Название | Living Letters of the Law |
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Автор произведения | Jeremy Cohen |
Жанр | История |
Серия | |
Издательство | История |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9780520922914 |
As the Chronicon records the reigns of Eastern and Western monarchs in succession, it highlights their victories over Jews, heretics, and Byzantine invaders of the West, those who evidently impede the realization of a properly ordered Christendom. Presumably, when these problems have been overcome, the sixth age will give way to the seventh. History will culminate in a final age of glory.
When will this final redemption occur? During Sisebut's reign, when Isidore first wrote the Chronicon, he reported the king's conversion of the Jews and at once reflected that “the time remaining in the sixth age is known to God alone.”64 Isidore's chronicle thus concludes, it would seem, on a note of uncertainty. Yet the movement of the sixth age of history from the pax romana to Catholic Visigothic kingship, and from the incarnation—entailing “the cessation of the kingship and priesthood of the Jews [cessante regno ac sacerdotio Iudaeo- rwra]”—to the conversion of Iberian Jewry, is suggestive.65 Marc Reydellet has elaborated: “Isidore lives in a world where all disparities seem to be conclusively reconciled: The Jews become Christians; all of Spain is reorganized around [the Visigothic capital of] Toledo. One does not mean to state that Isidore displayed a blind optimism—but simply that the great conflict of good and evil is played out within each individual. Yet in the order of collective history, the plan of God can seem to be on a course of total and definitive realization.”66 The conversion of the Jews at the end of the sixth age heralded that realization; and, Reydellet thus has concluded, Isidore's universal chronicle “was, in the history of its genre, the only one which had a conclusion.”67
The concerns and structure of Isidore's other major historiographical treatise, the Historia Gothorum, echo this sense of the Chronicon. In its first version, it too dates from the reign of Sisebut, and it too served as “a declaration of independence on the part of Visigothic Spain and an affirmation of its worth against the ancient [Roman] mistress of the Mediterranean world.”68 But if the Chrorticon legitimizes Visigothic kingship in a blending of Romanitas and Christianitas that followed upon the incarnation, the history of the Goths roots its patriotic vision in the glories of Spain and the Christian character of the Visigothic kingdom it spawned: “Of all lands from the West to India, you, Spain, holy and ever-fruitful mother of princes and of nations [principum gentiumque mater] are the most beautiful. You now are justly queen of all provinces, from whom not only the West but also the East receives its light. You are the splendor and jewel of the world, a very distinguished part of the earth, in which the glorious fertility of the Getic people takes much pleasure and flourishes greatly.”69 The panegyric of Isidore's well-known Laus Spaniae continues, but its ramifications for Isidore are already clear: Spain, mother of kings, is uniquely suited to the fulfillment of Christian historical-political aspirations. A geographical, spatial entity, Spain has nurtured the foremost Christian monarchy, much as the temporal progression of universal Chronicon's sixth age culminates in the Visigothic kingdom. For the Chronicori's emphasis on the incarnation, effecting the Christianization of human history through God's participation in it, the Historia Gothorum substitutes the conversion of Visigothic Spain and her rulers—to justify her claims to Rome's erstwhile primacy and her opposition to Byzantine imperialism. Not so much the historical Jesus of the Chronicon but Christ the king accords divine sanction to the Catholic rulers of the Historia Gothorum; his values pervade the totality of the Visigothic church—monarch and prelates, clergy and laity together—and render it the genuine kingdom of Christ (regnum Christi), the defense of the members of Christ (tuitio membrorum Christi).70
The earliest version of the Historia Gothorum reaches a natural conclusion in the career of King Sisebut:
At the beginning of his reign, leading the Jews to the Christian faith, he was zealous indeed, but not wisely so; for he compelled with force those whom one was supposed to bring to the faith with reason. But, as it is written, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed. He was, moreover, refined in his eloquence, learned in his thought, and educated, to an extent, in the sciences.
He was also renowned for his military accomplishments and victories…. Twice, in person, did he successfully defeat the Byzantines, and he conquered some of their cities for himself. He was so merciful following his victory, that he freed for ransom many from the opposing army who had been taken captive and led into slavery, and the price of the redemption of the captives became his treasure.71
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