РефератыИностранный языкDiDid The Increasingly Radical Resistance Theories Of

Did The Increasingly Radical Resistance Theories Of

The Late Sixteenth Century Have Any Effect In Pr Essay, Research Paper


Calvin had a maxim that leaders


were ?ordained of God? and that good leaders were therefore blessings upon a


people, whereas bad leaders were punishment for ?the wickedness of the


people?.? Calvin was aware of the


problem of inciting rebellion against Catholic princes and the repression it


might bring ? a fear confirmed by the St. Bartholomew?s Day Massacre ? but he


did reserve the right to passive disobedience, especially where staying within


the law required one to neglect or overturn a duty to God.? He also claimed that magistrates were


appointed to restrain the ?tyranny of kings? and so they had the right to rebel


and overthrow intolerable governments. Calvin?s


thesis was unclear, as it failed to set down all the practical means and


justifications for rebellion.? The


magistrates never found out who they were to obey and what they were to do.? Moreover, what one should do in


circumstances such as though during the Wars of Religion when the


superstructure of the state was hostile to Calvinism remained unclear.? Moreover, what one should do in the face of


absolute Catholic repression (as opposed to the potential and partial


repression seen in Calvin?s day) was never clarified.? In terms of theories of resistance, Calvin and Luther were of


very similar opinion.? Luther?s


pamphlet, Ravaging Hoardes, makes explicit reference to the fact that


peasant revolt was bad, and actually shared Calvin?s view of society. The most important person in


determining resistance theories through the sixteenth century was the one of


the idea?s greatest opponents. The sixteenth century?s most famous political


philosopher, Machiavelli, was a devoted Catholic and gained experience between


1498 and 1512 in the Florentine diplomatic corps. He was engaged in a variety


of roles in France, the Papal States and Germany.? Sacked by the new Medici government in 1512, Machiavelli was


writing in part at least in order to regain some influence and perhaps to win a


new appointment.? Dedicating his works


to the Medicis, Machiavelli exhorted them not just to rule Florence, but also


to restore Italy and to liberate her from the barbarians. Machiavelli was an extreme


pessimist and thought all men were prone to giving ?vent to their malignity


when opportunity offers? and he thus saw the ?princely virtues? (clemency,


liberality, honesty, honour etc.) as disadvantages when dealing with more


pragmatic people.?? In his view, a


prince had licence to ?act in defiance of good faith, of charity, of kindness


and of religion? in order to ?maintain his state.?? In essence, Machiavelli thought that in pursuit of national


objectives, Christian virtues should be discarded.? ??????????? Although The


Prince and The Discourses were unpublished until after his death,


these books circulated widely and within a generation of his death in 1527, he


had been universally attacked by Catholics and Protestants.? It is perhaps unsurprising that in the


aftermath of the Medici St. Bartholomew?s Day Massacre that Calvinists should


begin to see Machiavelli and the ?murderous Machiavel? Medicis, to whom


Machiavelli wrote his adivce, as atheist tyrants set on destroying them.? The perceived effect of Machiavelli?s


writings on Catherine de Medici, whether conscious or not, seem to have spurred


many Calvinist writers to begin to endorse theories of resistance designed to


protect themselves from extinction threatened by Machiavellian Catholic rulers


willing to savagely butcher, murder and destroy their subjects without


qualm.? It is the effectiveness of these


theories and their Lutheran and Catholic counterparts, written with the


specific purpose of raking back the tide of supposed Unchristian tyranny against


minorities that this essay will attempt to gauge. This era?s Zeitgeist is


a difficult one to trap for the non elite members of society.? Without the self confidence of a


constitutionally protected bourgeois class and without the guarantees of the


modern Rechtstaat, the consequences for social disorder and uproar were


very grave.? The strict oligarchy of the


time was harsh and could make the life of any resistant party nasty, brutish


and short without qualms, legal interference or backlash.? Meanwhile, the lack of modern


communicational media made the possibility of raising a force capable of making


any sustained or organised force difficult.?


Such simple brakes on any potential resistance movements or reactions


must be borne in mind when considering the question, as it would be unfair to


judge the power of authors over their audiences if we bear a modern view of


social fluidity and mobility. After the St. Bartholomew?s Day


massacre, Gentillet argued that the Medici influence on France had unleashed


the horrors of the massacre, a massacre of Machiavellian characteristics,


occurring during a time of supposed cross-denominational peace and


reconciliation upon a protestant population that had come to Paris in order to


celebrate in peace.? Gentillet spoke of


the peaceful nature of Protestants, who prayed for the conversion of other


peoples, and of the need for a peaceful co-existance, reiterating Calvin?s


belief in the need for compliance with the dominant and strengthening Catholic


forces.? However, Gentillet was the


first in the line of Calvinist writers whose ferocity would increase with


time.? The events of 1572 made the


Calvinists realise the need for a more effective means of dealing with


repression.? The result was ?monarchomach?


writers who condoned varying levels of resistance.? Francois Hotman?s Francogallia (1573), Theodore Beza?s The


Right of Magistrates (1574) and Philippe du Plessis-Mornay?s The Defence


of Liberty against the Tyrants (1579) being the most famous and typical


examples of such work. Francogallia was actually


written by 1568, and was approved by the Genevan Council who had not seen the


dedication; a passage attacking Louis XI, who was accused of being a usurper


amongst other things.? Hotman claimed


that the Estates Generales had the power to usurp, appoint and depose kings and


that the Estates Generales assent should be obtained before any decisions


affecting the whole Commonweal were made. Beza went further than Hotman,


claiming that the Estates Generales had the responsibilities as described by


Hotman, but he also claimed that in the event of the Estates Generales being


rendered impotent by kingly oppression, that magistrates should convene and


?press for a convocation of the estates? whilst ?defending themselves from


tyranny?.? The ?magistrates? were


defined as being local governors, the nobility generally and people of any


authority.? These people, he argued,


should not be seen as rebels if they acted against their king, but as people


merely performing their sworn duty to their God and Country.? It is unsurprising that this document, which


was rendered unpublishable by the Genevan council (fearing a public backlash),


was banned. The Defence of Liberty


against Tyrants was even more extreme.?


Whereas the others had seen the king as anointed leader in whom trust


must be placed, in return for which one could expect just kingship, du


Plessis-Mornay saw obedience as conditional on the king?s religion, behaviour


and general morality.? Private


individuals had no power to act, but the magistrates were told to act to the


extent of their power to remove such a figure.?


The book includes a phrase condemning the tyrannicidal as ?seditious, no


matter how just their cause may be? although he does admit the need for people


to act with an ?extraordinary calling.? Less orthodox were the writings


by such writers as the Scot George Buchanan.?


In The Right of the Kingdom of Scotland, he claims that the right


to remove tyrants lay with the ?whole body of people? and that ?every


individual citi

zen? had a compulsion to act appropriately.? A correspondent of Du Plessis-Mornay and


Beza, Buchanan differed on this vital issue.?


Huguenot writers flirted with the idea of open resistance (something


from which even the tyrannicidal Scot Buchanan shied away) but never really seemed


to bring themselves to condone it. Beza?s reaction to Henri of


Navarre?s claim to the French throne was to re-edit his works in favour of


condoning the absolutism of the monarch and diminishing the power of the


Estates Generales, but upon Henri?s conversion, returned to his original theses.? He did write specifically to call upon the


Huguenots to support the new king despite his ?major fault? (Catholicism).? The reaction to the Dutch


Revolt was to find its mouth in the German Johannes Althusius and the Dutchman


Hugo Grotius.? These uncontroversial


republican Protestants saw absolutism as ?wicked and prohibited? and condoned


the Estates Generales as the true method of government.? The Conciliar movement valued the German


constitution for its control of the Emperor through the electors.? Although the writers? vision of the Empire


was a vision of what they wanted it to be and not what it was, it also


contained a warning not to rebel against appointed leaders as otherwise nations


would become ?multitudes without a union.? Before the coronation and


conversion of Henri IV, Catholic resistance theories emerged as they saw the


emergence of a very real Protestant contender to the throne.? Louis d?Orleans firstly attacked the Francogallia


and Jean Boucher and Guillaume Rose proceeded to justify tyrannicide


unconditionally when ?a private individual? could aid ?a whole


commonweal?.? The Jesuit adherence to


the doctrine of tyrannicide was exemplified in such treatises as Juan de


Mariana?s The King and the Education of the King (1599).? Henri II?s assassination was seen as ?a


detestable spectacle? but was seen to serve as a warning to kings that their


crimes would not go unpunished, and even went as far as to claim that Jacques


Clement?s assassinating the King was ?an eternal honour to France.?? It is for such flagrant disregard for


political tact that the Jesuits were ejected from France in 1594 for seven


years. Meanwhile, the Scots Catholic


William Barclay expressed a more conventional position that the divinely


appointed leaders of nations could not be judged by human laws, and therefore


tyrannicide became merely regicide. Antonia Fraser sees the


importance of the Catholic justification for tyrannicide as massively important


for such figures as the Gunpowder plotters.?


Educated men, making a sophisticated bid to destroy the Protestant order


under the shield of what she refers to (confusingly) as ?double justification?.


This massive (probably government backed) plot to kill not only the King but


also the Protestant lords of England and if we are to believe its provenance as


a real letter from the Plotters, Monteagle?s letter shows a tremendous effort


to avoid killing Catholics, which would simply be an example the mortal sin of


homicide. Predictably, the effect of the


resistance theories is greater, the more educated the proponents and executors


of resistance were.? The Gunpowder


plotters needed double justification, and (apparently) took pains not to


kill the righteous, despite the predictable results of their widening the


circle of cognoscenti.? The highbrow ideas were


commuted in print and the lack of approval from the Genevan Council for openly


hostile ideas meant that theories propagated in churches from the pulpit and in


popular culture were more important in encouraging resistance than intellectual


theories, although these may have been required for the clerics and the


educated to accept such ideas.? As such, the rebellions of the


illiterate must be looked at in isolation.?


In 1562, the Bishop of Nimes encouraged Catholic children to murder


Protestant children ?following the Lord?s word, that his power would be most


clearly manifested by innocent persons.??


Such murders were not reciprocated because of a lack of familial and


popular support for such retribution.?


That such crimes could be committed is due in part to a transcontinental


hysteria about the imminence of apocalypse.?


Astrological predictions such as those by Michel Nostradamus were common


currency, and the phenomenon of Nostradamus? accuracy in predicting the Wars of


Religion, accompanied by his (and his colleagues?) assertions that


Protestantism would destroy Catholicism led to a determination to pull out


Protestantism root and branch.? To kill


Admiral Coligny was not a theologically sound case of tyrannicide, but in fact


just murder.? A Catholic riot in


Toulouse in 1563 was attributed a prediction of Nostradamus that the town would


fall to heretics the next day.? Low


level revolts were more commonly dictated by baser ideas of astrology and


vitriol distributed in pamphlet form across Europe than the theories of


resistance. More important still to the


heart and mind of every peasant were, predictably enough, resources such as


food.? Peasants, regardless of religion,


rebelled when taxed too hard.? The


French system of exacting tribute from the tenants of the gentry and the


exacting of tribute by the gentry from the peasantry led to frequent revolts,


as an increase in either imposition could lead to a regional poverty crisis


that would be uncontrollable by any one of the two taxing parties.? In 1548, 1589, 1590, 1591, 1594 and 1595,


there were major rebellions, some taking place in Protestant areas, some in the


predominately Catholic regions. In Sweden, where the tax


collection was centralised and where such instances did not occur, there was


much lower incidence of peasant rebellion.?


Although there was a revolt in 1542, a revolt linked to the reform of


the Swedish church as the peasantry wanted a return to the Orders they knew and


the ceremonies to which they were accustomed, it was mostly about the increased


tax burden.? In Muscovy, the risings of


1603 and 1606 to 1607 were a result of the introduction of serfdom and


coincidental famines. The German Peasants? War can be


attributed to the ?Poor Conrad? movement, rebellions concerning the work


tribute system in Inner Austria and the Bundschuh movement. Although such instances as the


Moriscos? Revolt show a propensity to rebel on religious grounds, there are


very few examples of low level revolt with a non tax based causation before


1626 when the Austrian Lutherans were either told to leave the country and face


heavy penalties or to convert swiftly.?


Although the billeting of Bavarian troops on the people was the


touchpaper that won peasant support for the rebellion, the religious aspect was


vital, as Wiellinger, Fadiger and Zeller, all educated men, led a peasants?


revolt against the Catholic oppression.?


It should be noted that these men acted precisely as was suggested in


the tracts.? Wiellinger, the official,


sent a list of demands for clemency and freedom of conscience to Ferdinand II,


promising obedience.? Although they did


turn to arms once the Bavarians billeted on them turned upon them, they did so


only as a last resort.? The armed


uprisings of 1632 and 1636 were purely labourers? revolts and thus turned


straight to arms, but without the cohesion, organisation or focus of the events


of 1626 as they lacked middle classed peasant support. It would seem that the theories


of resistance were important for people to whom they were communicable, in that


the Gunpowder Plotters and the Austrian rebels found theological support for


their actions in the theories of resistance, but that they never inspired


revolts and merely dictated their conduct.?


Events such as the murder of Coligny and the massacring of children had


no theological basis, but were enacted in any case.


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