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Authors: Philip Ziegler

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Notes

1
Campbell, op. cit., p. 162, (Grenoble, Vercelli, Reggio and Naples).

2
A F. Leach,
The
Schools
of
Medieval
England,
London, 1915, p.197.

3
W. A. Pantin,
The
English
Church
and
the
Continent:
The
Later
Middle
Ages,
London, 1959, p.3.

4
Hastings Rashdall,
The
Universities
of
Europe
in
the
Middle
Ages
(ed. Powicke and Emden), Oxford, 1936, Vol. III, p.317.

5
Hist.
MSS.
Comm.,
Vth Report App. (1874), p.450.

6
V.C.H.
Oxfordshire,
Vol. III, p.154.

7
J. E. T. Rogers,
Six
Centuries
of
Work
and
Wages,
op. cit., p.224.

8
E. Power,
The
Wool
Trade
in
English
Mediaeval
History,
Oxford, 1941, p.35.

9
E. Prior,
Cathedral
Builders,
London, 1905, p.130.

10
Prior and Gardner,
Medieval
Figure
Sculpture
in
England,
London, 1912, p.390.

11
R. Crawfurd,
Plague
and
Pestilence
in
Literature
and
Art,
op. cit., pp.130–31.

12
J. Harvey,
Gothic
England,
London, 1947, p.40.

The plague not only depopulates and kills, it gnaws the moral stamina and frequently destroys it entirely; thus the sudden
demoralisation
of Roman society from the period of Mark Antony may be explained by the Oriental plague … In such epidemics the best were invariably carried off and the survivors deteriorated morally.

Times of plague are always those in which the bestial and diabolical side of human nature gains the upper hand. Nor is it necessary to be superstitious or even pious to look upon great plagues as a conflict of the terrestrial forces with the development of mankind …

It may reasonably be felt that Niebuhr was pitching it a little high. It is, to say the least, extravagant to describe as ‘bestial and diabolical, the selfish manoeuvres of the frightened and the hysterical. It is also patently unfair to the many thousands who met the Black Death with courage and charity. But though
Niebuhr’s
words may seem fantastical he still had a valid and
important
point. Any history of the Black Death which ignored its impact on the minds of its victims would be notably incomplete. It was an impact whose effects endured. The resilience of
mankind
is perpetually astonishing and within only a few years the horrors of the plague had been thrust from the forefront of their minds. But no one can live through a catastrophe so devastating and so inexplicable without retaining for ever the scars of his experience.

It is a truism to say that, in the Middle Ages, a man’s mental health and the public and private morality to which he
deferred
was inextricably involved with his relationship with the Church. His faith was unquestioning and his psychological
dependence
upon its institutions complete. Any blow suffered by the Church was a direct blow to his own morale. Any discussion of his state of mind after the Black Death must start by
considering
how far the condition of the Church had been modified by
the events of the preceding years. There can be little doubt that it had changed, and changed almost exclusively for the worse.

Fairly or unfairly, medieval man felt that his Church had let him down. The plague, it was taken for granted, was the work of God, and the Church assured him, with uncomfortable
regularity
, that he had brought it on his own head. ‘Man’s sensuality … now fallen into deeper malice’ had provoked the Divine
anger
and he was now suffering just retribution for his sins. But the Church must have seen what had been going on over the
previous
years and decades, yet had given no sign that the patience of the Almighty was being tried too high. It would, perhaps, not have been reasonable to have expected protection from the wrath of God but surely it was not too much to ask that the Church, presumably better equipped than anybody else to predict a
coming
storm, should have given some warning of the danger that mankind was courting? Instead, there had been no more than the routine remonstrance which made up the repertoire of every preacher. All that the Church had done was wait until it was too late and then point out to their flock how wicked they had been.

The villagers observed with interest that the parish priest was just as likely, indeed more likely, to die of the plague than his parishioners. God’s wrath seemed just as hot against Church as against people: a significant commentary on those preachers who denounced all their fellows with such tedious zest. So little hard evidence survives that any generalization about relationships within society can be little more than guess work. Yet it would have been surprising, in a community so credulous and so deeply religious, if the village priest, the Man of God, had not been
accorded
, not only the respect due to a figure of temporal power, but also a tinge of awe appropriate to one who enjoyed a special relationship with the Almighty. That the parson was mortal, everyone knew, that he ate, drank, defecated and in due course died. Often, indeed, he came from the same village as his flock and had relations living near him to testify that he was but flesh and blood. Yet, with his ordination, surely he acquired too a touch of the superhuman; remained a man but became a man apart? After the plague, his vulnerability so strikingly exposed, all trace of the superhuman must have vanished.

But he might at least have hoped that what he lost in awfulness he would regain in the sympathies of his flock. The priests, after all, suffered and died at the side of the laity; were always, indeed, among the most likely victims. Yet the slender evidence that exists shows that they lost in popularity as a result of the plague. They were deemed not to have risen to the level of their responsibilities, to have run away in fear or in search of gain, to have put their own skins first and the souls of their parishioners a bad second. It was not only captious critics like Langland or Chaucer who so accused them but their own kind. It was the Bishop of Bath and Wells who taxed them with lack of devotion to their duty;
1
a monk who wrote: ‘In this plague many
chaplains
and hired parish priests would not serve without excessive pay’;
2
the chronicler of the Archbishops who complained that: ‘… parishes remained altogether unserved and beneficed parsons had turned away from the care of their benefices for fear of death’.
3
Such criticism must have reflected a general view.

One of the most perplexing features of the Black Death is the reconciliation of this criticism with the outstandingly high
mortality
among the priests. We have already considered the factors which contributed to this high death rate. There is much which remains uncertain. But what seems clear beyond contradiction is that, if the parish priest had chosen to devote his superior wealth and the privileges conferred by his status solely to
preserving
his own person, he would have stood a better chance than his parishioners of survival. The fact that he suffered more proves that he cannot altogether have shirked his duty. The
picture
which one forms to explain this seeming ingratitude on the part of the people towards their priests is that of a clergy
doing
its daily work but with reluctance and some timidity; thereby incurring the worst of the danger but forfeiting the respect which it should have earned. Add to this a few notorious examples of priests deserting their flocks and of conspicuous courage on the part of certain wandering friars, and some idea can be formed of why the established Church emerged from the Black Death with such diminished credit. The contempt of contemporaries may not have been justified but it was still to cost the Church dear over the next decades.

There is little doubt that those who wished to criticize the Church found plentiful grounds on which to do so during the next few years. On the whole, in plague as in war, those who take most care of themselves live on while those who expose themselves perish. The best of the clergy died, the worst survived. Obviously this is an over-simplification; many good men were lucky as well as less noble who were unfortunate. But the abrupt disappearance of nearly half the clergy, including a
disproportionately
great number of the brave and diligent, inevitably put a heavy strain on the machinery of the Church and reduced its capacity to deal effectively with movements of protest or revolt.

It does not seem that the new recruits who took the place of the dead were spiritually or, still more, educationally of the calibre of their predecessors. During and immediately after the plague the usual rules governing the ordination of priests were virtually abandoned. Many men who found themselves widowed took holy orders when already middle aged. In the diocese of Bath and Wells a priest was admitted to holy orders even though his wife was still alive and had not entered a cloister on the
somewhat
shaky grounds that ‘she was an old woman and could
remain
in the world without giving rise to any suspicions’.
4
The Bishop of Norwich obtained a dispensation to allow sixty clerks aged twenty-one or less to hold rectories on the grounds, more or less categorically stated, that they would be better than nothing. In Winchester, in 1349 and 1350, twenty-seven new incumbents became sub-deacons, deacons and priests in successive
ordinations
and thus arrived virtually unfledged in their new offices.
5
The Archbishop of York was authorized to hold emergency
ordinations
in his diocese.
6

There is, of course, no reason to assume that a priest will be any the worse for having been married and taken to his new vocation late in life. Knighton it is true, referred to such recruits
disparagingly:
‘… a very great multitude of men whose wives had died of the pestilence flocked to Holy Orders of whom many were illiterate and no better than laics except in so far as they could read though not understand’;
7
but Knighton, as a Canon
Regular,
had anyway little use for the secular priesthood. Nor did the fact that some of the new priests were unusually young when
ordained mean that they would lack a sense of vocation or fail to become as good as their predecessors when they had gained
experience
. But, in the unseemly rush to fill the gaps, many
unsuitable
candidates must have been appointed and many novices thrust unprepared into positions of responsibility. Certainly in the first few years after the plague, when society was slowly pulling itself together, the Church must have been singularly
ill-equipped
to give a lead.

The ill wind of the plague blew some good even to the clergy. Coulton has calculated that, before the Black Death, the
majority
of livings in lay presentation were given to men not yet in priests’ Orders, often not even in Holy Orders at all.
8
Analysing the figures for four dioceses over a long period before 1348 he found that 73.8 per cent of the parishes were served by ‘non-priests’ unable to celebrate Mass, marry their parishioners or administer last rites. Most of these amateur rectors appointed
professional
curates to do their work but, though the souls of the parishioners might not be imperilled, the situation whereby prosperous absentees appointed qualified priests for the smallest possible wage to do the work which they were incompetent or
unwilling
to do themselves was not a happy one for Church or laity. During the Black Death the situation altered. The great majority of institutions went to ordained priests. The change survived the plague and an analysis of the period after the Black Death showed that the percentage of active priests in charge of benefices had more than doubled to 78 percent.

But among these novice priests and the survivors of the plague there was noticeable a new acquisitiveness; a determination to share in the wealth which fell free for the taking after the Black Death. Such a determination was understandable. Many of their demands were anyway perfectly justified; the economic
difficulties
of certain parish priests have already been mentioned
9
and it was often literally impossible for the parson to live on what the plague had left him of his income. But insistence upon his financial due is rarely becoming to a minister of the Church and sometimes they were greedy and excessive in their exactions. ‘A man could scarcely get a chaplain to undertake any church for less than
£
10 or ten marks,’ grumbled Knighton. ‘And whereas,
while there had been plenty of priests before the plague and a man might have had a chaplain for five or six marks or for two marks and his daily bread, at this time there was scarce anyone who would accept a vicarage at
£
20 or twenty marks.’
10
Archbishop
Islip had no doubt that ‘the unbridled cupidity of the human race’ was at work among the priesthood. ‘… the priests who still survive, not considering that they are preserved by the Divine will from the dangers of the late pestilence, not for their own sakes, but to perform the Ministry committed to them for the people of God and the public utility’, were neglecting their duties and seeking better paid conditions. So bad had things got that, unless the priests at once mended their ways: ‘many, and indeed most of the churches, prebends and chapels of our and your diocese, and indeed of our whole Province, will remain
absolutely
without priests’.
11

This spectacle of priests haggling for extra pay and abandoning their parishioners if better pickings were to be had elsewhere was admirable material for those who were anyhow disposed to expect the worst of officers of the Church. ‘Silver is sweet’
commented
Langland bitterly:

Parsons and parish priests complained to the Bishop

That their parishes were poor since the pestilence time

And asked leave and licence in London to dwell

And sing requiems for stipends, for silver is sweet:

while Chaucer put into the Reeve’s mouth the mocking words:

For Hooly chirches good moot been despended

On hooly chirches blood that is descended

Therfore he wolde his hooly blood honoure,

Though that he hooly churche sholde devoure.
*

Some writers have also ascribed to the Black Death the
responsibility
for an increase in the number of pluralities among those who held benefices.
12
It would not have been surprising if the dearth of priests had led to more cases in which a single parson
held two or more benefices but, though this seems to have been the result in certain continental countries, in England the ‘great increase in the practice’ to which Gasquet referred did not take place. On the contrary the evidence points, if anything, to the existence of less pluralities after the Black Death than
before
it. Certainly the great increase in the number of ordained priests appointed to benefices was likely to lead to a smaller
proportion
of non-resident parsons in the future.

BOOK: The Black Death
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