled over them and had become free cities. The cities that were located on royal land benefitted from the weakness of the central power. They would proudly declare allegiance to the emperor and, under duress, pay him taxes, but in all other respects these imperial cities were as free as the free cities. And then you have places like Hamburg where the council simply forged a charter that had declared them a free and imperial city and pushed this claim through by force and fortune. But even where formal overlordship remained, as was the case with most members of the Hanseatic League, the cities enjoyed a large degree of freedom at least in the 14th and 15th century.

Which gets us to the political picture.

The great medieval dynasties of the Ottonians, the Salians and the Hohenstaufen had expired by 1268. A centuries long conflict with the papacy over leadership of Christianity and repeated attempts to bring Northern Italy to heel had ended with a comprehensive defeat of imperial power. The last of these emperors, Frederick II had died in 1250, excommunicated, militarily and physically exhausted and increasingly paranoid. His son, Konrad was never crowned King of the Romans and perished in the attempt to defend his kingdom of Sicily against Charles of Anjou, the papal champion. The last of the dynasty, Konradin, died aged just 17 on the executioners block in Naples, having failed to oust the usurper of the Sicilian crown.

After that the empire had no effective leadership for two decades. Two foreigners, Alfonso X of Castile and Richard of Cornwall were simultaneously elected as kings of the Romans, but neither could assert much authority.

In 1273 the prince electors, at that point a still somewhat fluid group, elected Rudolf of Habsburg, a count from the Aargau in modern day Switzerland. Rudolf was a truly impressive figure, a ruthless warrior but commensurate strategist and politician. He had profited enormously from the collapse of Hohenstaufen power, taking over lands and cities previously held by the imperial family. He was however still only a count and his family had been relative parvenues. That may have been the reason the electors chose him, believing he would be a weak ruler who would grant them whatever rights and privileges they desired.

As it turned out, Rudolf was nothing of that sort. He initiated a restitution policy forcing princes and bishops to hand back the formerly royal lands to the king. Peter Wilson estimated that roughly 2/3 of the former imperial resources were recovered.

Rudolf also embarked on a confrontation with the richest and most powerful of the imperial princes, king Ottokar II of Bohemia, the “Golden King”. Relying on the large silver mines in Kutna Hora, Ottokar II had expanded his realm by acquiring Austria, Styria, Carinthia and what is now Frioul and Slovenia. Rudolf outmaneuvered Ottokar and forced him to hand him the Austrian duchies. In a subsequent battle Rudolf defeated Ottokar II who died in the field. The Habsburgs took over Austria which over time became the center of their power.

Upon Rudolf’s death the electors refused to elect Rudolf’s son which would have created a new royal or even imperial dynasty. Instead they chose another little count, Adolf von Nassau. Adolf tried the same trick, this time going after the Landgraviate of Thuringia. But that failed, he irritated the Prince electors who deposed him and called back Albrecht von Habsburg, the son of Rudolf they had previously rejected. Albrecht defeated and killed Adolf and took control of the empire.

Albrecht’s main interest was now to further expand his and his family’s possessions. The golden opportunity was the kingdom of Bohemia where king Ottokar’s family, the Premyslids had died out. There was lot of back and forth, and just when Albrecht was preparing for another invasion of Bohemia he was murdered by his nephew.

Adolf and Albrecht represent a new approach to the role of the King of the Romans. These men looked at the title only as a way to expand their personal wealth, in particular using the royal prerogative to claim fiefs that had become vacant upon the extinction of the vassal’s family. The empire and its interests were clearly secondary.

Their successor was another “little count” in inverted commas, Henry of Luxemburg. And the calculation of the prince electors was again the same as before, let’s get someone with limited resources on the throne and push him around. And again, their gamble did not work out.

Henry VII was cut from a different cloth. He had grown up at the French court and had a much broader perspective. He saw that unless he gained the imperial crown through a coronation in Rome, the imperial title and with it political power over the empire would inevitably fall to the French king.

Henry VII therefore set off for Italy, the first emperor to be crowned in Rome for almost a century. But apart from the coronation, his stay in Italy was a terrible failure. Like his predecessors he was dragged into protracted Italian domestic conflicts that he could not resolve. His army perished before the walls of Brescia, his beloved wife succumbed to disease, and so did he a year later.

But the house of Luxemburg did receive a windfall profit they did not even aspire to. And it was the most valuable of them all, the kingdom of Bohemia. The Bohemian nobles who retained the right to choose their ruler offered the crown to John, the son of Henry VII. Though Henry saw it as a distraction from his main objective, the Roman coronation, he was persuaded to let the Bohemians take his son home as their new king. John of Luxemburg would later become famous as the Blind King of Bohemia whose pointless chivalric deeds at the battle of Crecy gained him the respect of Edward, the Black Prince of Wales.

After Henry VII death, we have another simultaneous election of a king of the Romans, Ludwig of Wittelsbach, duke of Upper Bavaria and Frederick of Habsburg, duke of Austria. In 1322 Ludwig did emerge victorious at the battle of Mühldorf. But by then imperial power was already so diminished, the title, its resources and prerogatives added only marginal advantage to its holder.

The political landscape had become a system of three roughly equal sized power structures. The house of Habsburg centered round Austria and their holdings in South-west Germany, Alsace and Switzerland,  the Luxemburgs as kings of Bohemia and counts of Luxemburg and the Wittelsbachs as dukes of Bavaria and Counts Palatinate on the Rhine.

During the 30 year long reign of Ludwig the Bavarian, the three parties carved up all vacating fiefs between each them. The Habsburgs received Carinthia, the Wittelsbachs Brandenburg and Holand Hennegau and the Luxemburgs Silesia.

Where they clashed was over the county of Tyrol which controlled the important transalpine routes, including the Brenner pass. John of Luxemburg got there first, gaining the hand of the heiress of these lands, Margarete Maultasch for his son Johann Heinrich. However that relationship broke down and Margarete threw the Luxemburger out and married the son of Ludwig the Bavarian, without prior divorce. In the end, after the Margarete’s only child had died, she handed the county to the Habsburgs.

Ludwig managed to keep a lid on all these conflicts until in 1347 the kettle boiled over. The Luxemburg party elevated Karl, the son of the blind king of Bohemia to king of the Romans. Karl managed to overcome his opposition, partially because both Ludwig the Bavarian and the next champion of the Wittelsbach cause died, but mainly through bribery. These bribes were astronomical, adding up to 1.6 million gold florins.

To raise theses funds Karl sold, pawned and granted away almost all that was left of the royal lands and rights. Though he bought some of it back later, the net result was that from now on any holder of the royal or imperial title had to fund almost the entirety of their administration from their personal fortune.

Karl IV reigned for 30 years, a period during which he stabilized the situation in the German lands and issued the most significant constitutional document in the 14th century empire, the Golden Bull.

The Golden Bull did not say anything fundamentally new. It set out that the king of the Romans was elected by a majority of the seven electors, these being the archbishops of Mainz, Cologne and Trier, the king of Bohemia, the duke of Sachsen-Wittenberg, the Count Palatinate on the Rhine and  margrave of Brandenburg. These electors had been set more or less since the election of Rudolf of Habsburg in 1273. All the Golden Bull did was to clarify exactly which branch of the respective houses was allowed to vote, the voting process, location and the like.  It also granted the Prince Electors king-like status in their own lands. They enjoyed all formerly royal rights and privileges in their lands, like the establishment of tolls, the raising of taxes, minting of coins, building of castles and establishment of cities. Their subjects had only limited recourse to imperial justice. Basically they were completely autonomous though still part of the empire. Again, not really a change from the status quo, but a written confirmation of it.

The significance of the Golden Bull lay less in what it said than in what it did not say. The Golden Bull makes no mention of the pope at all. And by this omission it asserts that the pope has no role in the choice of the future emperor. Hitherto the popes had declared an explicit right of approbation, i.e., they reserved the right to reject an election they did not agree with. This was one of the manifestations of the superiority of the popes over the emperors that had been the key intellectual and political battleground of the Middle Ages. 

Pope John XXII and Ludwig the Bavarian had clashed over exactly this question, the approbation. This conflict resulted in the excommunication of Ludwig, his family and in the end the entire empire. Ludwig managed to hold on to his throne and gained the support of the imperial bishops, abbots and clergy in his defiance of the papacy. He even got crowned in Rome, not by the pope or a cardinal, but by the people and senate of Rome, much like the pagan emperors of old. At the Kurverein zu Rhens the electors asserted their right to elect the future emperor without any interference from the papacy. This statement was obviously not recognized by the papacy. But when Karl IV issued the Golden Bull, which in a more elegant way said the same, the pope did not object too loudly.

And that brought the long lasting papal-imperial conflict, that central axis of medieval politics, to an end and laid the foundations for a new constitution of the empire, as yet unknown.

If we sum up the political situation over these 125 odd years from 1250 to the death of Karll IV in 1378, one question should come up, which is, how could the empire afford a hollowed out central authority, squabbling princes, excessive bribery and a papal interdict on top. Why did it not get invaded? Any other state with that level of dysfunction would not have been able to maintain its territorial integrity.

And that gets us to something that nobody ever seems to mention. For almost 300 years, ever since the battle on the Lechfeld in 955, there had not been any external threat to the empire’s borders. This is truly astounding. If you look at France and its constant wars with England, Spain’s Reconquista, the never ending wars between the Scandinavian kingdoms, Poland’s conflict with the Lithuanians and the Teutonic Knights, it becomes clear that in this respect the Holy Roman empire in the 13th and 14th century was an exception.

Basically the empire was exceedingly lucky. On its eastern border Poland had disintegrated into dozens and dozens of smallish duchies ruled by descendants of king Boleslaw III, the Wrymouth. The powers to the east of Poland had been wiped out by the Mongols who themselves made only one brief effort to move west before their urge for conquest died down. So instead of being a threat to the empire, Poland and the east became an area of conquest and emigration for the empire. First the buffer states of the Slavic Wends between the Elbe and the Polish border was taken over by Saxon nobles who founded Brandenburg and the various Saxon duchies. Some of the Slavic elite like the dukes of Mecklenburg and Pomerania were coopted into the empire. The Teutonic knights were called in by a Polish duke to deal with the pagan Pruzzi and established the order’s state in Prussia.

Equally the Hungarians had integrated into the West and Bohemia was part of the empire. The Scandinavians in the North were preoccupied with their constant wars of succession, often finding themselves dependent upon the counts of Holstein or the Dukes of Mecklenburg or dealing with the Hanseatic League.

Finally in the west, the kings of France had focused on their internal consolidation rather than outward expansion. Their two 100 years wars with their largest vassal, the king of England left little resources for forays eastwards. As for the south, Italy was a key battleground for medieval imperial politics, but that was always a civil war between the papal and imperial faction, not a war of conquest.

As we head into the end of the 14th and the 15th century this picture changed considerably. The kingdom of Poland recovered from centuries of total fragmentation. Under Wladyslaw the elbow-High and  Kasimir the Great the Piast duchies united back into a kingdom and took an ever more aggressive stance against the Teutonic Knights and the encroaching Margraves of Brandenburg.

At the same time king Louis the great of Hungary led a renaissance of Hungarian power and played a key role in imperial politics. And all that happened on the doorstep of Bohemia, the main powerbase of the imperial family.

Equally the French monarchy had started nibbling away at the French-speaking imperial bishoprics of Cambrai, Toul, Verdun, Metz and Liege. Further south Provence, still part of the kingdom of the Arelat and hence imperial territory was ruled by a cadet branch of the French royal family. The Franche-Comte, once home to Barbarossa’s wife Beatrice was gradually transferred to France in the 14th century.

The issue of French encroachment became an increasingly important topic, in particular under the Luxemburg emperors Henry VII and Karl IV who hailed from the area. Karl IV used the weakness of the French monarch after their defeat at the battles of Crecy and Poitiers to reassert imperial authority by holding a massive diet in Metz in 1356 where the Golden Bull was finally proclaimed. However, once France had regained the territories ceded to the English in the treaty of Bretigny, they turned their gaze again eastwards to the empire.

In the last year of his life emperor Karl IV travelled to France to find a compromise with Charles V of France over the former kingdom of Burgundy which included Provence, the Rhone valley and Piedmont as well as the succession to the Hungarian and Polish thrones. In this deal, the details are unknown, it seems as if Karl IV handed over de facto control of Provence and the Rhone valley to the French crown in exchange for his son’s succession in Hungary.

What we can conclude from that is the main political axis had shifted from north-south to east-west. In the Middle Ages, emperors were focused on Italy and on the papacy, but by the end of the 14th century most of time and effort is spent on France, Poland and Hungary.

And just generally, the center of power in the empire has shifted east. The medieval emperors had their main landholdings and support base in the south and along the Rhine river. Now, under Karl IV, imperial power relies on Bohemia with its satellites, Silesia and Moravia and the recently acquired margraviate of Brandenburg.

With external pressures mounting fundamental reform of the empire becomes ever more pressing. To put that into perspective, king Edward III of England had borrowed 1.1 million gold Florin to fight the 100 Years’ war against the French. The total income of the emperor from his imperial resources was 20,000 Gold Florin. If he wanted to raise exceptional taxes, the only place he could do that was in the imperial cities that would occasionally head his demands, but not always. The other source of funds were the merchant bankers in these cities who lent considerable amounts against huge interest and only upon handover of valuable collateral.

Despite their importance in the functioning of the empire, by 1378 the cities were most unhappy with the state of affairs in the kingdom. Being dependent upon trade, their main concern was the safety of the roads and rivers, the tolls charged and the stability of the currency. When Karl IV designed the Golden Bull he initially wanted to address all three subjects. He aimed for a communal policy on coinage, guaranteeing the levels of precious metal content, restrictions on tolls and a general peace, a Landfrieden. The Landfrieden would have been a permanent ban on private violence, requiring the princes to eradicate the robber barons and recognize a system of law courts that based their decision on the written laws. In exchange the cities would have to refrain from forming leagues and associations for mutual support, i.e, doing all these things by themselves.

But these provisions were never passed. In the negotiations the princes managed to water the rules on mints, tolls and the peace down to practically zero. All that was left in the Golden Bull was the ban on the formation of city leagues.

No points to Griffindor for figuring out what happened next. With the central government unable to guarantee safety from illegal and legal robbery, the cities defied the Golden Bull. The Swabian cities, most of them imperial ones, formed a league led by the city of Ulm. They refused to swear allegiance to Karl’s son Wenceslaus which resulted in a war. The imperial army failed to scale the walls of Ulm and the emperor had to reach for a compromise that sanctioned the Swabian league. And the war boosted the confidence of the citizens of Ulm to the point they gave their parish church, the Ulmer Muenster, the tallest church tower in the world, or at least they tried. The tower was only completed in the 19th century.

Another, even more unusual league formed in the South West. The imperial cities of Zurich, Bern and Lucerne joined the forest cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden in an agreement of mutual support against their not really very oppressive overlords, the house of Habsburg.

But it is not only the economic, social and political picture has fundamentally changed by the middle of the 14th century. There is also a huge cultural shift.

When we talk about culture in the Middle Ages, what we are talking about is religion, and even more specifically, the church and at its head, the papacy.

Ever since the 10th century religious history was driven by the constant demand to reform the church. Given the importance the afterlife played in the mind of people of the Middle Ages, the quality of the church personnel who performed the holy sacraments was of crucial importance. A sinner wanted to be sure that his absolution was valid so that his time in purgatory was shortened. And for the sacrament, be it eucharist, baptism, confession, confirmation and last rites, to be valid, it had to be performed accurately, something only a competent and properly anointed priest could ensure. Even though the papacy had confirmed many times that even sacraments administered by unworthy clergymen in an inaccurate  manner were valid, the people still demanded better.

These reform efforts had come in waves. Once disappointment with the established church reached boiling point, reformers gained traction proposing changes. The Cluniac abbots, St. Peter Damian, Anselm of Canterbury preached reform in the 11th century, Bernhard of Clairvaux in the 12th century and St. Francis in the 13th century. For most of this period the papacy was able to retain control over the reform process. They usually achieved that by co-opting the movements into their system, be it as Cluniacs, Cistercians or Franciscans. This, combined with relentless persecution of those reformers they branded heretics kept the pope in charge.

In the 14th century the papacy lost control of the reform agenda. They had moved to Avignon where they spent their days under the watchful eye of the French monarch and doing their bidding, even when it was to sanction a raid on the templar order. In this period the church became much more efficient as an organization, gaining more and more control over the local bishoprics and even individual clergymen. At the same time it also improved its fiscal capabilities, collecting tithes more consistently, drawing the first year income of newly elected bishops and issuing indulgences as a way to monetize their store of holiness. This process made the Avignon papacy appear greedy and worldly to the common man. Moreover it made it unpopular with local clergy whose autonomy and income they had seized.

Pope John XXII, a lawyer more than a theologian, put oil in the fire when he pressured the Franciscan order to give up its vow of poverty. He reasoned that the image of a poor Franciscan habit next to a bejeweled cardinal made the latter look bad. This debate t- hat quickly became a debate over whether the church as a whole should be as poor as Jesus had been – had a devastating impact on the perception of the papacy. The pope was seen as endorsing the worldliness of the church rather than fighting it. And worldly the church had become. Teenage archbishops, drunk parsons, dissolute monks and lustful nuns returned not just as tropes in folk tales and bawdy songs.

Having lost the moral high ground the popes saw their hold on political power wane. When pope John XXII excommunicated the elected king of the Romans, Ludwig IV, the move backfired badly. Ludwig marshalled a coalition between the Franciscan dissenters and the imperial church against the pope. For almost 30 years did the church in the German lands live outside the reach and in defiance of the papacy. Even when the papal candidate Karl IV replaced Ludwig, he quickly shed the mantle of papal protegee. Nobody wanted to be a Pfaffenkönig, a pet of the church.

Karl IV did formally reconcile the empire with the Holy See and the interdict was lifted but the hold of the pope over the empire was broken as the Golden Bull made clear.

The calamities of the papacy did not end with the Golden Bull. In 1377 pope Gregory XI returned to Rome from Avignon. But there he died just months later. The cardinals elected a new pope, Urban VI. How free and fair this election was depends on what impact one ascribes to the Roman mob that had gathered outside, threatening to kill everyone inside unless they chose a Roman pope. Once back in Avignon the cardinals declared the election of Urban VI invalid and elected a new one, Clement VII. We now have two popes. Urban VI was recognized by several powers, including the emperor and the king of England, whilst Clement VII relied mainly on French support. The Great Western Schism was born. As the two popes were preoccupied with their internal squabbles, hope for church reform receded further and further.

The inability of the papacy to lead a successful reform program left a void. Whenever that had happened In the Middle Ages the emperors had occupied this empty space, claiming universal responsibility for Christendom. But that claim has moved so far from the political realities of the day, even pious rulers like Karl IV could not really take up the mantle any more.

Which meant the reform debate was left to the laity and the intellectuals. Men like Dante, William of Ockham, Marsilius of Padua and Petrarch developed entirely new concepts of how the church should be organized. Marsilius who is one of the most unfairly overlooked political thinkers in European history was the most radical. In his Defensor Pacis, the Defender of the Peace he declared that all laws that bind men in the here and now derive their legitimacy from the acclamation of the people. A ruler rules only on the support of the ruled, not by divine right. Hence in the empire, it is the emperor who makes the laws in agreement with the ruled, represented by the Prince-Electors. The pope on the other hand has no power in the temporal world, his realm is the spiritual world.

Marsilius’ writings gained a lot of traction. They were translated into French, Italian and German which indicates they were read not just by the Latin-speaking intellectual elite, but much more broadly. Other thinkers, namely John Wycliff who we have not yet talked about, developed these ideas further.

What helped the spread of new concepts were the new universities that had sprung up across central Europe. Prague University opened in 1348, Krakow in 1364, Vienna in 1365, Pecs in Hungary in 1367, Heidelberg in 1386, Leipzig 1409 and Rostock in 1419.

Charismatic preachers spread their message of the sinfulness of the official church and the urgent need for reform.

In particular in the empire, which had been detached from the papacy for decades under Ludwig the Bavarians, the population was already very skeptical of the ability that reform could be achieved inside the church.

And that is where the story begins.

Next week we will kick off by looking at Karl IV’s successor, king Wenceslaus IV who inherited what looked like a stable and well sorted reign even though several key reform projects are still unfinished. Will he be able to continue in his father’s footsteps, deliver the Landfrieden, protect the empire against its external foes and resolve the Great Western Schism? Well, let’s see.

And whilst you wait you may want to brush up on some of the earlier episodes that go into a lot more depth on some of the topics we just discussed. In particular the episodes 149 to 151 where we discuss the reign of Ludwig the Bavarian, which was a crucial period when the empire and the church drifted apart. Or if you need a refresher on how imperial power fell apart, the episodes 73 to 77 trace the story of the civil war between Philip of Swabia and Otto IV that brought a free for all for the imperial princes and then the early years of Frederick II who had to accept the status quo. Or if you like to hear more about the Hanseatic League or the Teutonic Knights, you can find these as a separate podcast unimaginatively titled the Hanseatic League and the Teutonic Knights wherever you find the History of the Germans.

You can listen to all of these on historyofthegermans.com where you can also support the podcast by signing up as a patron or by making a one-time donation.

Emperor Karl IV gets his son Wenceslaus IV crowned king of the Romans

This is the last episode of this season and it is time to say goodbye to Karl IV, Ludwig the Bavarian, Henry VII, Albrecht of Habsburg, Adolf von Nassau and Rudolf of Habsburg. These have been some eventful 138 years.

When Karl IV died in 1378 he left behind an impressive list of achievements but also a number of failures. And he left behind a son, Wenceslaus he had invested with so much hope and so many crowns, it not only broke the bank but even chunks of the political edifice he had so patiently built.

How and why is what we will discuss in this episode.

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 163 – Succession and Legacy, also episode 26 of Season 8 “From the Interregnum to the Golden Bull”.

This is the last episode of this season and it is time to say goodbye to Karl IV, Ludwig the Bavarian, Henry VII, Albrecht of Habsburg, Adolf von Nassau and Rudolf of Habsburg. These have been some eventful 138 years.

When Karl IV died in 1378 he left behind an impressive list of achievements but also a number of failures. And he left behind a son, Wenceslaus he had invested with so much hope and so many crowns, it not only broke the bank but even chunks of the political edifice he had so patiently built.

How and why is what we will discuss in this episode.

But before we start the usual reminder that all this advertising-free German history fun is funded by the generosity of our patrons who have gone to historyofthegermans.com/support and signed up as Patrons or have made a one time donation. And today I want to thank Jim V., Chris E. J, Gilles, John Thompson, Peter McCloskey and Martin E. who have so lavishly endowed us.

And with that, back to the show

These last three episodes we have looked at Bohemia, the Empire, the expansion of the Luxemburg  possessions and the international successes of Charles IV. Now it is time to talk about his Achilles heel, his obsession with his son and heir, Wenceslaus.

The last time a son had followed his father on the throne of the Holy Roman Empire had been in 1191 when Henry VI took over from Frederick Barbarossa. One could claim that Konrad IV took over from Frederick II in 1250, but Konrad IV was never crowned and his reign in the empire was confined to his duchy of Swabia.

Spoiler alert, Karl IV will be the first emperor who gets his son elected and crowned during his lifetime. But that came at a price.

Before we can get into this we need to take a quick recap of Karl IV’s family history. He had been married a total of four times. His first marriage was to Blanche of Valois, the sister of king Philip VI of France, a marriage arranged whilst he lived in Paris. The couple were married for 18 years, but had only two children, both girls, but no son and heir.

Her death in 1348 came at an extremely opportune moment for Karl, because he was now free to marry Anne of Bavaria, the daughter of the Count Palatinate on the Rhine who brought him a crucial electoral vote as well as strategic positions in the Upper Palatinate. This relationship produced a much desired son, but the child died in infancy. Anne too died soon after.

Wife #3 was Anna of Schweidnitz, daughter and heiress of one of the Silesian dukedoms that Karl wanted to integrate into the Lands of the Crown of Bohemia. Anna was just 14 at the time they got betrothed and lived to age 23. In that time she got crowned Queen of Bohemia, Queen of the Romans and finally in 1355, she was crowned empress in Rome. But most importantly after first giving birth to a daughter, Elizabeth, in 1358, in 1361 she delivered the long awaited heir, a boy called Wenceslaus.

Like so much of Karl’s activities, the birth of Wenceslaus was an elaborately designed spectacle. Karl had his heavily pregnant wife brought to Nürnberg, by now one of the three symbolic cities of the empire, alongside Frankfurt and Aachen. And he had invited the electors, imperial princes and representatives of the great cities  for a diet at the same time.

On previous visits the emperor had stayed in the comfortable mansions of one of the great Nürnberg bankers where he could enjoy all creature comforts. But that would not do for the birth of an imperial child. So the family moved up the hill into the drafty castle once built by the Hohenstaufen emperors.

By ensuring his son was born in the imperial castle above the great imperial city, in the presence of the whole of the empire, Karl projects a clear message. This child, his son, was not just the future king of Bohemia, but he was also destined to be the future emperor.  

My god is he a happy father. This is what he wrote to the Bohemians: quote: “Rejoice in the hearts of all our faithful! rejoice, our dear subjects, let the whole nation hold a great festival of joy. All Bohemia, and all its provinces, rejoice at the great happiness that has befallen you. You rich and poor, you young and old, rejoice, for behold the royal lineage has brought forth a scion! Heaven has finally granted our ardent wishes, and the Empress, our consort, has given birth to our heir to the throne, as promised by God! His appearance was like the rising sun dispelling the fog, for this newborn also dispelled the fickleness, indecision, fear and hope from the hearts of our subjects, and brought back their previous happiness, serene confidence and love.” End quote.

He may be laying it on thick, but then he was already 45 years old and until then without a male heir. This lack of a successor left the entire political structure he had built fragile. And that fragility impacted not just him, but the whole of his empire that could still remember the endless sequence of civil wars that had followed an imperial vacancy. Therefore it is likely that there were indeed celebrations of joy across the empire, welcoming the long awaited heir.

Karl’s excitement culminated in the weeks that followed. He had the baby weighed in gold, which he sent to Aachen in recognition for the miracle he attribute to the intercession of the saints and relics in this other great imperial city. He then called for the imperial regalia to be brought over from Prague to Nürnberg to be exhibited to the public.

For the christening 2 weeks later 5 electors, 18 bishops and numerous princes came to the church of St. Sebaldus in Nürnberg. Having just been to the christening of my niece and nephew, I know that children can sometimes be less than co-operative in religious ceremonies. Reports about young Wenceslaus christening tell of the little boy being more than obstinate. Stories circulate that in his revulsion he had soiled the holy water and even the fouled the altar, a bad omen for what may be coming.

Bad omen or not, these celebrations did not go down well with the Habsburgs and the Wittelsbachs who saw their chances of returning to the imperial throne vanishing. The events may therefore have triggered their attempt to overthrow Karl in alliance with the kings of Poland and Hungary. This conspiracy as we have heard, failed, in part because Anna of Schweidnitz was kind enough to expire in childbirth a year later, making way for Karl’s fourth marriage to Elizabeth of Pomerania. Elizabeth was the granddaughter of king Kasimir the Great of Poland and this union underpinned a new arrangement between Poland and the emperor, which in turn let the Habsburg conspiracy crumble into dust.

The marriage to Elisabeth of Pomerania lasted until Karl’s death and produced 6 children, 4 of which survived. The eldest of the two surviving sons, Sigismund will feature heavily in our next season, so keep him in mind.

But back to Wenceslaus. Karl is unperturbed in his urge to promote his precious little boy. First he creates a new altar for the coronation church in Aachen, dedicated to St. Wenceslaus where a Czech speaking priest is to pray for the now deceased members of the House of Luxemburg, including for Wenceslaus mother.

As soon as little Wenzeslaus could walk, he was crowned king of Bohemia. Karl’s advisers had tried to dissuade him from this, in large part because they feared it would be almost impossible to guide the child once crowned. After all, sending an anointed king on to the naughty step was fraught with complex issues of “lese majeste”. And as you probably know, the naughty step was not introduced until the early 2000s, so we are talking about much more hands-on punishments here.

Then, to paraphrase Jane Austin, it is a truth universally acknowledged that a young man in possession of a crown, must be in want of a wife. The young man in question being unable to even form the words “I do” was no obstacle for him to be promised in marriage to a daughter of the Burggrave of Nürnberg. That engagement ended when a better opportunity arose to get him a Wittelsbach bride, and a little later a Hungarian princess. Finally it is 14-year old Johanna von Wittelsbach who snatches the nine-year old heir.

3 years later Wenceslaus becomes the elector of Brandenburg, making him an imperial prince alongside his royal Bohemian title.

When Wenceslaus turns 15, the emperor gets going on his most ambitious project for his precious son, getting him elected and crowned king of the Romans. And ambitious it was.

Let’s start with the legal obstacles.

All the provisions of the Golden Bull are based on the implicit assumption that the previous emperor had died. There are no rules about electing a king of the Romans whilst the predecessor is still alive.

Plus, the Golden Bull had explicitly set out that an elector was only able to cast his vote when he had become 18 years of age, which suggests an emperor should also at least be 18 years old.

But regulation, schmogulation, if only enough bribes are paid, the Electors ewre all too happy to set aside these judicial niceties.

Ah, enough bribes. That was a bit of a problem. For one the bribes required came to a stunning quarter of a million florin. A princely sum that already but coming just in the wake of the 500,000 florin Karl had promised the Wittelsbachs for the margraviate of Brandenburg. Where to find such a princely sum? The imperial lands, cities, castles, tolls and so forth had already been pawned, sold and otherwise alienated in the run-up to Karl’s own election and coronation. Karl had bought back some of it during the course of the last 20 years, focusing mainly on freeing the imperial cities from the control of the territorial lords.

But these imperial cities were difficult to pawn again. Because in the intervening period Karl had ever so often asked the cities to fund his projects such as the journeys to Rome, his various coronations and acquisitions. And in exchange for payment of these taxes the cities had made Karl promise that he would never again pawn them away or diminish their privileges.

But needs must. So, Karl goes about pawning and selling imperial cities to territorial lords as if there had never been any such agreements. The crassest treatment was suffered by the city of Cologne, still Germany’s largest. To obtain the vote of the archbishop of Cologne, Karl had to revoke a number of privileges for the city. the problem was that he had just recently issued a charter granting Cologne a wide range of privileges and almost complete independence from the archbishop’s control. The only way to solve this conundrum was for the imperial chancellery to blatantly declared that they had never issued such a charter and that whatever paper the good citizens of Cologne held in their hand was not worth the parchment it was written on. When the baffled citizens protested pointing out their long track record of loyalty to the empire, Karl placed the whole city under the imperial ban.

That was the straw that broke the camel’s back. The cities had already been quite upset about the Golden Bull that prevented them from forming city alliances for mutual protection, whilst at the same time not producing a general peace, a Landfrieden, for the whole empire. How were the roads going to be made safe if they could neither do it themselves nor rely on the government. In their eyes the emperor had not only failed them but was now charging excessive taxes, and worse, placing them under the control of territorial lords who wanted to dismantle their freedoms.

18 Swabian cities, led by the city of Ulm formed the Schwäbische Bund, a league of defense against imperial overreach. When Wenceslaus was finally elected and crowned in 1376, the cities refused to acknowledge him as king unless he vouched not to pawn them to anyone, ever.

Wenceslaus responded by declaring an imperial war against the cities and brought an army before the walls of Ulm. But that was as far as he got. His forces were – as so often in this period – unable to overcome the city’s defenses.

The success boosted the citizens of Ulm’s self-confidence and they began work on the Ulmer Muenster, a parish church that was to outshine all other churches in the land, even its cathedrals. Its tower was to rise higher than any other in the land, even in the whole of Christendom. Their architect was none other than the Father of Peter Parler the master builder responsible for St. Vitus cathedral and the Charles bridge in Prague. The great tower was only finished in the 19th century, but at 161 meters became the highest church tower in the world.

The other outcome of the defeat was that Karl and Wenceslaus had to agree a ceasefire that wa supposed to turn into a lasting agreement. Negotiations were protracted. In a rather blatant twisting of the facts, Karl declared that he had never thought of pawning any of his most loyal imperial cities. The cities did not believe a word of that and by 1377 the Schwäbische Bund had grown to 28 members. Even the staunchly loyal city of Rothenburg ob der Tauber joined the alliance. They had even entered into negotiations with Karl’s enemies, the Habsburgs and count Eberhard of Württemberg.

At that point the emperor and his son realized that they were in a bit of a pickle. The cities had been not just an important source of taxes and soldiers funding the imperial tasks, but they had also been a counterweight to the power of the princes and in particular the prince electors. By alienating them, there was a genuine risk that the cities, even the still loyal ones like Nürnberg and Frankfurt could switch sides and leave the Luxemburgs isolated.

This point was likely made most forcefully by the members of Karl’s chancellery, many of whom were members of the educated elites of the cities. The same argument was made by his closest advisers and financiers, the great bankers of Nurnberg, Augsburg and Regensburg.

In 1377, father and son cave and solemnly promise that the imperial cities of the Schwäbische Bund cannot ever be pawned. Having rewarded the rebels, this privilege was then extended to the imperial cities that had remained loyal.

Making the imperial cities unalienable was certainly politically opportune, but it also removed the very last asset an emperor could use to fund any imperial infrastructure. From this time onwards, anyone carrying the crown of the Holy Roman Empire will have to depend predominantly on his own financial and military resources for whatever projects he -and very rarely she – wants to pursue.

Rebuilding his dynasties’ relationship with the cities preoccupied in his last years. In the summer of 1378, after return from his trip to France we discussed last week, he was in Nürnberg to hold a diet and was shocked to find still so many of the Swabian cities not attending. The problem had clearly not gone away despite all the assurances.

One final act was to write his testament. And as much as he wanted to pass all his possessions plus the lands of his half-brother, the duke of Luxemburg to his beloved Wenceslaus, he concluded that this would cause too much friction in the family. Therefore, he split this enormous territory that made up almost a quarter of the empire north of the Alps between his sons. Wenceslaus did get the lion’s share, i.e., the kingdom of Bohemia with Moravia and Silesia. But Brandenburg went to Wenceslaus half-brother Sigismund. A third brother, John was made duke of Görlitz, but as a vassal to his older brother. Apart from his sons, Karl had to also consider his nephews, the children of his brother Johann Heinrich of Moravia. The eldest of them, Jobst, went on to inherit Moravia, technically as a vassal to Wenceslaus, but we will see how that pans out.

On November 29, 1378 Charles IV passed away in his splendid capital, the city of Prague, aged 62, probably from general exhaustion and the severe gout he had suffered from for decades. He had ruled the empire for 30 years, not counting the first 2 years of civil war against the Wittelsbachs.

In this time, he had profoundly changed the empire. The Golden Bull became the bedrock of a newly defined empire, the Holy Roman Empire forever ridiculed by Voltaire. But as we discussed in the Golden Bull episode, there wasn’t much room for Karl to do anything other than recognizing the power of the princes. And, quite frankly, living in a country where a centralized monarchy has sucked all economic, cultural and political activity into a 607 square mile plot of overpriced land, I do see great advantages in the more fragmented structure of Germany where multiple cities host world leading industries, where one can have dozens of internationally recognized museums spread across the country, where towns have literary and theatrical traditions going back centuries and still thriving and where the states elect their own parliaments and governments – for good and for bad.

His other achievement was to bring the relationship between pope and emperor onto a new plane. This was not all his own work, his predecessor Ludwig the Bavarian had already cut a path here, and the weakness of the Avignon papacy was a major factor as well, but the fact remains that after 300 years of conflict literally to the death, from here forward pope and emperor acted in unison. Whether that was a good idea is something we will discuss by my estimate for the next at least 12 months.

And the most recognizable legacy of his reign is no doubt the city of Prague, its famous bridge, its cathedral, the extension that more than doubled its size, the astoundingly large squares, its university and the various monasteries and churches he founded. We have not talked much about his other great project, like his intended capital for Brandenburg in Tangermuende and  the castle of Karl Steijn near Prague. If you ever get to Czech Republic, make sure you go there. Few medieval buildings exist that still breathe the spirit of its creator, as much as this does.

But despite his great achievements, he also failed to deliver in some crucial dimensions. The Golden Bull has always been a stripped-down version of a much larger legislative concept. What he had initially hoped to achieve is usually summarized under the title of general peace or Landfrieden. The Landfrieden is quite a bit more than just the idea of an agreement between princes and cities to keep the piece.

The way Karl thought about it was set it out in the Majestas Carolina, his abandoned project to create a new legal framework for Bohemia kingdom. This concept incorporated a lot of the provisions from the Constitutions of Melfi (episode 80) that Frederick II had implemented in his kingdom of Sicily.

Under a general Landfrieden, there would be an obligation for all parties to refrain from violence and instead bring their disputes before a judge. The judges would base their decision on the provisions in the law code and their decision was final. Anyone who would take up arms against that decision would become and enemy of the state and be persecuted by the state authority.

This would have given the emperor a monopoly of violence, as it was gradually been implemented in France and England. Trial by combat and feuding was to be replaced by written law implemented by institutions, resulting in a dramatic increase security and in consequence of communications and trade. It is a concept we find pretty basic and normal today but for medieval aristocrats it was an unacceptable infringement of their political rights. They had become used to being able to mold the law according to their personal preferences, and to use force in the pursuit of their perceived rights. In particular as it related to people of lower social standing, i.e., peasants and burghers, aristocrats did not believe to be bound by any rules. Only the interaction between aristocrats was to be governed by the chivalric code but again, not by a law made by the monarch.

These reforms failed on the resistance of the barons in Bohemia and Karl was smart enough not to try it in the empire where his position was weaker.

With the general peace being a no-go, the other reforms, such as common standard for coinage also fell by the wayside. It will be Karl’s successors who will spend the next 100 years dragging the elites of the empire kicking and screaming into a system of law and institutions that provides a general peace.

This story and the other big issue, the schism in the church and the recurring demands for church reform will be the subject of our next season. I have not yet decided on the title, so stay tuned. Next week I have lined up an interview with Vaclav Zurek, researcher at the Prague Academy of Sciences who has just written a biography of Karl IV, which is coming out in English translation this autumn. I am sure you will enjoy hearing this story from a Czech perspective.

See you on the other side.

Karl IV’s great plans for his capital city

Karl, by the grace of God, King of the Romans, ever august, and King of Bohemia [  ]

We have turned over in careful contemplation, and have been diligently pondering how our hereditary kingdom of Bohemia may flourish in all its beauty, thrive in peace, and not fear the loss of its riches to its enemies, and how the general good and benefit of the said kingdom may prosper, how its’ governance may grow from good to better, and how it could plant a new seed for the faith in god.

To soundly provide for these things, neither sparing our labors nor expenses, we have decided to extend, expand, and newly delineate the city of Prague, recently elevated to metropolitan status at our insistance and request, situated in the midst of the kingdom and in a most fertile place, frequented by peoples from various regions and parts of the world, whose houses and buildings, inhabitants, and the multitude of people surrounding it, as well as the influx of people to it, which no one can count, especially because of the general study that we have decided to establish in the said city, cannot conveniently accommodate.”

So begins the charter that founded one of the Middle Ages most ambitious infrastructure projects, the creation of Prague’s New Town, the third city to be created near the ancient castles of the kings of Bohemia, making the combined city larger in surface area than Cologne, only surpassed by Constantinople and the eternal city. A new Rome was to rise on the shores of the Vitava River, a place adorned with churches and monasteries evoking the holiest places of Christianity and squares on such a monumental scale that reminds one more of the 19th century than the 14th. Prague still today attracts “people to it which no one can count”

This is what we will talk about today. Not just what he built, but why and how….

But before we start let me thank Dana J., Charisse P., James M., Eddie, Henrik R., Thomas H. and Margaret P. who keep this show advertising free by signing up as patrons on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support. If you want to join this gang of generous givers, go there and before you know it, you will find your name read out here too, on top of basking in the soft glow of your fellow listeners gratitude.

Video

TRANSCRIPT

Hello and welcome to the History of the Germans: Episode 158 – Prague – The New Rome? Karl IV’s great plans for his capital city, also episode 21 of Season 8 From the Interregnum to the Golden Bull.

Karl, by the grace of God, King of the Romans, ever august, and King of Bohemia [  ]

We have turned over in careful contemplation, and have been diligently pondering how our hereditary kingdom of Bohemia may flourish in all its beauty, thrive in peace, and not fear the loss of its riches to its enemies, and how the general good and benefit of the said kingdom may prosper, how its’ governance may grow from good to better, and how it could plant a new seed for the faith in god.

To soundly provide for these things, neither sparing our labors nor expenses, we have decided to extend, expand, and newly delineate the city of Prague, recently elevated to metropolitan status at our insistance and request, situated in the midst of the kingdom and in a most fertile place, frequented by peoples from various regions and parts of the world, whose houses and buildings, inhabitants, and the multitude of people surrounding it, as well as the influx of people to it, which no one can count, especially because of the general study that we have decided to establish in the said city, cannot conveniently accommodate.”

So begins the charter that founded one of the Middle Ages most ambitious infrastructure projects, the creation of Prague’s New Town, the third city to be created near the ancient castles of the kings of Bohemia, making the combined city larger in surface area than Cologne, only surpassed by Constantinople and the eternal city. A new Rome was to rise on the shores of the Vitava River, a place adorned with churches and monasteries evoking the holiest places of Christianity and squares on such a monumental scale that reminds one more of the 19th century than the 14th. Prague still today attracts “people to it which no one can count”

This is what we will talk about today. Not just what he built, but why and how….

But before we start let me thank Dana J., Charisse P., James M., Eddie, Henrik R., Thomas H. and Margaret P. who keep this show advertising free by signing up as patrons on patreon.com/historyofthegermans or on historyofthegermans.com/support. If you want to join this gang of generous givers, go there and before you know it, you will find your name read out here too, on top of basking in the soft glow of your fellow listeners gratitude.

And with that – back to the show

Last week was a bit tough, but then the 14th century was a tough time to be alive. But despite all the horrors there were some delightful things happening at the same time. And one of these was the architecture created in that period. It is in the 14th century that the Hanseatic cities reached the peak of their political power, when the spires of churches and city monasteries in Lübeck, Hamburg, Wismar, Riga and Tallin rose to the sky. New cloth halls adorned Ypres, Krakow, Ghent and Brunswick. The celebrated city halls of Stralsund, Bremen and Muenster date back to this period as do the innumerable half-timbered houses you find all across the German lands that shape the idea of the romantic Germany for hundreds of thousands of tourists every year.

But the largest, the most ambitious construction project of the 14th century happened on the eastern edge of the empire. A project on a scale unprecedented since the days of ancient Rome. Prague was to rise from an important city to the largest city in the empire in the span of 2 years. Yes, 2 years or less was the timescale that Karl IV set for the city to be built in his own words so properly constructed that the houses may be conveniently inhabited and lived in”.

Ah, and then there is the date. The foundation document for Prager Neustadt dates to March 8, 1347, just as the first grain shipments from Caffa enter the port of Messina in Sicily, bringing rats, flees and Yarsinia Pestis, leaving barely 2 years before the disease reaches Prague.

Now before we survey the greatest of Karl’s projects, we need to take a step back to see the broader strategy behind it.

The actual starting gun for the Make Prague Great project had sounded 3 years earlier, in 1344. It was then that Karl, at the time still only the crown prince convinced his friend, the pope Clement VI to raise the status of the bishopric of Prague to an archbishopric.

This does not sound much to modern ears. Has anyone noticed that pope Francis recently raised Las Vegas to an archbishopric? No, me neither. But in the Middle Ages, this was a seminal moment. The church was still by far the superior organisational structure in europe, much more complex and coherent than any state administration. And the boundaries of dioceses had a significant effect on the temporal political structure within it.

Long term listeners may remember episode 14 when we talked about Otto III’s trip to Gniesno in Poland. At that point, in the year 1000, Otto III raised Gniesno to become an archbishopric. From that point forward the Polish church was no longer subject to oversight by the archbishop of Mainz, which meant Poland’s rulers found it somewhat easier to withdraw from the imperial orbit. The same happened in Hungary where Esztergom was founded as an archbishopric in 1001.

Of the three monarchies on the eastern side of the empire only one, Bohemia, remained subject to the archbishopric of Mainz, and was the only one that remained within the political structure that became the Holy Roman Empire. Coincidence, me thinks not.

The creation of a Bohemian archbishopric may have been delayed unduly, but it was a key puzzle piece in the Karl’s creation of what he called “the Crown of Bohemia”, the constitutional construct that he hoped would cement his and his family’s rule of these lands for eternity.

More about that later. First we need a cathedral for the freshly minted archbishop, who also happened to be one of Karl’s closest advisors and confidants, Arnost of Pardubice. On November 21, 1344 work began on St. Vitus cathedral. This cathedral is unique in so many ways, the first of which is its location. I cannot think of any other cathedral that towers over a city, a solid half hour walk uphill from the main square. And that speaks to the role the archbishop of Prague was to assume in the political system of Bohemia.

The Bohemian church had been created by St. Wenceslaus way back in the 10th century. At the time the majority of Bohemians were pagans and it was the ruler’s efforts to convert the population that led to the Christianisation of the country. Hence the bishops were always extremely close to the dukes and later the kings of Bohemia. Their residence and their cathedral was within the precincts of the royal castle, not down in the town with the people. A very different setup to the way bishops operated in the empire, or even France and England. At some point Karl jokingly referred to the archbishop as his personal chaplain.

St. Vitus was hence as much royal chantry as it was the archepiscopal cathedral. To build it, Karl wanted the latest and greatest in cathedral fashion. Hence he appointed Matthias of Arras, a Frenchman who may have been working on some of the great cathedrals of Northern France, in Amiens or Beauvais and had most recently been involved in the construction of the papal palace in Avignon. Matthias was a competent man who designed a layout of the church along classic French lines putting emphasis of proportions and clear, mathematical composition of the whole. Matthias died in 1352 having finished only the easternmost part of the choir. His successors continued with his plan until the arrival of Peter Parler in 1356. Peter Parler was just 23 when he was given the commission to complete St. Vitus cathedral. Having been apprenticed to his father since his youth, he had worked at the church of the Holy Cross in his hometown of Schwäbisch Gmund. Aged 19 he sets off as a journeyman travelling to many of the great construction sites of Europe at the time, the cathedrals of Cologne, Paris, Strasburg and potentially even England. Upon his return he rejoins his father who had been given a huge project, the building of the Frauenkirche in Nurnberg that was to be erected over the ruins of the old synagogue, the destruction of which had triggered the massacres of the Jews in the city as we heard last week. Karl had been closely involved with the Frauenkirche he intended specifically to be used for key imperial ceremonies and events. And that is where he noticed Peter and called him to Prague.

Peter Parler brought a new style to not just St. Vitus cathedral but to many of Karl’s great projects. Peter Parler was both a sculptor and an architect. Once he gets involved in St. Vitus, the cathedral shifts away from the strict lines of Matthias of Arras to a new innovative style that gives it the almost organic qualities that would spread across europe as the late gothic style. This is best exemplified by the new type of vaults he created for the choir of St. Vitus. In a classic gothic church, the groin vaults have single diagonal rips from one pillar to the other. Parler doubled their number creating a set of crossing rips that not only improve structural integrity but also created a sort of net-like pattern. This and the balustrade that he added to the naves as a way to make the upper floors of the cathedral feel as if they were floating above the congregation as a vison of the heavenly Jerusalem were two key elements of the Parler Style. The Parler Style was rapidly adopted first across the empire in Landshut, Nurnberg, Vienna and then throughout the Hanseatic league from where it spread all over Poland, the Low countries and even as far as the cathedral of Seville that features both net vaults and a Parler balustrade.

Peter Parler and his sons and workshop would be leading many of Karl’s projects both in Bohemia as well as across the empire. They have shaped the way Prague looks today and also built St. Stephens in Vienna. They are a big deal.

Within St. Vitus cathedral there is a chapel that was to become the heart of Karl’s concept of the Bohemian crown, the chapel of St. Wenceslaus. This chapel features no just one of the most intricate of Parler Vaults but is also decorated with 1300 semi-precious stones and frescoes depicting the passion of Christ and the life of St. Wenceslaus.

It once held two immensely valuable objects, one of which is still there. The first was a reliquary of St. Wenceslaus in the form of a bust and the second, the crown of St. Wenceslaus. Now I cannot say whether the bones inside the reliquary were indeed those of St. Wenceslaus, but what we know for a fact is that the crown placed there had never been worn by the good king Wenceslaus. Not because he wasn’t a king, but because this crown had been made on Karl’s orders in 1344, the year of Prague’s elevation to an archbishopric.

During Karl’s reign this crown was kept in St. Wenceslaus chapel on the bust of its namesake for most of the year. That was a huge deviation from the normal procedure. Medieval crowns were often kept with the other regalia in a treasury, often a heavily fortified castle. They were the property of the ruler who could take them along for trips and use them as a means of representation whenever he wanted to. The crown of St. Wenceslaus only left the chapel on special occasions and for coronations. It wasn’t the crown of the king, but the crown of a saint the king would occasionally be allowed to borrow. That is actually still the case today. The crown is kept in a chamber next to the chapel locked by seven locks, the keys to which are held by seven dignitaries including the president and the archbishop of Prague and the original is only shown to the public on special occasions.

What was the point of commissioning an extremely expensive crown and then pretend it had been St. Wenceslaus crown all along so that it had to remain with the saints remains?

That brings us back to Karl’s idea on how to solidify his regime in Bohemia. As we talked about in the episode about Karl’s youth, the hold of the Luxemburgs on Bohemia was extremely fragile. Karl’s father spent most of his time outside the kingdom where he was extremely unpopular and had lost the power struggle with the barons. In his autobiography Karl makes a big song and dance about how much the Bohemians loved him, his ability to speak the language, his descent from the ancient Premyslid dynasty etc., etc., But even in the middle ages a spot of linguistics and an eminent mother  cannot have been enough, in particular not in a kingdom whose barons and patricians held the reins of power and at least believed they could elect and depose their kings at will.

The more I read about Karl the more I get to admire his political instincts and pragmatism. Because rather than fighting the barons and patricians as his father had done, he tied them into his political structure. He created the crown of St. Wenceslaus as a symbol of the Bohemian Kingdom outside his own person. The crown of Bohemia became more than a physical object, but a symbol that personified the Bohemian lands, its customs and rights and privileges. And Karl poured everything into this concept. In his role as king of the romans he declared the lands of Silesia and some territories west of the Bohemian forest to be not just his personal fiefs, but inseparable parts of the crown of Bohemia. He declared that all the barons and lords were integral to the “universitas regni Bohemia”, of the commonwealth of the crown of Bohemia. And to further elevate the crown as a physical object, he enclosed in it a thorn from the Crown of Thorns. The pope declared the crown a sacred object that conveyed salvation to those who prayed before it.

By creating this object that held all the power in the kingdom, all he then had to do was to make sure that nobody else could take hold of it. And that was via the coronation ceremony. A ceremony he conveniently had designed himself. This involved the usual anointing, seating on the throne and lifting of the crown, but now by a Czech archbishop rather than a German one. But what made it special was that not all the songs were in Latin, nor were they in German, but in Czech. Few things could reassure the Czech-speaking population under pressure from the influx of German speakers since the early 13th century than their king singing the Kyrie Elision in their language.

The crown of Bohemia now had a great resting place in the St. Vitus cathedral that was rising up. But that wasn’t enough splendour for Karl. If he wanted to elevate Bohemia to a kingdom on par with the great monarchies of France and England, he needed a capital. And since he was not just the king of Bohemia but also the elected king of the Romans and hence future emperor, this capital needed to be suitable for such an august monarch.

Hence we find ourselves in March 1347 in a field outside the walls of Prague’s Old Town watching Karl IV laying the first stone in the greatest plan for a city extension of the entire middle Ages. When Charles first arrived in Prague in the 1330s the city comprised about 2.5 square kilometres of build-up space and had roughly 15,000 inhabitants. The city was actually two cities and two royal castles. There was the Mala Strana, the Little Side or Lesser Town in English which had risen up below Prague castle. On the opposite side of the Vitava sat the Old Town. And downriver on the Vitava sat the Vhysegrad, the residence of the early medieval Bohemian rulers.

As we have seen in many other places, most extremely in Gdansk, each of these entities were independent cities with their own councils, markets and city walls.

The New Town that Karl ordered to be built was hence given its own city rights and privileges. In the foundation charter he was generous in his awards, granting the new place the same rights the Old Town had received. The new Town was to get its own city council, its aldermen and city defences. However, as the Old town had lost a lot of its privileges during the reign of King John the Blind, these rights were less extensive than they would be for an imperial or a free city in the empire. He made up for the lack of civil rights by providing generous tax incentives, more than enough to fill the place.

And what a place it was. The Prague New Town comprised 7.5 square kilometres, three times the Old Town and Little Side combined. This new settlement surrounded the Old Town on all three sides, stretching from the old castle of Vhysegrad to the Vitava upriver from the old town. The wall built to protect the settlement was 3.5 km long, 6 to 10 meters high and took less than two years to build. Karl had already bought a lot of plots inside this wall before construction began and now sold these under the condition that the purchaser would begin construction within one month and completes the work within 18 months. With the New Town the population of Prague rose to 40,000 making it the largest city in the German lands alongside Cologne. In terms of surface area it became the third largest after Rome and Constantinople.

But what took peoples breath away both then and today was the monumentality of its market squares. The area today called St. Wenceslaus square that today looks like a classic 19th century avenue built to represent the glory of the nation was then called the Horse market. And it was already 60 metres wide and 750m long, far larger than anything anyone had seen before. Well except for Charles Square which at 80,550 square metres is still one of the largest city squares in the world and definitely the largest medieval square in Europe.

This square-driven megalomania had a clear message. At a time when space inside walled cities was at huge premium and city streets were narrow and bridges built up with houses, a city square large enough to hold 12 simultaneous football matches screamed look at how large a defensive wall I can build. Or more precisely how large a defensive wall the crown of Bohemia can build.

Talking about open spaces, in 1357 construction began on the one bit of Carolinian infrastructure ever visitor to Prague had been on, the Charles Bridge. Despite the tourists and intrusive sellers of pointless titbits and drunk teenagers, this remains my favourite bridge in the world. Two gates at each end, a beautiful view of both sides of the city and its elegant construction tells again of the great skill of Peter Parler and his workshop. And the fact that this bridge had no houses on it when London and Paris only had bridges that looked like the Ponte Vecchio in Florence is just another sign of the immensity of Karl’s project.

The Neustadt filled up rapidly in part with overspill from the Old Town and the Little Side where space had been at a premium. There had also already been some suburbs in what would later become the New Town. But mostly these were new arrivals.

Many were Jewish.  As Charles said in his foundation document quote “Considering the weakness of the Jewish people, we take under our special protection all and each Jew, both male and female, sons and daughters, and all their goods, who will come to inhabit the said New City, [  ] commanding all and each justice of the kingdom, especially of our city of Prague, modern and future, to protect and defend the Jews from all disturbance, molestation, and injury.” That is a bit rich given Karl’s involvement in the persecution of the Jews that led to them fleeing east in the first place.

He also invited settlers from the West and East to come to Prague and many did. That is in itself a tremendous achievement given the Plague had just wiped out roughly a third of Europe’s population leaving lots of opportunities for ambitious and mobile men and women to make their fortunes nearer to home.

Another major draw of Prague was that it gradually became a bit of a holy place. Karl had a habit of collecting relics. Maybe not a habit, more of an obsession. He became famous for demanding to cut of bits and pieces of saints whenever he came to visit a monastery or pilgrimage church. Sometimes he paid for the privilege, sometimes he just took the bones. In St. Gall he had the head of one of its saintly abbots sawn off as the holy body refused to separate from its uppermost section. Foreign dignitaries quickly realised that the way to the king of Bohemia’s heart was through dusty bones and holy pieces of cloth. One of those claimed to be the tablecloth used at the Last Supper.

But whilst this all sounds a bit weird, it had a certain logic to it. Relics did provide relief from time spent in purgatory if the sinner prayed next to them. The church provided elaborate tables laying out how many years one gets off for how many Ave Marias in front of which saint’s remains. So bringing a large number of relics to Prague was quite the same as ambitious mayors courting art collectors to place their works into museums they promise to build for them.

Whilst Karl kept many of the relics for himself, he donated even more to various churches on his demesne, in particular in the New Town of Prague. Pilgrims would come to pray in these churches boosting the business of inns and traders of all kinds. Others would decide to live in Prague to be closer to these most effective items of salvation. Charles even obtained a papal charter that gave particular absolution for pilgrims who came to see the great relics contained in the Bohemian crown, the Holy Lance and other holy objects that were paraded through the streets of Prague on certain holy days.

And finally there is another draw, the very first University founded east of the Rhine river. This was again one of Karl’s very first decisions after becoming King of Bohemia, to found a university he named after himself in his typical modesty. As so often in his early years it was his good relationship with Pope Clement VI that made that possible. Clement granted a bull establishing a place of general studies in January 1347. Later historians with an anti-papal bent would insist that the university was founded through a Bohemian royal golden bull in 1348.

In any event, the university began operating around that time, modelled on the University of Paris offering all four faculties, including theology. Students came from the empire and from Bohemia, Moravia, Poland, Hungary and even Scandinavia. But it differed in some significant way from the universities as they existed to date. The university of Prague was founded and maintained by the king of Bohemia. Previous universities had been created by the scholars and teachers who were paid directly by the students. Lecturers in Prague were housed in colleges as had been the case in Oxford and Cambridge, but in Prague the lecturers were paid by the university and hence by the state, a system that would take hold across most of central Europe.

Whilst most of the things we discussed today relate to Karl’s role as king of Bohemia, the University was something different. This foundation was quite explicitly meant to be an institution open to everyone in northern europe, not just Czech speakers. In fact in the early days of the university less than a quarter of students were Czech speaking. That the university was hugely attractive to non-Czechs should not be surprising since for anyone in the empire as well as in Poland and Hungary, Prague was a whole lot closer than Paris, Bologna or Oxford. This issue of language and who the university was for will become an important topic further down the line, so just keep that in mind. But for now what we have is a truly international institution which raised the profile of Prague, the crown of Bohemia and its bearer even further.

When we put it all together, the whole thing begins to make sense. What Karl is attempting here is a redefinition of the Kingdom of Bohemia. A kingdom increasingly detached from the empire, its most senior bishop no longer reporting to a archbishop over in the German lands, a capital massively enlarged with squares on a scale that takes people’s breath away, a centre for pilgrims who find it a new Jerusalem or at least a new Rome and throning above all the cathedral of St. Vitus and within it the crown of St. Wenceslaus the manifestation of this commonwealth.

By 1355 it is clear to see for everyone that Bohemia is flourishing under its new ruler and that it had come together as a kingdom, ruler, nobles, patricians, scholars and artisans all united in one purpose.

And that is when Karl decides that it was time to harvest what he had sowed. This new entity, the crown of Bohemia needed a constitution. Surely he did not use the word constitution in the way we would use it today but he meant something quite similar, a written document that set out explicitly who was to decide what, which rights one had against the state and what the state could to those who failed to obey.

This document he called the Majestas Carolina, I am not sure I can translate that. It opened up with several sections on what to do with heretics, which implies the anti-clerical trends had been boosted by the recent plague. The next section is about preserving the resources of the crown, effectively prohibiting the sale and mortgaging of certain royal estates and cities – so far so uncontroversial by 14th century standards.

What raised eyebrows were the rules about the Landfrieden, the common peace. Bringing peace and protecting travellers had been demanded of rulers since time immemorial but had still failed to materialise. Emperors, kings, dukes, counts and cities across medieval Europe tried and tried to rein in on banditry and feuds, sometime by force, sometime through voluntary agreement, but usually with limited success.

The Majestas Carolina took a straightforward approach. Karl simply banned mot just feuds and banditry it any form of harm done Toni’s subjects.   An administrative structure comprised of bureaucrats and lawyers was to enforce this peace and adjudicate the conflicts underlying the feuds. As for the nobility, they were to be co-opted into the royal apparatus, serving the crown of Bohemia by providing advice in the council and military support in war. All power was therefore concentrated in the crown of Bohemia, any rival structure such as voluntary agreements or alliances amongst the barons and/or cities were explicitly prohibited.

That all sounds eminently sensible. Almost word for word exactly as sensible as the Constitutions of Melfi issued more than a hundred years earlier by Frederick II for his kingdom of Sicily. And like the Constitutions of Melfi, it ran into opposition from the barons. For them the Majestas Carolina would have brought an unacceptable loss of power. No longer were they the sole judges in their land. And even worse, once the law was written down, they could no longer make it up as they went along. And let’s not forget, feuds and banditry had become a major source of income for the knights whose revenues from agricultural activity had dried up, now that they had to pay their few remaining peasants more money.

The Majestas Carolina, as sensible a lawbook it was, got shot down by the barons. When Karl called a general assembly in 1355 to pass this shiny capstone of the Bohemian reforms, he faced a hostile crowd. Pragmatic as he was, instead of trying to push and causing a civil war, he just came back to the barons one morning and said that a terrible accident had befallen his project. The one and only copy that some barons had already signed had accidentally fallen into the fire and had burned down. Without the book I am afraid, nobody can sign it. I am sorry to disappoint you all who wanted to commit to the project. It must have been a sign of god that this was not the way forward. So all stays as was. Thanks everyone for coming. See you next year.

And that is what I will say now too, see you next week when we look at Karl’s policy beyond Bohemia, namely his approach to the empire, which may include his second, more successful attempt at passing a constitution. I hope you will tune in again.

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