In the
foregoing pages we have seen Florence poor and dependant but gradually shaking
off all foreign influence and asserting her individual freedom; we have beheld
her small domain almost insensibly spread into a respectable state; and while
perpetual fever rioted within we have witnessed a rapid extension of outward
authority, until she was able from fear or friendship to unite in her cause all
the warlike resources of Tuscany. We have seen that this was achieved for the
most part by a self-governed nation of shop-keepers in its strictest sense, and
under an executive power formed generally from the same materials; and although
it is not from official titles that the excellence of any government can be
estimated, we must join with Sismondi in acknowledging that there is something
noble in the choice of those by which the Florentine ministers were designated.
The names of justice, goodness, and national industry, were all invoked to
assist public administration, and the commonwealth was ruled by a College of
Good-men, the Priors of Arts and the Gonfalonier of Justice. Such was the
government of ancient Florence; and if the disaster of Monteaperto sprang from
the same source it was through diplomatic deception, and individual
presumption, an error arising more from obstinacy, mortified pride, and the insatiate
love of glory than any deliberate judgment of the nation: but the same people
who had so ably conducted their foreign affairs were no less attentive to the
progress of domestic improvement, of commerce, and civilisation, a slight
account of which will be attempted in the present chapter.
The public
architecture of Florence probably commenced about the year 1078 along with the
second circuit of walls and the general erection of those lofty towers which
serving as strongholds for the noble and opulent gave a fiercer and more
decided character to civil war: at these early periods much timber was used in
the construction of private dwellings and therefore by tumults or accident the
town suffered from frequent and extensive conflagrations. By these visitations
nearly all the city had perished in successive portions and was more solidly
reconstructed, each fire abating on ancient nuisance; confined and numerous
dwellings were huddled together in the centre of the town amongst markets and
stalls and storehouses, and choked by a dense population which was crowded into
a set of small chambers separated by wooden partitions and timbered floors.
The frequency
of civil conflicts, the slackness of neighbourly assistance, and even the very
execution of justice, multiplied the chances of such misfortunes, nor was it
until the year 1116 that any preventive laws or regulations were applied. The
bridges of Florence seem to have been the first architectural results of
increasing commerce and refinement, but long before this the architect Buono
who was probably a Florentine, assisted in the revival of a better taste of
which an example may be seen in the tower of Saint Mark at Venice: afterwards
came Fuccio who built the church of St. Maria sopr’ Arno and the more celebrated Castel dell’ Uovo at Naples; he was cotemporary with Lapo who advised
and superintended the paving of Florence. The streets had in most parts been
previously laid with brick for which small stones were now substituted and
afterwards rectangular flags, the present polygonal form being of a much more
recent date and like its prototypes the so-called Cyclopean walls, was most
likely adopted to economise time, labour, and material. It is doubted whether
Lapo was a German or a Florentine but probably the son of Cambio da Colle in
Vai d’Elsa; he however resided at Florence and built
the church of San Salvatore del Vescovado: his son
and scholar or fellow-student Amolpho far exceeded
him in celebrity and has left still existing marks of his architectural genius
in the present walls, the Palazzo Vecchio, the vast fabric of Santa Croce and
the more finished and magnificent cathedral. About the same period lived the
two lay brothers of Saint Domenic; Sisto and Ristoro;
who commenced the church of Santa Maria Novella which Michael Angelo used to
call his “Sposa”; but it was completed by Giovanni da Campi a third brother of
the same order. Another great and justly celebrated building of this age was
the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova erected at the expense of Falco Portinari a
benevolent Florentine he father of Dante’s Beatrice: it was an act of beneficence
that the frugal manners of his country enabled him to perform; for except on
rare occasions, little expense was lavished on anything but horses, arms, and
war. Hospitals which, besides the present meaning of the name, were in those
days places of general hospitality, so abounded in town and country during the
middle ages that it appears as if the whole social state were then divided into
pilgrims, invalids, and hospital establishments There was scarcely a single
rich convent or other ecclesiastical society that had not something of the sort
administered almost exclusively by the clergy, and after the fall of Rome
supported by large and frequent acts of individual piety and beneficence: the
religious and charitable impulses sprang from their usual source, strengthened
perhaps by the unhappy condition of the times; but hospitality became
absolutely necessary in an age when war or religion had set half the world in
pilgrimage to Rome, Compostella, Palestine, or to some other of the various shrines
that then attracted reverence from superstition. The general insecurity was
such that, except in towns, there were few inns, so that the rich usually
lodged with their friends while the poor sought shelter in hospitals, which
were commonly found in the wildest and most dangerous parts of the country, at
the fords of rapid rivers and the roughest passes of the mountains. The
hospital of La Scala at Siena founded in 898, is one of the first of these
establishments although some were existing at a much earlier date, and a
society of Augustine monks, (the order generally deputed for such services)
appointed as a college to take the management of similar institutions in
foreign states: hence in 1316, the branch establishment of La Scala was erected
at Florence and endowed by the republic. The Misericordia, another institution
springing from die same benevolent feelings is also due to the Florentines of this
epoch: founded in 1244, this society had for its object the alleviation of
human misery in its most helpless form; by night or day, in every season, in
storm or sunshine, mingling indiscriminately with common sickness and the most
consuming pestilence; the members of this body formed then as now of all ranks,
from the sovereign downwards; were found to visit the sick and hurt and carry
them to their own house or to the hospital; to save disconsolate survivors the
distressing office of funerals; to bear the poor and abandoned dead, to their
tombs; and perform all those painful duties which humanity dictates and man
most wants when he is himself least able to perform them. This association
soon became rich but never idle, yet was suppressed in 1425, to the great
regret of the people, and continued dormant for half a century.
Its memory was
cherished notwithstanding, and we are told of a citizen who having stumbled on
a dead body in the street immediately took it over his shoulders to the public
palace and throwing it down before the priors reproached them for the folly of
abolishing the Misericordia and then departed leaving the corpse in the
council-chamber. This hint, the indication of both weakness and license, would
appear to have answered its intent for the Misericordia was almost immediately
restored to the wishes of a people who amidst all their own turbulence and the
ferocious character of the age seem to have nourished much of the kindlier
feelings of nature; and there must have been periods of soft reaction when
natural gentleness, religion, and even its mask, superstition, asserted their
authority and corrected if they did not balance the stormy temper of the time.
Years of misery
and the rough contact of barbarian nations had in fact shaken ancient Italian
luxury into primitive rudeness while southern manners reacted on and softened
the northern conquerors: Malespini’s and Villani’s accounts of Florentine
customs in the thirteenth century are almost the only regular notice we have on
this subject; but amongst the old poems and private chronicles a few
particulars may be collected, and more detailed accounts are extant of the
customs of other Italian states which reflect considerable light on those of
Florence. From the notion that a mercantile nation should supply the wants of
strangers without sharing that luxury it creates, an extreme frugality of
manners and simplicity of dress were encouraged by the Florentines, and
minutely prohibitive laws in later times frequently but unsuccessfully
promulgated. Such laws may for a while check the first approaches of luxury but
never finally prevail against the growing desires of man: yet the Florentines
preserved their simplicity for a long time after the age we now treat of, and
as late as 1467 at the marriage of Niccolo Martelli, and on the arrival of the
Duke of Calabria, the same scanty unostentatious service of plate as among the
Romans of old was seen at each entertainment. The simplicity of Florentine
maimers in 1260 described by Villani and Malespini, justifies a similar picture
as drawn by their great poet: “Then,” say these writers, “ the Florentines
lived soberly on the simplest food at little expense; many of their customs
were rough and rude and both men and women went coarsely clad; many even
wearing plain leather garments without fur or lining: they wore boots on their
feet and caps on their head : the women used unornamented buskins, and even the
most distinguished were content with a close gown of scarlet serge or camlet,
confined by a leathern waist-belt of the ancient fashion, and a hooded cloak
lined with miniver: and the poorer classes wore a coarse green cloth dress of
the same form. A hundred lire was the common dowry of a girl, and two and three
hundred were then considered splendid fortunes: most young women waited until
they were twenty years old and upwards before they married. And such was the
dress, and such the manners and simple habits of the Florentines of that day;
but loyal in heart, faithful to each other, zealous and honest in the execution
of public duties: and with their coarse and homely mode of life they gained
more virtue and honour for themselves and their country than they who now live
so delicately are able to accomplish.
Although this
praise is probably coloured by the usual imaginative excellence of bygone
times, there seems good reason to believe that luxury did not penetrate into
Florence to the same extent at the same epoch as it seems to have done at
Siena, Pisa, and in Lombardy after the termination of the thirteenth century.
Those cities, such as Milan, Venice, Padua, Pisa, Genoa, and Lucca, which in
consequence of favourable mercantile positions or richness of soil naturally
led the march of civilisation, far exceeded the Florentines in refinement, and
Pisa even as late as the middle of the thirteenth century affected to hold them
in contempt as a parcel of wild mountaineers.
All accounts
however agree in asserting that luxury augmented rapidly after the commencement
of the fourteenth century when the spread of commerce war and foreign travel
brought with them increased riches, new wants, and deeper sensuality : Dante
who was well acquainted with Italy joins in the general outcry with all that
proneness to exalt the merits of the olden time which through every age has
shown itself so remarkably in the human heart, because men still retain the
vivid impressions of youthful pleasures and confidence amidst all the cares and
sorrows and forced suspicions of our afterlife : yet Dante’s lamentation, in
its moral aspect, at least is scarcely justified by the punishment to which he
condemns not only his great preceptor, but some of those also who were
considered the most virtuous of Florentine citizens.
Nevertheless we
may gather from all these relations that a certain homely style of domestic
manners was more prevalent in Florence than amongst the surrounding nations
through the whole of the thirteenth century. Celibacy was not common because an
increasing commerce supplied the means of family subsistence; and the less so,
because the turbulent character of those times made a numerous progeny and
powerful connexions of the last importance : from this it would naturally
follow that infidelity and licentiousness were more rare than afterwards, when
Boccaccio wrote, and when Florentine women were not ashamed to read the
Decameron. Yet concubinage, as we have seen, augmented to such a degree in the
latter part of the thirteenth century that the most severe laws even to burning
at the stake were promulgated against it. The consequence of these manners was
populous clans all bearing the same name and generally united both for good and
evil. At a somewhat later period we read, amongst other instances, of a certain
Pier degli Albizzi who having five married sons was on the occasion of a
private feud in 1355 enabled to assemble no less than thirty cousins and
nephews under arms. But notwithstanding all their intestine jars the
Florentines seem to have been a cheerful festive race, fond of mirth, attentive
to business, and addicted to practical jokes, with a quick wit and smartness of
reply which gave their opponents no advantage: they displayed much fancy and
ingenuity with considerable expense in pageants and festivals, and the genius
of their artists was successfully employed on every great occasion: but their
joyous temperament was much deadened by the poison of the Bianchi and Neri
factions, which as we have seen, in the year 1300 spread through the community.
Before this says Villani “the citizens used to solace themselves with continual
repasts, social meetings and divers amusements; the city was in profound peace
and a constantly increasing prosperity enlivened the whole nation: each year in
the beginning of May gay companies of either sex were to be seen in all parts
of the metropolis with music dancing and pastimes.” The cool marble steps of
the cathedral became a favourite resort in the summer evenings after the piazza
was enlarged and that magnificent edifice completed; and when dinners were
given it was a common custom, arising probably from the confined apartments in
towers and houses, to collect the guests together in the public street before
the house door previous to being summoned to the guest-chamber, where after
washing, they shared the owner’s hospitality. In these crowded dwellings,
divided and subdivided by the partition of property between the children of
either sex, according to the ancient Lombard law on allodial possessions, the
whole family resided; some members having only a single chamber and a small
kitchen for their individual portion, sometimes they lived separate, sometimes
together, with a common kitchen and a common hall where round the blazing fire
they assembled during winter evenings; but in summer time the “Loggia” was the
great place of social reunion and amusement.
A family did
not often separate until compelled by its increasing numbers, when one of them
either enlarged the house or sold his share to those who remained, and then
generally settled in the neighbourhood; so that whole streets were frequently
filled with the same race and bore, and still bear the family name. But besides
the share of each individual there seems to have been also a common purse made
up, as it would appear from the rent of shops or warehouses, which paid the
expenses of repairs and alterations for the general good.
The lordship of
“Loggia e Torre” or tower and portico was an undoubted distinction of the very
ancient nobility although shared by some of the most powerful and opulent Popolani, and extreme jealousy was shown by every member of
the “Consorteria” or family, to preserve their
individual right to the ancient tower of their race: extraordinary pains were
taken to divide it into just proportions and secure to each his particular
share by minute legal forms and precise distinctions, all confirmed by public
instruments and arranged with the solemnity of a public treaty. By common
consent one or two of the most aged or respected of the family were chosen as
chiefs and consenators of the general right over the
tower as well as the especial claim of each individual : the same care was
extended to the Loggia where all family meetings were held, public and private
affairs discussed, marriages settled, visits made and received: chess,
draughts, and dice with other amusements carried on in sight of the public, and
many had an open space of ground in front of the Loggia where they exercised
their horses. These lodges were held sacred, and it was the boast of some
families that no public officer would dare to lay his hand on any fugitive that
had sought protection there: among such the Adimari were conspicuous, and there
was a common saying that no unworthy alliance was ever made in the Loggia of
that family.
At their
marriages the simple presentation of a ring constituted the solemn act of
affiance; and after the priestly benediction and the donation of the “Morgincap” the union was considered to be complete. The
latter however formed a very important part of the ceremony as it was given the
morning after marriage and endowed the bride with part of her husband's
possessions, sometimes even in fee-simple, as a mark of belief and confidence,
and a pledge of enduring affection : the custom was of German origin but very
early introduced amongst the Florentines and preserved a long while.
This assumed
inviolability of Tower and Loggia could only have existed prior to the great
and final contest between the citizens and nobility after the expulsion of the
Duke of Athens in 1343; or more probably before the banishment of Giano della
Bella. About the same period we are told that Florence was happy; and
especially towards the year 1283 Giachetto Malespini like Villani describes the city as abounding in
mirth and festivity; jugglers and buffoons and mountebanks of every sort poured
in from the Italian states to share the bounty of lordly Florentines, who
nevertheless lived frugally themselves while they were hospitable and even
generous to their guests. There were at this time in Florence more than three
hundred “Cavalieri di Corredo” and a multitude of
gentlemen that maintained an equal state with belted knights, kept many horses
and retainers, and applied themselves to the acquirement of virtue and
knowledge and courtesy; and they did eat often together of plain meats and
lived in domestic familiarity with each other and did not dress richly; but at
Easter they were careful to give to the usual frequenters of courts and to
jesters various presents of dress and ornaments : and from many parts of
Lombardy and other places and from every corner of Italy came to the said
Florence the said jesters to the said festivals and they were warmly greeted.
To these “Corti Bandite” or open houses, so common
and so celebrated amongst some of the great lords of Italy, came multitudes of
poets, musicians, dancers, jesters, players, and charlatans of every sort; all
under the generic name of “Uomini di Corte” who
amused the great, night and day by the exercise of their various talents and
made themselves so acceptable that they never departed without a considerable
largess.
The custom of
the age would allow of no great lords coming to these entertainments without
presenting some rich and friendly offering to their host, and the splendid
vestments so acquired were generally transferred to these itinerants. On
occasions of great moment such gifts were often magnificent; fine horses,
jewels, rich mantles, silver rases, and other presents were received and
immediately made use of to reward the minstrels and charlatans whose number
often amounted to many hundreds. At the marriage of one of the Gonzaghi, lords of Mantua, in 1340, but more particularly
at that of Lionel Duke of Clarence to Violante daughter of Galeazzo Visconte of
Milan (where the most sumptuous “Corte Bandita” ever known in Italy was held
for many days) presents were given to no less than five hundred wandering
poets, musicians, dancers and jesters.
We are also
made acquainted with some of the fashionable amusements in Tuscany by the
writings of Folgore da San Gimignano a poet of the
year 1260 who addresses a series of somewhat satirical sonnets, one for each
month, to a joyous company of Senese gentlemen in which he pretends to instruct
them how they should pass their time in the most agreeable manner amongst a
people noted in that age for their epicurean indulgences: these sonnets were
parodied by Cene della Citarra of Arezzo a
contemporary poet who reverses the picture with some humour, and probably with
some truth as regards the habits of the poor.
The poet
embodies his instructions in the form of a gift and beginning with the month of
January gives his young friends large fires in well lit rooms; bed-chambers
splendidly furnished and beds with silken sheets and fur coverlets; plenty of
confectionary; and attendants snugly clad in woollens and cloth of Douay: they
are then to take the air and amuse themselves by throwing soft snowballs at the
young ladies whom they happen to meet in their walks, and when tired return to
their repose.
Dressed in
short frocks and strong shoes and stockings, he sends them in February to hunt
the boar, deer, and wild goat, with good dogs, full purses, and agreeable
company: at night they were to come merrily home to excellent wine a smoking
kitchen and a song.
In March their
sports were to be changed to fishing for eels, trout, and salmon; or dolphin
lamprey and sturgeon, with every other kind of fish, and painted boats and
greater barks fit for the roughest season: skilful revellers were to attend
their will in villas and palaces, and procure every delight that would make
time fly smoothly; but without monk or priest. “Let those crazy shavelings go
and preach for they abound in lies,” saith the poet.
In April the
scene changes to flowery fields, fountains, young soft grass, and no
discomforts; but in their place fair mules and palfreys and steeds from Spain,
and the song and the dance from Provence, and new instruments of music fresh
from Germany, and dames and damsels sauntering along with them through
beautiful gardens where all would honour them, and bend the knee before their
chief, to whom the poet offers a crown of jewels the finest of those possessed
by Prester John the far-famed king of Babylonia.
May also was to
bring them troops of light well-trained horses, springy, spirited and swift;
with head and breast well armed; and tinkling bells, and banners, and rich
trappings: many-coloured mantles, light round shields and polished weapons, and
breaking of spears and shock of lances; flowers of every hue, showers of
garlands fluttering from balcony and casement and flights of golden oranges
tossed up in turn; and youths and maidens kissing mouth and cheek, and
discoursing of happiness and love.
Their sojourn
for the month of June is described in a beautiful sonnet where he assigns them
a fair hill covered with pleasant shrubs, and thirty villas and twelve castles
glimmering about a small and pleasing city, in the centre of which springs a
delightful fountain that breaking into a thousand branches and streamlets cute
gently through lawns and gardens refreshing the short and tender herbage, while
the orange the citron the date the sweet lemon and every other saporific fruit embowered the paths and roads, the natives
loving and courteous to each other and pleasing to all the world.
In July they
are removed to Siena with full flasks of Trebbiano and iced Vaiano wine; and breakfasting and supping together eat heartily of
roasted partridge, young pheasants, boiled capons, kids and jellies; with veal
and garlic ragouts for those that liked them; shunning exposure to the great
heats, dressing lightly, avoiding all worries, steady to their pleasures and
always having their table well supplied.
For their
August dwellings he gives them thirty castles in a mountain vale where no
pestilential sea-wind blowing across the marshes can penetrate, and where they
will shine in serene health like the stars of heaven: here a single mile should
limit their evening and morning rides between two small towns and their return
through cool valleys where a perennial stream flowed smoothly and attractively
as if leading them to their noontide sleep, while their purse lay always open
to provide the best repasts in Tuscany.
The cooler
month of September was to bring many amusements : hawks, hounds, falcons, decoy
birds, gosshawks, game, gloves, and setting dogs with
bells: cross-bows well fitted and true to their mark; bullets, bows, arrows,
bags, and fowls of every kind fit for striking or the snare: each sportsman
friendly with his companions, taking every joke in good humour and hailing
other hunters with open purse and smiling countenance.
The
recommendation for October is to visit those that keep a good stud, follow
sports on foot or horseback, dance at night, drink good wine, get tipsy; “as in
good truth there is no better life.” And after the morning’s ablutions wine and
roast meat are once more an excellent medicine, for it would give them spirits
and “preserve them in better health than that of fishes in a lake a river or
the sea, because they would thus be leading a more Christian life.”
In November the
baths of Petriola were to be their station with a
large stock of money and comforts; such as tin flasks, silver cups, torches,
flambeaus, confectionary and every other kind of food : each was to drink, and
solace his companions, and all to comfort themselves with good fires, wines,
pheasants, partridges, doves, hares, kids, roast and boiled meats, Bologna
sausages, and appetites always ready: and when wind and darkness and pouncing
rain were altogether raging without; why then; they were only to make
themselves the more comfortable within.
The last month
of the year was to find them in some city of the plain, established on the
ground-floor with warm hangings, blazing fires, lighted torches, benches and
chess-tables; plenty of food, and the dice-box in their hand. Large wine-casks,
the host a toper, all warmly clad in night-gowns great coats and cloaks and
fine capacious hoods; then they might laugh at the miserable, mock the miserly,
and hold no communication with either.
Such we may
suppose was the “beau-idèal” of Senese gentlemen’s
amusements in the thirteenth century, and it must be confessed that they were
not ill chosen; but though Florence had probably not yet reached this point of
luxury the two communities were so closely connected that there must have been
a considerable degree of similarity in their manners.
This poet wrote
seven other sonnets for the seven days of the week in which certain occupations
either usual or poetically adapted to each day are enumerated and run nearly
over the same ground as the others. We learn from these that Sunday was the
peculiar day of recreation for all ranks of Florentines. Lords and citizens
dames and damsels gave up that day to pastimes: arms, dances, music and singing
were to be heard in every quarter, palaces and gardens were alive with
pleasure, and the “Armeggierit” or Moorish exercise
of arms already described, with other military accomplishments, were especially
practised: the whole community lived in public, and balls and musical
entertainments were enjoyed by all ranks in the open streets either as
spectators or performers.
It was at one
of these dances, as we have said, in the Place of the Holy Trinity that the
first open rupture took place between the families of the Cerchi and Donati;
the second was at a funeral meeting in the Piazza Frescobaldi at the opposite
side of the Arno, and in one of the tumults proceeding from this event we have
an example of that state of helpless insecurity which generally attended the
vanquished when there existed a single enemy to take advantage of their
weakness. Neri Strinati in his family chronicle tells us that during the
troubles occasioned by Charles of Valois’ fatal visit to Florence in 1301 the “Masnada” or followers of the Strinati’s private enemies
belonging to the La Tosa family broke by night into their dwelling plundering
almost everything worth carrying off, and they were only saved from worse usage
by the sudden appearance of a friend of both parties who with difficulty
succeeded in expelling the intruders: but the house was scarcely cleared when
the “Masnada” of the Medici family came on a similar
errand and plundered the little that remained, tearing even the clothes and
bed-clothes away from men women and children, and leaving them thus naked and
helpless, proceeded to their other possessions, so that no less than three
houses in town and country were sacked or destroyed that night by these
implacable foes. Such were the customs of the great, but it would be more
satisfactory if we had data sufficient for a detailed account of the condition
of the Florentine peasantry, if such a race of beings existed in the thirteenth
century: it is not improbable that an incipient class of freemen distinct from
the “Servi” and “Masbadieri”; a class which had the
right of selling its own labour, may about this time have been gradually
forming; but whether it had augmented sufficiently to constitute any
considerable part of the rural population and what were its habits and general
condition, there appear to be few if any means of judging correctly. Ricobaldo of Ferrara, a writer of the thirteenth century
quoted by Muratori, gives an account of manners that can scarcely apply to any
but the lower classes of that state, more especially as ecclesiastical luxury
had been previously reprehended by San Damiano, and the gentlemen were probably
not much behind the priesthood either in external pomp or more sensual
enjoyments.
In the times of
this emperor, says Ricobaldi speaking of Frederic II.
about the year 1334; the manners and customs of the Italians were unpolished;
at supper man and wife eat from the same dish and they did not use wooden
trenchers at meals: there were but one or two cups in a family: by night when
at supper they lighted the tables with lanterns or torches, one of the servants
or children holding the torch, for they had not the convenience of wax or
tallow candles. The men wore leathern cloaks without ornament or woollen cloaks
without fur, and caps of “Pignolato”(?). The women
gowns of the latter, and they attended weddings even after they were married.
At that time the dress of both sexes was mean; of gold and silver they had
little or none on their clothes; their diet also was sparing; the common people
fed on fresh meat three times a week cooked with herbs for dinner, and at
supper the remainder was eaten cold. All did not use wine in the summer time;
there were few wine-cellars: the rich kept for themselves but moderate sums of
money; the granaries were not large; they were satisfied with storehouses; the
women married with slender portions because their means were very spare. At
home maidens were content with a tunic of “Pignolato”
which was called a “Sotanus” or cassock and with a
linen robe named “Xoccam”. The headdress for maids or
matrons was not costly; the married bound their temples and cheeks with broad
ribands. The pride of the men then consisted in fine horses and arms; the pride
of the rich nobility was to have towers, and at that time all the Italian
cities had a noble appearance from their numerous towers.
This however
does not entirely agree with Saint Damiano’s reproof to the bishops and
cardinals whom he accuses of a thirst for wealth in order that “Indian perfumes
may scent the lofty vases at their feasts; that a thousand wines may grow
yellow in their crystalline vessels; that wherever they come their bed-chambers
may be covered with curiously wrought and admirably woven hangings ready at
hand; and thus also they conceal the walls of the churches from the eyes of the
spectators during the performance of funerals: they spread the seats with
tapestry bearing strange pictures, and they fix rich hangings to the ceilings
lest any decayed part should fall. Then a crowd of attendants stand around,
some of whom reverently assist their lord and, like watchers of the stars,
regard his nod with exceeding inquisitive observation lest by chance he should command
anything.” “It is considered madness,” he afterwards says, “and is not unlike
it, when a bed is sculptured with such prodigious cost as to exceed the
endowment of any holy shrine, even the apostolic altar itself: and
notwithstanding that sobriety should grace the priesthood they are now become
gluttons from wealth. The royal purple is even despised because it is but a
single colour; coverlets dyed with various brightness are esteemed for the
decoration of the lofty bed, and as native garments might seem foul they
delight in the furs of other countries because they are purchased at an
exorbitant price; and thus the spoils of both sheep and lambs are despised for
those of ermines sables martens and foxes. It would be irksome to add the
remainder of their vanity: absurdities to be groaned over not laughed at; and
it is painful to enumerate the consequences of such ambition and prodigious
folly: the very Papal mitres denied in various parts with glittering gems and
golden plates, and the horses while they pace swiftly with arched necks,
fatigue by their untamed fierceness the hands of those who hold the reins. I
omit the rings set with great pearls and the wands, not glittering only but
buried in gems and gold; certainly I never remember to have seen even pontifical
staves so covered with a blaze of radiant metal as were those carried by the
bishops Franensi and Esculano”.
Several writers
of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries describe the luxuries of those
times; but as such habits are merely comparative, the luxuries of the grandsire
being the necessaries of the grandson, it is only when particulars are given
that any judgment can be formed, and a few such particulars may be found in the
relation of a dispute which happened in the year 1149 between the canons of
Saint Ambrose at Milan and the monks of their order, about the dinners to which
they were entitled when they dined with the abbot.
The canons
claimed the right of having nine different kinds of meat in three courses: “First
cold fowls, ‘gambas de Vino’, and cold pork; in the second course stuffed
fowls, beef with pepper, and “Turtellam de Lavezolo” (?).
Thirdly roast fowls, loins of meat with bread, and little stuffed pigs.”
At Rome luxury
is supposed never to have been entirely extinguished and the reception of
Conradine in 1268 was an occasion for exhibiting it with advantage. Saba Malespini as quoted by Muratori tells us “that a varied
dress, of different colours and sumptuous materials, worn over the armour
distinguished the troops of attendants. Choruses of female musicians performed
in concert within the city on cymbals, drums, trumpets, violins, and every sort
of musical instrument; and as it is the delight of luxury to display its
abundance of precious articles, ropes were stretched across the street in the
guise of arches from house to house, and decorated, not with laurel, not with
branches, but with rare drapery and various furs; girdles, bracelets, fringes,
strings of costly rings; diadems, buckles, clasps, necklaces of sparkling gems,
silken bags, woven coverlets, linen fabrics, purple hangings, curtains,
tablecloths, and fine linen interwoven throughout with silk and gold: veils
knotted together, and gilded mantles which skilful artists both native and
foreign had worked up with rare and costly materials”.
This sort of
magnificence so nearly allied to luxury, was probably confined to the great
cities, and more especially to Rome where the riches of an aggregated
priesthood and the peculiar pomp of the religious ceremonies combined to
promote it; but the general tastes and customs of Italy are supposed to have
undergone considerable alteration by the introduction of French customs after
the conquest of the two Sicilies by Charles of Anjou: he was soon followed by
many thousands of his countrymen bringing with them the airiness of French
manners and the splendour of the court of Provence, which were first admired
and then imitated by the Italians.
The entry of
this prince and his consort Beatrice into Naples in 1266 delighted the natives
with its magnificence. “Four hundred French cavaliers well clothed, in surcoats
and plumes, and a fine company of Frisons also
dressed in handsome liveries, and more than sixty French lords with golden
chains around their necks, and the queen in a chariot covered with blue velvet
and sprinkled within and without all over with golden lilies so that in my life
I never saw a finer sight”.
The close
connexion between Charles of Anjou and the Florentines must have greatly
assisted in shaking their primitive customs, and with the influence of
increasing riches, also in laying the foundation of future luxury, so that they
too were included in the general prohibition of Gregory X by the authority of
the Council of Lyon, which checked the excessive indulgence of female vanity in
dress throughout all Christendom; and again in 1299 the Florentine government
itself was compelled to publish a similar edict.
This growing
luxury was one of the effects of their rapid extension of domestic industry and
foreign commerce; for the Florentines being at first confined to a narrow
territory traffic were restricted to the exchange of a few superfluous
necessaries for the moderate comforts their frugal habits required; but in the
twelfth century their views began to enlarge with their new fledged liberty,
and an augmented population engendered fresh desires, industry, and commerce.
The progress of
trade will always have a certain relation to the condition of surrounding
nations, near or distant; it therefore became impossible that encircled as she
was by such cities as Siena, Lucca, Pisa, Genoa and others, Florence could
remain for a moment stationary after her freedom and independence were
confirmed; we accordingly perceive in her early history occasional indications
of that attention to foreign trade which gathered so much strength in after
times. Thus in 1135 she humbled the Buondelmonti, then powerful lords of Montebuono for their treatment of Florentine merchants; in
1171 she signed a commercial treaty with the rich and flourishing city of Pisa;
in 1191 she became a powerful member of the Tuscan league; in 1201 she
concluded a treaty with the Ubaldini, lords of the Mugello for the safe conduct
of merchandise into Lombardy, and in 1281 a similar convention with Genoa. In
the following year treaties with Siena, Lucca, Prato and Pistoia succeeded, by
which all tolls and duties on goods and persons were reciprocally renounced.
These acts
indicate a considerable expansion of mind and domestic industry, an industry
not springing from the land, which was neither rich in quality nor great in
surface, but because the natural faculties and activity of the people had been
left unfettered by the establishment of free institutions, because they were
not as yet contaminated by luxury, and were to a certain degree dependant on
strangers for those necessaries which a small territory denied to an increasing
population.
The mercantile
character of the Florentines in the thirteenth century appears to have
resembled that of the Dutch in their most prosperous days and was the cause of
similar effects; they produced much and consumed little; administered to the
luxury of strangers and repressed their own, and the result was public riches
and prosperity, perhaps virtue, according to the spirit of the age. Their form
of government was particularly favourable to commerce, and the early belief in
a supernatural destination to mercantile affairs because the city was founded
under the influence of Aries, may have somewhat assisted in producing it.
We have seen
that in very early times the citizens were divided into a certain number of “Arts”
or trades from which all public functionaries were eventually drawn even to the
supreme governors of the country; it was an apiary without drones, for the
nobles were ultimately compelled to enrol themselves amongst tradesmen as their
only way to public honours. Trade thus presenting the single medium for
attaining political power all minds were naturally directed towards it, perhaps
even without any previous inclination or peculiar desire of gain; and in this
manner political ambition became subservient to national industry and
commercial enterprise. The great energy of Florentines soon carried them far
away from their home to seek a livelihood in foreign countries and finally
return with independence; in this way there was scarcely a region in the world
left unexplored by their activity, and everywhere and in every station they
made themselves useful if not necessary, besides improving their native country
by the introduction of all that was likely to be serviceable in the customs of
strangers. This love of enterprise soon became general and an acute mercantile
spirit pervaded all ranks of society to such a degree that he who was not a
trader, or who had not made a fortune in foreign parts, had little
consideration at Florence. Commerce thus became a second nature, few
speculations were neglected, and as the merchants personally conducted their
own adventures a race of quick intelligent citizens grew up who were perfectly
acquainted with the necessities, power, and resources of foreign nations and
generally with the leading men of each, both Christian and infidel: and as the
rank of a Florentine citizen was considered noble and sufficient for admission
to any order of knighthood, so whether merchant or not, was he a fit companion
for the highest personages of other states. But these identical merchants being
also the chief rulers and ambassadors of the republic they carried such a mass
of useful knowledge into the state government and public assemblies as gave
them considerable advantages in their foreign political relations; and there
being no permanent embassies the frequent change of diplomatic missions
increased this knowledge; more especially as it was the custom of ambassadors
particularly the Venetian, to send home detailed relations of the power, resources
objects and peculiar policy of the several courts. Thus from youth upward were
this people formed to intellectual activity and liberality of sentiment by a
constant intercourse with all nations, ranks, and professions, while some of
their neighbours with a richer soil and less necessary labour followed a slower
and less brilliant course; and therefore when war came, with all its cost
misery and exhaustion, the value of Florentine industry also became apparent
and with it her national ascendancy.
Numerous
regulations beneficial or pernicious, ludicrous or severe, were compiled and
published from time to time for the purpose of securing freedom of action and
commercial probity : by these the arrest of any merchant was prohibited on the
exchange during the time of business and for three hours after; and bankrupts,
besides the legal penalties by which they and their male descendants were
deprived of all public honours and employment and almost considered enemies of
the state; were further condemned to have their bare posteriors bumped on a
circular stone of black and white marble still existing under the arcade of the
Mercato Nuovo of Florence. Even the mischievous establishments of the “Grascia” and “Abbondanza” were directed with more
plausibility than forecast to the success of trade, and created the scarcities
they were intended to prevent; for agricultural produce was insecure from
frequent wars, and larger profits were more safely drawn from commerce and manufactures;
thence it became an object to keep down the price of food so as to undersell
all competitors by the low rate of Florentine labour ; and here may be sought,
if not the origin of those victualling offices, which was of high antiquity, at
least the reason of that blind support of them and their fallacious principles
until the days of Leopold.
The early
progress and organised system of trade and manufactures in the Florentine
republic may be gathered from various public treaties in which the “Consuls of
the Arts” are named and officially employed; but more especially from a public
instrument executed in 1204 where besides the banking trade, which was perhaps
the most lucrative as well as one of the earliest sources of Florentine wealth,
we find the judges and notaries; the “Calemala di
Panni Franceschi” or foreign cloth merchants; the city retail traders; and the
silk and wool trades. Although the two last not only existed, but at this time
were regularly organised branches of trade and government, they were both so
much improved by two subsequent events as to cause some mistakes about the real
date of their introduction : the first was the arrival of the Lucchese emigrants
after the plunder of their city by Ugguccione da
Faggiola in 1314 which gave new spirit to the silk trade; the second by the
establishment of the Padri Umiliati in 1239, or according to Richa in 1206.
Many Lombards,
especially Milanese, were banished to Germany in 1014 by the emperor Henry the
First, and in order to subsist they united and formed a society under the lowly
appellation of the “Umiliati” in allusion to their
unhappy condition; professing to live by their own labour they applied
themselves to various arts but particularly to the manufacture of wool, and on
their return to Italy in 1019 still held together under their chief or minister.
Afterwards, instead of periodical meetings in a common hall they permanently
united in convents to continue their occupation. Until 1140 they were all
laymen but afterwards became a religious society whose priests instead of
working themselves superintended the labour of others under a president called “il Mercatore” and assumed a lamb as their badge, which
was subsequently adopted by the wool-trade of Florence. Innocent III confirmed
the order, and they acquired great riches as well as employment from various
governments for their known zeal and honesty in places of great trust: thus did
they preside over the weights and measures of Cremona; were attached to the
Italian armies as commissaries for the payment and subsistence of the troops,
and became treasurers of the Florentine republic: they produced preachers,
authors, and poets, and having finally reached their meridian, began like all
mundane institutions to decline. Their religion and industry gradually melted
into luxury and idleness; crime followed, and finally even their protector
Cardinal Borromeo nearly fell a victim to their vengeance in his endeavours to
reform them: this was the signal of suppression, which by command of Pius V
took place in 1571 after several centuries of useful labour : during which, by
admitting artists of every country into the society they collected all the
skill and professional experience of the age and mainly contributed to the
commercial prosperity of Florence, which aware of their importance gave them
every possible encouragement : they first settled at San Donato close by the
town, but afterwards came nearer, and in 1259 established themselves on the
spot, (then without the walls) where now stands the convent of Santa Caterina d'Ognissanti which they built, and were in common with all
foreign artificers, exempted from taxation.
But the
Florentines were not satisfied with what they had learned from the Umiliati and soon became famous beyond other nations in
every branch of the art, particularly in the brilliancy of their colours: the
demand for their home manufacture soon exceeded the supply and induced them to
purchase rough undressed materials from English, French, and Flemish looms as
well as to establish Florentine workmen in those countries. The cloth thus
imported underwent the process of shearing, scouring and folding, but more
especially dyeing, in the Florentine workshops and recrossed the Alps to be
sold at an enormous profit. This system continued until Henry VII of England
prohibited the exportation of unshorn cloths and even restrained the Italian
manufactures in his kingdom, for he granted this privilege to few besides
Lorenzo and Giuliano of Medicis.
The dyers
formed a body of tradesmen dependent on the wool company, and sureties for good
behaviour to the amount of 800 florins were required from every member: to prevent
fraud the cloths were, placed under the inspection of experienced manufacturers
called the “Officers of Stains and Blemishes” and on the detection of false
colours all offenders were denounced as cheats and expelled from the trade. The
game of chess was allowed to be played, but all gambling strictly prohibited in
every shop and warehouse belonging to the wool trade, and its integrity was, at
least nominally, secured by a minute network of regulations all directed to
insure honest dealing and a perfection of manufacture calculated to promote its
celebrity amongst foreigners.
For the finest
cloths the wools of Spain and Portugal were imported; England, France, Majorca,
and Barbary supplied the second quality, and Italian sheep yielded the coarsest
kind. On those foreign supplies therefore almost all the domestic manufacture rested,
but the foundation was precarious, for the moment those nations began to
manufacture at home the supply diminished and Florence commenced her decline.
Dazzled by present profits, the blindest commercial act of the Florentines was
the establishment of manufactories in England, France, and the Netherlands; for
just so many schools of native industry were thus established and awakened the
trading spirit of those countries; yet the old Florentines used to ridicule the
simplicity of our ancestors for allowing these large profits to be made by
strangers in their country, forgetting the valuable knowledge which they left
in exchange but apparently not blind to its future reaction on their own
prosperity.
That this
direct trade with England began very early may be conjectured from the
existence of the “Calimala” as a corporate body in
1204, and that it was in activity in 1284 is proved by a letter still extant
dated London Saturday the sixth of January in that year (or 1298 by our
computation) written by Simane Oherardi of the company of Tommaso Ispigliati Gherardi and
Lapo Ughi Spini which informs his partners of the various contracts for wool
that he had concluded with a number of English convents, but the names of most
of them are hard to identify. That branch of the wool trade which under the
name of “Calimala” or vendors of French cloth,
comprehended all Transalpine fabrics of this material, was quite distinct from
the domestic manufacture: the merchants of the “Calimala”
were not allowed to traffic in Cisalpine cloths of any description, but a part
of their business was to dye and finish up the rough commodity to the highest
state of perfection or in a manner most suitable to the taste of the different
markets; a point much studied by the Florentines. Some of these cloths were the
manufacture of France, some of England, others of Brabant, and some also came fro in the Florentine looms working in all those countries, imported by way of
Paris, Avignon, Marseilles, Nice, Germany and Lombardy; in the memoirs of Francesco
Baldacci and Niccolo da Uzzano the
principal situations of these woollen manufactures
and markets in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries are mentioned, and the
goods described as being made up into bales containing from ten to thirteen
pieces wrapped in felt and double packing-cloths for transmission to Florence.
There after strict examination by a committee of the trade and due preparation
for new markets, the device of the “Calimala”
(an eagle holding a bale of cloth) was stamped on both ends of the piece, which
thus increased in value, was disposed of not only in Italy, but sent again
beyond the Alps and resold to the original producers as already mentioned.
Severe laws governed these trades; a rigid
inquisition was established into the colour and
quality of the dyes, the prices fixed, the importers forbidden to combine for
the purpose of raising it, and no dyeing materials were allowed to come through
any other channel. But a commerce founded on the ignorance of surrounding
nations in a progressive state of civilisation could
not last, and the Florentines themselves unconsciously accelerated its decay:
for when their sphere of action became more extended they could no longer
terminate their trading missions or voyages within the year and therefore
sought for some central position as a depot: they found it in Flanders and
especially at Bruges which places concentrated their commerce with Germany
France and England and became the principal focus of trade in the west of
Europe. This stimulated the Flemings who profiting by the occasion soon
learned to supply their own wants from their own resources; they became
manufacturers and exporters, and were soon followed by the English: thus the
chief nourishment of Florentine industry, the raw material and unfinished
cloth, was withheld; and this lucrative trade after sustaining itself until
the beginning of the sixteenth century declined with the declining republic and
almost expired under the monarchy,
With more passive times a softer art began to
flourish and the silk manufacture seemed to gather fresh spirit from the decay
of the wool-trade; for government perceiving the inevitable fate of the latter
lost no time in giving encouragement to the former. Until the twelfth century
Greece alone of all Christendom was acquainted with, and made the silkworm subservient
to human wants or fancy: the Arabs had however already introduced both the art
and insect into Spain, and this manufacture flourished at Lisbon and Almeria
long before its appearance in Italy. From Spain it might have come to Genoa
during the expeditions of that city against the Saracens, but there is a
general belief that it entered Tuscany direct from Palermo where Count Roger
the Second introduced it about the year 1117 or 1148, after plundering Corfu,
Cephalonia, Corinth, Thebes, Athens, and other places. Amongst his numerous
captives were many silk-workers whose value he so well understood that he
excepted them, both male and female, in a subsequent negotiation for the
restitution of prisoners and settled them permanently in the royal palace of
Palermo.
The period when this trade became one of the
established corporations of Florence is also uncertain; public documents prove
its existence there in 1204 either as a manufacture or an article of regular
traffic, but certainly as the former in 1225 although die raw material still
continued to be imported during the whole of the fifteenth century, because the
worm had not then been generally introduced.
The laws and regulations for this art were
similar in their objects and equally minute with those of the wool-trade: by
one of these, all members of the company connected by family ties were
compelled to submit to a compromise before its tribunals in every dispute
between them; and by another no silk-manufacturer could quit the country
without a license; but their jealousy of Lucca which had been their mistress in
the art, was manifested at a later period by a prohibition against any dealings
in silk with that republic. During the whole of the thirteenth century the silk
manufacture of Florence seems not to have made any progress comparable to that
of the wool-trade; the early competition of Lucca Genoa and other states
probably impeded it; but the “Arte del Cambio" or money trade in
which Florence shone pre-eminent soon made her bankers known and almost
necessary to all Europe.
Some have supposed that bills of exchange were
invented by the Jews during their persecution in France and England about the
twelfth century, while others assert that the Florentine exiles devised this
mode in the following age to save a portion of their estates from party
vengeance: but where commerce had taken such root as to require a permanent resident
in foreign countries for the superintendence of mercantile affairs, it seems
likely as a natural consequence of trade that letters of exchange would have
been invented without the goad of persecution. As the Jews therefore were
probably the first traders who in consequence of their dispersion maintained
such a connexion between foreign states and had need
of secrecy, it is more than probable that they were the first to make use of this
universal medium of circulation.
Confined within a narrow territory unequal to
their wants, with a growing population, and increasing commerce and industry,
the Florentines were compelled to find new sources of living beyond the
confines; frugal habits surpassing those of surrounding nations rendered
their profits more than sufficient to supply their moderate necessities ere
they were augmented by increasing riches, and an expanding commerce very soon
opened more easy roads for the employment of surplus capital. The banking trade was
therefore very early established, and the sharp intelligent Florentines soon
became the principal agents of popes, cardinals, and other great people for the
collection and management of their mints and revenues : of the church revenue
they were also sometimes the farmers, especially during the papal residence at
Avignon ; and in this way the Mozzi and Spini acted for Pope Gregory X and
Boniface VIII. The extent and ramification of their business was sometimes
enormous; the house of Carroccio degli Alberti alone having regular
banking establishments at Avignon, Bruges, Brussels, Paris, Rome, Naples,
Venice, Perugia, Siena and Barletta; and it may here be noticed that this close
acquaintance with ecclesiastical finance naturally united the interests of the
church and Florentines and affected their political relations more probably
than appears on the surface of history.
The vast sums flowing in from all these sources
enabled Florence to assume that strong and leading part in Tuscan politics that
so greatly distinguished her during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and
which we shall see her still maintain in the fourteenth and fifteenth; for
personally frugal, their country’s glory was the pride of her people, its honours and offices their chief ambition, and in peace or
in war they were ready to open their coffers either to humble an enemy or decorate
their own capital with sumptuous edifices.
The Italian bankers were generally known by the
various names of “Tavolieri” “ Feneratori” “ Usurai” “Toscani” “ Lombardi” “ Cambiatori"
“ Prestatori” and “Banchieri,” as their interest or profits was by the appellations of “Gift” “Merit” Guerdon" “Feneration” and “Usury”: by the two last it was known in England and France, where
the bankers had the general name of Tuscans and Lombards. But amongst all
foreign nations they were justly considered, according to
the admission of their own countrymen, as hard, griping, and exacting; they
were called “Lombard dogs”; hated, and insulted by nations less
acquainted with trade and certainly less civilized than themselves, when they
may only have demanded a fair interest for money lent at a great risk to
lawless men in a foreign country.
And after all the money seems to have been worth
its price to borrowers, for we are told that the Marquis Aldobrandini of Este
in order to sustain the cause of Pope Innocent III not only pawned all his
allodial domains but afterwards his own brother Azzo VII to the Florentine
merchants for money advanced to him by them! This shows how early riches began
to accumulate in the republic.
The extreme attention with which they conducted
mercantile business and their very minute knowledge of all its details may be
discovered in the above-mentioned trading memoirs of Francesco Balducci and
Niccolo da Uzzano which contain a mass of very
interesting information on the commerce of the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries in which they respectively lived. Much of this is connected with the
mint, the course of foreign exchanges, and the banking trade; the oldest laws
of which, now said to be extant as regards Florence, are of the year 1299,
referring however to others of 1280 which probably governed it in principle
during the existence of the republic. By this code, according to Pagnini, all
countinghouses of Florentine bankers were confined to the old and new
market-places, where alone they were allowed to transact business: before the
door was placed a bench, and a table covered with carpet on which stood their
money-bags and account-book for the daily transactions of trade: no
ecclesiastics or foreigners were allowed to be members of the bankers’ company,
which in 1422 consisted of seventy-two firms, but in the next fifty years had dwindled to less
than half that number, still however with branches established all over the
world.
The laws of Justinian which allowed from four to
twelve per cent, interest on money, according to the profession or quality of
the person, are supposed to have governed the pecuniary affairs of Florence
until the beginning of the fourteenth century when the rate of interest had
risen considerably and sometimes reached twenty per cent, per annum; at first
under the veil of equivocation, afterwards openly and regularly as the lowest
interest. This subsequently ascended to thirty and forty, and the government
paid from twelve to twenty in 1336; but the ordinary amount between individuals
was twenty per cent., which continued with various fluctuation until 1130 when
to regulate the growing evil in a period of great public difficulty and
suffering, an attempt was made to correct Christian rapaciousness by
introducing Jews into the city on condition that they were not to demand more
than twenty per cent for their money. As there was no paper currency in
Florence nor any other indication of a decrease in the precious metals except
the vast accumulations of Pope John XXII and his successor Benedict XII the
cause of this augmenting value of money must be attributed to the drain for the
expenses of foreign wars combined with great profits in foreign trade, more
especially tgat of banking, which branching all over
the world required a considerable and permanent amount of specie in the coffers
of each establishment.
Although these three branches of commerce were
considered the principal sources of national wealth, and all the other trades
rather contemned as vulgar; Florence as may be imagined was replete with every
species of industry: the trade of physician and druggist which included the
sale of all sorts of oriental spices and foreign productions formed a very
extensive and lucrative branch of commerce, and that of the furriers was still
more so, for the most expensive furs continued to adorn the clergy and Italian
nobility of both sexes long after the general custom had ceased, so that we
have a list of no less than two-and-twenty kinds of skins in the usual course of
importation: many of these probably came from the northern parts of Asia; for
Venice having succeeded in monopolising the trade and
closing the ports of Egypt to the Florentines, the latter with incredible
perseverance worked their way by land from “Tana” the present Asoph; by Astracan, and round
the head of the Caspian, through a number of places now very difficult to
identify, as far as what they called “La Nostra Citta” or capital of
China. Here they established a trade in the fourteenth century, but always on
their arrival at Pekin (which is by them denominated “Gambaluc” or “ Gambalecco”) the whole of their
specie was taken away from them in the emperor’s name and deposited in his
treasury, and the same nominal value in paper money given in exchange; but
it does not appear whether they received any part of it back on their return or
were compelled to buy the precious metals with other merchandise. This paper
money, was named “Babisci” coloured yellow, and bore three different values according
to the stamp; it was a legal tender, but does not appear to have raised the
value of commodities: the whole route is described minutely by Balducci who
wrote as is supposed about the middle of the fourteenth century.
While this traffic was maintained in the east
their golden florin and excellent mint-regulations secured a pecuniary
reputation in the west, and Florentines were accordingly made directors, managers,
and even farmers of both mint and exchequer in several European states: thus
in England, Aquilea, and Naples, the Frescobaldi, Vernacci, Buonaccorsi, Gherardo
Gianni and others were so employed, the latter even giving his name to a
current Neapolitan piece of the day. But of all the coins of this century the
golden florin was the most celebrated for its beauty and purity: before this,
copper and silver money only had been struck at the Florentine mint, and probably
no Tuscan city had as yet issued gold pieces on its own authority, although an
imperial coinage of this metal such as that of “Agostari” and other moneys struck at Pisa. Genoa, and Lucca in the name of Frederic II.
were current all over Italy.
The golden florin on the contrary was coined by
the victorious government of the “Primo Popolo” in 1252 on its own
independent authority, stamped with the image of their tutelar saint and device
of the Lily, and issued as the peculiar currency of the republic. This florin
was composed of one dram or seventy two grains of fine gold of twenty four carats,
and this has been scarcely or very little altered since.
The proportion of gold to silver in those days,
and until the effects of western discovery were felt in the sixteenth century,
was, we are told, as one to ten and nine sixteenths; therefore the golden
florin was equal to twenty silver florins which altogether weighed ten drams
and nine sixteenths or about seven hundred and seventy grains, and were each of
the same size and stamp as the golden coin. The “Silver Florin” “Popolano” “Silver Soldo” or “Guelpho”; for it went by all these names; was divided into twelve “Denari” each of
them, if the relative value of the two metals had not altered, equal to, or
coinciding with the present “Soldo” as the twentieth part of a “Lira.”
The gold florin also had various denominations in after times, but those most
noted were the “Fiorino di Galea” or galley florin and the “Fiorino
di Suggello” or sealed florin, called so because
a certain number of them after being carefully weighed at the mint were sealed
up together in a leathern purse and passed current unopened. The galley florin
was so named at its first coinage in 1422 to rival the Venetian ducat in the
Egyptian trade which began that year by permission of the Sultan and for which
a squadron of galleys was first equipped. The florin was also divided into an
imaginary coin called “Lira” the name of which, originating in the
pound of silver, seems to have long existed in Florence, and in 1202 equalled in value the golden florin of Malespini's time; which indeed seems to have been coined to represent it; but soon became
only a fraction of the latter, being affected by the proteus-like nature of
commerce, especially by the everchanging value of the silver into which the
golden coin was divided and which kept steadily declining. The imaginary Lira was divided as at present into twenty “Soldi" and each “ Soldo” into twelve “Denari”.
The agio or premium on gold was at first
a natural consequence of its superior estimation and convenience, but when
this mounted up to twenty and thirty per cent, it was evidently increased by
the depreciated value of the silver florin: if twenty of these only contained
seven hundred grains of silver instead of seven hundred and seventy; which were
necessary to equal a golden florin of seventy two grains; and that the
remainder was made up of baser metal, the sagacity of moneydealers would soon discover the change and exact so much more in proportion for their
gold. To this cause must be referred all those variations which we read of in
Villani and other old writers of the relative value of the golden florin and
lira; for sometimes a lira and a half was equal to the former and afterwards
two, three, four, seven, and so forth; nor was it until the reign of Cosimo the First that the
imaginary lira of former days became a real coin, of which thirteen and one-third
were equal to a “ Zecchino” or golden florin, which may always be
adopted as a permanent standard of reference for the value of Florentine
silver. A new silver florin appears to have been coined also in 1252; and one
of somewhat more value under the simple name of “Florin” in 1282 : to
these were added in 1290 the “Soldo Grosso” of less value than either.
Afterwards in 1305 came the “Grossi Popolini” of
the same value as the last, and in 1314 the “Guelfi del fiore” (with its half and quarter) not
greatly differing from the others.
The physical and moral forces that first shook
the German power in Italy were probably acquired by this rising commerce with
its resulting intelligence, and the influence of liberty soon reacted on the
human mind: learning began to revive, and the cultivated talents of Frederic
the Second and his natural sons Hensius and Manfred
gave it every encouragement; universities sprung up in various cities, that of
Bologna alone having as is said contained ten thousand students, amongst whom
Thomas a Becket of England was once conspicuous!. In the thirteenth century the
colleges of Pisa, Pistoia, Arezzo and Siena existed; the discovery of the
Pandects had given a new interest to legal science and the study of
jurisprudence became one of the first objects of free Italian genius.
When under Theodoric, the Gothic armies
conquered Italy they found the Theodosian code of Roman jurisprudence in full activity,
and which this wise prince not only left untouched but made his people obey it:
Justinian’s code succeeded but did not last, for the Lombards hated everything
Greek and preferred their own laws while they allowed the Italians to continue under those to which
they had been previously accustomed: but the laws of all these conquerors,
first collected under the title of “The Edict,” swelled in the course
of time to a complete body of jurisprudence which governed the greater portion
of Italy.
When this province fell under the power of
Charlemagne many settlers arrived from France and Germany with the privilege of
still being ruled according to their native regulations; and hence the “Salique” the “Ripuarian,” the “Bavarian” and the “Alamanni” laws
were all in simultaneous action with the Roman and Lombard codes. Jurisconsults
although nominally bound to study every one of these, could have had little labour with Justinian’s, there being scarcely a copy then
extant; its place was however supplied by a very meagre compendium suited to
the commonest necessities of the time, in which were reduced to a few simple
points the whole Roman jurisprudence, all the rest being left to the equity of
the judge. “ And a great blessing it was,” says Muratori, “to be
enabled to finish a law-suit at once without being doomed to watch its endless
course”.
General laws for Italy were passed, not by the
mere will of the prince, but by a Diet of the temporal and spiritual barons and
the chief commanders of the army, held at Pavia on the first of March, and
under the Francs two classes of laws governed the country; first the particular
code of each people which regulated contracts, succession, and punishment of
crime; and secondly the general laws which equally affected all the Italians.
Each man was bound to declare the law by which he desired to be governed; ecclesiastics
of all nations generally and wisely chose the Roman, and hence arose their
subsequent pretensions to exemption from the power of secular courts. In the thirteenth
century this custom began to decay in consequence, as is supposed, of the
increasing influence of the Roman code the advantages of which would no doubt
be perceived
and felt in proportion to the growth of that civilization for which it was
originally intended; and this influence which had commenced in the preceding
age now almost exclusively guided the schools and Forum.
After the peace of Constance in 1183 municipal
statute laws began to sprout in great abundance, not only in the larger cities
but in every petty burgh and town, each clamouring for its own peculiar statute, a natural consequence of newly-achieved
independence and succeeding tranquillity. These
municipal codes were called “Statutes” and were originally composed of
few, but afterwards of a greater number of laws; at first only regulating the
duties of the Podesta and other functionaries and rarely diverging from the
Homan and Lombard codes which had ruled before them; but subsequently changing
and reforming these to suit their altered circumstances, as in Florence, where
a commission was periodically appointed to revise old statutes; thus ceased
the salique, ripuarian and bavarian laws, but the Lombard though gradually
declining was still vigorous after the year twelve hundred.
In Florence the Theodosian code was never
completely disused and always considered as national, while on the contrary
that of Justinian was as much opposed there as in many other parts of Italy,
and treated as alien. Under the former therefore, combined with the Lombard and
mixed up with remnants of the other three; all perhaps affected by the
municipal statutes; did the citizens live until the year 1413 when Paolo da
Castro a famous jurisconsult of the day, compiled the “Florentine Statute” and the disentangling and explaining all this mingled mass of legislation was
what probably gained for the celebrated Accorso his uncommon reputation and
the lasting influence of his Commentaries.
Taddeo Accorso, or Accursius, seems to have been
the first great lawyer that the Florentine republic produced; for though
Cipriani had preceded him and gained some reputation in law and philosophy at
Ravenna, Accorso soon acquired the confidence of all the Italian peninsula. He
was born about the year 1182 of low parentage in the small village of Bagnolo, then belonging to the Gherardini family about six
miles from Florence, and after long, persevering, and solitary labour, lived not only to dispel the darkness in which all
legal science was then involved, but to see his opinions and expositions
received as law by the spontaneous consent of every state in Italy, and where
the law was silent his own private judgment was confidently appealed to: thus
the force of his single genius is said to have swayed the jurisprudence of
Italy for nearly three centuries.
His three sons Francesco, Cervolto and Guglielmo were all famous in the same studies, particularly Francesco who
for eight years was high in the confidence of Edward I of England and probably
compiled many of our own statutes. After Francesco Accorso, Dino di Mugello who
flourished about the same period was held in the highest esteem, and so well
maintained the reputation of the Florentine bar that by a decree of the
Veronese people wherever law and the Commentaries of Accorso were silent Dino’s opinion should be received
as law. He was the master of Cino da Pistoia a man of undoubted ability but
more known by the fame of his pupil Petrarca and the beautiful sonnet on his
death, than by those of his own writings that have come down to posterity; yet
the friend and instructor of such a poet and the subject of such praise could have
been no common man.
Florence also produced some medical men of great
celebrity in the thirteenth century: amongst these the most renowned was Taddeo Alderotti who at first is said to have led a life of
want and extreme ignorance, and was even supposed to be deficient in
understanding until about thirty years of age: he then suddenly changed, became
eager for instruction, rapidly acquired knowledge, soon mastered the rudiments
of general learning, studied hard at Bologna, gained considerable honour, and ultimately became the most celebrated physician
of his age and country. He was followed by his pupil Dino del Garbo, by Torrigiano, and by Tommaso del Garbo, son of the former, till
distinguished for their learning and medical abilities, but all resident at
Bologna the focus of Italian erudition.
Taddeo Alderotti according to Villani died at Bologna in 1303.
He was considered in Italy as another Hippocrates and was even surnamed “Taddeo Ipocratista”, but his value was more substantially
manifested by the high remuneration usually given for his services when called
to a distance from the scene of his usual practice, as exemplified in the following anecdote. Pope Honorius IV
having been taken suddenly and dangerously ill sent instantly for Taddeo from
Bologna: the doctor would not move under a hundred golden ducats a day which
the pontiff finally consented to give, but on his arrival gently expostulated
with him: Taddeo affected to be very much surprised, saying that as all the
temporal lords of Italy had voluntarily given him fifty ducats a day he marvelled greatly that the holy father being the chief
potentate of Christendom should have hesitated about a hundred; thus
vindicating himself while he reproved the known avarice of the pontiff.
Honorius was cured, and whether from gratitude or a desire of repelling the
charge of avarice, presented him with ten thousand ducats which Taddeo expended
in the endowment of churches and hospitals,
In mathematics or astronomy Florence does not at
this epoch seem to have produced any distinguished men except Cecco d’ Ascoli,
Dante’s preceptor, who was burned in 1327: but that the celestial motions must
have been observed with some accuracy is proved, independent of the existence
of judicial astronomy, by the early construction of a gnomon in the baptistry
of Saint John, mentioned by Villani, of which there are still some traces; and
although a small aperture in the cupola which formerly admitted the solar rays
at the summer solstice is no longer to be found, the point on which the light
fell may still be perceived in a representation of the sun encircled by a
curious legend which contains the same words whether read backwards or forwards.
The want of any Florentine mathematician of eminence
during the thirteenth century was compensated by Pisa a city much more advanced
in refinement, which produced one to whom Christian Europe is probably indebted
for the introduction of algebra. Leonardo Fibonacci was the son of a mercantile
agent or consul of the Pisan republic at Bugia on the Barbary coast who there
had him instructed in all the mathematical acquirements of the Arabians, and
improved his general knowledge by frequent journeys into Greece, Egypt, and
Syria: he is thought by some to have also been the first introducer of Arabic
numerals, perhaps without sufficient grounds, though he may have extended their
use; but the original manuscript of his treatise on algebra still exists in the Magliabechiana Library with the date 1202, and is
dedicated to the famous astrologer Michael Scott, at his own desire.
Nor was the literature of this century confined
to the abstruse sciences f, the Italian tongue also had its share of regard,
and the emperor Frederic II became so sensible of its beauty as to raise it
from rustic homeliness to the dignity of a courtly dialect, the language of
music chivalry and love: the taste of his sous Manfred and Hensius with the talent of Piero delle Vigne, all assisted in thia noble work until the court of Sicily became the
nurse of Italian language and poetry, and awakened the sounds of the Bolognese,
Paduan, Pisan, and Florentine lyres, nearly a century before the music of Dante
and Petrarca awed and delighted the world.
Long before this however a few flashes of poetry
had occasionally broken forth and Ciullo d’ Alcamo in 1197, Folcachiero and Lodovico della Vernaccia in 1200, and even
San Francesco himself in 1210 all gave indications of that approaching flame
which the two groat Florentines afterwards kindled into so amazing a brightness.
Bologna was the first to echo the Sicilian lyre; and there Onesto Ghisilieri, Fabricio, and Guido Guinicelli,
all sung in their native language about the year 1220 and the last is
particularly praised by Dante in three of his works.
Tuscany soon rang to similar strains, for love
is everywhere and love is the real muse of poetry: Ser Noffa d’ Oltr’ Arno who wrote some amorous poetry in 1240
appears to have been the first of the Florentines whose verse has reached us;
but he was quickly followed by Amorozzo and Migliore
da Firenze, Monte d’ Andrea, Dante da Maiano, and
thirteen or fourteen others who filled up the remaining part of the thirteenth
century. Amongst these Florentines is placed the celebrated name of Farinata
degli Uberti and the still more distinguished Brunette Latini: of Farinata’s verse we have nothing except the strange jumble
of proverbial rhyme which he chose for the text of his famous discourse at
Empoli; but some manuscript poems of his still exist it is said in the Vatican
and Barbarini libraries. It was the custom of those
days to speak from some text applicable to the subject, as clergymen now
preach, and Farinata chose two ancient proverbs when he indignantly rose to
speak against the contemplated destruction of Florence : these were “Come asino sape cost Minuzza rape, Si va capra zappa sc il lupo non la 'ntoppa ”, which (his head all intent on
higher matters) when asked from what text he was going to speak, he confused
thus, “Come asino sape si va capra zoppa cost minuzza rape se lupo non la 'ntoppa” yet
applied it well to the interested views and ignorance of his audience who like
the animals he named were still guided by their petty instincts, and followed
their habitual baseness in extraordinary times and circumstances without
peering beyond them.
The Fra Guittone d’
Arezzo also flourished about this period and though not strictly a native yet
lived and died in Florence where he founded the Convent of the Angioli: he was one
of the Frati Cavalieri Gaudenti, an order more epicurean
than ascetic. Dante blames his stylo as cold and void
of feeling, and Petrarca does not let him off unscathed.
Brunette Latini was perhaps the most generally
distinguished Florentine of his age, but more known to modems as the friend
and instructor of Dante than for the superior excellence of any works that
have reached us: he was a lawyer, statesman, philosopher, and poet; had an
extensive influence over his countrymen; he instructed his cotemporaries and
formed the rising generation, was admired while he lived and regretted when he
died, but was far from being untainted with the vices of the world. The year of
his birth is unknown, but as Malespini says he was “a
man of great wisdom” in 1260, it may be supposed that he had no little share in
the revolution of 1250 and the formation of the “Primo Popolo” or government
of the Anziani. He was learned witty and sagacious, and is described by Giovanni
Villani as a consummate master of rhetoric both in speaking and writing;
Brunetto was the first who began to teach and refine the Florentines; showing
them how to express their thoughts, and instructing them in the art of civil
government: Dante and Guido Cavalcanti were his most celebrated disciples and
the year 1297 is especially mentioned as one of unusual tranquillity in which many young men who had been educated
in the school of Brunetto Latini began to give a literary and philosophic tone
to society; wherefore if stamping a better form on the barbarous character of
the age be a proof of genius Brunette Latini is entitled to the appellation of
a great man. Philip Villani describes him as kind and courteous, and happy in
the practice of every virtue if with a more steady mind he could have supported
the injuries of his distracted country; but this eulogy can scarcely be
reconciled with the post assigned to him in the Inferno by his great pupil
along with other distinguished Florentines, nor does his crime allow us to
admit without dispute the boasted simplicity and virtue of those primitive
times, more especially as he almost acknowledges it in the twenty-first chapter
of his “Tesoretto”
This poem which is a moral vision has by some
been considered as a compendium of the “Tesoro” and is also supposed to
be what gave Dante the first notion of his own celebrated production: its
visionary form and the circumstances of the author supposing himself to be lost
in a wood where he gives an imaginative description of the virtues and vices,
might perhaps have suggested a similar idea in the mind of Dante; but still we
should bear in memory the words of the Abate Zannoni that if it were so, a “slight
and almost invisible spark served to kindle a vast conflagration.” The Tesoro,
on which Brunetto principally relied for fame; seems to be the promised prose
explanation of the Tesoretto, and is a
compilation from the Bible, Aristotle, and Pliny the naturalist; being probably
an abstract of all the knowledge of that age. The French original never was
printed and the present Italian translation by Buono Giamboni was first published in 1474 one hundred and eighty years after the author’s
death.
Besides these two Brunetto has left the “Favoletto” and several prose works; amongst them a
compendium of Aristotle’s Ethics, a work on the poverty of the learned, and
another on the glory of ignorant pedants. The subjects of the Tesoro are
metaphysics, Bible and other ancient story; astronomy, geography, natural
philosophy and history; the Ethics of Aristotle above mentioned; morality
rhetoric and civil government. It was composed during his exile after the
battle of Monteaperto in 1260. “And if any one ask,” he says, “why this book is
written in the French language since we are of Italy?” I will answer that it is
for two things: one because we are in France; and the other because the
French tongue is more agreeable and more common than all the other languages Such
is the influence of a military and a conquering nation which France has been,
with few intermissions, from Charlemagne downwards. Another passage in this
little volume merits some notice because in conjunction with a well-known
passage in Dante’s Purgatory it would argue more intimate knowledge of the
southern hemisphere amongst the people of that day than they are generally
believed to have possessed. The author after some discourse on astronomy
continues. “Thus follow in order all times, days, and nights according as the
firmament turns continually from east to west under its two eyes, which are
two stars, one the south and the other the north star; and these never
change except as the axle of a wheel. Thence it comes that mariners navigate by
the sign of these stars which are called pole-stars by every people; and those
of Europe and Africa navigate by the northern star, and other people towards
the south navigate by the southern star. And to prove this truth take a
loadstone and you will find that it has two faces the one lying towards the
north and the other towards the south pole-star, and therefore mariners would
be laughed at if they did not take care of this. And since these two stars do
not change their position it follows that some stars in the firmament turn in
smaller circles, and others in larger according as they are nearer to or further
from these polestars. And know that by these two stars we can understand the
point of the needle and towards which pole it lies He died in 1294 says Gio.
Villani, and “was a man of extensive erudition in his day, extremely active, an
eminent citizen, often employed in public matters, and of great celebrity”.
The last but not the least distinguished author
of this age was Ricordano Malespini:
born of an ancient family he is the well and source of all subsequent
historians. Villani copies him in silence, probably because his history was too
generally known to require any notification: the early part of his chronicle is
full of fables; then of course believed, or Villani would scarcely have
ventured to transcribe them word for word; but for everything that occurred about his own
times he is much relied on and is indeed the only authority we have: the
extreme simplicity of his style and the artless manner in which he relates the
most important events at once impress the reader with a conviction of his
sincerity. His chronicle was continued from the year of his death 1281 until
1286 by his nephew Giachetto Malespini so that from the year 1230 or 1240 when he is supposed to have visited his
relations at Rome and first collected materials, to the conclusion of Giachetto’s chronicle it may be considered as a cotemporary
history. Dino Compagni continued the history of his own times with uncommon
eloquence and deep feeling, from 1280 until 1312. Although at heart a Ghibeline
he acted with the Guelphic government but denounced their crimes with honest
indignation.
Connected with literature are the fine arts,
which do not appear to have received the same inspiration from love and beauty
that the Provencal and Italian poetry, and even the manners of this heroic age
give signs of: it is true that the Troubadours began to decline about the
middle of the thirteenth century, and their tongue, eclipsed by the Italian,
became only a dialect; but the latter replete with youth and genius, and
stimulated by love, expanded into a permanent noble and beautiful language.
Love itself about this period assumed a more platonic and unreal form; ladies
were worshipped for the mere fame of their charms which sometimes existed only
in the imagination of the knight; they were served for the honour of such slavery without hope of recompense; vows were made at feasts before
them and the peacock, to dare any danger that might be commanded by the beloved
object; and her surpassing excellence was asserted both with sword and pen in
every court of Christendom ; indeed the insensibility to this more refined
devotion was considered as a reproach to gentle blood, and those who frequented
the lower female society were denounced as wanting true nobility. Such was the
devotion of Petrarch for Laura, of Dante for Beatrice, of Cavalcanti for
Giovanna, and perhaps of Cino for La Selvaggia; but the painters and sculptors
of the thirteenth century do not seem to have been thus strongly affected.
Painting although never totally extinct in Italy yet for many centuries
remained inanimate or was only kept alive by Greek artists who occasionally
left Constantinople to display their talents in the west. It was about the
first quarter of the thirteenth century that some feeble efforts were made to
escape from the harsh outlines of Grecian saints and virgins, their pointed
wooden fingers and stiff drapery, and advance one step towards a more natural
taste: the first symptoms of returning vitality appeared at Siena and Pisa
where Guido and Giunta painted with some
little variation from the Greek manner in 1221 and 1230; but Bartolommeo of
Florence made a bolder stride in 1236 and may be considered the first of the
Florentine school: his picture of the Annunciation in the Servites’ convent is
far from a common work and required a Giotto to surpass it. Giovanni Cimabue,
who died in 1300 at the age of sixty, made the next attempt; but judging by his
Florentine pictures, a very feeble one, to break from the trammels of Byzantine
artists; and neither of his Madonnas at Florence
impress the spectator with any high idea of the pictorial art as it then existed:
a somewhat softer expression perhaps; a slight relaxation and increasing
roundness of the joints and muscles are all that distinguish them from Greek
compositions, unless it be inferiority of colouring.
One of these pictures however so pleased the natural taste, all ready to be
awakened to greater things, in the Florentine people, that they crowded about
the painter’s study with such expressions of delight as to gain for the street
w here he resided the distinctive name of “Borgo Allegri” which it still
retains. This universal feeling for the fine arts was again manifested, with a
certain mixture of religious sentiment, on the same picture being removed to
its destination in the church of Santa Maria Novella where the whole population
united in public procession with shouts and music, to accompany their favourite Madonna : when such enthusiasm is excited in a
comparatively civilised people amongst whom learning
had already made considerable progress, our wonder ceases that the early inventors
of more useful things should have been adored as gods by the ruder inhabitants
of the ancient world. It is for artists to judge of Cimabue’s genius; but none
can dispute his judgment in bringing forward the shepherd’s boy Giotto whom he
discovered at ten years old drawing one of his sheep on a smooth slate as he
tended the flock amongst the green pastures of Vespignano about fourteen miles from the capital.
Angiolotto Giotto di Bondone was
a sculptor, painter, and architect who soon pushed the pictorial art far beyond
the powers of his master: relieving his figures from the iron stiffness of
Cimabue he endowed them with a grace and spirit that were heightened by the
superiority of his composition and colouring. One of
Giotto‘s finest works on a great scale is a representation of the Last Supper,
still to be seen nearly perfect in the refectory of Santa Croce, a picture
excellent in its expression and drapery; the composition good, and the colouring still bright after an exposure of five hundred
years: perhaps this picture may have excited the imagination of Leonardo da
Vinci, in the same manner as the spark of Brunetto Latini is said to have
kindled the flame of Dante’s muse; yet Giotto’s production is no spark. The
best specimens of his painting are at Padua and Assisi, but he also worked at
Ravenna, Pisa, Naples, and in the sacristy of Saint Peter’s at Rome: he was a
friend of Dante and painted his portrait as well as that of Brunette Latini and
Corso Donati, and his architectural taste still stands conspicuous in the
magnificent belfry of the Duomo and the church of Orto San Michele at Florence;
for the former of which he received the high honours of citizenship and 100 golden florins a-year as a pension from the republic.
The cathedral church to winch this tower is attached was designed and partly
finished by Arnolfo di Lapo if, as Lanzi asserts, the latter name did not
designate a distinct person; he was also a sculptor and disciple of Niccolo
Pisano and executed works at Pisa, Rome, and other parts of Italy.
Mosaic work also began to make its appearance at
Florence towards the middle of this century; it was introduced by Andrea Tafi who although an older man studied, according to
Baldinucci, as a painter under Cimabue : born in 1213 he felt his powers, and a
strong inclination to the arts, and resolved, in spite of the rudeness and
consequent disadvantages of the age to pursue their study. As at this time
Mosaic pictures were perhaps the most esteemed he determined to gain a name, if
not from superiority of hand at least by the durability of his materials;
therefore repaired to Venice then the best school of this art, studied under those that were employed in
decorating the Church of Saint Mark, particularly Apolonio Greco whom he
persuaded to accompany him to Florence, and there learned his secret of
composition for Mosaic pictures; they were afterwards employed together to
adorn the Baptistry, where Gaddo Gaddi a better
artist than either ultimately joined them.
The latter was born in 1239 and died twelve
years after his supposed master Cimabue, having painted in Florence, Pisa and
in Rome, where he had been invited by Clement the Fifth; but his talents
survived in his son Taddeo and grandson Agnolo, both distinguished artists; and
besides this the family of Gaddi acquired some reputation in the subsequent
affairs of their country.
Perhaps the three sister arts would have
remained long if not entirely dormant had not the powerful stimulus of religion
assisted in their revival: that strong and prevalent inclination to please whom
we love, and deprecate those we fear, has in ancient and modern times produced
more temples, statues, and paintings, than any inherent taste or mental
necessity for the beautiful alone.
In the early ages of modern civilisation the superior riches and refinement of the clergy, their comparatively domestic
life, and the policy of alluring devotees by agreeable objects, which they well
knew how to invest with a peculiar sanctity, turned their attention more
immediately to the fine arts; these were as much encouraged within their
churches and cloisters as in the outward world, wherefore they became
essentially the patrons of art, and were enabled to be so not only from their
religious influence but their extensive temporal power and unbounded wealth.
The episcopacy in these early times was anything
but clerical; its sacred calling was no exemption from military service, and in
the character of feudal Barons the Bishops were often compelled even by popes and emperors to
carry arms, besides being in constant collision with their no less warlike
neighbours. Amongst the most powerful churchmen of those days were the Bishops
of Arezzo and Florence, whose temporal jurisdiction was enormous : the ample
means and belligerent disposition of one of the former has already been
noticed, but something may be now said about the authority of the latter.
It is commonly supposed that the first bishop of
Florence was Frontino a disciple of Saint Peter who with Saint Paolino Bishop
of Lucca preached Christianity there in the year 50 and was cotemporary with Saint
Romulus first bishop of Fiesole : how these facts are ascertained would now perhaps be difficult to discover; but
ancient documents are adduced to prove that the primitive title of the
Florentine prelates was “servants of Saint John and unworthy bishops.” The
last epithet was probably not long retained, but its truth was often manifested
especially about the last quarter of the ninth century when the increasing
temporal power of the Italian prelates sadly interfered with their spiritual
office.
Charles the Bald’s contention with his brother
Louis and others for the kingdom of Italy was decided by bribery, the clergy
forming a considerable part of the elective body; their support therefore was
not given for nothing, and in the long tempest of internal war which began with
the struggle between Berenger the First and Guido Alarquis of Spoleto,' both spiritual and temporal lords acted with more sagacity than
patriotism. The dignified clergy were then bribed like laymen, with temporal
lordships, with counties, cities, castles, marquisates, dukedoms, and public
revenues, and the Hungarian and Saracenic incursions gave them in common with
others a fair excuse for building strongholds and fortifying towns; and
thenceforth they gradually assumed the character and authority of military
nobles and counts, that is governors of cities and their surrounding country:
this clerical thirst for power became epidemic and each prelate strove hard to
combine spiritual and temporal authority by ousting the civic counts and
usurping the functions of their office while they still retained the empty
name.
The abbots of convents, and even lady-abbesses
strove with the bishops in this worldly race, and at every fresh succession to
the Italian crown managed by the power of gold to have old grants confirmed,
and generally augmented: this system had arrived at such a height in the
eleventh century as to make the sovereign insist that those prelates who
enjoyed temporal dignities under the crown should also receive the investiture
of their abbeys and bishoprics from his hands. A new source of fraud and simony
was thus opened; unholy treasures were poured into imperial coffers, papal
interests were affected, and the system ultimately terminated in open warfare
between the church and empire under Hildebrand and his successors: the abbots,
increasing in pride and power, disdained longer to acknowledge any superiority
in the ancient episcopal authority, and assuming the staff and mitre surpassed the bishops themselves in pomp and splendour. The result in both cases was a total neglect of
the pastoral duties to follow a court which in those days was never stationary;
they sent their vassals to war and as we have said were sometimes even forced
to take the field themselves in defiance of all church canons, while their
feudal neighbours tempted by the riches and false position of the clergy lost
no opportunity of attacking them under a regular system of spoliation.
On this commanding position of double authority
were placed from very early times the bishops of Florence, and their ancient
power great as it was, augmented after the fall of the Lombard dynasty; first
under the general protection of Charlemagne, and subsequently by the bounty of
devout sinners; but more especially
after the commencement of Florentine independence by the spontaneous obedience
of the “Cattani” or feudal chieftains, who became willing vassals of
the church in order to avoid the less agreeable domination of that republic. In
this way the Bishop of Florence rose into a powerful chieftain, the lord of
between forty and fifty castles and towns within its territory, and was
purposely spared by that city at a time when the surrounding chiefs were
successively disappearing in the spreading shadow of its power.
Florence had not in fact the same causes of
quarrel with these prelates as with other feudal barons, the Cattani, all of
Lombard or German blood held strongly to the emperors; were proud,
aristocratic, impatient of control, and despised the persons while they feared
the power of the citizens. The republic on the contrary followed Matilda’s
example by supporting the church: the bishops were naturally on that side and
therefore allowed to enjoy their estates in peace and almost independence while
willing to acknowledge the same paramount authority in Florence that formerly
belonged to the dukes and marquises of Tuscany. This supremacy was demanded
from all, and these prelates virtually submitted by appearing before the
Florentine courts in disputes with their own vassals. The Cattani on the other
hand endeavoured to shelter themselves under that
reverence which was then shown to everything ecclesiastical by giving their
allegiance to the bishop alone, and so becoming vassals of the church. The
lords of Castiglione were the first to do this in 1072, and their example was
followed as occasions offered through nearly the whole of the thirteenth
century, but generated much political disturbance and finally brought the
republic and the episcopacy into hostile collision.
Nor were these disputes confined to the
government; the election of Florentine bishops by the free votes of the inhabitants
and clergy had occasioned sharp struggles, bad blood, and often double returns;
to check such squabbles Honorius IV first violated the custom in 1286, and it
was entirely abolished for a similar reason by John XXII in 1322; the republic
prudently reserving to itself a right of nominating candidates and
simultaneously breaking the ancient custom of receiving a foreign ecclesiastic as
bishop of Florence. Many of these Cattani after having been subdued and made
citizens of Florence still maintained their feudal following and were usually attended
by troops of retainers, half slaves half freedmen, called “Uomini di Masnada” who held certain possessions of them
by the tenure of military service, took oaths of fidelity, and appear to have included
every rank of person in the different Italian states according to the quality of
the chief; but without any degradation of character being attached to such employment.
This kind of servitude, which could not be thrown
off without a formal act of manumission, was common in the north of Italy and began
in the eleventh century, when innumerable chieftains started up owning no superior
but the emperor. Being at constant war with each other they sought every means of
creating a military following by granting lands to all ranks of people, and it is
probable that many slaves were then partly emancipated for the purpose: such a
condition, though not considered dishonourable, was thus
essentially tinged with the colours of slavery, and so
far differed from the “Vassi” and “Vassali”
as well as from the Vavasours. This union of “Servi” slaves, or vassals of
one chief, was called “Maxnada ” and hence the
name “Masnadieri” so often recurring in
early Italian history; for the commanders of these irregular bands were often
retained in the pay of the republic and frequently kept the field when the civic troops had
returned to their homes, or when the war was not sufficiently important to
bring the latter out with the Carroccio. Hence the distinction between the
common expressions “Fare Esercito” and “Fare Masnada.”
Besides these military Villains who were
also called “Fedeli” there were two other kinds of slaves amongst the early
Italians, namely prisoners of war and the labourers attached to the soil, who were considered as cattle in every respect except
that of their superior utility and value: the former species of slavery was
probably soon dissolved by the union of self-interest and humanity: the latter
began to decline in the twelfth century: partially continued through the
thirteenth and vanished entirely in the fourteenth century. This emancipation does
not appear to have been so much the effect of any particular Christian
influence or direct moral improvement; although both might have materially
assisted; as that of utility and necessity: masters began to feel more
sensibly the inconveniences of slavery while its advantages were subject to
many drawbacks. The high price of the slave, his sickness death or flight; his crimes
if capital, for which his owner was so far responsible as to be compelled to
pay the consequent fines; the cost of tracing and identifying deserters which frequently
involved long and expensive suits if the runaway denied his being a slave; marriages
between bondsmen and women belonging to different masters, involving the
separation of man and wife; till these tended to undermine the hideous fabric
of predial and domestic slavery.
But the most powerful agent in the destruction
of this deep-seated injustice was the blaze of liberty which in the twelfth
century overran northern Italy and left so many independent altars burning on
its plains. The frequent wars of the new republics caused a demand for soldiers
and rendered the flight and concealment of slaves comparatively easy; for the ancient
laws of the Franks and Lombards against enlisting and secreting them had ceased
with the imperial sway; incipient freedom found a new interest in relaxing
antique rigour and arming slaves with the buckler of
liberty for the defence of their common county. At Bologna about the year 1256
rural slaves belonging to no less than a huudred citizens were not only emancipated by a public decree but their freedom was
purchased with the public money at the rate of ten Lire a head for man, woman
and child above fourteen years of age, and eight for all below; a price which
approaches in value to perhaps near thirty pounds of our present money.
The condition of these slaves was not however at
any time so hopeless as to darken that prospect of future liberty which might
open on them from their own conduct or the benevolence of their master: this
boon was frequently granted by all but priests, who are supposed to have
considered such beneficence as an alienation of ecclesiastical property and
therefore against the canons of the church. But sons of slaves if sufficiently
educated and manumitted were often received into holy orders, and thus a slight
compensation was sometimes offered for the almost hopeless condition of their
parents. These bondsmen were nevertheless allowed to accumulate capital by
their own industry and finally purchase their freedom; many were emancipated by
the dying commands of their masters; many for long service, fidelity, ability;
at the birth of children, and for the good of their deceased owner's soul:
thus by degrees the public mind was influenced by more liberal sentiments,
liberty generated liberty, and this milder form of an inhuman system gradually
though not entirely mouldered away.
The same free spirit, the offspring of commerce
and intelligence, which so stooped to remove the shackles of slavery had
already risen under the stranger’s yoke and repelled his aggressions; freedom
rode triumphant on the plains of Lombardy; each city stood nobly for itself
yet all so united in the common
cause that the German felt he was no longer lord and master of Italy. It was a
long and bloody contest, but the people had been prepared by many concurring
events: industry had enlarged commerce, commerce had enlarged wealth, and both
together had enlarged knowledge; knowledge begat freedom of thought and juster
notions of human dignity; men began to perceive that they were not placed
aright, and a thousand grievances which had previously been overlooked, disregarded,
perhaps unfelt, were now by the prying eyes of innovation magnified beyond
their real size and natural deformity. Neither had the art of war been
neglected; necessity had forced upon the Italians a profession which is in
general as hastily taken up as it is too reluctantly abandoned, yet one that
brings many noble spirits, many private virtues, with much public wickedness into
strong relief, and by which nations are blinded to the infamy of such crimes as
would fill their individual members with disgust.
The savage inroads of fierce Hungarian tribes and
ruinous descents of the Saracens in the beginning of the tenth century totally
changed the aspect of Italy: under the Frankish dynasty a long-continued calm,
unruffled by the sweeping tempests of barbarian violence, had accustomed the
people generally to inhabit unfenced places so that even the old civic
fortifications had mostly fallen to decay; but first the civil wars of Guido
and Berenger, and then the Hungarian inroads, created a different state of
things throughout the land. Cities and towns were rapidly surrounded with
walls, numberless castles seemed ns it were to grow out of the massive rocks,
grey lines of ramparts circled every crag, and scarcely a hamlet or even
private gentleman that did not demand the royal permission to secure themselves
and their property: the whole country had thus assumed a warlike aspect in the tenth
and eleventh centuries ; and even thus early those lofty towers of the city nobles
which multiplied so rapidly in the Guelph and Ghibeline frenzy of the twelfth
and following ages, are said to have originated; when even the very stones seemed
to share the general madness, and the battlements took a different form
according to the faction they defended. These towers were in Florence a sign
of high nobility, because nobles alone had in general the power or the privilege
of erecting them; but the means probably constituted the privilege, as Malespini tells us that several of those destroyed in 1250 belonged
to opulent citizens who were not nobles. The number of these buildings at
Florence was enormous but in Pisa incredible; ten thousand of them it is said
living once existed there in a warlike state; and at Luccapastruccio ordered three hundred lofty towers to be reduced to the level of the neighbouring houses: state policy and party rage in like
manner lowered and demolished those of Florence but the ground story of
multitudes may still be traced by the curious nimbler in the more ancient
streets of that metropolis. These high and slender towers clustering so thickly
against a cloudless sky must have given a bright and lively aspect to the city
when first bursting upon the view of the traveller; a
show of peace from the abodes of strife! The town of San-Gimignano,
still called “San Gimignano delle belle torre” by the people, where many still
remain; and even Siena, will now perhaps afford the best example of this rich
antique appearance, unaccompanied by the more revolting features as well as
the daring and romantic energy of those turbulent ages. Some of these buildings
leaned out of the perpendicular, as the belfry of Pisa and the rougher built Garisenda of Bologna which furnished Dante with so striking
a simile; this position is doubtless accidental in both; in the former
certainly, as recent excavations have proved; but all were intended in
Florence as fortresses, while at Siena, as we have seen, a different origin is ascribed to them and some doubt exists about the real
object of their erection.
The massive tower in the midst of a castle was
called as with us the “Donjon” or “Maschio”: the “Cassero” was a building of the same description but
walled round (of which there is a fine specimen at Vol terra) attached to the
citadel or “Rocca”. This last name was however more particularly applied
to the strong fortified hamlets on precipitous hills, those on the plains being
for the most part larger and generally called “Castelli” a denomination
which should not be mistaken for a simple castle according to our English
meaning. Some of these Castelli had, like that of Santa Maria a Monte mentioned
by Villani, no less than three circuits of walls besides the Rocca; and some had
a barbacan or lower wall beyond the rampart and
sloping outwards which seems to have inclosed a
narrow space between itself and the latter to prevent the application of
scaling-ladders; (like the “Cordon” of modern works) and the approach of
other warlike engines. That this could not have been very high from the ground
or for from the rampart, is evident from a circumstance quoted by Muratori: a
knight called Ghinozzo being in 1329 prisoner in a
certain Senese fortress, one day mounted his horse and riding near the walls
suddenly gave him the spur, leaped over the ramparts and alighting on the barbacan reached the outer ground with a second spring,
then spurring on apace gained the friendly fortress of Sassoforte.
The “Bastie,” which seem to be identical with the “Battifolli” so frequently mentioned in Italian
chronicles, were a sort of redoubt built of timber in a flat country, and
generally round some tower or houses, as a blockading station against a
fortress or other besieged place : they were encompassed by a ditch and earthen
rampart and were garrisoned by both cavalry and infantry.
After the year 1000 but especially in the
twelfth century, the northern Italians having become warlike and republican,
acquired also a taste for wealth industry and dominion: the two former were
then indispensable to maintain their state; population became necessary for
industry, and land for population. They all therefore set themselves to
recover their ancient landmarks by reducing the neighbouring aristocracy to obedience; they then opposed the emperors on the plea of their
infringing ancient rights and customs and loading them with unjust taxation;
and thus a warlike spirit sprang up from the force of circumstances, but
it is supposed that the Sicilian Normans were the first to introduce a more
regular discipline and inspire the Italians with a professional love of arms
and military glory.
The age of castle-building brought with it also
an improvement or perhaps a revival of military besieging engines. After
filling the ditch, moveable wooden towers called “Castra”and “ Phalas” were pushed close up to the walls and a bridge
let fall from them upon the battlements, so that nothing but fire or hard
fighting could defend the city : then there were various instalments for
casting stones either in solid masses or in showers, such as the “Mangani” and “Manganeli”, the last a mere
diminutive of the first; the “Troja” or Sow, the “Ballistum” called also “Lupa” or the Wolf; and several others, all under the
general appellation of “Petriere”, The
Troja used by the Genoese in 1372 is said to have thrown stones of from eighteen hundred to two thousand seven
hundred pounds weight, a thing scarcely credible. The Lupa threw a weight of
three hundred Modenese pounds and the effects corresponded; wall, and house,
and tower, came crashing down under their ponderous strokes, while a storm of
smaller stones kept beating from the mangonels and other artillery. The
besieged had little shelter from such tempests; their general defence was a
strong netting hung loosely before the place exposed to such attacks, but the
mischief was often terrible: the killed and wounded were said to be “Manganati” or mangonelled (mangled) and this is frequently used by the Italian writers in a general
sense for being wounded or annoyed by missiles or projectiles of any kind; thus
F. Viliam says, “Their horses were more annoyed and manganati by the English arrows; hence probably our own word mangle both verb and
substantive”.
The Italian “Cavalleria” a name common to
those gentlemen who had received the knightly belt and sword, had its origin
among the northern conquerors of Italy : after the tenth century this honour was more strictly confined to persons of noble
birth, and in general none but those who already wore the spur could confer it;
this was either done in the field before or amidst the clang of arms or
victory, or on the peaceful celebration of some great festival. It however was
not uncommon for independent states to exercise this power as was often done
at Florence, where the people appointed a commissioner or public representative
to perform the ceremony. Gilt spurs were buckled to the heel, a golden fringe
was attached to the knightly hood and the hilt and pommel of the sword was
gilded. There wore several sorts of knights: those generally called “Cavalieri
a Spron d'Oro” knights
of the golden spur, corresponded in all respects with the knights of English
chronicles and were thus distinguished from the noble squires or “Donzelli”
who wore silver spurs but fought in armour on
horseback, and ranked above the “Scudieri” or esquires. Such knights
were also denominated “Cavalieri di Corredo”
from the arms they wore, or as some suppose from the public feast usually given
by them at their installation; but we do not gather this from Sacchetti who in
his Novelle describes four distinct ceremonies for as many kinds of knights,
namely; the “Cavalieri di Corredo”; “Cavalieri Bagnati” or knights of die bath; “Cavalieri di Scudo” and “Cavaliere d'Armi.”
“The Cavalieri di Corredo,”
he says, “are those who in a deep green habit and a golden garment take the
order of knighthood: Knights of the Bath are made with exceeding great ceremony
and should be washed from every vice: Knights of the Shield are those that are
made by the people or great lords, and receive the honour of knighthood armed, and with the Barbuta or
crested helmet on their head. Knights of Arms are those that in the beginning
or even in the midst of a battle receive this distinction.” Besides these there
were “Cavalieri di Cavallate” “ Cavalieri d' Elmo”
and simple “Cavalieri” none of which were terms of honour,
and only signified men-at-arms on horseback belonging to the Cavallati or civic companies of cavalry.
Towards
the latter end of the eleventh century armorial bearings were emblazoned on the
shields to distinguish the several knights in battle or tournament; those of
princes, passing from their shield to their money, carried the name along with
them and hence the pecuniary denominations of the Italian “Scudo” and tho “Ecu” of France; but the French lilies did not
appear as armorial bearings until 1150 under the reign of Louis the Seventh.
A cavaliere or man-at-arms was accompanied by
one “Destriero” or strong war-horse, and one
or two, sometimes three mounted squires who led the animal fully caparisoned; or
carried the helmet lance and shield of their master: these “Destrieri” (“rich and great horses” as Villani calls
them,) were so named because they were led on the right hand without any rider,
and all ready for mounting: the squire’s horses were of an inferior kind called “Ronzini”, and on the “Palafreni”
or palfreys the knight rode when not in battle. The number of squires usually
attending on men-at-arms was very great, sometimes even trebling their nominal
force as given in historical relations: by the contract between France and
Venice for transporting troops to the Levant in 1281, the French demand that
the Venetians should carry in their vessels four thousand five hundred men-at-ars, as many horses, and nine thousand squires besides
twenty thousand infantry; but what became of the squires’ horses in this
expedition does not appear .
Sometimes the squires were banded together in close
army and sent forward to the onslaught before the knights, who cased in iron
charged after them with a tremendous shock: a few of the bravest knights, as
already noticed, called Feditori or Feritori were always selected to begin the fight,
because if they succeeded in breaking the adverse line their comrades’ spirit
and confidence increased, while the enemy’s diminished at the signal to charge
the whole army cheered, drums and trumpets sounded, and the Feditori dashed forward to the onslaught: if repulsed they fell back through intervals
in the main line and rallied on the reserve which sometimes won the battle as
at Campaldino.
Amongst the usual pieces of defensive armour worn in these days was one called the “Cervelliera” or iron scull-cap invented by
the famous Michael Scott, which was worn under the helmet and much celebrated: the
lance, the mace, the shield, the sword, the knife, and the poniard, were the
offensive arms of horsemen: footmen handled the long spear, the javelin, the
bow, the axe, the sling, the crossbow, the sword, the long knife, the dagger,
and other offensive anus; with the shield and helmet for defence. Of shields
there were various sorts in Italy; such as the “Scudo”, the “Rotella”, the “Brocchiere,” the “Targa”, and the “Pavese”, all differing in form, size, and material : they were
of iron, brass, wood, and leather; round, oblong, square and pointed : the Pavese were shields made after the fashion of Pavia; the Rotelli were named
from their circular form; the Brocchieri because they bulged out into a pointed boss and spike, which in close combat
might serve as a weapon of offence. The crossbowmen served on foot or on
horseback; they were sometimes arrayed in divisions or sections, shooting
alternately, so that a constant discharge was kept up against the men-at-arms: the
crossbow arrows were commonly called “Moschette” also “ Quadrilli” either from the
form of the head or being four-feathered : the “ Bolzoni ” were something of the same kind, but knobbed instead of pointed, and the “Verrettoni” a short light arrow, also
discharged from the crossbow, was very generally used, especially in the civil
tumults of Florence.
After the eleventh century when an Italian
republic declared war everybody that could carry arms was forced to take the
field, and if any place were besieged the different Quarters, Sixths, or
Thirds, of the city, according as it was divided, took their turn and were
regularly relieved about every thirty days. War was not wade in those ages
without previous notice and reasons given: the enemy was often challenged to
fight at a particular time and place; a herald threw down the gauntlet of
defiance, and the sun, wind, and all local advantages were duly balanced; a
custom preserved long afterwards in duelling. Winter
campaigns were rare. May being the usual time of commencing war, especially the “Guerra Guerriata” or a ravaging desultory
warfare without coming to serious combat: armies were attended by irregular
troops called “Ribaldi” and “Gualdani” who it is supposed did not differ materially
from each other and were used to scour the country for plunder forage and
intelligence; they fought without order as occasion offered, running in between
the regular battalions and under the horses of the men-at-arms whose bowels
they ripped up with long knives.
The “Masnade”
have been already noticed; but besides regular vassals we have early accounts
of paid bands of soldiers who with the former constantly kept the field when
unpaid citizens had withdrawn to their occupations: they were commonly
foreigners, and probably deserters or fragments of imperial armies disbanded at
the death of emperors in Italy, or dispersed from other causes. These
mercenaries however did not consist of Germans only; English, Flemings, and
even Hungarians, found out that the Italians were in need of troops and paid
well for them; so that as early as the thirteenth century this custom had
already begun to undermine the martial; skill and spirit of some communities
and paved the way for future Condottieri and their robber companions. The
Italian genius afterwards revived, but in an unwholesome form, and Florence
although richer, perhaps more powerful, yet never was so great as when her
citizens willingly took the field at their own expense to fight for their own country
under the shadow of the time-honoured Carroccio.
“It was drawn forth with joy and honour when the state, went out to war, and above it on a lofty
sail-yard was borne the bright and triumphant banner to which the whole army looked:
neither was there any castle in the territory, whether on mountain or in plain,
to defend which the people would fight so manfully, or so readily expose both
life and soul to every chance and danger for on this car depended the honour, strength, and glory of the republic”.
These are not the words of a Florentine but the
spirit was alike, and when kings or emperors came into Italy the highest honour that could be offered was to meet them on their way
with the Carroccio, and all public ceremonies were rendered more solemn by the
presence of this banner and its gorgeous accompaniments. The Carroccio only
went to the field “a Oste” or with the whole
military force of the commonwealth; at other times the colours were carried by a single man who was never to retreat or lower them under pain
of eternal infamy. Prisoners who declined joining the ranks of a victorious
army were despoiled of their horses and arms and held to ransom, or sent about
their business ; but the Florentines were considered so opulent that their
ransom was always more exorbitant than other prisoners of war, and this is one
of the reasons alleged for their gradually renouncing the military profession.
Sometimes the captives, especially when taken in a fortress, were released on
their parole not to serve for a certain period; sometimes they were kept in
prison for months and even years, but generally exchanged when both parties
became encumbered with them: they were often dismissed under certain conditions
and in case of decisive victories the vanquished obliged themselves to obey
the victors whenever called upon, either in paying tribute or receiving a
Podesta at their nomination, or perhaps in supplying them with a body of
auxiliaries in their expeditions; these were all marks of homage and lost
national independence ; but not of diminished internal freedom.
There was a strong and proud spirit of jealous
patriotism amongst all the Italian republics that burned as fiercely in
Florence as anywhere, and in their own estimation placed her above every other
country: this encouraged rivalry implacability and war, and probably brought
out both the bad and good qualities of the people in deeper colouring.
All served, from sixteen to sixty, either in
garrison or the field; and although all were not equally soldier-like there
were few who could not manage the arms then most commonly in use, because their
holiday amusements were athletic, military, and the skilful management of arms. The more disciplined troops were distinguished by their
peculiar weapons, their horses, or the cars on which in some places they went
out to battle; or else from their known station in the line, or the
particular time or occasion when they were to join in the fight: for instance
one body defended the Carroccio, another led or sustained the first attack,
while a third was held in reserve. It does not appear that the Florentines made
use of cars for sending their troops to the field, like the Milanese, who
according to Denina had three hundred and the people of Asti a thousand; on
each of which ten armed soldiere issued to the war.
The military resources of some of these
republics were astonishing when any great effort required them: Milan offered
Frederic II ten thousand men to accompany him into Palestine; the Bolognese
armed forty thousand against Venice! and the tyrant Eccelino maintained amongst his other troops a legion of twelve thousand Paduans alone!
Florence at one time could bring a hundred thousand fighting men at a few days’
notice into the field from the capital, contado, and
district; all organized under captains of tens, hundreds, and thousands, and
completely equipped according to their various nature. The greater part of
these were agricultural labourers well used to carry
arms, and while thus employed the commonwealth supplied them with provisions
and even a certain allowance of pay equivalent to the average wages of the
time ; thus when Florence made a sudden demonstration of her forces before
Arezzo in 1384 as will be hereafter noticed, twenty thousand cavalry and sixty
thousand infantry were rapidly and almost instantaneously assembled to gain
their object.
In these expeditions a camp equipage accompanied
the troops, the tents being as at present made of canvas, but probably at the
expense of the soldier: they were called “Trabacche”
and “Padiglioni” and were of various shapes
and sizes according to the rank and wealth of the owner: those of kings,
princes, and other great people were magnificent, and some are described as
being so spacious as to startle all common belief; but that considerable cost
and ingenuity were lavished on these vast tabernacles is indubitable, and the
national pavilion being considered second only to the Carroccio in honour; it was in especial charge of the general and had a
guard of honour amongst the Florentines.
National pride and hatred rendered every insult
personal, and produced a punctilious sensibility which often vented itself in
sudden fiery expeditions without adequate cause; during these hostilities, and
even in times of peace, everything was done by adverse states to insult and
aggravate each other: dead asses were thrown into besieged places; races,
particularly of infamous women, were run under the city walls ; the sports of
peace were celebrated in similar situations, as if to show the perfect safety in
which the invaders considered themselves, with their utter contempt of the
enemy: money was struck on the stock of a felled tree; generally one of
those that formed a shady resort for the citizens beyond the walls; as if to
exercise the rights of sovereignty and insult the vanquished: and even
permanent inscriptions and other abusive emblems were placed over the gates as
the Pisans did near Lerici in 1256; or on some lofty
tower as the marble arms of Carmignano. All these customs and feelings made the
wars of this early period between neighbouring states
more like the personal quarrels of individuals than the conflicts of contending
nations and often stamped a bitter and bloody character on the contest to which
except in civil contentions, we now are happily strangers.