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A Model for Christendom? Erasmus, Poland, and the Reformation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2014

Abstract

This article examines the close ties that developed between Desiderius Erasmus and the Polish kingdom and the implication of these relationships on our understanding of the religious landscape of late medieval and early modern Europe. Few regions embraced Erasmus as enthusiastically as Poland, and nowhere else did he have such a concentration of allies positioned at the highest levels of society including the king himself. More than any other figure from western Europe, Erasmus helped shape the intellectual and religious agenda of the Polish kingdom during this period. A close analysis of this relationship expands our understanding of Reformation Europe in a number of critical ways. It brings Poland, normally viewed peripherally in this period, into key debates and discussions of the Reformation. Erasmus's relationship with Poland also speaks to wider issues and processes of change in the Christian world. As confessional distinctions were becoming more pronounced in the 1520s and 1530s and hope for ecclesial reunion receded, Erasmus looked to Poland as a model for Christendom. He held up the kingdom as an example of how difference could be accommodated and compromise could be reached through wise leadership in church and state.

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Copyright © American Society of Church History 2014 

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References

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4 Geographically, the exceptions to these generalizations tend to be found in the Baltic region. Danzig's reformation moment was most typically urban, and there was peasant unrest in ducal Prussia. Zins, Henryk, “Aspects of the Peasant Rising in East Prussia in 1525,” The Slavonic and East European Review 38 (1959): 178187Google Scholar; Tazbir, Janusz, “Ze studiów nad stosunkiem polskich protestantów do chłopów w XVI wieku,” Reformacja w Polsce 12 (1956): 3261Google Scholar.

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6 Allen, vol. 5, letter 1393, 343–345.

7 Allen, vol. 9, letter 2533, 336–340.

8 Allen, vol. 7, letter 1819, 59–65; letter 2034, 456–458.

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25 Allen, vol. 9, letter 2533, 336–40; letter 2584, 401–403.

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27 Allen, vol. 10, letter 2643, 13–16.

28 Allen, vol. 6, letter 1752, 413–414; vol. 7, letter, 1820, 65.

29 See for example Allen, vol. 7, letter 1958, 337–338; vol. 8, 2175, 190–191; vol. 10, 2874, 309–313.

30 Allen, vol. 7, letter 1952, 331–332.

31 Des. Erasmi Roterodami Epistola ad Inclytum Sigismundum Regem Poloniae (Cracow: Wietor, 1527).

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34 Allen, vol. 11, letter 3014, 127–129.

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36 O'Malley, John and Perraud, Louis, eds., Collected Works of Erasmus, vol. 69 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999)Google Scholar, xi.

37 Allen, vol. 11, letter 3049, 217–222.

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40 See here Erasmus's extended discussion with Tomicki concerning the practical lessons Seneca could offer contemporary church leaders (Allen, vol. 8, letter 2091, 25–39) as well as the discussion concerning Erasmus's forthcoming publication of his Ecclesiastes, a long awaited handbook for preachers (Allen, vol. 11, letter 3049, 217–222).

41 Allen, vol. 8, letter 2173, 187–189; vol. 10, letter 2713, 91–2; vol. 11, letter 3000, 78–79.

42 Allen, vol. 8, letter 2175, 190–191, cited in Tracy, James, Erasmus of the Low Countries (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), 197Google Scholar.

43 Allen, vol. 6, letter 1717, 350–352.

44 Allen vol. 11, letter 3137, 345–347.

45 See the introductory remarks in Baker-Smith, Dominic, ed., Collected Works of Erasmus, vol. 63, Expositions of the Psalms (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1997), xiiixivGoogle Scholar.

46 Allen, vol. 11, letter 3049, 217–222.

47 Erasmus, An Exposition of Psalm 38 in Collected Works of Erasmus, vol. 65, Expositions of the Psalms, ed. Baker-Smith, Dominic (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010), 42Google Scholar.

48 Erasmus, An Exposition of Psalm 38, 43, 51, 52.

49 Erasmus, An Exposition of Psalm 38, 59.

50 Collected Works of Erasmus, 65:xii–xiv.

51 Rummel, Erika, “Erasmus and the Restoration of Unity in the Church,” in Conciliation and Confession, eds. Louthan, Howard and Zachman, Randall (Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press, 2004), 63Google Scholar.

52 Erasmus, On Mending the Peace of the Church in Collected Works of Erasmus, 65:202.

53 Erasmus, On Mending the Peace of the Church, 213. For a fuller analysis of this text see Erika Rummel, “Erasmus and the Restoration of Unity in the Church,” 62–72.

54 Allen, vol. 5, letter 1334, 173–192; cited in Collected Works of Erasmus, 63:lvii.

55 Erasmus, An Explanation of the Apostles' Creed in Collected Works of Erasmus, 70:261.

56 Cited in Backus, Irena, “Erasmus and the Spirituality of the Early Church,” in Erasmus's Vision of the Church, ed. Pabel, Hilmar (Kirksville, Mo.: Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, 1995), 112113Google Scholar.

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58 Cited in Mansfield, Bruce, Phoenix of his Age: Interpretations of Erasmus 1550–1750 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1979), 4Google Scholar.

59 For a summary see Rummel, Erika, Erasmus and his Catholic Critics, 2 vols. (Nieuwkoop: De Graaf, 1989)Google Scholar.

60 Dalton, Hermann, ed., Lasciana (Nieuwkoop: B. De Graaf, 1973)Google Scholar, letter 39, 175–176; cited in Bietenholz, Peter, “Concordia Christiana: Erasmus's Thought and Polish Reality,” Erasmus of Rotterdam Society Yearbook 21 (2001): 60Google Scholar. For the broader reception of De concordia see Rummel, “Erasmus and the Restoration of Unity in the Church,” 66–70.

61 Cytowska, Maria, “Érasme en Pologne avant l'époque du Concile de Trente,” Erasmus in English 5 (1972): 15Google Scholar. Jacqueline Glomski has looked most closely at the early period and has suggested a chronology that has Erasmus's influence peaking by 1530. Glomski, “Erasmus in Cracow,” 16.

62 Bietenholz ed., Contemporaries of Erasmus, 3:328.

63 Allen, vol. 11, letter 3014, 127–9; letter 3049, 217–222.

64 Allen, vol. 11, letter 3066, 240–246.

65 Erasmus, The Lord's Prayer, 58.

66 Allen, vol. 11, letter 3000, 78–79.

67 Allen, vol. 7, letter1919, 274–275.

68 Allen, vol. 7, letter 1819, 59–65.

69 Allen, vol. 7, letter 2034, 456–458.

70 On his understanding of Sigismund see Letocha, Danièle, “Quand Érasme se fait politique: la première lettre à Sigismond 1er le Vieux,” Renaissance and Reformation 12 (1988): 251271Google Scholar.

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72 Erasmus, Aliquot epistolae selectae (Basel: Froben 1536), H1r-H3r; E2v-E4r.

73 Erasmus, Aliquot epistolae selectae, F6v-F7r.

74 Erasmus, Aliquot epistolae selectae, D3v-D4v.

75 Cited in Augustijn, Cornelis, Erasmus. His Life, Works and Influence, trans. Grayson, J. C. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1995), 3Google Scholar.

76 This letter was appended to Erasmus's letter to King Sigismund. Des. Erasmi Roterodami Epistola ad Inclytum Sigismundum Regem Poloniae &c. . . (Cracow: Wietor, 1527), Biiir-Bvv.

77 A Lasco to Bullinger, March 1544, in A. Johannis a Lasco Opera, vol. 2, ed. Kuyper, A. (Amsterdam: F. Muller, 1866)Google Scholar, letter 16, 568–569.

78 Most important is his De Republica emendanda. The literature on Frycz in western languages is thin. Best is Séguenny, André and Urban, Wacław, eds., Andrzej Frycz Modrzweski, vol. 18, Bibliotheca dissidentium (Baden-Baden: Valentin Koerner, 1997)Google Scholar.

79 For a brief commentary and edited translation see Olin, John, ed. The Catholic Reformation (New York: Fordham University Press, 1992), 182197Google Scholar.