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READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

 

FLORENTINE HISTORY FROM THE EARLIEST AUTHENTIC RECORDS TO THE ACCESSION OF FERDINAND THE THIRD, GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY.

 

BOOK THE FIRST.

CHAPTER II. FROM A.D. 17 TO A.D. 650.

 

Etruria, Tuscia, and Tyrrhenia, were ancient names of Tuscany; and its boundaries the Magra, the Tiber, the Apennines and the Tyrrhenian or Etruscan Sea. The first river divided it from Liguria, now for the most part comprised in the Genoese state, and the second from Latium and Umbria, which are a portion of the ecclesiastical dominions: this was central Etruria; but the Etruscans’ territory, says Livy, extended from the Alps to the Sicilian Sea and filled all Italy with their renown. The political power of Etruria was based on a confederation of twelve principal cities and their territories, each governed by its own Lucumo or king; and, though various associations existed amongst them, it does not appear that the nation was ever steadfastly united by any supreme government, like that of the United States of America.

The chief Tuscan river is the Arno, which, like the Tiber, has its source in the mountain of Falterona: flowing through the Casentine valleys, and passing within three miles of Arezzo, it descends rapidly into the upper Val d’Arno, bathes the town and fields of Florence; winds between Monte Lupo and Capraia; and after refreshing and fertilising the plains of Pisa sweeps grandly through that capital and casts its turbid waters to the sea.

Florence is placed in the centre of Tuscany between the hills of Montughi, Monte Morello and Fiesole to the north; and those of San Miniato, San Giorgio and Bellosguardo to the south. Seated in a spacious and fertile plain, it seems as if some white and rocky mass had been dashed violently down, and breaking through olive groves and vineyards had promiscuously scattered its fragments on the soil; so thick are the villas and hamlets that stud the country round.

To the north-east is the treble-peaked Fiesole with its frowning convent and huge Etruscan walls: the valley of Mugnone, a place made classical by Boccaccio, divides it from Monte Morello and the neighbouring heights, once wooded, now brown and bare, the resort of herds and herdsmen. To the north-west, under the skirts of Monte Morello, lurks the city of Prato, one of the earliest Florentine conquests: further westward, Pistoia, the “City of Factions” and supposed memorial of Catiline’s defeat, is seen in dim perspective melting in the softened features of its own romantic hills. Behind all, the rugged peaks of Carrara, Pelligrino and the Appuan Alps break on the western sky, while to the south­west the eye ranges over a succession of villa-studded heights rich in agrarian industry; and for to the east, in a lofty recess of the Apennines, sits the woody Vallombroso, darkly contrasted with the general view.

Except the quotation from Florus, the earliest notice of Florence is by Tacitus, who at the end of his first book tells us that during the reign of Tiberius, in order to control the frequent floods of the Tiber, a question arose in the senate about the expediency of directing its tributary streams into new channels; and that in an audience given to the Ambassadors of the various Municipia and Colonies, those of Florence entreated that the river Chiana might not be turned into the Arno, as it would assuredly ruin their city by the increased volume of water which might thus be rolled down on them in rainy seasons. This vain though natural apprehension was first shaken by the scientific spirit of the Medici and afterwards dispelled by the lights of modern science, which besides arresting those devastating floods has metamorphosed the Chiana swamps into rich firms with a healthy population; and the poisonous wastes of the Maremma now promise similar and equally beneficial consequences.

It is believed that Christianity was first secretly taught in Florence about Nero’s reign  (AD 56) by Frontinus and Paulinus, disciples of Saint Peter; this was followed by a persecution of the Christians which nearly ceased under Vespasian and Titus, and recommenced under Decius in the third century (AD 250). St. Miniato is supposed to have then suffered decapitation on the spot where the Church of Santa Candida alla Croce a Gorgo was afterwards erected, bequeathing its name to the Present Gate of La Croce, and his body was interred, not without a miracle, on the opposite hill which still bears his name.

The first publicly acknowledged bishop seems to have been a certain Felice in 313, but no sure indication of any other appears about the year 400, when St. Zanobi was consecrated, a man reverenced in life and death for his exemplary conduct and miracles; that of causing a decayed elm to spring into full leaf by the accidental touch of his body on its way to interment, was early commemorated by the erection of a marble column on the spot, and long afterwards produced a beautiful specimen of pictorial art from the genius of Ridolfo Ghirlandaio.

While the western Empire was in rapid decay, the barbarian Radagasius with a numerous army laid siege to Florence, but met a bold resistance and was totally defeated by Stilicho in October 405 or 406, with the loss of all his army by sword and famine. In honour of this victory games were celebrated at Florence on the eighth of the above month, it being the festival of St. Reparata, to whom the Church of St. Salvadore which occupied the place of the present Cathedral was then dedicated. Long before the year 330 when the western Empire was first weakened by Constantine’s emigration, and as early as the time of Marcus Aurelius, symptoms of the great northern movement began to appear; it is even believed that during Domitian’s reign the Dacians might have been pressed by the Alani and these again by a forward motion of the distant Goths. But while this was in preparation all southern Europe had gradually sunk into effeminacy and corruption, and half the world was effete when the grand infusion of young and vigorous blood rushed southward, as if by a powerful effort of nature, to restore her moral and physical equilibrium.

From Adrian’s reign the seventeen provinces of Italy were governed by Consuls, Presidents, and Rectors or Correctors, Tuscany being ruled by the last; and this continued, with the exception perhaps of Odoacer’s rule, down to Longinus, who degraded the provincial Dukes of Narses to mere governors of cities. But the Empire still mouldered away, and its division by Valentinian the First was of no more avail than a change of the western government, from Rome to the stronger positions of Milan and Ravenna, by Maximian and Diocletian in the fourth century: Italy soon fell a prey to these northern hordes, who pouring in countless numbers from their gloomy forests and icy lakes, revelled in the milder air of the more fertile Ausonia.

The ravages of the Visigoths under Alaric, of the Huns under Attila, and the Vandals under Genseric, were so many destructive storms that struck the land with death and desolation; but the Heruli of King Odoacer changed the whole moral and political aspect of Italy: they planted a new and a freer spirit in a country which they had no wish to abandon for the less brilliant skies of their own inclement region. After defeating Augustulus and Orestes on the plains of Pavia, Odoacer remained for seventeen years the master of Italy’s fairest provinces, but without the imperial title, because from policy or habitual veneration for the majesty of the Caesars it is even doubted whether he ever assumed that of royalty, being content as it seemed with the simple dignity of Patrician or imperial Vicar. The sovereignty of Rome thus fell into the hands of a barbarian, who nevertheless governed well and wisely; who was tolerant although an Arian; who respected the institutions and prejudices of the vanquished although a conqueror; and caused Italy to be once more feared, courted and respected by the world.

Five centuries later the Italian Berenger reigned; he was deposed, and saw Otho of Saxony seated in his place as Emperor of the West: and these two revolutions, says Sismondi, “in one of which the name of Empire was changed to Monarchy, and in the other that of Monarchy to Empire, mark the long course of adversity that the Italian nation was compelled to endure for the recovery of its natural character, and the production of an energy that might render it worthy of freedom.” In Odoacer’s day the native Italians were in fact reduced to the last state of corruption, and a union of this degrading softness with the rough northern spirit, like the mixture of different soils, produced that harvest of intelligence and liberty which has nourished the European world to its present vigour: from the most abject degradation they passed through a long course of adversity to an energetic independence of character that rendered them worthy of the liberty they afterwards achieved.

Theodoric King of the Ostrogoths, a great soldier, a just ruler, and a virtuous man; for he was above the standard of his day; invaded Italy with the Emperor Zeno’s concurrence, defeated Odoacer in several battles, and after a long struggle remained master of that kingdom, which he governed in peace and justice for two-and-thirty years (AD 493-526). He put Odoacer to death, as Odoacer had put Orestes, and in his latter years became gloomy and even ferocious to his immediate attendants; and the execution of Boethius and Symmachus will ever darken his memory in despite of subsequent remorse. Theodoric nevertheless was one of those glorious barbarians who, themselves ignorant of the first rudiments of literature, furnish ample materials for the philosopher’s reflection and the historian’s pen. Through the influence of Cassiodorus, secretary to both him and Odoacer, learning was never slighted and genius generally repaid; and although the death of those celebrated philosophers was a just reproach, the honour they received through life will still do credit to his memory. Justinian’s generals, Belisarius and Narses, ultimately subdued the Ostrogoths after a supremacy of sixty years, their final struggles being the battles of Nocera and Tagina, where Teias and Totila successively fell, quelled by the mightier genius of an old neglected general and a mutilated courtier. The able, vigorous, but unpopular and somewhat avaricious rule of Narses lasted sixteen years, until he fell by female intrigues and adverse machinations accompanied by insults so bitter as, in the opinion of some writers, to cause the subsequent invasion of Alboin and his Lombards by a direct invitation. The fact is doubtful; but the Lombards, after forty years, abandoned Pannonia to the fiercer Huns, and with numerous Saxon auxiliaries rose in arms and marched to Italy breaking through every barrier and spreading in one broad flood from the Alps to the capital. The Venetians were safe in their Lagoons; Rome and its immediate territory remained faithful to the emperor; the southern maritime cities were defended by Greeks; and Zoton, an adventurous chief of the Lombard race, had established himself from the year 561 in the heart of Italy under the title of Duke of Beneventum: his independence may perhaps be doubtful; but with these exceptions the realm of Lombardy included all the peninsula, Pavia being then the permanent seat of government.

This invasion gave fresh energy to Italy, and tended to rouse her from that state of drowsy indifference with which she was still oppressed in despite of northern inroads : at first the Lombards’ rule was intolerably fierce, and though subsequently modified by time and intercourse, they never thoroughly mixed with the Italians, who could not forget their pristine ferocity even after that monarchy was destroyed. In conjunction with the bitter feeling between conquerors and conquered, diversity of manners and opinions must have occasioned hatred and disgust to both, and the despicable notion that the barbarians entertained of their new subjects is forcibly expressed by Luitprand, Bishop of Cremona; uttered, it is true, in a moment of anger, but not on that account the less sincere. “In the word Roman”, says he, “is included all that is ignoble, timid, avaricious, lascivious, and false, and every vice that can debase the dignity of man.” This would have astonished Fabricius, yet agrees with the opinions in Salviani’sGoverno di Dio” quoted by Lami, where there is a disgusting picture of Roman depravity, especially at public spectacles; while the chastity and generally moral, though uncivilised conduct of all the northern tribes except the Huns, is acknowledged. “The Goths” are described as “perfidious but chaste; the Alani not chaste but less perfidious; the Franks liars, but hospitable; the Saxons cruel and savage, but venerating chastity.” In fact the Goths and Lombards found all the vices that they most abhorred still flourishing in Italy, but in peculiar rankness about the theatres, amphitheatres, baths, and all other places of public diversion; they were therefore destroyed; not from wanton barbarity but honest indignation; and though Theodoric through policy and general love of the arts, repaired the Coliseum and granted public games at the repeated petitions of the Romans, he yet designates them as “exhibitions contrary to the gravity of manners, evacuators of modesty, fountains of strife, and the mockery of times to come.” The courage of northern spirits, ruthless in battle but not wantonly cruel, revolted from the bloody sports of Rome, and even the Italian clergy endeavoured unsuccessfully to prevent them. Nothing however was gained before the reign of Odoacer except an edict against their being held on the Sabbath, and this was not long attended to; nor did they entirely cease until the country was ruined by misfortunes that destroyed the power or wish for such amusements, and reduced man almost to the level of those beasts which he was wont to hunt for pastime.

 

 

CHAPTER III.

FROM A.D. 650 TO A.D. 805.

FLORENTINE HISTORY FROM THE EARLIEST AUTHENTIC RECORDS TO THE ACCESSION OF FERDINAND THE THIRD, GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY.

READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

 

 

 

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