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An Unknown Era of Progress Reviewed by Michael Morassutti It was a time of clerical tyranny and extreme despotism. Freedom of thought was non-existent and science was never allowed to progress. Brooding gothic cathedrals, malevolent popes and kings, browbeaten farmers, a repressed working class, the Black Death, famine—all of these swirled into the great blight of history. It was the worst of times. It was medieval times. This is the common view of the “Dark Ages,” as it is commonly put forward —indeed, as young students are indoctrinated to believe—by the enlightened education specialists and public intellectuals of our day. According to my dictionary, the Dark Ages refer to “the period from about AD 476 to about 1000, broadly.” That word in italics (not mine, but the dictionary’s) allows, of course, for extrapolation. The time period can be expanded to include any time or trend with which the institutional Catholic Church was involved, up to about the time of the Reformation. Needless to say, the term “Dark Ages” is usually used in a deprecating manner. The modernist catalogue of terms employed to delineate the principal aspects of life in the Middle Ages reads: obscurantist, totalitarian, ignorant, superstitious, stagnant, millenarian, and so forth. But this is certainly not the view taken by the historian of the French National Archives, Régine Pernoud, author of Those Terrible Middle Ages! Debunking the Myths. Originally published in French in 1977, the book has now been brought out by Ignatius Press in an English translation. Pernoud exposes much of the misinformation and explodes many of the clichés associated with the Middle Ages—the traits which are commonly ascribed to that era, and emphasized in the sort of polemical tone that is characteristic of a mother who is angry at her children. Pernoud’s analysis spans across the broad spectrum of medieval culture and society: arts and letters, language and literature, feudalism and slavery, the role of women, law, architecture, music, and the study of history itself. Interspersed with personal reflections and experiences, she provides the scholar and general reader alike a sobering assessment of a 1000-year period in history—an era whose contributions have been largely overlooked in school textbooks and contemporary cultural commentary.
A scholarly heritage It is within the context of medieval Latin, claims Pernoud, that the new genre of the novel—unknown to classical antiquity—was developed. The musical scale was unveiled. A new type of theater formed, which involved everyone (unlike exclusivist modern productions). It was during the late medieval era that the book came into existence, replacing the scroll and eventually paving the way for the introduction of printing. She asks:
Workers and slaves
Another unhappy social phenomenon commonly associated with medieval feudalism is slavery. However, Pernoud takes pains to clarify the difference between slavery and serfdom. The slave of classical Roman society was considered a thing, void of rights. He could not marry or raise a family, was under absolute control by a master, and could be bought or sold on a whim. On the other hand, the serf of medieval times was considered a human person, with the prospect of gaining property rights. Indeed, once he had obtained necessities of life, the serf inevitably felt the desire for freedom. So serfs began to become engaged in commerce and travel—a development that coincided with the expansion of cities. Pernoud makes two other interesting points about the differences between slavery and serfdom. First, slavery as an institution gradually disappeared during the medieval era, whereas it was predominant in the Roman Empire. Second, slavery was revived in the 16th century, especially in the Americas, when Roman law re-emerged in judicial and cultural frameworks. Slavery also regained prominence at a time and in places where the influence of the Church was on the wane. The credibility of the state and its laws was then gauged and guided by colonial expansion and commercial development, rather than morals and ethics. So in spite of the humanistic philosophy that dominated that era, slavery burgeoned throughout the world.
Women’s roles These few thoughts provide for only a sampling from the cornucopia of Pernoud’s arguments in defense of medieval society. In addition, her notes on the Inquisition and her chapters on the philosophy of history are essential reading. Readers of this book will be grateful to Pernoud for her diligent labors. Along with Christopher Dawson, and in more recent days Father Stanley Jaki, she has helped to revive interest in the civilization that was the Middle Ages without any sense of triumphalism, showing that this “intermediary period” Michael Morassutti is a free-lance writer living in Ontario, Canada. Back to Catholic World Report - July 2000 - Table of Contents Back to Catholic Information Center on Internet's Main Periodical Page |