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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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century the cross was introduced wholesale into military usage and was<br />

applied to shields and flags. <strong>The</strong> Roman army also introduced large marching<br />

crosses to act as standards for soldiers while they served on campaign.<br />

<strong>The</strong> utilization of the cross as a military standard and marker was meant<br />

to identify the Roman army with its new god and the Romans as Christian<br />

soldiers—a tradition that was to have a long history in the West.<br />

One further development in the Christianization of the Roman army<br />

was the introduction of priests to serve as chaplains for the soldiers. In the<br />

old pagan army, officers and centurions had undertaken most of the religious<br />

leadership. But the Christian religion demanded that only those with<br />

special sacred qualifications presume to serve the holy mysteries and tend<br />

the spiritual needs of the men. However, the Roman army of the fourth and<br />

fifth centuries was composed of a heterogeneous mix of Nicene Christians,<br />

Arian Christians, and various kinds of pagans. In order to accommodate<br />

the religious needs of soldiers from these various faith traditions, the army<br />

allowed a certain degree of religious freedom to its troops. Prosper of<br />

Aquitaine reports in his chronicle that during a campaign against the Visigoths<br />

in 439, Litorius, the Roman commander, allowed the Hunnic cavalry<br />

under his command to perform their own sacred rites, including using auguries<br />

and summoning spirits. In other cases, Nicene bishops were forced<br />

to allow Arian troops serving as garrisons in their cities to support Arian<br />

clergy. Bishop Ambrose of Milan, for one, complained to Emperor Gratian<br />

that he had no control over the Arian bishops serving among the Gothic<br />

troops in his city.<br />

Early Middle Ages<br />

As they did with so many other aspects of Roman military organization,<br />

the rulers of the Romano-German successor states adopted Christian religious<br />

practices. <strong>The</strong> first surviving statement of Carolingian governmental<br />

policy treating the recruitment and service of priests and bishops to serve<br />

as military chaplains was issued in 742. <strong>The</strong> Carolingian government ordered<br />

that every unit commander in the army was to have on his staff a<br />

priest capable of hearing confessions and assigning penances. In addition,<br />

the command staff of the army was to include one or two bishops with<br />

their attendant priests who were to form the leadership cadre for the provision<br />

of pastoral care. <strong>The</strong> duties of the bishops included celebrating public<br />

masses and bringing sacred relics into the field.<br />

<strong>The</strong> soldiers in Charlemagne’s field armies relied very heavily upon<br />

government efforts to secure the support of God for their military campaigns.<br />

In addition to the personal preparations of each soldier, which frequently<br />

consisted of confession and communion, the army as a whole benefited<br />

from a systematic program of public prayers, fasts, almsgiving, and<br />

450 Religion and Spiritual Development: Ancient Mediterranean and Medieval West

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