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The History of the Christian Church, 50-WHAT A MESS

50-WHAT A MESS (1)

The title of this episode is “What a Mess!”

As is often the case, we start by backing up & reviewing material we've already covered so we can launch into the next leg of our journey in Church History.

Anglo-Saxon missionaries to Germany had received the support of Charles Martel, a founder of the Carolingian dynasty. Martel supported these missions because of his desire to expand his rule eastwards into Bavaria. The Pope was grateful for his support, and for Charles' victory over the Muslims at the Battle of Tours. But Martel fell afoul of papal favor when he confiscated Church lands. At first, the Church consented to his seizing of property to produce income to stave off the Muslim threat. But once that threat was dealt with, he refused to return the lands. Adding insult to injury, Martel ignored the Pope's request for help against the Lombards taking control of a good chunk of Italy. Martel denied assistance because at that time the Lombards were his allies. But a new era began with the reign of Martel's heir, Pippin or as he's better known, Pepin III.

Pepin was raised in the monastery of St. Denis near Paris. He & his brother were helped by the church leader Boniface to carry out a major reform of the Frank church. These reforms of the clergy and church organization brought about a renewal of religious and intellectual life and made possible the educational revival associated with the greatest of the Carolingian rulers, Charlemagne & his Renaissance.

In 751, Pepin persuaded Pope Zachary to allow Boniface to anoint him, King of the Franks, supplanting the Merovingian dynasty. Then, another milestone in church-state relations passed with Pope Stephen II appealing to Pepin for aid against the Lombards. The pope placed Rome under the protection of Pepin and recognized him and his sons as “Protectors of the Romans.”

As we've recently seen, all of this Church-State alliance came to a focal point with the crowning of Charlemagne as Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in AD 800. For some time the Popes in Rome had been looking for a way to loosen their ties to the Eastern Empire & Constantinople. Religious developments in the East provided the Popes an opportunity to finally break free. The Iconoclastic Controversy dominating Eastern affairs gave the Popes one more thing to express their disaffection with. We'll take a closer look at the controversy later. For now, it's enough to say the Eastern Emperor Leo III banned the use of icons as images of religious devotion in AD 726. The supporters of icons ultimately prevailed but only after a century of bitter and at times violent dispute. Pope Gregory II rejected Leo's edict banning icons and flaunted his disrespect for the Emperor's authority. Gregory's pompous and scathing letter to the Emperor was long on bluff but a dramatic statement of his rejection of secular rulers' meddling in Church affairs. Pope Gregory wrote: “Listen! Dogmas are not the business of emperors but of pontiffs.”

The reign of what was regarded by the West as a heretical dynasty in the East gave the Pope the excuse he needed to separate from the East and find a new, devoted and orthodox protector. The alliance between the papacy and the Carolingians represents the culmination of that quest, and opened a new and momentous chapter in the history of European medieval Christianity.

In response to Pope Stephen's appeal for help against the Lombards, Pepin recovered the Church's territories in Italy and gave them to the pope, an action known as the ‘Donation of Pepin'. This confirmed the legal status of the Papal States.

At about the same time, the Pope's claim to the rule of Italy and independence from the Eastern Roman Empire was reinforced by the appearance of one of the great forgeries of the Middle Ages, the Donation of Constantine. This spurious document claimed Constantine the Great had given Rome and the western part of the Empire to the bishop of Rome when he moved the capital of the empire to the East. The Donation was not exposed as a forgery until the 15th Century.

The concluding act in the popes' attempt to free themselves from Constantinople came on Christmas Day 800 when Pope Leo III revived the Empire in the West by crowning Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor. It's rather humorous, as one wag put it – the Holy Roman Empire was neither Holy, nor Roman, and can scarcely be called an Empire.

Charlemagne's chief scholar was the British-born Alcuin who'd been master of the cathedral school in York. He was courted by Charlemagne to make his capital at Aachen on the border between France & Germany, Europe's new center of education & scholarship. Alcuin did just that. If the school at Aachen didn't plant the seeds that would later flower in the Renaissance it certainly prepared the soil for them.

Alcuin profoundly influenced the intellectual, cultural and religious direction of the Carolingian Empire, as the 300-some extant letters he wrote reveal. His influence is best seen in the manuscripts of the school at Tours where he later became abbot. His influence is also demonstrated in his educational writings, revision of the Biblical text, commentaries and the completion of his version of Church liturgy. He standardized spelling and writing, reformed missionary practice, and contributed to the organizing of church regulations. Alcuin was the leading theologian in the struggle against the heresy of Adoptionism. Adoptionists said Jesus was simply a human being who God adopted & MADE a Son. Alcuin was a staunch defender of Christian orthodoxy and the authority of the Church, the pre-eminence of the Roman Bishop and of Charlemagne's sacred position as Emperor. He died in 804.

The time at which Alcuin lived certainly needed the reforms he brought & he was the perfect agent to bring them. From the palace school at Aachen, a generation of his students went out to head monastic and cathedral schools throughout the land. Even though Charlemagne's Empire barely outlived its founder, the revival of education and religion associated with he and Alcuin brightened European culture throughout the bleak and chaotic period that followed. This Carolingian Renaissance turned to classical antiquity and early Christianity for its models. The problem is, there was only one Western scholar who still knew Greek, the Irishman John Scotus Erigena. Still, the manuscripts produced during this era form the base from which modern historians gain a picture of the past. It was these classical texts, translated from Greek into Latin that fueled the later European Renaissance.

The intellectual vigor stimulated by the Carolingian Renaissance and the political dynamism of the revived Empire stimulated new theological activity. There was discussion about the continuing Iconoclastic problem in the East. Political antagonism between the Eastern and the Carolingian emperors led to an attack by theologians in the West on the practices and beliefs of the Orthodox Church in the East. These controversial works on the ‘Errors of the Greeks' flourished during the 9th C as a result of the Photian Schism.

In 858, Byzantine Emperor Michael III deposed the Patriarch Ignatius I of Constantinople, replacing him with a lay scholar named Photius I, AKA Photius the Great. The now deposed Ignatius appealed to Pope Nicholas I to restore him while Photius asked the Pope to recognize his appointment. The Pope ordered the restoration of Ignatius & relations between East & West sunk further. The issue ended in 867 when Pope Nicholas died & Photius was deposed.

Latin theologians also criticized the Eastern church for its different method of deciding the date of Easter, the difference in the way clergy cut their hair, and the celibacy of priests. The Eastern Church allowed priests to marry while requiring monks to be celibate, whereas the Western Church required celibacy of both.

Another major doctrinal debate was the Filioque [Filly-o-quay] Controversy we briefly touched on in an earlier episode. Now, before I get a barrage of emails, there's debate among scholars over the pronunciation of Filioque. Some say “Filly-oak” others “Filly-o-quay.” Take your pick.

The point is, the Controversy dealt with the wording of the Nicene Creed as related to the Holy Spirit. The original Creed said the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father. A bit later, the Western Church altered the wording a bit so as to affirm the equality of the Son of God with the Father. So they said the Spirit proceeded from both Father & Son. Filioque is Latin for “and the Son” thus giving the name of the controversy. The Eastern Church saw this addition as dangerous tampering with the Creed and refused to accept it while the Filioque clause became a standard part of what was considered normative doctrine in the West.

Another major discussion arose over the question of predestination. A Carolingian monk named Gottschalk, who studied Augustine's theology carefully, was the first to teach ‘double predestination'; the belief that some people are predestined to salvation, while others are predestined to damnation. He was tried and condemned for his views by 2 synods and finally imprisoned by the Archbishop of Rheims. Gottschalk died 20 years later, holding his views to the end.

The other major theological issue of the Carolingian era concerned the Lord's Supper. The influential Abbot of Corbie wrote a treatise titled On the Body and Blood of the Lord. This was the first clear statement of a doctrine of the ‘real presence' of Christ's body and blood in the Communion elements, later called the doctrine of “transubstantiation,” an issue that will become a heated point in the debate between the Roman Church & Reformers.

The reforms of King Pepin and Pope Boniface focused attention on priests. It was clear to all that clergy ought to lead lives beyond reproach. That synod after synod during the 6th, 7th, & 8th Cs had to make such a major issue of this demonstrated the need for reform. Among the violations warned against were the rejection of celibacy, gluttony, drunkenness, tawdry relationships with women, hunting, carrying arms & frequenting taverns.

Monastic developments at this time were significant. The emphasis was on standardization and centralization. Between 813 and 17 a revised Benedictine rule was adopted for the whole of the Carolingian Empire. Another Benedict, a monk from Burgundy, was responsible for an ultra-strict regimen. Charlemagne's successor, Louis the Pious, appointed Benedict the overseer of all monasteries in the realm, and a few years later his revised Benedictine rule was made obligatory for all monasteries. Sadly, with little long-term effect.

When Louis succeeded Charlemagne, the Pope was able to regain his independence, following a long domination by the Emperor. The imperial theocracy of Charlemagne's reign would have yielded a ‘state church' as already existed in the East. But the papacy stressed the superiority of spiritual power over the secular. This was reinforced by the forged Donation of Constantine with its emphasis on papal pre-eminence in the governing of the Empire, not just the Church.

In the middle of the 9th C, priests at Rheims produced another remarkable forgery, the False Decretals. Accomplished with great inventiveness, the Decretals were designed to provide a basis in law which protected the rights of bishops. They included the bogus Donation of Constantine and became a central part of the canon of medieval law. It shored up papal claims to supremacy in church affairs over secular authority. The first Pope to make use of the False Decretals was Nicholas I. He recognized the danger of a Church dominated by civil rulers and was determined to avert this by stressing that the church's government was centered on Rome, not Constantinople, and certainly not in some lesser city like Milan or Ravenna.

From the late 9th until the mid-11th C, Western Christendom was beset by a host of major challenges that left the region vulnerable. The Carolingian Empire fragmented, leaving no major military power to defend Western Europe. Continued attacks by Muslims in the S, a fresh wave of attacks by the Magyars in the E, and incessant raids by the Norsemen all over the Empire, turned the shards of the empire into splinters. One contemporary lamented, “Once we had a king, now we have kinglets!” For many Western Europeans, it seemed the end of the world was at hand.


50-WHAT A MESS (1) 50-WHAT A MESS (1) 50-QUE MERDA (1) 50-КАКОЙ БЕСПРЯДК (1)

The title of this episode is “**__What a Mess!”__** O título deste episódio é “Que bagunça!”

As is often the case, we start by backing up & reviewing material we've already covered so we can launch into the next leg of our journey in Church History. Ako to často býva, začíname zálohovaním a recenzovaním materiálov, ktoré sme už prebrali, aby sme sa mohli pustiť do ďalšej etapy našej cesty v cirkevných dejinách.

Anglo-Saxon missionaries to Germany had received the support of **__Charles Martel__**, a founder of the Carolingian dynasty. Martel supported these missions because of his desire to expand his rule eastwards into **__Bavaria__**. The Pope was grateful for his support, and for Charles' victory over the Muslims at the Battle of Tours. But Martel **__fell afoul__** of papal favor when he confiscated Church lands. At first, the Church consented to his seizing of property to produce income to stave off the Muslim threat. But once that threat was dealt with, he **__refused to return__** the lands. Adding insult to injury, Martel ignored the Pope's request for help against the Lombards taking control of a good chunk of Italy. Um die Verletzung noch schlimmer zu machen, ignorierte Martel die Bitte des Papstes um Hilfe gegen die Übernahme der Kontrolle durch die Langobarden über einen guten Teil Italiens. Martel denied assistance because at that time the Lombards were his allies. But a new era began with the reign of Martel's heir, **__Pippin__** or as he's better known, **__Pepin III__**.

Pepin was raised in the monastery of St. Denis near Paris. He & his brother were helped by the church leader Boniface to carry out a major reform of the Frank church. Ihm und seinem Bruder wurde vom Kirchenoberhaupt Bonifatius geholfen, eine große Reform der Frankenkirche durchzuführen. These reforms of the clergy and church organization brought about a renewal of religious and intellectual life and made possible the educational revival associated with the greatest of the Carolingian rulers, **__Charlemagne__** & his Renaissance. Diese Reformen des Klerus und der Kirchenorganisation führten zu einer Erneuerung des religiösen und intellektuellen Lebens und ermöglichten die pädagogische Wiederbelebung, die mit dem größten der karolingischen Herrscher, Karl dem Großen und seiner Renaissance, verbunden war.

In 751, Pepin persuaded **__Pope Zachary__** to allow Boniface to anoint him, King of the Franks, supplanting the **__Merovingian__** dynasty. Then, another milestone in church-state relations passed with **__Pope Stephen II__** appealing to Pepin for aid against the Lombards. The pope placed Rome under the protection of Pepin and recognized him and his sons as “__Protectors of the Romans__.”

As we've recently seen, all of this Church-State alliance came to a focal point with the crowning of Charlemagne as Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in AD 800. For some time the Popes in Rome had been looking for a way to loosen their ties to the **__Eastern__** Empire & Constantinople. **__Religious__** developments in the East provided the Popes an opportunity to finally break free. The **__Iconoclastic Controversy__** dominating Eastern affairs gave the Popes one more thing to express their disaffection with. We'll take a closer look at the controversy later. For now, it's enough to say the Eastern Emperor Leo III banned the use of icons as images of religious devotion in AD 726. The **__supporters__** of icons ultimately prevailed but only after a century of bitter and at times violent dispute. Pope Gregory II **__rejected__** Leo's edict banning icons and flaunted his disrespect for the Emperor's authority. Gregory's pompous and scathing letter to the Emperor was long on bluff but a dramatic statement of his rejection of secular rulers' meddling in Church affairs. Pope Gregory wrote: “Listen! Dogmas are not the business of emperors but of pontiffs.”

The reign of what was regarded by the West as a heretical dynasty in the East gave the Pope the excuse he needed to separate from the East and find a new, devoted and orthodox protector. The alliance between the papacy and the Carolingians represents the culmination of that quest, and opened a new and momentous chapter in the history of European medieval Christianity.

In response to Pope Stephen's appeal for help against the Lombards, Pepin recovered the Church's territories in Italy and gave them to the pope, an action known as the **__‘Donation of Pepin'__**. This confirmed the legal status of the Papal States.

At about the same time, the Pope's claim to the rule of Italy and independence from the Eastern Roman Empire was reinforced by the appearance of one of the great forgeries of the Middle Ages, the __Donation of Constantine.__ This spurious document claimed Constantine the Great had __**given**__ Rome and the western part of the Empire to the bishop of Rome when he moved the capital of the empire to the East. The Donation was not exposed as a forgery until the 15th Century.

The concluding act in the popes' attempt to free themselves from Constantinople came on Christmas Day 800 when Pope Leo III revived the Empire in the West by crowning Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor. It's rather humorous, as one wag put it – the Holy Roman Empire was neither Holy, nor Roman, and can scarcely be called an Empire.

Charlemagne's chief scholar was the British-born **__Alcuin__** who'd been master of the cathedral school in York. He was courted by Charlemagne to make his capital at Aachen on the border between France & Germany, Europe's new center of education & scholarship. Alcuin did just that. If the school at Aachen didn't plant the seeds that would later flower in the Renaissance it certainly prepared the soil for them.

Alcuin profoundly influenced the intellectual, cultural and religious direction of the Carolingian Empire, as the 300-some extant letters he wrote reveal. His influence is best seen in the manuscripts of the school at Tours where he later became abbot. His influence is also demonstrated in his educational writings, revision of the Biblical text, commentaries and the completion of his version of Church liturgy. He standardized spelling and writing, reformed missionary practice, and contributed to the organizing of church regulations. Alcuin was the leading theologian in the struggle against the heresy of **__Adoptionism__**. Adoptionists said Jesus was simply a human being who God adopted & MADE a Son. Alcuin was a staunch defender of Christian orthodoxy and the authority of the Church, the pre-eminence of the Roman Bishop and of Charlemagne's **__sacred__** position as Emperor. He died in 804.

The time at which Alcuin lived certainly needed the reforms he brought & he was the perfect agent to bring them. From the palace school at Aachen, a generation of his students went out to head monastic and cathedral schools throughout the land. Even though Charlemagne's Empire barely outlived its founder, the revival of education and religion associated with he and Alcuin brightened European culture throughout the bleak and chaotic period that followed. This **__Carolingian Renaissance__** turned to classical antiquity and early Christianity for its models. The problem is, there was only one Western scholar who still knew Greek, the Irishman **__John Scotus Erigena__**. Still, the manuscripts produced during this era form the base from which modern historians gain a picture of the past. It was these classical texts, translated from Greek into Latin that fueled the later European Renaissance.

The intellectual vigor stimulated by the Carolingian Renaissance and the political dynamism of the revived Empire stimulated **__new theological activity__**. There was discussion about the continuing Iconoclastic problem in the East. Political antagonism between the Eastern and the Carolingian emperors led to an attack by theologians in the West on the practices and beliefs of the Orthodox Church in the East. These controversial works on the __‘Errors of the Greeks'__ flourished during the 9th C as a result of the **__Photian Schism__**.

In 858, Byzantine Emperor Michael III deposed the Patriarch Ignatius I of Constantinople, replacing him with a lay scholar named **__Photius I,__** AKA **__Photius the Great__**. The now deposed Ignatius appealed to **__Pope Nicholas I__** to restore him while Photius asked the Pope to recognize **__his__** appointment. The Pope ordered the restoration of Ignatius & relations between East & West sunk further. The issue ended in 867 when Pope Nicholas died & Photius was deposed.

Latin theologians also criticized the Eastern church for its different method of deciding the date of Easter, the difference in the way clergy cut their hair, and the celibacy of priests. The Eastern Church allowed priests to marry while requiring **__monks__** to be celibate, whereas the Western Church required celibacy of both.

Another major doctrinal debate was the **__Filioque__** [Filly-o-quay] **__Controversy__** we briefly touched on in an earlier episode. Now, before I get a barrage of emails, there's debate among scholars over the pronunciation of Filioque. Some say “Filly-oak” others “Filly-o-quay.” Take your pick.

The point is, the Controversy dealt with the **__wording__** of the Nicene Creed as related to the Holy Spirit. The __original__ Creed said the Holy Spirit __proceeded__ from __the Father__. The original Creed said the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father. A bit later, the Western Church altered the wording a bit so as to affirm the **__equality__** of the Son of God **__with__** the Father. So they said the Spirit proceeded from __both__ Father & Son. Filioque is Latin for “and the Son” thus giving the name of the controversy. Filioque ist lateinisch für „und der Sohn“, was den Namen der Kontroverse ergibt. The **__Eastern__** Church saw this addition as dangerous tampering with the Creed and refused to accept it while the Filioque clause became a standard part of what was considered normative doctrine in the West. Die Ostkirche sah diesen Zusatz als gefährliche Manipulation des Glaubensbekenntnisses an und weigerte sich, ihn zu akzeptieren, während die Filioque-Klausel zu einem Standardbestandteil dessen wurde, was im Westen als normative Doktrin angesehen wurde.

Another major discussion arose over the question of **__predestination__**. Eine weitere große Diskussion entstand über die Frage der Prädestination. A Carolingian monk named **__Gottschalk__**, who studied Augustine's theology carefully, was the first to teach **__‘double__** predestination'; the belief that some people are predestined to salvation, while others are predestined to **__damnation__**. Ein karolingischer Mönch namens Gottschalk, der die Theologie des Augustinus sorgfältig studierte, war der erste, der die „doppelte Prädestination“ lehrte; der Glaube, dass einige Menschen zur Erlösung prädestiniert sind, während andere zur Verdammnis prädestiniert sind. He was tried and condemned for his views by 2 synods and finally imprisoned by the Archbishop of Rheims. Er wurde wegen seiner Ansichten von 2 Synoden vor Gericht gestellt und verurteilt und schließlich vom Erzbischof von Reims inhaftiert. Gottschalk died 20 years later, holding his views to the end.

The other major theological issue of the Carolingian era concerned the **__Lord's Supper__**. Das andere große theologische Thema der karolingischen Ära betraf das Abendmahl. The influential **__Abbot of Corbie__** wrote a treatise titled __On the Body and Blood of the Lord__. Der einflussreiche Abt von Corbie schrieb eine Abhandlung mit dem Titel Über den Leib und das Blut des Herrn. This was the first clear statement of a doctrine of the ‘real presence' of Christ's body and blood in the Communion elements, later called the doctrine of “transubstantiation,” an issue that will become a heated point in the debate between the Roman Church & Reformers. Dies war die erste klare Aussage einer Doktrin der „wirklichen Gegenwart“ des Leibes und Blutes Christi in den Elementen der Kommunion, die später als Doktrin der „Transsubstantiation“ bezeichnet wurde, ein Thema, das zu einem heißen Punkt in der Debatte zwischen der römischen Kirche und Reformatoren.

The reforms of King Pepin and Pope Boniface focused attention on priests. Die Reformen von König Pepin und Papst Bonifatius lenkten die Aufmerksamkeit auf die Priester. It was clear to all that clergy ought to lead lives beyond reproach. Allen war klar, dass der Klerus ein tadelloses Leben führen sollte. That synod after synod during the 6th, 7th, & 8th Cs had to make such a major issue of this demonstrated the need for reform. Dass Synode nach Synode während des 6., 7. und 8. Jahrhunderts ein so großes Thema daraus machen musste, zeigte die Notwendigkeit einer Reform. Among the violations warned against were the rejection of celibacy, gluttony, drunkenness, tawdry relationships with women, hunting, carrying arms & frequenting taverns.

Monastic developments at this time were significant. Die klösterlichen Entwicklungen zu dieser Zeit waren bedeutsam. The emphasis was on standardization and centralization. Between 813 and 17 a revised Benedictine rule was adopted for the whole of the Carolingian Empire. Zwischen 813 und 17 wurde eine revidierte benediktinische Regel für das gesamte Karolingische Reich angenommen. **__Another__** Benedict, a monk from Burgundy, was responsible for an ultra-strict regimen. Charlemagne's successor, **__Louis the Pious__**, appointed Benedict the overseer of **__all__** monasteries in the realm, and a few years later his revised Benedictine rule was made obligatory for all monasteries. Der Nachfolger Karls des Großen, Ludwig der Fromme, ernannte Benedikt zum Aufseher aller Klöster im Reich, und einige Jahre später wurde seine überarbeitete Benediktinerregel für alle Klöster verbindlich. Sadly, with little long-term effect.

When Louis succeeded Charlemagne, the Pope was able to regain his independence, following a long domination by the Emperor. Als Ludwig die Nachfolge Karls des Großen antrat, konnte der Papst nach langer Herrschaft des Kaisers seine Unabhängigkeit wiedererlangen. The imperial theocracy of Charlemagne's reign would have yielded a ‘state church' as already existed in the East. Der kaiserliche Gottesstaat unter Karl dem Großen hätte eine „Staatskirche“ hervorgebracht, wie sie bereits im Osten existierte. But the papacy stressed the **__superiority__** of spiritual power **__over__** the secular. Aber das Papsttum betonte die Überlegenheit der geistlichen Macht über die weltliche. This was reinforced by the forged **__Donation of Constantine__** with its emphasis on papal pre-eminence in the governing of the Empire, not just the Church. Dies wurde durch die gefälschte Konstantinsstiftung mit ihrer Betonung der päpstlichen Vorrangstellung bei der Regierung des Imperiums, nicht nur der Kirche, verstärkt.

In the middle of the 9th C, priests at Rheims produced another remarkable forgery, the **__False Decretals__**. Accomplished with great inventiveness, the Decretals were designed to provide a basis in law which protected the rights of bishops. Die mit großem Einfallsreichtum durchgeführten Dekretale sollten eine Rechtsgrundlage schaffen, die die Rechte der Bischöfe schützte. They included the bogus Donation of Constantine and became a central part of the canon of medieval law. Sie schlossen die gefälschte Konstantinsstiftung ein und wurden zu einem zentralen Bestandteil des mittelalterlichen Rechtskanons. It shored up papal claims to supremacy in church affairs over secular authority. Es stützte den päpstlichen Anspruch auf Vorherrschaft in kirchlichen Angelegenheiten über die weltliche Autorität. The first Pope to make use of the False Decretals was **__Nicholas I__**. He recognized the danger of a Church dominated by civil rulers and was determined to avert this by stressing that the church's government was centered on Rome, not Constantinople, and certainly not in some lesser city like Milan or Ravenna. Er erkannte die Gefahr einer von zivilen Herrschern dominierten Kirche und war entschlossen, diese abzuwenden, indem er betonte, dass sich die Regierung der Kirche auf Rom konzentrierte, nicht auf Konstantinopel, und schon gar nicht auf eine kleinere Stadt wie Mailand oder Ravenna.

From the late 9th until the mid-11th C, Western Christendom was beset by a host of major challenges that left the region vulnerable. Vom späten 9. bis zur Mitte des 11. Jahrhunderts wurde die westliche Christenheit von einer Vielzahl großer Herausforderungen heimgesucht, die die Region verwundbar machten. The Carolingian Empire fragmented, leaving no major military power to defend Western Europe. Das Karolingische Reich zersplitterte und hinterließ keine größere Militärmacht zur Verteidigung Westeuropas. Continued attacks by Muslims in the S, a fresh wave of attacks by the Magyars in the E, and incessant raids by the Norsemen all over the Empire, turned the shards of the empire into splinters. Fortgesetzte Angriffe der Muslime im Süden, eine neue Angriffswelle der Magyaren im Osten und unaufhörliche Überfälle der Nordmänner im ganzen Reich verwandelten die Scherben des Reiches in Splitter. One contemporary lamented, “Once we had a king, now we have kinglets!” For many Western Europeans, it seemed the end of the world was at hand. Ein Zeitgenosse beklagte: „Einst hatten wir einen König, jetzt haben wir Kinglets!“ Für viele Westeuropäer schien der Weltuntergang nahe.