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Old 05-07-2010, 10:58 AM   #11
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When Henry VIII seized the monasteries (by Mugabe-style methods) he justified it by producing "weeping statues" and the like which were fake. The allegation is that the monks produced these "miraculous" items, which drew pilgrims and therefore revenue for the monastery. The production of fake relics for this purpose, allegedly by monks, is a staple allegation of this period. (I have never researched any of this, so am not taking a position here on the truth or otherwise of the claims; particularly given that it was used as a pretext to seize their property).
Do I understand you correctly in that you believe these allegations of pious forgery were possibly false,
When someone makes allegations of fraud, intending to demonize the owners of wide lands and so seize that property, a wise man will be a little sceptical of those allegations, made with such urgency, such outrage, and so profitably to those making them.

What the true facts are I don't claim to know. So I thought I wouldn't commit to any position on this.

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that the property seizures for fraud were likely motivated by the king's greed ?
I don't think there's any doubt about that.

When a greedy man or baron seeks to steal something belonging to others, he has several options. One of the favourites is to claim that the "others" do not really own it; to cast doubt on their claim, or to engage in character assassination aimed at suggesting that they don't deserve to own it, even if they do. The next step is for the greedy to claim to act on behalf of "more deserving" but powerless people -- ideally those whose claims cannot be denied by any fair man -- who perhaps would or could never have acted themselves. Then he can claim to be acting "rightly" in seizing the property. And, funnily enough, very little if any of that property ever ends up in the hands of those who supposedly justified the seizure. Curious, that.

If we read our history we see this motif again and again. It is a standard approach in despotisms, where there is no real security of property; first the demonisation, then the claim on behalf of the "innocent" or "victims"; then the seizures and executions. Every persecution begins with a demonisation, a "discovery" of wrong-doing by those who are to be targetted.

Thus I wonder about some of these cases. All the evidence was conveniently burned. Did Henry's agents fake some of the fakes? Bring them with them, as it were?

Henry had no legal claim to the abbeys. His seizures were done by intimidation and violence, and he turned everything he seized into cash and spent the lot in a handful of years. There may be people who believe he acted out of principle, but if so I have not met them.

Likewise the debunking of the "Donation of Constantine" by Lorenzo Valla was done at the behest of the King of Aragon, who intended to seize the papal states and wanted a justification to show that the papal moral claim was invalid.

And so on it goes. It's wise for us to keep our scepticism turned on when we see a standard scam in operation.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 05-07-2010, 11:02 AM   #12
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I don't know who Lombatti is, but he appears to know very little about his chosen subject; too little, indeed, to appreciate the difference between literary and epigraphical material, and the very different ways in which these come to be forged.
Why is that? Because he disagrees with you?
Not at all. I observe his faults of logic and education and reason purely because, as an atheist, I burn with hatred for him and his superstitious nation, and dance naked around a dark altar every evening sacrificing tramps to the evil god Tharg in order to damn his soul. Why else would I make that observation?

All the best,

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Old 05-07-2010, 11:34 AM   #13
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...purely because, as an atheist, I ...[sacrifice] tramps to the evil god Tharg...
Atheists supporting evil gods. Even your satires have to include strawmen.
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Old 05-07-2010, 12:17 PM   #14
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This is a favorite topic here, so this essay may be of interest.

Church History and Forgery by Antonio Lombatti

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Taken as a whole, medieval monks and clerics were probably the most prolific forgers of all time. For centuries they controlled access to official documents, placing them in a perfect position to alter or forge those documents, should they so desire.
The author writes mostly in Italian at www.antoniolombatti.it
I wonder if this argument is partly based on the low literacy rates in western Europe before 1100. Since few rulers could read Latin they were somewhat at the mercy of clerics who could. Of course in the Dark Ages no real estate was safe anyway, with waves of Germans, Vikings and Normans wreaking havoc.
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Old 05-08-2010, 10:03 AM   #15
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Do I understand you correctly in that you believe these allegations of pious forgery were possibly false,
When someone makes allegations of fraud, intending to demonize the owners of wide lands and so seize that property, a wise man will be a little sceptical of those allegations, made with such urgency, such outrage, and so profitably to those making them.

What the true facts are I don't claim to know. So I thought I wouldn't commit to any position on this.
But you have committed yourself to a position on this, Roger; you impute a simple low motive (robbery) to the actions of Henry VIII. But the situation seems to have arisen from much more complex issues. Are you aware that the first monastic seizures under Henry were seeking to restore the lapsed religious character of monastic life, and were authorized by a papal bull secured by cardinal Wolsey ?
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that the property seizures for fraud were likely motivated by the king's greed ?
I don't think there's any doubt about that.
When a greedy man or baron seeks to steal something belonging to others, he has several options. One of the favourites is to claim that the "others" do not really own it; to cast doubt on their claim, or to engage in character assassination aimed at suggesting that they don't deserve to own it, even if they do. The next step is for the greedy to claim to act on behalf of "more deserving" but powerless people -- ideally those whose claims cannot be denied by any fair man -- who perhaps would or could never have acted themselves. Then he can claim to be acting "rightly" in seizing the property. And, funnily enough, very little if any of that property ever ends up in the hands of those who supposedly justified the seizure. Curious, that.
Curious is that you completely omit the most obvious context to the "dissolution acts" which was Henry's seeking to eliminate what he believed was an agency of Rome which opposed him as the head of the Church of England. The link I have provided to the Wiki article (above) gives I believe a balanced view of Henry's motives which appear to be on the whole political.

Jiri
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Old 05-08-2010, 11:31 PM   #16
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Roger Pearse, you have listed what you consider ulterior motives for concluding that some medieval relic or document is a forgery. Please describe to us what you would consider convincing evidence of medieval fraudulence.

Consider the case of Rev. William Buckland:
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The brilliant eccentric kept a veritable menagerie at his house, together with countless rocks and fossils. Buckland's hyena disturbed the family's dinner guests by crunching one of the guinea pigs (Hallam 1983, p. 62, note 38)! The Bucklands experimented with exotic foods to such an extent that the professor boasted about having eaten his way through much of the animal kingdom. During his honeymoon visit to Palermo, Buckland was shown St. Rosalia's shrine, where he promptly shocked the priests by declaring that the bones were from a goat, not a woman. He also tasted alleged "martyr's blood" on the floor of a European cathedral and said, "I know what it is-bat's urine!" (Hallam 1983, p. 62, note 34).
William Buckland in Retrospect

The Father, the Son, and the Holy Goat

What ulterior motives do you think that Rev. William Buckland might have had for concluding that St. Rosalia's bones were really goat bones? To me, he came to that conclusion by his knowledge of comparative anatomy -- St. Rosalia's bones looked like goat bones to him.

Or, for that matter, concluding that some supposed blood was really bat urine?
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Old 05-09-2010, 06:11 AM   #17
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When someone makes allegations of fraud, intending to demonize the owners of wide lands and so seize that property, a wise man will be a little sceptical of those allegations, made with such urgency, such outrage, and so profitably to those making them.

What the true facts are I don't claim to know. So I thought I wouldn't commit to any position on this.
But you have committed yourself to a position on this, Roger; you impute a simple low motive (robbery) to the actions of Henry VIII. But the situation seems to have arisen from much more complex issues. Are you aware that the first monastic seizures under Henry were seeking to restore the lapsed religious character of monastic life, and were authorized by a papal bull secured by cardinal Wolsey ?
The process begun by Wolsey was (according to the article cited) intended to amalgamate small monasteries and convents with larger ones. This is quite different from the Dissolution of Monastic Life as such, which is what the later program achieved.

The Dissolution was based on 'evidence' of monastic misconduct which (according to the article cited) was was far from objective.
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...where the reports of misbehaviour returned by the visitors can be checked against other sources, they commonly appear to have been greatly exaggerated, often recalling events and scandals from years before.
Andrew Criddle
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Old 05-09-2010, 11:39 AM   #18
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But you have committed yourself to a position on this, Roger; you impute a simple low motive (robbery) to the actions of Henry VIII. But the situation seems to have arisen from much more complex issues. Are you aware that the first monastic seizures under Henry were seeking to restore the lapsed religious character of monastic life, and were authorized by a papal bull secured by cardinal Wolsey ?
The process begun by Wolsey was (according to the article cited) intended to amalgamate small monasteries and convents with larger ones. This is quite different from the Dissolution of Monastic Life as such, which is what the later program achieved.
Hi Andrew,
I don't see where the article is saying that the authority that Wolsey received from Clement VII. intended to amalgamate monasteries. That Wolsey started the process of monastic suppression (he favoured funding of colleges with the proceeds) under Henry is a well-known and accepted fact and examples of it are are cited by the wiki arrticle (; for more see e.g. page 17, of the essay here.).

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The Dissolution was based on 'evidence' of monastic misconduct which (according to the article cited) was was far from objective.
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...where the reports of misbehaviour returned by the visitors can be checked against other sources, they commonly appear to have been greatly exaggerated, often recalling events and scandals from years before.
I don't have illusions about the agenda of Cromwell and his commission of inquiry. But the suppression certainly was not as simply motivated as Roger would have us believe. BTW, the article also mentions that while 'the vice and excesses may have been biased and exaggerated' they were also chronicled by Thomas More, himself to be victimized by Thomas Cromwell's unfairness.

Best,
Jiri
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Old 05-09-2010, 12:24 PM   #19
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At the risk of dragging this even further away from pre-modern history, the official newspaper of the Italian bishops published an article by cult-apologist Massimo Introvigne, dredging up the fact that Goebbels had mounted a campaign against the Catholic Church in 1937 based on charges of pedophilia. However, even he had to admit that there was some basis in fact for the charges.
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The expression “moral panic” was only coined by sociologists in the 1970s to identify a social alarm created artificially, by amplifying real facts and exaggerating their numbers through statistical folklore, as well as “discovering” and presenting as “new” events which in reality are already known and which date to the past. ...
Pointing out some bad motive on the part of one's accuser is not a defense.
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Old 05-10-2010, 12:43 AM   #20
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When someone makes allegations of fraud, intending to demonize the owners of wide lands and so seize that property, a wise man will be a little sceptical of those allegations, made with such urgency, such outrage, and so profitably to those making them.

What the true facts are I don't claim to know. So I thought I wouldn't commit to any position on this.
But you have committed yourself to a position on this, Roger; you impute a simple low motive (robbery) to the actions of Henry VIII. (etc)
Try reading my comments in full, rather than mixing up two separate issues.
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