on this day the suspension of Eugene IV Takes Hold. The world-unifying
Council of Basel had been convened in Switzerland in 1431 by Martin V to
continue the reforms under his papacy that had solved the Western Schism,
which had torn apart Catholic Christendom for nearly forty years.
In 1417, the Council of Constance had determined agreements to have the
Roman Pope Gregory XII and Pisan Pope John XXIII, while the Avignon Pope
Benedict XIII was excommunicated, undercutting his support and effectively
ending the schism. Conciliarism had solved the issues of whom to trust
with ultimate authority and many sought for it to reign supreme in Western
Europe.
Councils were to take place every seven years, and Martin V convoked Basel
shortly before his death of apoplexy. His cunning assistant Gabriele
Condulmer was appointed Pope Eugene IV quickly afterward, and he
immediately began to struggle with the Council. In December, Eugene called
a dissolution for the Council, but the electors refused to leave and
continued reforms. Eugene, a native Venetian, gave papal support to his
city and allied Florence against Milan during the Lombardy Wars, which
spawned great unrest among the Romans. After two years of contrary bulls,
the two were reconciled by the newly elected Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund,
who allowed for the retaining of papal powers (and protection) while
Eugene IV revoked the dissolution.
"Interesting...I don't know if it'd have worked in
RL, particularly the parts about the Eastern churches. A lot of those
quarrels were actually over national differences, just expressed via
church differences." - reader's commentsFollowing his settlement
with those at Basel and looking toward presiding over a peace treaty in
Ferrara, Eugene attempted to escape Rome disguised as a Benedictine monk.
While in the Tiber, he was spotted and had stones thrown at him until a
band of Romans supporting the Colonnna Family swam into the river and
dragged him back to the Vatican. The city turned to an uproar that even
the papal armies under Cardinal Vitelleschi could not reestablish control
with the Pope under hostage. The peace talks in Ferrara disintegrated
without the pope, and his influence began to become questioned as balance
struck itself out.
While the Pope's power waned, the Council at Basel continued to grow in
prestige. They wrote reform (such as banning circumcision as a mortal
sin), judged lawsuits, acted as mediators, and even influenced the Treaty
of Arras ending the Hundred Years' War between France and England. As the
Council worked to achieve union with the church in the East, Eugene IV
finally had to give them recognition to align his own political agendas.
The parties worked to determine a place of meeting with the Council
wanting an inland city far from Roman influence and the Greeks of
Constantinople hoping for an easily reached port city. On January 10,
1438, the convention met, and the two churches began discussing ways of
reconciling their dogma. Eugene worked to gain advantage in the
discussion, but on January 24, the Council suspended him. It was the first
step on the downward spiral of papal power, followed soon after of gaining
the support of Frederick III, King of the Romans, that would eventually be
relocated to a main seat representing overall Western Catholicism on the
Council.
"Agreed. This seems to understate both the degree
of opposition on both a theological and proto-national level toward union
with Rome (a lot of Greeks actually preferred Ottoman rule to Latin
interference at this point). " - reader's commentsIn the meantime,
the Council was able to achieve an agreement with Patriarch Joseph II of
Constantinople early in 1439. He would die that June, but by then the
union would be in action, and, though unpopular, would prove to be
mutually beneficial as the West ended its infighting and launched fresh
crusades to beat back the Ottoman advances on the East. The reunification
of the Church continued as the Coptic Christians arrived from Ethiopia
with delegates in 1441. Further unification came as the Jacobites of
Syria, Maronites of Lebanon, and even Nestorians of Persia came into the
fold, joining Armenians and Russians who had already come. They managed to
incite rebellion through the growing Ottoman Empire in Greece and Turkey,
ending the expansion of Muslim political power while eclipsing it with a
new Christian coalition.
The strong unity came as the Council debated issues such as purgatory and
the Processions of the Holy Spirit. Theological debates will continue
eternally, but the loose Constitution of Christendom would define a common
ground that would be used by political leaders throughout Europe, Asia,
and Africa to determine trade agreements, terms of war and peace, and
overall morality. Missionaries and conquerors would stretch the reach of
Christendom through Africa (in a crusade against slavery once dreamed by
Martin V), Mongol-controlled Asia, and even to the newly discovered
Americas.
Noted Pope Martin VI, formerly Augustinian monk Martin Luther, would lead
internal matters of reformation by separating Church and State, the holy
and the secular, solving many of the issues rising by the very different
beliefs of the many churches that could not be rectified with his famous
bull, "...Therefore I declare that neither pope nor bishop nor any other
person has the right to impose a syllable of law upon a Christian man
without his own consent".