Apocalypse Then
Apocalypse Then
Apocalypse Then
APOCALYPSE THEN
Prophecy and the Making of
the Modern World
Arthur H. Williamson
Praeger Series on the Early Modern World
Raymond B. Waddington, Series Editor
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Williamson, Arthur H.
Apocalypse then : prophecy and the making of the modern world / Arthur
H. Williamson.
p. cm. (Praeger series on the early modern world, ISSN 1940-1523)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98508-0 (alk. paper)
1. End of the world. 2. Prophecies. 3. HistoryProphecies. I. Title.
BL503.W55 2008
202
0
.3dc22 2007044131
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available.
Copyright C 2008 by Arthur H. Williamson
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be
reproduced, by any process or technique, without the
express written consent of the publisher.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2007044131
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98508-0
ISSN: 1940-1523
First published in 2008
Praeger Publishers, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881
An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
www.praeger.com
Printed in the United States of America
The paper used in this book complies with the
Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National
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Every reasonable effort has been made to trace the owners of copyright materials in
this book, but in some instances this has proven impossible. The author and publisher
will be glad to receive information leading to more complete acknowledgments in sub-
sequent printings of the book and in the meantime extend their apologies for any
omissions.
To Liz and Vanessa,
and Paulina
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Chapter 1. Encountering the Beast 1
Chapter 2. Apocalypse Revived: The Reformation 37
Chapter 3. The Last World Empire and Its Competitors 71
Chapter 4. Prophecy and Nature: Science, Sex, and Salvation 105
Chapter 5. The British Revolutions: The Rise of
Modern Politics 135
Chapter 6. Prophecy and Science II: Physics, Geology,
and the Eschaton 167
Chapter 7. Apocalyptic Conscience in Crisis: Quakers,
Jews, and Other Subversives 187
Chapter 8. Prophecy, Enlightenment, and the Democratic
Revolutions 231
Chapter 9. Novus Ordo Saeculorum: The Rise of the
Redeemer Republic 265
Chapter 10. Antichrist in the Postapocalyptic Age 293
Notes 321
Index 341
LIST OF
ILLUSTRATIONS
1.1 Images of the apostles, mid-fourth-century fresco, Domitilla
Catacomb, Rome 11
1.2 Joachim of Fiores Tree Circles, from the twelfth-century
Liber Figurarum 20
1.3 Sandro Botticelli, Mystic Crucifixion, c. 1500 32
1.4 Luca Signorelli, The Reign and Deeds of Antichrist
(detail), Orvieto Cathedral, Italy, c. 1500 34
2.1 Robert Recorde, The Castle of Knowledge (London, 1556),
frontispiece 41
2.2 Illustration from Martin Luthers translation of the
Bible (1534), Rev. 11:28 59
2.3 Illustration from Martin Luthers translation of the
Bible (1534), Rev. 17 60
2.4 Melchior Lorch, engraving of the papal Antichrist (1545) 62
3.1 Columnar device for Charles V, in Girolamo Ruscelli,
La Impresse Illustri (Venice, 1566), 11114 74
3.2 Global device for Philip II, in Girolamo Ruscelli,
La Impresse Illustri (Venice, 1566), 11114 76
3.3 Medal celebrating the union of Spain and Portugal (1580) 77
3.4 Francis Bacon, The Great Instauration (London, 1620),
frontispiece 90
3.5 William Faithorne, The Embleme of Englands
Distractions . . . (London, 1658) 94
3.5a Francis Barlows original drawing for The Embleme
of Englands Distractions 96
6.1 Thomas Burnet, Sacred Theory of the Earth
(London, 1681, 1684), frontispiece 178
7.1 Historia Fanaticorum (Frankfurt, 1701), frontispiece 190
7.2 Rembrandt van Rijn, etchings for Menasseh ben Israel,
Piedra Gloriosa, O Estatua Nabuchadnosor
(Amsterdam, 1655) 206
7.3 Johann Friedrich Corvinus (?), Anabaptisticum et
Enthusiasticum (n.p., 1702), frontispiece 218
10.1 Fritz Lang, Metropolis (1927) 302
10.1a Albrecht Durer, whore of Babylon (1498) 304
10.2 Chart of the premillennial future or Tribulation Map
(c. 1970) 312
x List of Illustrations
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This project has been assisted hugely and at moments decisively by a
number of scholars, librarians, art specialists, and friends both here
and abroad. Notable among them are Bernard McGinn, Ray Wad-
dington, David Scott, Steve Buss, Allan Macinnes, Tom Lisanti,
Christopher Wm. Linnane, Jenny Ramkalawon, Gary Kurutz, Joanna
Snelling, Cathy Cherbosque, Sydney Moritz, Margarida Ramos, Jenni-
fer Belt, Ken Krabbenhoft, Jack Smith, Donis Guilloton, and Duncan
Campbell. The professionalism and solidarity of Heather Staines and
Randy Baldini have proven heartening, insightful, and invaluable.
An unabridged version of this bookfully annotated and more
expansively illustratedis available for consultation at the California
State University Library in Sacramento.
CHAPTER 1
ENCOUNTERING
THE BEAST
Today few people accept the notion that the world is about to end
through a prophesied supernatural act. Despite Tim LaHaye, Hal Lind-
sey, and even former president Ronald Reagan, the Judeo-Christian
apocalypse, at least literally understood, is normally discounted as a
creed for cranks.
And yet this has not always been the case. Between 1500 and 1800
many of Europes and Americas most creative minds (Catholic, Prot-
estant, Orthodox, Jewish) believed that they were living in the latter
days of the world and the culmination of human history. The apoca-
lypse underwrote the Reformation in the sixteenth century, the British
Revolution in the seventeenth century, and the American Revolution
in the eighteenth century. Moreover, it proved a crucial catalyst in
the emergence of liberal values, political democracy, and even modern
science. There is nothing in the least liberal, democratic, or scientific
about the apocalypse, but none of these developments would have
occurred without it. The apocalypse could fuel philo-Semitism no less
than anti-Semitism, toleration no less than religious persecution. It
could inspire the program for modern science; it could activate the
enemies of science. Even so, whether liberal or otherwise, apocalyptic
ideas and expectations during the early modern period exercised the
European social imagination quite literally from Moscow to Mexico
City, from Scotland to the Yemen. They would shape the world in
profound and enduring ways.
The early modern period was not the first time that the apocalypse
penetrated the Western intellect and redefined it. That had happened
once before during the Intertestamental years (c. 150 BCE200 CE). In
antiquity apocalyptic expectations permanently transformed the reli-
gious landscape and, eventually, the political landscape as well.
Between 1500 and 1800 they created modernity. During that second
great encounter with the apocalypse, such expectations played a cen-
tral role in the emergence of secular culturearguably the signal
achievement of the postmedieval West. There exists no small irony
here. A deeply religious set of ideas proved instrumental in enabling
people to see their world through prisms other than those provided by
religion. Secular categories, initially, arose less from the rejection of
religion than through the dynamics and tensions within religion itself.
Accordingly, this study examines the prophetic, the apocalyptic,
the eschatological within larger political and cultural patterns. Consid-
ered from this vantage point, these strains of thought will turn out to
be far less weird and still less dangerous or explosive than com-
monly portrayedand far closer to what we are as modern people.
Before anything else, the apocalypse and its attendant complex of
ideas comprise mechanisms for imagining time. That is, they created
ways for making change meaningful and enabled people to make sense
of a transforming world. The questions confronting us in this study
concern less the advent of the Messiah or of Christ than the advent
of time itself. When and why did a prophetic future become persua-
sive? How did history and concepts of change become articulate and
acquire importance, providing intelligibility that other ways of think-
ing no longer seemed to offer?
Only within the last 300 years has it become possible for people
to develop a coherent explanation of the world around them outside
of a religious framework. Throughout the past, to dismiss religion
individuals have occasionally done so in all ageswas to dismiss
coherence and despair cognition. Further, for most of its history
European culture had visualized time and change as marginal, irra-
tional, and emblematic of mans fallen state. The burden of the
Western message has been atemporal and indeed anti-temporal. The
apocalypse alone allowed people to conceptualize qualitative change.
It alone has enabled people to say that today may be one way, but
tomorrow will be both completely different and altogether explicable.
The role of the apocalypse has almost always proven fecund rather
than destructive, and never more so than in early modern Europe.
2 APOCALYPSE THEN
The study that follows concerns itself less with formal theology than
with the broader intellectual questions that exercised contemporaries.
The eschatological systems of such great exegetes of the apocalypse
as Joachim of Fiore, Joseph Mede, and Johann Heinrich Alsted will
not receive close analysis, but their cultural context will be of major
interest. The Reformation will illustrate this approach. The millen-
nium, the thousand-year reign of righteousness and justice at the end
of days, re-emerged within mainstream thinking during the course of
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Protestants in this period
used the idea of the millennium to develop a coherent and, for the
first time, a linear vision of the European past. The new past made
events in the present meaningful and urgent on a cosmic level. But it
also did more. At the same time, people during these centuries were
hugely preoccupied with the future, anticipating the culmination of
the human experience that lay, they believed, in the immediate offing.
Increasingly, it seemed that there might be a moment of latter-day
glory before the end of days and the conclusion of time. That expec-
tation, shaped and reshaped by the course of political events and the
prospects for the future, eventually grew into a full future millennium
that complemented, refocused, but never supplanted the millennial
interpretation of the past. What made the idea plausible, and then
compelling, will concern us rather more than a full review of the var-
ied readings it was given. Major intellectual fissures rather than narrow
doctrinal disputes comprise our subject. Confrontations about time
and its meanings shape the discussion. Because the apocalypse takes
place literally within the saeculum, it has served, overwhelmingly, to
validate the physical world. Further, because the apocalypse described
the story of a community, the community of the redeemed, it inher-
ently spoke about common interest and developed concepts of public
culture.
This sort of inquiry will not fit comfortably within the well-wrought
categories of nineteenth- and twentieth-century theologians. Modern
theology all too often has been projected onto the past, and has long
promoted anachronism and drastic misconceptions as a result. The
quest for denominational pedigree and doctrinal legitimacy has
removed the complexities of previous generations and impoverished
our understanding of the dynamics that drove earlier ages. The catego-
ries of pre- and postmillennialism provide an example. On the face of
3 Encountering the Beast
it these terms are quite clear and carry drastically conflicting implica-
tions: Christ will inaugurate the millennium (pre-), or Christ will turn
up at the end of that prophesied period and draw it to a close (post-).
Theoretically the latter should point to activism, the former to quietist
ready waiting. In practice, they have consistently proven highly
unstable frameworks of distinctly limited usefulness. Even in recent
centuries people often can elide from one to the other without signifi-
cantly altering their outlook or expectations. Further, they comprise
nineteenth-century terminology that earlier generations would have
found puzzling or tangential to their concerns. Resort to such anachro-
nism seriously distorts the world before 1800.
No less does apocalyptic thinking defy easy functional analyses. The
apocalypse does not stand for something other than itself, but com-
prises an intellectual structure of great importance that needs to be
understood within its own terms rather than made over into some-
thing more familiar. It simply will not do to see modern political
movements as warmed-over Judeo-Christian messianism.
1
Nor can
apocalyptic preoccupations be dismissed as a piece of residual belief
tucked away in the corner of otherwise significant minds. Isaac New-
tons apocalyptic was by no means incidental to his most serious
reflection. Similar distortion results from treating the apocalypse as a
self-contained stream of thought, largely disconnected from the cul-
tural environment of which it formed an integral part. Our under-
standing of this axial period will find itself ill-served by neat religious
formulations, reassuring reduction, or casual dismissal.
The central concern of this study is to understand the foundations
of modernity. Why is the apocalypseso alien to us todayyet so
pivotal to the creation of our culture and to what we are? Only by see-
ing the apocalypses centraland often highly creativerole histori-
cally within Western civilization can we meaningfully assess its
significance to the current world. Only by grasping Apocalypse
Then can we ever truly comprehend Apocalypse Now.
ANCIENT JUDAISM: FROM PROPHECY TO ESCHATOLOGY
The civilizations of both the ancient Mediterranean and the an-
cient Near East were awash with prophecy. We will recall Thucydides
wry comments about prophetic sayings that forecast the coming of the
4 APOCALYPSE THEN
plague to Athens at the outset of the Peloponnesian War. The pagan
sibyls produced volumes of prophecies that played a vital role in the
cultural life of antique Rome. Virgil became Romes most famous
prophet with his vision of the citys imperial destiny. But the Near
East simply seethed with mythologies, stories, and visions that found
their way into inspired statements about the future. Overwhelming,
prophecy came out of Asia, as Westerners long recognized.
Among the peoples of the Near East none absorbed, developed, and
identified with these lines of thought more thoroughly than did the
ancient Jews. The idea of the promise, arguably, proved more telling
and more defining than any other doctrine or belief, more significant
than even monotheism. Yahweh, the God of Israel, might well be a
jealous god, but that did not preclude the existence of other deities.
By accepting the Lord God and then by following his instructions,
good things would happen (and bad ones would be avoided). Ones
seed would be multiplied: there could be no greater triumph than liv-
ing to see three, even four generations of offspring (and no greater
calamity than an untimely death). The success of the individual was
bound up immediately and inextricably with the peoplehood that was
Israel. The Lord God meant the promise of success in battle, liberation
in moments of defeat, and, in time, literally the promised land. Only
later still did ethical notions become integrated into the prophetic.
Prophecy implied human agency, in a sense free will. Both the indi-
vidual and Israel might choose not to obey, and the (normally dire)
prophetic consequences would ensue.
Prophecy also validated this world and this life almost entirely to
the exclusion of any alternative. In these matters, the early books of
the Bible were unrelenting. The dead do not praise the Lord, / nor
do any that go down into silence (Ps. 115:17). From Sheol, the sub-
terranean region inhabited by shades of the dead, there was neither
God, nor future, nor purpose. For in death there is no remembrance
of thee; / In Sheol who can give thee praise? (Ps. 6:5). Not even the
sufferings of Job could secure him any postdeath compensation. An-
cient Judaism concerned itself with life, not death.
By the middle prophets the picture had become a great deal more
complicated. Yahweh now unmistakably ruled the nations and the uni-
verse. He did much more as well. His activities went beyond simple
prophecy, the future contingent upon divine promise and human
5 Encountering the Beast
response. In addition, Gods revealed will manifested itself through an
underlying program, as part of a narrative frameworkan apocalypse.
The Jewish apocalypse comprised a great sacred drama, possessing a
beginning, a middle, and an end. That culmination, the eschaton
eschatology is the study of final thingswould mean the realization of
Israels destiny and, increasingly, that of humankind as well. The ear-
liest to speak of the end is the prophet Amos (c. 786746 BCE).
Although the end he had in mind was a local event, the destruction
of the northern Jewish kingdom, he clearly saw the Lord God as a uni-
versal deity, and the event held universal significance. However, it
was only with crushing Jewish defeat and then the Babylonian exile of
the indigenous elites (587538 BCE) that the apocalypse became highly
articulated and a standard mode through which the divine word
needed to be comprehended.
Many different eschatological scenarios emerged. The most promi-
nent was the restoration of the great Davidic kingdom and the line of
Jesse, a latter-day empire that would defeat contemporary powers
and endure forever. The latter-day David would be the promised
messiah, the anointed one, who would inaugurate this last age, the
messianic era. Alternatively, however, Yahwehs wrath might fall so
heavily on a sinful world that only a saved remnant of Israel would
survive. The messianic age might not require a messiah. In a still dif-
ferent variant Israel might find itself redeemed and restored as a light
to the nations where the peoples of the world would come to learn
its law, ethics, and wisdom. In time Jewish prophets imagined the
redeemed as joining the divine itself and inhabiting or visiting
the realm of the stars. Nature itself could undergo a transformation.
The end of days had often been envisioned as involving natural up-
heaval, and, as part of the eschaton, the upheaval in nature expanded
from a local event to a cosmic catastrophe. In the end, nature too
might become redeemed in the sense of renewed and revitalized,
augmented in its fecundity. One of the most consequential end-time
expectations was the resurrection of the dead. Initially a prospect
reserved for the social elite, the resurrection had become a universal
event by the Hellenistic era after the fourth century BCE. As earlier,
this world and this life remained decisive.
Whatever the expectation, the revealed program of the apocalypse
entailed a linear time sequence running from the fall of man from the
6 APOCALYPSE THEN
garden of Eden to the end of days. As such its importance cannot
be overstated. History provided the framework of meaning, the con-
text of redemption. Such a divine plan limited, if it did not foreclose,
the role of human agency. Unlike prophecy, eschatology was fully pre-
ordained. Nevertheless, despite these differences, the potential conflict
between the two all but never arose. Instead, the divine scheme and
human volition became interleaved with one another, reinforcing pro-
phetic purpose and rarely posing a problem.
Moreover, the apocalypse and attendant eschatological projections
arose as a courtly phenomenon and spoke to royal contexts. It was the
work of an intellectual elite and a scribal culture altogether removed
from the Jewish peasantry. Its message was primarily communicated
through the written word to literate audiences and concerned the
crisis of dynastic disruption. Jonathan Z. Smith was surely right to
describe it as a learned rather than a popular religious phenomenon,
and to reject what he called the lachrymose theory of apocalypti-
cism which claims that the apocalypse manifests deprivation and
reflects lowerclass interests.
2
For most of its history, from biblical
times up to the early modern period, the apocalypse rarely fired social
revolution. Even after 1500 messianic revolutions remained an occa-
sional phenomenon, occurring most spectacularly (and most success-
fully) within the English-speaking world.
3
If a veritable smorgasbord of end-time possibilities had appeared, an
increasingly detailed apocalyptic trajectory also came into being. Suc-
ceeding symbols, succeeding names, places, and events fleshed out the
narrative and located the present moment within what seemed an
ever-sharper relief. No prophet did this more dramatically or with
greater consequence than did Daniel (c. 150 BCE). The prophet envi-
sioned a series of spectacular animals: a lion with eagles wings that
walked on two legs, a gigantic flesh-devouring bear, a winged leopard,
and then, greatest of all, an enormous beast with ten horns. The last
beast then developed a little horn with eyes like the eyes of man
which plucked out three of the Beasts other horns. Eventually the
great beast was slain, and in that moment arrived the son of man at
the end of days. Each of these extraordinary creatures, the prophet
indicated, depicted a political empire, and their succession described
the political history of the world. Daniel thus offered a developed
time-line through which to imagine not only the history of the Jews
7 Encountering the Beast
but the history of humankind. Daniel sought to address the contempo-
rary Jewish struggle against the Seleucid successors to the empire of
Alexander the Great, but the significance of his vision lies in its linear
worldview.
Daniel went further, developing a similar idea through a quite dif-
ferent kind of vision. The text misled its readers in a way common to
prophetic writing, for Daniel portrayed himself as an advisor to the
powerful Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar who had lived centuries
earlier (605562 BCE). Thereby the prophet made his writing seem
hugely old, and its vision of the future became substantiated (after the
fact) and compelling. As Nebuchadnezzars advisor, Daniel was called
upon to interpret the kings troubling dream: a great statue of a human
figure comprised of a golden head, silver chest and arms, bronze belly
and thighs, legs of iron, and feet of both iron and clay. A little stone
cut from a mountain by no human hand subsequently struck and
destroyed the great colossus, whereupon the little stone grew into a
great mountain. Odd indeed, but Daniels explication turned it into an
emblem of human history and the apocalyptic program: the statue
embodied a succession of empires, all ultimately overthrown by spirit-
ual truth at the end of days. Both the vision of the great beasts and
Nebuchadnezzars dream had an extraordinary history before them,
inspiring apostles, church fathers, sixteenth-century reformers, early
modern revolutionaries, and even Martin Luther King Jr. in the later
twentieth century. Daniels immediate impact was in many ways no
less impressive. He at once manifested and promoted a deepening pre-
occupation with eschatology that transformed the ancient world.
THE INTERTESTAMENTAL PERIOD: APOCALYPTIC
CRESCENDO
Between about 150 BCE and about 200 CE religious revival and
eschatological expectation challenged and ultimately convulsed an-
tique civilization. What Daniel had initiated subsequently climaxed
with the second letter attributed to Peter (c. 130150 CE) and the con-
temporaneous Jewish revolt of Simon Bar Kochbah (d. 135 CE)to be
followed by aftershocks in their immediate aftermath. Apocalyptic
movements proliferated, competed, and interacted, all variously antici-
pating the end of days and imminent judgment of the world. Sectarian
8 APOCALYPSE THEN
groups and often their enemies as well adopted apocalyptic vocabula-
ries. Expectations of the end now reached into all layers of society.
The Jewish historian Flavius Josephus (c. 35c. 100) was surely right
when he noted the popularity of Daniel and its appeal to the multi-
tude during the first century CE.
4
It can be no accident that this was
one of the rare moments in the pre-modern past when the apocalypse
inspired popular uprisings. Most remembered and best documented
today among the intertestamental apocalyptic movements are that of
John the Baptist, the Qumran community, and, above all of course,
the Jesus movements.
There can be little doubt that Jesus thought arose directly from
Jewish eschatological expectations and, further, conformed fully to
them. He looked to the restoration of Israel and the revitalization of
Judaism. He anticipated the transformation and restoring of nature.
He believed that the eschaton had already begun and that the bound-
ary between the living and the dead had diminished in significance.
His own sacrifice and resurrection became the prototype for the imme-
diate future, the universal resurrection. The imminent messianic age
would entail an in-gathering of the Jews (not Gentiles) living out-
side Palestine; because they were remote, they would not face the
same moral standard as the locals who had heard the message of the
new Judaism. Jesus certainly regarded himself as a prophet, possibly
the figure described in Isaiah 61though, it seems, not necessarily as
the son of man. He clearly did not anticipate a new faith, much less
a church.
5
His message was utterly eschatological and completely
focused on this world.
The apostles inevitably shared Jesus expectation of an imminent
end, even if they endowed him with greater divinity than he had appa-
rently claimed. Pauls first letter to the Thessalonians (c. 50 CE), the
earliest surviving New Testament text and the earliest Christian docu-
ment, is alive with anticipation of the resurrection. The continued
presence of the post-Easter Jesus similarly speaks to the sense of
immediacy. Doubts may have been raised about Jesus eschatological
status, but these were decisively overborne. The transmutation of the
Jesus movements into Christianity by Paul in no way qualified the
faiths apocalyptic energies. Universalism and mission found themselves
completely compatible with the expectation of a rapidly approaching
terminus. What did emerge was an increasingly detailed timeline. There
9 Encountering the Beast
to defeat death and return to this world). At the same time messianic
interest persisted within Judaism despite the Bar Kochbah catastrophe,
even if Jewish apocalypses tended to die out in the early second century.
Nevertheless, after about 170 a new sensibility visibly began to emerge.
People of all social classes experienced a deepening sense of disconnection
between public life and their personhood. Politics became less meaningful,
traditional communal worship less compelling, the civic less purposeful,
the familiar social self less persuasive. To the extent that the apocalypse
validated this world, it too became marginalized. The man-god had not
returned. Nor did the course of human events point to the historical
redemption and the resolution of humanitys destiny.
THE DECLINE OF THE APOCALYPSE
The new sensibility affected both Judaism and Christianity, and
interest in the apocalypse within both faiths waned more or less to-
gether during later antiquity. By the late fourth century its grip on the
spiritual imagination had become highly tenuous, and in the Christian
West Augustine of Hippo (354430) introduced a major intellectual
reformulation that dispatched it all but completely. Probably no individ-
ual at any time more effectively terminated apocalyptic expectations
Figure 1.1 Images of the apostles. This mid-fourth-century fresco of the
apostles, Domitilla Catacomb, Rome, characterizes the attitude of all early
Christians. They await the return of the Son of Man to judge the quick and
the dead. A long wait, as it turned out. (Hirmer Verlag, Munich)
11 Encountering the Beast
would appear a false prophet, an Antichrist, before the endas Paul
stated most tellingly in his second letter to the Thessalonians. There
might even be more than one such figure. By the last decade of the first
century John of Patmos on the coast of Asia Minor produced the most
dramatic delineation of the Christian version of sacred time: the Book
of Revelation. John spoke of seals being opened, trumpets sounding, and
bowls being poured out as spectacular sequences of events. He spoke of
various great beasts, false prophets, and satanic figures. He placed a
scarlet whore drinking from the cup of iniquity atop the back of
Daniels ten-horned creature. Most notably of all, he transformed the
messianic age into the millennium, the thousand-year reign of right-
eousness and justice under Jesus and his saints. We can now never know
the full context that motivated John, but his commitments could hardly
be more clear: the Roman Empire is the last great beast, the last great
test for the faithful; its doom is imminent; its mighty capital city will be
utterly destroyed. Collaboration with it will mean damnation. Only well
into the second century do we encounter clear evidence of anxiety
about the failure of the man-god to return. The second letter ascribed to
Peter, and the latest document to enter the New Testament, suggests
that Jesus may delay his coming in order to give more people an oppor-
tunity to encounter the faith and to repent.
By the late second century apocalyptic prospects had clearly begun to
wane both within Judaism and Christianity: the Lord God now mani-
fested himself through his law, Jesus through his sacraments. Yet escha-
tological interest, however imminent these events might be imagined as
being, retained remarkable resilience. Papias, an elder in the Asian city
of Hierapolis (c. 140), vigorously promoted the idea of the millennium
and stressed the fecundity of nature during that era. The burden of labor
would end along with the burden of sin. Similar doctrines were main-
tained by Irenaeus, the third-century bishop of Lyons, the early fourth-
century writer Lactantius, and a great many fathers of the early church.
In this respect they remained very much in the Jesus tradition. Even
when the parousia, the return of Christ, no longer seemed imminent, it
remained the defining event, the focus of Christian expectations. Ori-
gen alone seems to have given the millennium a spiritual interpretation.
Images of the apostles during these centuries portray them as clasping
the sacred word, awaiting the return of the savior (Figure 1.1). Images
of Christ stress his power (and thereby, among other things, his capacity
10 APOCALYPSE THEN
than did this North African bishop, the greatest and by far the most in-
fluential of the Latin fathers. On a variety of fronts he struck tellingly
and, for Westerners, convincingly, against the significance of the physi-
cal world. The city of God, the community of the saved, bore no con-
nection with the earthly city of politics. The pursuit of the public good
in no way led to the divine good that allowed for salvation; citizenship
distracted fatally from redemption. Political organization in any form
possessed no inherent value and could have legitimacy only in a nega-
tive way: providing peace that would allow the saved to experience
divine grace. Otherwise, government did not differ from robber bands.
So, too, the philosophic pursuit of final truth and ultimate good could
never escape its earthly dimension. It was one thing to discover the
good (if that were even possible simply within the realm of nature),
quite another to desire the good that required a transformation of the
self. Much the same applied to the apocalypse, and especially the mil-
lennium. It too validated this world, it too looked to the material, it
too directed people away from the transcendent.
What then did all these prophetic biblical statements actually mean?
Augustine was emphatic. The millennium simply referred to the spread-
ing of the gospel and Christian authority. It comprised nothing more
than the everyday world we now inhabited. The apocalypse offered no
road map to sacred history and human destiny, Augustine insisted,
because the sequences of symbols could not be correlated to political
experience or the course of events. Yes, there would occur a terminus,
possibly in the year 1000, the number in scripture and, perhaps more
significant, a perfect number in that it comprised ten cubed. The end
was very far from imminent and did not link with certainty to any time
or times. Further, scripture indicated that the end-day events would
occur quickly and precipitously. Human involvement was neither
required nor of concern. Mens eyes needed to be cast elsewhere.
Augustine thereby disconnected both the classical and the Judaic tra-
ditions from the world of contemporary people. His views proved deci-
sive. The Council of Ephesus (431) formally adopted his eschatological
reading of scripture and made amillennialism canonical. Thereafter,
millenarianism would not resurface before the twelfth century, and even
then it failed to become mainstream. Moreover, apocalyptic reflection
in any form, while far from unknown, emerged only on the margins
of medieval civilization. Late antique and early medieval Europeans,
12 APOCALYPSE THEN
especially in the West, ceased to seek the intervention of their
patronus with the imperial hierarchy and instead appealed to their
patron saint to intercede with the heavenly hierarchy. On earth, an
ever more stratified church, a structure created by Gods grace that
existed outside the realm of nature, increasingly supplanted the func-
tions of civil government. That ecclesiastical order mirrored, however
imperfectly, the eternal order through which God ruled the universe.
People of every social status found themselves living in a world popu-
lated with angelic and, far more prevalently, demonic forces, but these
agencies were an atemporal phenomenon, quite outside any time frame.
Only in the Greek East, where imperial government continued to be
effective (and where Augustines influence was less authoritative), did
the apocalypse persist as a significant mode of thought. Despite persecu-
tion, many Christians early on wanted to see the Roman Empire as their
protector, the universal authority that allowed for the spread of the
universal faith.
6
They took pains to proclaim that Romanitas was fully
compatible with Christianitas. They dissented vigorously from John of
Patmos. The conversion of the emperor Constantine (c. 274335), his
subsequent military victories, and the writings of Eusebius of Caesarea
(c. 264340) underscored the idea that the empire had arisen providen-
tially to serve Christian purposes. Struggles between Roman civilization
and its barbarian challengers were increasingly read as an ongoing strug-
gle between Christianity and heathenism.
Then Constantine moved his capital to Constantinople in the East,
both symbolizing and working the shifting political and cultural center
of gravity. By the sixth century Constantines capital had emerged as
the new Jerusalem, and the Byzantine Roman Empire had now become
the latter-day Israel. Imperial apologists succeeded in interweaving the
triumphalist claims and prophecies of the classical era into the Judeo-
Christian apocalypse. The Byzantines would create a synthesis of Dan-
iel, Ezekiel, Paul, Sibylline prophecies, and pagan literature (notably
absent was the violently anti-Roman Revelation). From Constantinople
radiated nothing less than Daniels fifth empire, the final world order
before the return of King Jesus. The emperor stood in the figure of
Christ, representing and anticipating the divine autocrat. The political
disasters of the seventh century that occurred with the coming of the
Slavs and the Arabs crystallized this eschatology around a vision of
Roman restorationa vision that would endure in centuries to come.
13 Encountering the Beast
There would arise a great Last World Emperor who would overthrow
the enemies of the faith and confront the Pauline Antichrist. Thereafter
Christ would return and the Last Judgment would occur. The focus was
on the awesome woes that faced Byzantium and, still more, the extraor-
dinary figure of the prophesied rulerthe Last Judgment itself almost
an afterthought. In what became typical medieval fashion, hope lay in
an exceptional individual, not in the thrust of history or the logic of
time. The preoccupation was restoration, a lost Roman past. In both res-
pects its implications were conservative and attenuated. If it remained
implicit within Byzantine ideology until the destruction of the empire
in 1453, apocalyptic thought lost its vitality after the tenth century and
end-time reflection declined. Survivalism, not triumphalism, became
the manifest mode. Links with timeless heaven rather than sacred mis-
sion became the dominant discourse.
Apocalypticism revived at a number of junctures in the history of
the medieval Latin West, especially during the fourteenth and fif-
teenth centuries. Moreover, people were generally aware that the end
might come suddenly and at moments believed the great events were
about to happen. But they did not see history or even daily life as
going anywhere. Quite the contrary. The most deep-seated habit of
mind encouraged a sense of timeless continuity. Even major transfor-
mations were instinctively characterized as affirmations of tradition.
The defining intellectual constructs of the era reinforced this outlook
by providing a deeply static view of society, nature, and the faith.
The human environment sought to replicate the immutable heavenly
hierarchies. Again, as in heaven, all earthly potentates held their office
as unworthy imitations of the divine ruler and judge. All political order
was also of a piece with the hierarchies to be found everywhere in na-
ture. Hierarchy and headship concurrently existed at every plane of
being: whether in the body, family, society. Such hierarchies within
hierarchies and heads above heads comprised universal principles that
obtained among the fauna and the flora in exactly the same way. Each
element within any hierarchy had its unique function or purposeits
telosthat identified it and made it what it was. All these functions
fit together and were logically necessary. The human body provided
the governing metaphor: even if each of its parts possessed a different
dignity, a higher or lower quality, each also served a necessary purpose.
John of Salisbury (c. 11171180) described political society in these
14 APOCALYPSE THEN
terms, terms that had long become commonplace. He found the place of
the head to be filled by the prince; the heart had its counterpart in the
kings council; the eyes, ears, and tongue served as the judges and gover-
nors of provinces. Officials and soldiers correspond to the hands.
Those who always attended upon the prince were likened to the sides.
Financial officers and keepers found their analogue with the stomach
and intestines, increasingly concerned with physical matters and
increasingly inferior as a result. At the bottom were the peasants who
corresponded to the feet, who walked upon the earth doing service with
their bodies and especially needed the foresight of the head.
7
Reciproc-
ity reigned. Time did not. Function never changed.
At the local level each political jurisdiction operated with an allied
set of assumptions. The common custom of the realm was instinctively
thought of as ancient and as valid for that reason. In a world without
historical analysis or social theory, tradition provided its own justifica-
tion. Of course everyone knew that all things on earth constantly
changed. But all such flux, mutation, transience, decay were irrational
and thus marginal. They suffused the sublunar regions and had resulted
from sin and the fall from Eden. Lady Fortune and her wheel symbolized
just this irrationality and the limits of the human mind. Change
and, above all, mortality did not invite explanation, but enjoined that
men look to the enduring, the significant, the underlying atemporal pat-
terns of the divine, and especially the glorious world of redemption
beyond time.
This signal commonplace, the bedrock of the university and the law
court, hallmarked the Middle Ages and was never successfully chal-
lenged. Quite the contrary. These lines of thought became systemat-
ized, integrated, elaborated, and made ever more articulate by figures
such as Albert the Great and Ranulf de Glanvill, Thomas Aquinas
and Henry Bracton, and the most powerful minds of the period.
Roman legal categories and Greek metaphysical categories provided
the foundations for the intellectual triumphs that defined the age.
Accordingly, the apocalypse never guided medieval civilization. It
never organized medieval cultural achievement, never became the domi-
nant mode of cognition. The formative events of the eraits turning
points, its characteristic institutions, and its greatest upheavalsall
attest to the marginal role of the apocalypse in the experience of the
Middle Ages.
15 Encountering the Beast
The crusades may have held vast consequences for Europe and have
expressed unprecedented self-confidence, but they did not comprise the
expression of an apocalyptic impulse. As Bernard McGinn has com-
mented, If apocalyptic motifs were used, they do not seem to have
played a major role.
8
Joachim of Fiore, undoubtedly the most signifi-
cant apocalyptic thinker of the medieval world, declined to make the
Crusades a decisive event within what he saw as the deepening crisis of
history. No amount of well-intended crusading could change the pro-
phetic program. Joachim actually conferred with the leader of the third
crusade, Richard I of England, and was far from encouraging.
The rise of the papacy and its ferocious struggle against royal
authority failed to enjoin an apocalyptic vocabulary before the thir-
teenth century and even then the apocalypse did not supply the pre-
dominant voice. We will be hard put to find more than a whiff of the
end of days and certainly no articulated apocalyptic vision with Pope
Gregory VII (c. 10201085) and his reforming successors. The apoc-
alypse did not frame the debate; it never even became a focus of dis-
pute within the investiture contest. The clericalization of the Latin
West took place within an atemporal language. Innocent III (1160
1216), surely the most powerful and far-reaching of the medieval
popes, at no point adopted any such vocabulary. In the fourteenth
century we do encounter prophecies about a final angelic pope, the
Wests belated counterpart to Byzantiums Last World Emperor. But
the formulators and promoters of this apocalyptic were critics of the
papacy rather than occupants of the apostolic chairoutsiders attack-
ing from the sidelines, papalist but not papal.
Even the fourteenth-century Black Death pandemic that carried off
perhaps a quarter to a third of Europes population, McGinn tells us,
had at best a minor effect upon the history of apocalypticism, at least
in comparison with other less troubled times. A recent study of the
plague that sought to map in detail its eschatological impact has
found an ambivalent reaction to the catastrophe: naturalism competing
with apocalypticism, in no simple sense apocalyptic.
9
The apocalyp-
tic year 1000, Marjorie Reeves observes, passed with little dramatic
demonstration. When apocalyptic reflection did occur during the me-
dieval era, there rarely appeared a developed historical time-line, virtu-
ally never a millennial future. As Reeves has trenchantly argued, it was
only within the context of end-time that history since the incarnation
16 APOCALYPSE THEN
had any significance for medieval people. There was no prospect of
endless progressive change, only of a drama tightly bound to its final
climax.
10
The regnant epistemologiesthe so-called Gothic spirit
pointed away from time as a meaningful category.
THE JOACHITE CHALLENGE
By far the most complex and original apocalyptic thinker of the
entire period was Joachim of Fiore (c. 11351202). He has had an
enduring impact well beyond his own times, yet the marginalizing of
his thought during the centuries following his death will illustrate the
priorities (and limitations of the apocalypse) for his civilization.
The twelfth century had famously naturalized its universe in the
sense that Aristotelian categories organized knowledge of the physical
world and, no less, knowledge of the divine, of theology, of the revela-
tory. As we have seen, all creation was imagined as a vast organism or
body in which every element had its special functionthe necessary
activity that it alone performed. Joachim shared with his contemporary
John of Salisbury this quite un-Augustinian understanding of society
and the cosmos. But he transformed it from a grand scheme of organic
integration into a vast vision of organic growth and development. The
story of mankind involved three great periods, each one experiencing
moments of germination, fructification, and consummation.
Every succeeding period led to a higher spiritual state of being on the
road to redemption and manifested a different person in the
godheadthe trinity comprising for Joachim temporaling aspects of
the deity. The firstthe age of the father, of the law, of the married
electran from Adam to Christ. It began its fruition in Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, faced the great crisis of Antiochus Epiphanes, and
culminated with Christianity. In the midst of this first age the second
found its germination with Elijah and then King Uzziah (783742 BCE).
That succeeding ageof the son, of grace, of the priestfructified
with Jesus and continued into Joachims time. Once again, in its
midst had germinated the third age with Benedict and the rise of
monasticism (c. 500 CE). This last agethe age of the holy spirit, the
age of the monklay in the immediate offing. The prospect was at once
exhilarating and terrifying. The reign of Antichrist, whom Joachim
seems to have imagined as a false pope, was about to commence.
17 Encountering the Beast
Christianity would be subverted; infidelity would reign. The faithful
would experience the most determined persecution, as scripture had
made abundantly clear. But the crisis would be met by two new forms of
monasticism, a contemplative order and a preaching order. These new
spiritual men would assist a preaching pope in guiding mankind
through its greatest crisis. The latter would emerge not as a mighty
potentate but as a suffering servant. Joachim believed that this novus
dux might well prove a pope who had experienced defeat at Rome.
Only spiritual energy, not military force, could induce the new age.
That third age would entail world renewal and the triumph of the
spirit. Mankind would be organized into the highest form of association,
the monastery. Joachim envisioned them as five oratories, each one
potentially enormous. They corresponded to Mary, John, Paul, Stephan,
and Peter, and symbolically embodied the central features within the
Christian church. These oratories would be in direct communication
with the spirit of God. In addition, Joachim foresaw two suburbs, one
of which would include married people who had off-spring and who,
together with their children, lived a common life. The other suburb
provided education, tended the sick, and dealt with taxes and adminis-
tration. All would be under the direction of the Spiritual Father who
inhabited the first oratory, evidently a spiritualized, monastic pope. His
authority, Joachim implied, derived from his charisma rather than his
office.
11
The most striking feature of Joachims vision for a modern reader is
its progressivist vision: each age improves upon the one before it, and
each happens in history as the result of human endeavor. The third age
would end eventually, and with it time itself, but the meliorist, even
utopian character of his thought remains unmistakable. Joachim was a
highly visual thinker whose ideas were explicated through figurae or pic-
torial diagrams, and the best illustration of the developmental and
organic dimension of the Joachite apocalypse is provided by his tree
circles (Figure 1.2). During the age of the father, figured by Moses, the
Israelite progeny of Shem prove the most fruitful. In the succeeding age
of the son, the gentile children of Japheth blossom. In the age of the
spirit everyone flourishes to an unprecedented extent. Joachim offered a
sweeping apocalypse that entailed far more than simple restoration or
revitalization and went well beyond anything proposed in antiquity,
whether by the Byzantines, Papias, Lactantius, or even John of Patmos.
18 APOCALYPSE THEN
Joachims startling originality appears in still other ways. Almost
uniquely in medieval Europe he projects the Antichrist as a false
Christian rather than a renegade Jew. His time-scheme is driven in
part by mystical numerical parallels in each age. This focus on the eso-
teric went still further. Bernard McGinn has noted Joachims proto-
Kabbalist use of names, drawn from the converted Spanish Jew Petrus
Alphonsi. Moreover, Joachim envisioned an uncharacteristically posi-
tive role for the Jews in the apocalyptic narrative and the final age. I
think the time of forgiving them, the time of consolation and their
conversion is here. Perhaps predictably he would be attacked as a
false prophet of Jewish origin.
12
It is important to stress that Joachim was close to the Roman curia
and an advisor to several popes, most notably Lucius III (r. 1181
1185). At the same time, Joachims apocalyptic altogether denied any
spiritual significance to royal authority: there could be no Last World
Emperor; the Crusades were hopeless; temporal princes proved persecu-
tors, not liberators, divine scourges rather than redemptive agencies.
The church alone provided the key. Nevertheless, Joachims papalism
was far from militant. His friends in the curia were consistently in the
peace party and sought accommodation with the crowned heads of
Europe, especially the German emperor. Joachim had no connection
with the reforming party that sought to extract the church from
society and establish clerical, indeed theocratic hegemony. The power-
ful popes we remember today were not his popes, and the intellectual
dynamics that underwrote their triumph and created high medieval
Europe were not his either.
In the years following Joachims death, new spiritual men did
indeed appear, in the form of the Dominican and Franciscan orders.
But the world they constructed differed drastically from Joachite ideals
and expectations. Only an increasingly isolated minority of Francis-
cans upheld and developed Joachims vision of transformation. The
severe contrast between the great Dominican doctor Thomas Aquinas
(12251274) and Joachim is instructive: a face-off between the profes-
sor and the abbot. The rising institution in the years ahead would be
Aquinass university, not Joachims monastery, a movement already in
decline during the twelfth century. The new era looked to Aristotle
and not, with Joachim, exclusively to scripture. The university doctors
organized knowledge about timeless scholastic universals and proof
19 Encountering the Beast
Figure 1.2 Joachim of Fiores Tree Circles from the twelfth-century Liber
Figurarum illustrates both the organic and progressivist character of the
abbots thought. At the same time the diagram also shows the philo-Semitic
dimension within Joachims apocalyptic program. This relatively positive view
of the Jewslike his progressivist visionis uncharacteristic of the Middle
Ages, both East and West. It was increasingly at odds with the development
of attitudes in the West that became more violently anti-Semitic from the
thirteenth century onward.
At the base of the tree is the Father who is the first person of the trinity
and who is manifested through Noah, literally the father of postdeluvian
humanity. Noah and his sonsShem, the progenitor of the Jews, and
Japheth, the progenitor of the Gentilescomprise the fructification of the
Age of the Father, the first age of humankind. They are directly comparable
to the fructification with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. During this period
the Jews flourish, represented by the branch on the left, while the Gentiles
on the right are less fruitful (though the presence of buds seems to suggest
their potential).
At the center is the failed and blasted branch of Noahs third son, Ham. Ham
had seen his fathers drunkenness and was cursed. He represents the reprobate
and the damned. Joachim did not identify Ham with any particular people.
The Jewish and gentile branches draw together with the inauguration of
the Age of the Son. During the second age the Gentiles flower with the
greatest spirituality, while the Jews emerge less sotheir positions literally
reversed. The illustration suggests that the Jews in the Christian era remain
far from barren. Nevertheless, the illustration also suggests that the Christian
Gentiles have achieved a more robust spiritual state than that of their Jewish
predecessors.
Once again the branches draw together at the outset of the third age, the
Age of the Holy Spirit. At this point everyone becomes fruitful on a scale
well beyond that of either previous period.
Following the apocalyptic wave that resurfaced with the sixteenth-century
Reformation, both progressivist historical visions and philo-Semitism would
emerge as part of mainstream European culture. The intellectual assumptions
of the Reformation differed widely from those of Joachim, but highly devel-
oped versions of his conclusions came to hallmark major currents within Prot-
estantism. Several of his works and works attributed to him saw print in the
early sixteenth century. Anglophone reformers such as John Bale, John
Knox, and James Maxwell were in varying degrees familiar with him and his
expectations. (Reproduced by permission of the President and Fellows of Corpus
Christi College, Oxford MS 255a, f. 12v.)
63 Apocalypse Revived
English Bible. Its influence during the early modern period is difficult to
overestimate, probably second only to the Bible itself. It suffused the
textures of the Anglophone cultures, endowing them with an apocalyp-
tic character that proved remarkably tenacious. That character was also
surprisingly populist. The martyrs were overwhelmingly common peo-
ple: merchants, craftsmen, husbandmen, wives, widows, maidens, ser-
vants. Foxes documented accounts show them to be articulate about
their beliefs as well as undaunted by either authority or by the fate that
awaited them. They know full well the social and spiritual reality they
seek to create. They are emphatically of this world. The change from
the earlier sixteenth century is momentous. It was one thing to portray
the pope as the butt of populist scatological humor, quite another to
portray simple people as the agent of history.
Foxe believed in the Great Chain of Being as much as any. But he
also knew that the humble comprised the engines that drove the
apocalypse and realized human destiny. For this reason Foxes work
appealed to reformers of every sort, from Edmund Spenser to John Mil-
ton, from moderate Episcopalians to fire-breathing Levellers and com-
munist Diggers, from the British revolutionaries in the mid-seventeenth
century to the American revolutionaries in the late eighteenth. He
would underwrite the Anglophone achievement. For just this reason he
would draw down the wrath and scorn of conservatives such as Richard
Hooker and William Shakespeareand of Counter-Reformers, notably,
the Jesuit Robert Parsons. Today our poetry comes from Shakespeare
but our central values do not. We will find them arising, instead, with
John Foxe.
The this-worldly character of Foxes martyrs, their active engage-
ment in historical and apocalyptic struggle, manifests itself in the illus-
trations that fill the book. The martyrs are characteristically defiant.
Often in their moment of suffering they look directly at their persecu-
tors, confronting them. Sometimes they look out at the reader. Foxes
illustration of martyrdom of the reformer William Tyndale, executed
by Henry VIII in 1536, is revealing. In his final moment Tyndale does
not ask God to receive his soul but to open the kings eyes. He seems
less concerned to join God in heaven than for God to join men on
earth. Accounts of martyrdom in Foxe and others strongly confirm the
illustrations. These martyrs therefore differ decisively from their late
antique predecessors who, in their moment of death, find themselves
64 APOCALYPSE THEN
transfixed by God and the world to come. The latter attest to the
irrelevance of this world and the consuming importance of the next.
No less do they differ from the martyrs of the High Middle Ages
where status was so sharply defining. The Foxean martyr affirmed his-
tory and human agency within it. And he (or she) was highly con-
scious of both.
THE TEMPORALIZATION OF WESTERN CULTURE
The sixteenth-century Protestant apocalypse created the first genu-
inely historical vision of Europe. Its devisers based it on institutional
development, and, if it incorporated allegory and the manipulation of
mystical numbers, it became increasingly independent of them.
We need to see the new apocalypse as part of a broader cultural
shift, the temporalization of Western thought and outlook. The world
increasingly assumed meaning not through its underlying structure, but
through its development. Integral to this shift, and hugely strengthen-
ing to the Protestant vision, was the relatively new phenomenon of
humanism. The so-called studia humanitas did not simply entail a pas-
sionate interest in classical literature and learningmatters that had
always interested the medieval world. Rather, its prime concern was
how to read that literature. The whole point of scholasticism, indeed
virtually the entire thrust of medieval civilization, had been to de-
historicize every text and to turn scripture, the fathers, the councils,
all literature, Christian or otherwise, into a single, coherent statement
of religious truth. The very techniques of reading undergirded just this
objective. As Guibert of Nogent had explained about 1084 when he
outlined the procedure for writing a sermon,
There are four ways of interpreting scripture. . . . The first is his-
tory, which speaks of the actual events as they occurred; the sec-
ond is allegory, in which one thing stands for something else; the
third is tropology, or moral instruction, which treats of the order-
ing and arranging of ones life; and the last is anagogy, or spiritual
enlightenment, through which we are led to a higher way of life.
For example, the word Jerusalem: historically it represents a spe-
cific city; in allegory it represents the holy Church; tropologically,
or morally, it is the soul of every faithful man who longs for the
vision of eternal peace; and anagogically it refers to the life of the
65 Apocalypse Revived
heavenly citizens, who already see the God of Gods, revealed in
all His glory in Sion.
23
Still further literary techniques reinforced this approach to the written
word. The ancient Hebrews (quite unlike medieval Jews) knew about
Christ through scriptural intimations, served the faith, and were there-
fore savedeven if they had not quite heard of him. Characters in
the Old Testament embodied types, patterns, figures, and
shadows, through which the Nazarene and his truth could be known.
Even pagan literature could be similarly de-contextualized and
endowed with Christocentric meaning. Herakles as well as King David
offered insight into Christs rule and character.
By the sixteenth century we have crossed over into an altogether
new intellectual environment. Erasmus had made this clear in 1516
on the eve of the Reformation. If we want to understand scripture and
know the meaning of Christian truth, the Rotterdam scholar declared,
we must reconstruct its context. Once again in the Paraclesis, he
laid out the points at issue with high resolution. [I]f we from study of
history not only the position of those nations to whom these things
happened, or to whom the apostles wrote, but also their origin, man-
ners, institutions, religion, and character, it is wonderful how much
light and, if I may say, life is thrown into the reading of what before
seemed dry and lifeless. Erasmus repeatedly insisted that students
should learn to quote Scripture, not second-hand, but from the foun-
tain-head, and to take care not to distort its meaning as some do,
interpreting the church as the clergy, the laity as the world and the
like. To get at the real meaning, he declared, it is not enough to
take four or five isolated words; you must look where they came from,
what was said, by whom it was said, to whom it was said, at what
time, on what occasion, in what words, what preceded, what fol-
lowed.
24
Meaning came from its moment, from context, and thus
from time. The greatest Protestant intellectualssuch as Philipp Mel-
anchthon in Germany, George Buchanan in Britain, Francois Hotman
in Franceand virtually all Protestant intellectuals after 1550 were
utterly immersed in humanist linguistic analysis. The apocalypse
became interwoven into grammar and lexicography. Rarely has any
twentieth-century student of the period spoken more succinctly about
the significance of the last two than did G. N. Conklin.
66 APOCALYPSE THEN
The older query, so to speak, of What does God mean here?
became the far more arresting question, What has God said here?
Allegory, mystic paraphrase, tropology and the whole formal liter-
ature of interpretation were uncompromisingly attacked as doctri-
nal irrelevancies by syntax and lexicography. Grammar, not
speculation, became the greatest heresy of the Christian world,
and unhappily no fires could be kindled to consume the rudimenta
linguae of Hebrew and Greek.
25
Grammar and thus context had become the ally of history and heresy.
We would severely miss the dynamism of this extraordinary century
if we thought for a moment that such mattersinvolving questions of
time and its meaningswere somehow a sideline and did not enter
directly into the periods most contested issues. In truth, theology and
temporality confronted one another at the very heart of the confes-
sional conflict. Thomas Aquinass explication of the Eucharist became
and still remains the central doctrine of Catholic theology. Its mes-
sage, not simply for clerical power but also for history, is resolute and
unmistakable. Transubstantiation, as Aquinas defines it, means that
the participant in the sacrament encounters the divine literally and
physically (and, for Protestants, carnally)an encounter at once im-
mediate, intimate, total.
26
Consequently the Catholic sacrament con-
stantly replicated exactly the same act in exactly the same way as
when the Nazarene had (reputedly) said, This is my body. On this
central, all-important point Aquinas is emphatic: from their first
utterance by Christ these words have possessed the same consecratory
power, provided they were spoken by a priest, as if Christ himself were
actually present among us pronouncing them.
27
At the heart of
Catholicism lay an unchanging moment constantly repeated.
All reformers joined issue. Christs sacrifice was sufficient. Salvation
derived from having faith in that act. It could not be replicated; efforts
to do so would not only fail, but amounted to supplanting Christ and
in the deepest sense could only be anti-Christian. One might believe
with the conservative Lutherans in consubstantiation, and regard
Christ as mystically present in the Eucharist even if the elements had
not been transformed. One might believe with Calvinists that Christ
was spiritually present in the sacrament. One might believe with the
radical Zwinglians that the sacrament constituted no more than a
memorial. But the sufficiency of the historical Christ was not in
67 Apocalypse Revived
dispute. The Protestant communion contrasted utterly with the Catho-
lic Mass, for it remembered the past rather than replicating it. Time
and history informed the Protestant service to the point of defining it.
One of the central axes of contention between the two faiths therefore
involved the textures, contours, and significance of time. Protestan-
tism, albeit hugely preoccupied with grace and faith, was nevertheless
equally engaged in the saeculumprofoundly spiritual and yet irredu-
cibly secular.
Still another axis of contention grew immediately out of this one.
The Protestant sacrament could only be a public undertaking, the com-
munity together remembering its spiritual past. There could always be
a private mass. There could never be a private communion. Conflict-
ing claims about time led at once to conflicting demarcations of the
public and private. Protestantisms heavy emphasis on the publicand
the public as manifestation of both history and salvationencouraged,
if it did not enjoin, a profoundly civic consciousness.
Privacy for Protestantism was also reconfigured as a result, and the
self became at once radically individualized and radically temporalized.
Diaries in something like the modern sense had emerged with the
Renaissance and were hardly a Protestant invention. But they became
very much a Protestant phenomenon. Diaries recorded spiritual devel-
opment, which meant highly personal development. The individual
became historical, and by the end of the century there appeared all
sorts of manuals for charting and assessing just that development.
Once one thought one had felt the spirit, it became imperative to
watch its growth and its gradual transformation of the personality.
There were twelve steps of justification (or was it thirteen?). There
were perhaps the same number on the road to sanctification.
If an increasingly temporalized world reshaped the personality, it
informed much else as well. The individual was also defined by history
and his own redemption in some sense resulted from it. The ancient
heresy of mortalism which, in one of its forms, had claimed that the
soul slept at death only to be resurrected at the end of time, now
resurfaced in the sixteenth century. Although numerous reformers vig-
orously rejected the notion, it still appealed to many Protestants. And
well it should. For it strongly reinforced the notion that we could only
achieve our own salvation when the apocalypse worked itself out
and found its fruition. History would indeed redeem us. Mortalism
68 APOCALYPSE THEN
underscored the importance of the saeculum and in every way the im-
portance of the physical worldthe growing preoccupation, in Amos
Funkensteins words, with Gods body.
28
In the next century Protes-
tants as different as John Milton and Thomas Hobbes would find
this doctrine compelling and intellectually essential. The latter days
may well have been expected to prove the worst of times, and Catho-
lic victories on the battlefield along with the gathering Counter-
Reformation gave every reason for such expectations. Yet, in at least
one sense, optimism became all but inescapable. People in the six-
teenth century simply had to know more than mankind could at any
earlier moment. What the prophets, the patriarchs, and the apostles
had seen only darkly through symbols, signs, and types, the latter
age fully understood through the clear light of history.
Three distinct agents had joined together to reformulate the stand-
ard of the intelligible. The Reformations apocalyptic vision of the past
had combined with humanist text in context, and both linked in turn
with the Protestant theology of memory to infuse Western civilization
with a new and largely unprecedented sense of time as the measure of
meaning. To understand something, it now seemed, required less a
knowledge of its essence than of its process, less its structure than its
development, less what it was than what it might become. This tem-
poralization of the Western world would continue, overcoming the
severest resistance, until the last decade of the nineteenth century.
69 Apocalypse Revived
CHAPTER 3
THE LAST WORLD
EMPIRE AND ITS
COMPETITORS
THE ADVENT OF THE FIFTH MONARCHY
If the apocalypse did not penetrate the fabric of Roman Catholic piety
and theology in the way that it did with Protestantism, apocalyptic
expectations did shape and suffuse Catholic political vision in signifi-
cant ways. The signal geopolitical event of the late fifteenth and early
sixteenth centuries was the emergence of the great Spanish and Portu-
guese empires, the first on a global scale. Breathtakingly gigantic and
utterly unprecedented, they operated within the realm of grace no less
than within the realm of nature, and were preoccupied with salvation no
less than dominionindeed with the historical redemption, prophecy,
and eschatology rather more than mere rulership. The people of Spain
and more generally of the peninsula had received the gift of election,
an act of divine favor that endowed them with a special destiny in what
were perceived as being the latter days of the world. The expanding
Spanish kingdom promised to be nothing less than Daniels fifth mon-
archy, the final world order that presaged the return of the savior. The
blind Jews would be converted in the end to the true faith; the fulness
of the Gentiles would be called. Jerusalem would be retaken, the holy
sepulture recovered. The true faith would be propagated throughout the
world, which would be governed by this messianic empire. These expect-
ations found reinforcement and articulation from the wide-ranging
prophecies putatively derived from the sibyls of late antiquity and from
the varied medieval legends of the great Last emperor.
It is far from incidental that Ferdinand of Aragon and Castile styled
himself the king of Jerusalem. Nor is it in the least surprising that
Christopher Columbus saw his voyages as being of a piece with the
overthrow of Moorish Granada and the simultaneous destruction of
the centuries-old Jewish community in Spain, all occurring in the
same fateful year 1492. Nor should it be surprising that Columbus too
fixed his gaze on Jerusalem and the holy sepulture. His expectations,
as well those of his patrons, found their sources in this dense tissue of
antique, medieval, and biblical prophecy. Like them he increasingly
saw his role as a prophetic one, the Christ-bearer to the Gentiles:
even to the point of finding in his own name that messianic message,
Christo-ferens (Christ-bearer) and which he signed laid out in the
form of a cross. Like his patrons he saw himself fulfilling the great
events of the last age.
And so it seemed to happen. By the 1530s the Hapsburg dynasty,
now headed by Charles V, had met with such spectacular successthe
conquest of the New World, the crusade against Tunis, the domi-
nation of Italy, the consolidation of power in central Europe, the
Netherlands, and Spain, the turning back of the Ottoman Turks at
Viennathat this new superstate, unlike anything in history, might
very plausibly be the prophesied Last World Empire. As early as 1525,
following the defeat and capture of Charless French rival Francis I at
Pavia, Alfonso de Valdes had looked to the fulfillment of the imperial
eschatology. Valdes served as the emperors secretary and court Latin-
ist, but his sentiments extended well beyond the court to virtually all
reaches within these vast dominions. Earlier still, Charless iconogra-
phy proclaimed his having burst through the traditional boundaries of
antiquity, the pillars of Hercules. That great terminus for the classical
world, associated with the ancient motto non plus ultra, was cast as a
columnar device with a motto that made just the opposite statement:
plus ultranoch weiter for the German-speaking empirestill further
(see Figure 3.1). For Horace, Claudian, and other classical writers, the
oceans were natural boundaries; crossing them was unnatural, violating
the order of things. Now Christian mission had overcome pagan limi-
tations, as grace transformed nature in the run-up to the eschaton.
Spanish imperial power became synonymous with the civitae dei.
Although during the course of the sixteenth century the great His-
panic design experienced setbacks, disasters, even catastrophes, such
events merely curbed presumption and tested Spanish resolve. For all
these reasons, royal policy categorically refused to surrender territory,
72 APOCALYPSE THEN
and the century witnessed a trajectory of erratic but unmistakable
growth.
Small wonder that Philips famous impresa or emblem of 1555 por-
trayed him as Christ-Apollo in the chariot of the sun with his divine
mission of bringing the light of the faith to the entire earth. With the
motto Iam Illustrabit Omnia (Now he will illuminate everything), the
impresa dramatically showed Philip as enlightening a hitherto dark-
ened New Worlddarkened by its paganism, darkened by being hid-
den until its providential discovery in these last times (Figure 3.2).
Contemporaries were altogether clear on the matter: God had
inspired this emblem which is an oracle or a prophecy that the whole
world will soon be illuminated with divine light through the universal
conversion of the infidel to the true Catholic faith.
1
Psalm 18.43, to
which Columbus himself had appealed, was once again called into
service: [T]hou did make me the head of the nations; / people whom
I had not known served me. Following the 1560s the same imagery
and the same claims became further articulated with the acquisition of
the Philippines and bore similar implications for the Orient. After the
annexation of the far-flung Portuguese empire in 1580itself a pro-
foundly spiritual actthe Dominican preacher Hernando del Castillo
expostulated, [I]f the Romans were able to rule the world simply by
ruling the Mediterranean, what of the man who rules the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans, since they surround the world? By now the
phrase, an empire on which the sun never set, had long become a
cliche. But then who, after all, was the sun? At this moment Philip
chose to adopt the astonishing, if layered motto Non Sufficit Orbis
(The world is not enough) (Figure 3.3).
2
Contemporaneous Portuguese attitudes were strikingly similar. Por-
tugal, the Ensign or standard-bearer of Christ, had received provi-
dentially the sacred mission to establish Daniels fifth monarchy.
Promoted by a series of papal bulls and brieves during the middle
1400s, documents that deeply and enduringly informed the attitudes of
the political elites, Portuguese expansion by centurys end had con-
ferred on Dom Manuel I (r. 14951521) an enormous string of (self-
awarded) African and Asian titles. Eschatological expectations led to
the forced conversion of Portuguese Jewry in 1497 and to an ever
more prominent missionary dimension to the growing empire.
Moreover, by the later 1520s, familiar apocalyptic projectionsthe
73 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
Figure 3.1 Columnar device for Charles V, in Girolamo Ruscelli, La Impresse
Illustri (Venice, 1566), 11114. One of the many devices proclaiming the daring
Plus Ultra on behalf of the Hapsburg monarchy. Originally designed for Charles
V at his assumption of sovereignty in 1516, the emblem associated the prophetic
Last World Empire with the Hapsburg dynasty. Plus Ultra became, in Marie
Tanners words, Europes most enduring symbol in the bid for universal theocratic
monarchy. The image would have a long future before itand an increasingly
conflicted one.
Earl Rosenthal has described the origin of the device and provided a careful dis-
cussion of this and similar devices in his seminal articles: The Invention of the
Columnar Device of the Emperor Charles V at the Court of Burgundy in Flanders
in 1516, in the Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institute 36 (1973): 201ff.,
and Plus Ultra, Non Plus Ultra, and the Columnar Device of Emperor Charles
V, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institute 34 (1971): 20428, esp. 228.
Tanner, The Last Descendant of Aeneas: The Hapsburgs and the Mythic Image of the
Emperor (New Haven, 1993), p. 155. (California State Library, Sacramento)
conquest of Jerusalem, the overthrow of the Ottoman Turksbecame
elaborated and augmented through local prophetic writings associated
with a small-town shoemaker, Goncalo Eanes Bandarra, whose verse
Trovas became hugely popular. Together such diverse sources formed
a long prophetic tradition that found its apogee, though hardly its
conclusion, in Portugals greatest Fifth Monarchy Man, the Jesuit
Antonio Vieira (16081697). This national eschatology penetrated
the textures of Portuguese society and culture to shape politics, litera-
ture, and spirituality for centuries to come.
We might expect these two messianic empires, underwritten by
potentially conflicting claims, to become bitter rivals. In fact, from
the late fifteenth century onward, their relations seem to have been
characterized more by symbiosis than competition. Similar administra-
tive practices, common social attitudes, shared religious values, the
same views on race and blood, a long practice of slaveryall further
smoothed by papal partitions of the globe into disparate spheres of
influencecombined with significant economic interdependence to
make for cooperation rather than antagonism. Like the Counter-
Reformation they so powerfully promoted in the later century, the new
empires were obsessed with hierarchy, authority, orderwith protec-
tion rather than participation. If humanist rhetorical conceits and his-
torical scholarship celebrated these massive structures, especially before
1550, the Iberian preoccupation was with imperial Rome, not its repub-
lican predecessor. The classical values of the polis and the citizen did
not intrude: civic humanism could hardly have been more alien or more
unwelcome. The Iberian eschatology carried with it an authoritarian
agenda that became manifest from Naples to Ghent, from the Spanish
Comuneros to Chile. For all the classical myths and motifs, Spaniards
(and Portuguese) remained a chosen people, latter-day Israelites
rather than latter-day Romans. Precisely because of their spirituality,
they looked less to replication than to the unprecedented. The pro-
foundly religious categories so foundational to this mental world made
events intelligible rather more through that language of Moses than
that of Machiavelli. No other dynasty embraced the prophetic with
such energy and conviction. Never beforeand nowhere elsedid im-
perial claims and clerical vision, royal power and papal agency, the Sib-
ylline and the Joachite, merge more seamlessly or more compellingly.
Where earlier there had been rival visions and conflicted expectations,
75 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
Figure 3.2 Global device for Philip II, in Girolamo Ruscelli, La Impresse Illustri
(Venice, 1566), 11114. This remarkable image of Philip II portrays him as a
messianic Christ-Apollo driving his chariot the sun through the skies. Accord-
ingly, a ribbon above him bears the motto Iam Illustrabit Omnia (Now he
will illuminate everything). He is the light to the world. Most notably, he brings
light across the seas to the hitherto darkened Western hemispheredark in that
it was unknown to Europe, dark in that lacked the true faith. The globe at the
bottom shows the New World literally darkened. The globe at the top shows a
view of the southern sky. Philip is nude, unprecedented in such iconography
according to Marie Tanner. His substantial penis, possibly erect, emphasizes his
powerthat is, his manhood both as virtue and virility. (California State Library,
Sacramento)
Ferdinand and Isabella, Charles and Philip, Manuel and his successor
Joao III, joined with the Vatican to discover integrated purposes and a
great cooperative venture.
By any standard the great empires proved an all but unqualified suc-
cess, and at moments their vast spiritual and political objectives
seemed almost within grasp. Yet in both the Iberian realms, well-
founded confidence had an edge of anxiety. It was one thing for Jews
and Moors to become Catholic, at least nominally, and quite another
for them to become Spanish, Latin, and medieval. As early as the
mid-fifteenth century the conversos no less than the Jews found them-
selves the target of pogroms and restrictive legislation. The offspring
of perverse Jewish ancestry were deemed infamous and ignominious
and consequently unworthy to hold any public office or any bene-
fice. Fear of Jewish, and later of Muslim deceit, of converts being
false Catholics, combined with a deep concern for community identity
and authenticity, from which arose an abiding obsession with geneal-
ogy, with having pure blood (pureza de sangre) or clean blood (limpieza
de sangre). Iberian authoritarianism thus found itself reinforced by
claims of race. These lines of thought played out in both New World
governance and European conflict. Heretics such as the Dutch could
Figure 3.3 The reverse of the medal celebrating the union of the two world
empires of Spain and Portugal under the rule of Philip II in 1580 shows the globe
firmly contained within its equator and longitudinal lines below the astonishing
motto non sufficit orbis (the world is not enough). Atop the globe charges a
horse suggestive of the horses powering Philips chariot in the 1555 engraving
that had portrayed him as the lux mundi. The medal is thought to have been
struck in about 1583. (INCM, Museu Numismatico Portugeus, Inv. no. 2918)
77 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
only be inferior people, agreement with whom would defeat Spanish
spiritual mission and compromise Spanish honor.
To confront such awesome powerswith the best armies, the best
generals, and seemingly limitless wealthrequired an act of consider-
able courage. But, in a sense, that was the least of it. For any challenger
needed also to confront these empires apocalyptic claims, their political
assumptions, their racial preoccupations. Both the Jews and the Moors
developed counter-eschatologiesa messianic backlashto oppose
the apocalyptic of their conquerors and persecutors. In the first years
of the new century, Jewish prophetesses appeared in Toledo and Seville.
The one in Toledo, a fifteen-year-old, had a vision of the victims of the
Inquisition sitting in heaven and predicted the coming of the Messiah.
Forty-five followers of the beautiful one in Seville were burned. At
Valencia prayers of vengeance cried out against the Catholic mon-
archs: Revenge us, O Lord, on this damned Queen of Spain, who has
destroyed your people, and pushed it into evil, and has burned and
killed it. . . . Come from your pity and give us miracles, that the Queen
of Spain may be burned in the fire. From abroad, the emigre Isaac
Abravanel wrote books predicting the imminent return of the Messiah
(perhaps as soon as 1503), the restoration of the Jews to Israel, and their
enemies consigned to eternal damnation. Other self-proclaimed Jewish
prophets such as Solomon Molkho and David Reubeni confronted the
Hapsburgs, the papacy, and the Portuguese daringly and directlyand
with disastrous results.
3
Despite profound antagonism toward the Span-
ish and all Christians of the peninsula, the Jews found themselves
enmeshed within a common messianic culture.
In broad terms, that would be true elsewhere as well. The Iberian
colossus had defined empire for Europe as an entity at once spiritual
and geopolitical, mapping the terrain within highly developed apoca-
lyptic terms. No competitor, no opponent, no dissident could do other
than speak to this central element in the Wests new imperialism.
COUNTER-EMPIRE
Ranged against the Hapsburg superstate was the House of Valois
and the French monarchy. The rival dynasty was not an alternative
claimant to the Spanish mission and mantelor so maintained a
number of its publicists. Rather, they cast France as the protector of
78 APOCALYPSE THEN
European liberty, the upholder of boundaries, the promoter of Stoic
self-restraint and limitation. The humiliating defeat of Charless siege
at Metz in 1552one of the great French victories during the reign of
Henri II (r. 15471559)brought forth an outpouring of patriotic fer-
vor. The Hapsburg eagle was now portrayed as chained between the
Herculean columns, with the motto Non ultra Metas (not beyond Metz
or not beyond these limitspunning on metas, meaning boundary
markers). Poets celebrated the event, among them Pierre de Ronsard,
Melin de Saint-Gelais, the future chancellor Michel de lHopital, and,
most notably, the Scottish humanist George Buchanan.
4
Buchanans
Latin verses, highly popular and immediately translated by Joachim du
Bellay, portrayed Henry as even greater than Perseus and, significantly,
Hercules in defeating monsters, for France had beaten back the Haps-
burg Hydra. That world domination of which Charles had madly
dreamed, and for which he brought such huge forces, now discovered
boundaries and limits. And France alone had stood firm against this
universal aggression. The strength of the Germans gave way. Italian
liberty, unaccustomed to a tyrants yoke, muttered and grumbled.
Restless ambition . . . was dreaming of world empire. But you the
good leader of war-like France have put a stop to the arrogance.
5
At
this juncture Buchanan seems to have envisioned a Gallo-Britannic
counter-empire that would underwrite political societies and make pos-
sible civic lifeand that, at least conceivably, just might enable a
world of religious toleration.
George Buchanan (15061582) was one of the most radical thinkers
of the sixteenth century and also one of the centurys most determined
critics of empire. By 1550 he had become convinced that these great
empires were incompatible with civic life, and that civic life, the highest
form of association, was prerequisite to realizing humanitys potential
and purpose. Only as a citizenas one who participated in political
decision-taking by making moral judgments that at once determined the
public good and defined his personhoodcould any individual hope to
achieve virtue and, crucially, become civilized. The monstrous congeries
emanating from Madrid and Lisbon, far from achieving mankinds des-
tiny, had in fact foreclosed what it meant to be human. The high points
in history were the republics of classical antiquity and of quattrocento
and cinquecento Italy (Italian liberty, indeed). For Buchanan the
founders and defenders of republics were historys great men; their
79 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
subverters and enemies, its greatest villains. The legendary Codrus (who
sacrificed himself to establish the Athenian republic) found his antitype
in Sulla and Caesar. To strike down Caesar was to be a true citizen:
Such great virtue . . . was deep-seated in the heroic soul of Brutus, /
When the pious daggers were given him on behalf of his country.
6
For
Buchanan spirituality was civil, piety derived from classical pietas, and
salvation was integral to public life. He held Xerxes, Philip of Macedo-
nia, and Alexander the Great in utter contempt, and he poured out
venom on the Roman emperors. Empire could only be a spiritual and po-
litical catastrophe.
Buchanan developed lines of thinking that comprised a near total
rejection of every element within the Iberian ideology. As he daringly
told the Lisbon Inquisition, he had come to discount all forms of proph-
ecy. The bishop of Rome might well be a sacrilegious Judas, as he said
in the 1530s; the doctrines of Catholicism might well be hellish and in-
compatible with salvation, as he clearly believed in the 1560s. But the
apocalypse did not organize his view of history or of the current moment;
the papacy was profoundly evil, but at no point emerges as the prophe-
sied Antichrist. The prophetic never informs his extensive oeuvre, and,
unsurprisingly, Buchanans blistering rejection of popular, non-biblical
prophecy was uncompromisingly thorough-going. Merlin was an egre-
gious impostor and cunning pretender, rather than a prophet.
7
For the Iberians, crusade, conquest, global empire, the true faith, the
extirpation of perverse heresy and sodomy, and mission-infused,
pure blood, all comprised elements integrated into a single apocalyp-
tic packagethe ideology of the last age. To impugn any of these ele-
ments struck at the imperial eschatology, and, accordingly, Buchanan is
perhaps the first of many British writers to invert the Iberian blood
claims. Charles is half Moorish (semimaurus). John Knox, Andrew
Melville, Edmund Spenser, David Hume of Godscroft, among others,
subsequently turned the preoccupation with pure blood against its
advocates. Further, Buchanan insisted, Iberian settlements across the
ocean were utterly corrupt, not fulfilling some messianic mission but
leading innocent people into a shameful servitude. By resisting the
Hapsburgs, the French challenged eschatological pretension and served
mankind in almost every conceivable way.
There existed a third option, much less impressive at the time but
considerably more consequential after 1560 when the prospects and
80 APOCALYPSE THEN
persuasiveness of Gallo-Britannia precipitously evaporated. The Eng-
lish kingdomrevitalized and redefined by Thomas Cromwell,
Thomas Cranmer, and Henry Tudor in the 1530s, and then radicalized
during the brief reign of Edward Tudorpresented itself as an empire
for liberty. Although overseas settlement never surfaced, the new Eng-
land joined Christian liberty with political liberty in a powerful apoca-
lyptic vision that projected universal reform. Just as Constantine the
Great (d. 337), allegedly born in Britain and with his allegedly British
mother Helen, had overthrown Satans public kingdom and instituted
the true faith, so his heir, a latter-day British Constantine, might over-
throw Satans successor, the Antichristian papal monarchy, in the final
age of the world.
At the end of the 1540s, in the midst of a war with Scotland to
secure the dynastic union of the two realms, this vision became frac-
tured. On the one hand, the English government claimed historic feu-
dal suzerainty over Scotland, a view bolstered by medieval mythologies
and, to some extent, by medieval history. On the other, there also
emerged the prospect of a British union of equals, founded on mutual
solidarity, common reforming purposes, and a fusion of peoples. The
most influential writing promoting the latter was an Epistle Exhorta-
torie of 1548, ostensibly written by the English regent, the duke of
Somerset. Appealing to the indifferent old name of Brytaynes, the
Epistle offered realistic insight into contemporary politics, as well as
genuinely powerful flights of rhetoric: we offer equalitie & amitie, we
ouercome in war, and offer peace, wee wynne holdes, and offer no
conquest, we gette in your lande and offre Englande. The more egali-
tarian vision and the literature promoting it were no doubt shaped by
emigre Scottish Protestants who passionately sought the creation of a
radical, reforming Britain, one that might provide the model for man-
kind in the final era of the world.
8
Like its competitors, the new Britain would also be imperial because
it embodied multiple monarchiesand, more than that, multiple
monarchies integrated into a new identity. Certainly it was no less apoc-
alyptic in its aspirations, no less global in its horizon. Somersets Epis-
tle, the centerpiece of this unionist literature, addressed a European
audience through Johannes Sleidanuss Latin translation. Even Charles
V read it and, hardly a surprise, found it distinctly displeasing. It also
appeared almost immediately in German. The Epistle subsequently
81 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
informed virtually all Scottish writing on the subject of Anglo-Scottish
unionfrom John Knox in 1558 to Thomas Craig, Robert Pont, and
John Russell in the wake of the 1603 regnal union. It did not matter
whether they revered Constantine or repudiated him.
A WORLD REDEEMED, A WORLD WITHOUT EMPIRE
Whatever the ambiguities and contradictions within French aspira-
tions or whatever the discrepancies within Englands British vision,
neither Henry Tudor nor Henry of Valois and their sickly sons proved
capable of a sustained alternative to the Hapsburgs. Hapsburg domina-
tion in England during the disastrous reign of bloody Mary Tudor
(15531558) and even the less repressive experience of French domi-
nation in Scotland during that same decade indicated that empire
meant annihilation, not liberation. John Knox declared that God
hath not created the earth to satisfy the ambition of two or three
tyrants, but for the universal seed of Adam; and hath appointed and
defined the bounds of their habitation to diverse nations, assigning
diverse countries. The Spaniards might see themselves as the elected
successors to the Jews, but the Hapsburg policy of growth through
happy marriage ran directly counter to the Hebrew experience and
to the principles of the Old Testament.
9
Such circumstances might have urged a renewal of the egalitarian
version of Edwardian Britainthey certainly did for Knoxbut events
worked in very different directions. That extraordinary decade 1558
1568 saw the Reformation unleash a revolutionary upheaval that chal-
lenged authority throughout the region: authority became destabilized
in England, twice overthrown in Scotland, radically contested in
France, and violently rejected in the low countries. Moreover, the for-
tuitous emergence of female rulers with problematic claims to the
throne further heightened the volatility of the moment. During these
years direct action became all but inescapable, and legitimacy needed
to be imagined anew, indeed to become self-generated. In such a con-
text, classical political thought and the civic vocabularies, so promoted
by Buchanan, acquired an urgency that would have been unthinkable
in earlier decades. Appeals to fellow countrymen, to the common
good, and, literally, to the respublicamore than custom or tradi-
tionbecame insistent and frequent. By 1562 Chancellor de lHopital
82 APOCALYPSE THEN
had ceased to speak of France guiding the totum orbem, and instead
appealed to the cives and the citoyen. In the 1570s the French had
begun to construct a new vocabulary, one that enjoined the duties of
bon patriottes et concitoyensterms and concepts that soon thereafter
entered English.
10
For Buchanan, Scotland now appeared an autono-
mous commonwealth, led by selfless aristocrats pursuing the public
good, and where, ideally, citizens imposed law on themselves. In such
a commonwealth, as Buchanan declared in verses written for the new-
born James in 1566, the king would be a far more modest figure than
the great emperors both past and present. But, as a self-ruled model
for citizens, he would also be a more worthy and significant one. The
virtuous Scottish republic, unlike its grotesque Iberian antitypes, had
no place for empire, however imagined, and could only become cor-
rupted by it.
Anti-imperialism did not foreclose global activism. Exactly during
these years, Buchanan continued to be directly and passionately
involved in both the French and English reformations. So too were
such close intellectual associates as Andrew Melville and Philip Sid-
ney. These early modern patriots were consistently internationalists,
reformers in a great common cause at once religious and political, that
ran everywhere within the regionand extended from there to all
Europe and throughout the globe. Rarely did patriots become apolo-
gists for their home government, and normally they were at odds with
it. Their civic world pointed to confederation and the most intimate
collaboration in the struggle against the Hapsburgs and their papal
ally. That global struggle, truly a world war, might in fact require colo-
nies both at home and abroad. But such plantations needed to be
conceived and structured in ways compatible with civic humanist
ideals. Humanist attitudes invited autonomous or semi-autonomous
communities, and made their founders latter-day law-givers. Liberty
was a term integral to its vocabulary, and the overseas enterprises of
the English, the French, and especially the Dutch were seen continu-
ally as being allied with the Amerindians and as seeking to achieve
their liberation from the Iberian conquests. Liberation did not arise
merely from strategic considerations; nor was it cynical posturing, as
required by todays post-colonial historiography. It arose from deeply
held intellectual commitments, no less sincere than naive. In the most
strenuous terms, Spains enemies could not possibly be conquistadors,
83 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
but just the reverse. With few exceptions, they did not adopt the
Spanish model but sought to overturn it.
During the later decades of the sixteenth century, the English, the
Scots, the French, and the Dutch overwhelmingly and emphatically
rejected the Last World Empire. So, too, did those among them who
undertook to plant colonies. And yet a palpable change had taken
place. Quite unlike Buchanan, they overwhelmingly and emphatically
did not reject prophecy and the apocalypse. Their entire undertaking,
like their homeland, like their allies abroad, was cast within a vision
of struggle against the Antichrist. They countered the soteriology of
universal empire and its claims to election every bit as much as its po-
litical and cultural assumptions. Their eschatology offered neither an
alternative Last World Empire, nor an anti-apocalypse, but an alto-
gether new apocalyptic program.
The Netherlands life-and-death struggle against the Hapsburgs was
understood, naturally enough, within the framework of the Protestant
apocalyptic vision. Writers such as Willem Usselincx saw overseas col-
onization within such terms, and the Dutch estates seriously consid-
ered the prophetic interpretations of Joan Aventroot before launching
their bold western venture to Brazil in the late 1620s. Both Elizabeth I
and her successor, James VI and I, were greatly influenced by Refor-
mation apocalyptic, especially James who wrote extensively on the
subject. Yet both of them were also highly defensive and traditional,
and hoped to reach an accommodation with the great super-state.
When Philip IIs messianic agenda made that impossible, Elizabeth
reluctantly entered upon a global war. Much of the politics, literature,
religious reflection of the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuriesin
Britain and throughout Europeconcerned just this struggle against
Universal Monarchy.
As with the Dutch, British colonial projects do not comprise com-
petition for world empire but efforts to forestall such empire, a kind of
anti-empire. Such was the case whether plantations were established
in Ireland (to consolidate the British kingdoms), placed about the Bal-
tic (to promote reformation ideals), or confronted the Iberians directly
through transoceanic settlements. During the Elizabethan period the
poet, planter, and political commentator Edmund Spenser viewed the
Munster plantations in Ireland less as the conquest of that island than
as part of the global struggle against Spain. His writing is intensely
84 APOCALYPSE THEN
apocalyptic and patriotic. Anticipating Francis Bacon, he saw the dis-
coveries in the New World specifically through Daniels prophecy
about the increase of knowledge from human travel during the last
age of the world. Book II of the Faerie Queenethe Legend of Sir
Guyon, or of Temperancedraws on Peter Martyrs account of the
New World to create in Sir Guyon an anti-conquistador, whose story
promotes the values of humanity and moderation against conquest,
universal empire, and Non Sufficit Orbis. Even in the darkening days of
the 1590s, Spensers A View of the Present State of Ireland provides
not a blueprint for violence, but, we now know, a remarkable proto-
sociology of modernization that displays unexpected sympathy for the
Gaelic Irish and an inclusive perspective. Like Buchanan forty years
earlier, like Knox and Melville, Spenser inverts the Spanish preoccu-
pation with blood. But he does more and goes on to reject the Iberian
idea of race itself.
11
Like much contemporaneous literature, the Faerie
Queene sought to imagine a coherent British response to the threat
from imperialism, not to promote imperialism. For here was a desper-
ate struggle, unquestionably the most dangerous war to confront the
British Isles between the Norman conquest and 1939. In the end
Spenser emerges as an opponent of empire rather than its apologist.
Philip Sidneys projected trans-Atlantic settlements, as described in
the early seventeenth century by his friend Fulke Greville, fit this pat-
tern. Sidney, a wakeful patriot, Greville tells us, reflected on the
possible strategies for the global war against Spainthis devouring
Sultanand concluded that the most effective one would be an
attack on the Spanish possessions in the New World that would dis-
rupt the flow of its treasure. English forces should focus on America,
vulnerable to an attack, rather than being concentrated in an offen-
sive in the Netherlands. The landing in America would not simply
involve search, seize, and destroy, but the plantation of a colony in
some convenient havenpossibly Puerto Rico. Sidney manifestly did
not intend to found an alternate Protestant empire in the New World.
He consistently speaks of forming a generall league among free prin-
ces. At one point he envisioned a joint expedition with the Nether-
lands. Further, hee contrived this new intended Plantation . . . as an
Emporium for the confluence of all nations that love or profess any
kinde of vertue or commerce. Predictably he looks to an alliance with
the Amerindians. The American undertaking, and perhaps much of
85 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
the point of the war with Spain, was to lead Europe and the world
into a well balanced treaty of universal peace, restore and keep the
world within her old equilibrium or bounds. This is the language of
Knox and Buchanan. He repeatedly warns that England not over-
extend herself as happened in France during the late Middle Ages: I
say, even when in the pride of our conquests, we strove to gripe more
than was possible for us to hold: as appears by our being forced to
come away and leave our ancestors bloud and bones behind for monu-
ments not of enjoying, but of over-griping & expulsion. He is quick
to dismiss these wind-blown conquests of ours that have happily
been scattered. The English expulsion from France had proven
happy in large part because the rise of French authoritarianism
would have corrupted England, turning English moderate wealth
among social ranks into the nasty poverty of the French peasants,
bringing home mandates instead of laws, impositions instead of parlia-
mentary freedoms. The Protestant agenda in France extended from the
reformed religion to restoring constitutional institutions in that once
wel-formed monarchy. The issue in Europe and throughout the world
was implementing boundaries to authority, limitations to power, and,
implicitly, public participation.
12
Buchanan, Spenser, and Sidney shared an emphatically British ori-
entation and participated more broadly in what we might call a North
Sea-English Channel oikumene, defined by a civic, reforming outlook,
one informed, for most, by the Protestant apocalyptic framework. Yet
within this group highly articulated impetus for a reformed British
state surfaced in the 1590s from the Scottish northoutstandingly,
with Buchanans successor as court poet, the Presbyterian minister
Andrew Melville (15451622). Melville embraced Buchanans theories
of resistance, endorsed his civic ideals, stressed his values of Stoic self-
restraint. He adopted Buchanans ideas, but he also did more: he
endowed them with apocalyptic and signally British significance.
At some point early in the 1590s Melville undertook a Scottish
national epic. Drawing on Scotlands medieval origin myths, Melville
imagined the world contested between two competing fountains,
two competing spirits, arising from two sons sprung from a Gaelic
Abraham. The Western counterparts to Isaac and Ishmael, the first
wins praise for his modesty, seeking to preserve his fathers laws and
the practice of shared governance. He does not conquer nations, but,
86 APOCALYPSE THEN
Melville intimates, provides a model for nations. In contrast the latter
is ruthlessly aggressive and bloodthirsty, striving to extend his fame
and his fathers kingdom by whatever force, by whatever power.
Thirsting for gold and hungrier than Orcus, he seizes all things by
waging unbridled war. He slaughters great numbers of people and
overturns kingdoms. The first spirit will find its fruition in the emerg-
ing British kingdom, the latter in the enormous Spanish empire.
13
Herein lay the stark choice facing mankind in what was the final act
in the epic drama of human experience: satanic empire or a world
without empire altogether.
Instead of empire, there would emerge a confederated world of
free societies. Throughout the first half of the seventeenth century
confederal anti-imperialism shaped politics across the Protestant world,
literally from Transylvania to New England. Anti-imperial leagues saw
the struggle in no less apocalyptic terms than did their Fifth Monarchy
enemies. Melville addressed the matter in verses celebrating the birth
of King Jamess heir, Prince Henry, in 1594. The prince would succeed
with his father to the southern crown and unite the two realms into
a single body of Scoto-Britannic People. The new Britain that
resulted would lead the world against the Antichrist and empire. For
Melville, Napier of Merchiston, and virtually all Presbyterian intellec-
tuals, the papacy and the Hapsburgs, the proud crown of the twinned
Hesperia, were the direct political and spiritual heirs of the pagan
Roman Empirea view strongly corroborated by contemporaneous
papal iconography. What had grown for so long could be swept away
in one short hour. For now rust blunts the edge of the sword
Aeneas wielded. Prince Henry, Melville hoped, would one day rejoice
at having buried the insolent spirit of empire in its tomb.
14
There is every indication that the young prince completely
accepted the vision Melville mapped out at his birth, and after 1603
his short-lived court promoted an outlook and policies increasingly at
odds with that of his conservative and timid father. Attracting Hugh
Broughton, Andrew Willet, and other leading Anglophone interpreters
of biblical prophecy, the court was suffused with apocalyptic expecta-
tion. It was said that the prince cherished the true prophets, and
there is no doubt that he genuinely enjoyed sermons and listened
attentively. The implications were far-reaching. Broughton and Willet
were leading philo-Semites, their thinking inaugurating a tradition
87 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
that culminated in the 1655 Whitehall conference and the readmis-
sion of the Jews into England. In contrast, James during these years
launched a mini-expulsion, commanding the earl of Suffolk to ferret
out Jews living secretly in the realmwhich made the ablest of them
to fly out of England.
15
In addition, Willet (among others) took an
uncharacteristically positive view of Anglo-Scottish union, and
described the two realms going up to Jerusalem together as louing sis-
ters and fellow tribes.
16
There can be little doubt that Henrys court was developing the
prospect of a union far more profound and egalitarian (and potentially
radical) than anything his father could have comfortably contem-
plated. Looking back to the apocalyptic radicalism at the end of
1540s, a new Henrician union projected common purposes and a com-
mon destiny that reached deeply into the hopes of wide populations in
both realms. Henry was by far the most popular Stuart prince of the
seventeenth century. Unlike his father, the prince looked to a trans-
formed future rather than a world merely stabilized within traditional
and hierarchic terms. Central to Henrys vision was confrontation with
the Hapsburgs, both on the continent and also globally: notably, a
blockade of Spain combined with an attack on the West Indies.
17
The
underlying spiritual dimension cannot be doubted, and, unsurprisingly,
in 1618, six years after the princes death, the apocalyptic exegete
Willet would be jailed for anti-Spanish writing.
If apocalyptic expectations became increasingly marginalized in the
thinking of King James, these lines of thought were far from absent at
his court. It has been recognized only occasionally that Francis Bacons
program for science inherently mandated European expansion, indeed
the conquest of the globe, and that both the new discoveries and the
new science realized apocalyptic prophecy. At its heart science was
soteriological and eschatological. Science meant salvation, for its
advancement did nothing less than work the historical redemption. It
is a restitution and reinvesting (in great part) of men to the sover-
eignty and power . . . which he had in his first state of creation.
Bacons words on the matter are frequent and clear. These were the
latter times of which Daniel had spoken, when he prophesied that
many shall pass to and fro and science shall be increased
(Dan. 12:4). The opening of the world by navigation and commerce
and the further discovery of knowledge came together in the same
88 APOCALYPSE THEN
final age.
18
Bacons famous frontispiece to The Great Instauration
(1620) adopted and transvalued Charles Vs columnar image whose
motto now became Daniels prophecy (Figure 3.4).
Bacons expectations translated into his advocating aggressive prose-
cution of the war with Spain in the 1590s and his opposing the peace
sought by Robert Cecil and James. In the 1620s, and now out of public
office, Bacon again urged war with Spain. Yet defeating the Spanish
Empire did not imply a translatio imperii. He never seems to have con-
templated a new British order, and his well-known comment in On
Plantations implied circumspection: I like a Plantation in a Pure
Soile; that is, where People are not Displanted, to the end, to plant in
Others. For else, it is rather an Extirpation, then a Plantation.
19
Bacon
is manifestly an imperialist, but not a British imperialist.
Accordingly, British colonial projects in the earlier seventeenth
century from Lithuania to the New World were suffused with apoca-
lyptic purpose. But their founders intended to obstruct world mon-
archy, not to realize it, while the settlements themselves were
conceived as quasi-autonomous, humanist poleis, not mere extensions
of the metropole. Few of Jamess courtiers can have reflected more on
eschatology than did Sir William Alexander who authored a massive
poem of some 11,000 lines describing in detail the events that would
occur at the Last Judgment. Probably no one promoted colonies in
America more indefatigably than did Alexander on behalf of Nova
Scotia in what is today Canada. Ultimately, colonies for Alexander do
not lead to a revived Constantinian empire at the end of days, but
comprise an alternative to itrealizing, inter alia, prophecy but with-
out bloodshed and dispossession. Robert Gordon adopted a distinctly
Baconian tone when he promoted his venture by noting that all
divinesthat is, expertsagreed that these are the latter dayes . . .
well knowne by the signes that were to come before, sett downe by
God himself in his sacred Word, and for the most part alreadie mani-
fested.
20
The popular travel writer William Lithgow went further, see-
ing both economic development and colonies as elements in the
struggle against world empireTurkish and, especially, Spanish. Philip
II had been the worlds usurper. His Hapsburg successors wished to
domineere / Ore all the universe. Who or what might this mon-
sters monarchy confyne: / For if he could, he would himselfe invest, /
From pole to pole, and so from East to West. Supported by the
89 The Last World Empire and Its Competitors
Figure 3.4 In the frontispiece to the Great Instauration (1620), Francis
Bacon famously appropriates and transvalues Hapsburg iconography of the
previous century. The conquest of the globe is a central and integral feature
to the program for science and thus human redemption. All of these events
embody the fulfillment of prophecy and culminate the apocalyptic narra-
tiveas the motto from Daniel 12.4 indicates: Multi pertransibunt & auge-
bitur scientia (Many will pass to and fro [in the latter days] and knowledge
will increase). Yet no final empire, Hispanic or otherwise, assumes these mo-
mentous responsibilities. The multi Bacon has in mind may be not simply
many people, but many peoples as well, and the scientific project will recon-
stitute the human mind empirically, without recourse to theological dispute.
Even Jewish wisdom becomes important as humankind seeks a final truth that
lies just over the horizon. Bacons text coincides with the outset of the great
religious war that would convulse Europe till mid-century.
Antichristian papacy with its unnatural clergy, Spain was the great
threat to mankind. Plantations, both at home and abroad, comprised
key parts of the alternative. Support for the colonial enterprise could
be based widely across the British religious spectrum. Although Lith-
gow later strongly supported the Scottish Revolution of 1638 and the
Covenanters, at this point he firmly identified with Laudian episco-
pacy and decried the peevish, Puritanick show.
21
Only with the mid-century revolutions and the coming of the Eng-
lish and then British republic did a centralized and coherent challenge
to the Hapsburgs finally emerge. Parliament and then successive revo-
lutionary governments between 1649 and 1660 understood themselves
emphatically within the language of Foxe and Brightman. Domesti-
cally, that entailed an altogether heightened sense of public space, the
citizen-saint, and radical social experimentation. Globally, it entailed
confrontation with Catholic and counter-revolutionary Europe. More-
over, eschatological expectations assumed plausibility and telling po-
tency because England and then Britain emerged as a world power, for
the first time since the Middle Ages, and by many standards for the
first time ever. The British republic is a spectacular success story, prob-
ably the most spectacular of the entire century. Not only did the
republic defeat all of its enemies rapidly and decisively, but also its
new capabilities and successively able leadership transformed it almost
Edmund Spenser had anticipated Bacons views (and Daniel 12:4) in his
anti-imperial poem The Faerie Queene, Book II, The Legend of Sir Guyon,
or of Temperance (1590):
And daily how through hardy enterprise,
Many great regions are discover`ed,
Which to late age were never mention`ed.
Who ever heard of th Indian Peru?
Or who in venturous vessel measur`ed
The Amazons huge river, now found true?
Or the fruitfullest Virginia, who did ever view?
Yet all these were, when no man did them know,
Yet have from wisest ages hidden been;
And later times things more unknown shall show. (Proem, ii.3iii.3)
(Courtesy of The Huntington Library, San Marino, California)