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READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

 

HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH FROM THE APOSTOLIC AGE TO THE REFORMATION A.D. 64-1517

 

 

 

BOOK IX. 

FROM THE END OF THE COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE TO THE END OF THE FIFTH COUNCIL OF THE LATERAN, A.D. 1418-1517.

CHAPTER VI.

FROM THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER VI TO THE END OF THE FIFTH COUNCIL OF THE LATERAN. A.D. 1503-1517.

 

CAESAR BORGIA had supposed himself (as he told Machiavelli) to have provided for all the contingencies which might occur on his father’s death, with a view to con­trolling the election of the next pope, and of securing for himself the power which fortune and skill had combined to put into his hands. But his calculations were frus­trated by the circumstance that, at the time of Alexander’s death, Caesar was himself disabled for action by the illness which had seized him in the vineyard of the Vatican. He contrived, however, while on his sick-bed, to enter into an agreement with the Colonna family, for the purpose of strengthening himself against the opposition of the Orsini, who had seized the occasion to make threatening demonstrations. In the meantime the Roman populace, in vengeance for the insolence of the Spaniards under the late pontificate, attacked their houses and destroyed their property; and the city was a scene of tumult, plunder, and slaughter. As the Vatican quarter and the fortress of St. Angelo were occupied by Caesar’s soldiery, the cardinals, thirty-eight in number, met in the Dominican church of St. Mary sopra Minerva, and refused to go into conclave until they were assured that these troops should be removed, and that the French army should approach no nearer than Nepi. Their wish as to the French was effected through the influence of cardinal d’Amboise, who avowedly put himself forward as a candidate for the papacy, and brought with him to the election Ascanius Sforza, whom he had gained to his interest by releasing him from his French prison, and by entertaining him honourably for the last two years. But it soon appeared that d’Amboise could barely reckon on a third part of the college as his supporters; and the cardinals, surprised and perplexed by the suddenness of the late pope’s death, resolved to choose one who should not only be free from party ties, but whose age and infirmity might seem to promise another speedy vacancy. On the 22nd of September the election fell on Francis Piccolomini, who, in memory of his uncle Pius II, styled himself Pius III. The new pope was sixty-four years old; he had been promoted to the cardinalate by his uncle in 1460, and was regarded as the most respectable member of the college, which had been greatly sunk in character by Alexander’s simoniacal and scandalous appointments. Rome and the ecclesiastical states were still in a condi­tion of disturbance. Nobles of the Campagna repossessed themselves of lands which had been taken from them by the duke of Valentinois; the cities of Romagna invited their expelled lords to return, or these returned uninvited to resume their power. The Venetians invaded Romagna, and made themselves masters of Faenza and other places. By entering into an alliance with the French, Caesar Borgia provoked the Spanish general Gonsalvo to order that all the Spaniards who were in his service should leave it. The duke renewed the contest with his old enemies the Orsini, but was driven to withdraw into the Vatican and the adjoining quarter, where he en­deavoured to fortify his position. By these disorders the pope was compelled to take refuge in the castle of St. Angelo, where he died after a pontificate of six-and-twenty days.

This short interval between two vacancies of the papacy had sufficed to ascertain the strength of parties in the college. D’Amboise, finding that he could not hope to be chosen, exerted himself in favour of the cardinal who was supposed to be the most devoted to the French interest, Julian della Rovere. Ascanius Sforza was gained to the same side by the hope that his family might recover the duchy of Milan; and, notwithstanding the long and open enmity between Julian and the Borgias—although Caesar had made the eight Spanish cardinals swear that they would elect no one but a partisan of his family—even Caesar was induced, by expectations of recovering his territories, of confirmation in his office of standard-bearer, and of marrying his daughter to the future pope’s nephew, to throw his influence into the scale of Julian. Capitulations were drawn up, and an oath was taken to observe them; among other things, the future pope was within two years to assemble a general council for the reformation of the church. Without having been shut up in conclave, thirty-seven out of thirty-eight cardinals voted for Julian, who, as pope, took the name of Julius—a name which had been borne by only one of his predecessors, the contemporary of Constantine and Athanasius. The pope, whose earlier career has been noticed from time to time, was now sixty years old. He was regarded as a man of sincere and open character; even Alexander VI allowed him this merit, while censuring him in other respects. But it would seem that he sometimes traded unfairly on his reputation for honesty, as when, at the election, he recommended himself to the French party by referring to his past conduct, and to the Spaniards by promising a different policy for the future. His manner of life was not immaculate; he had an illegitimate daugh­ter, whom he married to one of the Orsini; his amours had affected his constitution, and his love of wine was notorious; but, as compared with some of his late pre­decessors, his character and conduct might almost be styled decorous and respectable.

Caesar Borgia had believed that, although not powerful enough to dictate the choice of a pope, he was able, through his influence with the Spanish cardinals, to pre­vent the election of any individual to the papacy; and he professed to regret the support which he had given to Julius as the only mistake that he had ever committed. But, as in his prosperity he had never scrupled at any treachery, he was now to be the victim of other men’s deceit. Although his army was scattered by the Orsini and others, he still retained about 400 or 500 soldiers, and formed a wild scheme for the recovery of Romagna by means of this little force. But, as he was about to embark at Ostia for Spezzia, he was arrested by the pope’s order, and was detained in the Vatican until he consented to sign a document by which some fortresses, which still held out for him, were made over to Julius. He then made his way by sea to Naples, and repaired to the camp of Gonsalvo, with whom he had secretly carried on negotiations. But, although he was received with a great show of honour, he was carefully guarded until the general should learn the Spanish king’s pleasure respecting him; and, agree­ably to Ferdinand’s usual perfidy, he was arrested in defiance of the safe-conduct which he had received, was sent as a prisoner to Spain, and was imprisoned in the fortress of Medina del Campo. From this confinement, after two years, he made his escape, and he was invested with a military command by his brother-in-law the king of Navarre, who had vainly interceded for him with Ferdinand. But in March 1507, his adventurous life was ended in a skirmish near Viana, within the diocese of Pampeluna, of which he had formerly been bishop, and on the anniversary of his institution to the see. So utterly was the terror of the Borgias extinct (although Lucretia still lived as duchess of Ferrara), that a “Comedy of Duke Valentino and Pope Alexander” was acted in the ducal palace of Urbino, and that other scenes from the family story were already represented on the stage.

As Alexander’s great object had been the establishment of his family in the rank of territorial princes, that of Julius was to extend the temporal power of the papacy by recovering for it all that it had ever possessed, or could pretend to claim. And to this end he employed great skill, energy, tenacity of purpose, and even the talents of a general and the endurance of a soldier. He desired to reunite under the papacy all those fiefs which had been taken by Caesar Borgia from their hereditary lords, and which since Caesar’s fall had again for the most part reverted to the old dominion, while part had been seized by the Venetians. The Venetians offered to give up all their acquisitions except Faenza, and to hold that terri­tory under the same conditions of tribute as its former lords. But the pope for a time refused even to admit their ambassadors to his presence; and he utterly rejected their Proposals. In the end of August 1506, he set out from Rome for the purpose of reducing the fiefs of the church to obedience. Baglioni, a condottiere who had got possession of Perugia, submitted, and was allowed to continue. The Bentivogli were driven from Bologna; on St. Martin’s day the pope made his triumphant entry into that city; and his return to Rome was greeted with a yet more imposing triumph.

The French had been driven out of Naples by Gon­salvo of Cordova, and the whole kingdom was now subject to Ferdinand. The death of Isabella of Castile (November 26th, 1504), and that of her son-in-law the archduke Philip (September 25th, 1506), brought into nearer prospect the vastness of the power which was likely to be concentrated in the hands of the young Charles, the heir of Spain, Naples, Austria, and the Netherlands; and Lewis of France was bent on averting the danger which seemed to threaten him from this cause.

Maximilian, at a diet which assembled at Constance, told the German estates that it was necessary for him to be crowned as emperor at Rome, if the empire were to retain any influence in Italy. The promise of men which he received from the assembly—8000 horse and 27,000 foot for half a year—was unequal to his wishes and was imperfectly performed; but he set out on his expedition. The Venetians, although they professed themselves willing to allow his passage through their territories, refused to admit his army. There were signs of opposition from other quarters, and on entering Italy from the Tyrol he found himself compelled by enemies who beset his way to engage in a warfare which did not result in his favour. The pope, in his desire to keep him at a distance, allowed him, by a special privilege, to assume the title of emperor without having gone through the ceremony of a coronation. The army, ill-fed and unpaid, broke up; and Maximilian, after having concluded a treaty with the Venetians, returned to Germany.

The republic of Venice was now at its greatest height of wealth and power, and the success of its prudent, selfish, and grasping policy had long excited a strong feeling of jealousy in other states. Thus when Pius II invited the Florentines to take part in the crusade, they had declined on the ground that whatever might be taken from the Turks would fall to the Venetians. Julius, in a letter to Maximilian, spoke of them as encroaching, as aiming at supreme domination in Italy, and even at re­establishing for themselves the old imperial power; and he had been especially offended by their rejecting one of his nephews, whom he had nominated to the see of Vicenza, and substituting a Venetian citizen, whom they required to style himself “bishop by the grace of the senate”. The emperor considered that the Venetians had formed their territory at the expense of the empire. The French king was angry with them for having crossed his designs, for having craftily favoured the interest of Spain, and for having got possession of some places which had belonged to his duchy of Milan. In December 1508, a treaty was concluded at Cambray between the archduchess Margaret, regent of the Netherlands, on the part of her father the emperor, and by cardinal d’Amboise as representative of France. Spain was to take part in the treaty, and d’Amboise, as legate, took it on him to promise the pope’s concurrence.

The treaty began by stating that the emperor and the French king, having resolved, at the pope’s request, to make war against the Turks, held themselves bound to restrain the Venetians in their aggressions on the holy Roman empire and other Christian states; and it pledged the allied powers to hold by each other until each should have recovered whatever had been taken from it by the Venetians. For a time this treaty was kept secret from the power against which it was directed.

Although Julius had special reasons for dissatisfaction with the republic, he yet felt strongly the inexpediency of admitting foreigners to exercise dominion in Italy. And the evil was the greater in proportion to the power of the French and the Spanish sovereigns, who had re­spectively possessed themselves of Milan and of Naples. He dreaded the pretensions which might be advanced on the part of the empire as to Italy; he dreaded d’Amboise as one who was intriguing to succeed him—whom Lewis, by interfering in Italian affairs, might help to attain the papacy, in order that a French pope might transfer the imperial crown from Germany to France. Hence, although in his enmity to pope Alexander he had himself been the first to bring the “barbarians” into Italy, the policy of his later years was directed chiefly to their expulsion. He therefore privately offered to make peace with the republic on condition that certain territories should be yielded up to him. But the Venetians, in reliance on their power of raising mercenary troops, and in the expectation that a league between parties widely differing in interests would soon break up of itself, de­clined the proposed terms; and Julius thereupon joined the league, undertaking to utter the censures of the church against the Venetians, so that Maximilian should be set free from the engagements which he had lately contracted with them.

In the spring of 1509 Lewis began hostilities, and within seventeen days his forces had made themselves masters of all that he was entitled to claim under the treaty of Cambray. The pope about the same time sent forth a “monitory” bull, in which he reproached the Venetians for encroachments and usurpations, for interfering with the rights of the church as to jurisdiction over clerks and as to patronage of bishoprics, and for har­bouring enemies of the apostolic see. He allowed them twenty-four days for submission and restitution; in case of their neglecting this opportunity he declared them to be under interdict, and that their persons and property might be seized and sold. The Venetians appealed to a general council, and found means to display their appeal on the doors of St. Peter’s at Rome; and Julius pro­nounced an interdict against them.

But the pope did not confine himself to the use of spiritual weapons. His troops, under the command of his nephew Francis della Rovere, duke of Urbino, marched into northern Italy, where they reduced Faenza, Rimini, Ravenna, and other places. The Venetians, pressed by this invasion, by the French king, who in­flicted on them a severe defeat near Agnadello, and by the fear of preparations in which Maximilian was supposed to be actively engaged, made overtures to the pope for peace; but these were so ill received that the republic hesitated between submission to the father of Christendom and an alliance with the Grand Turk. But Julius dreaded lest the destruction of the republic should give the French king the sovereignty of all northern Italy; he was softened by the compliance of a power which had usually been so haughty; and, although the ambassadors of France and of the empire opposed a reconciliation, he listened to the intercession which Henry VIII of England addressed to him through Bainbridge, archbishop of York. The Venetians agreed to abandon their appeal, to give up all pretensions to ecclesiastical independence and to jurisdiction over the clergy. Six citizens of high dignity were sent as ambassadors to Rome, where they were required to enter by night, and were not greeted with any of the usual marks of honour. Yet they were not obliged to submit to the full humiliation which had sometimes been inflicted on penitents. On prostrating themselves before the pope in the porch of St. Peter’s, they were absolved with a simple injunction to visit the seven basilicas of Rome, and were at once received, “not as excommunicate or interdicted, but as good Christians and devoted sons of the apostolic see.” The pope himself had struck out the usual flagellation from the scheme which had been drawn up by his master of ceremonies.

Julius had quarrelled with the French king about the see of Avignon, which had become vacant by the death of a bishop while in attendance on the papal court. The pope attempted to exercise the patronage, but as Lewis declared this to be contrary to a late treaty, he was compelled to yield ungraciously. The death of cardinal d’Amboise, in May 1510, increased the ill-feeling which had arisen, as Julius claimed for the church the treasures which the minister-legate had accumulated. The pope resolved to destroy, if possible, the French king’s in­fluence in Italy. He endeavoured to stir up troubles against him on the side of England and on that of Switzerland; and in the violence of his self-will he insisted that others, with whom he had hitherto acted, should follow him in his change of policy. Hence, when Alfonso, duke of Ferrara, who was a feudatory of the papacy and had been one of his generals, refused to break off from the alliance against Venice, Julius declared that he had forfeited his fief, and refused to accept his tribute. He issued against him a bull of extraordinary violence, repeated its denunciations in the customary curses of the holy week, and professed that for the ruin of this enemy he would risk his tiara and his life. He declared that Lewis had forfeited his claim to the kingdom of Naples, and granted investiture in it exclusively to Ferdinand, whom he hoped by this favour to secure to his party. He negotiated through Mathias Schinner, bishop of Sion in the Valais, with the Swiss, whom Lewis had offended by resisting their demands of increased pay and by speaking of them with disparagement; and he was allowed by their diet to raise as many soldiers as he might require from the confederation.

Lewis, although unwilling to quarrel with the pope, both from his own feeling and yet more on account of his queen’s influence over him, found it necessary to act in self-defence. Falling back on a suggestion of his late minister d’Amboise, he convoked at Orleans a national assembly of prelates, doctors, and other learned men, which continued its deliberations at Tours. The chancellor opened the proceedings by denouncing Julius as having attained the papacy by uncanonical intrigues, and having cruelly troubled Chris­tendom by his love for war; and the king submitted to the council eight questions, bearing on the lawfulness of resisting an aggressive pope by force. The answers were favourable to his wishes: it was declared that a pope might not make war on a temporal prince except within the church’s territory; that a prince might, in self-defence, invade the pope’s territory, although not with a view of depriving him of it; that if a pope should stir up other powers against a prince, the prince might withdraw from his obedience, although only so far as might be necessary for the protection of his own rights; that in case of such withdrawal he ought to fall back on the ancient common law of the church and on the pragmatic sanction; that any censures unjustly uttered by popes were not to be regarded.

While Lewis was thus endeavouring to fortify himself by the sanction of ecclesiastical law, the pope continued to proceed by forcible means. Neither age nor sickness could check his impetuosity. At Bologna, where he had made his entry with great pomp on the 23rd of September, he ordered that all who were able and willing to fight should be assembled in the market-place; and on being informed that their numbers amounted to 15,000 foot and 5000 horse, although he was suffering from a violent attack of fever, he rushed from his bed to a balcony, and pronounced his benediction on them. Towards the end of October his life was despaired of; but he recovered, and notwithstanding the remonstrances of cardinals and ambassadors, who endeavoured to restrain him by a regard for his spiritual character, he set out in a litter for the siege of Mirandola. Arriving there on the 2nd of January 1511, he took up his abode in a peasant’s hut, under the guns of the fortress. He disregarded the frost, the heavy snow, the roughness and scantiness of his fare. He reproved the officers around him for their slowness; and while his pioneers fled from the discharge of the enemy’s artillery, he himself superintended the pointing of his cannon, and gave orders for the discharge. On returning to Mirandola, after a short intermission of the siege, he established himself in a little chapel, still nearer to the walls than his former quarters. A plan laid by the famous Bayard for his capture would probably have been successful, but that a sudden snowstorm drove the pope and his party back to their cover before they had reached the point at which the French ambush was posted; and, on finding himself pursued in his return, Julius with his own hand assisted in raising a drawbridge over which he had just made his escape. Undaunted by hardships or danger, he per­severed in the siege; and when at length Mirandola was taken, he refused to enter by the gate, and desired that a breach might be made in the wall, so that he might make his entry in the style of a conqueror, arrayed in helmet and cuirass.

In Germany, as well as in France, there had been manifestations of discontent against the papacy. A paper of ten “Grievances” had been drawn up, setting forth, among other things, the abuses of the Roman court as to dispensations, as to the ejection of bishops who had been duly elected, as to the reservation of the greater dignities and benefices for cardinals and papal protonotaries; as to expectancies, annates, patronage, and indulgences; as to the exaction of tenths under pretext of crusades which never took place; as to drawing of causes to Rome which ought to be decided on the spot. A list of suggested “Remedies” followed; and a paper of “Advices to the Imperial Majesty” was annexed—recommending the establish­ment of a pragmatic sanction, similar to that of Bourges. In consequence of these representations Maximilian took it on himself to issue an edict forbidding pluralities and simony, and desired James Wimpheling, a learned jurist, who was supposed to be the author of the Gravamina, to draw up a pragmatic sanction adapted to the circum­stances of Germany.

Negotiations were attempted between Maximilian and the pope through Matthew Lang, bishop of Gurk, who appeared at Bologna as imperial ambassador, and was received with great marks of honour. But Julius was offended by the assumptions of the bishop, who, when three cardinals were sent to him, employed three gentlemen of his suite to meet them, as if no one but the pope himself were worthy to treat with the representative of the emperor; and Lang, on withdrawing from the court, complained of the impossibility of moving the pope’s “obstinate and diabolical pertinacity.”

In consequence (it is said) of the death of a cardinal at Ancona, five of his brethren, among whom Carvajal, a Spaniard, was the leader, refused to join the pope at Bologna, and obtained from the government of Florence permission to remain in that city. By this the pope was greatly incensed, as he supposed their conduct to imply a charge of poison against him, and he expressed his dissatisfaction to the Florentines. The cardinals removed from Florence to Milan, where they openly declared themselves in opposition to the pope. The French king had drawn the emperor into his wish for a general council; the two sovereigns applied to the pope, reminding him of the promise which he had made at his election, and telling him that, in case of his refusal, they would endeavour to accomplish their object by means of the cardinals; and they acted accordingly.

There was some discussion as to the place where the council should be held; for while Maximilian wished it to be at Constance, Lewis proposed Lyons, and the Italian prelates insisted that, as reform was needed not only in the members, but in the head of the church, some Italian city would be most suitable. On the 16th of May, three cardinals, in the name of themselves and of six others (by some of whom the act was afterwards disavowed), issued a document summoning the council to meet on the 1st of September at Pisa—a place which was considered of good omen, as having been the scene of the council which deposed the antipope Anacletus, and of that which, after deposing the rivals Gregory XII and Benedict XIII, elected Alexander V. They announced this step to Julius, and charged him in the meantime to refrain from creating any new cardinals. The emperor and the king of France severally issued their citations;  but it was in vain that they endeavoured to gain the cooperation of Ferdinand, and Henry of England wrote in strong terms to Maximilian, expressing his horror at the possibility of a schism.

In the meantime an insurrection broke out at Bologna. The bronze statue of Julius, lately executed by Michael Angelo, and erected in front of the cathedral, was thrown down, dragged about the streets with insult, and afterwards given to the duke of Ferrara, by whom it was melted into cannon. The Bentivogli returned under French protection. The cardinal-legate, Alidosi, whose government had been greatly detested, fled in disguise by night, and made his way to Ravenna, where, on reporting his arrival, he was invited to the pope’s table. But as he was on his way to the banquet, he accidentally met the pope’s nephew, the duke of Urbino, who, after a vehement complaint that the legate had calumniated him to Julius as inclining to the French interest, drew out a dagger, and stabbed him mortally. The pope, although greatly distressed by the murder, was afraid to inflict any punishment on his nephew, lest he should go over to the enemy. He set out in deep grief for Rome, and on arriving at Rimini, he found the announcement of the Pisan council placarded on the door of the convent where he lodged.

On the 16th of July the pope sent forth a bull sum­moning a rival council to meet in the church of St. John Lateran on Monday after Easter-week in the following year. In this document he defended himself as to his performance of the engagements made at his election, professing to have been always zealously desirous of a general council, and to have endeavoured to gain the concurrence of temporal princes towards that object, although the fulfilment of his wishes had been prevented by public troubles. He compared the opposing cardinals to “acephalous locusts”, threatened them with deposition from their dignities and preferments unless they would submit within sixty-five days, and interdicted Florence, Pisa, and all places in which the schismatical council should meet. He laboured to stir up his allies against it, and at the expiration of the time of grace pronounced the refractory cardinals to be deposed, and subject to the penalties of heresy and schism.

It soon became clear that the council of Pisa would be a failure. The emperor’s promises of support proved to be delusive. In laying the subject before a meeting of German prelates at Augsburg, he found that they were present at the opening, the members of the council were almost exclusively Frenchmen, who acted under con­straint of their sovereign. No confidence was placed in the cardinals, whose conduct in summoning the council was attributed to motives of personal ambition. The French king himself is said to have afterwards avowed that the assembling of it was merely a device for rendering the pope more tractable. The number of members was never considerable; it is said not to have exceeded four cardinals, who held proxies for three of their brethren; two archbishops, thirteen bishops, and five abbots; some doctors of law, among whom the most famous was Philip Decius (or Dexio), who vigorously defended the council with his pen; and a few repre­sentatives of universities. On attempting to enter the cathedral of Pisa for the performance of the opening mass, they found the doors closed, and were obliged to resort to another church, although an order from the Florentine magistrates afterwards procured them admission to the cathedral. The clergy of Pisa refused to lend them vestments, and left the city in obedience to the papal interdict. In the face of these circumstances the council, under Carvajal as president, affected to assert its authority by declaring that all that might be attempted against it by the pope or his cardinals should be null, and that it was not to be dissolved until the church should have been reformed in head and in members. But the Florentines, alarmed by the pope’s sentences and threats, became weary of allowing the rebellious assembly a place within their territory; and after three sessions the council took occasion from a street-affray between some servants of its members and some young men of Pisa, to remove to Milan.

About this time Maximilian, whose mind was singularly fertile in wild designs, conceived the strange idea of getting himself elected to the papacy. This project appears to have been suggested by an illness of Julius, which was so serious that for a time he was believed to be dead, and cries were raised at Rome for the establishment of a republic. But as the old man recovered in defiance of medical warnings and prescriptions, Maximilian wished to be appointed his coadjutor, as a step towards being chosen as his successor. In order to obtain the consent of the Spanish king, he professed himself willing to resign the empire in favour of Charles, the grandson of both; and he was ready to pledge his jewels and robes with the Fuggers, of Augsburg, the great money-dealers of the age, in order to raise funds for securing the votes of the cardinals. But the plan found no favour with Julius and appears to have come to nought through its mere extravagance.

The pope offered terms of reconciliation to Lewis; but, as he had foreseen, they were not accepted, and he entered into a new alliance with Aragon and Venice. Of this “holy league” (as it was called), the declared objects were, to preserve the unity of the church against the pretended council of Pisa, to recover Bologna and other fiefs (among which Ferrara was understood to be included) for the Roman see, and to drive out of Italy all who should oppose these designs. The concurrence of England is said to have been partly gained by a cargo of presents more novel than costly,—Greek wines, southern fruits, and other provisions, intended for the king and the chief persons of the kingdom, and conveyed on board of the first papal vessel that had ever anchored in the Thames.

 

1511-12. BATTLE OF RAVENNA.

 

The French troops poured into Lombardy under Gaston de Foix, duke of Nemours; and it is at this time that Lewis is commonly supposed to have met the papal threats of interdict by striking the medal which bears the motto Perdam Babilonis Nomen. The council, which was sitting at Milan, professed to authorize Gaston, through its legate the cardinal of St. Severino, to occupy the States of the Church until St. Peter’s chair should be filled by a lawfully-chosen pope. Brescia, which had risen against the French, was taken, and the capture was followed by extraordinary excesses of spoliation, cruelty, and brutality. But at the great battle of Ravenna, fought on Easter-day 1512, although the French general gained a brilliant victory over the allied Spanish and papal troops, he himself fell, at the age of twenty-four. Among the prisoners taken by the French was the cardinal-legate of Bologna, John de’ Medici, whom they carried off to Milan. But there, when he offered the absolution which the pope had authorized him to bestow on all who would promise never again to bear arms against the church, his captors crowded around him, entreating his pardon and blessing; while the members of the antipapal council could not show themselves in the streets without being pursued with jeers, curses, and insulting gestures. The French army, weakened by an order which the emperor had issued for the recall of the Germans who were serving in it, and by the desertion of many soldiers who had returned to their own country after sharing in the plunder of Brescia, was needed at home for defence against the English; and as it retreated through the Milanese territory, before a force of 20,000 Swiss, which had entered Italy by the Tyrol for the service of the pope and of Venice, the inhabitants rose against the stragglers, and slaughtered many in revenge for the late outrages. The sentence of sus­pension which the council affected to issue against the pope, after attempts to draw him into summoning another general council, and after several delays and extensions of the time of grace allowed him, was received with general mockery; and the residue of the unfortunate assembly, after having removed to Asti and thence to Lyons, vanished so obscurely that its end was not observed.

Julius had treated all the messages of the opposition council with contempt. He had not been dismayed by the successes of the French, and had rejected, even with anger, a suggestion that he should withdraw for safety to Naples. And three weeks after the battle of Ravenna—only a fortnight later than the time originally appointed—he assembled the fifth Lateran council. The proceedings were opened by Giles of Viterbo, general of the Augustine friars, and afterwards a cardinal, who, in a discourse which was greatly admired, spoke of the evils and dangers of the time, of the benefits of synods, the providential care which had been shown in the protection of the pope, the mischiefs of schism, the necessity of ecclesiastical and moral reformation, and the duty of arming against the general enemy of Christendom.

The first and second sessions were chiefly occupied by formal business. At the third session, Matthew Lang, bishop of Gurk, appeared, and produced a commission from Maximilian, with whom the pope had lately concluded an alliance. In this document the emperor signified his adhesion to the council, and authorized his repre­sentative to do all that might be possible for the restoration of unity. The bishop then declared that in the emperor’s name he revoked and annulled all that had been done in the conciliabulum of Pisa, for which, he said, the emperor had never given any mandate; and he and a lay envoy of Maximilian reverently kissed the pope’s feet. At the same session was read and accepted a bull, reprobating and annulling all the proceedings of the refractory cardinals, and renewing an order by which Julius, in the preceding August, had interdicted all France, with the exception of Brittany, and had even condescended to gratify his enmity against the French by so petty an act of vengeance as the removal of a fair from Lyons to Geneva.

At the fourth session the question of the pragmatic sanction was brought before the council. After a reading of the instrument by which Lewis XI had abrogated it, the advocate of the coun­cil, Melchior Bardassini, requested that the pragmatic sanction should be revoked and annulled, and that a monition should be addressed to such ecclesiastical and lay persons of eminence in France as might be interested in it, requiring them to appear and to show cause why it should not be abolished. Two bulls of the proposed tenor were thereupon produced, and received the approbation of the council.

Julius had quarrelled with his Venetian allies, partly as to some territories which he claimed on the Po; and while the republic concluded a treaty with France, the pope, as we have seen, allied himself with the emperor. But whereas Maximilian set up pretensions to the duchy of Milan for himself or one of his grandsons, the pope, who could endure no foreign dominion in Italy, favoured the claims of Maximilian Sforza, son of Lewis the Moor. This claimant entered the capital on the 29th of December; and it appeared as if Julius were on the point of completing his work of expelling the “barba­rians” from Italy, when he was seized with an illness which seemed likely to be fatal. In consequence of this he was unable to be present at the fifth session of the Lateran council, which was held on the 16th of February 1513; but he got from it a confirmation of a bull which he had sent forth eight years before, and had since republished, with a view to checking the practice of simony in elections to the papacy. The pope retained to the last his clearness of mind and his strength of will. With regard to the cardinals who had been concerned in the council of Pisa, he declared that as a private man he forgave them, and prayed that God would forgive the injuries which they had done to the church, but that as pope he must condemn them; and he ordered that they should be excluded from the election of his successor. On the night of the 21st of February Julius breathed his last, at the age of seventy.

On the 4th of March twenty-five cardinals met for the election of a successor to the papacy. The warlike ambition of Julius had produced so much of trouble that there was among them a general wish to fill the chair with a pope of very opposite character. The younger cardinals especially resolved to make their influence felt, and among them the most active was Alfonso Petrucci, cardinal of St. Theodore, and son of the lord of Siena. Raphael Riario, the senior and richest member of the college, whom some cardinals were disposed to choose in the hope of sharing in the great preferments which would become vacant by his election, was soon set aside—partly on account of his relationship to Sixtus IV and the late pope, and partly from doubts as to his capacity; and on the 11th of March the election fell on John de’ Medici, who had entered the conclave two days later than the other cardinals. He had been detained on his journey from Florence by an ailment which is supposed to have induced some of his brethren to vote for him on the ground that it seemed likely to shorten his life. It is said that Petrucci, in announcing the election of the new pope, as Leo the Tenth, to the people, shouted out, “Life and health to the juniors!” The result was hailed with general acclamation.

Leo at the time of his election was only thirty-seven years of age. His early promotion to the cardinalate, and his expulsion with the rest of his family from Florence, have been already mentioned. During his exile from his native city he had travelled with a party of friends in Germany, France, and the Low Countries, and had lived some years at Genoa, where his sister and her husband, Franceschetto Cibò, had established themselves. There he became intimate with Julian della Rovere, who, like himself, was under the disfavour of pope Alexander; and when his friend became pope, cardinal de’ Medici removed to Rome. Under the pontificate of Julius he lived in splendour, and showed that he had inherited the tastes of his family by his patronage of literature and art. He threw open to all a noble library, including as many of the manuscripts collected by the Medici as he had been able to recover by purchase after the troubles of Florence; his palace became a resort of painters, sculptors, mu­sicians, and men of letters; but so far did the expense of indulging his tastes exceed his means of gratifying them, that he is said to have been sometimes reduced to pledge his silver plate in order to procure a supply of the most necessary materials for an intended banquet.

The cardinal had been sent as legate to Bologna, at the head of a force which was intended to reduce the city after the revolt of 1511; and when the Spanish general Cardona, who commanded the besieging troops, through disregarding his advice, had allowed the French to advance to the relief of the Bolognese, the legate appeared at the battle of Ravenna, where, as we have seen, he was made prisoner. From this captivity he was able to make his escape; and within a short time he shared in the restoration of his family to Florence—for which he had contributed to pave the way by the attention which he was accustomed to bestow on Floren­tine visitors during his residence at Rome.

As the pope had not yet advanced beyond the order of deacon, he was ordained as priest on the 15th of March, and as bishop on the 17th; and he was hastily enthroned on the 19th, in order to avoid interference with the rites of the holy week. But Leo was not content with this imperfect ceremony, and a more splendid coronation was celebrated at the Lateran on the 11th of April. In the great procession the gods of Olympus and other heathen elements were mingled, according to the taste of the age; and the pope rode the same Turkish horse which, on the same day of the preceding year, had carried him at the battle of Ravenna. The cost of this second coronation amounted to 100,000 ducats; and such an outlay for such a purpose contrasted strongly with the practice of Julius II, who, while he incurred enormous expenses on account of his wars, had spent very little on display. Magnificence and expense were characteristic of Leo’s court, and in order to find the necessary means he had recourse to the disreputable expedients of promoting cardinals for money, and of creating offices for sale. Even the luxury of his table was extraordinary. He encouraged invention in the culinary art; the flesh of monkeys and crows, and other unusual kinds of food were served up before him by way of experiment; and the discovery of peacock sausages was regarded as the highest triumph of genius in this department. His banquets were enlivened by the brilliant conversation of wits, and by the follies of bad poets, whom he conde­scended to entertain for the sake of the amusement which their vanity and their absurdities afforded him. The court was a scene of continual diversions, which were not always of the gravest character. The pope’s favourite companions were gay, and for the most part highly-born, young cardinals. One of them, Bernard Dovizi, who from his birthplace was called Bibbiena, wrote comedies of a somewhat free character, which were acted by young performers in the Vatican; and every year a party of comedians, known as the “Academy of the Roughs”, was brought from Siena for the diversion of the father of Christendom. Card-playing for heavy stakes was a common sequel of the pope’s banquets; and, whether a winner or a loser, he was in the habit of throwing gold pieces among the spectators of the game. He condemned the practice of dice-playing, however, as dangerous to fortune and morals. Painters, sculptors, architects, musicians, and artists of all other kinds, found Leo a munificent patron; nor was literature neglected in the distribution of his favours, although it seems to have received but an inferior share of them. Before leaving the conclave at which he had been elected, he appointed as his private secretaries two elegant scholars, Bembo and Sadoleto, who afterwards became cardinals. He also promoted to the cardinalate some eminent divines, such as Thomas de Vio (known by the name of Cajetan), Sylvester Prierias, and Giles of Viterbo. But the learning which he chiefly favoured was not theological. His own acquirements in theology were confessedly scanty; while, as might have been expected in a pupil of Politian, he delighted in the writings of the Greek and Roman poets. His favourite amusement was hunting, in which he engaged with a zeal regardless of season, of weather, and of unwholesome air; and nothing disturbed his usually placid temper more surely than any breach of the laws of sport.

That Leo had little of piety or devotion in his cha­racter appears unquestionable. But his defects as to religion may be described as those of a man of the world too much addicted to its objects and enjoyments. The charges which have been brought against his morals appear to have been greatly exaggerated and maliciously darkened; and the tales which represent him as an unbeliever in the Christian revelation may be regarded as utterly groundless. Good-natured as Leo usually was, he sometimes showed himself stern. He beheaded Baglioni, who (as we have seen) had made himself tyrant of Perugia, for acts of tyranny, robbery, and murder, notwithstanding the intercessions of the Orsini; he hanged a doctor of laws for producing forged documents in a suit; and he punished with unsparing severity the conspiracy of cardinal Petrucci.

Leo was desirous, like his predecessor, to exclude the rule of foreigners from Italy; but his ambition was of a lower kind than that which had thrown a sort of grandeur over the schemes of Julius, and had in some degree covered the unscrupulous nature of the means which he employed. It was not for the church, for the papacy, or for Italy that the Medicean pope laboured, but for his own family. His eagerness to forward the interests of his relations was shown immediately after his election by his appointing his cousin Julius, a knight of Rhodes, and son of the victim of the Pazzian conspiracy, to the archbishopric of Florence; and to this were soon added the dignity of cardinal and the legation of Bologna. At a later time great troubles arose out of his endeavours to provide a principality for a nephew by uniting Parma and Piacenza with Reggio, and, on the failure of that plan, by bestowing on him the duchy of Ferrara, which was for that purpose to be taken from Alfonso d’Este; and in a lower degree the pope was noted for his partiality for his countrymen in general,—so that Rome, to the disgust of its native citizens, swarmed with Florentines who were employed in all sorts of offices and occupations.

 

1514-15. BATTLE OF MARIGNANO.

 

Leo had followed Julius in his hostility to France; and he was a party to a new league which was concluded against that power at Mechlin, in April 1513, between the emperor, the king of England, and the king of Spain, although neither the pope nor Ferdinand formally signed it. But the course of events speedily induced him to change his policy. The French, after some successes in northern Italy, were defeated at Novara by Swiss troops in the interest of Maximilian Sforza, and were driven back across the Alps, while the fortresses which had been held for them in Italy surren­dered, and by the disasters of France the power of Spain became more alarming, as the vast dominions of that country (including its acquisitions in the new world), of Austria, Naples, and the Netherlands, with the dignity of emperor, were likely to be soon united under the young Charles, the grandson of Ferdinand and of Maximilian. The pope, therefore, was disposed to conciliate the French king, who, partly from his own regard for the papacy, and yet more in consequence of his consort’s importunities, was ready to abandon the unsuccessful council which he had assembled in opposition to Leo’s predecessor. An agreement was easily concluded; and at the eighth session of the Lateran council it was declared that Lewis adhered to that council, and undertook to expel the rival assembly from Lyons or any other place in his dominions, while the pope recalled all the censures which had been uttered against France. The schismatical cardinals Carvajal and San Severino, who had been arrested in Tuscany on their way to the conclave, had at the seventh session petitioned the council for pardon, and, on making their humble submission to the pope, and abjuring the council of Pisa, had a few days later been reinstated in their dignity.

Within three weeks after the reconciliation of France with the papacy, queen Anne of Brittany died; and on the first day of the year 1415, her death was followed by that of Lewis XII, who in the meantime had married a third wife—the young princess Mary of England. The crown of France descended to Francis, duke of Angouleme, the first prince of the blood, and son-in-law of the late king. At the time of his accession, Francis was only twenty years old. He was possessed of showy qualities, personal and mental, which won for him admiration and popularity; but he was thoroughly selfish and hard-hearted, voluptuous, un­steady, and faithless; and these grave faults were more and more developed with advancing years.

The new king at once signified his intention of prose­cuting his predecessor’s designs on Italy by assuming the title of duke of Milan; and in August he crossed the Alps into Lombardy—a country devastated, exhausted, and reduced to misery by the sufferings of years, during which it had been the battleground of French and Spanish, German and Venetian, armies. The glory acquired by Gaston de Foix during his brief career stimu­lated the emulation of the young Francis. At the battle of Marignano, the greatest action of the age, which the veteran general Trivulzio declared to be a battle of giants, in comparison of which all his former engagements were but as children’s play, the king’s desire of glory was gratified by a signal victory over the Swiss, who until then had been regarded as invincible; and when the fight was over, he distinguished the “fearless and blameless knight”, Bayard, by asking and receiving knighthood at his hands. In consequence of this battle, Maximilian Sforza, who had never been able to gain a firm hold on the Milanese, gave up all pretensions to the duchy of Milan, and withdrew to a life of privacy in France.

After some negotiation Leo sought a conference with Francis, and the two potentates met at Bologna. Francis showed the pope all ceremonious marks of reverence by kissing his feet, his hand, and his mouth, holding his train, and serving him at mass. And the result of the conference was greatly in favour of Leo. He obtained the king’s consent to his designs on the duchy of Urbino; he put off his request for investiture in Naples by holding out hopes of the changes which might follow on the expected death of Ferdinand of Spain. But the most important business of the conference related to the pragmatic sanction, which for three-quarters of a century had been a subject of contention between France and the papacy. The late pope, at the fourth session of the Lateran council, had cited the king, the princes, the bishops, and the parliaments of France, to show cause why the law should not be abrogated. At the ninth session (May 5, 1514) the procurator of the council reported that the French had not obeyed this summons; but the bishop of Marseilles explained that the prelates of France had been unable to procure a safe-conduct from the duke of Milan. On this, the Milanese ambassador said that his master had not refused a safe-conduct, but had required time for consideration; and the subject was further discussed at the following session.

Leo now succeeded in arranging with Francis that that sanction should be abolished, and a new concordat should be substituted for it. The blame of this concession was laid by the French on the king’s chancellor, Duprat, whom the pope had gained to his interest by the hope of the cardinalate and of other rewards. In return for his concessions the king obtained the dignity of cardinal for Adrian de Boissy, bishop of Coutances and brother of the grand-master of France, with a discharge as to certain moneys which had been collected as if for a crusade, and had been detained by Lewis XII; and in addition to these favours, the pope professed to bestow on him new privileges with regard to ecclesiastical elections.

The terms of the concordat were settled at Bologna in August 1516, and were ratified by the Lateran council at its eleventh session, on the 19th of December—one bishop only expressing any difference of opinion. Elections in cathedrals and monasteries were abolished, on account of the alleged evil consequences. In case of the vacancy of a see, the king was within six months to present to the pope a person not under twenty-seven years of age, and having certain other qualifications. If he should present one not so qualified, he might within a further time of three months present another; and in case of delay, the pope might appoint a bishop, as he was also authorized to do when a vacancy was caused by the death of a prelate at the Roman court. Exceptions were, however, made as to some of the qualifications in the case of persons of royal or high birth, and of friars who by the statutes of their order were unable to take the prescribed degrees. A like rule was established as to monasteries, where the heads were to be chosen from persons of the same order to which the monks belonged, and not under twenty-three years of age. The bull of Boniface VIII known as Unam Sanctamwith the slight modification of it introduced by Clement V, was reenacted, and the pragmatic sanction—which was spoken; of as “the Bourges corruption of the kingdom of France”—was abolished. Thus the pope, in order to conciliate the king, had made over to the crown a large part of the privileges which were taken from the French church. The Roman practices of reservation and expectative graces were given up, but the pope found his compensa­tion in the recovery of the annates.

The report of the concordat was received in France with general indignation and disgust. The students of the university of Paris broke out into tumult, and dragged about the streets a figure of the chancellor Duprat, whom they regarded as the betrayer of the national church. Preachers loudly denounced from the pulpit the sacrifice of ecclesiastical liberty. When Francis convened at the Palace of Justice a great assembly of the parliament, the bishops, the chapter of the cathedral, and the chief doctors of the university, the concordat and the chancellor’s explanations of it, with his statement that it must be regarded as a remedy for worse evils, were received with loud cries of disapprobation. When the king sent forth letters patent, by which the courts were ordered to take the concordat for the basis of their future judgments, the advocate-general, instead of requiring that the concordat and the letters should be registered by the parliament, desired that the pragmatic sanction might be maintained, and appealed “against the congregation which claimed the title of Lateran council.”

The parliament of Paris blamed the re-imposition of annates as a measure which would beggar the kingdom, and also as simoniacal. It appealed “to the pope better advised, and to the first lawfully assembled council”; and in this it was followed by pro­vincial parliaments. The university of Paris appealed in like manner, and forbade all printers and booksellers to circulate the obnoxious document under pain of being rejected from the academic body.

Francis, in no less indignation, met these demonstra­tions by threats, and by high-handed measures. He imprisoned some members of the university who had made themselves conspicuous in opposition to the con­cordat. But the parliament still carried on a long war of formalities, in the hope of delaying, if not of prevent­ing, the enforcement of the new system. Chapters and monastic bodies continued to elect their heads, and the parliaments maintained the men so chosen, to the exclusion of the king’s nominees. The courts affected to act and to decide as if the pragmatic sanction were still in force, until Francis, in 1527, by transferring the cognizance of ecclesiastical causes from them to the great council of state, procured a reluctant submission to the concordats The chief remaining trace of the Gallican liberties was to be found in that freer tone of thought by which the French church was until very recent times distinguished from other portions of the Roman communion.

The Lateran council, although more considerable as to numbers than that of Pisa, had never been largely attended, and the greater part of its members (who at the utmost did not exceed sixteen cardinals and about a hundred bishops and abbots) were Italians or bishops in partibus, although there were also representatives of England, Spain, and Hungary. Under Leo it had become merely an instrument of the papal policy. A few decrees for reform of the curia and other such objects were passed in later sessions; but they were so limited by exceptions and reservations that little effect was to be expected from them. There was also a project of an alliance between Christian sovereigns against the Turks. There was a condemnation of some sceptical opinions which had been vented as to the eternity of the world and the mortality of the soul; and, in order to check the indulgence in such specula­tions, it was decreed that no student in any university should spend more than five years in philosophical and poetical studies without also studying theology or canon law, either instead of such subjects or together with them.

The council broke up at its twelfth session, on the 16th of March 1517, having enabled the pope to triumph over the threatened schism, and to gain a victory over the church of France which placed his authority higher than it had ever stood in that country. On the 31st of October in the same year, Martin Luther began the great movement against the authority of Rome by publishing his ninety-five propositions at Wittenberg.

 

 

CHAPTER VII.

PROPAGATION OF THE GOSPEL—

MEASURES AGAINST JEWS AND MAHOMETANS IN SPAIN—WITCHCRAFT—SECTARIES—

FORERUNNERS OF THE REFORMATION.