READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER XIX.FAILURE OF CHARLES V
AS the Emperor
approached Augsburg the magistrates came a mile or two out of the town to meet
him, and received him on their knees. He entered the city at the head of his
Spanish and Italian troops, and took up his residence at the house of the Fuggers in the Wine Market. One of his first steps was to
cause the cathedral, and another of the principal churches, to be purified from
the defilement they had suffered by the exercise of the Lutheran worship; after
which the Popish service was re-established in them with extraordinary pomp.
Had Charles been
so inclined, he might now, perhaps, have rendered his authority despotic in
Germany; yet he showed a wish to respect the constitution of the Empire; and
all his views seemed directed to the appeasing of the religious dissensions. A
marked change was observed in his appearance and conduct. During the late
campaign he seemed to have become all at once an old man. His hair was grown
completely grey; his countenance was pallid, his voice weak, and he was
affected with lameness. The constitutional melancholy which he inherited from
his mother appeared to be much increased. Already, in the year 1542, he had
expressed to the Duke of Gandia, afterwards General
of the Jesuits, his intention of abandoning the Court and the world so soon as
his son should be capable of assuming the reins of government. It was remarked
that he took no part in the festivities and amusements in which his brother
Ferdinand and the other princes assembled in Augsburg indulged. He took his
meals in solitude and silence; and it was seldom that the Court jesters, who at
that period entertained the leisure of the great, could extract from him the
faintest smile. It was to such a man, now for the first time truly Lord of
Germany, that princes and nobles, and the deputies of many great and wealthy
cities, came to do homage.
The Diet was very
fully attended. All the seven Electors were there, as well as a large number of
princes, prelates, and burgesses. After some trouble, especially with the
deputies of cities, the Emperor brought the three Colleges to a unanimous
decision on the subject of the Council — or rather he surprised their consent
by assuming it — so that he could tell the Pope that the Electors, the
spiritual and temporal Princes, and the Imperial cities, had submitted
themselves to the synod at Trent. In this resolution the stress laid upon the
designation of the place contained, in fact, a protest against the removal of
the Council. There still remained, however, the more difficult task of persuading
Paul to restore the Council to Trent; a difficulty increased by an occurrence
which further widened the breach between the Emperor and the Pope.
Paul’s son, Pier
Luigi Farnese, Duke of Parma and Piacenza, was a tyrant of the old Italian
stamp; in cruelty a Caesar Borgia in miniature. The hatred of his subjects
produced a not unusual catastrophe : Farnese was assassinated by a band of
conspirators, at the head of whom was Count Agostino Landi.
Ferrante Gonzaga, Governor of Milan, appears to have been acquainted with the
plot; nay, there are even strong suspicions that it had received the sanction
of the Emperor himself. However this may be, Gonzaga occupied Piacenza with his
troops, and Charles continued to hold possession of it, on the ground that he
had never granted investiture to the murdered Duke. The rage of the Pope at the
death of his son and the seizure of his domains knew no bounds. He was ready to
call the Turks to his assistance. Among other things, he contemplated a league
with France, with the view of making the Duke of Guise King of Naples. On the
20th of September he addressed an angry epistle to the Emperor, demanding that
the assassin should be punished, and that the town should be restored to Ottavio Farnese, the son of the murdered Duke and
son-in-law of the Emperor. To which demand the Emperor returned an evasive
answer.
These events
rendered the breach as to the Council irreparable. The Pope could not, indeed,
out of respect to public opinion, flatly reject the proposals respecting the
return of the Council, which were laid before him by Madrucci,
Cardinal of Trent; but he contrived that his answer should be equivalent to a
refusal. He replied that he must consult the Fathers assembled at Bologna, the
very persons against whom the Emperor protested. These declared that the first
step must be the reunion with themselves of the Fathers who had remained behind
at Trent. They then wished to know whether the German nation would recognize
and observe the decrees already made at Trent; whether the Emperor did not mean
to alter the form hitherto observed; and whether a majority of the Council
might not definitively decide respecting either its removal or its termination.
The Imperial plenipotentiary perceived from this answer that all hope of an
accommodation was at an end, and immediately left Rome. Charles dispatched two
Spaniards, the licentiate Vargas and Doctor Velasco, to Bologna, who, on the
16th January, 1548, made a solemn protest against the translation of the
Council, and all that it had subsequently done, as null and void; at the same
time declaring that the Emperor must now assume the care of the Church, which
had been deserted by the Pope. The Legate del Monte replied, that he should
answer only to God for what he had done, and could not suffer the temporal
power to arrogate the direction of a Council. In short, it was a declaration of
spiritual war.
The Interim, 1548
It being now
evident that no arrangement could be effected with the Pope, the Emperor
determined upon a scheme for the settlement by his own authority of the
religious differences which agitated Germany. With this view he commissioned
three divines, Michael Helding, Suffragan of the
Archbishop of Mainz, Julius Pflug, Bishop of Naumburg, and John Agricola, Court preacher of Joachim II,
Elector of Brandenburg, to draw up some articles which were to be observed till
the questions in dispute should be settled by a properly constituted and
generally acknowledged Council. The first of these divines represented the old
Catholic party; the second its more liberal, or Erasmian section; while Agricola, though he had sat at
Luther's table, was the exponent of the peculiar notions of his Sovereign. From
their labours was expected a code that should satisfy
all parties; but, as commonly happens in such compromises, they succeeded in
pleasing none. They drew up a formula consisting of twenty-six Articles, which,
as it was intended only to serve a temporary purpose, obtained the name of the
Interim. Most of the articles were in favour of the
Catholics, the only concessions of any importance to Lutheran views being the
celebration of the Lord's Supper in both kinds, and permission for married
clergy to retain their wives. The College of Princes adopted the opinion of the
spiritual Electors : that Church property should be restored; that a
dispensation should be necessary for the marriage of priests and for receiving
the cup in the Lord’s Supper; above all, that the formula should not affect
those who had remained in the old religion, but be applicable solely to the
Lutherans. The Emperor found himself obliged to accept this last condition. On
the afternoon of the 15th of May, 1548, the Colleges of the States were
summoned to the Imperial apartments, where the Emperor and King Ferdinand sat enthroned.
Although many wished that the subject should be fully discussed, the Archbishop
of Mainz stood up after the reading of the Interim, and without any authority
from his brother Electors, or from the assembly, thanked the Emperor for his
unwearied endeavors to restore peace to the Church; and in the name of the Diet
signified their approbation of the plan proposed. The assembly was struck with
astonishment at the presumption of the speaker, but nobody had the courage to
contradict him; and the Emperor accepted his declaration as a full and
constitutional ratification of the instrument : copies of which were now first
distributed to the States, so that there was no opportunity for discussion.
One of the first
to oppose the Interim was the new Elector Maurice, whom Charles had solemnly
invested at Augsburg with the Saxon Electorate. The investiture was conducted
with all the ancient ceremonies : a stage, with a throne for the Emperor, was
erected in the Wine Market; the other six Electors in their robes of state
assisted at the solemnity; while John Frederic, the deposed Elector, looked on
from the window of his lodgings with an undisturbed and even cheerful
countenance. On the day after the publication of the Interim, Maurice handed to
the Emperor a written protest against it. He remarked at the same time that he
had been hindered from expressing his opinion; complained of the hasty and
untimely speech of the Elector of Mainz; reminded Charles of the promises made
to himself at Ratisbon; and expressed his dissatisfaction that the Lutherans
alone were to be subjected to the new formula. Charles affected surprise at the
Elector's separating himself from the other States; but he promised to consider
his protest, and two days after Maurice quitted Augsburg. The Elector Palatine
and Joachim of Brandenburg accepted the Interim; Ulrich of Würtemberg also
caused it to be published, and enjoined his subjects to obey it. There were,
however, other malcontents besides Maurice. The Margrave John of Cüstrin remonstrated against it; and the deputies of
several Imperial cities alleged that they must await the instructions of their
constituents. With the cities, however, Charles adopted a more peremptory tone,
treating with each separately, and beginning with Augsburg, the municipal
council of which was brought by the threats of Granvelle to accept the Interim. The preachers were compelled to put on the vestments
appointed in that formula; and it was ordered that a mass should be said every
Sunday in the evangelical churches. Granvelle proceeded in like manner with the deputies of the other cities, and he even
went so far as to threaten some of the more obstinate with the flames.
With the steadfast
John Frederick the Imperial minister found more difficulty. Charles was
desirous of obtaining the adherence of the deposed Elector, both for the sake
of his influential example and on account of what possessions still remained in
his family; and with this view Granvelle, with his
son the Bishop of Arras, and the Vice-chancellor Seld,
were deputed to him. John Frederick kept the ambassadors to dinner; after which
he caused his Chancellor Minckwitz to read to them a
strong protest against the Interim, and concluded by desiring them to hand it
to the Emperor. For this act of honest contumacy a paltry vengeance was taken.
The ex-Elector’s servants were disarmed; his steward and cook were directed not
to prepare any flesh dinners on fast days; and what annoyed him more than all
this, he was deprived of his Court preacher and of his books; among which were
a splendidly illuminated Bible and the works of Luther, in whose writings he
found his chief solace, and which, as he expressed himself, “went through his
bones and marrow”. He consoled himself, however, with the reflection that they
could not be torn from his memory and heart. The Landgrave Philip, whose
conduct forms a strong contrast to that of John Frederick, experienced even
worse treatment. He wrote a very submissive letter to the Emperor from Donauworth, in which, although he expressed his opinion
that all the contents of the Interim could not be established from Scripture,
he promised obedience and implored the Emperor's mercy. But he was only treated
with still greater harshness and contempt.
As the Emperor had
been obliged to exempt the Catholics from the operation of the Interim, he
carried out the wishes he had long entertained for the amendment of the Church
by a separate edict of reformation, which was read June 14th, and published
after the close of the Diet. It contained many excellent rules respecting the
election of the clergy, their preaching, their administration of the sacraments
and ceremonies, their discipline and morals. Pluralities were abolished,
visitations appointed, the German hierarchy reconstituted, episcopacy restored
in Meissen and Thuringia, together with many other regulations of the like
description. Never was an ordinance of such a nature drawn up with more wisdom
and moderation. Even the advocate of the Roman Curia allows that it contained
much that was good; but asserts that it was necessarily abortive because a
temporal Prince had presumed to interfere in spiritual affairs.
Charles also
displayed his authority in this Diet by re-establishing the Imperial Chamber,
by renewing and amending the Landfriede,
or Public Peace, by sumptuary laws and new ordinances of police, and especially
by the reconstitution of the Imperial Circle of Burgundy by the addition to it
of the Netherland provinces of Utrecht, Overyssel,
Gelderland, Zutphen, and Groningen, fallen to the
house of Austria since 1521. Artois and West Flanders, released from French
suzerainty since 1526, were also now parts of the Emperor’s Burgundian
dominions. The Imperial States were not consulted respecting this arrangement,
with which they ventured not to find fault, although it was regarded with great
dislike and suspicion. It was plain, indeed, that the whole gain of the measure
would belong to the house of Austria, and that the Empire would be called upon
to defend the Low Countries against the enemies of that house. Charles
proceeded still more arbitrarily with several of the Imperial cities, by
depriving them of their municipal privileges and remodelling their government according to his will.
It was hardly to
be expected that the Lutherans, who had just thrown off the trammels of the
Pope, should quietly submit to the dictation of a temporal Prince in matters of
conscience. Wherever, indeed, the authority of the Emperor prevailed, he
compelled at least an external observance of the Interim, but the discontent
was deep and universal. At Nuremberg, the only priest who said Mass was obliged
to go to church attended by a guard. More than 400 pastors are said to have
been expelled from Swabia and the Rhenish lands for rejecting the Interim; and
although it was forbidden to write against it, under pain of death, no fewer
than thirty-seven attacks upon it appeared, including one by Calvin, whose
situation, however, did not expose him to much risk of incurring the penalty.
The towns of Lower Saxony entered into a league to resist the Interim; but it
was Magdeburg and Constance that chiefly distinguished themselves by their
opposition. The former, as we have seen, lay already under the ban of the
Empire; on the 6th of August, Constance, although it had done no more than
other towns, was subjected to the same penalty; but it had always been
obnoxious to the House of Austria. A body of Spaniards attempted to surprise the
city on the very day of the publication of the ban; the enterprise was
frustrated by an act which may be paralleled with that of Horatius Cocles. Two Spaniards were hastening over the bridge that
spans the Rhine to seize the open and unguarded gate; a citizen engaged them
both, and finding himself likely to be overpowered, grappled with them, and
dragged them after him into the stream. At length Constance was obliged to
surrender to the forces of King Ferdinand, October 14th; and though an Imperial
city, it was seized by that Prince for the House of Austria. After its capture
the exercise of Lutheran worship was forbidden there on pain of death. To the
reduction of Magdeburg, a longer and more difficult enterprise, there will be
occasion to revert. This city was now become the stronghold of Protestantism;
and it was chiefly here that were published the numerous pamphlets, songs,
caricatures, etc., in which the Interim was abused and ridiculed.
The Leipzig
Interim
Maurice was very
ill received on his return to his dominions. The States assembled at Meissen
refused to accept the Interim, and seemed to be already turning towards
Maurice's brother Augustus. All eyes were directed towards the Elector and his
theologians, the successors and representatives of Luther, and especially
towards Melanchthon, whom Maurice had recalled to Wittenberg; for the
University there had been dispersed by the war. Melanchthon had published a
pamphlet about the Interim, which had excited the minds of the Saxons against
it; and the Elector’s embarrassment was increased by a rescript from the
Emperor requiring obedience, and calling upon him to banish Melanchthon. That
reformer, however, was not made of the same stern, unyielding stuff as Luther;
and in this conjuncture it was perhaps fortunate that he was not so. Allowance
must be made for the difficult position in which he was placed. He had to
choose between the restoration of some unessential ceremonies and the
appearance of an Imperial army in Saxony, which, as it had done in Swabia,
might carry matters to a still greater extremity. Under these circumstances, he
and a few other divines who acted with him, consented to the resumption of
certain usages and ceremonies, which they called adiaphora, or
things indifferent, as not involving any points essential to salvation : such
as the use of the surplice, lights, bells, unction, fast days and festivals,
and the like; while they retained all the doctrines which they considered of
vital importance. A formula was drawn up in December, 1548, which obtained the
name of THE LEIPSIG INTERIM, and was published in the following July. The
concessions it contained drew down upon Melanchthon a storm of obloquy from
those more violent reformers whose situation exempted them from feeling the
motives which actuated him; and particularly from Matthias Flaccius,
a young divine, who had some motives of personal enmity against Melanchthon, as
well as from Calvin himself, in their safe retreats in Magdeburg and Geneva.
The Interim caused
as much displeasure at Rome as among the reformers, and was anathematized at
once by Geneva and the Jesuits. Violent treatises were published, both in Italy
and France, as well against the concessions made to the Lutherans as against
the sacrilegious intervention of the temporal power in the affairs of religion.
The Roman ecclesiastics compared the Emperor's conduct with that of Henry VII,
to which, indeed, it bore considerable resemblance; and they denounced his deed
as equally guilty with that of Uzzah, who had touched with unhallowed hand the
Ark of God. Paul himself, with more sagacity, perceived the weakness of the
foundation on which the Emperor had built. By joining either of the parties,
Charles might have crushed the other; by attempting to steer between them he
lost the control of both.
Henry II’s Plot
against the Emperor
Meanwhile the
French party was active in Italy. In his foreign policy Henry II was directed
by the Guises rather than by Montmorenci; both these
parties in the cabinet were strongly anti-Protestant, but the Guises were also
anti-Imperial. While persecuting the reformed religion with the most implacable
virulence at home, Henry, like his father, would willingly have assisted the
German Lutherans against the Emperor. That party, however, was too much humbled
to attempt anything; and the French King was fain to content himself with
insidious attacks upon the power of the Emperor. In the summer of 1548, Henry,
surrounded by a brilliant court, paid a visit to Turin; where, by assembling
the garrisons distributed through Piedmont, he might, in a few days, have
converted his escort into an army. His object was to support various
conspiracies against the Emperor in Italy, which had been chiefly hatched by
Cardinal du Bellay, the French ambassador at Rome. Of these conspiracies, no
fewer than three were directed against Genoa, and involved the assassination of
Andrew Doria. The first, in which the brothers of Fiesco were concerned, with Giulio Cibó,
Marquis of Massa Carrara, failed through Cibó's being
denounced by his own mother. When arrested, letters were found upon him from
the Cardinal of Guise, which showed that the latter was privy to the plot, and
had communicated it to Henry II. The two other conspiracies, at the head of
which were Paolo Spinola and a monk named Barnabó Adorno, also failed. At Parma, two plots for the murder of Gonzaga, Governor of
the Milanese, were likewise discovered and frustrated, and the authors of them
put to death. In their examination, these men declared that they had been
employed by the sons of Pier Luigi Farnese, the murdered Duke; that the French
King was aware of their designs, and had come into Italy for the purpose of
taking advantage of the disturbances which might follow on their
accomplishment. From a letter of Cardinal du Bellay, it appears that there was
a further plot for massacring the Viceroy and Spanish garrison at Naples, and
seizing that city. These enterprises had not been supported with the expected vigour by Paul III. After the first transports of rage had
subsided, fear had taken their place in the bosom of the sly and subtle, and
now aged Pontiff, who began to renew his negotiations with the Emperor; and
after a short stay at Turin, Henry was recalled by an insurrection of the
peasantry of Saintonge and Guienne, on the subject of
the gabelle, or salt-tax, and the
extortions and oppressions of the revenue officers. The insurgents acted with
great barbarity; but though their forces are said at one period to have
numbered 50,000 men, they had no competent chief to direct them, and could not
venture to oppose the royal troops, under the Constable Montmorenci and the Duke of Aumale. At their approach, the
citizens of Bordeaux, who had taken part in the insurrection, so far from
attempting to resist, dispatched a magnificent barge for the conveyance of Montmorenci within their walls; but the rugged Constable
declared that he meant to enter in another fashion, and battered down a breach
with his artillery. He treated the citizens with the greatest harshness and
cruelty. During more than a month, the executions succeeded one another with
frightful rapidity, and without any formal trial. More than 140 persons were
put to death, some with the most dreadful tortures. Bordeaux was condemned to
lose all its privileges and liberties; the jurats were compelled to burn its
charters with their own hands; the town-hall was ordered to be demolished, and
a fine of 20,000 livres was exacted . The impolicy of these penalties, however,
in case of a war with England, caused them soon afterwards to be remitted. The
more prudent Aumale acquired a popular reputation by
tranquillizing Saintonge and the Angoumois without enforcing any punishment.
But the brutality of Montmorenci had done its work.
That very year, in sight of the scaffolds erected by the Constable, Etienne de
la Boetie, of Sarlat in Perigord,
a young man of eighteen, the friend of Montaigne, wrote his Contr'un, or Discours de la Servitude volontaire, one of the most
burning and brilliant declamations ever launched against tyranny. The doctrines
there laid down regarding the true principles of civil liberty, and the right
of popular resistance, are remarkable for the period, and show as great an
advance in politics as the Reformation did in religion.
After the
conclusion of the Diet, Charles left Augsburg for the Netherlands (August 13th,
1548), dragging with him in his train the two captive Princes. The Landgrave he
sent to Oudenarde, while he carried John Frederick
with him to Brussels. One of Charles's objects in proceeding to the
Netherlands, where he remained till the spring of 1550, was to cause his son
Philip, now in his twenty-first year, to be recognized by his future subjects
in those provinces, as well as to complete his education by initiating him
under the paternal eye in all the arts of government. The Emperor had also a
design to procure, after the death of his brother Ferdinand, the Imperial Crown
for Philip; and with this view, Philip, in order that he might become
acquainted with the Germans, was directed to pass through Germany on his way
into the Netherlands. Charles having secured the obedience of most part of
Germany, and feeling his health declining, was anxiously considering how he
might best perpetuate the greatness of the House of Austria. He and his brother
now held between them Spain, the Netherlands, Naples, Milan, Hungary, Bohemia,
and the Empire; but the lapse of a generation or two would sever the intimate
connection between these possessions, unless care were taken to prevent such a
result.
Philip’s absence
was unpopular in Spain. The national spirit, however, had been considerably
broken during the reign of Charles; and though some discontent was manifested
by the Castilian Cortes, the opposition was neither well conducted nor
persevering. The Duke of Alva, in assembling the Cortes, excluded the prelates
and nobles, and summoned only the deputies of towns. It was also some
satisfaction to the Spaniards, that during Philip's absence the government was
entrusted to the Archduke Maximilian, the Emperor’s nephew, whom he had
recently married to his daughter Mary. Charles directed his son, before leaving
Spain, to remodel his Court after the Burgundian fashion, which was much more
splendid and ceremonious than that of Castile. The young Prince embarking at
Barcelona, proceeded to Genoa, and thence to Milan, where he spent some time in
a round of festivities. The whole journey from that place to Flanders — through
Tyrol, and by Munich and Heidelburg to Brussels — was
performed on horseback. At Trent, Philip was met by the Elector Maurice, who
accompanied him some way on his journey. The young Prince took evident pains to
render himself popular with the Germans; but to conciliate affection lay not in
his nature. His cold, haughty, and repulsive manners disgusted them as well as
the Flemings.
Policy of the
Guises
The Emperor, in
order to find employment for the French arms, and prevent them from being
directed against himself, would willingly have embroiled France and England in
a war; and during the revolt of Guienne, he
endeavored to persuade Protector Somerset to revive the pretensions of England
to that province. But although the policy of France, directed by the Guises,
was well calculated to provoke hostility, yet the factions with which England
was then distracted, as well as the dangerous intrigues of his own family, made
Somerset desirous of peace. To foment hostilities between England and Scotland
was the natural policy of the Guises, as well from considerations of religion
as from the far more powerful motive of family interest. After the accession of
Edward VI the reformed religion had been established in England; and the views
of Somerset, a zealous Protestant, were directed to extend the reformation to
Scotland, where there was already a considerable Protestant party, and by a
marriage between Edward VI and Mary, the young Queen of Scots, to effect a
union of the two Crowns. This, however, would have been fatal to the ambition
of the Guises, who were desirous of forming a marriage between their young
niece and the Dauphin Francis, son of Henry II. And as a union between England
and Scotland would have deprived France of a means she had often employed to
harass and weaken the former country through the latter, they did not find much
difficulty in persuading the French King to refuse the ratification of a treaty
concluded at London, March 11th, 1547, respecting Boulogne, and for regulating
the affairs of Scotland. The Scotch Parliament and the Regent Arran had also declined to ratify the previous treaty
between Henry VIII and Francis I, in which Scotland had been included. Party
differences in that country were hot and rancorous. The adherents of the
reformed religion were for the English marriage and alliance, while the
Catholics found their rallying point in France. The latter party had been led
by the savage and bigoted Cardinal David Beaton, the Scottish Primate, detested
by the Protestants for his cruelty, and even by the Catholic nobles for his
overbearing arrogance, which at length caused his destruction. A private
quarrel with Norman Leslie, son of the Earl of Eothes,
led that young nobleman, with sixteen companions, to effect his murder in the
castle of Saint Andrews, a little before the conclusion of the treaty just
referred to. Mary of Guise, the Queen-mother, now the head of the Catholic
party in Scotland, in vain attempted to secure the conspirators, who, with the
aid of about 150 men who were not in the plot, succeeded in holding the Castle
of Saint Andrews against her; upon which she applied to her brothers for
assistance, and with the aid of twenty-one French galleys and some French
troops, the Castle was forced to capitulate, July 3rd, 1547. The Protector
Somerset, advancing with an army of 18,000 men, inflicted a terrible defeat on
the Regent Arran, who had much superior forces, at
the battle of Pinkie, September 10th, 1547.
Somerset was
prevented from pursuing his victory by disturbances in England, which compelled
his return; but this defeat diminished the consideration of the Regent Arran, and increased the influence of the Queen-mother. She
saw no safety except in a French alliance, and through the influence of her
brothers she succeeded in arranging a marriage between her daughter Mary and
the Dauphin Francis. The prospect of securing the Crown of Scotland in his
family had induced Henry II, although at peace with England, to assist the
Scotch. Mary, the young Queen of Scots, was carried into France for her
education till the time should arrive for the celebration of the marriage; and
6,000 French troops which had been landed in Scotland helped in repulsing the
attacks of the English. The latter having rejected a summons to desist from
these hostilities, France in 1549 declared open war. A French fleet, under the
command of Leone Strozzi, a Florentine refugee,
issuing from Havre de Grâce, defeated the English
fleet near Guernsey. Towards the end of August Henry II in person approached
Boulogne with an army, and captured some of the neighboring forts; but the
siege of Boulogne itself was deferred till the following year. The French arms
were helped by the distracted state of England. The Earl of Warwick and his
party, who had succeeded to the power of Somerset, though they had condemned
the Protector for desiring a peace with France, found themselves compelled to
adopt that measure; and a treaty was signed, March 24th, 1550, by which
Boulogne was surrendered to the French for 400,000 crowns, instead of the
2,000,000 stipulated by the treaty of 1546. It was, indeed, too expensive to be
kept.
Persecutions in
France. Death of Pope Paul III, 1549.
During this period
the religious persecutions in France were continued with the utmost severity.
The policy of the Guises, and the despotism which with the Constable was an
instinct, united in favor of persecution; and Diana, who had been personally
affronted by an enthusiastic reformer, inclined the same way. The splendid
fêtes given in Paris at the coronation of Henry's Queen, Catharine de' Medici,
in June, 1549, were concluded by an auto-de-fé,
in which four wretches convicted of Lutheranism were burnt at a slow fire. The
hunting down of heretics was profitable to the French courtiers. They were put
on the same footing as usurers, and it was not unusual for a favorite to obtain
a royal brevet granting him the estates of such persons, throughout an entire
province. The Protestants lost about this time one of their best friends and
protectors, Margaret, Queen of Navarre, who died in Bigorre,
December 21st. Her daughter, Jeanne d'Albret, though
evangelically inclined, was yet too young to afford them much assistance.
Pope Paul III, who
had attained the great age of eighty-two, died a little before (November 10th).
He may be said to have fallen a victim to his ambition, the ruling passion of
so many Popes. During the latter months of his life he had attempted to mollify
the Emperor by concessions; he had first suspended, and then dissolved, the
Council of Bologna (September, 1549), but had obtained nothing by this conduct.
Paul had, in the summer, demanded back Piacenza from the Emperor, and on
Charles's refusal, the Nuncio, with a rhetoric amounting to blasphemy, cited
the Pope, the Emperor, and Granvelle to appear within
six months before the throne of God. Fearing that Parma would fall, like
Piacenza, into the hands of the Emperor, Paul had brought that Duchy under the
direct rule of the Holy See, offering his grandson, Ottavio Farnese, the Duchy of Castro, in exchange for it. But to this arrangement Ottavio would not accede, and with his brothers actually
entered into a league with Ferrante Gonzaga, their father's reputed murderer,
for the purpose of recovering Parma. This news threw the aged Pope into so
violent a fit of rage, that he fell senseless on the floor; and, though he
survived three weeks, it can hardly be doubted that the agitation of his
spirits contributed to hasten his end. He had occupied the chair of St. Peter
fifteen years, and was esteemed for his talent and sagacity.
The Conclave for
the election of Paul's successor, agitated by the intrigues of France, of the
Imperial party, and the Farnese family, lasted three months. The new Pope was
at length chosen by a sort of accident, or caprice. Five or six Cardinals were
standing round the altar of the chapel, dis-cussing the difficulties of the
election, when Cardinal del Monte suddenly exclaimed, “Choose me, and you shall
be my companions and favourites”. His election was
effected, and Del Monte, who had been chamberlain to Julius II, assumed the
title of Julius III. The Roman prelates of that day were not in general
remarkable for morality, but of all the Sacred College, Del Monte, a profligate
and a cynic, was, perhaps, the most unfit for the office to which he was
called. Del Monte, who as President of the Council of Trent, had taken the lead
in transferring that assembly to Bologna, was naturally obnoxious to the
Emperor; yet, as Julius III, he preferred the Imperial alliance to that of
France, and one of his earliest measures was to conciliate Charles by
authorizing the re-opening of the Council at Trent. The Emperor had summoned a
Diet to meet at Augsburg on the 25th of June, 1550, and in May he left Brussels
to proceed thither with his son Philip. He was now much more embittered against
the Lutherans than he had appeared to be during the Smalkaldic war; or rather, perhaps he thought it no longer necessary to wear the mask. The
German reformers might infer from his proceedings in the Netherlands what they
had to expect in the event of his obtaining absolute power. Before leaving that
country, where he had already established a modified Inquisition, he published,
at Brussels, a most cruel and tyrannical edict against the Protestants (April
29th). To buy, sell, or possess any Protestant books, to hold any secret
meetings for discussing the Scriptures, to speak against the worship of the
Virgin and Saints, was prohibited on pain of death and confiscation of goods.
The power of the Inquisitors was augmented, and informers were encouraged in
their hateful office, by receiving part of the property of the victims.
Diet of Augsburg,
1550.
The Diet of
Augsburg was opened July 26th. There was a very full attendance of prelates;
but of temporal princes only Duke Albert of Bavaria, and Henry, the younger, of
Brunswick, were present in person; the rest sent representatives. The town was
so filled with Spanish soldiers that the assembly obtained the name of “the
Armed Diet”. Charles was able to announce in his speech the consent of the Pope
to the re-opening of the Council at Trent. That Council, however, would be
useless unless the Lutherans could be brought to submit to its decrees; and to
enforce this submission was one of the Emperor's objects in summoning the Diet.
He regarded most of the principalities and cities of Germany as being now
either subdued, or attached to his policy from inclination; and in the latter
class he ranked the Elector Maurice, who had always shown himself subservient
to his views. But Maurice had now attained the object of his wishes, and was
disposed to take a very different view of matters now that he no longer needed
the Emperor's help to despoil his kinsman. He was sagacious enough to perceive
that it was Charles’s object to establish in Germany an absolute and hereditary
tyranny, as he had done in his paternal dominions; in which case the Elector's
own power would dwindle to a mere name, and perhaps be entirely extinguished.
He saw that Lutheranism was the chief safeguard for the political privileges of
the German Princes; he had reason to suspect that the Emperor would not
tolerate that faith any longer than he was compelled; in his heart, too,
Maurice preferred the Lutheran faith to the Catholic. Moreover, he was not
without cause for personal enmity against the Emperor. He felt that he had been
deceived by Charles respecting the treatment of his father-in-law, the
Landgrave of Hesse; and his pride, if not his affection for his relative, had
been wounded by the neglect with which all his entreaties and remonstrances on
that subject had been received. To be the head, moreover, of the Lutheran
party, was a more glorious part than to be the mere lieutenant of the Emperor;
and the reproaches of his brethren in religion, if they did not afflict his
conscience, mortified at least his self-esteem. But he had a very difficult
game to play. He was aware that he was suspected by the Lutherans, without
whose help he could not hope to stand against the Emperor; while, on the other
hand, any steps he might take to gain their support would be sure to awaken the
suspicion and anger of Charles. Maurice met these difficulties with that
uncommon mixture of boldness and duplicity which marked his character : he
determined to side with the Lutherans on the subject of the Council, and with
the Emperor on that of the Interim. The Saxon ambassador at the Diet was
instructed to protest that his master would never submit to the Council, except
on condition that the decrees already made at Trent should be reconsidered;
that the Lutheran divines should be allowed a deliberative voice; and that the
Pope should renounce all idea of presiding over and conducting the proceedings.
Charles, however, fancied that the Elector, in thus acting, merely wanted to
preserve his credit with his party. When therefore, the States, at the instance
of the Emperor, made provision for the war against Magdeburg, and further
recommended that Maurice should conduct it, Charles readily assented. He had
neither health, money, nor leisure to begin another German war himself : and he
even considered it a high stroke of policy to engage the Lutheran Princes in
the reduction of a city regarded as the stronghold of their faith. The rigid
divines of Magdeburg, however, looked upon Maurice as an apostate from their
creed, and overwhelmed him with calumnies. Accompanied by Lazarus Schwendi, as Imperial commissary, he appeared before that
town with his troops in November, 1550, and we shall revert, a little further
on, to his proceedings.
During the sitting
of this Diet Charles endeavored to carry out the project, that Ferdinand should
procure the succession of the Infante Philip to the Imperial Crown, after his
own decease, to the prejudice of his son Maximilian; although the latter, when
Philip should have attained the Imperial Crown, was to be made King of the
Romans, and the Empire was thus, eventually, to remain in Ferdinand's line. To
discuss this important project, Queen Mary proceeded from Brussels to Augsburg,
and Ferdinand recalled his son Maximilian from Spain. Ferdinand had at first
given a flat refusal; but at length, after long and secret negotiations, a
contract was made between Ferdinand and Philip, March 9th, by which the former
engaged, when he should become Emperor, to procure the election of Philip as
King of the Romans. The other part of the plan, that Philip, when Emperor,
should do the like by Maximilian, was secured only by Philip’s promise, as it
was thought that the Electors would not entertain a scheme founded on so remote
a contingency. The recess of the Diet of Augsburg was published February 14th,
1551. The States had been brought to recognize the Council, though in very
general terms, and to remit to the Emperor's discretion the question concerning
the restitution of ecclesiastical property. During this assembly Charles lost
his ablest minister, Nicholas Perrenot de Granvelle, his Chancellor, who died at Augsburg, August
28th, 1550. Charles bestowed the chancellorship on Granvelle’s son, Antony, Bishop of Arras, who possessed all the diplomatic ability of his
father, and subsequently became a Cardinal.
Meanwhile the
clouds of war between France and the Emperor were silently gathering. Besides
political reasons, the French King was instigated by personal enmity. Though of
weak judgment and easily governed, Henry II was constant in his afflictions and
implacable in his resentments, and he had never forgiven Charles the sufferings
inflicted on him during his captivity in Spain. For some time he had been
preparing for war. In June, 1549, the ancient league of France with the
Catholic Cantons of Switzerland had been renewed, in which also two of the
Protestant ones, Basle and Schaffhausen, were included. An intimate alliance
was contracted with England at the time of the peace already mentioned. Henry
sent to Edward VI the collar of his order of Saint Andrew, and negotiations
were entered into for a marriage between Edward and the French King's daughter
Elizabeth, then only five years old; which was eventually concluded by the
treaty of Angers in July, 1551. The peace was proclaimed in England May 28th,
1550. Apprehension of the Emperor's plans was a motive with the English Court
to keep on friendly terms with France. Credible information was received that
Charles designed to carry off his kinswoman, the Lady Mary, to Antwerp, and to
endeavor to place her on the English throne by means of a domestic conspiracy
assisted by an Imperial army : and the coast of Essex was strictly watched in
order to prevent her escape.
The views of
France were also extended towards Italy. Although the Emperor was master of the
Milanese and dominant in Genoa, the possession of the duchy of Parma was still
necessary to him in order effectually to exclude the French from central and
southern Italy. Pope Julius III had, on his accession, reinstated Ottavio Farnese, the son of Pier Luigi, in the possession
of Parma, to be held as a fief of the Church. Charles, who still kept Piacenza,
offered the Republic of Siena in exchange for Parma, and even engaged to hold
the latter under the Pope, as suzerain, and to pay an annual quit-rent. Julius
was naturally averse to accept so powerful a vassal; but after hesitating
sometime between the menaces of the Emperor and those of the French King, he at
length submitted to Charles. Ottavio upon this threw
himself on the protection of France, and Henry II, by a treaty signed in May,
1551, engaged to assist him with troops and money. At this news the Pope, who
was now completely governed by Charles, declared Ottavio a rebel, and dispatched an army against him; while the Emperor sequestered the
dowry of his own natural daughter Margaret, the wife of Ottavio;
and towards the middle of June directed Gonzaga, Governor of the Milanese, to
attack Parma. Two small armies of Italians in the pay of France succeeded,
however, for some time in defending that city; till Henry II, weary of being
merely the auxiliary of the Duke of Parma, ordered Marshal de Brissac, Governor of Piedmont, to attack the Imperial
possessions, though without any previous declaration of war. On the night of
September 3rd, the troops of Brissac surprised and
captured the towns of S. Damiano and Chieri, but an
attempt on Chierasco failed. At the same time a fleet
of forty galleys under the Baron de la Garde, issuing from the ports of
Provence, captured some Spanish merchant vessels, and in concert with another
squadron under Leone Strozzi, prevented Andrea Dona
from issuing out from Genoa. The approach of winter, however, put a stop to
these operations. Another means of assailing the Emperor was to revive against
him the hostility of the Turks. Notwithstanding Francis I's experience of
Turkish friendship at Nice and at Toulon, it remained a fixed idea in France
that the power of Charles must be checked through that of the Sultan; and
hostilities between the former and the celebrated pirate-captain, Torghud or Draghut, a genuine
successor of Hayraddin, afforded a pretence for inciting Solyman to
take up arms.
The Turkish
Corsair Draghut. Henry II opposes the Council.
For some years Draghut had been the terror of the Mediterranean. His
squadron, which sometimes numbered forty swift-sailing vessels, appeared at the
most unexpected points, captured richly-laden merchantmen, plundered the
coasts, and bore off all the inhabitants that could be seized into slavery. An
anxious look-out was kept from cliff and castle for his dreaded sails, the
approach of which was signaled by columns of smoke. At length, partly by fraud
and partly by force, Draghut succeeded in seizing the
town of Afrikia, or Mehdia,
near Tunis, where the Moors and Jews expelled from Spain and Portugal had
established a sort of Republic. This proceeding roused the auger of Charles,
who, with the aid of some Papal and Florentine galleys, and of the Knights of
St. John settled at Tripoli, wrested Afrikia from the
hands of Draghut. Baron d'Aramon,
the French ambassador at Constantinople, took advantage of this incident, which
he represented as a breach of the truce existing between the House of Austria
and the Porte, to incite the Sultan to action; and early in 1551 Solyman dispatched a fleet into the Mediterranean with the
design of recovering Afrikia. The plan failed; but
after a fruitless attempt upon Malta, the Turks succeeded in taking Tripoli,
which was but poorly defended by the Knights (August 14th). At this time D'Aramon, who had been to France for instructions, was at
Malta on his way back to Constantinople, whither he proceeded in the Turkish
fleet, a circumstance not calculated to refute the reports then prevalent of
the participation of France in these affairs.
Besides all these
hostile intrigues and demonstrations, Henry II also opposed the Emperor in his
favorite project of the Council. After obtaining an assurance from Henry that
the French prelates should repair to Trent to counter-balance the influence of
the Imperialists, Julius III had published a bull for the reassembling of the
Council at that place on May 1st, 1551; which was, however, on account of the
small number of Fathers then present, adjourned to September 1st. At this
second session appeared on the part of the French King, Jacques Amyot, the celebrated translator of Plutarch, to protest
against the legality of the Council. This step was followed up by several other
acts of hostility against the Pope. The French prelates were forbidden to
appear at Trent; the remitting of money to Rome, or any place subject to the
Roman See, was prohibited; and to obviate any censures which the Pope might
fulminate against him, Henry II instructed his Keeper of the Seals to enter an
appeal to a future Council. He also persuaded the Swiss Cantons to refuse to
recognize the Council of Trent.
Charles, on the
other hand, was straining every nerve to maintain the Council and to make its
authority respected. He persuaded the three ecclesiastical Electors to proceed
to Trent, and compelled several of the German prelates to appear there, either
in person or by proxy. He also exhorted the Lutheran Princes to send their
divines thither to explain and defend their tenets; though at the same time he
was acting as if the Council had already given a decree against them; and the
places of the expelled Lutheran clergy in Swabia were supplied with their most
bitter and bigoted adversaries, nominated by the sole authority of the Emperor.
After these acts of tyranny Charles set out for Innsbruck, in order that he might
be at hand to superintend the proceedings of the Council, as well as for the
sake of easy access in case his affairs should call him either into Germany or
Italy.
But the French
King, not content with the hostile measures already related, had also entered
into correspondence with the Emperor’s domestic enemies, the German Lutherans,
and Maurice, particularly the Elector Maurice. We have already mentioned that
Maurice had been entrusted by the Emperor with the siege of Magdeburg, and that
he had invested that city in November, 1550: yet he had sent an agent to the
French King as early as the preceding July, with assurances of extreme
friendship, and the allied Lutheran Princes had engaged that, on the next
vacancy of the Imperial Crown, they would elect to it either Henry himself, or
some Prince who might be agreeable to him. On the 3rd of November, 1551,
Maurice granted the citizens a capitulation, which, though it involved the
surrender of the town, was, in fact, a peace on favorable conditions. Nominally,
indeed, they were to submit to the pleasure of the Emperor, and were to pay a
fine of 50,000 florins; but they were assured that their liberties and
privileges, both civil and religious, should be respected. Maurice entered the
town November 7th, and preserved the same moderation which he had displayed
during the siege; yet he managed the whole affair with so much address that
Charles suspected no fraud or collusion, nor hesitated to ratify the terms of
the capitulation.
Only a month
before, however, Maurice had already concluded a formal treaty with France.
Henry had sent Jean de Froissac, Bishop of Bayonne,
into Saxony, who, as the result of some secret negotiations at the Castle of Lohe, conducted partly by Maurice in person and partly by Heydeck as his representative, signed a treaty (October
5th), of which the following are the principal articles : that Maurice should
be the commander-in-chief of the German Confederates; that he and his
associates should furnish 7,000 horse and foot in proportion, and attack the
Emperor; that the King of France should provide 240,000 crowns for the pay of
the army during the first three months, and afterwards 60,000 crowns a month;
that he should seize the French-speaking towns of Cambray,
Toul, Metz, and Verdun, and hold them as Vicar of the Empire; and that at the
next vacancy, either he himself or some Prince whom he approved of, should be
elected to the Imperial Crown. The motives assigned for concluding the treaty
were to liberate the Landgrave of Hesse from his five years’ captivity, as well
as to free Germany from a “bestial, insupportable, and perpetual servitude”.
and restore its ancient liberties and constitution. John Frederick was also to
be liberated, but on condition that before he was reinstated in the dominions
still left to him, he should bind himself towards Maurice by such pledges “as
the common good demands” — that is, of course, that he should not require back
the Electorate. A treaty of great historical importance, especially as regards
the claims of France to the towns of Metz, Toul, Verdun, and Cambray. The parties to it, besides the Elector Maurice,
were George Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Culmbach,
John Albert, Duke of Mecklenburg, William of Hesse, son of the Landgrave
Philip, and the King of Denmark. But though the King of France was already
engaged in hostilities with the Emperor in Italy, the idea of attacking him in
Germany caused Henry to pause before he ratified the treaty. Maurice secretly
dispatched into France, under an assumed name, his friend and ally, the
Margrave Albert, to persuade Henry to consent. The French King sent for Schärtlin, the former commander of the Suabian troops, who had lately entered his service; and for nearly two months
consultations were nightly held at the courts of Paris, Orleans, and Blois.
When the German negotiators were conducted through the rooms, the Margrave
followed Schärtlin as his attendant, under the name
of Captain Paul of Biberach. At length, on the 15th
of January, 1552, Henry signed and swore to the treaty at the Castle of
Chambord, near Blois.
In December
Maurice had made another attempt to procure the liberation of the Landgrave, by
sending to Charles at Innsbruck a solemn embassy, whose demand to that effect
was supported not only by the King of Denmark and many Princes of the Empire,
but also by the Emperor's own brother, King Ferdinand. Charles returned an
evasive answer, as indeed Maurice had hoped and expected; whose sole intention
in sending the embassy was to place the Emperor’s unfeeling conduct in a
hateful point of view, and to obtain a plausible pretext for the blow he was
about to strike. Charles on his side did not believe that Maurice was in
earnest. He had seen some years before at Augsburg how little the young Elector
really cared about the liberation of his father-in-law, and he and his
ministers, from Maurice's dissolute life, had contracted for him a sort of
contempt. Charles imagined that he only made the application in order to please
the Landgrave's family, and all Maurice’s conduct was calculated to lull the
Emperor into a false security. He had directed Melanchthon and other divines to
proceed to Trent, with a Confession of Faith to be laid before the Council
there assembled; and he carried his dissimulation so far as to order a house to
be prepared for himself at Augsburg. Nay, he actually began his journey towards
that place, attended by a minister whom Granvelle had
bribed to be a spy upon his actions; but after travelling a few stages he
pretended to be taken ill, and sending forward the minister with the
intelligence that he should arrive in a few days, he mounted his horse as soon
as the spy had departed and hastened back to join his army in Thuringia.
Before he actually
declared war against the Emperor, Maurice made a last appeal to him for the
liberation of the Landgrave, March 27th, 1552; and this time his request was
accompanied with complaints respecting the proceedings of the Council of Trent,
which he denounced as an unfair and prejudiced tribunal, wholly influenced by
the Pope. The intention of the Allies to procure the Landgrave's release had
already been declared to the Saxon States assembled at Torgau and to those of Hesse at Cassel. Early in March the Hessian troops, under the
Landgrave’s son William, assembled at Kirchhain, and
after an abortive attempt to surprise Frankfurt, took the high road to Fulda.
Maurice meanwhile was leading his men, who had been cantoned in the neighbourhood of Mühlhausen,
through the Thuringian forest into Franconia, while the Margrave Albert was
advancing with a third body. All these three armies; uniting at Rothenburg, on the Tauber, took the road to Augsburg. As
soon as he had openly taken up arms, Maurice published a manifesto in which he
declared his objects to be the security of the evangelical religion, the
preservation of the laws and constitution of the Empire, and the liberation of
the Landgrave of Hesse. This manifesto was artfully contrived to secure as many
adherents as possible, Catholic as well as Lutheran, the former as well as the
latter being interested for the liberties of the Empire. A more violent
manifesto was published by Albert, and a third by the King of France. On the
last, in which Henry declared himself “Protector of the Liberties of Germany
and of its captive Princes”, he had caused to be engraved a cap of liberty
between two daggers : little dreaming that such an emblem would one day portend
the fall of the ancient monarchy of France.
Maurice entered
Augsburg without a blow, the Imperial garrison retiring on his approach. The
Emperor and his Spanish troops had left a hateful memory in that city. Maurice
reinstated the magistrates whom Charles had deposed, and restored the churches
to the Lutheran ministers, as he had done in the other towns through which he had
passed.
The Emperor, who
was still at Innsbruck, was overwhelmed with surprise and alarm at the breaking
out of this formidable conspiracy. The false security in which he had been
wrapped seems almost unaccountable. The treaty between the German Lutherans and
the King of France was known at the smallest Courts; yet it made no impression
on Charles, who remarked that one ought not to be disturbed at every rumour. So far from making any provision against such an
attack, he had dismissed part of his troops, and dispatched others into Hungary
and to the war in the Duchy of Parma. His treasury was exhausted, the troops
about him hardly sufficed for a body-guard. In this forlorn condition Charles
earnestly inquired of his brother what assistance he could expect at his hands
in the common danger? Ferdinand answered, what was in fact the case, that he
had need of all his resources against the Osmanlis in Hungary. The Emperor was
equally unsuccessful in his application to the Augsburg bankers, who refused
him all advances even on the most advantageous conditions. Alarmed and agitated
by uncertain counsels, Charles, who imagined a universal conspiracy against
him, was utterly at a loss what step to take next. His first idea was to seek a
refuge with his brother, who, however, dissuaded him from that purpose. He then
thought of flying into Italy; but the war in that quarter had not proved
favorable to his arms, and it might be dangerous with his small escort to
venture on the Italian roads. At last he resolved to
make for the Upper Rhine and the Netherlands. At midnight on the 6th of April
he left Innsbruck very secretly, attended only by his two chamberlains, Andelot and Rosenberg, and three servants. On the following
day at noon they reached Nassereith, near the pass of
Ehrenberg; for which they set off after a short rest, hoping to find it open
and so to take the high road to Ulm. On the way, however, they learnt that they
would be running into Maurice's hands, who was to occupy Füssen that very day, and they were therefore compelled to return to Innsbruck.
Arrangement
between Ferdinand and Maurice.
It was fortunate,
under these circumstances, that Ferdinand had remained on a good footing with
Maurice. Those Princes met at Passau on the 26th of May, where a truce was
arranged till the 10th of June, to afford an opportunity for negotiating a
peace. Charles, not much relying on the truce, had contrived to scrape together
some money in the course of April, and began to arm. Troops were mustering for
his service at Frankfurt, at Ulm, and especially at Reutte,
the frontier town of Tyrol, where they had taken possession of the pass of
Ehrenberg. The Allies were well enough acquainted with the Emperor's character
to know that if he again found himself at the head of an army they should look
in vain for any concessions; and Maurice determined to strike a decisive blow.
Orders were given to advance; the Imperial camp at Reutte was attacked and dispersed (May 18th); on the following day the pass and castle
of Ehrenberg were stormed and taken without much resistance, when nine
companies of Imperialists surrendered. The allied Princes now determined, as
they said, “to seek the fox in his hole”, and march to Innsbruck. But at this
critical moment Maurice was detained by a dangerous mutiny of some of his
troops, who claimed the usual gratuity for storming the castle; and as he had
not the means of satisfying their demand, it was some time before he could
appease their clamours by promising them compensation
at Innsbruck, This delay of a few hours secured the safety of the Emperor. On
the afternoon of the 19th May Charles summoned John Frederick into the garden
of the castle, and told him that he was free, intimating, however, that he must
follow the Court a little longer. At nine in the evening, Charles, who was
still suffering from the gout, ascended a litter, and commenced his flight by
torch-light, accompanied only by his Court and a small body of Spanish
soldiers. The night was cold and wet, the mountains covered with snow; yet the
little band pushed on, breaking down the bridges behind them, and after
traversing almost impassable mountain roads, arrived at length at Villach in
Carinthia. When Maurice entered Innsbruck May 23rd he found that the fox had
stolen away. The Emperor’s effects and those of his courtiers, which had been
left in the hurry, were abandoned to the soldiers; but all that belonged to the
King of the Romans was rescued from the general plunder.
On the other side
of the Alps, the Council of Trent had fled as precipitately as the Emperor.
Already, at the first news of the rising in Germany, the Pope had decreed, with
secret satisfaction, a suspension of the Council, and this resolution had been
adopted by a majority (April 28th), although some of the stauncher adherents of
the Emperor remained till the news arrived of the taking of the pass. Great was
then the confusion. All believed that the Lutherans would march upon Trent; and
not only the Fathers but the inhabitants also, took to flight in all
directions. The Legate Crescenzio, though dangerously
ill, also fled, and died on arriving at Verona. The prorogation of the Council,
which had been for a term of two years, was afterwards extended to ten, and it
did not reassemble till 1562.
Meanwhile Henry
II, taking advantage of this diversion, and in conformity with his treaty with
the German Princes, had ordered a considerable army to assemble at Châlons. In a lit de justice, held in the Parliament of Paris,
February I2th, 1552, he appointed his Queen, Catharine de' Medici, Regent of
the Kingdom during his absence; but to guide and control her actions, he
associated with her Bertrandi, Bishop of Comminges and Keeper of the Seals, and the Admiral d'Annebaut: a surveillance of which Catharine loudly
complained. Before he set out on this expedition, Henry caused a number of
heretics to be burnt at Agen, Troyes, Lyons, Nimes,
Paris, and other places; he had also established a severe censorship of the
press, and a strict supervision of all books imported, especially from Geneva;
and having thus done all in his power to suppress Protestantism in his own
dominions, he set out to assist the Protestants of Germany. The French army,
under the command of the Constable Montmorenci, being
reinforced by some German mercenaries, crossed the Meuse, and summoned Toul,
which surrendered without a blow. The French next appeared before Metz. This
Imperial city was a sort of Republic, enjoying peculiar privileges; among which
was exemption from receiving troops within its walls, whether Imperial or
others. The magistrates offered the army provisions, as well as to admit the
King and Princes, but not the troops. The Bishop, however, Cardinal Robert de Lenoncour, a Frenchman, persuaded the principal inhabitants
to allow the Constable to enter with a guard of about 600 men, which Montmorenci increased to the number of 1,500 picked troops;
and when the citizens attempted too late to close their gates, they were pushed
aside, and the whole army entered. The ancient capital of Austrasia thus fell,
by a fraud, under the dominion of France, and Henry made his solemn entry into
it, April 18th.
Campaign in Alsace
After these
successes, the French marched towards the Vosges mountains and Alsace, leaving
Verdun to be occupied on their return. They passed without much difficulty
through Lorraine; but in the purely German land of Alsace their insolence
excited the alarm and hatred of the inhabitants. The consequence was that the
country was deserted; the French were often obliged to go four or five leagues
to obtain forage and provisions, and if they were found in bodies of less than
ten men, they were sure to be massacred. Montmorenci,
who had a great contempt for the Germans, boasted that he would enter Strassburg and the other towns on the Rhine, “like so much
butter”; and he attempted to take Strassburg by the
same stratagem which had succeeded at Metz. He asked permission for the
ambassadors of the Pope, of Venice, Florence, and Ferrara, "just to see
the town", but selected 200 of his best soldiers to accompany them as an
escort, who were to seize the gates. The Strassburgers,
however, were alive to his designs, and received the troop with a discharge of
artillery, which killed ten or twelve, and made the rest fly. Henry penetrated
as far as Hagenau and Weissenburg,
which he entered. But provisions were beginning to fail; he was among a hostile
population; and the news that the Queen of Hungary had dispatched from the
Netherlands a large body of troops under Van Rossem,
who had taken Stenai and ravaged all the country
between the Meuse and the Aisne, determined him to retreat. On the 13th May,
Henry began his retrograde march, pretending that he did so only to gratify his
allies the Swiss, who had sent to beg that he would spare the towns in alliance
with them; but, with a ridiculous bravado, he caused the horses of his army to
be watered in the Rhine, as if he had accomplished some hazardous and distant
expedition. The retreating army, after again traversing Lorraine and occupying
Verdun, crossed the Sarre and invaded Luxembourg. The
towns of Rodemachern, Yvoy, Damvilliers, Montmédy, and
others fell into Henry's hands, and were treated with the greatest rigour. The booty, however, was bestowed, not on his army,
but on his courtiers and captains, who were execrated at once by the
inhabitants and by their own soldiers. Henry concluded the campaign by taking
the Duchy of Bouillon, which the Emperor had given back to the Bishopric of Liége, but which was now restored to its later masters, the
house of La Marck : after which he disbanded his army
(July 16th). It appears to have been in this campaign that the French began to
make geographical maps to facilitate military operations. Carloix attributes the invention to his master, Marshal Vieilleville,
but he is not always to be believed on such points.
The campaign in
Piedmont and the Parmesan, though it has Italian been the subject of voluminous
memoirs, is hardly worth relating. The most remarkable incident was an attempt
by the Marshal de Brissac to surprise the Castle of
Milan, by means of men who had arrived singly through the Grisons, and had been
received in the house of a traitor in Milan; but the enterprise failed through
the ladders which had been prepared not proving long enough. The war of Parma
and Mirandola was brought to a conclusion. The Pope,
alarmed by the prodigious expense, as well as by the suspension of the revenues
derived from France, the prospect of the loss of that Kingdom to the Holy See,
and the menace of Henry II to assemble a General Council, had entered early in
the year into negotiations for a peace, which were hastened on by the success
of the Elector Maurice and the danger of the Emperor; and a truce of two years
between the Pope, the Duke of Parma, and Henry II, was signed at Rome, April
29th, 1552.
Maurice, who did
not think of pursuing his success further than Innsbruck, determined to attend
a conference at Passau (May 26th). The Emperor seemed to have been sufficiently
humbled. At a meeting at Heidelberg of the Princes of Upper Germany, it had
even been debated whether he should not be deposed; but the victory over him
had been achieved through a surprise, and he had still great means at his
disposal. At Passau appeared King Ferdinand and his son Maximilian, the
Imperial ambassadors, the Elector Maurice, Albert III Duke of Bavaria, the
Archbishop of Salzburg, and the Bishop of Eichstedt;
while the remaining Electors, the Dukes of Brunswick, Cleves, Pomerania, and
Würtemberg, the Margrave John, and the Bishop of Würzburg, sent
representatives, Maurice renewed the demands made in his manifesto, nor were
they deemed unreasonable even by King Ferdinand, and by the Catholic Princes of
the Empire, who feared that Charles's plans were directed not only against the
Lutheran religion but also against their own civil liberties. Maurice had
brought with him the Bishop of Bayonne as French ambassador, who offered no
opposition to the contemplated peace. Henry II, indeed, whose only object was
to create disturbance in Germany, had found another and less costly ally in
Albert of Brandenburg, who, refusing to accede to the truce, had detached
himself from the army of Maurice, and was ravaging Germany on his own account
at the head of 8,000 men. The Emperor, however, showed at first no disposition
to accede to the proposed terms. He agreed indeed to release the Landgrave, but
required security for the consequences of such an act, which it was difficult
to provide; and above all he would not yield on the subject of the Council. In
this state of things King Ferdinand made a journey to Villach to mollify his
brother; while Maurice, resorting to a rougher mode of persuasion, marched with
his army to Frankfurt, where troops were mustering for the Emperor, and
bombarded that city, though without much effect. At length Charles, principally
from his brother's representations of the danger impending from the Turkish
war, consented to more moderate terms, and Maurice having again returned to the
conference, a treaty was signed, August 2nd, 1552, which, under the name of the
Peace of Passau, marks an epoch in the history of the Reformation. The chief
articles were in substance : That the confederates should dismiss their troops
by the 12th of August, or enroll them in Ferdinand's service for war against
the Turks; that the Landgrave of Hesse should be set at liberty on his
promising submission for the future; that a Diet should be summoned within six
months for settling religious disputes, and also for considering alleged
encroachments on the liberties and constitution of the Empire; that in the
meantime the Lutherans should enjoy the free exercise of their religion,
engaging in turn to leave the Papists unmolested; that Lutherans as well as
Catholics should be admitted into the Imperial Chamber; that an entire amnesty
should be granted for all past transactions; and that Albert of Brandenburg
should be admitted into the treaty provided he immediately laid down his arms.
The King of France was invited to state his grievances against the Emperor, so
that he might be included in the general pacification. And as it was foreseen
that the coming Diet might fail in bringing about the desired settlement, it
was agreed in a separate treaty that in that case the peace should remain in
full force till a final accommodation should be effected. This latter agreement
Charles refused to sign; but it was not anticipated that he would endeavor to
disturb it.
Thus ended the
first religious war in Germany, arising out of the League of Smalkald; by which Maurice, whatever we may think of his
duplicity, was certainly the means of saving the liberties of the Empire, as
well as the Protestant religion, from the assaults of Charles V.
CHAPTER XXTHE CLOSE OF CHARLES V’S REIGN |