Introduction
In June 1407, the Vienna city council went to inspect the building works at the main parish church of St. Stephen’s. The fabric warden’s accounts record a substantial expenditure on wine for “the councillors and the craftsmen” but no other information about this visit.Footnote 1 Historians must turn instead to the reports of the chronicler, Thomas Ebendorfer, to guess its purpose and outcome: that, because of deviations from the original plan, the enormous south tower, then under construction, had to be demolished to the height to which its first master had brought it, and restarted.Footnote 2 It was a dramatic moment in the architectural history of the church—building work would grind to a halt for a year—but even if the conditions and consequences of the inspection were exceptional, the visit itself was not.Footnote 3 St. Stephen’s, although a vast collegiate church with a chapter founded by the Habsburg duke, Rudolf IV, was still the city’s main parish church and its building work was a civic project, overseen by a fabric warden appointed by the city council (Rat), which also audited the accounts and agreed upon the selection of senior craftsmen.Footnote 4 The work was even substantially funded out of city revenues.Footnote 5 That several men from the council would visit the building site suggests the gravity of the situation, but that they would take an active interest in directing the work they were funding and overseeing was wholly logical.
There is, by contrast, no comparable moment in the history of parish church building in London.Footnote 6 The oversight of church construction never formed a part of the formal responsibilities of the offices of mayor or alderman. They never visited the building site in an official capacity, never oversaw the contracting, accounting, and auditing of the work, and never chose masons, appointed fabric officers, or had a hand in designs. The exceptionally wealthy men who ran the city did contribute to many building projects on the city’s churches, both financially and managerially, but as private individuals, typically in their home parishes. At the wealthy parish church of St. Mary-at-Hill, London,Footnote 7 for example, the mayor was present at a payment made in 1499–1500 to a former warden and auditor, who appears to have been running building work on the church.Footnote 8 This was probably William Remyngton (in office 1500–1501, alderman of Billingsgate 1485–1511), who would be buried in the church and was a regular donor.Footnote 9 That the building work was run by a senior, local parishioner at St. Mary-at-Hill, with the mayor no more than looking on in a private capacity, was typical. Examples of building projects administered by other parochial officers can be found at All Hallows, London Wall (1528–1529),Footnote 10 and the wealthier parishes of St. Andrew Hubbard and St. Peter Westcheap (1437–1440).Footnote 11
The construction of these two church towers, bookending the fifteenth century, suggest very different models for the political framework in which building work was to be carried out in large cities in the European Middle Ages. In one case, the city’s government was actively inspecting the building site, appointing the fabric warden(s), agreeing on contracts, paying out wages and costs, auditing accounts, and even commanding changes to the design; in the other, these tasks were overseen by parish masters or churchwardens, whose appointment and accountability was at a strictly local level, outside direct civic control. Church building in medieval Vienna was highly formalized within the structure of the city’s government; in London, it was relatively more ad hoc and variable in its organization within the city’s varied parochial administrations. In Vienna, it was overseen from the peak of a centralized pyramid; in London, it took place in localities organized like a set of overlapping and interconnected villages, in which each parish took charge of its own church construction. The differences between the architectural politics of the two cities were, in many ways, great: centralized and decentralized; civic and parochial; high government and local politics.
Stark as these differences are, scholars of the organization of medieval parochial architecture have not yet worked at the kind of scale necessary to explicate their causes, types and effects, although there have been calls for precisely such comparative study of the parish.Footnote 12 In the last thirty years and more, numerous excellent local, regional, and national studies have provided highly nuanced accounts of the administration of medieval parishes, including the construction of their churches, but rarely of their continental context or transregional similarities and differences. The aim of this article is to propose such a large-scale framework into which historical work on regions and localities could be set.Footnote 13 Its central claim is that foundational to the politics of medieval urban church construction—in London, Vienna, and across the continent—was the “architecture of politics,” that is, specifically, whether a city’s civic authority had integrated its parochial lay fabric fund(s), something common everywhere in smaller cities and towns but variable in larger ones. This variability, I will argue, depended on the chronology of urbanization: older cities often had large numbers of long-established, self-governing parishes that could not be integrated into civic structures, while later foundations were typically centralized under a single parish structure, from which lay responsibilities were then assimilated to increasingly powerful municipal governments. It was, simply put, structural ecclesiastical differences that were critical in determining the political framework in which medieval parish church construction was realized, and less other variables that described much urban difference, such as the population or morphology of the city, the status of the church, its seigneurial context, or the project’s architectural ambition. That all of these could be remarkably diverse within each of the two models will be shown clearly in this article’s second section, which will argue that London and Vienna might stand in for a constitutional difference that crisscrossed medieval Europe, albeit with many local variants. Quite how these differences might have played out in terms of the sociology and symbolism of the church building (the “politics of architecture”) is, necessarily, a more speculative question that will occupy the article’s third and final section.
Town and Parish
Comparing Vienna and London makes it clear what was at stake: both were large cities with powerful civic governments and considerable legal entitlements, but remarkably different parochial structures. Late-medieval Vienna had some twenty to twenty-five thousand inhabitants, making it among the largest cities in the Holy Roman Empire, if still about half the size of London.Footnote 14 Although suffering from a reduction in the wake of the Black Death, the city’s late-medieval population represents a substantial rise since around 1200, when it had some five to ten thousand residents.Footnote 15 The combined population of the city of London, Southwark, and Westminster had also declined considerably since the Black Death, from a medieval high point of some eighty thousand in 1300 to around forty to forty-five thousand in 1380, but the city would continue to grow throughout the later Middle Ages, largely through immigration.Footnote 16 Differences in population were vastly exceeded by differences in parochial organization: while late-medieval London had some 108 parish churches, Vienna had just three and only a few additional public chapels.Footnote 17
The reason for this dramatic contrast may be found in the chronology of the cities’ early parochial development, which took place on either side of a period of Europe-wide ecclesiastical reform associated with Pope Gregory VII (in office 1073–1085) that compelled secular lords to hand their foundations to clergy.Footnote 18 Although Vienna and its churches predated this period, it was still only developing as a trading center and its churches and chapels were successfully centralized under the control of the city’s rector. This precedent would not only make assimilation to the city’s authority logistically more straightforward as it grew in power over the following centuries, but would also directly associate parochial oversight with city-wide authority.Footnote 19 Indeed, the new centralized parish of St. Stephen’s was founded at around this time, ca. 1137/1138, intended perhaps as the core of a new urban community, which would, as it turned out, only begin to develop later in the twelfth century. Earlier foundations became either effectively private chapels (as was the case for St. Ruprecht’s, St. Peter’s, and Maria am Gestade, the first of which may have been the city’s original parish) or subordinate parishes staffed by clergy from St. Stephen’s (as at St. Michael’s).Footnote 20 In this, Vienna was typical of many cities across Europe: parochial systems in places that were founded or grew significantly after about 1100 tended to be restricted to a single dominant church; when parishes proliferated it was typically because they predated the Reforms and already had well-established rights that prevented reorganization.Footnote 21 As cities grew over the rest of the Middle Ages, and intramural parishes subdivided (or suburban parishes were added) to deal with demographic pressures, the dominance of the main church was maintained. Indeed, a number of new churches, and monasteries and friaries, were founded in Vienna over the long thirteenth century but it maintained its fundamental ecclesiastical structure, dominated by a single parish church.Footnote 22
Certainly by the later Middle Ages, the city council was in charge of the building funds of St. Stephen’s, Maria am Gestade, and St. Michael’s, appointing a fabric warden to oversee each of them and auditing their accounts at an annual meeting.Footnote 23 The prehistory of these “fabricae ecclesiae” is unclear, but such lay funds were installed in churches across Europe during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries (they are in evidence somewhat earlier in France and Italy, and later in the Holy Roman Empire) and, in single-parish cities, they were often eventually swallowed up by civic institutions, when they did not remain under the direct control of a powerful collegiate church.Footnote 24 In every case, the earliest surviving evidence for the appointment of a Kirchmeister (that is, a permanent lay fabric warden) in Vienna—at St. Michael in 1325, St. Stephen’s in 1334, and Maria am Gestade in 1424—should not be taken as indicating the date of their installation, but does perhaps suggest that they participated in the strengthening of the city’s privileges under Frederick III and Albrecht II in the decades after 1300, after a period of instability in the 1280s and 1290s.Footnote 25 In any case, the long thirteenth century marked a period during which many cities, including Vienna, won, and occasionally lost, various new powers, including control of the building funds.
Of the churches administered by Vienna’s city council, Maria am Gestade is perhaps the most significant, since it had not been part of the city’s parochial system but rather a possession of the powerful Benedictine Schottenstift (founded shortly after St. Stephen’s) until 1302, followed by a number of wealthy families, the Austrian sovereigns and, most lastingly, the bishop of Passau.Footnote 26 That the municipality could take charge of maintenance work even here testifies to its political strength, although perhaps also to the administrative convenience of such an arrangement for the church’s owners. An even better demonstration, however, is the failure of a plan made by Rudolf IV in the middle of the fourteenth century to remove the St. Stephen’s building fund from the council and place it under the control of the college that he had established at the church. Not every city in the empire was able to maintain or win control of a fabric fund from a powerful college in its central parish church, but Vienna did.Footnote 27 Acquiring these fabric funds was not only a demonstration but also an extension of the city’s field of activity in a period when the independence of urban government was being gradually, but not irrevocably, won. They brought with them a substantial economy—some £1,000 a year for St. Stephen’s alone in the fifteenth century—and thus new powers over fundraising, patronage, and expenditure (and, perhaps, as I discuss below, new moral authority).Footnote 28 The completeness of their assimilation to the city government, and the importance they were accorded, can be shown by the facts that only the more senior “inner councilmen” were eligible to hold the office of fabric warden, that even after the inner council was expanded in 1396 to include artisans, the office continued to be held only by merchants, the wealthiest and most powerful constituency in the city, and that several fabric wardens were senior or capable enough to go on to become mayor.Footnote 29
The establishment of St. Stephen’s as the dominant parish in the course of the mid-twelfth century, as part of a continent-wide ecclesiastical reform movement, determined the ways in which two subsequent developments that were common across Europe would come to shape the administration of church construction. The first was the establishment of lay responsibility for at least a large portion of the church’s maintenance and liturgy, a process that probably began in most places in the twelfth or thirteenth centuries, and the creation of independent lay funds (fabricae) to finance it. The second was the development of increasingly powerful city governments over the twelfth and thirteenth centuries and beyond.Footnote 30 In cities like Vienna, which were unified under a single parish church, and especially if there was no powerful collegiate chapter already in the town, these civic bodies would often come to assimilate and oversee the pre-existing lay fabric fund(s) and the building work they financed, alongside their other responsibilities, generating what I will refer to as the “Vienna model.”Footnote 31 In these places, both maintenance and major building works—which in Vienna and elsewhere could be on a cathedral-like scale—were typically, although not invariably, financed out of the same account.
By contrast, in London and other cities with a large number of long-established parishes, church fabric funds would never be swallowed up into civic government and, at least by the later thirteenth century, they were typically controlled by lay officers in each parish, generally referred to by modern historians as “churchwardens.” The historical context for this difference is relatively easy to outline: many elements of London’s civic and ecclesiastical government were sufficiently well-established by the eleventh century to persist through the period of the Gregorian Reform and resist centralization under either ecclesiastical or municipal control.Footnote 32 London’s civic administration was divided into wards, within which a number of officers discharged duties relating to criminal justice, cleanliness, and repair, but not to church building work.Footnote 33 The ward had developed around the same time period as the parish, in the late Anglo-Saxon period, but any early overlap was soon lost and, by the twelfth century, the latter represented a much smaller administrative unit with very different responsibilities and was already outside the direct control of civic government, preventing any significant organizational reform.Footnote 34 England’s other large, multi-parish towns and cities—including, for example, Norwich, Cambridge, and Salisbury—had a similar disconnect between their civic and parochial organization,Footnote 35 with at least some parts of the latter dating to before the twelfth century.Footnote 36 After 1200, the number of parishes was maintained: even during demographic reductions in the later Middle Ages, when other towns were cutting back on parish numbers, London’s remained relatively static.Footnote 37 The city did oversee major building projects, such as work on quays and bridges, which were agreed at the Court of Common Council, the most representative of the institutions of government, but not church construction.Footnote 38
London’s churchwardens were only partly analogous to the Viennese fabric wardens.Footnote 39 There was considerable local variation, but in the later Middle Ages they seem typically to have been answerable to senior parishioners, generally termed the “parish masters” by modern historians. They formed more-or-less formalized oversight committees, often named after the number of their members, and audited the churchwardens’ accounts. However hierarchical this structure was, though, the wardens were probably formally appointed, or “elected,” before an annual assembly, likely consisting of the male householders in the parish (other bodies or individuals such as the patron or parson could also be involved).Footnote 40 Although they would invariably take care of parochial maintenance work, among other liturgical and financial responsibilities, the churchwardens were, unlike in Vienna, by no means always responsible for construction projects. In parishes such as St. Mary-at-Hill, as described above, building work was taken over directly by parish masters or dedicated fabric wardens.Footnote 41 The likely reason was that, unlike the churchwardens, they had the skills, capacity, and seniority to run such demanding projects.Footnote 42 On the other hand, even single-parish English towns could follow suit: at Hedon (with a population of around nine hundred), a separate administration was set up for church construction, presumably since such a small place also lacked a sufficiently specialized administration.Footnote 43
The dominance of Vienna’s fabric wardens over even major projects can probably be explained on two grounds, one formal and one social: its administration was more developed, with a professional clerk and chief builder (Baumeister), and so had the logistical capacity to handle a complex building site; and its fabric warden was sufficiently senior, in wealth, profession and experience, to be entrusted with the work. England’s parochial churchwardens, by contrast, were typically drawn from more middling ranks of local society and certainly not exclusively from city government (although plenty also served in civic office), and they rarely had subordinates.Footnote 44 This had other organizational consequences: for example, small urban (and rural) parishes would typically have had less specialized administrations than the civic government of large single-parish towns and thus took on a broader portfolio, so that, for instance, churchwardens in the former often administered property, a task that would be handled by a city’s treasury.Footnote 45 Even Vienna is not quite such a simple test case: certain sums, and so presumably their associated tasks, can be found disappearing from the fabric warden’s annual accounts and presumably shifted into those of other bodies.Footnote 46
The most obvious architectural, and financial, consequence of these differences is that while even wealthy parishes in London built relatively modest church buildings, albeit often richly furnished, St. Stephen, Vienna, was constructed on a vast scale, appropriate to its large number of canons and the attempts of its Habsburg (and Babenberg) patrons to develop it into a cathedral (they did not succeed until 1469, although this process was not finished until 1480). That St. Stephen’s architectonic conception was essentially as a cathedral is generally attributed to its status as part of Habsburg ambitions for Vienna, but its patronage is far more complex and both archaeological and account evidence indicates that financing came substantially from the city, both through public finances and direct contributions by individual citizens.Footnote 47 This was, however, sufficient: in Vienna, the parish encompassed virtually an entire city of some twenty thousand people; in London, many parishes would have had only a few hundred residents. By contrast, architectural work on London churches after 1200 consisted largely of extensions made gradually and ad hoc over the course of decades.Footnote 48 In Vienna, unlike London, total civic wealth, even if lower in absolute terms, had many fewer architectural outlets and so its products could be correspondingly more spectacular.
City and Parish in Medieval Europe
Concentrating on Vienna and London provides an appropriately stark contrast that is enlightening for the political and architectural history of each city, but could this distinction be extended across Europe, allowing, of course, for substantial local variation? From the thirteenth century, cities with numerous churches, typically with long-established parishes possessing an independent fabric fund administered by “elected” churchwardens, could be found across eastern England, the Iberian Peninsula, parts of the Low Countries and northern France, while those in south and southwest France, Germany, Poland, Scandinavia, and Hungary rarely had more than a few churches and typically one principal parish church. Italy is something of a special case since the town was usually identified with a single diocese, the cathedral of which was the town’s main church.Footnote 49 In these places, the building fund and the officials who administered it were often integrated into civic structures under the control of the mayor and council, even if their creation had preceded the development of urban rights. The following survey is based on accessible secondary sources and is proposed as no more than a rough, but suggestive, sketch of the continent’s comparative context, with many generalizations and lacunae that I hope future historians will fill.
In southern France, urban consulats administered parochial building funds, the fabriques, as part of civic government, while in the heavily churched cities to the north the funds were run by lay marguilliers or fabriciens, who were appointed by senior parishioners.Footnote 50 For example, Marc Venard’s case study for the rebuilding of a parish church by its churchwardens—in a specialized adaptation of their usual structure—is taken from the now-ruined Saint Vincent in Rouen, the capital of Normandy, in the years after 1515.Footnote 51 The city had some thirty-six parishes in the late Middle Ages, even more churches per head of population than London, several of which had been founded centuries before the Gregorian Reforms, and it followed the London model in running building work through its parochial churchwardens.Footnote 52 Even in this large and important city, with a population of up to fifteen to twenty thousand, and in the case of a vast church building, work was still run at a local, parochial level. A revealing contrast may be found in Montpellier in southern France, with a population of forty thousand, making it second only to Paris, but with just two principal parishes, one in the lord’s and one in the bishop’s quarter of the town, though it had an increasing number of chapels, friaries, and monasteries, and an important pilgrimage church.Footnote 53 Although its churches were ancient, the city had largely developed in the twelfth century and its first town government developed after a rebellion against its seignorial lords shortly after 1200.Footnote 54 In other words, it exemplified the “Vienna model” and indeed, here it was the city’s consuls who led building work at Note-Dame des Tables from the 1370s.Footnote 55
Iberian cities and towns could also have large numbers of parishes, with populations that would have been even smaller than some in London, and these were often in foundations made after the Gregorian Reform as large numbers of parishes were established in reconquered cities. Late-medieval Lisbon, for example, the largest city on the peninsula, had approximately fifty thousand inhabitants and some twenty-four churches, founded in the wake of the reconquest of 1147, along with many religious houses, hospitals, colleges and hermitages.Footnote 56 Seville was perhaps the most extreme example, with five to seven thousand late-medieval households and twenty-four parishes, a disparity that has often been attributed to the city’s exceptional frontier status, the need for religious conversion, and the direct replacement of mosques in the wake of the city’s conquest in 1248. Madrid had a comparable population and some ten parishes, also founded after the reconquest in the early twelfth century.Footnote 57 Tom Nickson has described the committee of wealthy locals who contracted for building work at Santa Maria del Mar in Barcelona in the fourteenth century, which may be usefully compared with a surviving contract from 1296 for the parish church of Olocau, north of Valencia, which the municipal council made directly with the architect.Footnote 58 The contrast here functions as a good example of the significance of the Gregorian Reform: Barcelona had been captured much earlier, in 801, but it maintained its five city churches (as well as a number of extramural parishes) since its counts and bishop were powerful enough to resist reform, while city government was discontinuous and patchy in its authority before 1259.Footnote 59 The small town of Olocau, by contrast, had a single parish church. In other words, the two places followed the “London” and “Vienna” models, respectively.
The Low Countries show a similar contrast. Most towns were relatively small, with a single, often collegiate church founded before the urban center had developed and overseen by the city council, along similar lines to the situation in Vienna.Footnote 60 Even the large city of Antwerp, for instance, with some forty thousand inhabitants, had just one main parish – with an enormous church building – until the 1470s.Footnote 61 As in many other places, even when new parishes were created there, a version of the “Vienna model” was maintained, shoring up the authority of the city council over the work of new parochial officers. New wardens swore, for example, not to undertake new construction work without the consent of the mayor and aldermen, who also audited the accounts. Some adaptation is in evidence, though, allowing for a degree of parochial independence: the city appointed upper churchwardens drawn from the ranks of the aldermen, but the four regular churchwardens who carried out the administration were drawn from among wealthier parishioners. Nonetheless, the city still had to approve them.Footnote 62 Both maintenance and building work could be run through the churchwardens’ accounts, although specialized committees were occasionally appointed for major projects.Footnote 63 Similar top-down control was exercised elsewhere, where parishes were small in number, or developed once urban government was sufficiently powerful to restrict parochial independence. At the Buurkerk in Utrecht, for example, with a population of twenty thousand and four parishes, the city appointed the churchwardens and oversaw building work, and they rendered their accounts to the mayors before an audience of the parishioners.Footnote 64 Four was a relatively large number of parishes for the Low Countries but only two dated back to before the thirteenth century. (When the city came to build its own chapel, however, it financed the work directly.Footnote 65)
Still, examples of cities with larger numbers of parishes and independent churchwardens, as in the London model, can be found in the Low Countries. A notable case in point is the city of Liege, with twenty-five parishes (and ten thousand people; even more parishes per person than London). The churchwardens (mambours) at the large parish of Saint-Martin-en-Ile provide a good example of independence from civic control.Footnote 66 Another example of the London model can be found in Ghent, with seven parish churches.Footnote 67 At the large church of St. Jacob, the three to four lay churchwardens (kerkmeesters) who ran maintenance and kept the accounts (as well as the Holy Ghost masters who handled poor relief) were not appointed by the city, though the positions were occupied by wealthy men who were active in civic politics.Footnote 68
Scandinavian towns were very small—even the largest, Stockholm and Bergen, had at their greatest extent in 1300 populations of some seven thousand—and typically had only a single parish, making them comparable to smaller towns elsewhere on the continent.Footnote 69 Trading communities that founded their own churches, such as the Lübeck merchants in Falsterbo, could have an interesting adaptation of the Viennese model, stretched overseas. Here, they administered the fabrica themselves—and oversaw building work that included the erection of a clock tower—but did so under the supervision of the Lübeck bailiff.Footnote 70 Falsterbo had a number of other churches and chapels in the later Middle Ages, but still a single dominant city church.
Hungarian towns typically grew relatively late, during the fourteenth and fifteenth century, while maintaining a single parish church over which urban authorities had a strikingly high degree of control.Footnote 71 Here, there is evidence of towns passing civic funds to the churchwardens, alongside their usual revenues, for the purpose of church repair or building work and the purchase of other artistic works, in keeping with the Vienna model. Saxon towns in Transylvania seem to have funded the building and maintenance of the church through the churchwardens (vitrici or aeditii), as elsewhere, and typically seem to have appointed them, often from among council members or other politically active men.Footnote 72 In the important commercial town of Brașov/Kronstadt, for example, which had a population of some eleven to twelve thousand but only a single parish church, which oversaw other junior churches, the municipality paid the churchwardens directly for building work.Footnote 73 Similarly, in Bistritz, by the 1510s, building work was overseen by the town council, through the churchwarden.Footnote 74 A distinction within the Vienna model between arms-length civic control of fabric wardens (as in Vienna) and direct oversight of church building projects (as in many cities for roads, gates, docks, and so forth) can be introduced here, the significance of which is probably local in nature. Zsolt Simon’s study of the churchwarden’s accounts of the important Transylvanian town of Sibiu/Hermannstadt in 1505–1511 indicate that the warden was appointed by the town council but that the latter was increasingly paying for major artistic projects directly by the end of the Middle Ages.Footnote 75 The town had grown around a single parish church, acquiring further chapels, hospitals, and friaries without subdividing the parish.Footnote 76 This model extended even to mendicant houses and hospitals, both of which had lay wardens who were accountable to the municipality and were sometimes even members of the council.Footnote 77 One cause of a degree of church independence in these places was the presence of multiple ethnic communities, which were permitted to build their own churches.Footnote 78
Vienna was far from alone within the Holy Roman Empire in exemplifying municipal control of parish church building work. Arnd Reitemeier’s meticulous survey of urban parishes in medieval Germany, Pfarrkirchen in der Stadt des späten Mittelalters, is taken up largely with civic, or clerical, administration and management of parochial funds, and its associated building work.Footnote 79 When variations on the oversight and auditing of urban churchwardens by the local council (Rat) are discussed, the major difference is the involvement of seigneurial representatives or members of a collegiate chapter from a powerful Stiftskirche (or of priests in rural places), in overseeing the work.Footnote 80 His key example of Wesel, with some 4,500 inhabitants and a single parish church (until suburban additions after the 1420s), which was rebuilt by order of the town council in 1500, might be taken as typical for the small towns that made up much of the empire.Footnote 81 England, too, had smaller towns with a single dominant parish church where building work, and the fabric fund, was led and administered by civic authorities, in the Vienna model,Footnote 82 such as projects I have described elsewhere in Totnes (with a population of about 1,400 in 1377) or Bridgwater (about 1,700).Footnote 83 In terms of the administration of church building, these towns were, in other words, similar to somewhere like Wesel.
Cologne is, however, a notable exception and would follow the London model, despite the markedly strong overlap between the seven inner-city civic “Sondergemeinde” (special communities) from the early twelfth century, and its earlier ecclesiastical “Pfarrsprengel” (parishes).Footnote 84 Although the two often covered the same area, they remained formally distinct, even increasingly so during the later Middle Ages, even while cooperative activities between them continued. (In fact, the city’s suburban parishes were never closely identified with civic communities.) Cologne’s parish structure long predated the Gregorian Reform, and by the later twelfth century it already had thirteen parishes, to which more would be added.Footnote 85 Tobias Wulf describes the relatively late development of the city’s lay fabrica in the thirteenth century and afterwards, followed by the formalization of a lay parochial administration and the installation of independent parish-level churchwardens around the early fourteenth century, and eventually the emergence of governing committees, very similar to the London model.Footnote 86 He associates increased expenditure at a parochial level, including on building work, with the development of this parochial structure.Footnote 87 Wulf gives the example of construction at St. Jacob’s in the early sixteenth century, which was overseen by the churchwarden, although the city council played a modest role, at his request, in resolving a conflict. Indeed, by the end of the fifteenth century there was a growing obligation to get permission from the city’s revenue officers (Rentmeister) for alterations, a kind of occasional, external intervention into parochial construction that seems to have been typical there but which does suggest an attempt to hybridize the London model.Footnote 88 (This would change by the seventeenth century, when the churchwardens reported damage directly to the Rentmeister.)Footnote 89
The most developed form of civic control of church building was in Italian towns and cities, which were typically identified with a single diocese and cathedral church, and constituted such a distinctive version of the Vienna model that they could probably be referred to as a third model in their own right. Here communes took over responsibility for construction and maintenance of the cathedral—and often for other chapels or churches—from the bishop, installing remarkably elaborate lay institutions, opera, to manage the work.Footnote 90 The process began, perhaps, as early as the later eleventh century and by the middle of the thirteenth the arrangements were both more elaborate and more professionalized than those to the north: in Bologna, the city employed craftsmen to carry out rebuilding work in the 1160s, after the bishop failed to rebuild after a fire in the 1130s, beginning a practice of direct payment and oversight that would continue into the thirteenth century.Footnote 91 In Siena, lay appointees to oversee the cathedral workshop began by the 1250s, and early statutes show that its officers, oaths, funding, and responsibilities were determined by “the Nine,” who ran the commune. Footnote 92 The physical protection of church buildings even formed part of the oath of Siena’s podesta. Footnote 93 By the 1280s, the director of the opera in Pisa had a substantial staff and house and was forbidden from taking on any other work (quite the opposite of the English churchwarden or German Kirchmeister).Footnote 94 In Orvieto, cathedral construction was undertaken by an opera composed of a treasurer and four supervisors, all elected by the commune. In addition to a permanent staff, large committees, including clerics and lay, professional and unpaid, and expert and amateur members, were used for major projects.Footnote 95
The institutionalization, power, and seniority of the opera may have given it a degree of independence from the commune that was not paralleled by northern fabric wardens within the Vienna model, who hardly constituted a separate institution, although they did often have junior employees and seem to have possessed a high degree of latitude between their annual audits. On the other hand, the formation of an independent body led to regulation and highly formalized oversight controls: in Siena, the financial officers of the opera (five in number) served for just three months and had to report to the commune at the end of every term.Footnote 96 Indeed, the regular reform of the personnel, organization, and systems of accountability of the city’s opera indicates that it remained a point of concern for the commune. The bishop continued, often, to have a supporting role: in Genoa, church taxes were given to the opera for building work, although it was overseen by the commune. Footnote 97 In most cities, the opera, often working from its own palazzo, oversaw the building site’s finances, the purchase of equipment and the hiring of craftsmen, as well as managing markets, woods, taxes, or other rights and properties that funded its activities. However, day-to-day direction of the building site was the responsibility of the capomaestro, who was accountable to the opera through systems that could be increasingly elaborate, involving large numbers of advisers, experts, and colleagues.Footnote 98
Italy was exceptional, but Wim Vroom has found a number of cathedrals north of the alps with lay fabric masters, who in several cases were installed after the city made major contributions to the fabric fund and apparently sought greater control over its building plans, as at Palma and Huesca in Spain and, to some extent, in Lübeck.Footnote 99 In most cases this was cooperative, with lay and clerical wardens working together, but an exception can be found in Strasbourg, where the city took over the cathedral fabric directly in the 1280s, appointing the Pfleger and overseeing major building work. Disputes between the city on the one side and the bishop and chapter on the other (two sides often opposed elsewhere) continued here through the later Middle Ages.Footnote 100 Otherwise, as Vroom has shown, construction projects at cathedrals, like Old St. Paul’s in London, were largely run internally by canons or monks, and their employees, although they did seek funding from the laity.
This survey, aside from its brevity, crudeness, and many overlooked examples, has methodological problems that must be acknowledged. First, parish numbers and civic powers changed significantly and sometimes quickly in individual places during the Middle Ages. Secondly, generalization about regional differences should be taken here as no more than a broad brush that would admit of considerable local and temporal difference, including the countless examples that were not examined in the course of writing this article or for which no evidence survives. Thirdly, even when church construction was a civic matter, the organization, powers, history, and practice of urban government varied considerably from one town to the next, as did parochial size, organization, and management.Footnote 101 For the mayor of Vienna and the mayor of Bridgwater (or the parish authorities of St. Mary at Hill, London, and of Saint Vincent, Rouen) to oversee building work does not entail similarities in the social, political, or cultural significance of their activities or even in important details of their management. In particular, it should be recalled that other institutions apart from the parish and city, most notably the chapter of a powerful urban collegiate church, could run parochial building work, and so the power of one did not necessarily entail the weakness of the other, while complex patterns of cooperation between all of these, along with clergy, private individuals, and guilds, were probably common.Footnote 102 Lastly, although the major parish church is often both relatively well documented and deliberately integrated into a broader political structure, subordinate parishes or chapels, and perhaps smaller projects in larger churches, probably often had an ambiguous and changing status that permitted high degrees of private initiative or cooperation between different authorities (as when guilds took over building work or when civic authorities worked together with private owners, as at Maria am Gestade, or bishops, as often happened in Italy). This short article, however, is intended only to demonstrate how a comparative approach at a vast scale can locate important structural differences that would remain invisible at a local or regional level, and in doing so to suggest how some institutional developments shaped the politics of architectural production.
The Politics of Architecture
Even allowing for considerable variations within the Vienna and London models, the stark differences between them evidently had major implication for the politics of architecture—that is, for what large-scale civic or communal church construction meant for the practice, authority, and reach of city and parish governments and how buildings manifested these differences in their materiality and semiotics. In Vienna, church building and maintenance was a major field of council activity: within the ambit of city government or its delegates fell the keeping, auditing, and archiving of building accounts; the appointment of the fabric warden; the oversight of the work; the commissioning (or at least the approval) of master craftsmen; the writing of contracts, accounts, and deeds; the inspection of the building site; the raising of public funds; and the visiting of comparable buildings.Footnote 103 As noted above, this both expressed and extended the power of the city’s government; it demonstrated its independence from seigneurial power and brought a large amount of caLondon’s to pital expenditure and attendant powers of patronage under its control in periods when civic entitlements were frequently fought over. The praxis of church building in Vienna connected “top” to “bottom” in relatively direct and highly regulated ways (at audit, the mayor himself would, after all, hear even the smallest transaction paid to a laborer) that tended to repeat, and so also to concretize and even to justify existing social and administrative structures.
Architectural production also constituted some of the aesthetics of civic power: the visit to the building site, the laying of foundation stones, the recording of architectural events in the city books, the hearing of audits, and the meeting with the master mason were moments when mayoral responsibility was visibly discharged and celebrated, and sometimes even sacralized, as suggested by the wine drunk during the inspection of the site in 1407, the congratulatory meal invariably held after the accounts were audited or the processions of clergy and nobility at the laying of foundations.Footnote 104 These were not insignificant associations for the city’s government to foster: contemporary iconographies could show even kings visiting building sites, while architectural patronage was a “good work” that would speed the donor’s soul through purgatory and the church building was of course a central and remarkable element of religious praxis.Footnote 105 In London, where the moral or spiritual authority, and the economic potency, of the city’s government was no less important, the closest equivalent was the building of new quays or similar non-ecclesiastical projects, which carried a quite different set of associations.Footnote 106
This is not to argue that London’s elite were not able to access the political advantages that came through the oversight of church construction, but it was a somewhat different, probably broader elite and a somewhat different and perhaps more powerful set of advantages. In contrast to Vienna, where, other than craftsmen, only a tiny minority wealthy enough to sit on the council and/or serve as fabric warden had any direct role in the work, the London model provided a larger number of individuals with both local and city-wide opportunities for involvement in the administration and control of church construction.Footnote 107 London’s high government was no less narrow than that of Vienna, but a much broader sweep of men served as parish masters, churchwardens, and fabric wardens.Footnote 108 This reflected the sheer size and complexity that the city’s governance had reached by the late Middle Ages: Caroline Barron estimates a thousand men were involved then in some office or another, even as London’s central government became increasingly oligarchic.Footnote 109 This would also increase the indirect involvement and everyday familiarity with church construction of a broader part of the population: in the city’s small parishes, often with only a few hundred residents, interactions between masters, congregations, and builders were more intimate and more immediate during periods of construction.Footnote 110
And yet, the contrast between the two cities should not be characterized as a vertical civic organization and a horizontal parochial one, in which Vienna’s church building was bound to the elite and London’s to the “community.” Even in the latter, parochial leadership, as we have seen, was probably made up largely of small groups of wealthy parishioners, including men who acted at times as mayors and aldermen, and who had an outsized role in appointing churchwardens, auditing their accounts, and directing their work, and even took on major parochial projects directly or directed those who did.Footnote 111 As a set of practices that structured relationships between different bodies, individuals, and social groups, architectural production may have been even more important in London than in Vienna.Footnote 112 Since London’s parochial-level societies were less formalized than Vienna’s civic hierarchy, with unofficial, personal differences determining who was involved in church building, the work itself could play a more significant role in both determining and demonstrating social difference.
The clearest example of how this could work is probably how an individual family could dominate whole church buildings in London while in Vienna private donations to St. Stephen’s were limited to, at most, particular units or objects (which was also common in London).Footnote 113 The wealthy families who appear to have led the rebuilding of St. Michael Crooked Lane, St. Laurence Pountney, and St. Michael Paternoster Royal are good examples.Footnote 114 Taking over construction would provide an opportunity for these families to dispense employment and patronage, install their own administrative structures, and visibly exercise their oversight, even beyond the parish, with a degree of independence not available to the wealthy in cities like Vienna.Footnote 115 Another possible example is the regularity with which surviving churchwardens’ accounts begin with a major building project: while this could be the consequence of chance survivals or a deliberate archival strategy, it suggests that new works stimulated new forms of administrative practice and record-keeping that offered roles for “middling” other subordinate parishioners within the otherwise elite practice of church construction.Footnote 116
To what extent and how building work was (pre)consciously associated with civic or parochial authorities is a challenging question. In medieval Europe, it is always difficult to establish a social semiotics of architecture—that is, how, when, for whom, or even if a building “represented” particular ideas, people, or offices.Footnote 117 One approach would be to invert the logic of the previous sections: if the building was funded and overseen by the city government or the parochial masters, then it “must” have been understood as representing them and, more specifically, as communicating something about their piety, competence, or social commitment (and so, in a further step, buttressing their authority, legitimacy, or other political interests). Such an argument is evidently problematic, not least for the imprecision of the term “represent” and the lack of knowledge of contemporary reception, but examples of inscriptions, heraldry, or imagery indicate that some sort of association with the work was actively sought by patrons and builders, even if evidence of specific moments of meaning-making about the work by contemporary visitors are vanishingly rare.Footnote 118
Explicit surviving examples of civic governments describing their own patronage are relatively uncommon but one revealing instance can be found in a remarkable inscription given twice in Ulm Minster in 1377.Footnote 119 It records how Ludwig Kraft “laid here the first foundation stone of this parish church in the name and by the will of the council” (von haissen des rates wegen hie zu vlm lait lvdwig kraft … de(n) erste(n) fu(n)dame(n)tstain a(n) diser pfarrkirchen).Footnote 120 Kraft held the right of patronage, had negotiated the church’s relocation, and had funded its construction.Footnote 121 However, Ulm, following the Viennese model, still retained such a close bond between council and church that, it seems, Kraft required its authority to lay the cornerstone. The suggestion, in other words, is that Kraft is the exception that proves the rule: church construction in towns where civic government and parish were united was so commonly associated with the council that Kraft needed to explicitly account for his role in the work, while awkwardly acknowledging the authority of the city. The modest number of surviving inscriptions of this kind might suggest not the absence of such associations but rather their strength. Londoners, meanwhile, needed to have no such compunctions about claiming unilateral power in church building, while no Viennese layman had such an outsized role in building St Stephen’s.
St Stephen’s has no such explicit inscription evidence, but in 1450 the town included an elaborated account of the laying of the foundation stone of the north tower in its most important city book, the Große Stadtbuch or Eisenbuch. Footnote 122 In fact, the mayor is not mentioned until towards the end of the passage, followed by other figures from the civic hierarchy, but the inclusion of the text in this particular book suggests that it was understood, or claimed, at least in part, as a civic event. In terms of the fabric itself, Tim Juckes has pointed out that when large-scale figures of Rudolf IV and his family that had been made for him in the 1360s were installed high on the church’s west front, perhaps in the 1420s, they were given arms including those of the city of Vienna, “introducing a civic perspective” to a cycle which had probably not been intended to have one.Footnote 123 It is striking, too, that as civic government and seigneurial authority in Vienna changed on several occasions in the late Middle Ages, sometimes violently, the building work at St. Stephen’s was largely unaffected: no matter who was in power, or how they had come to be there, this demanding and expensive project continued.Footnote 124 It suggests that building work was understood, at least by councilmen, as the distinctive province not of one party or individual (or of their ideals and ambitions) but rather of civic government, or perhaps more abstractly, of the city itself.
By contrast, there are strikingly few instances in London, or for that matter outside it, in which inscriptions or similar media explicitly record building work as the responsibility of the parish. “Parochial identity,” “parochial community,” and “parochial membership” have become popular terms in recent scholarship, but these are distinctively modern analytical categories and their medieval antecedents, if they existed, need considerable nuancing.Footnote 125 Unlike the city (or the guild), the parish was never incorporated, received few legal entitlements, rarely had arms, and had no explicit list of “members” (as cities did for citizens or guilds for members) or any formalized and permanent government (in theory, if not in practice). There was, in effect, little that the parish qua parish could “do” (collective actions were, rather, brought by groups of individual parishioners).Footnote 126 It is telling that the Middle English Dictionary entry for “parish” includes not a single incident where it is the subject for an active verb. The term “parish” was used to describe a unit within ecclesiastical government (with certain legal entitlements and obligations), a geographical area, or a building or group of people, but not an entity that was agentive in its own right, like the city, at least before the early modern era, when it began to gather greater powers and formalized government.
Similarly, the churchwarden was not an equivalent office to that of either the mayor or the fabric warden in Vienna. There are very few surviving inscriptions that name the churchwarden(s) qua churchwarden(s) as the “author” of a work (and none in London). Even in the rare exceptions, such an inscription is typically preceded by a specific name and it is unclear whether the individual acted in that capacity or simply claimed the position as status while acting privately.Footnote 127 The role of the churchwarden has been much discussed in recent historiography, but it is likely, perhaps especially in big cities and even when they were overseeing a discrete building project, that they were understood largely as administrators of a particular set of activities rather than as the project’s leaders or as “representatives” of “the parish” or the building work. Clive Burgess has argued persuasively that even the churchwardens’ account books that constitute our main evidence for parochial building work were kept in order to honor the hard work of individuals who would not otherwise be acknowledged, rather than, as was long thought, as a record of their leadership of a local political unit.Footnote 128
Importantly, without a strong contemporary abstract conceptualization of “the parish,” the church building itself was probably more important in providing an articulatable metonym for both local identity and the bundle of practices the made up a locality. It is notable, for example, how many more wills left money to particular furnishings, the fabric fund, or building works rather than to the churchwardens, and how contemporary poets used the parish church building or particular parochial liturgical activities as symbols of local commitment, while writing little about “the parish” itself.Footnote 129 The dominance of private individuals and groups in inscriptions should make us alert to both modern and medieval claims that the building was overtly connected to a “community” with a local “membership” rather than to those who had “annexed” parts of the building.Footnote 130 Some London churches seem to have been composed of a collection of architectural units each funded by a different wealthy family, and historians rarely have sufficient sources to determine whether they were nonetheless actively understood by contemporaries as “an emblem of parochial identity” and a “symbol of the parish community” or rather as an assemblage of more particular acts and gifts.Footnote 131 Although terms such as the “community” or “all the parishioners” are common in medieval sources, they are typically found in texts written by the elite to describe, and validate, their own actions—that is, they are a rhetorical, moral, and/or legal claim that the historian should hesitate to repeat as reflecting either a social reality or a widespread contemporary discourse.
The dominance of inscriptions to the architectural patronage of individuals, guilds or fraternities, or other institutions (as when St. Botolph Aldgate had the arms of its patrons, Holy Trinity Priory Aldgate, carved in its stonework when it was rebuilt in the sixteenth century), rather than to the parish or churchwardens, also reveals something of how administrative differences shaped discursive ones: cities like London lacked a means of articulating, or even thinking, collective responsibility for church building in the way available to citizens of cities like Vienna.Footnote 132 I have argued above that the lack of formalized government in London parishes made church building by wealthy families more constitutive of social hierarchies, and this point may be extended into local semiotics. If it is doubtful that there was a distinctively parochial “identity,” “membership,” or “imaginary,” then it is likely that other forms of identification, perhaps especially those to do with architecture, such as “donor,” “giver,” “founder,” “churchwarden,” or “fabric warden” constituted more important parts of local discursive repertoires than did “parish” or “parochial community.”Footnote 133
Explicit examples of how the patronage of church construction shaped how buildings, and presumably families, were described and known can be found at St. Laurence Pountney and, probably, St. Benet Fink, churches that were renamed after their (re)builders, apparently in their own time.Footnote 134 The discursive impact of informal, private patronage away from such unilaterally dominated churches, and on parishioners outside the elite, is somewhat harder to find, but one interesting example can be found in the lists of donors to building work, and other major projects, that were made at Allhallows London Wall.Footnote 135 They demonstrate how construction work provided an opportunity to articulate informal hierarchies within the parish with new clarity (in this case on paper, although elaborate inscriptions in the work itself can be found elsewhere).Footnote 136
In London there was, in other words, no purposive, abstract, collective entity to which parish church building work could be either conceptually or symbolically assigned, but there were arms, inscriptions, account books, and even names that made known the gifts or work of individuals. It seems likely that this did determine how the work was known, at least to later generations: John Stow, one of London’s most important early antiquarians, writing in the 1590s, would often ascribe building work to private donors, typically on the basis of the arms that he found in a church, but never to “the parish.”Footnote 137 Meanwhile in Vienna, the city’s arms were displayed on the church, since the council had both the means and the authority to present it as a field of collective, civic activity (which is not to claim that, even if successful in shaping local discourses, contemporaries understood it to involve the “whole,” the “community,” et cetera). It is, however, not the case that the collective was wholly irrelevant in London or that private donors were immaterial in Vienna, but even these kinds of patronage took forms that were placed within the fundamental parochial structures of both places: incorporated, self-governing guilds were important to coordinate the work of individuals in the former, while patrician families had to distinguish their gifts from the work of the city in the latter.Footnote 138
Conclusion
The formal governmental context within which the administrative systems for church building and maintenance were developed deeply shaped the social, economic, and managerial functioning of the building site. Vienna and London might be taken as extreme examples: The ecclesiastical structure of the former had been centralized under a single parish church, and later its fabric funds were assimilated to its increasingly powerful city council, which administered them alongside the many other responsibilities that made up civic government. The parochial structure of the latter was plural, decentralized and largely self-governing (excepting the usual oversight of archdeacons or bishops), and so its fabric funds were administered by local officers, with no direct role for the mayor and aldermen. Many versions of the Vienna model could be found across the continent, from the elaborate and professionalized institutional arrangements of Italy to the legislative controls over new, semi-independent churchwardens in Antwerp, to direct payments from the city council in Sibiu. Meanwhile, cities with a large number of churches in the Iberian Peninsula, northern France, and the Low Countries, with devolved parochial structures that had survived the Gregorian Reforms of ca. 1100, adopted the London model.
Quite how the formal control of church building shaped a more encompassing politics of architecture is a question for further study by the cultural, and the local, historian, but it is clear that it had a profound impact on opportunities for and the form of participation in the leadership of projects. While in Vienna, building work manifested, and possibly reinforced, formal (and informal) differences that structured the city’s social world from the mayor to the laborer, in London, it had a more local, but perhaps more powerful, structuring function within the context of the small, intimate, and varied parishes where it took place. This even extended to the means by which “identities” were articulated: the church building itself became an important way both to identify a locality and to articulate one’s place within it. Everywhere, however, wealthy individuals donated directly to church building, whether or not they also participated in civic or parochial government. Everywhere, too, church construction was both assimilated to and influential over preceding administrative, social, and discursive structures.
Acknowledgments
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 895794. It was carried out as part of “Building Vienna” (BV). I would like to thank Dr. Tim Juckes, Dr. Justin Coulson, and Dr. Tom Nickson for reading and commenting on earlier versions of this article. A version was given at an Institutskolloquium at the Institut für Kunstgeschichte at the University of Vienna on 21 June 2023.