The Hungarian Articles of 1608 before the Roman Inquisition: The Excommunication of Mathias II Cover Image

Az 1608. évi magyar törvények a római inkvizíció elõtt: II. Mátyás kiközösítése
The Hungarian Articles of 1608 before the Roman Inquisition: The Excommunication of Mathias II

Author(s): Péter Tusor
Subject(s): History
Published by: AETAS Könyv- és Lapkiadó Egyesület

Summary/Abstract: The essay tries to find an explanation of how it was possible that Catholicism, which was totally pushed into the background at the Diet of 1608 due to the Protestant Bocskai uprising, could regain a number of its positions in Hungary by the time of the Diet of 1609. One of the most important events of the intervening year, in this respect, was the Roman censorship of the articles passed at the 1608 Diet, published in print, upon the request of Hungarian prelates. Despite the repeated urges of Cardinal Ferenc Forgách, Archbishop of Esztergom wishing firm intervention, Rome before and under the 1608 Diet assumed an expectant attitude against the religious politics of the new Hungarian king, Mathias II (1608-1619), who had deposed Rudolph II (1576-1608) and come into power with support from the Protestant Estates. More favourable than those of Forgách, the reports of Bishop Placido de Mara of Melf, a nuncio accredited to the king played a crucial part in this. The behaviour of the Holy See changed only after seeing a printed copy of the articles, which made Catholicism in Hungary impossible, confirmed by the sovereign's initials, sent by the Hungarian bishop to Rome, and after receiving the news of the freedom of religion granted to the Austrian Protestants in 1609. At this point, Pope Paul V (1605-1621) informed Mathias II that due to these concessions the king had come under the ruling of the provisions contined in the bull In Coena Domini, and that had himself excommunicated from the Church along with his councillors.[...] The events taking place in Rome, Vienna, and Pozsony, in which one of the key figures was Bishop Melchior Klesl of Vienna, are reconstructed in detail by the author mainly with the help of the sources available at the recently opened Archives of the Inquisition. The intervention of the Holy Office considerably contributed to the fact that the Hapsburg sovereign and his environment, putting considerations of political realism to the fore, promoted the unfolding of the Hungarian counterreformation more effectively in the following decade, within the scope of which the opportunity of implementing the reform resolutions of the Council of Trento presented itself. Hungarian Catholics, led by Cardinal Ferenc Forgách eventually managed to counterbalance the superiority of Protestantism in home affairs in 1609 with the help of foreign support, which, in their case, was extended by potetas indirecta, as applied by the Holy See.

  • Issue Year: 2000
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 74-87
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: Hungarian