| Volume Thirty-Five | 1993 | |
THE VIOLENT attempt by the Melchiorite Anabaptists in 1534/35 to establish the "New Jerusalem" in the city of Münster represents one of the most bizarre events of the Reformation. The whole crisis is often construed as an extreme outworking of some latent tendencies within Reformation thought. Luther's widespread influence had greatly diminished the role of the priest as a mediator between the layman and God, thereby increasing the importance of the Bible and personal conscience in directing the layman's spiritual journey. The outcome of this change was that many laymen gave birth to radical interpretations of scripture -- interpretations which often carried dangerous social and political implications.1 The prophetic claims of the two principal prophets at Münster, Jan Matthys and Jan Bockelszoon van Leiden, support this view. Both men drew an enormous amount of prophetic authority from scripture and wielded it with disastrous social and political consequences.
I intend to investigate the means by which Matthys and
Bockelszoon established their prophetic authority among the citizens of
Münster. I will focus specific attention on their leadership roles during the
turbulent period of 1534 and 1535. However, the narrative given here is
also an attempt to redress some of the shortcomings of previous
interpretations of these two prophets. There has been a tendency among
scholars to employ Max Weber's categories of "charisma" and the
"routinization of charisma" in order to understand the leadership styles of
Matthys and Bockelszoon. The initial leadership of Matthys so goes the
argument -- reflected a dominant charismatic style, while Bockelszoon only
represented the routinization or bureaucratization of this charisma, which
culminated in the oppressive legalism of his messianic
reign.2
A closer examination of the actual events at Münster,
however, reveals that such Weberian distinctions are largely unjustifiable.
The classic Weberian devolution from charisma to bureaucracy does not
clearly appear in the succession from Matthys to Bockelszoon. Rather, each
prophet manifested extreme bureaucratic, even authoritarian, tendencies --
they only perhaps worsened under Bockelszoon.3
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AS RECENT scholarship points out, identifying the origins of Anabaptism is a notoriously complicated matter. Previous disputes have centered around whether Anabaptism began in Zurich with the initiation of believers' baptism in January of 1525, or in 1521 and 1522 with Luther's confrontation of the Wittenburg radicals, whom he labeled Schwärmer (enthusiasts). Recently, the disputed nature of Anabaptism's origins has led scholars, instead of trying to establish a single moment of origin, simply to accept a plurality of possible origins and to engage the complexity of Anabaptism.4 For our purposes, I only mention the spread of Anabaptism throughout Southern Germany and into the Netherlands, a process largely traceable to the fiery apocalyptic sermons of Melchior Hoffman, who independently initiated adult baptism in Strasbourg in 1530 and later, after much traveling and preaching, won a following in the Low Countries.5 It was his strand of Anabaptist faith, characterized by eschatological fervor (once encountered by Jan Matthys and later transmitted to Jan Bockelszoon van Leiden) that laid the intellectual foundations for the events at Münster.
IN 1533, Hoffman's eschatological prophecies were perceived
as a social threat by the authorities at Strasbourg (the city he originally had
prophesied as the future "New Jerusalem") and he was imprisoned despite
his refusal to employ violence to achieve his ends. After his imprisonment,
his ideas began to assume an aggressive life of their own in the
Netherlands. Soon after hearing of Hoffman's fate, the Haarlem baker Jan
Matthys, in the presence of the Low Country Melchiorites, professed to be
driven by the Spirit, and he told how God had revealed to him that he was
Enoch, the second witness of the apocalypse (Hoffman had claimed to be
the first witness, Elijah). This caused considerable confusion among the
Melchiorite Anabaptists in the Low Countries who did not know how to
respond to Matthys's sudden claim of prophetic authority. When Matthys
learned of this confusion, according to the Confession of Obbe
Philips, he resorted to threats and terror; Philips writes, "he carried
on with much emotion and terrifying alarm, and with great and desperate
curses cast all into hell and to
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The initial steps toward Münster's tragic fate had been taken.
WITH THIS scant historico-intellectual backdrop bearing upon Matthys and Bockelszoon, we must now turn from our narrative in order to examine the nature of the sociological interpretations which these two prophets have received.
As mentioned before, scholars have liberally applied the
Weberian categories of "charisma" and the "routinization of charisma" to
both men in order to illuminate the means by which they established their
leadership positions and transmitted their religious ideas to their
followers.10 The concept of charisma is of central
importance in both Weber's philosophy of history and his sociology of
dominion (Herrschaftssoziologie). In his monumental fragment
Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, charisma appears in his tripartite
division of pure types of legitimate authority: the traditional, the rational-
legal, and the charismatic. Weber defined traditional authority as order
resting on "an established belief in the sanctity of immemorial traditions and
the legitimacy of the status of those exercising authority under them."
Rational or legal authority, on the other hand, he defined as "a belief in the
'legality' of patterns of normative rules and the right of those elevated to
authority under such rules to issue commands."11
Unlike charismatic authority, traditional and rational forms of authority
(also described as patriarchal and bureaucratic) share a significant
characteristic: permanence. In this respect they are both institutions of the
daily routine, providing for the recurrent and normal needs of daily life. As
Weber himself put it, "The patriarch is the 'natural leader' of the daily
routine. And in this respect,
the bureaucratic
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structure is only the counter-image of patriarchalism
transposed into rationality."12
Charisma,on the other hand, represents a radically different
form of authority that appears in periods of social distress. Unlike
traditional and rational authority, where ultimate power resides in
impersonal entities (i.e. institutions, constitutions, hereditary lines),
charismatic authority appears in the leadership characteristics of specific
individuals, or perhaps more accurately, in the dialectical interplay between
leaders and their followers. Weber writes,
Charisma shall be understood to refer to an extraordinary quality of
a person, regardless of whether this quality is actual, alleged, or
presumed. "Charismatic authority," hence, shall refer to rule over
men . . . to which the governed submit because of the belief in the
extraordinary quality of the specific person.... Charismatic rule is
not managed according to general norms, either traditional or
rational, and in this sense it is "irrational."13
This passage touches on several noteworthy aspects of charisma. First, the
leader-follower relationship is characterized by a complete personal
devotion. Second, the devotion of the followers often leads to the formation
of a charismatic community (Gemeinde) in which the followers exist in an
emotionally charged environment in which each is committed to the leader.
Third, and most importantly, there is the hint in this passage that authentic
charisma acts as a revolutionary force, disrupting social norms. Elsewhere
Weber writes,
charisma, in its most potent form, disrupts rational rule as well as
traditional altogether and overturns all notions of sanctity . . . [it]
is indeed the specifically creative revolutionary force in history....
The bearer of charisma enjoys loyalty and authority by virtue of a
mission believed to be embodied in him: his mission has not
necessarily and not always been revolutionary, but in its most
charismatic forms, it has inverted all value hierarchies and
overthrown custom, law, and tradition.14
The essence of genuine charisma is thus its revolutionary nature. Weber
documented various historical manifestations of genuine charisma in such
figures as Christ, Mohammed, Joseph Smith, Napoleon, and many others
whose personal appeal somehow revolutionized their respective social
orders.
The concept of charisma especially invites application to religious figures.
In fact, Weber derived the term from the church historian Rudolf Sohm, who in
turn borrowed the idea from St. Paul's epistles to the Corinthians, where it had
originally meant "gift of grace." In his Kirchenrecht, Sohm used
the term to
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Despite the frequent employment of charisma throughout his
oeuvre, Weber devotes more space to its routinization than to
charisma itself. Routinization refers to the means by which a charismatic
movement becomes infused with everyday social institutions. It is also a
process of the de-personalization and derevolutionization of genuine
charisma. Since charisma depends on a period of social distress in order to
flourish, its life is necessarily short-lived, because its revolutionary drive
becomes mitigated by the more resilient forces of tradition and
rationality.18 As Weber himself put it,
As domination congeals into a permanent structure, charisma
recedes as a creative force.... However, charisma remains a very
important element of the social structure, even though it is much
transformed . . . after its routinization its very quality as an
extraordinary, supernatural, and divine force makes it a suitable
source of legitimate authority for the successors of the charismatic
hero.19
Though charisma is superseded by stabilizing forces, it still remains within
the fabric of the ascending structures of tradition and/or rationality. It
serves these structures by acting as a point of reference from which they
derive legitimation.
UNTIL NOW, I have been discussing charisma and its
routinization in a broad and theoretical manner. Though Weber largely
speaks in similar terms, he also pinpoints specific historical personalities
and social situations in order to demonstrate the value of his theory,
including the example of a religious prophet.20
Weber believed that charismatic prophet inspires from the resources of his
own personality -- resources which his followers believe are somehow "in
touch" with a spiritual or extra-mundane realm which confers "a unified
view of
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Of course, the charisma of the prophet is subject to routinization. This takes place, according to Weber, after the death of the prophet when he is succeeded by a "legislator" -- one who continues the leadership role of the prophet but does so by institutionalizing or bureaucratizing the charismatic drive of the former leader. Incapable of generating the "crowd-response" like his charismatic forebear, the legislator appeals to rational and/or traditional means of authority to sustain the momentum among the followers which the prophet had inspired. The devolution in early Christianity from Christ to Paul is an oft-cited example of this process, though Weber notes many other examples. The procedure can take many forms, ranging from a simple codification of the accepted moral behavior set down by the prophet to the imposition of cruelty and force. Both forms may be seen as efforts to maintain a sense of control in the absence of the charismatic leader. Weber does not view this change in leadership styles as a radical dichotomy, but often as a fluid and inevitable transition. The death of the prophet leads to the rise of the legislator. The structure which the latter imposes represents a compensation for the loss of charisma in the former.22
SINCE WEBER, the concept of charisma has witnessed a
bewildering variety of applications, often of a contradictory nature. Because
of the perceived abuse (or perhaps, overuse) of the concept, one must
wonder whether the concept remains serviceable for sociological
investigation. Weber himself is at least partly to blame for this problem, for
he frequently left the term vague, in spite of many attempts to clarify
himself. His original opacity is compounded by the fact that such sweeping
concepts as charisma do not fit harmoniously into the multiparadigmatic
character of modern sociology. Scholars who attempt to appropriate
Weber's vocabulary often end up obfuscating his intent while producing a
revised conceptual framework of questionable value. In the final analysis,
the opacity of Weber's original formulation coupled with the diverse
character of contemporary sociology has produced a conceptual quagmire
in which, as has been repeatedly argued, terms such as charisma have
become "sponge words" easily employed for multiple and often
contradictory purposes. The question no longer is, What does charisma
mean? but, What does it mean for whom and when applied to which
circumstances? This state of conceptual anarchy has led some scholars to
argue for the elimination of its use in
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But this is an extreme position. Weber's canonical status in modern sociology has led many scholars to endeavor to rescue charisma from the entropy which its applications have generated. A principal strategy has been to subdivide the concept into categories and then to resolve the residual ambiguities with copious qualifications. Since the literature which this enterprise has generated is too massive to take account of here, I will only touch on a few developments which charisma has undergone as it specifically relates to prophecy.
Robert Tucker's study of Lenin's leadership style (1968) argues that "prophetic charisma" should be understood as the centerpiece of Weber's entire work on charisma. Tucker makes a sharp distinction between prophetic charisma and routinized charisma, and argues that the latter should be given another name, since forces of routinization are completely contradictory to charisma as he defines it. In a 1977 study, Margrit Eichler calls for a limited understanding of charisma in which she concludes that the idea of charisma is not useful for the study of social movements, but rather should be confined only to understanding the legitimacy of leadership. Guenther Roth (1975), on the other hand, argues for an expansion of the conceptual boundaries of charisma to encompass the genesis and development of a wide range of social movements. He generally speaks of groups rather than individuals as charismatic, and he calls the members of these "inspired" groups "ideological virtuosi" who espouse single minded convictions about certain absolute values.24
Even from this brief glance at attempts to clarify or improve upon Weber's idea of charisma, we can see that the concept is a bit too pliable to be practical: attempts at clarification only result in further obfuscation. I contend that charisma from a macrosociological standpoint has entered a state of severe questionability. The promise of conceptual clarity which the idea seems to offer has been lost in the manifold attempts to effect this clarity.
This is true in both a macrosociological and mircosociological context: the problematic nature of charisma seen in a purely theoretical context also appears when it is applied to specific historical settings. The Weberian treatments of leadership during the Münsterite kingdom is an apt example. The social turbulence at Münster coupled with the presence of self-proclaimed prophets makes for an appropriate setting to use Weberian concepts. However, as mentioned above, the Weberian reading applies only by excessively tampering with historical detail.
An example of such an endeavor is Otthein Rammstedt's
1966 Sekte und soziale Bewegung: Soziologische Analyse der Taüfer
in Münster (1534/1535). Rammstedt depicts Jan Matthys as a radical
charismatic leader (charismatischen
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Herrscher). The reasons for this, according to
Rammstedt, are based on the fact that Matthys claimed to be directly led by
God in his actions. He possessed the gift of exorcism and categorized
peoples imply as saintly or ungodly. His actions were sanctioned by his
pneuma and could not be controlled, criticized, or subjected to
set regulations or traditions (Ordnungen oder Traditionen), but
were dependent solely on his spontaneous revelations. Finally, the nature
of his chiliastic expectations made it possible for his followers to identify
with him.25
The death of Matthys only months after the "New Jerusalem" had gotten under way led to the leadership of Jan Bockelszoon van Leiden who, according to the Weberian scheme, fits the role of a "legislator." Rammstedt claims that Bockelszoon lacked charismatic authority and could only establish his legitimacy by authoritarian control. Unlike Matthys, whose authority radiated from charismatic appeal, Bockelszoon was forced to depend on two of Münster's leading officials, Rothmann and Knipperdolling, to help him bolster his position of leadership. Though he did prophesy, his prophecies were unsatisfactory to the Münster congregations because they lacked the spontaneous and irrational elements characteristic of Matthys's visions. Moreover, the spontaneity of Matthys's leadership style was replaced by organization, as seen in Bockelszoon's decision to end Matthys's former spontaneous group meetings and to institute a system of organized meetings.26
Rammstedt's chief argument for the institutionalization
hypothesis is based on the cruelty and terror of Bockelszoon's reign.
Violence increased when he came to power; in one case he summarily
executed someone, without definite cause, simply to inspire dread in the
people. In sum, to quote Rammstedt,
Formerly spontaneous, extraordinary events became ordinary
phenomena, became ritualized, and all that remained was fear for
one's own life. To preserve their power positions and to prevent the
disintegration of the congregation, the ruling minority regulated the
life of the Anabaptists completely.27
Rammstedt's argument has been criticized by Margrit Eichler, who argues
that the succession of the Münsterite prophets may be apprehended in a
Weberian framework only if that framework is modified. She argues that
in certain contexts, a charismatic leader may be succeeded by another
charismatic leader as in the case of Matthys and Bockelszoon. She divides
charismatic leaders into two types: prophets and saviors, and argues that
saviors (Bockelszoon) often follow prophets (Matthys). The archetypal
example she gives of this process is found in the succession from John the
Baptist to Christ, where the charisma originating in the former culminates
in the latter. In her scheme, the classical
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DURING February 1534, the power of the Anabaptists in Münster increased dramatically. On February 8, Jan Bockelszoon van Leiden and the guild leader Bernard Knipperdolling, whom Bockelszoon had befriended, ran wildly through the streets, screaming that everyone must repent of their sins.29 This ignited much emotional turbulence, especially among the women Anabaptists, who, as former nuns,had recently left the convents and fallen under the influence of Rothmann's preaching. Some began to see apocalyptic visions in the streets of such intensity that they would foam at the mouth and throw themselves upon the ground . In such a charged atmosphere, the Anabaptists made their first armed rising and took the Town Hall and market place. The Lutheran majority in the town offered little resistance, and soon the town council recognized the Anabaptists as legal citizens of Münster. Thereafter, many Lutherans fled the city and the Anabaptists grew in number and power. Messengers and manifestos were sent out urging Anabaptists in other towns to come with their families to Münster. The rest of the earth, it was announced, was to be destroyed, but Münster would be spared to become the New Jerusalem.30
Into this volatile situation Jan Matthys entered: a tall, gaunt
figure with a long black beard.31 His imposing,
physical presence allowed him to gain power
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This task of expulsion and compulsion took place several days later. On the morning of February 27, armed men, urged on by Matthys, ran through the streets yelling: "Get out you godless ones, and never come back you enemies of the Father." In bitter cold, in the midst of snow, rain and wind, droves of the "godless" (including the old and invalids, small children, and pregnant women) were chased from the town by Anabaptists who beat and laughed at them. They were forced to leave their belongings behind, their food was confiscated and they had no choice but to beg in the countryside for food and lodging. As for those who decided to remain in town, they received compulsory re-baptism in the marketplace. The entire process lasted three days.33
By eliminating the Lutherans and Catholics from the city, Matthys and his cohorts not only heightened the sense of chiliastic expectation but they also came to realize that the outside world was growing intolerant of the developments within Münster, and that they were soon to be besieged. The Catholic Bishop of the city, Franz van Waldeck, had been at work some time in recruiting mercenaries to confront the Anabaptist threat. The expulsion of the Lutherans and Catholics prompted him to accelerate his efforts.34 Soon thereafter, earthworks were erected around the town and the siege began. Many Anabaptists were surprised and confused to find themselves at war, but under the leadership of Knipperdolling they soon recovered confidence and began responding to the threat. Men, women, and children were assigned various duties. Small skirmishes took place outside the walls.35
The war atmosphere led to a veritable social revolution. Matthys seized
the opportunity to consolidate his power over the property and money of the
townspeople. He preached that it was the Father's will that all the goods of the
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This trend toward common ownership culminated in an institutionalized communism. Under the leadership of Matthys, the town preachers and council members decided that all goods should be shared in common. Matthys employed Rothmann to promulgate this new vision of society in his sermons. "Dear brothers and sisters," Rothmann proclaimed, "afterwards we shall be one people. Brothers and sisters, indeed it is completely God 's will that we bring our money, silver, and gold together. One person should have just as much as another."38 At first this order was met with considerable opposition. The people who had recently received compulsory baptism were assembled and told that unless they relinquished their money they would perish. They were then locked inside a church in a state of mortal fear for several hours. At length Matthys entered the church with a group of armed men. His victims implored him to intercede to God for them, which he did, saying that if they complied, God would allow them back in the community. Ultimately, they complied.39
Yet not everyone acceded to Matthys's authority: some defied him unto death. A blacksmith, for instance, unconvinced by Matthys's prophecies, accused him of being possessed by the devil. Matthys had him arrested and thrown in the tower.40 Later he was brought to the market place where many of the citizens were also summoned. Matthys gave a speech in which he declared that God was outraged at this man's evil actions because he had defiled an otherwise pure town. He was sentenced to death, but before execution, was stabbed repeatedly with a halberd and thrown back into the tower. Later he was placed against the town wall and Matthys himself shot him in the stomach, causing his eventual death.41 The gathered crowd was told to profit from the example of the blacksmith and they dutifully sang a hymn before dispersing.42
A final instance of the authoritarian control exercised by Matthys may be seen in his decision to regulate information. On March 15, 1534, Matthys proclaimed that all books except the Old and New Testaments (which were deemed solely sufficient for conducting a holy life) were to be brought to the cathedral-square where they were burned to ashes.43 This anti-intellectualist act represents a complete break with the past, and it allowed Matthys to gain a complete monopoly in the interpretation of Scripture.44
On Easter Sunday of 1534, Matthys received what he believed
to be a divine command to make a sortie against the besiegers of the city
with only a few men
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The death of Matthys allowed for his disciple Jan Bockelszoon van Leiden to assume leadership. Under Bockelszoon, the previously- established authoritarian measures of Matthys continued, reaching a crescendo in his decision to anoint himself king. The kingdom which he set up is legendary in German history, so here I will touch upon only its most salient features.
Bockelszoon began his messianic reign by running naked
through the streets of Münster in a wild religious frenzy; he then fell into
a silent ecstasy for three days. When his power of speech returned, he
announced that God had told him to restructure the town government
immediately, which he did by appointing twelve men whom he called the
Elders or the Judges of the Tribes of Israel (Ältesten der Stämme
Israels) who were placed in charge of all the public, private, spiritual,
and worldly affairs of the citizens of Münster the
"Israelites."47 The twelve published a new code
of moral law 48 which provided for strict military
organization and a tighter communism of goods. Some workers, for instance, previously
employed for money, were forced to continue in their trades without pay,
simply as servants of the community.49 The code also
had a very rigid stance on sins committed after (re-)baptism, and all
citizens were subjected to demanding laws:
If we are God's sons and have been baptized in Christ then all evil
must disappear from among us.... Every one is under the
authorities, who have power over all. Because there is no authority
outside of God.... If you do evil, fear the authorities. They wield
the sword not in vain; they are God's servants, the avengers to
punish the evildoer.50
Sins punishable by death included blasphemy, seditious language, scolding
one's parents, adultery, lewd conduct, backbiting, spreading scandal, and
even complaining!51
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Bockleszoon's most controversial innovation was polygamy. It was introduced at least partly to emulate the Old Testament patriarchs 52 and also (perhaps) to compensate for the rapid attrition of male citizens due to their military efforts.53 Bockelszoon established polygamy on his own authority by announcing that all who resisted it would be considered reprobates and therefore in danger of execution. Persons of marriageable age were ordered to marry; unmarried women had to accept the first man to ask them. This often led to disorder in the competition to see who could acquire the most wives, and thus this latter regulation was ultimately rescinded.54 Bockelszoon himself, beside remarrying Matthys's widow Divara,ultimately accumulated 15 wives.55 Bernard Rothmann received second place with nine.56
It was not as an ordinary king that Bockelszoon established himself, but as the Messiah of the Last Days. One day a goldsmith declared that the Heavenly Father had revealed to him that Bockelszoon was to be king of the whole world, holding dominion over all kings, princes, and great ones of the earth. He was to inherit the scepter and throne of his forefather David and was to keep them until God should reclaim the kingdom from him. Bockelszoon accepted this man's prophecy and soon enlisted the town preachers to deliver one sermon after another, explaining that the Messiah foretold by the prophets in the Old Testament was indeed none other than Jan van Leiden Bockleszoon.57 Bockelszoon himself called a town meeting in which he gave a speech to proclaim his new identity, "Now God has chosen me to be king over the entire world. What I do, I must do, because God has ordained me. Dear brothers and sisters, let us now give thanks to God."58 After the sermon, Bockelszoon led the crowd in singing a psalm, and then everyone returned to their homes.59
Bockelszoon did everything possible to represent tangibly the importance of his new position. While the siege continued outside the city, the streets and the gates within were given new names. Sundays and feast days were abolished and the days of the week were renamed on an alphabetical system. Even the names of infants were decided upon by the king according to a special system. Gold and silver coins were minted with inscriptions that emphasized Bockelszoon's unique role: "One King Over All."60 A special emblem was devised to symbolize Bockelszoon's absolute claim to spiritual and temporal dominion: a globe, representing the world, pierced by two swords and surmounted by a cross inscribed with the words: "One king of righteousness over all ." The king himself wore this emblem modeled in gold as a necklace, his attendants wore it as a badge on their sleeves, and it was accepted in Münster as the official emblem of the state.61
Bockelszoon set up a throne in the marketplace. Draped with
cloth and gold,
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Though the king indulged in a life of excess, he subjected his citizens to austerity. Harsh regulations of dress went into effect; for God, Bockelszoon had said, abhorred all superfluity in clothing. Every house was searched and anything that was considered surplus was confiscated. To justify the disparity between his lifestyle and that of the people, he explained that luxury was permitted him because he was completely dead to the world and the flesh.63
Finally, though Bockelszoon maintained his grip on power through prophetic outbursts and appeals to Scripture, his primary means of controlling the populace was terror and brute force. Two instances suffice to demonstrate this. The first one came in the wake of Bockelszoon's decree of polygamy when a group of citizens, led by Henry Mollenhecke, attempted to stage a coup and depose him Their efforts failed, however, and Mollenhecke, with forty-eight of his followers was brutally tortured and ultimately beheaded in a macabre process that took four days. Afterwards, two mass graves were dug in the marketplace where all the dead bodies were placed a solemn reminder of Bockelszoon's authority.64 Another example of Bockelszoon's tactics of intimidation was his decision to execute several women for their sins. One was beheaded simply for denying her husband his marital rights, another for bigamy (the practice of polygamy was solely a male prerogative), and a third for insulting one of Bockelszoon's preachers.65 Indeed, the king would tolerate no transgressions. It was thus announced that all sinners in the future would be immediately brought before the king and sentenced to death. They would be extirpated from the Chosen People their very memory would be blotted out, and they would find no mercy beyond the grave.66
WHILE Bockelszoon was busy with his power and prestige
within the city outside the city walls, the siege of Münster, spearheaded by
Bishop Franz von Waldeck, continued. By careful diplomatic action, the
Bishop had managed to involve both Catholic and Protestant rulers, as well
as imperial representatives in support of his cause. Even Philip of Hesse,
one of the staunchest supporters
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However, by April of 1535, signs of success began to appear. The elderly, women, and children began trickling out of the city due to food shortages. In order to prevent escape, four of the escapees were beheaded on April 26 by the besieging forces and their heads placed at the gate as an example of what would happen to others who tried to leave. Overall, between April 22 and June 15 at least fifteen hundred citizens attempted to escape the misery of the city. All but a few were immediately killed by the Bishop's forces.
On May 25, Heinrich Gresbeck abandoned his post at one of the gates of Münster and surrendered. His life was spared because he volunteered information which led to the final defeat of the Anabaptists. On June 24, he and Hans Eck, who had escaped with him, led the bishop's army into the.city. The final showdown had begun. In accordance with the bishop's policies of war, there was to be no mercy for the conquered except for pregnant women and priests. The gaunt, surviving Anabaptist army suddenly faced three thousand soldiers who had been waiting sixteen months for this occasion. The killing lasted for two days. According to one report of the armed Anabaptists were killed during the fighting and an additional 200 afterwards when the cellars and attics were searched. On June 27 Count Wirich von Dhaun, commander in chief of the Bishop's forces, gave orders to stop the killing. At that time, the surviving men and women were gathered at the cathedral square where they were tried, condemned, and executed. The bodies of those killed and starved to death were buried in the cathedral square by peasants recruited from the surrounding countryside. The stench was unbearable.67
Bishop Franz came personally to the city to assess the situation
and to receive his share of the booty. He claimed half of the total goods,
which included all the property of the Anabaptists, while the mercenaries
received the movable goods as payment for their services. The bishop also
took charge of the leaders of the Anabaptists (their lives had been spared
for interrogation purposes). The preacher Bernhard Rothmann probably
perished somewhere in the city, but no
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On the 20th of January 1536, Bockelszoon, Knipperdolling, and Krechting were transferred to Münster and interrogated for the final time. Once again, the examiners were particularly interested in finding out about underground international Anabaptist connections, but the answers they received yielded little valuable information. Predictably, each one tried to minimize his responsibility. The day before the executions, Bockelszoon, in the spirit of his previous recantation, was said to have admitted that he deserved to die ten times.
The next day they were brought to an elevated stage for the execution. Hot glowing coals and pincers were present for purposes of torture. The death penalty was verbally proclaimed against all three since they had sinned against "God and the government." Bockelszoon fell to his knees and prayed. The victims were strapped against wooden posts and iron rings were placed around their necks. Bockelszoon was the first to be tortured. When Knipperdolling witnessed how the hot pincers were used to burn ÔX)0*0*0*°°ÔŒBockelszoon's body, he attempted to end his life by hanging his head over the iron ring around his neck. The executioner tied his head against the post with a rope through the mouth in order to prevent his attempts. After the final act of torture, which consisted of pulling their tongues with the pincers, they were put to death by piercing their hearts with a glowing hot dagger. Their bodies were then put into large iron cages and hung on the tower of a nearby church, and the pincers were attached to a column of the city hall. This was done so that "all insurrectionists who refuse to obey proper authorities would see in this an example and warning."68
UNDERSTANDABLY, the nature of this paper -- its sharp
division into theoretical and historical sections -- presents problems as one
approaches a conclusion. My intent could be seen as an effort to set up the
theoretical only to have it "knocked
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Scholars in the past have often dealt with the events at Münster as if the entire crisis was simply one hermetic laboratory for sociological experimentation. If one avoids this error, however, and is willing to think of the chain of ideas leading up to Münster, i.e. the thought of Melchior Hoffman, the Weberian mold is perhaps illuminating. For it is Hoffman, and not Matthys, who is the prophet that most clearly manifests Weberian charismatic characteristics. The masses attracted to Hoffman's prophecies in the Low Countries and his refusal to use violence to effect his message attest to the fact that he established his authority simply by personal appeal and the content of his message. Matthys, on the other hand, represents a devolution into authoritarian measures. His use of violence, his tactics of information control, and the opposition which he received from the citizens in Münster testify to his inability to maintain a sense of authority in the basis of charisma alone. He simply drew from the charisma generated by Hoffman and sanctioned it in himself by force. Finally, if one indulges my revision, Bockelszoon represents only the extreme propulsion of authoritarian tendencies already originating with Matthys.
Yet my revisionist reading should seem self-evidently problematic, for it is the very flexibility of charisma which has made it such a troublesome concept. My revised appropriation of charisma, like similar enterprises, represents only a recasting of historical detail to endorse a shaky conceptual framework. Thus my quick dismissal of this account is an admission of the impracticality of charisma altogether. Lumping figures like Christ, Napoleon, Hoffman, Matthys, and Bockelszoon under the same terminological umbrella indeed presents many problems. As much of this paper demonstrates, the employment of such terms easily sinks into mere semantic wrangling. Historical detail becomes a pawn in an increasingly complex theoretical language game that distances itself from historical knowledge as it increases the sophistication of the conceptual tools which are supposed to promote this knowledge. In the final analysis, instead of cajoling history to serve theory, we should perhaps tame our theory in order that it may better serve history.