Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T02:02:56.902Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Alexander Russell . Conciliarism and Heresy in Fifteenth-Century England: Collective Authority in the Age of the General Councils. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th Series, 105. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017. Pp. 223. $99.99 (cloth).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2018

Michael Van Dussen*
Affiliation:
McGill University
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The North American Conference on British Studies 2018 

Alexander Russell's Conciliarism and Heresy joins a wave of recent Anglophone scholarship on the fifteenth-century general councils, though its attention to specifically English conciliar interest makes it one of only a few studies on the subject to appear since Margaret Harvey, C. M. D. Crowder, E. F. Jacob, and A. N. E. D. Schofield published their foundational work between the 1950s and 1970s. Russell refines or refutes the claims of these historians in particular, but his project also has different aims; rather than attending primarily to English representation at the councils (Constance and Basel in particular)—and instead of focusing on their significance for religious reform or the history of political thought—Russell argues that the communitarian theories that the councils helped to crystallize were the products of more general patterns of communal government throughout Europe, including England.

In chapter 1, Russell argues that the English were not only interested but enthusiastic about their participation in the councils and that they saw in these gatherings opportunities both to reform the church and protect English domestic interests. Russell contends that claims to the contrary mistake the eventual failure of the conciliar project for the perspective of its English participants at the time, whose apparently noncommittal attitude toward Basel in particular suggests a tacit acknowledgment that the councils must inevitably fail. To counter this assumption, Russell enlists other kinds of evidence, such as efforts by English officials like Archbishop Chichele to prevent the work of Constance from coming to a close, using the fact of unfinished business to gain leverage over the newly-elected Pope Martin V. Russell reads this and other similar cases in terms of a “sense of possibility” among the English (28).

In chapter 2 he turns to another point of intersection between the councils and broader communities in Western Christendom, suggesting that widespread charges of heresy in the period stemmed from clerical responses to an increase in lay involvement in what had once been more exclusively clerical concerns. Russell rightly points out that debates at the councils took place against the backdrop of developments in popular devotion. He highlights three points of engagement of the council fathers with matters of lay concern: the regulation of Eucharistic practice, the debates with the Hussites, particularly at Basel, and controversy surrounding the canonization of St. Bridget. Disputations on these issues reveal a concern among council fathers to both regulate and foster lay devotion.

Russell explicitly takes up the theme of “collective culture” in the third chapter (86), where practices of majority voting and other means of corporate decision making at Constance and Basel are shown not to have been anomalous or revolutionary (as has often been asserted), but applications of communitarian administration that were widespread in European government and administration of the church. This argument proceeds by analogy, whereby procedures of collective decision making at Constance are compared to those found in smaller-scale forms of government in England. Russell concludes that English acceptance of policies at Constance stemmed from their familiarity with similar forms of collective government at home.

In chapter 4 Russell revisits the charge of English indifference in endorsing conciliarism. It argues that the English struggle to combat Wycliffism at home complicated English ability to openly endorse the conciliar correction of papal abuses. The English recognized that the arguments of papal apologists, who associated conciliarism with sedition that was likewise a threat to secular monarchs, bore uncomfortable resemblance to Wycliffite positions about resistance to erring churchmen. The significant absence of English commentary on conciliarist theory thus makes sense: given their condemnation of Wyclif's positions, drawing attention to English involvement in the deposition of popes could appear to be troublingly inconsistent.

English hesitation about openly supporting conciliar theories of resistance helps to explain their more explicit endorsement of conciliarist communitarianism, the subject of chapter 5. In accepting the councils’ claims to represent the universal church, the English could (and did) then cite the councils in anti-heresy campaigns. Heretics were shown to stand apart from the community whose membership included the majority of all believers. Thus, the heterogeneity of the conciliar decision-making body was not absolute; the council could discipline those who rejected its representative authority.

Conciliarism and Heresy offers fresh and sensible perspectives on English involvement in the fifteenth-century general councils, perhaps the most important of which is to resist a priori assumptions about English apathy or pessimism towards the conciliar endeavor. One of Russell's most valuable contributions is to show how local or national circumstances can determine acceptable positions or deliberate silences on the part of English representatives in conciliar debates. Of course, as Russell acknowledges, an argument for English enthusiasm is difficult to prove, given the scarcity of records or explicit commentary. At the very least, however, Russell convincingly argues that the English were willing and concerned participants in the project.

Russell's subject is of course vast, and so a judicious selection of focal points is essential. Even so, one wonders if his treatment of the very significant English involvement in the prosecutions of Wycliffite and Hussite positions and personages at Constance and Basel—even aside from their significance for the history of religious reform, which is not his subject—is perhaps cursory. Additionally, at certain points in the book, the English seem to be inexplicably missing, while at others extrapolation from the English context to conciliar practice seems to leave out the rest of Europe. Again, one should not expect an exhaustive study of conciliarist interest in all parts of Latin Christendom; but even so, there are points where arguments for situating the councils within a more widespread context of collective government in Europe seem to rest on evidence from England alone, so slightly more could be done to show that England was representative. These points of criticism aside, Russell's monograph is a remarkable contribution, providing a generous and reliable resource for scholars of conciliarism, and important correctives to previous assessments. Conciliarism and Heresy will stand out as an influential study for years to come.