READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER VIII
THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE OCEAN NAVIGATION AND DISCOVERY
OF THE NEW WORLD. ORIGIN OF EMBASSIES. PROGRESS OF THE ART OF WAR
THE period which
we have been hitherto contemplating was marked by the commencement of ocean
navigation, which, by the discoveries it effected, had a wonderful effect on
the commerce of modern Europe, and on the respective power and resources of its
several States. It therefore becomes necessary to give some account of these
discoveries, which could not well have been presented, in a connected form, in
the preceding chapters.
A knowledge of the
properties of the magnet was a necessary antecedent of distant ocean voyages
and the discovery of unknown lands. Like gunpowder, however, the magnetic
needle was long known before it was applied to its present use. The invention
of the compass has been attributed to Flavio Gioja, a
native of Amalfi, who flourished about the beginning of the fourteenth century;
but though Dr. Robertson laments that Gioja has been
defrauded of his just fame, it is certain that the compass was known nearly two
centuries before his time. It is minutely described in a Provençal poem by Guiot of Provins, supposed to
have been written towards the end of the twelfth or beginning of the thirteenth
century. The age of Guiot may indeed be disputed; yet
that the compass was known at least in the first half of the thirteenth
century, appears from the writings of Cardinal Vitry (Jacobus de Vitriaco), Bishop of Acre, in Syria, who died in 1214.
Vitry, indeed, in his “History of the East”, confounds the magnet with the adamant
or diamond, as some of our own writers have also done; yet he describes the
polarity of the magnetic needle, and intimates its indispensable necessity to
navigation. In 1203 the magnetic needle, fitted in a box, was in common use
among the Norwegians. A letter written by Pietro Peregrini in 1269, and preserved among the manuscripts in the University of Leyden,
contains a scientific account of the properties of the magnetic needle, and
even of the construction of the azimuth compass. The description of Guiot of Provins, who was
probably older than the authors cited, shows the compass in a very rudimentary
state; merely a needle rubbed on a loadstone, and floating on a cork or other
light substance in a vessel filled with water; a method, however, used early in
the twelfth century by the Chinese, who were acquainted with the compass long
before it was known in Europe. The English, with that talent for practical
adaptation which characterizes them, seem to have made great improvements in
the compass.
But although the
compass was so early known, it was not till the fifteenth century that voyages
of discovery were prosecuted on any systematic plan. The Spaniards had indeed
discovered the Canary Islands about the middle of the fourteenth century, but
rather by accident than from design; which might easily have happened, as they
lie considerably less than 200 miles from the continent of Africa. Cape Non on
that continent, which lies opposite to the Canaries, was long considered an
impassable boundary, till an expedition fitted out by the Portuguese King John
I, or the Bastard, in 1412, succeeded in doubling it and reaching Cape Bojador, 160 miles further. The only effect of this voyage
was to awaken a desire for further discoveries. King John’s fourth son, Henry, who
was distinguished both by an enterprising temper and a love of art and science,
especially geography, establishing his residence at Sagres (Tercena Naval, afterwards called Villa do Infante),
near Cape St. Vincent in the Algarves, gathered
around him from all quarters men practically acquainted with navigation, as
well as others versed in mathematics and astronomy, and discussed with them
bold projects of maritime enterprise. Henry’s cares were rewarded by the
discovery of the Madeiras (1419), and subsequently of
the Azores, Cape Verde, and Guinea. His death in 1463 checked the progress of
these voyages, which had extended to within five degrees of the equinoctial
line.
The importance of
these discoveries had roused the apprehension of the Portuguese that their
title to the possession of them might be contested; and in order to settle this
question, they applied to Pope Eugenius IV, who issued a bull liberally
granting to Portugal all the lands from Cape Non to India! The Popes claimed a
peculiar property in all islands and undiscovered lands, rather, it would seem,
as the successors of the Roman emperors, than, as some authors have asserted,
as the Vicars of Christ upon earth. The Guelf doctors and canonists held that
the Pope was lord of all the world, while the Ghibeline doctors assigned that lordship to the Emperor. In accordance with the former of
these views, Pope Adrian IV had bestowed Ireland on Henry II; and in 1295
Boniface VIII granted Gerba and some other islands on the African coast to
Admiral Ruggiero di Loria, on condition of homage and tribute.
King Edward, the
eldest brother of Prince Henry, and successor of their father John, and
Edward’s son Alfonso V, did not pay much attention to navigation; but the
spirit of maritime discovery was revived by Alfonso’s son John II, who ascended
the throne in 1481. In 1484, a Portuguese fleet sailed 1,500 miles south of the
line, and observed the stars and constellations of another hemisphere;
settlements were made on the coast of Guinea, which were fortified, and a
regular trade was established. From their own experience of the line of coast,
as well as from information obtained from the natives, the Portuguese now began
to conceive the possibility of reaching India by a southern navigation,
agreeably to the ancient accounts of the Phoenician voyages. To acquire
information and aid in effecting this design, John II dispatched two
ambassadors to the King of Abyssinia, a Christian Prince, near the Red Sea,
whom he supposed to be the Prester John, famed in the stories of eastern
travelers, and from their inquiries it was evident that a passage round Africa
to India was feasible. Meanwhile, however, Bartolomeo Diaz had already set off
to attempt it. In spite of great dangers from storms and mutinous crews, this enterprising
navigator sailed far enough south not only to descry but to double the
Cabo Tormentoso, or Cape of Storms, the southern
boundary of Africa (1487); and as the coast beyond was ascertained to trend to
the north-east, the prospect of success seemed now so clear that King John
renamed this headland Cabo de Bona Esperança, or Cape
of Good Hope.
The discoveries
and conquests of the Portuguese in the East Indies were, however, reserved to
be effected in the reign of John II’s cousin, Emanuel the Great, who ascended
the throne on John’s death in 1495. Vasco da Gama, having doubled the Cape of
Good Hope, arrived at Calicut on the Malabar coast in May, 1498, and returned
to Portugal in the following year; without indeed having founded any
settlement, but bringing home a rich cargo of the various products of the
country. In 1500 Pedro Alvarez Cabral, with a Portuguese fleet, having stood to
the westward in order to avoid the calms and variable breezes on the African
coast, arrived off the coast of Brazil and took possession of that country, of
which Cabral considered himself the discoverer, for the Crown of Portugal. But
though his pretensions in this respect have till lately been sanctioned by the
highest authorities, it appears from more recent researches that two Castilian
navigators, one of whom was Vicente Pinzon, the companion of Columbus, had
previously landed there and claimed the country for Spain. These conflicting
pretensions were settled by the treaty of Tordesillas, to which we shall advert
further on.
While the
Portuguese were making this progress in eastern navigation, the Spaniards had
made still more brilliant and striking discoveries in a new hemisphere, though
probably not more important in a commercial point of view.
The existence of a
fourth continent and of a race of antipodes had been at least suspected by the
ancients centuries before the beginning of our era. The sphericity of the earth
was known to the Pythagoreans. Plato in his Timaeus refers to an Atlantis
greater than Asia and Africa put together. Aristotle asserted the possibility
of sailing from the extremity of Europe or Africa to the eastern parts of Asia,
and the same idea was adopted by Strabo. Aristotle likewise thought it probable
that there were other lands in the opposite hemisphere; and Elian also
maintained the existence of a fourth continent of enormous extent. Seneca the
philosopher affirms that with a fair wind the voyage from Spain to the Indies
might be accomplished in a few days; and the same writer in one of his tragedies
has uttered on the subject the following most precise and striking prophecy:
“The time will
come in distant years when Ocean
may relax the
bonds of things, and an immense region be laid open:
Tethys may then
unveil new worlds, and Thule
be no longer the
remotest spot of land”.
A prophecy which
could hardly have been uttered but for the prevailing opinion among the learned
just alluded to.
This remarkably
consentient opinion of civilized antiquity continued to prevail during the
earlier ages of Christianity till the Doctors of the Church, with that
narrowness of view which led them to stifle all liberal knowledge, did their
best to suppress it, and thus contributed to defer its realization. The work
called Christian Topography, attributed to Cosmas Indicopleustes,
exhibits the strange geographical notions which must have been entertained by
the Fathers of the Church. It is a return to barbarism. The earth is described
as a vast oblong plain, more than twice as long from east to west as it is
broad, and surrounded by the ocean. The old idea nevertheless partially
survived, and was recorded by Roger Bacon in the thirteenth century, and by
other writers in the Middle Ages.
Even the
circumnavigation of Africa by the Portuguese had been anticipated six centuries
before the Christian era. With some minds antiquity is a fatal objection to any
narrative that appears a little extraordinary, or that runs counter to their
own narrow prejudices: yet a capricious incredulity is a more dangerous
critical fault than too ready a belief; and there are two circumstances in
Herodotus’s narration of the voyage round the African continent, undertaken by
some Phoenician mariners at the command of Pharaoh Necho,
which give it an indelible stamp of truth. By this voyage it was discovered
that Africa was detached from any other continent except at the Isthmus of
Suez, and could consequently be circumnavigated. Again, the Phoenicians
asserted that on their voyage (which, as they started from the Red Sea and
returned by the Columns of Hercules, or Straits of Gibraltar, was performed
from east to west) they had the sun on the right hand. Both these circumstances
are true, yet neither could be guessed a priori; the latter indeed was so
contrary to all experience and probability, that Herodotus himself refused to
believe it. These two facts are sufficient to dispose of the futile objections
which have been raised against the story.
It is probable
that America had been visited by Europeans centuries before the time of
Columbus. Historians who long preceded him have related that, towards the close
of the tenth century, Eric Rauda, Biorn,
and other Icelandic navigators, visited Greenland and a country lying to the
south-west of it, which they called Winland, from its grapes. In this country the
sun is described as being eight hours above the horizon in the shortest day;
and as this would happen in about latitude 49°, Winland was probably
Newfoundland. A colony was settled there, but after a time all intercourse with
it was dropped. As the distance between Iceland and Greenland is not great,
there is no a priori improbability in this account, which is attested by most
respectable authorities. Other voyages and discoveries, as that of the Welsh
Prince Madoc ap Owen in 1170, and the navigation towards India by the west of
the two Genoese, Guido de Vivaldi and Teodosio Doria, in 1281 and 1292, are perhaps not so well
authenticated. But in the time of Columbus these discoveries seem to have
fallen into oblivion.
CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
Little is known
about the early life of Christopher Columbus. He was a native of the territory
of Genoa, but the year of his birth is so utterly unknown as to have been
variously placed between 1430 and 1455. It was probably 1436. Columbus was bred
to the sea, and served not only in the merchant service, but also in some
warlike maritime expeditions, as that of John of Anjou for the conquest of
Naples in 1459, and in some cruises against the Turks and Venetians, in which
ho distinguished himself by his bravery. According to his own account, Columbus
visited Tille, or Thule, by which he probably meant
either the Feroe Isles or Iceland. In 1470 he
proceeded to Portugal, and remained in that country till 1484. His love of
enterprise was no doubt stimulated by the maritime discoveries of the
Portuguese; and it has been recently proved that he conceived the first idea of
his great discovery shortly after his arrival in that country, and consequently
three years before he was in communication on the subject with Paolo Toscanelli. There can be no doubt, however, that his
correspondence with Toscanelli, a Florentine
physician and distinguished cosmographer, fortified Columbus in his project.
Everything proves that his original idea and principal purpose were to reverse
the Portuguese method, and to seek a passage to India, the land of gold and
spices, by sailing westward; and that the discovery of lands between Europe and
the eastern shores of India was only a secondary consideration both with him
and Toscanelli. The idea was necessarily founded on
the sphericity of the earth, and on the geographical opinions of some of the
ancients, which, as we have said, were not altogether extinguished during the
Middle Ages, and which Columbus appears to have more immediately derived from
the treatise De Imagine Mundi of Pierre d’Ailly,
Bishop of Cambray. The theory that an unknown land,
which he supposed to be India, lay at no great distance in the western ocean,
was confirmed by the circumstance of trees, pieces of carved timber, and other
things, having been cast by the waves on the coast of Madeira and the Azores;
nay, even the bodies of two men of unknown race. Columbus was also encouraged
by his own errors and those of the authors on whom he relied. He did not
imagine that the globe was so large as it really is, and thought
that India extended much further to the east, leaving consequently a smaller
space of ocean to be traversed.
It does not
detract from the merit of Columbus that his project was founded on the previous
opinions of others, and on such slight evidence in favor of it as could be
collected; on the contrary, allowing it to be possible that the idea could have
even entered his mind without these aids, still he would rather deserve to be
called a madman than the greatest of all discoverers, if he had set out on his
voyage without a rational probability of success. His merit consists in having
realized, by courage and perseverance, what others had only speculated on in
their closets. Like Luther, and all the other great benefactors of mankind, he
was the man of action. Thought is a noble thing, and must necessarily precede
all great and noble undertakings; but so long as it remains merely thought, it
is of no practical benefit to mankind.
It is well known
what difficulty Columbus found to persuade the Princes and Powers of the world
to help him in realizing the magnificent theory which had taken such complete
possession of his own mind. For many years he applied in vain, first to the
Genoese Republic,—for he wished to bestow on his own country the honor and
profit of that great discovery and precious birth of time—as well as to the
governments of Portugal, England, and Spain. He was not, however, a man to be
easily discouraged and thrust aside. Like most great geniuses, he had a vein of
enthusiasm in his temper; and it appears from the frequency of his citing it,
that the aforementioned prophecy of Seneca had made a deep impression on his
mind; deeper, perhaps, than the more learned opinions of the ancient writers.
This disposition degenerated, indeed, in his old age into a kind of
superstition, when his soul, like that of Newton, became engrossed by a mystic
theology. In a letter addressed to Ferdinand and Isabella from Jamaica, in July
1503, and still more strongly in the sketch of his extravagant work entitled
Prophecies (Profecias), written a year or two later,
he professes that neither human reason, nor mathematical science, nor maps of
the world had been of any service in his enterprise, which was simply an
accomplishment of the predictions of Isaiah. This result, and the gold which
his discoveries might afford for effecting the conquest of the Holy Sepulcher,
are, he asserts, alone of importance. All the letters of Columbus, indeed,
express the greatest anxiety to amass gold; but this sordid desire is covered
with the veil of religion. Thus in one of his letters he says: “Gold is a most
excellent thing; whoever possesses it is master of everything in the world; it
even brings souls into Paradise” a reference apparently to the practice of
buying indulgences.
We have entered
rather fully into the circumstances which led to the discovery of America, both
because that event is one of the most striking and important of the 15th
century, and because it is, perhaps, more entertaining and instructive to trace
the rise and development of a great idea than to detail the steps by which it
was carried into practical execution. The latter, indeed, our space does not
allow, nor is it necessary to our purpose. The narratives of the discoveries,
conquests, and settlements of the Portuguese and Spaniards in the East and West
Indies are episodes in the history of Europe, important only in relation to the
effects which they produced on its commerce, politics, and manners; and we
shall therefore only briefly indicate the leading-features of these
discoveries.
Shortly after the
conquest of Granada by the Spanish Sovereigns in 1102, Columbus, after many
tedious years of suspense, at length succeeded in gaining for his scheme the
sanction and assistance of Queen Isabella. An agreement was signed with him
constituting him High Admiral in all the seas and Viceroy in all the lands
which he might discover, securing him one-tenth of the net profits of their
products, and another one-eighth on condition of his furnishing one-eighth of
the expense of the expedition. Ferdinand, though he signed this agreement,
refused to take any part in the enterprise, the expenses and profits of which
were therefore limited to Castile. Columbus appears to have been aided in
advancing his stipulated share of the outfit by Martin Pinzon, a wealthy
ship-owner and experienced navigator of Palos de Moguer,
a little seaport town in Andalusia. Pinzon had been one of the chief patrons of
his scheme, and with his brothers Vicente and Francisco, not only furnished one
of the vessels required for the expedition, but also engaged personally to
accompany it.
On the 3rd of
August, 1492, Columbus left the mouth of the Odiel with his little squadron, consisting of three ships; the largest of which, the
Santa Maria, in which he hoisted his flag, was under 100 tons’ burden, and the
only one decked. The two other vessels, called caravels, were little better
than boats, being open in the center, with cabins in the stem and forecastle.
Our limits will not permit us to pursue the details of this extraordinary
voyage which forms, perhaps, the most interesting chapter in all the records of
human adventure. Suffice it to say that, after touching at the Canaries to
refit, and again sailing thence on September 6th, the sagacity and perseverance
of Columbus, and the courage and fortitude with which he braved not only the
perils of that long and unknown navigation, but also the still more formidable
danger of alarmed and mutinous crews, were at length rewarded by the discovery
of land (Friday, October 12th). This proved to be one of the Bahama islands.
Columbus called it San Salvador, but it is better known by the native name of Guanahani. In his further searches he discovered the large
and important islands of Cuba and Haiti, the latter of which he called
Hispaniola. The loss, however, of his largest ship, and other events, compelled
Columbus to return to Europe. After building a little wooden fort which he
called Navidad, or Christmas, where he left a garrison of thirty-nine men, he
set sail from Hispaniola, January 4th, 1493; and after many adventures, being
driven by a fearful storm into the Tagus, he landed at Lisbon, February 24th.
Here he had an interview with King John II, who received him with much apparent
honor, but with secret jealousy and mortification at his success. Columbus
arrived at Palos March 10th, seven months and eleven days after the date of his
sailing thence. In proof of his success he had brought home with him some
native Indians, as well as birds, stuffed specimens of animals, and bracelets
and other ornaments of gold. We have already adverted to the splendid reception
which he met with from Ferdinand and Isabella at Barcelona.
The Spanish
Sovereigns were readily induced by the success of Columbus’s first voyage to
fit out another expedition on a larger scale. A fleet of seventeen ships was
prepared, reckoned to carry 1,500 persons, with all the means and appliances
necessary for colonizing; and so great was now the ardor to share in the
enterprise that many persons of distinction volunteered to join it. A board was
established at Seville for the management of the affairs of India; for Columbus
still believed that he had touched at the eastern parts of that country; whence
the islands which he discovered have still retained the name of Indies, though
qualified with the epithet of West.
There was one
circumstance, however, which gave the Catholic Sovereigns some uneasiness. They
felt no scruple in wresting these newly discovered lands from their native
masters, who were infidels and enemies of Christ, and consequently their
possessions conceived to be lawfully at the mercy of the first Christian Prince
who could seize upon them; but the King of Portugal, as we have said, had
already obtained from the Pope a donation of the Indies, and King John had
referred to this matter in his interview with Columbus at Lisbon. A fresh
appeal to the Pope seemed to be the only way to escape this
embarrassment. Alexander VI, who then occupied the See of Peter, was
a Spaniard by birth, and might be presumed therefore to new with favor the
claims of the Spanish Sovereigns; which, however, were urged upon him in
that high and independent tone which, in the midst of all its bigotry,
distinguished at that time the intercourse of the Spanish Court with Rome.
Alexander readily undertook to settle a question which appeared to him the
simplest in the world. The theory of the sphericity of the earth, on which the
discoveries of Columbus were founded, and in accordance with which the Spanish
and Portuguese adventurers might come into collision in their new settlements,
was an erroneous notion which could not for a moment be entertained by the See
of Rome. Unfolding the orthodox map, before mentioned, of Cosmas Indicopleustes, from which it appeared that the longer the
Spaniards sailed to the west, and the Portuguese to the east, the further they
would be separated from one another, Pope Alexander drew with infallible hand
from north to south a line of demarcation, passing 100 leagues to the west of
the Azores and Cape Verde; all to the east of this line he gave to Portugal,
all to the west, to Spain.
The jealousy of
the King of Portugal, however, was not so easily appeased. By the advice of
some of his courtiers he had prepared, under pretense of an expedition to
Africa, a naval armament, destined to seize the countries discovered by
Columbus; and as King Ferdinand had heard of these preparations, a keen
diplomatic game ensued between the two Sovereigns. After lengthened negotiations,
the points in dispute between the two Courts were arranged by the treaty of
Tordesillas, June 7th, 1401, by which it was agreed that the line of
demarcation should be placed 370 leagues to the west of the Cape Verde Islands.
Under this treaty the Portuguese subsequently claimed Brazil.
Meanwhile Columbus
had set sail from Cadiz on his second voyage, September 25th, 149, carrying
with him Father Boyl and a troop of friars destined
to convert the natives. He now held a more southerly course, which brought him
to the Caribe Islands, November 2nd. Dominica, Marigalante,
Guadalupe, Antigua, San Juan de Puerto Rico, and other islands, were
successively discovered, and found to be inhabited by a race of ferocious
cannibals, the very reverse of the gentle natives whom he had met with in his
former voyage. On arriving at his settlement of Navidad, in Hispaniola, he
found that all his men had been destroyed by the natives, whom they had
ill-treated. Having now greater means at his disposal, he founded a town, which
he named Isabella, in honor of the Queen of Castile, and soon after erected
Fort St. Thomas. But he had great difficulties to contend with. His followers
were discontented and mutinous, and not the least turbulent among them was
Father Boyl. Columbus now deemed it prudent to send
home twelve ships for reinforcements. Meanwhile he set out on a further voyage
(April 24th, 1491), which, however, after a five months’ cruise, ended only in
discovering Jamaica. On his return to Hispaniola, he found his colony there in
the greatest distress. In March, 1496, he returned to Europe, where a new plan
was formed of a settlement on a more extended scale; and as gold dust had been
discovered in Hispaniola, the attention of the settlers was to be directed, not
to cultivation, but to the working of that precious metal. Two years were spent
in preparation, and in July, 1498, Columbus again set sail with only six ships.
On this occasion he steered due south till near the equinoctial line, and then
to the west. Trinidad was discovered August 1st, and soon after the American
continent (Paria and Cumana) with the small adjacent
islands. On the 30th of August he again reached Hispaniola. The success of
Columbus stimulated other navigators to emulate his voyages. One of the most
eminent of those who followed in his track, the Florentine Amerigo Vespucci,
had either the address or the good fortune to make it appear that he had first
discovered the American continent in 1497, which to the disparagement of
Columbus, has from him derived its name.
The profits of
Columbus’s discoveries did not answer the expectations of
the Spanish Sovereigns; jealousy and envy were at work against him, the minds
of Ferdinand and Isabella were poisoned by the machinations of his enemies, and
in 1500 Don Francisco de Bovadilla, Commander of the
Order of Calatrava, was dispatched to Hispaniola to inquire into the charges of
maladministration which had been brought against the Indian Viceroy. Bovadilla was a man of small and malignant mind; he encouraged
the colonists to bring accusations against Columbus, whom he caused to be
arrested, and sent home in irons. On Columbus’s arrival in Spain, December
17th, 1500, the Spanish Sovereigns ordered him, indeed, to be set at liberty;
but although he cleared himself from the charges brought against him, he was
superseded in the government of Hispaniola.
The active mind of
Columbus was still brooding over new schemes of discovery. The experience of
his former voyages had taught him that he must look still further for the
shores of India; he anticipated the existence of the great Pacific Ocean, which
he thought might perhaps be entered by a narrow strait, and India reached. He
set out from Cadiz on his fourth and last voyage, May 0th, 1502, with only four
small barks, and discovered on this occasion the coast of the American main
from Cape Gracias a Dios to Puertobello; but he was
not destined to behold the Pacific. Compelled to quit the Honduras coast by
violent hurricanes, he bore away for Hispaniola, and in the passage was wrecked
at Jamaica. Here he was forced to linger more than a year; for, though two of
his officers, Mendez a Spaniard, and Fieschi a
Genoese, had with incredible difficulty and danger contrived to reach
Hispaniola in a canoe, Ovando, the governor, from a
mean jealousy of Columbus, could not for a long period be persuaded to send a
vessel to bring him away. It was impossible for the Admiral to remain in
Hispaniola with a man of the temper of Ovando; he
quitted that island as soon as he could, and arrived at San Lucar,
in Andalusia, December, 1504. Queen Isabella was now dead. The mean and
ungrateful Ferdinand evaded the recognition of Columbus’s claims under the
agreement of 1492, amusing him with fair words and deceitful promises; till the
great navigator, worn out by blasted hopes and the fatigues and troubles which
he had undergone, died, unrewarded, at Valladolid, May 20th, 1500. Ferdinand
may surely claim the first rank in the list of pseudo and ungrateful patrons.
Of Gonsalvo, indeed, who had acquired for him the
Kingdom of Naples, and who was allowed to end his days in banishment and
disgrace, it may be said that he had only discharged his duty as his
Sovereign’s officer; but Columbus, who had added a new world to the dominions
of Spain, was actually cheated out of the reward stipulated by a solemn
agreement under the royal hand.
ALFONSO
ALBUQUERQUE
We shall only
briefly pursue the principal remaining discoveries of the Spaniards and
Portuguese during the period comprised in the preceding pages. In 1508 Puerto
Rico was settled by the Spaniards. In 1509 Juan Diaz de Solis and Pinzon
discovered long reaches of the coasts of South America, landed in several
places, and took possession for the Crown of Spain. In 1511 Cuba was reduced by
Diego Velasquez; and in the following year Florida was explored by Ponce dc
Leon. Ponce is said to have undertaken this voyage with a view to discover a
miraculous fountain, whose waters were reputed to restore to the aged and
decrepit all the vigor and beauty of youth. In 1513 Balboa penetrated into the
Isthmus of Darien, and from the top of the Sierra de Quarequa first beheld the vast expense of the South Sea—a discovery which excited almost
as great a sensation as that of America.
Meanwhile the
Portuguese had been extending their conquests and settlements in the East.
Cabral, to whose expedition we have before adverted, established friendly
relations with the Zamorin, or Ruler of Calicut, whose dominion extended over
Malabar, and thence he pursued his voyage to Cochin and Cananor.
The renowned Alfonso Albuquerque was, however, the chief founder of Portuguese
power in India. He established a settlement at Goa, in the middle of the
Malabar coast, one of the most advantageous posts in India (1508); and
subsequently, by his conquest of the island of Ormus,
at the entrance of the Persian Gulf, obtained a station which commanded the
trade between Persia and the East Indies. The Portuguese went on adding to
their settlements at Malacca, the Molucca Islands, Ceylon, and other places;
and though the route to India through Egypt and the Red Sea still lay open to
European commerce, yet it had been rendered almost useless by the command which
the Portuguese had obtained of the Indian markets, as well as by the superior
advantages of the sea route.
England was not
altogether without participation in these great maritime discoveries. In 1497,
under the auspices of Henry VII, Sebastian Cabot, a native of Bristol, and one
of three sons of John Cabot, a Venetian merchant settled in that city, sailed
round the northern coast of Labrador, and penetrated into Hudson’s Bay, in the
attempt to find a north-west passage to India. He reached as far as 67’5 north;
but being unable to go further, sailed to the south along the coast of America as
far as 38º. His enterprise, however, led to no immediate advantage; for though
some subsequent voyages were made, no trade or settlements were established.
Thus the navigation of the Atlantic was first opened by men springing from the
two great maritime Republics of Genoa and Venice, on whose Mediterranean
commerce these discoveries were to inflict a fatal blow. The voyages of the
French to Canada fall after this period.
The commercial
effects of the discoveries in the East and West Indies were not immediately
felt. We shall, therefore, postpone the consideration of them, and close this
chapter by describing some of the results of the new European System, the
commencement of which, inaugurated by the Italian wars of the French, has been
shown in Chapter V. As before observed, one of the effects of it was to
establish a sort of community of nations, maintained by negotiations, treaties,
and finally by a code of international law. In this intercourse of nations,
ambassadors were necessary, and we will here give a brief sketch of the origin
and progress of their functions.
Ambassadors, who
in early times, and even in the reign of Henry VIII, were called orators, were,
of course, at all periods occasionally necessary in the intercourse of nations;
yet except among the Venetians, embassy, as a diplomatic office, was unknown in
the middle ages, and the functions of an ambassador were from time to time
discharged by eminent men, when the interests of their country might require
their services. The custom of employing resident ambassadors belongs to the
period of modern history; for though the Kings of Poland and Sweden, the
Knights of St. John and of the Teutonic Order, had residents at Rome in the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, who bore the title of procurators, these
seem different from what we properly understand by the term ambassador. Mr.
Prescott ascribes the introduction of resident ambassadors to Ferdinand the
Catholic of Spain. The practice, however, does not appear to have become common
till towards the middle of the sixteenth century; nor indeed during the whole
of that century can the diplomatic career be said to have been thoroughly
established, as the office of ambassador was often filled not by regularly bred
diplomatists, but by distinguished ecclesiastics, magistrates, and influential
citizens.
The Florentines
distinguished themselves from an early period as diplomatists and ambassadors;
and often undertook the office not only for their own city but also for foreign
States; thus escaping one part of Sir Henry Wotton’s definition, that, “an
ambassador is a clever man sent abroad to lie for his country”. Each of
Florence’s great literary triumvirate, Dante, Petrarca,
and Boccaccio, was employed as an ambassador, and at a later period Machiavelli
distinguished himself in the same capacity. His dispatches, under the title of Legazioni, are published among his works, and although not
correctly arranged, contain a treasure of authentic information respecting the
persons as well as the political relations of the period. The Venetians,
however, were the first to bestow any systematic attention upon embassies. The
Venetian Signory, by an order of September 9th, 1268, directed their
ambassadors to deliver up on their return all the presents they had received; and
in December of the same year the Great Council ordered them to make a report of
what might be useful to the Government. It was necessary that the Venetian
ambassadors should be nobles and past the age of thirty-eight. In the sixteenth
century, after the custom of resident ambassadors had been introduced, the term
of Venetian embassies was restricted to three years, lest the patriotism of the
ambassadors should be weakened by too long a residence abroad. The
disadvantages attending the appointment of a new and inexperienced minister
were thought to be counterbalanced by the number of men conversant with foreign
affairs which by this arrangement would be always congregated at Venice: nor
did their recall preclude them from being again appointed. We have already
alluded to their reports, or Relationi, which in
process of time became elaborate descriptions of the countries and courts to
which they were accredited. The substance of some of the oldest of them is
preserved in the Chronicle of Marino Sanuto.
The ambassadors of
Rome were divided into two classes; if Cardinals, they bore the title of
Legates, while other Papal ambassadors of high rank were called Nuncios. In the
middle ages, Legates were frequent enough, while in modern times Cardinals are
seldom sent in a diplomatic character. The ambassadors of Rome hold the highest
place in the diplomatic body: they are now always Archbishops, mostly in partibus; a condition not indispensable in the
middle of the sixteenth century, when persons who were not even clerical had
the office and title of Nuncios, as Castiglione and Acciajuoli under Clement VII. The reports of some of the Roman ambassadors, like those of
the Venetian, have become important historical papers.
Ambassadors had
the title of Excellence at the beginning of the sixteenth century, though
perhaps only by courtesy. The official address was Magnifico Oratore or Magnifico Signore. Charles V ordered that the
title of ambassador should be given only to the envoys of Kings and of the
Republic of Venice, and not to the agents of any vassal State. After the Papal
ambassadors, the Venetian had the precedence. In Italy the Imperial ambassadors
naturally took the first place; next those of France, and then those of Spain.
It was usual in former times for ambassadors to follow the movements of the
Court to which they were accredited, whithersoever it went; and as journeys
were then generally made on horseback, they had thus a good opportunity of
becoming acquainted with the countries which they visited.
In the middle ages
treaties were promulgated by the voice of the herald, nor was it customary to
print and publish them till long after the invention of printing. The Golden
Bull, however, the fundamental law of the Holy Roman Empire, forms an
exception, which appeared at Nuremberg in Latin in 1474, and at Ulm and
Strasburg in German in 1484 and 1485. The Annales Ecclesiastici of Baronius, the first volume of which appeared at Rome
in 1588, is one of the earliest historical works in which treaties are
inserted.
Of international
law, another and very important result of the European system, we shall speak
in a subsequent chapter, as its foundations were hardly laid in the period we
are considering; and we will close this chapter with some account of the
methods of warfare at this period.
SYSTEMS OF
MODERN WARFARE
Even at the
beginning of the sixteenth century the gens d'armes,
or heavy cavalry, were still pretty generally regarded, at least in Western
Europe, as forming the pith of armies; though in the Spanish forces the heavy
cavalry were not so numerous as the light, who fought in Moorish fashion. The
Burgundian gens d'armes had a great reputation.
Infantry, however, were now beginning to be more employed. During the preceding
century, and especially the first half of it, little or no care had been
bestowed on the raising or discipline of the infantry, who were considered
incompetent to resist cavalry. Yet those horsemen all cased in iron, who fought
with long lances and heavy swords, could not engage except upon an open plain;
a small fortification, a little stream, even a ditch, arrested them; and it was
rarely that they ventured to attack an entrenched camp. Thus an engagement
could not take place unless the generals on both sides were desirous of it; and
in Italy, especially, there was frequently no pitched battle, scarcely even a
skirmish, in the course of a war. The expeditions were confined to what were
called cavalcades, or forays into the enemy's country; when the horsemen swept
over the plains, destroying the crops, carrying off the cattle, and burning the
houses. In short, war was thus made upon the people, and not against the
enemy’s army.
The Swiss, whose
mountainous country is ill adapted to horsemen, were the first European people
who organized a formidable infantry; and its effect on the Burgundian horsemen
has been seen. The Swiss foot soldiers were armed with pikes of enormous
length, or halberds; they had gigantic sabres,
wielded with both hands, and a club armed with points of iron, called the Morgen-stern,
or morning-star. Such arms were necessary against the helms and cuirasses of
mounted knights. Among the German peasantry, oppressed and discontented for a
long series of years, it was also easy to raise soldiers, and it was in their
villages that were recruited the lance-knights, Lanzknechte,
whence the French lansquenets, who played so great a part in the wars of Europe
during the period we are contemplating. In this respect the example of their
Swiss neighbors had a great influence upon them. The German lance-men were
also, as their name implies, armed with long spears. But however effective
against cavalry, those troops could not contend in close combat with the short
swords of the Spanish infantry.
The missile
weapons used before the introduction of muskets were arrows, discharged from
bows or crossbows. Hand-guns, or arquebuses, are first mentioned in 1432, when
Sigismund, on his journey into Italy, had a guard of 500 men so armed. These
arquebuses were so heavy as to require a rest, and were fired with a matchlock,
which inconveniences long caused them to be considered inferior to the
crossbow. It appears from a passage of Aeneas Sylvius, that the hand-guns used
in 1459 were also without locks. Muskets, or pistols, with locks were first
made at Nuremberg in 1517.But a century elapsed before the bow was quite laid
aside. Artillery (in the modern sense of the word) had come into pretty general
use before the end of the fourteenth century. It seems to have been first used
by the Moors in their wars with the Spaniards about 1312. In 1339 the Scots
battered the walls of Stirling Castle with bombards, and the Turks are said to
have used artillery with effect at the first siege of Constantinople in 1422. The
use of gunpowder in mining was a Spanish invention, first adopted by Francisco
Ramirez at the siege of Malaga in 1487. Pedro Navarro afterwards used mines on
a more extended and scientific scale in the Italian wars of the sixteenth
century, as before related.
In a military
point of view, the nations of Eastern Europe presented some peculiar features.
They possessed few fortresses in comparison with the Romance or Teutonic
nations, and their chief military force, even down to the seventeenth century,
consisted of enormous bodies of cavalry. Louis, King of Hungary and
Poland, often assembled, about the middle of the fourteenth century, an army of
40,000 or 50,000 horsemen, to the astonishment of the Italians, who in their
most important wars could hardly raise 3,000. The Hungarians served like the
Poles on the condition of their tenures. Although well mounted they were badly
armed, having only a long sword, a bow and arrows, and no coat of mail; for
which, however, a thick jacket formed a kind of substitute. It was computed in
the sixteenth century that the Polish cavalry was equal in number to that of
Spain, France, and Germany combined. The Grand-Prince of Moscow could bring
into the field 150,000 mounted combatants. The force of the Voyvodes of Transylvania, Moldavia, and Wallachia was reckoned at 50,000 horsemen each,
and the Szekler in Hungary at 60.000. Beyond were the bordering Tartar hordes,
who may be said to have lived on horseback.
We have already
adverted to the origin of standing armies in the reign of Charles VII of
France, and previously among the Turks; but it was long before they were kept
up in any force, and only some garrisons and a few gens d'armes were retained in time of peace. The institution of standing armies, like every
other division of labor, must, on the whole, be regarded as having promoted
civilization, by enabling those not engaged in military service to direct their
whole attention to other pursuits. This institution was one of the effects of
centralization, or the establishment of the great monarchies, the progress of
which we have already seen. But this centralization was not yet complete.
Considerable remains of feudalism still lingered in Europe, and we shall see in
the sequel its gradual extinction.
We now resume the
narrative.
CHAPTER IXFROM THE ELECTION OF POPE LEO X TO THE ELECTION OF CHARLES V AS EMPEROR, AND THE DIET OF WORMS, 1513-1521 |