Page:Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 5.djvu/686

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EUROPE


612


EUROPE


gained from the Orient the best the East had to give and thus was greatly aided in its development.

A more lasting success, however, followed the at- tempts, patterned on the Crusades, to carry on wars of conversion and conquest in those territories of north- eastern Europe peopled by tribes that had lapsed from the Faith or that were still heathen; among such pagans were the Obotrites, Pomeranians, Wiltzi, Sorbs, Letts, Livonians, Finns, and Prussians. The preparatory work was done in the twelfth century by missionaries of the Premonstratensian and Cistercian Orders. They were aided with armed forces by Duke Henry the Lion of Saxony, Albert the Bear of Bran- denburg, Bolcslaw of Poland, and St. Erik IX of Sweden. From the beginning of the thirteenth cen- tury Crusailes were undertaken against Livonia, Sem- gall, a division of the present Courland, and Esthonia; the Teutonic Knights conquered Prussia after a strug- gle that lasted more than fifty years. In Lithuania


scribed elsewhere, and was facilitated by the violent procedure of the petty princes who had absolute sovereign power over their subjects. The first of the ruling princes to make the change was Albert of Brandenburg, Grand ilaster of the Teutonic Knights (1525); he was followed by the Elector John of Saxony, Philip, Landgrave of Hesse (1527), and at almost the same date by nearly all the German imperial cities. The movement soon gained the north- ern countries, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and the Baltic provinces; these all gave their adherence (1530) to the so-called Augsburg Confession, while the upper German imperial cities, Strasburg, Constance, Lindau, Memmingen, held to the Tetrapolitan Confession of the so-called Reformed Church founded by ZwingU and especially strong in Switzerland. The Reformed Church also found adherents in the Palatinate, and at the beginning of the seventeenth century in Hesse- Cassel and Brandenburg. The Anglican Church was


RELIGIOUS STATISTICS FOR THE COUNTRIES OF EUROPE

THE FIGURES BELOW ARE BASED ON CENSUS REPORTS, D.^TES OF WHICH ARE GIVEN IN PARENTHESES


Country


Catholics (including Uniat


Evangelicals: including Anglicans, Methodists,


Oriental Christians: Orthodox- Greek, Gregorian

etc.


Jews


Moham- medans


Others: Ra- tionaUsts, Without a Confession.



Eastern Churches'


Unitarians, etc.




Non-Chris- tian


Russia, Finland, and Poland. (1897)


11,326,794


6,283,679


78,713.017


5,082,342


3,560,361


320,292


Austria -Hungary, with Bosnia and








Herzegovina (1900)


35,804,263


4,227,691


4,095,723


2,158.380


548,632



Germany (1900)


20,327,913


35,231,104



586,833



17,535


France (1900)


38,100,000


662,000



100,000



100.000


Spain (19001


nbout 18,500,000


(1887) 6,654



(1887) 402



(1887) 23,330


Sweden (1890)


1,436


4,779,867



3,402



276


Norway (1900)


2.065


2,204,989



642



13,770


Great Britain and Ireland (1901)


5,310,000


35,925.000



210,000




Italy (1901)


about 30,300,000


(1880)62.000



(1880)38.000




Turkish Empire (1900)


480,000


20,000


2,480,000


90,000


3,060,000



Denmark (1900)


5,479


2,436,012



3,476



4,573


Rumania (1S99)


149.667


22,749


5,408,743


269,015


43,740


16.148


Bulgaria (1900)


40,790


4,524


3,020.840


33,717


643.253


1,149


Portugal (1900)


5.425,500


500



2,000




Greece and Crete (1900)


34,710



2,172,048


6,518


57.446


740


SerWa (1S95)


10.948


1,002


2,281,018


5,102


14,414



Switzerland (1900)


1,283.135


1,918,197



12,551




The Netheriands (1S99)


1.790.161


3,085,899


45


103,988



115,179


Belgium (1900)


6,669.000


20,000



4,000




Montenegro (1S97)


12,934



201,067



13,840



The inhabitants of the Grand Duchj'








of Luxemburg, Republic of Andorra,








Principality of Lichtenstein, Republic








of San Marino, and the Principality of








Monaco, are almost entirely CathoUcs


about 280,000








176.055,796


96,872,067


98,372,501


8, .530.368


7,941,686


612,992


Christianity did not win the victory until 136S. After this only the Turks, in the south-eastern corner of the Continent, were a cause of alarm to Christian Europe for centuries. The decline of the power of the East- ern Empire drew the Turks over the Bosporus; in 1365 they had control of Adrianople; in the course of the fourtet^nth century the Serbs, Bulgars, Macedo- nians, and the inhabitants of Thessaly became their subjects. In H53 the Turks took Constantinople, in 1401 Trcbizond, in 14S0 even Otranto in Apulia; after 1547 tiiey owned lialf of Hungary. It was not until the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that theirpos- sessions were reduced to their present boundaries, thus limiting Mohammedanism to a small part of the population of Europe.

At the beginning of modern times a great change took place in the boundaries of the European .States. The cause was that ecclesiastical movement known as the Reformation, which placed in opposition to the unity of Catholicism in Western Europe the numerous religious associations that together form Protestant- ism. The apostasy of the various countries and cities, which began soon after Luther first appeared, was brought about by the most varied causes, de-


established in 1549 in Great Britain; in 1559 the French Reformed Church adopted the "Confessio Gallicana"; in 1560 the Scotch Reformed the "Con- fessio Scottica"; from 1592 the Reformation in Scot- land adopted a Presbyterian form of government. Since 1562 the Reformation in the Netherlands has held to the "Confessio Belgiea", and the Reformed Church in Hungary since 1567, to the " Confessio Hun- garica". Soon the Counter-Reformation, called into life by the Council of Trent (1545-63) to prevent the loss of the whole of middle Europe, appeared; its suc- cess was assured by the aid of the Society of Jesus. In this way various princes and bishops who were de- sirous of doing their duty were enabled to hold their countries to the Catholic Church, as the Duke of Cleves, the Electors of Mainz and Trier, the Bishops of Augsburg, WUrzburg, Bamberg, Minister, Constance, Basle, the Abbey of Fulda, but especially the Dukes of Bavaria and the Hapsburg dynasty witiiin their Aus- trian provinces. Soon the hostility between the two ecclesiastical parties grew so bitter that a trifling inci- dent sufficed to bring on a terrible religious confhct, the Thirty Years War (1616-48). Two religious con- fessional leagues confronted each other in Germany: