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The christian church

In religious history, this is the century everyone will remember as the time of the great upheaval known as the Reformation. The Catholic church had become complacent and failed to deploy its wealth adequately to satisfy the "spiritual hunger" of the people. Absentism among the clergy, along with ignorant and immoral priests, combined with material greed, produced the soil for religious revolution. A number of the factors involved have been listed in the special section at the end of the previous chapter. Although the course of this revolt differed in the separate countries, all the political, economic and social activities of Europe were involved. Pope Leo X, who was a de Medici, was a benign man, who did not realize the magnitude of the problem during his tenure between 1513 and 1521, the period when Martin Luther initiated the final steps in the Protestant revolt. Those measures will be discussed in the section on GERMANY later in this chapter. The Holy Roman Empire disappeared, in essence, and long needed changes had to wait for Pope Paul III (1534-1549), an intelligent and skillful man who led Europe to a turning point by initiating the Counter-Reformation. This involved the calling of a general council of the church, which met in three sessions at Trent between 1545 and 1563 at which many of the clerical abuses were corrected and it was only then that the Catholic Church began to regain ground lost to Protestantism. Of the 250,000 books printed in Europe up to 1600 about 3/4 were written about religion. (Ref. 8 )

From the old church's standpoint, one of the most important figures to appear in this era was Ignatius of Loyola, who after loose escapades as a Spanish soldier, finally "saw the light" following a long convalescence for an injury, became a monk and with others in Paris in 1534, started the Society of Jesus, later called the "Jesuits". In parts of Europe, at least, these men really saved Catholicism. The spirit of these confident, positive, energetic, disciplined priests became the essence of the new, militant Church. Loyola, himself, with apparent hallucinations and known convulsions, might well have been called insane by today's standards. The Counter-Reformation, originally devoted to peace-keeping among the faithful, gradually lost this role and by 1572 actually helped to provoke war and violence throughout a century.

NOTE: Insert Map 58. The Exploration of the World to c1600

On the other hand Protestantism did not escape some serious defects. As a religion basing itself on an infallible Bible, it could not favor scientific disciplines. Calvin had little use for science, Knox none. Astrology, witchcraft and superstitions persisted. Nevertheless, some progress was made in biology and marked advancement in astronomy. Nikolai Kopernik, or Niklas Koppernigk, or Nicolaus Copernicus, born in west Prussia in 1473 under Polish rule, wrote of a heliocentric theory of the universe, which actually was a far more profound change in thought than the Reformation. It made the differences between Catholic and Protestant dogmas seem trivial and it pointed beyond the Reformation to the Enlightenment, but few men at the time could recognize the implications. The reader will not be burdened with a debate on the merits of the Catholic and Protestant views of the problems and questions of the day any further, but the interested reader is ref erred to Durant's Volume VI, (Ref. 51 ), pages 936 and 937 for excellent presentations on both sides of that great question.

NOTE: Insert Map. 63. The Religious Situation in Europe 1560

The moslem church

There was a great resurgence of Muslim power between 1520 and 1526 with the western expansion of the Ottomans into Hungary and the Mughal invasion of India. This was actually the high tide of conquest and was followed by a period of consolidation and more moderate expansion until the 1590s when a spate of revolts- weakened the power of the two expanding empires. A third Moslem state, the Safavid Empire of Persia also stretched out some to the east, but this was a Sh'ite dynasty while the others were orthodox Sunni. Overall it is apparent that, outside of Europe proper, Christianity had lost much ground to Islam. (Ref. 8 ) As it was aptly put by McNeill (Ref. 139 ):

"By the end of the 15th century, Islamized steppe warriors, aided by Moslem missionaries, merchants and local converts to Islam, had engulfed the old heartland of orthodox Christendom, driven deep into India and established the Moslem faith and culture in outlying provinces of China. Even in sub-Saharan Africa and southeast Asia, well beyond the range of the steppe warriors' bowshot, merchants and missionaries had won numerous peoples to Islam.”

McNeill, (Ref. 139 ), page 611

International jewry

Some persecutions of Jews continued as in the last century. The word ghetti was first applied to the Jewish quarter of Venice in 1516. (Ref. 8) After their expulsion from Spain and Sicily in 1492 and from Naples in 1514, the Jewish exiles divided in two directions - (1) to Mediterranean Islam, particularly Turkey and (2) to the Atlantic seaboard, particularly Amsterdam, where they were able to promote increased trade with the Iberian peninsula and to Hamburg. (Ref. 292 )

Forward to A.D. 1601 to 1700

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Source:  OpenStax, A comprehensive outline of world history. OpenStax CNX. Nov 30, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10595/1.3
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