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THE NORMANS, THE BBC,

THE PAPACY AND US!

As one who watched both Professor Robert Bartlett's 'Normans' and


Dan Snow's 'Norman Walks', let me say how much I enjoy the
BBC's sense of history and these two items in particular.

Hitherto I have admired the BBC’ ‘sense of history’. But on recent


reflection I find that I must reconsider this view. Indeed, I have to
admit of a general problem that now pervades my entire viewing of
these wonderfully formal historical offerings, one’s prejudices
drawing one decisively if reluctantly towards Pillars of Wisdom,
where, as Oscar Wilde reminds us, even in a pitiable medieval
gutter some spirits see the stars.

The problem revolves entirely around our notion of the Papacy as


well as our notion of the ‘Nation State’. By my reckoning, the
Normans not only beat the crap out of everyone for not being
Normans and good Christians, but they made French the language
of the people for at least 400 years after their conquest. In
administration, law, architecture -- practically everything -- any
notion we have even of Saxon England is reviewable backwards.
Moreover, what does that say of our idea of ‘England’, ‘Ireland’ ,
‘Scotland’, ‘Germany’, ‘Italy’, and the European Nation State?

One cannot be blamed for thinking that during the Dark Ages and
the Early Middle Ages, there was little or nothing known of the
Nation States or how -- if at all -- they were conceived. And while
the middle ages was ubiquitously violent and volatile -- and can
often be likened to a game of chess, played out for real by endless
petty kings (mostly relatives) and neighbouring city states
(especially in Italy) -- the real governor of the European land mass,
never to be found on a Chess Board, was the Pope.

It was a time when everyone was running off to Rome to pay one’s
respects to the sole overlording religion in Italy. The story of Jesus
had been doing the rounds and, as Wycliffe had pointed out, the
corruption of mother Church was so horrific, that the Pope’s next
move was to swamp Europe with young men called Benedictines,
Franciscans, Dominicans, etc., etc.. The church became the biggest
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employer in Europe for hordes of unwanted young men and women
who could not afford a horse, a sword, a helmet, a suit of mail, a
kite shield, a long bow and a romping great horse! In a way, the
crusades was a means of enlisting holy men into the church’ s
military knighthood: and this is an insight that ought not to be
discounted today, when the RC Church recruits all over the world
for people who are prepared to embark upon an individually
inspiring career, but who in reality are co-opted into a terrible
army.

In any event, the emergence of the institution of the Papacy,


should be kept in mind, not just as a means of understanding the
coincidence and agenda of the Normans, but also with the part
played by the Papacy with respect to the military exploits of those
who came before the Normans as well as those who came after --
the Papal manipulation of the Byzantines, for example, the
Lombards, the Franks, and only then, when needs must, with the
Viking-cum-Normans.

The ‘Normans’ are neither the beginning nor the end of history; nor
are they an item -- however interesting -- to be considered solely
in their own environment. If -- as we are tired of reiterating -- ‘All
history begins now, with our consciousness and knowledge of the
past, and of what the past means for us now’, then the Normans
are most instructive by reference to their relationship with the more
enduring Papacy. While the genius of the bloody Normans was
partly to be seen in their assimilability, the messianic designs of the
Papacy are infinitely more significant to our understanding of
Western and World history as a whole.

With the present enthusiasm for Norman history and the Middle
Ages at an unprecedented ‘high’, there is the very strong possibility
that we (and the gurus at the BBC) may not see the wood for the
trees, thereby missing one of the great opportunities (and to my
mind ‘duties’) of public broadcasting, namely, to educate the public,
thereby making the much more aware of the daily contemporary
forces at play in our time.

Although it might be reserved for another programme, it is


unfortunate that this rather central aspect of the middle ages is
never really captured by the historians. It is as if there is some
protocol that precludes the influence and management of these

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military affairs by the Papacy from being recounted in the same
breadth as the 'secular powers'. It is as if the ‘Normans’ were
entirely autonomous in their military agenda and the raging
antagonisms between Papacy and Emperor, between the ‘spiritual
sword’ and the ‘temporal sword’ was never an ubiquitous military
reality.

And this is my problem, mostly with Professor Bartlett's otherwise


excellent account. Catholicism’s (and Christianity’s) need for
constant crusades is not just an incident of the twelfth century, but
whenever the thinking public have reason to discard the Christian
myth-makers, a new antagonism specifying the fears between
Communism-and-Fascism or Jewry-and-Catholicism or Catholicism-
and-Islam is made to appear on the world scene. This ‘historical’
division and its orchestrated amplification has its uses today as
much as yesterday, and if we do not learn to recognise it for what it
is, then we are doomed yet again to repeat it, and allow ourselves
to be defeated by those powers who best use these religious
division.

And while Professor Bartlett is absolutely correct to point out that


the Norman conjuncture has a significance for us all today, I would
suggest that the most important aspect of this conjuncture is not so
much a description of Norman triumphs (however important) but
the continual alliances made by the Papacy with the most militarily
gifted (and brutal) contemporaries available, whether they be
Lombard, Frank, Norman, Spanish, Austrian, Italian, German or
Croatian, or whether, like the Americans, they possess and are
prepared to use the Atomic bomb.

Which brings me to my second -- and connected -- problem!

If, instead of following up the Invasion of Britain with the Norman


exploits in Southern Italy, the story as told is reversed -- that is,
to demonstrate the exploits of the Normans in Southern Italy first,
and the ensuing clash and shared agreement between Papal and
Norman forces, then one might all the easier see the enduring deal
which the Papacy struck with the Normans -- reference being made
perhaps to a similar deal being struck with Constantine as far back
as the fourth century, and respectively with the Lombards, and with
the Franks, etc..

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This perspective could well be moved forward through the crusades
against the Pagans,Jews, Albigensians, Huguenots and assorted
Protestants. Indeed, if we look at the reign of King John (1167 –
1216), we see this thesis of expanding Papal and Christian
hegemony made perfectly real. And if we look to Wycliffe for an
explanation of these events, it becomes clear that it is Papal greed
that prompts a new consciousness of the nation state (of England),
as well as the perpetual role adapted by the Roman Church in world
politics.

It is a thesis that is capable of being carried forward to the religious


wars, the religious affiliations of Charles 1 (and his wife), as well as
the litany of wars in Europe down to our own times. (Is Tony Blair’s
position so different to that of Charles 1?)

More recently, we can follow the thesis right down to crusade


against the Masons, to the Cristeros War in Mexico in the 20s, to
the crusade against the Communists in the 30s 40s and ad
infinitum, inspiring protocols with Mussolini, Franco, Hitler,
Salazar, Croatia, and the Americans, and even forward to the
assault on Russia and Vietnam by the combination of JP11,
Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, and in our own time
through the illegal war in Iraq and Afghanistan by Benedict XVI,
Tony Blair and George Bush.

Nothing, it seems to me, provides a greater threat to world peace


than the present unstable state of Christianity. Without a crusade --
or at least a juxtapositional defining of Christianity and Islam,
Christianity and Atheism, etc. -- Christianity sees itself as a
wasting back-water. The several Jesuitical ‘Universities’ and
colleges, and their allies all over the world (but especially in the US
and India) are, it seems to me, on standby to create and amplify
this focal antagonism. Whether in China, Venezuela, Britain or
behind President Obama’s back, the same war that has raged
throughout the entire Christian era still persists.

Isn’t it time to drag Christianity into the open, unmask its janus-
like militant/mendicant face, and observe its messianic heart ?

The Christian Conquest, both in its religious zeal and its ancillary
compulsion to conquer the world, has always been known to the
world. That this struggle, constantly made universal by the

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relentless missionary zeal of the churches, has hardly been
touched, much less analyzed. Dare one suggest to the BBC that
Professor Bartlett’s account of the Normans be re-conceived in this
light; that a discussion panel be invited to carry the exploits of the
Normans forward into the succeeding centuries that have truly
marred the landscape of Europe and the World. Isn’t it time to let
history and our sense of history inform our present consciousness
of its intimate ties with religious imperialism? Isn’t it especially
opportune, now that the Catholic Church is visibly driving the world
into an “Islam/Christian” , “Religious/Secular”, “Christian/Atheism”,
“Darwinian/Creationist” divide, to examine the role of Christianity
and the Papacy in this world-wide agitation for world dominance?

It has been well said that ‘all history begins NOW’. Let us therefore
use Professor Bartlett’s account of the ‘Normans’ as a starting point
towards our understanding of NOW in all its mea-culpa dimensions!

Seamus Breathnach

www.irish-criminology.com

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