Europe at the Time of Saint Wenceslas
Now that we have arrived at the first of authentically dated
rulers over Bohemia, Saint Wenceslas, 928-935, we may as well
take a look round the Europe of that time.
We find first of all that the peoples were capable of getting
into just as bad a mess as they are in to-day, and that without
the aid of any new diplomacy, League of Nations and International
Conferences.
England was, so to speak, nowhere in those days; Englishmen
did not wander about the Continent making observations from terraces,
did not even launch missions and commissions on harmless and unsuspecting
countries, in order to impress the inhabitants thereof with our
wealth and our good taste in getting rid of it. England was very
busy with the Scots, Welsh and Danes, who were also causing a
deal of trouble to the broken-up remnants of Charlemagne's Empire.
The ideal of the Holy
Roman Empire still lived and inspired a host of adventurous
Counts of the Marches and other bearers of German culture to inroads
into territory inhabited by Slavonic races. The idea seemed to
be that as each Slavonic tribe, principality or kingdom adopted
Christianity it should come under German domination and be held
in trust for Mother Church by German princes as long as the Papacy
conformed to their conception of right and wrong.
The Papacy itself seems to have had no definite ideas of right
and wrong at the time, or at least did not put them into practice;
had, in fact, become thoroughly corrupt and ineffective for good.
Christendom was in a parlous state, disunited and assailed by
hosts of barbarians, Danes, Saracens, Hungarians.
The latter had become especially dangerous to the Slavonic peoples.
Before Arpad arrived at Pressburg (now Bratislava) in 829, the
territory inhabited by Slavonic tribes, mostly in principalities
of varying size and importance, had extended with fluctuating
frontiers, from Holstein south-eastward through Central Europe
to the Adriatic and the Balkan range.
Arpad drove a wedge into this Slavonic mass and broke it into
two parts; Arpad's descendants still separate northern and southern
Slavs. We have seen how the Empire of Moravia went down before
the Magyars, and that the Bohemians, no longer able to count on
support from that side, were forced to turn to Germany.
The intrusion of the Magyars into Central Europe, by dividing
the mass of Slavonic races, also weakened the influence of the
Eastern Church among the Bohemians and forced those that were
inclined towards Christianity into closer communion with Rome
via Germanism. German priests were beginning to gain the ascendancy
over those of the Eastern persuasion, they objected to services
in the Vulgate, and as they knew no language but their own and
only sufficient Latin for their clerical duties, their influence
began to threaten the Slavonic genius of the Bohemians with extinction.
This was undoubtedly their purpose, and it accounts for much
of Bohemia's sufferings during the thousand years following the
imposition of the German Bishop of Ratisbon on this country by
the German King Arnulf to whom the immediate predecessors of St.
Wenceslas, Spytihnev and Vratislav had appealed for assistance.
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