Fernán Caballero

 Raimundo Diosdado Caballero

 Juan Caballero y Ocio

 Cabasa

 Jean Cabassut

 Miguel Cabello de Balboa

 Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca

 John & Sebastian Cabot

 Francisco Cabral

 Pedralvarez Cabral

 Estévan (Juan) Cabrillo

 Cadalous

 Caddo Indians

 Cades

 Antoine de Lamothe, Sieur de Cadillac

 Diocese of Cadiz

 St. Caedmon

 University of Caen

 Cæremoniale Episcoporum

 Caesarea

 Caesarea Mauretaniae

 Caesarea Palaestinae

 Caesarea Philippi

 St. Caesarius of Arles

 Caesarius of Heisterbach

 St. Caesarius of Nazianzus

 Caesarius of Prüm

 Caesar of Speyer

 Caesaropolis

 Archdiocese of Cagliari

 Diocese of Cagli e Pergola

 Charles Cahier

 Daniel William Cahill

 Diocese of Cahors

 Diocese of Caiazzo

 Armand-Benjamin Caillau

 Cain

 Cainites

 Joseph Caiphas

 Caius

 John Caius

 Popes Sts. Caius and Soter

 St. Cajetan

 Constantino Cajetan

 Tommaso de Vio Gaetani Cajetan

 Diocese of Calabozo

 Diocese of Calahorra and La Calzada

 Calama

 Fray Antonio de la Calancha

 Calas Case

 Mario di Calasio

 Pedro de Calatayud

 Military Order of Calatrava

 Archdiocese of Calcutta

 Polidoro (da Caravaggio) Caldara

 Domingos Caldas-Barbosa

 Pedro Calderon de la Barca

 Caleb

 Christian Calendar

 Jewish Calendar

 Reform of the Calendar

 Ambrogio Calepino

 Paolo Caliari

 California

 Vicariate Apostolic of Lower California

 California Missions

 Louis-Hector de Callières

 Callinicus

 Callipolis

 Pope Callistus I

 Pope Callistus II

 Pope Callistus III

 Jacques Callot

 Pierre Cally

 Dom Augustin Calmet

 Caloe

 Diocese of Caltagirone

 Diocese of Caltanisetta

 Calumny

 Dionysius Calvaert

 Congregation of Our Lady of Calvary

 Mount Calvary

 Calvert

 Diocese of Calvi and Teano

 John Calvin

 Calvinism

 Justus Baronius Calvinus

 Calynda

 Camachus

 Camaldolese

 Diego Muñoz Camargo

 Luca Cambiaso

 Archdiocese of Cambrai

 University of Cambridge

 Cambysopolis

 George Joseph Camel

 Diocese of Camerino

 Camerlengo

 St. Camillus de Lellis

 Camisards

 Luis Vaz de Camões

 Girolamo Campagna

 Domenico Campagnola

 Jeanne-Louise-Henriette Campan

 Pedro Campaña

 Tommaso Campanella

 Giuseppe Campani

 Diocese of Campeche

 Lorenzo Campeggio

 Bernardino Campi

 Galeazzo Campi

 Giulio Campi

 Campo Santo de' Tedeschi

 Jean-Pierre Camus de Pont-Carré

 Cana

 Canada

 José de la Canal

 Canary Islands

 Canatha

 Luis Cancer de Barbastro

 Candace

 Diocese of Candia

 Candidus

 Candlemas

 Candles

 Candlesticks

 Canea

 Vicariate Apostolic of Canelos and Macas

 Vincent Canes

 St. Canice

 Henricus Canisius

 Theodorich Canisius

 Alonso Cano

 Melchior Cano

 Canon

 Canon (2)

 Canoness

 Canon of the Mass

 Canon of the Holy Scriptures

 Apostolic Canons

 Collections of Ancient Canons

 Ecclesiastical Canons

 Canons and Canonesses Regular

 Canons Regular of the Immaculate Conception

 Canopus

 Canopy

 Canossa

 Antonio Canova

 Cantate Sunday

 Ancient Diocese of Canterbury

 Canticle

 Canticle of Canticles

 Cantor

 Cesare Cantù

 Canute

 St. Canute IV

 Diocese of Capaccio and Vallo

 Baptiste-Honoré-Raymond Capefigue

 Pietro Caperolo

 John Capgrave

 Diocese of Cap Haïtien

 Capharnaum

 Capitolias

 Capitularies

 Episcopal and Pontifical Capitulations

 Count Gino Capponi

 Domenico Capranica

 Giovanni Battista Caprara

 John Capreolus

 Capsa

 Captain (In the Bible)

 Captivities of the Israelites

 Archdiocese of Capua

 Capuchinesses

 Capuchin Friars Minor

 Capuciati

 Apostolic Prefecture of Caquetá

 José de Carabantes

 Caracalla

 Archdiocese of Caracas

 Vincent Caraffa

 Caraites

 Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz

 Auguste Carayon

 James Joseph Carbery

 Carbonari

 Ignatius Carbonnelle

 Diocese of Carcassonne (Carcassum)

 Girolamo Cardan

 Juan Cardenas

 Cardica

 Cardinal

 Cardinal Protector

 Cardinal Vicar

 Cardinal Virtues

 Bartolommeo and Vincenzo Carducci

 Carem

 Mathew Carey

 Etienne de Carheil

 Diocese of Cariati (Paternum)

 Caribs

 Giacomo Carissimi

 Dionigi Carli da Piacenza

 Ancient Diocese of Carlisle

 Carlovingian Schools

 Carmel

 Mount Carmel

 Carmelite Order

 Melchior Carneiro

 Jean-Baptiste Carnoy

 Horacio Carochi

 Caroline Books (Libri Carolini)

 Caroline Islands

 Raymond Caron

 René-Edouard Caron

 Vittore Carpaccio

 Carpasia

 Diocese of Carpi

 Carracci

 Bartolomé Carranza

 Diego Carranza

 Juan Carreno de Miranda

 Rafael Carrera

 Carrhae

 Joseph Carrière

 Louis de Carrières

 Charles Carroll of Carrollton

 Daniel Carroll

 John Carroll

 Archdiocese of Cartagena

 Diocese of Cartagena

 St. Carthage

 Archdiocese of Carthage

 Carthusian Order

 Georges-Etienne Cartier

 Jacques Cartier

 Bernardino Lopez de Carvajal

 Gaspar de Carvajal

 Juan Carvajal (Carvagial)

 Luis de Carvajal

 Luisa de Carvajal

 Thomas Carve

 John Caryll

 Carystus

 Diocese of Casale Monferrato (Casalensis)

 Giovanni Battista Casali

 Vicariate Apostolic of Casanare

 Girolamo Casanata

 Bartolomé de las Casas

 Diocese of Caserta

 John Casey

 Henri Raymond Casgrain

 Cashel

 St. Casimir

 Casium

 Jean-Jacques Casot

 George Cassander

 Joseph Cassani

 Diocese of Cassano all' Ionio

 Patrick S. Casserly

 John Cassian

 William Cassidy

 Giovanni Domenico Cassini

 Cassiodorus

 François Dollier de Casson

 Diocese of Cassovia

 Castabala

 Andrea Castagno

 Diocese of Castellammare di Stabia

 Diocese of Castellaneta (Castania)

 Juan de Castellanos

 Benedetto Castelli

 Pietro Castelli

 Giovanni Battista Castello

 Baldassare Castiglione

 Count Carlo Ottavio Castiglione

 Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione

 Castile and Aragon

 Cristóbal de Castillejo

 Caspar Castner

 Castoria

 Francesco Castracane degli Antelminelli

 Alphonsus de Castro

 Fernando Castro Palao

 Guillen de Castro y Bellvis

 Casuistry

 Edward Caswall

 Roman Catacombs

 Catafalque

 Giuseppe Catalani

 Catalonia

 Archdiocese of Catania (Catanensis)

 Diocese of Catanzaro

 Catechumen

 Categorical Imperative

 Category

 Catenæ

 Cathari

 Cathedra

 Cathedral

 Cathedraticum

 Ven. Edmund Catherick

 Monastery of St. Catherine

 Catherine de' Medici

 St. Catherine de' Ricci

 St. Catherine of Alexandria

 St. Catherine of Bologna

 St. Catherine of Genoa

 St. Catherine of Siena

 St. Catherine of Sweden

 Catholic

 Catholic Benevolent Legion

 The Catholic Club of New York

 Catholic Epistle

 Catholic Knights of America

 Catholic Missionary Union

 Catholicos

 Catholic University of America

 François Catrou

 Diocese of Cattaro (Catharum)

 Augustin-Louis Cauchy

 Caughnawaga

 François-Etienne Caulet

 Caunus

 Cause

 Nicolas Caussin

 Diocese of Cava and Sarno

 Felice Cavagnis

 Bonaventura Cavalieri

 James Cavanagh

 Giovanni Antonio Cavazzi

 Celestino Cavedoni

 Andres Cavo

 William Caxton

 Diocese of Cayes

 Comte de Caylus

 Charles-Félix Cazeau

 St. Ceadda

 Diocese of Cebú

 St. Cecilia

 Cedar (1)

 Cedar (2)

 St. Cedd

 Cedes

 Brook of Cedron

 Diocese of Cefalù

 Rémi Ceillier

 Celebret

 Celenderis

 Pope St. Celestine I

 Pope Celestine II

 Pope Celestine III

 Pope Celestine IV

 Pope St. Celestine V

 Celibacy of the Clergy

 Cella

 Elizabeth Cellier

 Benvenuto Cellini

 Celsus the Platonist

 Conrad Celtes

 The Celtic Rite

 Cemetery

 Religious of the Cenacle

 Robert Cenalis

 Diocese of Ceneda

 Censer

 Censorship of Books

 Ecclesiastical Censures

 Theological Censures

 Census

 German Roman Catholic Central Verein of North America

 Centuriators of Magdeburg

 Centurion

 St. Ceolfrid

 Ceolwulf

 Francisco Cepeda

 Ceramus

 Cerasus

 Ceremonial

 Ceremony

 Cerinthus

 Certitude

 Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

 Salazar Francisco Cervantes

 Diocese of Cervia

 Andrea Cesalpino

 Giuliano Cesarini

 Diocese of Cesena

 St. Ceslaus

 Cestra

 Ceylon

 Noel Chabanel

 Diocese of Chachapoyas

 James Chadwick

 Pierre Chaignon

 Chair of Peter

 Chalcedon

 Council of Chalcedon

 Chalcis

 Chaldean Christians

 Chalice

 Richard Challoner

 Diocese of Châlons-sur-Marne

 Cham, Chamites

 Archdiocese of Chambéry (Camberium)

 Samuel de Champlain

 Anthony Champney

 Jean-François Champollion

 Etienne Agard de Champs

 Chanaan, Chanaanites

 Diego Alvarez Chanca

 Chancel

 Bl. Pierre-Louis-Marie Chanel

 Vicariate Apostolic of Changanacherry

 Claude Chantelou

 Chantry

 Jean Chapeauville

 Chapel

 Placide-Louis Chapelle

 Chaplain

 Jean-Antoine Chaptal

 Chapter

 Chapter House

 Character

 Character (in Catholic Theology)

 Charadrus

 Jean-Baptiste Chardon

 Mathias Chardon

 Chariopolis

 Charismata

 Civil Law Concerning Charitable Bequests

 Charity and Charities

 Congregation of the Brothers of Charity

 Sisters of Charity

 Charlemagne

 St. Charles Borromeo

 Emperor Charles V

 Charles Martel

 Diocese of Charleston

 François-Xavier Charlevoix

 Diocese of Charlottetown

 François-Philippe Charpentier

 Pierre Charron

 Charterhouse

 Alain Chartier

 Diocese of Chartres

 La Grande Chartreuse

 Chartulary

 Georges Chastellain

 Pierre Chastellain

 Chastity

 Chasuble

 François-René de Chateaubriand

 Diocese of Chatham

 Geoffrey Chaucer

 Pierre-Joseph Chaumonot

 Maurice Chauncy

 Pierre-Joseph-Octave Chauveau

 Chelm and Belz

 Timoléon Cheminais de Montaigu

 Cherokee Indians

 Chersonesus

 Cherubim

 Maria Luigi Carlo Zenobio Salvatore Cherubini

 Ancient Diocese of Chester (Cestrensis)

 Jean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus

 Michel-Eugène Chevreul

 Diocese of Cheyenne

 Antoine-Léonard de Chézy

 Gabriello Chiabrera

 Diocese of Chiapas

 Diocese of Chiavari

 Chibchas

 Archdiocese of Chicago

 Henry Chichele

 Ancient Catholic Diocese of Chichester (Cicestrensis)

 Diocese of Chicoutimi

 Francesco Chieregati

 Archdiocese of Chieti

 Diocese of Chihuahua

 Diocese of Chilapa

 Children of Mary

 Children of Mary of the Sacred Heart

 Chile

 Domingo (San Anton y Muñon) Chimalpain

 China

 Chinooks

 Diocese of Chioggia (Chiozza)

 Chios

 Chippewa Indians

 Diocese of Chiusi-Pienza

 Chivalry

 Choctaw Indians

 Choir (1)

 Choir (2)

 Etienne-François, Duc de Choiseul

 Gilbert Choiseul du Plessis-Praslin

 Pierre Cholonec

 Alexandre-Etienne Choron

 Chrism

 Chrismal, Chrismatory

 Chrismarium

 Order of the Knights of Christ

 Diocese of Christchurch

 Christendom

 Christian

 Christian Archæology

 Christian Art

 Christian Brothers of Ireland

 Sisters of Christian Charity

 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine

 Brothers of Christian Instruction

 Christianity

 Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge

 Congregation of Christian Retreat

 Christina Alexandra

 Christine de Pisan

 Bl. Christine of Stommeln

 Christmas

 St. Christopher

 Pope Christopher

 St. Chrodegang

 St. Chromatius

 Chronicon Paschale

 Biblical Chronology

 General Chronology

 Sts. Chrysanthus and Daria

 St. Chrysogonus

 Chrysopolis

 Chur

 Church

 Churching of Women

 Church Maintenance

 Chusai

 Chytri

 Giovanni Giustino Ciampini

 Agostino Ciasca

 Ciborium

 Pierre-Martial Cibot

 Robert Ciboule

 Cibyra

 Andrea Ciccione

 Count Leopoldo Cicognara

 El Cid

 Cidyessus

 Diocese of Cienfuegos

 Carlo Cignani

 Cenni di Pepo Cimabue

 Giovanni Battista Cima da Conegliano

 Prefecture Apostolic of Cimbebasia (Upper)

 Archdiocese of Cincinnati

 Cincture

 Cinites

 Cinna

 Circesium

 Circumcision

 Feast of the Circumcision

 Cisalpine Club

 Cisamus

 Cistercian Sisters

 Cistercians

 Citation

 Abbey of Cîteaux

 Citharizum

 Diocese of Città della Pieve

 Diocese of Città di Castello

 Ciudad Real

 Diocese of Ciudad Rodrigo

 Cius

 Civil Allegiance

 Diocese of Cività Castellana, Orte, and Gallese

 Diocese of Civitavecchia and Corneto

 Abbey of Clairvaux

 Volume 5

 Clandestinity (in Canon Law)

 St. Clare of Assisi

 St. Clare of Montefalco

 Bl. Clare of Rimini

 William Clark

 Claudia

 Claudianus Mamertus

 Claudiopolis (1)

 Claudiopolis (2)

 Francisco Saverio Clavigero

 Christopher Clavius

 Claudius Clavus

 James Clayton

 Clazomenae

 Clean and Unclean

 Jan van Cleef

 Joost van Cleef

 Martin Van Cleef

 Mathieu-Nicolas Poillevillain de Clémanges

 Charles Clémencet

 Franz Jacob Clemens

 Clemens non Papa

 Pope St. Clement I

 Pope Clement II

 Pope Clement III

 Pope Clement IV

 Pope Clement V

 Pope Clement VI

 Pope Clement VII

 Pope Clement VIII

 Pope Clement IX

 Pope Clement X

 Pope Clement XI

 Pope Clement XII

 Pope Clement XIII

 Pope Clement XIV

 Cæsar Clement

 François Clément

 John Clement

 Clementines

 Bl. Clement Mary Hofbauer

 Clement of Alexandria

 St. Clement of Ireland

 Maurice Clenock

 Cleophas

 Clerestory

 Cleric

 Giovanni Clericato

 Clericis Laicos

 John Clerk

 Agnes Mary Clerke

 Clerks Regular

 Clerks Regular of Our Saviour

 Clerks Regular of the Mother of God of Lucca

 Diocese of Clermont

 Pope St. Cletus

 Diocese of Cleveland

 Josse Clichtove

 William Clifford

 Diocese of Clifton

 José Climent

 Ven. Margaret Clitherow

 Diocese of Clogher

 Cloister

 School of Clonard

 Diocese of Clonfert

 Abbey and School of Clonmacnoise

 St. Clotilda

 Clouet

 Councils of Clovesho

 Giorgio Clovio

 Clovis

 Diocese of Cloyne

 Congregation of Cluny

 John Clynn

 Bernabé Cobo

 Viatora Coccaleo

 Diocese of Cochabamba

 Martin of Cochem

 Diocese of Cochin

 Jacques-Denis Cochin

 Pierre-Suzanne-Augustin Cochin

 Johann Cochlæus

 Co-consecrators

 Cocussus

 Codex

 Codex Alexandrinus

 Codex Amiatinus

 Codex Bezae

 Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus

 Codex Sinaiticus

 Codex Vaticanus

 Thomas Codrington

 Co-education

 Nicolas Coeffeteau

 Coelchu

 Theodore Coelde

 St. Coemgen

 Coenred

 Coeur d'Alêne Indians

 Edward Coffin

 Robert Aston Coffin

 Cogitosus

 Diego López de Cogolludo

 Hermann Cohen

 Diocese of Coimbatore

 Diocese of Coimbra

 Jean-Baptiste Colbert

 Henry Cole

 Edward Coleman

 Henry James Coleridge

 John Colet

 Nicola Coleti

 St. Colette

 John Colgan

 Diocese of Colima

 Frédéric-Louis Colin

 Jean-Claude-Marie Colin

 Coliseum

 Diego Collado

 Collect

 Collectarium

 Collections

 Collectivism

 Diocese of Colle di Val d'Elsa

 College

 College (in Canon Law)

 Apostolic College

 Collège de France

 Collegiate

 St. Colman

 Walter Colman

 Joseph Ludwig Colmar

 Cologne

 University of Cologne

 Bl. Colomba of Rieti

 Republic of Colombia

 Archdiocese of Colombo

 Matteo Realdo Colombo

 Colonia (1)

 Colonna

 Egidio Colonna

 Giovanni Paolo Colonna

 Vittoria Colonna

 Colonnade

 Colophon

 Colorado

 Colossæ

 Epistle to the Colossians

 Liturgical Colours

 St. Columba of Terryglass

 St. Columba

 St. Columba, Abbot of Iona

 St. Columbanus

 Columbia University

 Christopher Columbus

 Diocese of Columbus

 Column

 Diocese of Comacchio

 Comana

 Diocese of Comayagua

 François Combefis

 Daniel Comboni

 St. Comgall

 Commandments of God

 Commandments of the Church

 Commemoration (in Liturgy)

 Commendatory Abbot

 Giovanni Francesco Commendone

 Commentaries on the Bible

 Philippe de Commines

 Commissariat of the Holy Land

 Commissary Apostolic

 Ecclesiastical Commissions

 Commodianus

 Commodus

 Brethren of the Common Life

 Philosophy of Common Sense

 Martyrs of the Paris Commune

 Communicatio Idiomatum

 Communion-Antiphon

 Communion-Bench

 Communion of Children

 The Communion of Saints

 Communion of the Sick

 Communion under Both Kinds

 Communism

 Diocese of Como

 Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement

 Compensation

 Occult Compensation

 Privilege of Competency

 Complin

 Compostela

 Compromise (in Canon Law)

 St. Conal

 St. Conan

 Conaty, Thomas James

 Concelebration

 Diocese of Concepción

 Conceptionists

 Industrial Conciliation

 Daniello Concina

 Conclave

 Concordances of the Bible

 Concordat

 The French Concordat of 1801

 Diocese of Concordia (Concordia Veneta)

 Diocese of Concordia (Corcondiensis in America)

 Concubinage

 Concupiscence

 Concursus

 Charles-Marie de la Condamine

 Etienne Bonnot de Condillac

 Condition

 Thomas Conecte

 Ecclesiastical Conferences

 Confession

 Confessor

 Confirmation

 Confiteor

 Confraternity (Sodality)

 Confucianism

 Congo Independent State and Congo Missions

 Congregatio de Auxiliis

 Congregationalism

 Congregational Singing

 Catholic Congresses

 Congrua

 Congruism

 Conimbricenses

 Giles de Coninck

 Connecticut

 John Connolly

 Pope Conon

 Conradin of Bornada

 Bl. Conrad of Ascoli

 Conrad of Hochstadt

 Conrad of Leonberg

 Conrad of Marburg

 Bl. Conrad of Offida

 St. Conrad of Piacenza

 Conrad of Saxony

 Conrad of Urach

 Conrad of Utrecht

 Florence Conry

 Ercole Consalvi

 Consanguinity (in Canon Law)

 Conscience

 Hendrik Conscience

 Consciousness

 Consecration

 Consent (in Canon Law)

 Consentius

 Conservator

 Papal Consistory

 Cuthbert Constable

 John Constable

 Constance

 Council of Constance

 Constantia

 Pope Constantine

 Diocese of Constantine (Cirta)

 Constantine Africanus

 Constantine the Great

 Constantinople

 Councils of Constantinople

 Rite of Constantinople

 Ecclesiastical Constitutions

 Papal Constitutions

 Consubstantiation

 Diocesan Consultors

 Philippe du Contant de la Molette

 Gasparo Contarini

 Giovanni Contarini

 Contemplation

 Contemplative Life

 Vincent Contenson

 Continence

 Contingent

 Contract

 The Social Contract

 Contrition

 Contumacy (in Canon Law)

 Adam Contzen

 Convent

 Convent Schools (Great Britain)

 Order of Friars Minor Conventuals

 Diocese of Conversano

 Conversi

 Conversion

 Convocation of the English Clergy

 Henry Conwell

 Archdiocese of Conza

 Vicariate Apostolic of Cooktown

 William Henry Coombes

 Copacavana

 Cope

 University of Copenhagen

 Nicolaus Copernicus

 François Edouard Joachim Coppée

 Coptos

 Claude-Godefroi Coquart

 Coracesium

 Ambrose Corbie

 Monastery of Corbie

 St. Corbinian

 James Andrew Corcoran

 Michael Corcoran

 Confraternities of the Cord

 Giulio Cesare Cordara

 Charles Cordell

 Balthasar Cordier

 Diocese of Cordova (Cordubensis)

 Diocese of Cordova (Cordubensis in America)

 Juan de Cordova

 Core, Dathan, and Abiron

 Vicariate Apostolic of Corea

 Archdiocese of Corfu

 Diocese of Coria

 Corinth

 Epistles to the Corinthians

 Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis

 Diocese of Cork

 School of Cork

 Maurus Corker

 Cormac MacCuilenan

 Elena Lucrezia Piscopia Cornaro

 Jean-Baptiste Corneille

 Michel Corneille (the Younger)

 Michel Corneille (the Elder)

 Pierre Corneille

 Jacob Cornelisz

 Cornelius

 Pope Cornelius

 Peter Cornelius

 Cornelius Cornelii a Lapide

 Karl Josef Rudolph Cornely

 Nicolas Cornet

 Cornice

 Abbey of Cornillon

 Giovanni Maria Cornoldi

 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado

 Coronation

 Gregorio Nuñez Coronel

 Juan Coronel

 Corporal

 Corporation

 Corporation Act of 1661

 Feast of Corpus Christi

 Corpus Juris Canonici

 Fraternal Correction

 Correctories

 Michael Augustine Corrigan

 Sir Dominic Corrigan

 Corsica

 Hernando Cortés

 Giovanni Andrea Cortese

 Diocese of Cortona

 Abbey of Corvey

 Corycus

 Corydallus

 Juan de la Cosa

 Archdiocese of Cosenza

 Henry Cosgrove

 Edmund Cosin

 Cosmas

 Sts. Cosmas and Damian

 Cosmas Indicopleustes

 Cosmas of Prague

 Cosmati Mosaic

 Cosmogony

 Cosmology

 Francesco Cossa

 Lorenzo Costa

 Giovanni Domenico Costadoni

 Republic of Costa Rica

 Francis Coster

 Clerical Costume

 Maria Cosway

 Jean-Baptiste Cotelier

 Cotenna

 Cotiæum

 Pierre Coton

 Diocese of Cotrone

 Robert de Coucy

 Frederic René Coudert

 General Councils

 Evangelical Counsels

 Counterpoint

 The Counter-Reformation

 Court (in Scripture)

 William Courtenay

 Ecclesiastical Courts

 Jean Cousin

 Charles-Edmond-Henride Coussemaker

 Pierre Coustant

 Nicolas Coustou

 Diocese of Coutances

 Louis-Charles Couturier

 Diego Covarruvias

 Covenanters

 Covetousness

 Diocese of Covington

 Cowl

 Michiel Coxcie

 Michiel Coxcie

 Charles-Antoine Coysevox

 Lorenzo Cozza

 Giuseppe Cozza-Luzi

 Cracow

 Pearl Mary Teresa Craigie

 Richard Crashaw

 Jean Crasset

 Mrs. Augustus Craven

 Gaspar de Crayer

 Richard Creagh

 Creation

 Creationism

 Credence

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Christendom


In its wider sense this term is used to describe the part of the world which is inhabited by Christians, as Germany in the Middle Ages was the country inhabited by Germans. The word will be taken in this quantitative sense in the article in comparing the extent of Christendom with that of Paganism or of Islam. But there is a narrower sense in which Christendom stands for a polity as well as a religion, for a nation as well as for a people. Christendom in this sense was an ideal which inspired and dignified many centuries of history and which has not yet altogether lost its power over the minds of men.

The foundations of a Christian polity are to be found in the traditions of the Jewish theocracy softened and broadened by Christian cosmopolitanism, in the completeness with which Christian principles were applied to the whole of life, in the aloofness of the Christian communities from the world around them, and in the hierarchical organization of the clergy. The conflict between the new religion and the Roman Empire was due partly to the very thoroughness of the Christian system and it naturally emphasized the distinction between this new society and the old state. Thus when Constantine proclaimed the Peace of the Church he might almost be described as signing a treaty between two powers. From that Peace to the time of the Barbarian inroads into the West, Christendom was all but conterminous with the Roman Empire, and it might be thought that the ideal of a Christian nation was then at least realized. The legal privileges which were granted to the bishops from the first and which tended to increase, the protection given to the churches and the property of the clergy, and the principle admitted by the emperors that questions of faith were to be freely decided by the bishops - all these concessions seemed to show that the empire had become positively as well as negatively Christian. To St. Ambrose and the bishops of the fourth century the destruction of the empire seemed almost incredible except as a phase of the final catastrophe, and the system which prevailed in the delays of Theodosius seemed almost the ideal Christian polity.

Yet there was about it much that fell short of the ideal of Christendom. In many ways, as a contemporary bishop expressed it, "the church was in the empire, not the empire in the church". The traditions of Roman imperialism were too strong to be easily mitigated. Constantine, though not even a catechumen, in a sense at least, presided over the Council of Nicaea and the "Divinity" of his son Constantius, though formally observing the rule that decisions of faith belonged to the bishops, was able to exert such pressure upon them that at one time not a single strictly orthodox bishop was left in the occupation of his see. The officious interference of a theologian emperor was more dangerous to the Church than the hostility of Julian, his successor. But the wish to dominate in every sphere was not the only relic of pagan Rome. Though the emperor was no longer pontifex maximus and the statue of Victory was removed from the senate house, though Theodosius decreed the final closing of the temples and put an end to pagan public worship, the ancient world was not really converted; it was hardly a catechumen. In philosophy, literature, and art it clung to the old models and reproduced them in a debased form. Pagan civilization had not been Christians of a simpler character and a more spontaneous vigour than the inhabitants of the degenerate empire. The formation of Christendom was to be the work of a new generation of nations, baptized in their infancy and receiving even the message of the ancient world from the lips of Christian teachers.

But it was to be long before the great future hidden in the Barbarian inversions was to become manifest. At their first irruption the influence of the Teutonic tribes was only destructive; the Christian polity seemed to be perishing with the empire. The Church, however, as a spiritual power survived and mitigated even the fury of the Barbarian, for the helpless population of Rome found a refuge in the churches during the sack of the city by Alaric in 410. The distinction between church and empire, which this disaster illustrated, was emphasized by the accusations brought against the patriotism of the Christians and by St. Augustine's reply in his "De Civitate Dei". He develops in this encyclopedic treatise the idea of the two kingdoms or societies (city, except in a very metaphorical sense, is too narrow to be an adequate translation of civitas) the Kingdom of God consisting of His friends in this world and the next, whether men or angels, while the earthly kingdom is that of his enemies. These two kingdoms have existed since the fall of the angels but in a more limited sense and in relation to the Christian dispensation, the Church is spoken of as God's kingdom on earth while the Roman Empire is all but identified with the civitas terrena; not altogether, however, because the civil power, in securing peace for that part of the heavenly kingdom which is on its earthly pilgrimage, receives some kind of Divine sanction. We might, perhaps, have expected, now that the empire was Christian, that St. Augustine would have looked forward to a new civitas terrena reconciled and united to the civitas Dei; but this prophetic vision of the future was prevented, it may be, by the prevalent opinion, that the world was near its end. The "De Civitate", however, which had a commanding influence in the Middle Ages, helped to form the ideal of Christendom by the development which it gave to the idea of the kingdom of God upon earth, its past history, its dignity, and universality.

From the fifth century till the days of Charles the Great there was no effectual political unity in the West, and the Church had no civil counterpart. But Charles' dominions extended from the Elbe to the Ebro and from Britany to Belgrade; there was but little of Western Christendom which they did not include. Ireland and the South of Italy were the only parts of it which his power or his influence did not reach. Over the territories actually comprised in his empire he exercised a real control, administrative and legislative, as well as military. But the Carlovingian empire was far more than a mere political federation: it was a period of renewal and reorganisation in nearly every sphere of social life. It was spiritual, perhaps, even more than political. In war conversion went hand in hand with victory; in peace Charles ruled through bishops as effectively as through counts; his active solicitude extended to the reform and education of the clergy, the promotion of learning, the revival of the Benedictine Rule, to the arts, to the liturgy and even the doctrines of the Church. In the West Christendom became a temporal polity and a society as well as a Church, and the empire of Charles, brief though its existence proved to be, remained for many centuries an ideal and therefore a power. Yet the Carlovingian civilization was in most cases a return to late Roman models. Originality is not its characteristic. Charles' favourite church at Aachen is supported on the columns which he sent for from the ruined temples of Italy. Even in his relations with the Church he would have found the closest precedents for his policy in the attitude of Constantine or even perhaps of Justinian. Great as was his respect for the successor of St. Peter, he claimed for himself a masterful share in the administration of matters ecclesiastical: he could write, even before his coronation as emperor, to Pope Leo III, "My part is to defend the Church by force of arms from external attacks and to secure her internally through the establishment of the Catholic faith, your part is to render us the assistance of prayer". Still every step forward has usually begun with a return to the past; it is thus that the artist or the statesman learns his craft. If the Carlovingian system had lasted, no doubt much that was new would have been developed, and even under Charles's successor the spiritual and temporal powers were placed on a more equal and more appropriate footing. But Charles was too great for his age; his work was premature. The political bond was too weak to prevail over tribal loyalty and Teutonic particularism. Disorder and disruption would have broken up Carlovingian civilization even if Northman, Saracen, and Hungarian had not come to plunge Europe once more into anarchy.

During the tenth century the work of moral and political reconstruction was slowly carried on by the Church and feudalism; in the eleventh came that struggle between these two creative factors of the new Europe which saved the Church from absorption into feudalism. This century opened with what was, perhaps, the most hopeful attempt, after Charles the Great, to give the medieval empire a really universal character. The revived empire of Otto I in the middle of the tenth century had been but an imperfect copy of its Carlovingian model. It was much more limited geographically, as it included only Germany, its dependent states to the east, and Italy; it was limited also in its interests, for Otto left to the Church nearly all those spheres of ecclesiastical, educational, literary, and artistic activity for which Charles had done so much. But Otto's grandson, the boy emperor Otto III, "magnum quoddam et improbabile cogitans", as a contemporary expressed it, attempted to make the empire less German, less military, more Roman, more universal, and more of a spiritual force. He was in intimate alliance with the Holy See, and with almost startling originality he established in Rome the first German and then the first French pope. He seems to have realized the truth that it was only by leaning on and developing religious aspect of the empire that he could hope at that stage of history to make its influence universal in the West. Europe was so unformed politically that the long reign of a wise and determined emperor backed up by the Church might perhaps have changed its future history, have brought together into one broad and rather indefinite channel the small but already divergent streams of national tendencies, and built up Europe on the basis of a Christian federalism. But Otto mirabile mundi, died at the age of twenty-two, and the dream of a Christian empire faded away. Never again did a successor of his make a serious attempt to throw off his German character and to make the sphere of his rule conterminous with Christendom. Fascinating as is the theory of the Holy Roman Empire, and great as was its influence on history and speculation, it was always something of a sham. It claimed in political matters a sphere of action as wide as that of the popes in things spiritual but, unlike the spiritual, this political plena potestas was never admitted. Even before the War of Investitures and the First Crusade had made so wide a breach in the imperial prestige, an Abbot of Dijon of Italian origin could contrast the still enduring unity of the Church with the disruption of the civil power. The empire is generally held to have reached its zenith in the middle of the eleventh century but that is not the century in which we find the ideal of a united Christendom nearest its realization.

Political unity in the West was never restored after the fall of the Carlovingian Empire, religious unity lasted till the Reformation, but in the twelfth century we find, in addition, a very large measure of what may compendiously be called "social unity". Before that time isolation, disorder and the predominance of feudalism had kept men apart; after it the development of national distinctions was to have something of the same effect. The twelfth century is therefore the period in which Christian cosmopolitanism can best be studied. The Church was naturally the chief unifying force, in the darkest days she had preached the gospel to Frank, Saxon, and Gallo-Roman, and her organization had been, at critical moments when the civil power had almost sunk under the flood, the only bond which linked together the populations of the West. The opening century found the Church in the midst of that Hildebrandine movement, in favour of clerical celibacy and against simony, which was necessary to save the spiritual character of the clergy from being obliterated by too close a contact with temporal administration and the material ambition of feudal society. The reform, though its centre was at Rome, was a European movement. Its forerunners had been found in the monasteries of Burgundy and among the students of canon law in the Rhine cities; at the height of the struggle its leaders included Italians, Lorrainers, Frenchmen, and a German monastic revival. When Paschal II showed signs of faltering, the movement was carried on almost in spite of him by the zeal of French reformers. Even Spain, England, and Demnark caught the saving infection, and the eventual settlement between Church and empire was foreshadowed in the concordat, devised probably by a French canonist, which was agreed to by St. Anselm and Henry I. Thus did all the nations which were to be have their share in the victory of Hildebrandine principles, and there was roused throughout the West a revival of the spiritual life. The ideals of the clergy were raised, or rather they acquired strength and confidence to pursue ideals which they had always, though despairingly, acknowledged. This crusade against selfishness, passion, and weakness brought together the clergy of the West, as the attack on more material foes united its peoples, and as a consequence the ecclesiastical body in the twelfth century is a real society almost contemptuous of political or racial frontiers. We find Frenchmen and an Englishman in the chair of St. Peter; an Italian, St. Anselm, at Canterbury; a Savoyard, St. Hugh, at Lincoln; an English John of Salisbury at Chartres: instances such as those could be multiplied almost indefinitely. In medieval Latin this vast society possessed a language suited to the varied wants of the age, and it is as living as any vernacular if we read it in a letter of St. Anselm, a sermon of St. Bernard, a poem of Adam of St. Victor, the "Polycraticus" of John of Salisbury, an assize of Henry II, the desultory chronicle of Ordericus Vitalis or the finished history of William of Tyre. It was a language which might have had a greater literature if the less simple amongst those who wrote had not been continually harking back to classical models.

The spirit of Catholicity in the Church was guarded and prompted by the ever increasing power of the popes. The days when the Holy See had had to be rescued by the emperors from the petty and passionate Roman nobility must have seemed far off, and the most definite result of the War of Investitures was a second liberation, the conquest of the complete independence of papal elections. Never was the papal power in Europe so great as in the years between the end of that war in 1122 and the great disaster of the Second Crusade. Besides being the guardian of the Faith, the papacy was fast becoming the central court of Christendom. For close on two centuries, from Nicholas I to Leo IX in the middle of the eleventh century, the plenary powers of the pope had been but exceptionally exercised north of the Alps though they had been acknowledged in principle, but in this most legal of centuries the exercise of papal jurisdiction becomes habitual. The curia was treated as a court of first instance as well as a court of appeal. Hardly any subject was too small or too local to be referred to Rome: the pope, for instance, decided whether or not the Duke of Larraine might have a castle within four miles of Toul. Papal legates might be met on all the highways of Christendom, papal courts sat in every land. Canon law grew fast, and the "Decretum" of Gratian, about the middle of the century, though it was not an authoritative collection, provided legates and judges with an admirable synthesis of papal pronouncements. St. Bernard was much troubled at the amount of legal business which poured in upon the pope; it must, he considered, interfere with the more spiritual duties of his high office. But the movement was irresistible; the papacy had become de facto the centre of a vast Christian nation. The empire was, as we have seen, out of court. It was in the papacy that Christendon, a temporal as well as a spiritual society, found its head in temporal and spiritual things alike.

After the faith and the hierarchy of the Church the monastic orders have usually formed the strongest bond of Catholic union, and in the twelfth century the monastic spirit was full of life. In the previous epoch the Cluniac Benedictines had played an essential part in the work of reconstruction; but life was now more complicated, and monasticism took many forms. The contemplative spirit of the old hermits inspired the Carthusian foundation of St. Bruno, "the only ancient order which has never been reformed and never required reforming", the increased demand for parish work led to the revival of regular canons, and in part to the foundation of the Premonstratensians, the Crusades produced the military orders, while in the Cistercians the new spiritual fervour with its ascetical and mystical tendencies found appropriate expression. Seldom has a new order spread with such rapidity throughout Europe as these white Benedictines, and St. Bernard, their great representative is the most marvellous instance of the power of a single man, without official position, over all classes and different nations. The settlement of a disputed papal election practically depended on his verdict, he appeased the feuds of German noble families and reconciled Italian cities, he led one emperor to the South of Italy and sent another on a crusade of the East; more wonderful still, single-handed he pursued the Roman people to forsake the antipope. Though not the originator, he was the motive power of the Second Crusade, and his eloquence seemed as persuasive in the Rhine cities as in Burgundy, and as successful in saving the Jews from the fanaticism of the crusaders as in rousing the crusading spirit.

Besides the Church and its many activities, there were other forces at work, other expressions of the energy of youthful Christendom which must at least be enumerated. The twelfth-century renaissance was a rapid development of what may be called Franco-Norman civilization. France, if the name is given a comprehensive meaning, had conquered England and South Italy, had brought about the crusades, and had helped the papacy to victory over the empire. It was in France that the new monastic movements took their rise, and the intellectual movement as well. The University of Paris was the university of Christendom, and the problems stated by the Breton Abelard excited the curiosity and the enthusiasm of young men from every country. French was spoken nearly as widely as Latin, and the medieval epic, the romances of the Arthurian legend, and the lyrics of the troubadours, the three most characteristic forms of medieval vernacular literature all were developed amongst men who spoke one of the dialects of French. Politically the Franco-Norman world was divided between Plantagenet, Capetian, and the princes of the South, and the personality of Frederick Barbarossa gave a splendour to German politics, but intellectually and socially French civilization dominated Europe. It was however, a supremacy which lay in the rapidity and logical thoroughness with which she expressed ideas common to the whole West. The development of Gothic architecture in England was almost parallel to the French, the epic and the Arthurian legend found a congenial soil in Germany, and the lyrical poetry of Italy was almost a younger sister to that of Provence. The same spirit seemed to be abroad from Scotland to Palermo, and the Christians of the West must have felt that they were indeed citizens of a great city.

For this sense of a common Christendom was not confined to the clergy or the knightly and baronial classes. The peasantry and the town-population had much improved their economic and legal positions since the beginning of the eleventh century, they had also profited by the education of action and experience. In the movement for the Truce of God, in the Hildebrandine reform, in the Crusades, in all these struggles of a crowded age, the holy people of God had taken a prominent part; all had increased their self-confidence, all had drawn them closer to the clergy and to one another. Though the aim of the Hildebrandine reform was to preserve the distinctive features of the priestly life, it had not formed the clergy into a caste. Gregory VII had appealed to the laity, and the reformers found among the people allies most enthusiastic at times indeed fanatical and cruel. The Crusades, too, had consecrated the devotion of the poor pilgrims as well as knightly valour. At one moment, when the leaders had forgotten the Holy City for the sake of Syrian castles, it was the zeal of the poor that alone saved the fortunes of the expedition. On the other movements of the time clergy and people were often united, and municipal liberties, at least in their earlier stages, found a support in the Church. Alexander III, the greatest pope of the century, was allied with the Lombard republics in their struggle with Frederick Barbarossa, the greatest of its emperors. It is at least probable that since the early ages of the Church, clergy and laity have never been so united as in this century. Few medieval saints have excited so much universal and popular enthusiasm as St. Thomas of Canterbury, a martyr for the rights of the Church and the clergy, and the pilgrims who thronged to Canterbury from all parts of Christendom are perhaps the best evidence of the union between people and clergy, and between the different nations of the West.

The pontificate of Innocent III, which began before the close of the twelfth century, was the climax of this period of Christian cosmopolitanism. It illustrates both the splendour of the ideal and the increasing difficulty of realizing it. Few popes have had nobler aims than Innocent, few have been more favoured by nature and circumstance or have been apparently more successful. He was enabled to put at the head of a national movement in Italy, to govern Rome, where his predecessors had been weakest, to compel the King of France to respect the rights of marriage and the King of England those of the Church, to help in the success of two papalist candidates to the empire, and to see a crusade sail for the East. These are but some of the successes of his reign, yet it is impossible to study the fortunes of his pontificate without observing that nearly every one of his victories is marked by the signs of ultimate failure. Of the two emperors whom he helped to the throne, the first repudiated all his engagements and declared open war upon him in Italy, the second was that Frederick II who was to be the most thoroughgoing foe of the papacy. The homage which Innocent won from King John contributed in a later generation to embitter the relations between England and the Holy See. In his Italian policy, disinterested as it was, can be traced the first beginnings of future evils; the political power he had acquired led to the first case of nepotism and to the first appeal to a French noble for help in the South of Italy. He lost control over both the religious campaigns which he set in motion, for he endeavoured unsuccessfully to protect Raymond of Toulouse from the Albigensian crusaders and to prevent the Venetians diverting the Fourth Crusade from Jerusalem to Constantinople.

That so great a pope should meet with failures so signal was significant of the change coming over Europe. The control over temporal and even ecclesiastical matters was slipping away from the head of Christendom, though the great personality of Innocent and the successful war waged by his successors against the empire might disguise the fact from contemporaries. In the fourteenth century the national wars, the great Schism, the unimpeded progress of the Turks, these were all witnesses to the divisions of Christendom. For a moment, at the time of the Council of Constance in 1414, there seemed to be a rally; the Christian society appeared to be drawing together again in order to put an end to the schism and to reform the Church; but as a matter of fact that council was the first of European congresses, a meeting of national delegates rather than a parliament of Christendom. The history of this change from the Christendom of the twelfth century to the nations of the Reformation epoch, is the history of the later Middle Ages. It is possible, however, to disentangle some of the elements of this complicated process of disintegration.

To the modern student, who is wise after the event, it is clear by the eleventh century that the Europe of the future is not going to be built up politically as an empire and that the ultimate development of some form of national state is assured. The Church, though she might have preserved a large measure ot social unity and linked the nations together, could never have formed a permanent, universal state, for Christianity is not, like Islam, a political system. Politically, there seems but two alternatives; empire or nations. Indeed the roots of nationality can be traced deep down in geographical and racial differences and in the varing degrees in which the Teutonic invaders of the Roman Empire coalesced with its old inhabitants. In the twelfth century, though the sense of a common Christianity is the predominant characteristic of the age, the development of national distinctions proceeded apace. Germany was long to regret the glories of the reign of Frederick Barbarossa, yet even his power failed to level the Alps politically and to overcome the still hardly conscious nationalism of the Lombard cities. The social and intellectual influence which France had exerted in the middle of the century began under Philip Augustus to take a political form; while in England conquerors and conquered were fast amalgamating, and a national feeling, fostered by insular position, had grown up, though it was concealed for the moment by the extent of the Angevin Empire and the foreign interests of Henry II and Richard I. This empire broke into pieces under John, and, after an interval of weakness and hesitation, England appears in the reign of Edward I as the country where nationality had most rapidly developed. Elsewhere, too, the process continued. The personality of St. Louis gave to the French monarchy a halo comparable to the spiritual character which was to cling for so many centuries to the Holy Roman Empire. The fall of the Hohenstauffen decided finally what had long threatened, that Germany was to be not a State, but at any rate a nation severed from Italy, and that Italy itself was to live its own turbulent city life so fruitful in war, in tyranny, in saints, and in works of art.

Meanwhile the new monarchies of the West became self-conscious through their lawyers. Secular law in the twelfth century had given its support to the civil power, but it had been overshadowed, on the whole, by the great development of canon law. Towards the close of the thirteenth it had its revenge as the ally of the national sovereigns. Edward I was both one of the most legal and one of the most powerful of English kings, yet in his case legal absolutism was mitigated by customary law. In France the enigmatic figure of Philip the Fair was half-concealed by his legist ministers, men who combined a radical anti-clericalism, ready to go any lengths, with the most frank acknowledgment of the absolute power of the sovereign. It is an instance of the irony of history that Edward and Philip should be the contemporaries of Boniface VIII, the boldest assertor of papal supremacy. The probable explanation is that the recent victory over the empire misled the papalist writers and perhaps the popes themselves. The disappearance of the Hohenstauffen seemed to leave the papacy an undisputed supremacy in the Christian world. It had been the practice to speak of the spiritual and temporal powers in terms of pope and emperor, and it was long before it was realized, at least on the papal side, that the civil power, defeated as emperor, had returned to the attack with more aggressive vigour as the Monarchy and the State. The papal-imperial controversy continued, though with increasing unreality, when the pope was at Avignon, and the emperor was Louis of Bavaria, and little effort was made to adapt to the new conditions the older theory of the co-ordinate powers of Church and State, both of immediate Divine origin but differing in dignity.

The struggle between Boniface and Philip culminated in the outrage of Anagni, where Nogaret, the French lawyer, struck the aged pope. It was a brutal act, disgraceful only to the perpetrator. Unfortunately, it was followed by the migration, a few years later, of the papal court to the prison-palace of Avignon. This premature development of French absolutism was followed by years of war and anarchy; but from her misfortunes France rose up a consolidated monarchy. In England, aristocratic misrule and some forty years of intermittent civil war produced the same result. In Spain, and even in the German and Scandinavian principalities and kingdoms, different causes tended in the same direction. Thus grew up those monarchies, powerful at home jealous of foreign interference, which contributed so much to the Reformation.

While in the political sphere nations were drawing apart, in the social sphere the Church was losing much of her influence on the thoughts of men. Some of this loss was perhaps inevitable. New interests were springing up on every side with the growth of wealth, of education, and of the complexity of life new professions, other than that of arms, were being opened to the educated laity. Religion could hardly expect to keep the hold she had exercised on the outward lives of Christians. Meanwhile the improvement of secular law would in time render unnecessary and invidious many of the clerical privileges which had been so essential in a simpler age. Thus as European society developed, the clergy, the most cosmopolitan element of it, would necessarily lose some of the commanding influence they had exercised in the ages when they represented civilization as well as religion. But other causes were at work. The high religious enthusiasm of the earlier twelfth century was not maintained at the same level either in clergy or people. And indeed even that Christian age had had its dark side. Passion, the fierce passionate character of a primitive people, was not yet subdued. What had been won by the Hildebrandine movement had to be preserved. No moral victory is final: no generation can afford to disarm. The very success of the Church brought its dangers, and increased power tended to ambition and worldliness. The faults and the wealth of the clergy must have contributed something, it would be difficult to say how much to the darkest feature of the age, the heresy which even in St. Bernard's time lurked in secret nearly everywhere. This evil spread like a plague through Southern France and Italy, and kept appearing sporadically north of the Alps. It seemed to threaten Christian morals and Christian faith alike. So acute did the danger become in France that it almost justified the violences of the Albigensian Crusade but the Church of the thirteenth century had nobler weapons than those of De Montfort or the Inquisition: the Friars and Scholastic movement attacked heresy, morally and intellectually, and routed it. Henceforth, however, till the sixteenth; century, no great religious or monastic movement, common to Christendom, was provoked by the many moral and intellectual causes which led to the decline and fall of the medieval system and finally to the Reformation itself.

The history of the papacy cannot be separated from that of the Church. The great popes of the past had had a share which can hardly be over-estimated in binding together Christian society and raising its moral level; it is not surprising that the diminished influence of the papacy is among the causes of the disintegration of Christendom. It is difficult not to trace the decadence to the struggle with Frederick II. Before that struggle, in the days of Innocent III, the difficulties of the papacy were due to its agents, its subjects, to the very greatness of the task it had undertaken, not to the character or aims of the popes themselves. But from Gregory IX a different spirit seemed to prevail. The popes were engaged in a hand-to-land conflict with a power which aimed at establishing a strong monarchy in Italy which threatened to stifle Roman and papal freedom the contest was not being waged with an imperious but distant German: it was Italian, territorial and bitter. The spiritual ruler seemed almost merged in the sovereign of Rome and the feudal lord of Sicily. Money was necessary, and in order to obtain it funds had to be raised in other, and especially, transalpine lands, and by means which aroused much discontent and which affected the credit of Rome as the central court of Christendom. The conception of canon law, of a system of courts Christian and a sacred jurisdiction over-riding political frontiers, is a magnificent one, and the debt which European law owes to the canonists is admitted by the modern masters of legal history. It was a system, however, which had many rivals, and it required the support of a high moral prestige. Unfortunately, the machinery was, from the first, defective, there was no organization at Rome capable of dealing with the press of legal business, and even in the twelfth century complaints of venality and delay were frequent and bitter. Litigants are not easily satisfied, nor has the law often been at once impartial cheap, and speedy in any country yet it can hardly be denied that in the thirteenth century; the Roman courts suffered from very serious abuses.

It is unnecessary to follow the fortunes of the papacy after the thirteenth century; the lesson of the French influence, of the schism, of the Italianization of the fifteenth-century popes, is but too clear. Though the essential rights of the Holy See were but seldom denied in those years, it was clear, when the crisis came, and when the papal supremacy had to bear the first attack, that that devotion which makes martyrs and the enthusiasm which inspires righteous rebellion were sadly lacking. It would seem, then that the growth of national divisions, the increased secularism of everyday life, the diminished influence of the Church and the papacy, that all these interdependent influences had broken up the social unity of Christendom at least two centuries before the Reformation, yet it must never be forgotten that religious unity remained. As long as Christendom was Catholic it was a reality, a visible society with one head and one hierarchy. Though for the moment centrifugal tendencies were in the ascendant, the future was full of possibilities. A great religious movement, a revival of the Christian spirit, the reform which should have come when the Reformation came, any such appeal to the common faith and to Catholic loyalty might have brought the Christian nations together again, have put some check upon their internal absolutism and external combativeness and have removed from the Christian name the reproach of mutual antagonism.

Such speculation is, however, as idle as it is fascinating, instead of the reform, of the renewal of the spiritual life of the Church round the old principles of Christian faith and unity, there came the Reformation, and Christian society was broken up beyond the hope of at least proximate reunion. But it was long before this fact was realized even by the Reformers and indeed it must have been more difficult for a subject of Henry VIII to convince himself that the Latin Church was really being torn asunder than for us to conceive the full meaning and all the consequences of a united Christendom. Much of the weakness of ordinary men in the earlier years of the Reformation, much of their attitude towards the papacy, can be explained by their blindness to what was happening. They thought, no doubt, that all would come right in the end. So dangerous is it, particularly in times of revolution, to trust to anything but principle.

The effect of the Reformation was to separate from the Church all the Scandinavian, most of the Teutonic, and a few of the Latin-speaking populations of Europe but the spirit of division once established worked further mischief, and the antagonism between Lutheran and Calvinist was almost as bitter as that between Catholic and Protestant. At the begining, however, of the seventeenth century, Christendom was weary of religious war and persecution, and for a moment it almost seemed as if the breach were to be closed. The deaths of Philip II and Elizabeth, the conversion and the tolerant policy of Henry IV of France, the accession of the House of Stuart to the English throne, the pacification between and Spain and the Dutch, all these events pointed to the same direction. A like tendency is apparent in the theological speculation of the time: the learning and judgment of Hooker, the first beginning of the High Church movement, the spread of Arminianism in Holland, these were all signs that in the Protestant Churches, thought, study, and piety had begun to moderate the fires of controversy, while in the monumental works of Suarez and the other Spanish doctors, the Catholic theology seems to be resuming that stately, comprehensive view of its problems which is so impressive in the great Scholastics. It is not surprising that this moment, when the cause of reconciliation seemed in the ascendant, was marked by a scheme of Christian political union. Much importance was at one time attributed to the grand dessein of Henry IV. Recent historians are inclined to assign most of the design to Henry's Protestant minister, Sully, the king's share in the plan was probably but small. A coalition war against Austria was first to secure Europe against the domination of the Hapsburgs but an era of peace was to follow. The different Christian States, whether Catholic or Protestant were to preserve their independence, to practise toleration, to be united in a "Christian Republic" under the presidency of the pope, and to find an outlet for their energies in the recovery of the East. These dreams of Christian reunion soon melted away. Religious divisions were too deep-seated to permit the reconstruction of a Christian polity, and the cure for international ills has been sought in other directions. The international law of the seventeenth century jurists was based upon national law, not upon Christian fellowship, the balance of power of the eighteenth century on the elementary instinct of self-defence, and the nationalism of the nineteenth on racial or linguistic distinctions. It has never occurred to anyone to take seriously the mystic terminology with which in the Holy Alliance Alexander I of Russia clothed his policy of conservative intervention. The Greek insurrection and the Eastern questions generally restored the word Christian to the vocabulary of the European chanceries, but it has come in recent times to express our common civilization rather than a religion which so many Europeans now no longer possess. (See )

Francis Urquhart.