FranceHistories

Peace of God: When the Church Frames Violence

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Hugh Capet: The Birth of the Capetian Dynasty (987–996) · HIGH MIDDLE AGES

At the end of the 10th century, private wars multiply: feuds between lords, local raids, violence against peasants and clerics. The monarchy, weak in resources, cannot stop everything. The Church then offers an answer: the Peace of God.


⛪ A Spiritual “Police”

The Peace of God is not a treaty between states: it is a religious and social movement. Councils condemn certain forms of violence, protect non-combatants, and threaten spiritual sanctions against those who transgress.


🤝 An Opportunity for the King

For a Capetian king with limited means, the movement is useful: he can present himself as the guarantor of Christian order and rely on the network of bishops to pacify the kingdom without a standing army.


⚖️ Limits

The Peace of God does not abolish war: it reclassifies it, channels it, and creates a norm. It is one of the elements that gradually structures the feudal order of the 11th century.


🧠 Key Takeaways

  • The Peace of God responds to local violence that the state does not control.
  • The Church becomes an actor of public order, and the monarchy makes use of it.