A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Urban’s successor, Boniface IX (1389–1404), reconquered the papal states and set


up governors (many of them his family members) to rule them. Desperate for more


revenues, the popes turned all their prerogatives into sources of income. Boniface,


for example, put church benefices on the open market and commercialized


“indulgences”—acts of piety (such as viewing a relic or attending a special church


feast) for which people were promised release from Purgatory for a specific number


of days. Now money payments were declared equivalent to performing the acts.


Many people willingly made such purchases; others were outraged that Heaven was


for sale.


Solutions to end the schism eventually coalesced around the idea of a council.


The “conciliarists”—those who advocated the convening of a council that would


have authority over even the pope—included both university men and princes


anxious to flex their muscles over the church. At the Council of Pisa (1409), which


neither of the popes attended, the delegates deposed them both and elected a new


man. But the two deposed popes refused to budge: there were now three popes, one


at Avignon, one at Rome, and a third at Bologna. The successor of the newest one,


John XXIII, turned to the emperor to arrange for another council.


The Council of Constance (1414–1418) met to resolve the papal crisis as well as


to institute church reforms. In the first task it succeeded, deposing the three rivals


and electing Martin V as pope. In the second, it was less successful, for it did not end


the fragmentation of the church. National, even nationalist, churches had begun to


form, independent of and sometimes in opposition to papal leadership. Meanwhile the


conciliar movement continued, developing an influential theory that held that church


authority in the final instance resided in a corporate body (whether representing


prelates or more broadly the community of the faithful) rather than the pope.


POPULAR RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS IN ENGLAND AND BOHEMIA


While the conciliarists worried about the structure of the church, many men and


women thought more about their personal relationship with Christ. The Book of


Margery Kempe is about an English woman (presumably Margery Kempe, though


she calls herself “the creature” throughout the book) who had long conversations


with the Lord. In “contemplation” she traveled back in time to serve Mary, the


mother of Jesus:


[Mary said to Margery], “follow me, your service pleases me well.”

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