Voices for Tolerance in an Age of Persecution.
Carr, Richard A.
Vincent P. Carey, Ronald Bogdan, and Elizabeth A. Walsh, eds.
Voices for Tolerance in an Age of Persecution.
Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 2004. 236 pp.
illus. $40. ISBN: 0-295-98460-0.
To speak of tolerance in an age that was most intolerant seems to
be yet another paradox in that most paradoxical of ages. History has
recorded the brutality of early modern Europe, which met challenges to
orthodoxy with hanging, decapitation, burning, torture, and wholesale
slaughter, all of which, as Vincent Carey reminds us, was
"legitimized" by a tradition that had accorded license for
such barbarity: Saint Augustine had recognized force as an acceptable
means of promoting orthodoxy, while Saint Thomas Aquinas sanctioned
death as suitable punishment for heretics and schismatics. While those
revered theologians were concerned with the extirpation of the infidel and the heretic, or with their conversion to the true faith, the
Renaissance complicated their mission, as Ute Lotz-Heumann recalls, by
founding new confessions, each claiming to be the true church, and
thereby added a further challenge to the social ideal of a religiously
unified society--as well as a grim irony to those pious battles in which
Christian slew Christian.
Yet, beneath the clamor and din of religious and political strife
that marked the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were to be heard
voices that called for tolerance, voices that aimed to supplant
extremism with moderation, war with peace, hatred with tolerance. Their
writings, ranging from Erasmus to Locke, (although the majority have
less celebrity), were viewed at the Folger Shakespeare Library in 2004
in an exhibition in conjunction with which the present volume was
published.
In addition to a catalogue of the exhibition, Voices for Tolerance
opens with nine essays dealing with various facets of the struggle for
tolerance and for freedom from persecution in the Renaissance world. Ute
Lotz-Heumann traces the origins and impact of Lutheranism in Germany up
to the Peace of Augsburg in 1555, and places those of Luther's
writings that have been victims of modern disapproval within the context
of their historical moment. Turning to France, Barbara Diefendorf
focuses on the maze of events culminating in the St. Bartholomew's
Day massacre and follows the Huguenot struggles up to 1598 when the
Edict of Nantes brought a temporary solution to religious dissension.
Donna B. Hamilton reexamines the anti-Catholic policies in Renaissance
England, where Catholicism was reduced to "an underground and
harassed church" (117). Catholics, to avoid execution, were given
the choice of imprisonment, exile, conversion, or attendance at
Protestant services. A contrasting tale is recounted by Clodagh Tait,
who explains why in Ireland, where persecution created martyrs on both
sides, the majority "rejected the religious position of their
monarchs" in favor of Catholicism. And Karl Bottigheimer notes in a
thought-provoking essay the particularity of seventeenth century England
where the religious conflicts pitted Protestant against Protestant, and
coincidentally occasioned a profusion of statements calling for
religious toleration.
The scope of the volume is broad, and not limited solely to the
politico-religious struggles of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation.
Moving deftly through Renaissance Spain, Germany, Venice, Amsterdam, and
England, Clare Carroll recalls the persecution "and limited
toleration" of the Jews from the time of their expulsion from Spain
in 1492 through their readmission to England in 1664, while Jyotsna G.
Singh considers the ambivalent attitude of England toward Islam--an
attitude marked by fear of the military strength of the Ottoman Turks on
the one hand, but complemented by an underlying admiration of Islamic
power and wealth, as well as a fascination with their exotic and most
un-Christian domestic life--and Sujata Iyengar discusses the plight of
black Africans, victims of myth and a burgeoning slave trade, in
Renaissance England and Scotland.
If the inhumanity of the period seems at times incredible, Anna
Battigelli's fascinating case study warns of the ease with which
the hysteria of intolerance can be provoked by fictions and
fabrications. We are not immune.
These essays will teach little to those who have any knowledge of
the specific topic. They are intended to be background pieces, and, as
such, they are engagingly written. Based on select secondary sources,
they offer little that is new for the scholar, though they would be
vivid introductions for the student. The subject is compelling, and
certainly most timely. The struggle for acceptance regardless of race,
religion, or ethnic background is a topic that is as pertinent today as
it was five centuries ago. Such was the stated purpose of the exhibition
and of this book. But it leaves a somewhat bitter aftertaste: while
underscoring the pertinence of Renaissance thought to readers today, it
is also a rather sad commentary on human progress that we are still
struggling with the same issues.
RICHARD A. CARR
Indiana University, Bloomington