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7_Sorrows
Guest
civilizations and cultures advance. the Church has changed. there have been 2 world wars. i don’t see any reason to believe that Jews would still be living in ghettos.
The Roman ghetto was enforced until the Italian army took Rome in 1870 and the Papal States were abolished, so Papal policy - some Popes more antipathetic/some Popes more sympathetic - only fundamentally changed in the sense that they were unable to do anything about it and that’s how far that particular aspect of civilization/cultural advancement had managed to arrive at at that point.civilizations and cultures advance. the Church has changed. there have been 2 world wars. i don’t see any reason to believe that Jews would still be living in ghettos.
i have to admit that i do not know much about the Roman ghetto. i am more familiar with the ghettos that were in eastern europe.The Roman ghetto was enforced until the Italian army took Rome in 1870 and the Papal States were abolished, so Papal policy - some Popes more antipathetic/some Popes more sympathetic - only fundamentally changed in the sense that they were unable to do anything about it and that’s how far that particular aspect of civilization/cultural advancement had managed to arrive at at that point.
A counterpoint to arguments about ‘how lovely the world would be if the Reformation hadn’t happened’ is to look at places where it didn’t, like Spain and Italy.
“Revisionist” scholars, in the sense in which the term’s used by historians, would be the ones who argue that these things were “not as bad as they have been made out to be.” I suspect that you’re using the term the other way round–many non-historians think that “revisionist” is a slur meaning something like “a historian who tries to argue that things were other than they really were.” A revisionist is someone who tries to “revise” accepted understandings of history. A revisionist may be right or wrong–usually revisionists contribute greatly to our understanding of the past, even if they go way too far in the opposite direction from the traditional one.This question was bouncing around my brain lately, and I’ve been hearing things like the Crusades and the Inquisition really weren’t as bad as they were made out to be, due to revisionist history, etc…
And, after passing by three different Protestant denomination churches while driving, I resolved to post my question online.
I think one mistake people make in answering this question is assuming that if the Reformation hadn’t happened the Catholic Church as it emerged from the Reformation would simply have been the only game in town. The post-Reformation Catholic Church was itself a product of the events of the Reformation era. One can understand why pious, traditional Catholics might forget this–it’s easy, and understandable, to skate over the complexities of historical development in one’s conviction that the essence remains unchanged. But what’s odd is that Protestants and secularists also seem to assume that if it hadn’t been for the Reformation we’d all be living under Tridentine Catholicism.So, would the World be a better place, and more unified? Or would the centralization of power and influence in the Church corrupt high ranking officials, and make current affairs still bad, just in a different way?
It did happen in Italy–in a particularly gentle and Catholic form–and was squashed by the “Counter-Reformation.”The Roman ghetto was enforced until the Italian army took Rome in 1870 and the Papal States were abolished, so Papal policy - some Popes more antipathetic/some Popes more sympathetic - only fundamentally changed in the sense that they were unable to do anything about it and that’s how far that particular aspect of civilization/cultural advancement had managed to arrive at at that point.
A counterpoint to arguments about ‘how lovely the world would be if the Reformation hadn’t happened’ is to look at places where it didn’t, like Spain and Italy.
Thanks, will do, I’ll try to remind myself to keep generalizations (in either extreme) in check.Well, you want to avoid generalizations one way or the other. Many Crusaders DID use them as an excuse for plunder. Again, see Constantinople. Sure, there were soldiers in the Crusades who probably fought with pure motivations, but it is dangerous to categorize “crusaders” as all upright, God-fearing soldiers.
Didn’t the Enlightenment/Revolutionary era eventually result in the Holocaust though?Jewish emancipation came after the Enlightenment/Revolutionary era of the late 18th/early 19th centuries. Without that, there would have been no reason to suppose that policy towards Jews in Western Europe would change - some Popes being more antipathetic, some Popes being more sympathetic - especially in Italy (one of the few places Jews would have been able to live, projecting forward from the policies of the late-Medieval/early Modern eras).
So, what miracle of ‘enlightenment’ that would have meant freedom for Jews to live anywhere and practice our religion unmolested is it that you imagine would have happened that would have freed my Italian ancestors from ghetto life?
I expect that the ‘key’ would have been how Catholicism would have developed in France. Hapsburg-Valois/Bourbon rivalry would have happened/continued whether there was a Reformation or not so the French would just have had to work on the particularism of the German princes in another way.It did happen in Italy–in a particularly gentle and Catholic form–and was squashed by the “Counter-Reformation.”
Spain is a better argument, but even there, government policy was very much aware of the Reformation even if most people in Spain were untouched by it. Furthermore, the particular harshness of Spanish Catholicism was shaped by the Reconquista.
Northern European and Italian “Catholicisms” were very different, and might have gone on being very different.
In a sense, the Reformation made all of Catholic Europe “Spanish.”
Edwin
What I mean by “Revisionist” history is definitely meant in a negative connotation - it is history that has been distorted. It can be by accident due to fictional literature, eventually becoming accepted as true, or deliberate to fulfill some political agenda (ex. see the Myth of the Flath Earth).“Revisionist” scholars, in the sense in which the term’s used by historians, would be the ones who argue that these things were “not as bad as they have been made out to be.” I suspect that you’re using the term the other way round–many non-historians think that “revisionist” is a slur meaning something like “a historian who tries to argue that things were other than they really were.” A revisionist is someone who tries to “revise” accepted understandings of history. A revisionist may be right or wrong–usually revisionists contribute greatly to our understanding of the past, even if they go way too far in the opposite direction from the traditional one.
I don’t want to talk here about anti-Semitism - it developed in a particular era of European history with quite a number of antecedents and streams of thought including ideas and developments within both Protestantism and Catholicism.Thanks, will do, I’ll try to remind myself to keep generalizations (in either extreme) in check.
Didn’t the Enlightenment/Revolutionary era eventually result in the Holocaust though?
Theoretically the series of events is…
To me, it seems as though the anti-semitism is present in history, Reformation or not.
- Reformation (and Martin Luther was definitely anti-Semitic…he wrote a book "On the Jews and Their Lies).
- Religious Wars
- Enlightenment (not sure, but didn’t Marx have undertones of anti-semitism in his writings?)
- Secularization of governments
- Eugenics movement
- Gradual secularization of Nazis, eventually leading to persecution of religious establishments
- Holocaust (Nazi-instituted eugenics essentially)
This is a claim often made–nearly as often as the even more erroneous claim that “religion is the biggest cause of wars.”There were no ‘Wars of Religion’, they were wars about power, territory and money, people used religious language because that was the language they had available.
I am guessing no Enlightenment, or Industrial Revolution, since the competition between the Protestant and Catholic nations of Europe was a big factor in those periods of history (at the very least the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution would have occurred very differently).This question was bouncing around my brain lately, and I’ve been hearing things like the Crusades and the Inquisition really weren’t as bad as they were made out to be, due to revisionist history, etc…
And, after passing by three different Protestant denomination churches while driving, I resolved to post my question online.
So, would the World be a better place, and more unified? Or would the centralization of power and influence in the Church corrupt high ranking officials, and make current affairs still bad, just in a different way?
Like life saving medicine or communication technologies such as the one that you’re using right nowIn Pr. Thomas Woods Jr’s How The Catholic Church Built Western Civilization he details how the holy monks of Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire, England were producing iron in the 16th century almost as efficient as modern furnaces. He expounds on some findings of Bradford archeometallurgist (now you know this is ligit) Gerry McDonnell:
tl;dr - Cistercians would have brought about the Industrial Revolution 250 years earlier.
We probably also would have steered technological advances for merely efficient purposes, not the** frivolousness rampant today**.
Probably not.The USA probably wouldn’t exist at all. The Founders of it were the products of and based its very foundation on Protestant theological, political, and socioeconomic ideaa, as well as Enlightenment ones. **I wonder if any modern democracy would exist. **
-Chris
Very true - although perhaps not always in the sense we’d might think of it.Jewish emancipation came after the Enlightenment/Revolutionary era of the late 18th/early 19th centuries.
I remember listening to a Swedish historian talking about Gustav Adolf’s intervention in the Thirty/Fifty Years War. On the face of it a pretty good example of ‘principled’ intervention - until you find that he was being given a giant ‘bung’ by the French (involving grain market transactions).This is a claim often made–nearly as often as the even more erroneous claim that “religion is the biggest cause of wars.”
What are your reasons for making this claim? How on earth would you go about eliminating religion as a motivating factor?
Edwin
Yes (at least from a practical point of view).But would it have been right to burn Luther at the stake?** Could the Church decree sentence him to death for the horrendous heresy he spoused**?
Yes, but with all due respect, that’s an uninformed use of the word. It assumes that somehow we “already” have infallible, complete knowledge of history, and then there are these nasty “revisionists” who distort things.What I mean by “Revisionist” history is definitely meant in a negative connotation - it is history that has been distorted.
Russell, who debunked the “flat earth” myth most thoroughly and effectively, was a revisionist in so doing–in the sense in which historians use the term.It can be by accident due to fictional literature, eventually becoming accepted as true, or deliberate to fulfill some political agenda (ex. see the Myth of the Flath Earth).
So you disagree with Kamen and Russell and others who have challenged accepted historical paradigms in ways that favor Catholicism?'m not sure if you’re defending the idea of what revisionist historians do, but if so, I definitely disagree.
Right. And for that you need revisionists–otherwise you will be stuck with an “accepted” paradigm that in many cases (as in the two we’ve mentioned–or for that matter the Crusades) is shaped by Enlightenment anti-Catholicism (since you desire the truth, you shouldn’t want to be stuck with paradigms that favor Catholicism if they aren’t supported by the evidence, but in fact as often as not the revisionist account makes Catholicism look better, given the dominance of the early stages of the development of modern historical scholarship by secular/Protestant attitudes).I simply want the truth, the facts, as close as I can get to it anyway.
Yes, Christendom never had much affection for Jews.Most likely, I’d be living in a ghetto.
I think we have to be careful in talking about ‘anti-Semitism’ as opposed to old-fashioned ‘Jew-hatred’ - some of the magic ingredients were pretty primitive at that time, conspiracy theory had yet to be fully developed, for example.Very true - although perhaps not always in the sense we’d might think of it.
A perfect example would be the 2nd French Empire under Napoleon III ~ some of the bureaucrats and civil servants were patting themselves on the back for their ability to treat the Jewish people as citizens of the Empire…despite their perceived “racial defects” and the bureaucracy’s deeply rooted anti-semitic opinions.
ie: “I am such a Good Republican/Citizen because I can treat the Jews fairly…even if they are a bunch of _________.”
So Kaninchen to the Ghetto. And i’d probably be unfortunately dead.
Ah, La Serenissima.…or in Venice.![]()
Right. But the 30 Years’ War, even in the “traditional” paradigm, is the transition point between the wars of religion and the wars of the early modern secular state. The French participation pretty clearly wasn’t religious, since the French government was Catholic but intervened on the side of the Protestants. You’re right that Gustavus Adolphus has been built up in the past as a great Protestant hero, but that the reality was more complicated.I remember listening to a Swedish historian talking about Gustav Adolf’s intervention in the Thirty/Fifty Years War. On the face of it a pretty good example of ‘principled’ intervention - until you find that he was being given a giant ‘bung’ by the French (involving grain market transactions).
But on what basis do you suggest this? You seem to assume that if there were other factors, then the religious factors don’t count.Obviously, one can’t deny that there were some ‘religious’ motivations but, I’d suggest, that they were more to do with what we would now call ‘propaganda’ and aids to recruitment than a driving force.
Both. Why on earth would it be an either/or?Wars were very expensive operations and realpolitik motivations very apparent. Were the Protestant German Princes fighting about religion, for example, or was religion a very good means of establishing their power relative to the Empire?