Commentary
On Sept. 7, 1303, a French military force which had crossed into Italy seized the pope at his summer palace at Anagni, south of Rome. The soldiers dragged him from his throne, beat him, and threw him in a jail cell, intending to take him back to France for trial. What had prompted such an extraordinary turn of events?
In medieval Europe, church and state had fought battles for centuries over jurisdiction, finances, and influence. By 1300, the papacy had succeeded in weakening the Holy Roman Empire but now faced a challenge from powerful kings in England and France. These monarchs were anxious to increase their revenues and saw taxing the Roman Catholic Church as the obvious answer to their money woes.
The church had always resisted compulsory taxation, but often contributed to kings’ coffers in times of war or emergency. Popes were quick to remind greedy statesmen that the church provided their countries’ social safety net and most educational institutions. Catholic churches ran a multitude of hospitals, asylums, leprosaria, schools, universities, hostels, orphanages, and food programs for the poor; they even ransomed prisoners taken captive by Muslim raiders. Taxing the church would mean less money for these services, but King Edward I of England and King Philip IV of France both swooped in on church property. (They were equal-opportunity extortionists, having squeezed riches out of Italian bankers, Jews, and the Knights Templar.)
The legacy of Boniface VIII’s arrest would continue. In 1378 the papacy moved briefly back to Rome, but before long the French backed a rival pope in Avignon. Europe was split between those countries supporting the Roman pontiff and those backing the Avignon candidate. It got even worse. In the early 1400s, Western Christendom saw two, then three, then four rival popes before eventually the schism ended. The ambitions of the papacy had been thwarted and the supremacy of national kings was established.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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