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  • The Apocalyptic Year 1000: Religious Expectation and Social Change, 950–1050
  • David Appleby
The Apocalyptic Year 1000: Religious Expectation and Social Change, 950–1050. Edited by Richard LandesAndrew GowDavid C. Van Meter. (New York: Oxford University Press. 2003. Pp. xvi, 360. $145.00 clothbound, ISBN 978-0-195-11191-0; $55.00 paperback, ISBN 978-0-195-16162-5.)

Although the volume stems from a 1996 conference in Boston, the first chapter is a translation of Johannes Fried’s article of 1989 on apocalyptic expectation c. 1000. Fried’s practice anticipated the underlying principle of this entire collection: discarding the “terrors/antiterrors” dichotomy, they look for more nuanced signs of apocalyptic ideas and expectations in the medieval sources. [End Page 120]

In part 1, which focuses on medieval thought, Guy Lobrichon shows that the Anonymous of York (c. 1000) made apocalyptic additions to a largely anti-apocalyptic tradition of commentaries on Revelation 20. The context and reception of Adso’s De ortu et tempore Antichristi allow Daniel Verhelst to discern “a powerful latent anxiety about the end of the world among the clergy and more educated laymen in Lotharingia and the West Frankish Kingdom” (p. 87). According to Steven R. Cartwright, the commentary on 2 Thessalonians by Thietland of Einsiedeln expresses ideas intended to ease contemporary anxiety over the coming apocalypse. Richard Newhauser argues that the avarice-apocalypse nexus in tenth-century thought reflects both the changing economy and the patristic idea that an upsurge in greed would signify the end of time just as it had once signified the end of the golden age. Umberto Eco highlights St. Augustine’s hermeneutic system as one factor that enabled Beatus of Liébana to interpret Revelation in a “neurotic” (p. 128) and non-Augustinian manner.

In part 2, which focuses on art and literature, Yves Christe notes that while Apocalypse cycles in manuscripts often depicted the end of the world and the Last Judgment, monumental images between about 1000 and the mid-twelfth century usually omitted them; intensely apocalyptic themes were too explosive for ordinary viewers. Malcolm Godden explains that references to the millennium in the homilies of Ælfric and Wulfstan must be understood against a background of speculation about time and history, and in light of the ambiguities of Old English grammar. Daniel F. Callahan suggests that widespread concern about the millennium accounts for the growing interest around 1000 in St. Michael as the archangel of the apocalypse. Regula Meyer Evitt examines anti-Judaism in an early-twelfth-century liturgical manuscript from Limoges. The Ordo prophetarum preserves the dramatic force of earlier images of Jews as threatening outsiders, while muting the apocalyptic fervor linked to anti-Judaism in early-eleventh-century Limoges. Once the millennium had passed, and after violence against southern French Jews, a return to Augustine’s calmer eschatology seemed attractive. Susan E. von Daum Tholl argues that the projection of firm Ottonian rule into eternity in deluxe illuminations was a means of asserting “the eschatological continuity” (p. 236) of the empire against the apocalyptic idea that the empire’s fall signals the end of time.

In part 3, which focuses on historiography, Landes criticizes the antiterrors consensus that developed among modern historians in response to the nineteenth-century thesis of the terrors of the year 1000. Augustine’s cautious eschatology shaped the medieval sources more than the champions of the consensus realized. However the claim is viewed that modern historians have been more Augustinian than their medieval predecessors, the discussion is so clear that it should be read before the volume’s other studies. Benjamin Arnold maintains that the measures of Otto III and Pope Sylvester II to spread Roman imperial and ecclesiastical authority just before 1000 were responses to apocalyptic expectations based on St. Paul’s (2 Thess. 2:3) reference to a “falling [End Page 121] away” just before the last day. William Prideaux-Collins surveys ideas about the apocalypse in England around the year 1000, giving attention to Byrhtferth, Wulfstan, and Ælfric. Van Meter examines the eschatological rhetoric of the letter of Richard of St. Vanne describing the otherworldly visions of a monk of St. Vaast in Arras c. 1012. The letter...

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