READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE
CHAPTER XI.
THE CATHOLIC KINGS.
CUT
off from the world by the Pyrenees and the still unnavigated ocean, broken up
into small kingdoms, largely absorbed in their quarrels and in the reconquest
of the land from the Saracens, Spain for many centuries played a comparatively
small part in the affairs of Europe. Down to 1479 the peninsula contained five
independent kingdoms: Castile, with Leon, occupying 62 per cent, of the entire
surface; Aragon, with the kingdom of Valencia and the principality of
Catalonia, occupying 15 per cent.; Portugal 20; Navarre 1; and Granada, the
last stronghold of the Saracens, occupying 2. The marriage (1469) of Isabel,
daughter of John II of Castile, with Ferdinand, son of John II of Aragon,
united the two branches of the House of Trastamara, and merged the claims of
husband and wife to the Crown of Castile. Isabel succeeded her brother, Henry
IV, in 1474. Ferdinand, who had already received from his father the Crowns of
Sicily and Sardinia, inherited in 1479 the remaining dominions of Aragon. Aragon
and Castile remained distinct, each keeping its separate laws, parliaments, and
fiscal frontier. Isabel, as queen in her own right, retained the Crown
patronage and revenues within Castile, but general affairs were transacted
under a common seal. In Aragon Ferdinand’s authority was not shared by his
queen. The Spanish possessions in Italy belonged to Aragon exclusively, as
America afterwards belonged to Castile. A common policy, and the vastly
increased resources of a kingdom uniting under its sway 77 per cent, of the
peninsula, at once gave preponderating weight at home. During the greater part
of the sixteenth century Spain was the chief Power in the world. The half
century from 1474 to 1530, which witnessed the rise of this Power, may be
subdivided into periods distinguishable as that of organization and
reconstruction, 1474-1504; that of lawlessness and revolution, 1504-23; that of
absolute monarchy, 1523-30.
The reforms of
Ferdinand and Isabel, “the Catholic Kings”, put an end to anarchy, and formed
the bridge between the division of power of the Middle Ages and the absolute
monarchy of the sixteenth century.
To
understand them, we must briefly recall some peculiarities of the institutions
of the larger States of the united kingdom. The organization of the kingdom of
Castile was the direct result of its gradual reconquest from the Saracens.
Including in its population Asturians, Galicians, and Basques, as well as
Castilians and the mixed peoples of Andalucia, the land is divided
ethnologically and geographically into well-marked districts, never thoroughly
welded together. Castile was governed by traditional municipal usages and local
charters, rather than by national laws. Conquered lands were retained by the
Crown, or granted to lords temporal or spiritual, or to corporations. The Crown
in some cases retained feudal rights, but in others alienated the whole
authority. The owners in the latter case became almost independent princes.
Lands conquered without his help owed nothing to the King. Their conquerors
divided them, and elected a chief to rule and defend them. Thus were formed behetrías (benefactoría), independent communities boasting that they could change
their lord seven times a day, and distinguished according as the lord might be
chosen among all subjects of the Crown or only among certain families. At the
end of the fifteenth century the behetrías were disappearing. Their
factions made them an easy prey to their neighbors, the great nobles or the
Crown. Unclaimed lands became the property of those who settled on them. The
great estates of the Crown and titled nobles were subdivided among the freemen
(hidalgos) of their following. Those who settled on owned lands became
the vassals of the owner. The power of a lord over his vassal was unlimited, unless
defined by charter: down to the thirteenth century the law ran “he may kill him
by hunger, thirst, or cold”. Under these conditions it was impossible to
attract settlers to newly conquered and dangerous lands near the frontier. King
and noble vied with one another in the attempt to attract population by grant
of charter (fuero). To grant a fuero is to define the obligation
of vassals to their lord. Under the local fueros sprung up the
municipalities, electing their magistrate to administer public lands and to
carry out the laws of the fuero. As the power of the municipalities
increased, that of the nobles or the Crown shrank within the district. The
municipalities were the basis of political organization of the commons. By
siding with the Kings in their long struggle with the nobles they increased
their liberties as against the nobles, but fell more under the authority of the
Crown. The royal judge and tax-gatherer replaced the officers of the overlord
or municipality. The King interfered in local matters, nominating the
magistrates and appointing a president over them, the corregidor, whose
vast and undefined powers gradually superseded municipal authority.
The legal and
political classification of persons corresponded to the division of the land.
The three Estates were formed by ecclesiastics; nobles, including the titular
nobility, and the minor free or feudal holders (hidalgos); and commons, in many
cases the descendants of the serfs of the soil.
The privileges of
the first two Orders were enormous. They were exempt from direct taxation:
their lands were inalienable: they were liable neither to arrest for debt nor
to torture. The nobles were bound to the King only by the lands they held from
him. The law recognized their right of formally renouncing their allegiance and
making war upon the King. Their rights, like those of the municipalities, had
been granted to settlers on the frontier. When the frontier moved forward, the
right remained undiminished; and the result was anarchy. Under weak Kings the nobles
extended their authority over the municipalities, and extorted large grants of
lands and incomes guaranteed on the royal patrimony. Strong Kings exacted
restitution.
The commons,
while still paying as vassals certain dues to the Crown or to nobles, had, by
the middle of the fifteenth century, won the right of changing lords, and the
ownership of the land on which they lived, with right of transferring it by
sale or bequest. Their condition was notably better under the Crown than under
the nobles. In order to check desertion, the nobles were forced to follow the
more liberal policy of the Kings. Slaves were rare, consisting in the main of
foreigners, captives in the Saracen Wars, or negroes imported through Portugal.
Jews and Moslems enjoyed the special protection of the Crown.
The Castilian
Cortes originated in a Council of prelates and nobles advising the King on all
matters civil and religious. In the thirteenth century the commons of the
municipalities won the right of assisting, by deputies, at the Council. At
first, neither the number of municipalities represented, nor the number of
their deputies was limited; for they had no vote. They assembled merely to
receive communication of royal decrees, to swear allegiance to the successor to
the throne, and to receive confirmation of their charters at the beginning of a
new reign. Later, the representatives of the municipalities won the control of
direct taxation, to which their Order alone was subject. But by this time many
of them, by delegating their powers to their neighbors, or through neglecting
the royal summons, had lost the right of representation. Thus by the middle of
the fifteenth century the right of sending two deputies to parliament belonged
only to the cities of Burgos, Toledo, Leon, Seville, Cordova, Murcia, Jaen,
Segovia, Zamora, Avila, Salamanca and Cuenca, and the towns of Toro,
Valladolid, Soria, Madrid and Guadalajara. Granada was added after the
Conquest. The privileged municipalities successfully resisted any addition to
their numbers. Large districts remained practically unrepresented; the little
town of Zamora spoke in the name of the whole of Galicia. The Proctors were
chosen among the municipal magistrates, by vote or lot according to local
custom. In some towns the choice was restricted to certain families. At first
the Proctors were merely mandataries commissioned to give certain answers to
questions set forth in the royal summons. If further matters were proposed,
they were obliged to refer to their electors. No law prescribed the interval at
which Cortes should be called; but extraordinary supply was generally voted for
three years, and at the end of that time parliament was summoned to vote a
fresh supply. When the King was in no need of money and the succession was
secured, the intervals were longer; no parliament met between 1482 and 1498.
The time, place, number of sessions, and subjects for discussion were fixed by
the King.
Cortes were
general or particular, according as the three Estates, or the commons alone,
were summoned. The three Orders deliberated separately. General Cortes met to
take the oath of allegiance, and to receive confirmation of privileges. When
supply was the only business, the commons alone attended. As exempt from
taxation, the nobles and clergy finally ceased to attend after 1538. The King
swore to maintain the liberties of his subjects only after receiving their oath
of allegiance; nor was it till after voting supply that the commons presented
their petition demanding redress of grievances, extension of privileges, and
fulfillment of promises. The articles of these petitions ranged from the widest
reforms to trivial local matters; they were severally granted, refused, or
evaded by the King according to his own judgment or the advice of his Council.
The only remedy of the Cortes was to refuse or reduce supply on the next
occasion. In order to secure their subservience, the Kings sought to usurp the
right of nominating Proctors; to dictate an unlimited commission in a
prescribed form; to win over the Proctors themselves by bribes; and to impose
an oath of secrecy with regard to their deliberations.
The Cortes had no
legislative power. Their suggestions, if accepted by the King, at once became
law. But the King was the sole lawgiver, and consent of parliament was not
necessary to the validity of his decrees.
Besides being
lawgiver, the King was the sole fountain of civil and criminal justice. His
powers were delegated (1) to his Council, as supreme Court of Appeal; (2) to
the alcaldes de corte, a judicial body, part of which held irregular
assizes, while part accompanied the royal Court, superseding local tribunals;
(3) to the Chancery, or Court of Appeal, of Valladolid (a second for Spain
south of the Tagus was founded in 1494 and established at Granada, 1505; in the
sixteenth century these audiencias or High Courts superseded the adelantados and merinos); (4) to the corregidores; (5) to municipal judges
locally elected under the fuero. Besides these there existed
ecclesiastical Courts partially independent of the Crown.
Since its feudal
oligarchy had been broken down (1348) Aragon had enjoyed a constitution
capable, under an energetic King, of securing good government. It differed from
that of Castile in its more aristocratic theory and more democratic, or rather
oligarchic, practice. The free population was divided into four Estates, the
clergy, the greater nobility, the petty nobility, and the citizens or commons.
Each of these Orders was represented in parliament. The numbers of their
deputies varied; in 1518 we find the clergy with fifteen; the greater nobles (ricos
homes) with twenty-seven; the petty nobility (infanzones) with
thirty-six; and the commons with thirty-six. The parliament thus formed had far
greater power than that of Castile. Custom demanded that it should meet every
two years, and that the King should attend all its sessions. Absolute unanimity
was required to give validity to its decisions. It exacted confirmation of
liberties before swearing allegiance, and redress of grievances before voting
supply. So exorbitant did its claim seem to the Castilian Isabel, as to cause
her to declare that she would rather conquer the country than suffer the
affronts of its parliament. When parliament was not sitting, its place was
taken by a permanent commission of two members of each Estate, which jealously
watched over the public liberties and the administration of the public moneys.
Below the four Estates stood the serfs of the Crown and of the nobles, who
formed the majority of the population. They were little more than chattels,
without legal or political privileges.
The Justicia was originally an arbiter between King and the nobles. He afterwards came to be
regarded as the personification and guardian of the liberties of the Aragonese.
He was appointed by the Crown, but after the middle of the fifteenth century
held office for life. His powers consisted of the right of manifestation,
or removal of an accused person to his own custody until the decision of his
case by the proper Court; and of that of granting firmas, or protection
of the property of litigants until sentence was given. The office of justicia,
the importance of which has been greatly exaggerated, was similar to that of
“inspector of wrongs” among the Arabs. The municipal liberties were of high
significance. Some communities had the right of owning vassals and
administering public revenues, as well as that of jurisdiction. The
municipalities elected their magistrates, generally by lot; but privileges
differed locally, and in some districts the powers of the nobles were almost
unlimited.
The constitution
of Catalonia bore traces of the ancient and close connection of this
principality with France, and formed the most complete type of feudalism south
of the Pyrenees. As such it resembled that of Aragon more closely than that of
Castile. The preponderance of the nobles was very great, though the three
Estates were represented in parliament. The vassals remained in a condition of
the harshest serfdom, until it was ameliorated by John II in his struggle with
the nobles (1460-72). The “evil customs” under which they groaned were finally
swept away by King Ferdinand (1481).
Valencia at the
time of its conquest in the thirteenth century received a constitution modelled
on that of Catalonia. The land was shared among the great nobles: its Saracen
cultivators became their vassals, and the main source of their wealth and
power. In the towns a mixed and busy Christian population sprang up, drawn from
Italy and France as well as from Catalonia and other provinces of Spain.
Of the three
Basque provinces Biscay was a semi-independent principality until the end of
the fourteenth century, when marriage made the King of Castile its Señor.
Alava and Guipuzcoa were originally behetrías; the Kings of Castile became
their overlords after the beginning of the thirteenth century. The former was
incorporated as a province of Castile in 1332. While the local liberties of
other provinces were sacrificed to the centralizing policy of Ferdinand and
Isabel, the Basques of Biscay and Guipuzcoa, owing partly to respect for
tradition, and partly to the necessity of securing the loyalty of a frontier
people, obtained the confirmation of their privileges and the right of
self-government. Their contribution to the revenue was a “free gif” granted
only after redress of grievances. In royal decrees they are called “a separate
nation”; as such they upheld their freedom from direct taxation and their right
of bearing arms, the special marks of nobility. It is to be noted that certain Castilian
towns enjoyed a similar privilege.
The first two
years of Ferdinand and Isabel’s reign were occupied by a war of succession.
Many of the Castilian grandees, supported by the Kings of Portugal and France,
maintained the claim of Juana, called la Beltraneja, whom Henry IV had
acknowledged as his daughter and successor, but whose legitimacy was doubtful.
Aragon took no share in the war; for in this kingdom Ferdinand had not yet
succeeded his father. The Portuguese and the Castilian malcontents overran the
western frontier, and seized Burgos and strong positions in the Douro valley.
The battle of Toro (1476) put an end to the danger, and left leisure for
reforms. During the two preceding reigns Castile had been given up to anarchy;
the municipalities had become almost independent; the nobles had usurped the
privileges of royalty and devastated the country by their private wars.
Centralization, repression, and assertion of the supremacy of the Crown, were
the remedies applied. The primary need was personal security. Outside the walls
of the towns all men were at the mercy of the lawless nobility, or of robber
bands. As far back as the thirteenth century the municipalities of Castile had
formed leagues or “brotherhoods” for defense in time of war, or to resist
encroachments by Kings or nobles. Isabel's first parliament (Madrigal, 1476)
revived and generalized this practice by founding the Holy Brotherhood.
Throughout Castile each group of a hundred houses furnished a horseman for the
repression of crimes of violence in the open country and for the arrest of
criminals who fled from the towns. Judges of the Brotherhood resided in all
important towns and summarily tried offenders. Their sentences, of mutilation
or death, were carried out by the troopers on the scene of the crime. The whole
organization was placed under a central assembly appointed by the
municipalities, whose president was a bastard brother of King Ferdinand. The
nobles at first objected to this curtailment of their right of exercising
justice; but their opposition was overcome. A few years later the Hermandad was extended to Aragon. Lawlessness disappeared, and the 2,000 trained troops
of the Brotherhood, together with its treasury, were made use of in the
Conquest of Granada. So well had the Holy Brotherhood fulfilled its purpose,
that within twenty years of its foundation it had become unnecessary. In 1492
the Cortes of Castile complained of its cost. The Crown hereupon took over its
troops, and in 1495 it was reduced to the standing of a country constabulary;
in Aragon it was abolished in 1510.
1476-8o]
Reforms of the Catholic Kings. The nobles.
The resources of
the Crown were outweighed by the enormous wealth and power of the nobility. The
danger of a combination between the grandees had been proved by the War of
Succession, when a mere section of them came near to imposing its will on the
country. The reduction and humiliation of the whole Order was undertaken and
made easy by its continual feuds. The grandees had wrested from Henry IV almost
the whole of the royal patrimony, adding Crown lands to their own, trespassing
upon common lands, and extorting huge pensions guaranteed upon the revenue. It
was urgently necessary to set free the royal revenues; and in accomplishing
this the Crown was sure of the support of the people, which groaned under the
burden of taxation made necessary by the loss of these resources. As soon as
Ferdinand and Isabel felt their position assured, they revoked the whole of the
grants made by their predecessor (Cortes of Toledo, 1480). All titles were
subjected to review, and only property held on ancient tenure, or as a reward
for public service, was left to the nobles.
The power of the
grandees was still excessive. One of its chief sources was the wealth of the Crusading
Orders, at once military and religious, which had long neglected the vows of
poverty and obedience, imposed at the time of their foundation in the latter
half of the twelfth century. The purpose of that foundation itself, the work of
reconquest, was well-nigh forgotten. The Grand Masterships conferred on their
holders the independent command of an army, and the disposal of many rich
commanderies; nor had they been wrongly called the chains and fetters of the
Kings of Spain. Instead of crushing them, as the Templars had been crushed,
Isabel took over their power. In 1476 she brought forward her husband for the
Grand Mastership of Santiago. On this occasion she allowed the election to go
against him; but afterwards, as vacancies occurred, he became successively
Grand Master of Santiago, Alcantara and Calatrava. The Pope granted investiture
on each occasion, with reversion to Isabel. Adrian VI (1523), and Clement VII
(1530), attached the Grand Masterships perpetually to the Crown. The King
gained the respect due to their semi-religious character, as well as their
riches and authority.
Many of the great
offices of State, such as those of Constable, Admiral and Adelantado,
were hereditary. Shorn of their powers, these titles now became merely honorary
in families of proved loyalty. The grandees were compelled to lay aside the
insignia of royalty which they had usurped, and their mutinous spirit was
checked by a few startling examples of royal justice. Their children were
educated under the eye of the Queen, and learnt to respect the Crown. Careers
were found for them in the Moorish and Italian wars or as officers of a stately
Court. The class which had broken the power of Alvaro de Luna, deposed Henry
IV, and disputed Isabel’s succession, ceased in a few years to be formidable.
Isabel revived the custom of administering justice in person. During a progress
through Andalucia (1477) she stamped out the great factions whose wars had
devastated the land. A royal commissioner, accompanied by an army, suppressed the
lawlessness of Galicia, and razed the castles of its robber barons.
At
the time of the War of Succession the only regular force at the disposal of the
Crown was a bodyguard of 500 men-at-arms and 500 light horse. During the war
against Granada this was increased, and received the addition of the trained
troops of the Holy Brotherhood. The rest of the army was made up of feudal
contingents and local militias, arrayed each under its own banner and commanded
by district governors, Grand Masters, grandees, or captains chosen by the
municipalities. The period for which these militias could be kept in the field
was limited by law and by the scanty royal revenues. Accordingly, they could
not be moved far from home, and wars were local in character. The burden as
well as the reward of the Conquest of Granada fell chiefly to the Andalucians.
At its close, a guard of 2500 horse was retained in the royal service, and the
powerful force of artillery that had been brought together was carefully kept
up. When the troops of the Holy Brotherhood were disbanded, this force was
found insufficient, and the local militias were revived upon a better plan. The
old law binding all citizens to provide themselves with arms according to their
condition having fallen into disuse, a decree was promulgated (at Valladolid in
1496) declaring one-twelfth of the males between the ages of twenty and
forty-eight liable to military service at home or abroad. Captains were
appointed, and the militias were mustered and drilled on holidays. But
victories abroad made soldiering popular, and volunteers in abundance were
found to submit to the discipline and learn the new tactics of the Great
Captain. The militia was neglected; taxation had taken the place of personal
service, and the municipalities refused to bear a double burden.
The Castilian
navy dates its origin from the Moorish Wars, when the Cantabrian sailors sailed
round the coast and cooperated with the land forces. Together with the Catalans
they were afterwards employed in stopping communications between the Moriscos
and their African brethren. The connection with Italy, Flanders and Africa,
increased the importance of the service, and the convoys required by the trade
of the Indies rapidly developed a formidable fleet.
The vast powers centred
in the Crown were exercised through the royal Council. Originally a
deliberative assembly of members of the royal family, prelates, and nobles, it
was entirely reformed by Ferdinand and Isabel (1480). Its former members were
not excluded, but their votes were taken from them, and their places supplied
by lawyers nominated by the Crown. The president, generally a bishop, was the
second person in the kingdom. The new Council was organized into departments,
the chief of which were the Council of State, controlling the public forces and
foreign affairs, and the Council of Castile, the supreme Court of justice, and
the centre of the executive. The royal authority was no longer shared by
grandees and prelates of noble rank; a professional class, midway between
nobles and people, and entirely dependent on the Crown, had sprung up. The
lawyers of the Council formed the real legislature; their education had steeped
them in Roman law, and their efforts were directed to the unification and
centralization of authority. As the powers of the Council rose, those of the
Cortes dwindled.
Over the clergy
too the royal authority was extended, and the civil and the ecclesiastical
power were united to such a degree, that the separation of Church and State
even now remains inconceivable to Spaniards. The morals and discipline of the
clergy had become much relaxed. Preferment in Spain was obtained by intrigues
at Home; and those who obtained it often neglected to visit their sees or
benefices. Public opinion supported the Crown in its desire for reform. In 1476
the Cortes protested against the abuses of the ecclesiastical Courts, which
usurped jurisdiction in civil matters and enforced their sentences by religious
penalties. The enormous and ever-increasing estates held by the Church in
mortmain had now come to be looked upon with jealousy and anxiety. The revenues
of the great sees were immense; the Archbishops of Toledo and Santiago
nominated the governors of their provinces. Little by little they were shorn of
part of their wealth, and of the whole of their civil jurisdiction and military
power. The annexation of the Grand Masterships of the Military Orders by the
Crown weakened the Church as well as the nobles. At the same time the sees were
filled by men of learning and piety, and ceased to be an appanage of the
nobility. At Toledo the turbulent Archbishop Carillo was succeeded by the
soldier and statesman Mendoza, known from his influence as "the Third
King" (1483). The next Archbishop, the Franciscan Ximenes de Cisneros, though
still a statesman and a warrior, was a crusader instead of a leader of faction,
a prelate of saintly life, and a lover of learning, as is proved by his
foundation (in 1508) of the University of Alcalá (Complutum). By a diligent
reform of the mendicant orders, he purified and strengthened the Church. In
1482 Ferdinand and Isabel wrested from the Pope the right of supplication in
favor of their nominees to bishoprics. This right at a later date, Adrian VI,
urged by Charles V, converted into one of presentation. In the kingdom of
Granada and in the Indies, ecclesiastical patronage, together with part of the
tithes, was reserved by the Crown. In 1493 a decree forbade the publication of
bulls without the royal exequatur. In general, it may be noted that after the
death of Isabel, the attitude of the Spanish Kings towards the papacy became
more and more independent. Ferdinand and Charles, when opposed, openly
threatened to break with Rome; and the latter obtained large assignments of
ecclesiastical revenues. The Inquisition was an ecclesiastical instrument in
the hands of the civil power; and when, in 1497, the Pope abandoned the right
of hearing appeals, this power became supreme. Thus religious was added to
civil despotism; indeed, the majority of Spanish clergy were always found to
side with the King against the Pope.
The natural
products of Spain are as varied as her climates, but her chief riches have
always been cattle, corn, wine, and minerals. Cattle breeding was specially
favored by legislators, because of the ease with which its stock could be put
beyond reach of invaders. Climate made a change of pasturage necessary in
spring and autumn. So long as the land was thinly populated this was an easy
matter. When agriculture became general, the rich owners of the migratory
flocks formed a guild for the protection of their traditional rights, and
obtained many privileges injurious to cultivators. The enclosure of waste lands
was forbidden, and broad tracks were reserved, even through the richest
valleys, to provide pasturage for the travelling flocks. In spring and after
harvest they ranged at will through corn-lands and vineyards. Nevertheless, at
the end of the fifteenth century Castile still exported com, while Aragon, and
even Valencia, in spite of the fabulous richness of its irrigated fields, were
forced to import from the Balearic Islands and Sicily. In 1480 the export duty
on food passing from Castile to Aragon was abolished. The result was a revival
of agriculture, particularly in Murcia; but the flocks diminished, and the
policy of protecting them was resumed. For many years the Spaniards in America,
intent upon nothing but the finding of gold, imported the necessaries of life
from the mother-country. Until 1529 the trade with the Indies was reserved
exclusively to Seville, and the result was a great development of corn and wine
growing in parts of Andalucia. But agriculture was ruined by the alcabala,
a tax of one-tenth on all sales. Bread paid three times over, as corn, as meal,
and as manufactured. To remedy this the alcabala was assessed at a fixed
sum levied by districts (1494); but now a larger horizon was beginning to dawn,
brilliant actions took place in the New World and in Italy, and agriculture
still remained neglected. Gold began to be imported in large quantities, and
prices trebled. The evil was further increased by disturbances among the
industrious Moriscos, by bad seasons, and by the ruinous policy of fixing a
maximum price, which still further depressed the greatest national industry and
drove the country population to the towns, which overflowed with beggars.
Spain’s position
made her a natural half-way-house for sea-borne trade between the Mediterranean
and Atlantic. Her exports were chiefly raw products-silk, fruit, and oil from
the south; iron, wool, wine, and leather from the north. By prohibiting the
export of gold and silver, and by the imposition of heavy export and import
dues, it was sought to encourage manufactures and to prevent the necessity of
buying back home products manufactured abroad. In spite of repeated protests of
the Cortes, the settlement of foreign artisans was encouraged by the Kings.
Manufactures, chiefly wool and silk, increased tenfold in the course of a
century; the great fairs drew buyers from foreign lands; it seemed as though
the inborn Spanish dislike of commerce and industry had been overcome. But the
progress which thus manifested itself was not destined to endure. The Revolt of
the Comuneros, to be noticed below, ultimately resulted in the partial
ruin of a rising middle class; the most enterprising of the population
emigrated as soldiers or settlers; and the great discoveries of precious metals
in America raised prices to such a pitch that Spanish goods could no longer
compete in foreign markets. A mistaken economic policy led to a neglect of the
objects in favor of the means of exchange, and encouraged the accumulation of
unproductive wealth. Nevertheless, a fictitious prosperity was for a time
maintained. The period of Spain’s greatest commercial energy falls within the
reign of Charles I.
It has been
supposed that Spanish population sank rapidly during the first half of the
sixteenth century. The data on which this calculation was made have, however,
been proved to be misleading. It is probable that population remained nearly
stationary at about eight millions, or somewhat less than half its present
amount.
Trade was
hampered by a coinage made up of foreign pieces of various values, and of
debased money issued from local and private mints. Ferdinand and Isabel
asserted their exclusive right of minting, and established a high standard in
their ducats (1476). These ducats were coined at the rate of 65’5 from a mark
of gold of the standard of 23’3/4- carats. The silver coin of these sovereigns
was the real (67 to the mark of silver, the standard being 67 parts out
of 72). The maravedi (1/375 of the ducat) was the basis of calculation;
there was, however, no actual coin of this value or name, but the real was
worth 34 maravedis. In 1518 the money of Aragon was made uniform with
that of Castile.
The chief sources
of revenue were the dues and rents of the Crown lands, and the alcabala.
The last-named, a tax of a tithe on all sales, was in 1494 commuted for a fixed
sum assessed on districts. Isabel's will forbade alteration of its amount, but
a new assessment was made in 1512. To these sources of revenue has to be added
extraordinary supply, the one direct impost. In Castile this amounted to 50
millions of maravedis yearly. Under Charles, an additional supply was
demanded. The total supply received by the Crown of Aragon amounted to less
than one-fifth of that received by the Crown of Castile, and the whole sum was
less than a quarter of that produced by the alcabala. Customs-dues, the
sale of indulgences under a constantly renewed Bull of Crusade, the revenues of
the Grand Masterships, the tax of two-ninths on ecclesiastical tithes, and the
King’s fifth of the gold of the Indies, brought up the revenue at the beginning
of Charles’ reign to about 600 millions maravedis. Almost the whole of
this was farmed by Jews and Genoese, and above all by the Fuggers. When it
proved insufficient, fines were levied for a renewal of the assessment of the alcabala,
and loans were raised at high rates of interest. The law forbidding alienation
of the royal patrimony was constantly infringed. Charles sold royal and
municipal offices, letters of naturalization and legitimacy, and patents of
nobility. Though the sum produced by the taxes increased thirtyfold within
sixty years, the burdens on the people were not augmented in like proportion.
Much alienated revenue was recovered; the value of gold sank to less than a
third; industry and commerce had vastly increased. The exemption of the nobles
and of certain districts and towns from direct taxation was, financially, not
very important.
A source of much
injustice was the lack of a recognized code of laws. Since the
promulgation (1348) of the Partidas and Ordenamiento de Alcala as
supplementary to municipal law, a great number of statutes had been enacted,
while others had fallen into disuse without being repealed. Isabel sought to
remedy the confusion by ordering the scattered decrees to be collected and
printed in the Ordenamiento de Montalvo (1485). But neither this nor a
further collection (1503) proved satisfactory. Montalvo’s book left many
important matters doubtful, and the laws it contained were not faithfully
transcribed. Isabel’s will (1504) provided for the continuation of the work of
unification. The result was the Laws of Toro (1505), a further attempt to
reconcile conflicting legislation. The Cortes of 1523 still complained of the
evil; nor was it remedied until the publication of the Nueva Recopilacion (1567).
1478-92]
The alien races and the Inquisition.
Under firm government
the country recovered rapidly from its exhaustion, and reconquest was again
taken in hand. For ten years (1481-91) it was carried on untiringly by the
heroic resolution of Isabel and the stubborn valor of Ferdinand. In spite of
disasters, like that of the Axarquia (1483), and obstinate resistance, like
that of Baza (1489), and notwithstanding the enormous difficulties of
transport, the slender resources of the Crown and the unserviceable nature of
their feudal army, the kingdom of Granada fell piecemeal into the hands of the
Catholic Kings. Owing to internal feuds and the treachery of the last of its
Naserite dynasty, not more than half of its natural defenders were ranged at
one time against the Christians. Some cities, like Malaga, were treated with
great harshness, while others capitulated on favorable terms; for the victor
was eager to press forward and it lay with him to decide whether or not he
would be bound by his word. At last the city of Granada, isolated and helpless,
submitted almost without a struggle (1492). The terms of capitulation included
a guarantee of the lives and property of the citizens, with full enjoyment of
civil and religious liberty, the right to elect magistrates to administer the
existing laws, and exemption from increase of the customary taxation. Ferdinand
thus sought to gain time to establish his authority over the excitable and
still formidable population.
Even before the
fall of Granada the problem of the alien races had presented itself. Living
under the special protection of the Crown, the Jews in Spain, in spite of
occasional massacres and repressive edicts, enjoyed great prosperity and were
very numerous. They controlled finance, and had made their way even into the
royal Council. The noblest families were not free from the taint of Jewish
blood, and it was known that many professing Christians shared their beliefs.
In 1478 a bull granted at the request of Ferdinand and Isabel established in
Castile the Inquisition - a tribunal founded in the thirteenth century for the
repression of heresy. Its object was now to detect and punish Jews who had
adopted Christianity, but had afterwards relapsed. Two years of grace were
allowed for recantation. In 1481 the Inquisition began its work at Seville; in
1483, in spite of protests on the ground of illegality, it was extended to
Aragon, where the first Inquisitor, St Peter Arbues, was murdered in the
cathedral of Saragossa (1485). Under the presidency of Torquemada (1482-94) the
Inquisition distinguished itself by the startling severity of its cruel and
humiliating autos and reconciliations.
Sixtus IV made
several attempts (1482-3) to check the deadly work, but was obliged by pressure
from Spain to deny the right of appeal to himself. The Inquisitors were
appointed by the Crown, which profited by their ruthless confiscations. Their
proceedings checked instead of promoting conversion, and a large body of
professing Jews remained isolated and stubborn among the Christian population.
Against these was turned the religious and national enthusiasm that greeted the
fall of the last stronghold of the Infidel. The achievement of political unity
made the lack of religious unity more apparent. It was rumored that the Jews
were carrying on an active propaganda; old calumnies were revived; they were
accused of plotting against the State, of sacrificing Christian children, and
of torturing and insulting the Host. In 1478 an edict expelled them from
Seville and Cordova; the severest repressive measures were renewed in 1480; and
in March, 1492, in spite of Ferdinand's protest, the Jews of Castile were
bidden to choose within four months between baptism and exile. On the strength
of an existing law prohibiting the export of precious metals, they were
stripped of a great part of their wealth, and many hundred thousands quitted
Spain. The treasury seized their abandoned property; but Spain was the poorer
for the loss of a thrifty and industrious population. The work of the
Inquisition now increased. Many of the exiles returned as professing Christians,
while many suspected families of converts had been left behind. Pedigrees were
subjected to the closest scrutiny; not even the highest position in the Church,
or the most saintly life, secured those whose blood was tainted from cruel
persecution. Even if their faith was beyond suspicion, they were made social
outcasts. Statutes as to purity of blood excluded them, in spite of the
protests of the Church, at first from universities, Chapters, and public
offices, and later even from religious Congregations and trade guilds.
Torquemada died in 1498; but the persecution went on until Cordova rose against
the fierce and fanatical Lucero (1506-7). Ximenes became Grand Inquisitor
(1507), and the tribunal became less savage, while its sphere of activity
widened. At the beginning of the century the baptized Saracens had been placed
under its authority. When Islam was proscribed throughout Castile (1502), the
Inquisition stamped out its last embers, by methods hardly less rigorous than
those directed against the Jews; afterwards, it was employed to further
absolutism in Church and State. Such are the passions roused by the very name
of the Inquisition, that it is difficult to judge its work. The Jesuit Mariana,
a bold and impartial critic, calls it “a present remedy given by Heaven against
threatened ills”. He admits, however, that the cure was a costly one; that the
good name, life, and fortune of all lay in the hands of the Inquisitors; that
its visitation of the sins of fathers upon children, its cruel punishments, its
secret proceedings, and prying methods caused universal alarm; and that its
tyranny was regarded by many as “worse than death”.
For nearly eight
years after its conquest the kingdom of Granada was ruled with firmness and
moderation by its Captain-general, the Count of Tendilla, and by Talavera,
Archbishop of the newly-created see. The capitulation had been respected; men's
minds were reassured; and many, who had at first preferred exile to submission,
had returned. Talavera, a man of earnest but mild temper, devoted all his
energies to the conversion of the Muslims; he secured their confidence and
respect, and, by encouraging the study of Arabic, partly broke down the barrier
of language. Already the results of his good work were apparent, when his persuasive
and forbearing policy was abandoned.
To the religious
advisers of the Queen the results attained seemed paltry: shocked at what they
considered a stubborn rejection of evident truths, they regarded the respect
shown to the religious and social peculiarities of the Muslims as impious
trafficking with evil, while the salvation of thousands was at stake. Ximenes
shared the fanaticism of his age and country. Having obtained a commission to
aid the Archbishop in his work, he assembled the Muslim doctors, harangued,
flattered, and bribed them till many received baptism (1499). Still
unsatisfied, he adopted more violent measures. He began to ill-treat the
descendants of renegades and to tear their children from them; he imprisoned
the more obstinate of his opponents, and confiscated and publicly burned all
books treating of their religion. A savage revolt within the city was quelled
only by the influence of the Captain-general and the Archbishop. Ximenes, when
recalled to Court to be reprimanded for his high-handed action, succeeded in
winning over the Queen to his views. A commission was sent to punish a revolt
provoked by the infraction of guaranteed rights. It was evident that the
capitulation was no longer to be respected, and while thousands, cowed but unconvinced,
received baptism, others quitted Spain for Africa. The districts round Granada
showed none of the submissive spirit of the city. On hearing of the injustice
done to their fellow-countrymen the mountaineers of the Alpujarras revolted,
and the Count of Tendilla, with Gonzalo de Cordova, then a young soldier,
undertook a difficult and dangerous campaign in an almost inaccessible region.
In the spring of 1500 Ferdinand himself assumed the command, and the rebellion
was crushed out by irresistibly superior forces. Each little town perched upon
its crag had to be stormed. Men taken with arms in their hands were butchered
as rebels; the survivors were punished by enormous fines, and cajoled or forced
to receive baptism.
No sooner was
this rising repressed, than a still more formidable one broke out in the Sierra
Bermeja on the western side of the kingdom. Christians were tortured and
murdered, and the alarm was increased by the belief that the rebels were in
communication with Africa. A splendid force, hastily raised in Andalucia,
marched into the fastnesses of the mountains; but, becoming entangled among
passes where the heavy-armed horsemen were helpless, it was nearly exterminated
at Rio Verde (March, 1501). The rebels, however, were terrified by their
success; the revolt spread no further; and when Ferdinand hurried to Ronda,
prepared for a campaign, they sued for peace. Again the choice between baptism
and exile was offered, and thousands quitted the country.
In July, 1501,
the whole kingdom of Granada was declared to be Christian; and the only Muslim
element left within the realms of Castile consisted of small groups settled in
cities even as far north as Burgos and Zamora, under the protection of the
Crown. These Mudejares were now forbidden to communicate with their newly
converted brethren of the south. Six months later, all who refused to become
Christians were banished. In Aragon and Valencia the Mudejares were allowed,
for a time, the private exercise of their religion. The harsh treatment of the
Saracens seemed justified by fear of their numbers and of their intrigues with
the African corsairs. They sank into a state of serfdom, being left dependent
for protection upon the landowners who throve on their industry. Even so they
clung to their faith, and the Inquisition found a hundred years insufficient
for rooting it out. The results of intolerance are still to be traced in the
wide wastes, once rich in corn, vine, and olive, of central and southern Spain.
While the rest of the land had been won back in a half-ruined and desolate
state, Granada was seized in full prosperity, but even she was not spared.
Profiting by the
eagerness of the King of France to settle outstanding differences before
invading Italy, Ferdinand in 1493 recovered by negotiation the counties of
Roussillon and Cerdagne, which had been pledged by his father to Louis XI.
In 1494,
following the traditions of the Crown of Aragon, he began actively to interfere
in European politics by forming the League of Venice for the purpose of driving
the French out of Italy. A period of peace followed the death of Charles VIII
(1498). When the War was resumed the Crown of Naples was added by the Great
Captain, Gonzalo de Cordova, to those of Castile, Aragon and Sicily (1503). The
New World had been discovered, but its supreme importance was misunderstood;
Spain was embarked upon the current of European politics, which was to drag her
to her ruin. Defeated in Italy and baffled in negotiation, the French King
decided to carry the war into the enemy's country. In the autumn of 1503 two
armies set out to invade Spain, one through the western passes of the Pyrenees,
and the other, supported by a fleet, through the eastern. The former never
reached its destination. The latter entered Roussillon unopposed; but wasted
time in besieging the castle of Salsas near Perpignan, until Ferdinand marched
to its relief. The French retreated to Narbonne without fighting. The loss of
the fleet in a storm completed the disaster of the French, and a humiliating
peace ended the War.
In 1496 were
negotiated the marriages which eventually gave the Crown of Spain to the House
of Austria. Juan, only son of Ferdinand and Isabel, married Margaret, daughter
of Maximilian, Archduke of Austria and King of the Romans. His sister, Juana,
married Maximilian’s son Philip the Fair, who had inherited (1493) from his
mother, the Netherlands, Flanders, Artois, and Franche-Comté. The death of the Infante Juan left his sister, Isabel, Queen of Portugal, heiress apparent to the throne
of Castile (1497). By her death (1498) and that of her infant son (1500) the
hope of the union of the whole Peninsula under one Crown was defeated. The
succession fell to Juana and her husband Philip. From the first their marriage
had been an unhappy one. Philip gave his wife abundant cause for jealousy, and
repressed her violent outbreaks by making her a prisoner within palace. Her
mind became disordered, and she soon showed signs of the intermittent insanity
which later overtook her. It became necessary for Juana and Philip to visit
Spain to receive the oath of allegiance as heirs to the Crown. But Philip
delayed till the end of the year 1501, and caused additional displeasure by
seeking the friendship of Louis XII and doing formal homage to him as he passed
through France. The Cortes of Castile swore allegiance to Juana and her husband
at Toledo (1502). The Cortes of Aragon, which had previously refused to
acknowledge her sister Isabel, alleging that females were excluded from the
succession, now took the usual oath. At the beginning of 1503 Philip quitted
Spain, leaving his wife with her parents. He again passed through France, and
concluded a peace with King Louis. But this peace Ferdinand, on hearing news of
the victories of the Great Captain, repudiated, alleging that Philip had
exceeded his instructions. The War in Italy went on as before.
1501-5]
Death of Queen Isabel. Ferdinand's regency.
After the birth
of Ferdinand, her second son, Juana's insanity increased. In March, 1504, she
quitted Spain against her mother’s will, leaving her in feeble health. Isabel
was broken by long years of toil, and by family sorrows. She died of dropsy at
the end of the year. The character of the great Queen is well described in the
simple words of Guicciardini: “a great lover of justice, most modest in
her person, she made herself much loved and feared by her subjects. She was
greedy of glory, generous, and by nature very frank”. Her will named Juana as
her successor; but a codicil directed “that Don Fernando should govern
the realm during the absence of Queen Juana, and that if, on her arrival, she
should be unwilling or unable to govern, Don Fernando should govern”. Ferdinand
proclaimed Juana and Philip, and undertook the regency; but Isabel’s death
marks the beginning of a period of anarchy which lasted until Charles
established his rule (1523).
The year 1505 was
spent in plots and counter-plots. Philip, supported by a strong party in Spain,
attempted to drive out Ferdinand. Instigated by Don Juan Manuel, he intrigued
with Gonzalo de Cordova, and with the King of France. Ferdinand, on his side,
was ready to sacrifice the union of Spain to private ambition: his first plan
was to marry and revive the claims of Princess Juana, la Beltraneja.
When this failed, he married Germaine de Foix, niece to the King of France
(October, 1505). King Louis made over to her as dowry his claims on the
disputed portions of the kingdom of Naples, with reversion to the French Crown
should the union prove childless. In this way Ferdinand broke up the dangerous
alliance between Louis, Philip, and Maximilian; but he also alienated from his
cause a large portion of the Castilians, who regarded his hasty marriage as an
insult to the memory of their Queen. At the same time Philip's agents in Spain
were undermining Ferdinand's authority, and had won over many of the nobles of
Andalucia; for he was still regarded as a foreigner in the land which he had so
long ruled, and his harsh, suspicious and niggardly nature increased his
unpopularity.
By the Treaty of
Salamanca (November, 1505) it was agreed that Ferdinand, Juana, and Philip
should rule jointly, and divide the revenues and patronage. In the following
spring Philip was obliged by stress of weather to land at Corunna. It had been
his intention to sail round to Seville and collect his partisans, since neither
party meant to abide by the agreement. Ferdinand hastened to meet his
son-in-law; but Philip evaded an interview, for every day more grandees joined
him, and he would soon be able to dictate his own terms. When the meeting
actually took place (June), Ferdinand's following was reduced to three or four
old friends, and he was compelled to declare that, owing to Juana's infirmity,
her interference would be disastrous to the kingdom. In consideration of a
pension he gave up the regency, and sulkily withdrew into Aragon with his young
wife, and otherwise unaccompanied, “holding it unworthy to exercise delegated
powers in realms over which he had been absolute King”. He was welcomed by the
Aragonese, who rejoiced to have shaken off the union with the preponderating
power of Castile. Shortly afterwards he sailed for Naples, where the conduct of
Gonzalo de Cordova had excited his suspicions.
In July Philip
met the Castilian Cortes at Valladolid. Aided by Ximenes, he attempted to have
his wife declared incapable of governing; but he was successfully opposed by a
party led by the Admiral of Castile. Juana was acknowledged as Queen in her own
right, Philip as King by right of marriage, and their infant son Charles as
heir to the throne. Acting in his wife’s name, Philip hereupon conferred the
offices of State and wardenships of the royal castles on members of his own
party. The malcontents began to draw together to liberate the Queen, whom they
believed to be sane and a prisoner in the hands of her husband. The threatened
rebellion was, however, for the moment arrested, and Philip was called away
northward to watch the frontier. He evaded the danger of invasion by means of a
treaty with the French King, from which Ferdinand was excluded. In September,
1506, Philip died suddenly at Burgos leaving Spain in a ferment of rival
factions. Within Castile no authority existed; for Juana refused to act. The
grandees nominated Ximenes with six members of the Council to carry on the
regency until the guardianship of the infant heir to the throne should be
decided. They summoned the Cortes; but their summons was disregarded as
unconstitutional. Ferdinand had already reached Italy, when the news overtook
him. He sent a commission to Ximenes to carry on the government during his
absence. On his return to Spain (July, 1507) he crushed the party, headed by
Juan Manuel, which supported the claim of Maximilian to act as regent for his
daughter-in-law and grandson. Ferdinand’s position was a strong one, for the
event foreseen in Isabel's will had come to pass: Juana, wandering from village
to village with the weird procession that bore her husband’s corpse, stubbornly
refused to sign papers of State. Most of the Flemish party fled; then Burgos
and Jaen, held for a time in Maximilian’s interest, submitted, and “calm fell
upon Castile”; for the majority welcomed the prospect of speedy repression of
the disorder which had broken out during Ferdinand's absence. After a meeting
with Juana, who refused to lend herself to his schemes by marrying Henry of
England, he gave out that she had resigned the government to him, and thus
remained undisputed master of the kingdom. Ferdinand showed no wish to avenge
himself upon those who had driven him with ignominy from the kingdom, but bore
himself ruthlessly towards those who now questioned his authority. Don Juan
Manuel had fled. The Duke of Nagera refused to deliver up his fortresses; but,
when an army was sent against him, he submitted, and his lands and titles were
given to his eldest son. At Cordova the Marquis of Priego revolted. Ferdinand
called out all Andalucia to crush him. He threw himself on the King’s mercy,
but was condemned to death. The interest of the Great Captain, his kinsman, availed
only to obtain a commutation of his sentence to confiscation, fine and
banishment.
Although the
suspicions against him were probably groundless, the Great Captain felt the
weight of Ferdinand's jealousy. They had returned from Italy together, and Ferdinand
had shown him all deference and had promised him the Grand Mastership of
Santiago. But the promise was never fulfilled; he was treated with marked
coolness, and withdrew to his estates near Loja, where he ended his days in
haughty and magnificent retirement. Once only-after the battle of Ravenna
(1512), when it was believed that he alone could save Spain’s possessions in
Italy, he received a commission to enlist troops. Thousands had already joined
his banner, when the danger passed away, and Ferdinand, alarmed and jealous,
withdrew his commission.
1507-9]
Ferdinand's second regency. Conquest of Oran.
The Barbary
pirates not only rendered the sea unsafe, but acting in concert with the
Moriscos, made frequent descents upon the Spanish coast, spreading terror and
devastation far inland. In 1505, at the instigation of Ximenes, Mers-el-Kebir,
one of their strongholds, had been captured. The disturbed condition of Spain
made it impossible immediately to follow up this success, but Ximenes had not
lost sight of his policy of African conquest. A war against the Infidel always
stirred the crusading spirit of the Spaniards, and Ferdinand saw in it a way of
turning public attention from late events. In 1508 a small expedition under
Pedro Navarro captured Peñón de la Gomera. In the following year a larger one
was prepared. Ximenes lent money out of the vast revenues of his see, and
himself accompanied the army of 14,000 men to Oran (May, 1509). The city was
captured, and many Christian captives were set free; but the glory of the
victory was stained by a brutal massacre of unarmed inhabitants. Within a month
Ximenes was back in Spain. He had quarrelled with Pedro Navarro, the general in
command of the expedition, and was moreover alarmed by reports that Ferdinand
was plotting to deprive him of his archbishopric in favor of his illegitimate
son, the Archbishop of Saragossa. Pedro Navarro remained behind, and in a few
months effected a series of brilliant conquests. Bugia fell after a siege;
Algiers and Tlemcen surrendered; Tripolis was stormed. Grown overbold, Navarro
fell into an ambuscade among the sandhills of the waterless island of Gelves;
the greater part of his army perished; and the tide of Spanish conquest in
Africa was stayed for a time (August, 1510).
The recovery of
Roussillon and Cerdagne gave Ferdinand command of the eastern passes of the
Pyrenees; but Spanish unity was still incomplete, while the kingdom of Navarre
lying astride of the western end of the range held the keys of Spain. Torn by
the continual wars of her two great factions, the Beaumonts and Grammonts, and
crushed by the neighborhood of more powerful States, Navarre could not hope to
preserve her independence. She was, moreover, ruled by a feeble dynasty that
had not taken root in the soil. Navarre had belonged to Ferdinand's father in
right of his first wife, but had passed by right of marriage to her
great-grandson François Phebus Count of Foix, and, later, to his sister
Catherine. Ferdinand sought to secure the prize by marrying his son to
Catherine. The scheme was frustrated by her mother Madeleine, sister of Louis
XII; and Catherine married Jean d'Albret, a Gascon nobleman whose large estates
lay on the border of Lower Navarre. Nevertheless Ferdinand found means of
frequently interfering in the affairs of his neighbors. He protected the
Beaumont faction and the dynasty against King Louis, who supported the claims
of a younger branch of the House of Foix, represented first by the Viscount of
Narbonne, and later by Gaston Phebus, brother of Ferdinand's second wife.
In 1511 Pope
Julius II, the Emperor, the Venetians, Ferdinand, and Henry VIII of England
formed the Holy League for the purpose of crushing France. Bent on his scheme
of recovering Guyenne Henry sent an army to Guipuzcoa to cooperate with the
Spaniards (1512). Ferdinand’s opportunity had now come. He demanded a free
passage for his troops through Navarre, and the surrender of fortresses as a
guarantee of neutrality. Jean d'Albret tried to evade compliance by allying
himself with the French. Ferdinand retaliated by a manifesto declaiming against
his faithlessness and ingratitude, and by ordering the Duke of Alva to invade
Navarre (July, 1512). Five days later the Spaniards, aided by the Beaumontais,
encamped before Pamplona, and Jean d'Albret fled to seek help from the French
army encamped near Bayonne. Pamplona surrendered on receiving guarantees of its
liberties, which it held dearer than its foreign dynasty.
Failing to get
help from the French, Jean d'Albret, though his capital was already in the
enemy's hands, attempted negotiation, professing his readiness to accept any
terms that might be dictated. Ferdinand, however, insisted on his claim to hold
Navarre until he should complete his holy enterprise against France. Most of the
Navarrese towns and fortresses now surrendered; Tudela was besieged by the
Aragonese under the Archbishop of Saragossa. Early in August Ferdinand renewed
his promise to give up the kingdom at the end of the war. His messenger was
seized and imprisoned, and on the 21st of the month he published at Burgos the
bull Pater ille coelestis, excommunicating all who resisted the Holy
League, and declaring their lands and honors forfeited to those who should
seize them. Although Jean d'Albret and Catherine were not named, the bull
specially mentioned the Basques and Cantabrians, and dread of its threats
brought about the surrender of the few places that still held out in Upper
Navarre. Ferdinand now threw off the mask and took the title of King of
Navarre. Meanwhile Alva had crossed the mountains, and summoned the Marquis of
Dorset from his camp near San Sebastian to aid in the conquest of Lower
Navarre. The English, however, declared that they had come to conquer not
Navarre but Guyenne; and since it was now too late in the year for that purpose
they sailed home after plundering a small part of the frontier. A French army
advanced against Alva, who recrossed the mountains without fighting and shut
himself up in Pamplona. But, after two fierce assaults, the French in turn
withdrew on the approach of Spanish reinforcements. The whole of Upper Navarre
and the district of Ultrapuertos north of the mountains remained in Ferdinand's
hands. In 1513 the Navarrese Cortes swore allegiance to him, and the French
King abandoned his allies by concluding a truce. Navarre was incorporated with
Castile (1515); Ultrapuertos was however afterwards abandoned on account of the
expense of keeping up an outpost beyond the mountains (1530).
Death
of King Ferdinand. [1516
The last three
years of Ferdinand's life were uneventful, so far as Spain is concerned.
Although he was involved in the tangled skein of alliances and plots by which
the fate of Italy was decided, his interest in politics was no longer active.
His chief anxiety was to leave a son to succeed to his patrimony. One had been
born of his second marriage, but had died shortly after birth. Although he was
eager to become a father once more, he was not destined to undo his life's
work, Spanish unity. He fell ill (1513), and with the restlessness of a dying
man, wandered through the mountain villages of Castile pursuing his favorite
occupation of hunting. A strong Spanish party, led by Don Juan Manuel and
supported by France, still opposed him, scheming in favor of Maximilian’s claim
to govern Spain as regent for his grandson. King Ferdinand held them in check,
and set up against Charles his younger brother Ferdinand, who had been brought
up in Spain and was now regarded as the probable successor to the united
Crowns, or, at least, to that of Aragon. In 1515 King Ferdinand visited Aragon
for the last time, and held Cortes at Calatayud. His arbitrary temper had grown
upon him, and, when supply was refused, he struck a last fierce blow at his
country's liberties by angrily dismissing the deputies and imprisoning their
president. When his end was known to be near (September, 1515) the Flemish
party sent to Adrian of Utrecht to act in the name of his former pupil, the
Infante Charles.
King Ferdinand
died in the village of Madrigalejo (January, 1516) leaving behind him a
reputation for political wisdom, astonishing when it is remembered that he was
an unlettered man. But it was his unscrupulousness that left the deepest mark
upon the age. During Isabel’s lifetime he had screened his grasping policy
behind her religious enthusiasm, and had used her haughty and upright spirit as
an instrument for attaining his selfish ends. He had never sought to be loved,
and after her death his character stood revealed in its native harshness.
"No reproach attaches to him" says Guicciardini, “save his lack of
generosity and his faithlessness to his word”. Shortly before his death he
revoked a will which favored his younger grandson and namesake, and now
bequeathed to him only a pension so modest as to preclude all chance of rivalry
with his brother. He left the Crowns of Aragon and the two Sicilies to his
daughter Juana, Queen of Castile, appointing her son Charles regent in her
name. To Ximenes he entrusted the government of Castile, and to his bastard son,
the Archbishop of Saragossa, that of Aragon.
Ximenes, although
more than eighty years old, undertook the charge with his wonted energy. Acting
under instructions from Flanders, and disregarding the protests of the
Castilians, he proclaimed Charles as King conjointly with his mother (May,
1516). He reformed the household of Queen Juana, who had been ill-treated by a
brutal governor. He fixed the seat of government at Madrid, on account of its
central position. He secured the person of the Infante Ferdinand, whose
discontent was being fomented by interested advisers. By sheer force of
character he set aside Adrian of Utrecht, who had been sent to share the
regency. He revoked all grants of lands and pensions made since Isabel's death;
when a commission of grandees waited upon him to enquire by virtue of what
power he had taken this step, he pointed to the artillery massed below his
palace.
Not content with
the regular forces of the Crown, he attempted to revive in more efficient form
the old militia, and sent commissioners to enroll a force of 31,000 men.
Exemption from taxation was promised to all who gave in their names. A certain
number in each district were to be armed and drilled, and to receive pay when
called out. The nobles took alarm, and stirred up the municipalities to resist
what was represented as a new burden and an encroachment on their liberties.
Valladolid and other cities rose in revolt, and forwarded a protest to Charles
in Flanders. The matter was ordered to stand over until his arrival. Four years
later, the municipalities had reason to regret their lack of military
organization.
Thinking to
profit by the unsettled state of Spain Jean d'Albret invaded Navarre and laid
siege to St Jean Pied-de-Port. He was supported by native exiles, who broke in
through the pass of Roncal, hoping for a rising within the country. They were
met before effecting a junction with the King, and were utterly defeated
(March, 1516). Jean d'Albret gave up the enterprise; he died three months
later, leaving his claims to his son Henri. Ximenes began to fortify Pamplona
as a stronghold for the Castilian garrison, while he dismantled a number of
outlying castles which might give protection to invaders.
In pursuit of his
policy of African conquest Ximenes sent an expedition against Algiers, which
had been seized by Barbarossa, the famous renegade corsair (September, 1516).
In consequence of the incapacity of its leader, the expedition met with a
crushing defeat, and was almost annihilated.
Ximenes’ schemes
were everywhere thwarted by Charles’ Flemish councillors. With their chief,
William de Croy, Seigneur de Chièvres, he had tried unsuccessfully to establish
a good understanding. Flemish interests required alliance with France, and in
pursuit of this object they were ready to sacrifice Spanish interests in Italy
and Navarre. For a time they were successful. By the Treaty of Noyon (October,
1516) Charles became betrothed to Francis’ infant daughter, promising to
satisfy the claims of the Albrets in Navarre and to give up Queen Germaine’s
dowry. Moreover, a growing feeling of discontent was provoked in Spain by the
shameless traffic in Spanish offices of dignity and profit carried on by
Flemish courtiers. The grandees, who writhed under Ximenes’ strong hand,
flocked with their complaints to Flanders and obtained a ready hearing. The
people were persuaded that Juana was sane and shut out from her rights by a
cruel plot. Ximenes, surrounded by difficulties, wrote repeatedly urging
Charles to come to Spain, and warning him of the rising discontent of the
municipalities. At last, in September, 1517, Charles landed on the Asturian
coast. He was only seventeen years old; his health was delicate; and his
diffidence had been increased by his being brought up under such masterful spirits
as Chièvres and his aunt Margaret. He found himself in a strange country
seething with half-repressed rebellion; he could not speak a word of Spanish.
The grandees hastened to welcome the King; but access to his presence was
barred by the Flemings. Ximenes too journeyed northward to meet the prince whom
he had so manfully served. He wished before his death to explain the policy by
which the mutinous spirit of Castile might be appeased and the anarchy of
Aragon quelled. The Flemings, foreseeing that their influence would be at an
end, if Charles fell under the influence of the Cardinal’s powerful will, did
their utmost to prevent a meeting. Ximenes was accordingly checked by a letter
in which Charles thanked him for his services and invited him to an interview,
after which he was ordered to retire to his diocese and take such rest as his
health demanded. Ximenes did not survive his political downfall. His death
(November 8) left Spain entirely in the hands of the foreigners, among whom his
honors were speedily divided. Adrian was made Cardinal, Chièvres became chief
minister of the Crown; his youthful nephew, William de Croy, Archbishop of
Toledo; and Jean le Sauvage, Chancellor. Ximenes' policy had been directed to
assure the supremacy of the Crown while giving to the people such rights and
cohesion as should balance the power of the nobles. He had also attempted to
found a Spanish empire in Africa. The latter scheme was intermittently
prosecuted after his death; but its special importance was lost sight of amid
dreams of universal empire. The natural development of the political rights of
the people was checked, and their hardly-won municipal liberties were crushed,
in the struggles that followed. Charles aimed from the first at the absolute
power which in the end swallowed up the liberties of nobles and commons alike.
After a brief
visit to his mad mother at Tordesillas, where she passed fifty years of her
life, Charles made a triumphal entry into Valladolid (November, 1517). Here, in
the following spring, the Castilian Cortes assembled. The grandees were
disgusted to find that all favous fell to foreigners. The sessions opened
stormily; for Spanish jealousy had been aroused by the appointment of a Fleming
to preside in conjunction with the Bishop of Badajoz, a known ally of the
foreign party. Two legal assessors watched the proceedings on behalf of the
Crown. The commons had hoped to profit by the inexperience of the prince in
order to extend their rights. Led by Dr Zumel, proctor of Burgos, they adopted
a haughty tone, reminded Charles of his duties as King and actually addressed
him as "our hireling.'" They claimed, contrary to custom, that he
should swear to observe their liberties before receiving the oath of
allegiance, and should hear petitions before they granted supply. Charles
submitted to the former demand, and was acknowledged as sovereign in
conjunction with his mother. This was a disappointment; for he had hoped to
rule alone. The Cortes voted a supply of somewhat more than the usual amount, spread
over three years. In answer to a long list of petitions, the King promised to
learn to speak Spanish; to forbid illegal exportation of gold and silver; to
grant no further offices or letters of naturalization to foreigners; to keep
his brother in Spain till the succession should be assured; not to alienate
Crown property; and not to give up Navarre.
Charles then
hurried on to hold Cortes at Saragossa. The Aragonese proved more stubborn.
Freed from Ferdinand's strong hand, the nobles had shaken off all respect for
the Crown, and moreover, Charles was thoroughly distrusted. Regardless of his
late promises, he had sent brother Ferdinand to Flanders, and, on the death of
Jean le Sauvage, had appointed another foreign Chancellor (Arborio de
Gattinara). The Aragonese first disputed Charles' right to call Cortes; they
next demanded proof of Juana's incapacity; and when, finally, they consented to
acknowledge him as King in conjunction with her, they insisted on declaring
that, if she should recover, she alone would be Queen in Aragon. Charles was
forced to adopt a submissive attitude; he sought to win over the people by
breaking down the usurped privileges of the nobles; but it cost him eight
months, and he had to undergo many affronts, before he could obtain a grant of
money so small that it was insufficient for paying his expenses. In order to
replenish the treasury, the supply voted by the Castilians was farmed; offices
were sold; and the Inquisition was urged to ruthless confiscation. The tide of
discontent rose higher than ever.
At Barcelona
objection was again taken to swearing the oath of allegiance to Charles during
his mother’s lifetime. Only after ten months were bribery and flattery able to
break down opposition and elicit a moderate grant. Charles was preparing to
meet the Parliament of Valencia (January, 1520), when news was brought of his
election as King of the Romans in succession to his grandfather Maximilian. The
report that the King was about to quit Spain roused the indignation against him
to the highest pitch. The Castilian cities were jealous of the time he had
spent in Aragon and Catalonia, haggling to obtain small supplies, while loyal
Castile, which had voted an extra sum, was neglected. There was now reason to
fear that Spain would sink to the level of a mere province of the Empire.
Already in November, Toledo had sent a circular letter to the cities possessing
votes in the Cortes, urging them to combine in order to prevent the departure
of the King, the export of gold, and government by foreigners. Some made no
reply; others, like Salamanca, joined eagerly in the protest. A commission was
appointed to lay before Charles the demands of the kingdom, whereupon he sent
to Toledo a new and more energetic corregidor to check the spirit of
mutiny. Wishing to obtain money and at the same time to tranquillize the public
mind by explanations and promises, he summoned Parliament to meet him at
Santiago de Compostela (February, 1520). As he hurried northward, he was
overtaken at Valladolid by the commissioners from Toledo and Salamanca, who
insisted, in spite of his orders, on fulfilling their charge. He bade them
follow the Court until he could find time to attend to them. A report that
Queen Juana was to be carried out of the country provoked a riot and a rash
attempt to check the King's departure from Valladolid. The cruelty with which
these excesses were avenged still further irritated the people. At Villalpando
the promised audience was granted to the commissioners of the cities; but
Charles was in no mood for yielding. He harshly bade them await the meeting of
Parliament to lay their wishes before him. Meanwhile the Court party was doing
its utmost to secure submissive deputies. A royal decree directed that an
unlimited commission should be given to the proctors according to a prescribed
form. Toledo refused to comply; her proctors were instructed merely to hear and
report on the proposals of the King. Other cities, while granting a commission
in the prescribed form, limited it by secret instructions to resist all demands
for money.
Revolt
of the Comuneros. [1520
It was amid the
gloomiest forebodings that the Cortes met at Santiago (March, 1520). The
selection of a place so far removed from the centre of Spain was suspicious;
even if promises were wrung from the departing King, their fulfillment was
unlikely: at such a distance from their electors deputies might easily be
bribed or intimidated. The chief cause of complaint, however, was the demand
for further supply, while the grant of 1518 had still a year to run. An attempt
was made to soothe irritation by the appointment of a Spanish president; and a
conciliatory speech from the throne was read by the Bishop of Badajoz in the
presence of Charles himself. Toledo was unrepresented, having refused to grant
the prescribed commission; the deputies of Salamanca were excluded for refusing
to take the oath before petitions had been heard. The nobles, disgusted at
their exclusion from the royal favor, had quitted the Court. Charles hurried on
to Coruña, in order to be able to embark at a moment's notice and reach England
(April). The remaining deputies followed, and were cajoled and threatened
until, by a narrow majority, they voted a supply of 300 millions of maravedis.
They petitioned for a Spanish regent; for the speedy return of the King; for
the better administration of justice; against the nomination of deputies by the
Crown, and the exaction of unlimited commissions; that the Cortes should meet
every three years; that the summons should contain a list of the matters to be
discussed; and that deputies should be compelled to render an account to their
electors within a stated time. Most of these petitions were refused, or left
unanswered; the Cortes were dismissed ; and in May Charles set sail, leaving nobles
and people equally discontented. Adrian of Utrecht was appointed by him regent
in his absence.
The return of the
deputies from Coruña was the signal for rioting in many cities. Some who had
voted supply contrary to instructions were murdered by the mob. Led by Toledo,
the cities, from Leon to Murcia and from Burgos to Jaen, formed a league under
the name of the Santa Comunidad, and expelled their corregidores to the cry of “Long live the King; down with the bad ministers!”. Avila was
chosen on account of its central position as the meeting-place of their Junta (July, 1520), which included nobles and ecclesiastics as well as commons. It
began by declaring itself independent of the Regent and Council, and organizing
the levies of the cities under the command of Juan de Padilla, a nobleman of
Toledo.
Adrian’s attempts
to check the revolt were feeble and unsuccessful. A small body of troops, sent
with Ronquillo, a judge of notorious severity, to punish Segovia, where the
outbreak had been specially violent, was easily beaten off. An attempt made by
Fonseca, one of the royal captains, to seize the artillery which Ximenes had
kept in readiness at Medina del Campo, not only failed, but resulted in the
destruction by fire of the town, one of the richest in Spain. Adrian was
obliged to disband Fonseca’s army and disavow his action. A more serious blow
to the royal cause followed. Padilla seized Tordesillas, and with it the person
of Queen Juana (August 29).
The Santa Junta now removed to Tordesillas, and proclaimed that the Queen
was sane and approved its actions. Valladolid, the seat of the regency, was
captured; some members of the royal Council were imprisoned; others, among them
Adrian himself, fled (October 18). The Great Seal of the kingdom and the State papers
fell into the hands of the rebels. Led by Adrian, who despaired from the first,
the friends of Charles in Spain wrote to him that all was lost, unless he
returned at once and came to terms with the Comuneros. But Charles never
yielded. His cause was aided more by the incapacity of its opponents than by
the energy of the royalists. Instead of setting up a government in the place of
that which it had overthrown, the Junta continued to declare its
loyalty; unable to conceive any authority other than that of the monarchy, it
wasted its time in trying to persuade the imbecile Queen to confirm its acts.
Juana had received its members, when they broke into Tordesillas, with some
show of favor; but her steady refusal to sign documents was not to be shaken.
The main theory
of the revolution - that the Queen was sane, and that her faithful commons were
to deliver her and shake off the hated yoke of the foreigner - had broken down.
Juana's obstinacy acted as a physical obstacle. Disheartened and irresolute, the
Junta betook itself to the only other source of legitimate authority, and sent
a deputation to Flanders to assure the King of its loyalty and beg confirmation
of its acts. At the same time it forwarded a long list of petitions. These
included Charles’ return to Spain and marriage; the reform of the Court on the
model of Ferdinand and Isabel's; the reduction of taxes to the standard of
1494; the better administration of justice; together with demands that corregidores should not be appointed without a request on the part of the municipality
concerned, and then only for two years; that municipalities should elect their
proctors without interference; that the commission of the proctors should not
be prescribed, and that death should be the penalty for accepting bribes; that
the Cortes should meet every three years, and that the three Orders should be
represented; that nobles should be excluded from municipal and financial
offices, and from the exclusive use of waste and common lands; that such lands
as they had seized should be restored within six months; that Isabel’s will and
Charles’ own oath forbidding the alienation of any part of the royal patrimony
should be observed, so as to obviate the necessity for extraordinary taxation.
These petitions never reached Charles, for the messengers’ hearts failed them,
and they turned back; but they show that the Junta utterly misunderstood
its position and the character of the King.
The
last two clauses mark a change of spirit; they are directed against the nobles,
some of whom had acquiesced in or favored the insurrection. So soon as their
usurped privileges were threatened, they began to rally round the throne. This
tendency was furthered by a masterly stroke of policy. Urged by Adrian’s
despairing appeals for help, Charles nominated two Spanish grandees, the
Constable and the Admiral of Castile, to share the regency: he bade them
temporize and dissimulate, call Cortes in his name if advisable, but sanction
no curtailment of the royal authority. The Constable raised an army in the
north under the command of his son, the Count of Haro; and, aided by Zumel, who
a year before had figured as a champion of popular rights, but had been brought
over by a bribe, he recovered the city of Burgos, where jealousy of Toledo's
leadership was strong. The Admiral joined Adrian at Rioseco, which forthwith
became the rallying-place of the royalists, and began to treat with the Comuneros. These appointments silenced the complaints of the grandees as to
the neglect of their order; nor could the popular party any longer complain
that the land was left to the government of strangers.
Internal quarrels
still further weakened the Comuneros. Flattered by the adhesion of Pedro
Giron, a nobleman with a private grievance, they made him captain in place of
Padilla (November). This was considered as a slight by the Toledans, and their
contingent marched home. The loss of Padilla and his men was compensated by the
arrival of Alonso de Acuna, Bishop of Zamora, one of the boldest and most
skillful captains of the time. Giron marched against Rioseco; but, either
betraying the cause he served or fooled by sham negotiations, he let his
opportunity slip. His army melted away; the Count of Haro relieved Rioseco and
recaptured Tordesillas together with the Queen and some members of the Junta (December 5). The cry of treachery was raised, and Giron became a fugitive.
An amnesty and a
few conciliatory measures would now have put an end to the movement; but the
Regents were hindered by Charles' obstinacy. He not only sternly forbade
further concession, but disavowed the moderate conditions under which Burgos
had returned to its loyalty. He seemed utterly reckless, leaving his agents to
fight alone, and even allowing their letters to remain unanswered. But the
Regents had now the nobility on their side, for the Comuneros became
daily more democratic and radical.
When the Junta
reassembled at Valladolid, its disorganization was more than ever apparent; its
authority was lost; it had not even a definite rallying-cry. Now that his rival
was gone, Padilla returned with his troops from Toledo. Though his unfitness
for command was known, he was elected captain by popular acclaim. A French army
was on the point of invading Navarre, and a powerful noble, the Count of
Salvatierra, had revolted in the north. But again the forces of the Comuneros were divided; for Bishop Acuña, hearing that the see of Toledo was vacant,
marched southward, hoping for the second time in his life to win a mitre by
force of arms. The royalist party was not more united; Adrian wrote “that any
one of the grandees would gladly lose an eye, in order that his fellow might
suffer the same”. The Constable and the Admiral had fallen out as to the proper
course of action; the former advocated force, the latter the continuation of
negotiations.
In the spring of
1521 Padilla led out his ill-equipped forces and, by a stroke of fortune,
captured the strong castle of Torrelobaton. Instead, however, of following up
his success, he lingered while the Constable, after defeating the Count of
Salvatierra in the north, marched with a fresh army to join his son at
Tordesillas. Fear, and a suspicion that their leaders were busy making terms,
spread confusion in the Comuneros’ ranks. Many of the soldiers deserted, others
betook themselves to indiscriminate plunder. Convinced that to risk a battle
with the remainder of his disheartened force would be madness, Padilla retired
as the Count of Haro advanced. While making his way down the valley of the
Douro to the protection of the castle of Toro, he was overtaken at Villalar
(April 23, 1521); his troops were easily dispersed, and, though he sought
death, he was himself captured alive. On the following day he was put to death,
together with his second in command. An enthusiastic but not unselfish
supporter of the popular cause, he had devoted his valour to its service; but
his jealousy and incompetence unfitted him alike for command and for the rank
of hero to which latter-day liberals have raised him. Bishop Acuña, after one
or two skirmishes in the neighborhood of Ocaña, wasted his time and popularity
in an attempt to compel the Chapter of Toledo to accept him as Archbishop. On
receipt of the news of the disaster of Villalar he fled. Padilla's widow, whose
family connections and high spirit gave her great authority, held out at Toledo
for a few months. After a useless struggle she escaped to Portugal, and the War
of the Comuneros was at an end.
When Charles
returned to Spain (July, 1522) he was received, as he states, “with much humility
and reverence”. But he came accompanied by a foreign guard, and determined to
punish ruthlessly. At Palencia the Regents laid before him their proposals for
amnesty. Not only were these rejected, but pardons granted in his name were
withdrawn. On All Saints’ Day at Valladolid he mounted a dais and declared that
he would be justified in punishing all who had shared in the late rebellion,
the municipalities by deprivation of their liberties, and individuals by
confiscation and death; nevertheless, he promised to pardon all save three
hundred. This proscription in the form of an amnesty was mercilessly carried
out. The list contained the names of many members of noble families. The
supplications of relatives who had fought on the royalist side availed nothing;
and the sum brought into the treasury by confiscation amounted to two million
ducats. Many executions followed, and even as late as 1528 the Cortes still
prayed for mercy on fugitives.
The revolt of the Comuneros originated in indignation against particular acts of
misgovernment, and hatred of foreigners, rather than in any meditated scheme
for winning popular liberties. It has been represented as an attempt to resist
the encroachments of the Crown, but was really an attempt to limit its
traditional privileges. Under the weak Kings of the fifteenth century, the
Castilian Cortes had neglected to secure the abolition of the antiquated forms
which represented the King as everywhere paramount. Under strong Kings the
strict letter of the law was enforced. Ferdinand and Isabel were despots with
the consent of their subjects; Charles was strong enough to disregard the
popular will. The movement never spread beyond Castile. The Andalucians offered
to suppress it, but their aid was not required; it was crushed by Castilian
troops. So soon as its democratic character became pronounced, it was opposed
by the nobles, whose aid, or acquiescence, was essential to its success. It
failed through local jealousy, respect for tradition, and lack of a leader, and
of a plan. It was not openly directed against the Crown. The Junta denied the
accusation of disloyalty, asserting that “never did Spain breed disobedience
save in her nobles, nor loyalty save in her commons” (January, 1521). The
failure of the movement so depressed the popular cause, that until the
beginning of the nineteenth century the Spanish commons but rarely again raised
up their heads beneath the sceptre of their absolute Kings.
The
Germanía of Valencia. [1519-1523
While the rising
of the Comuneros stirred Castile into a ferment, a distinct and much more
violent rebellion was in progress in Valencia. This was entirely social in
character. The city population was composed of restless and turbulent artisans,
descendants of the adventurers who had settled here, when the land was won back
from the Saracens. The country population was chiefly made up of Saracen
peasants, vassals of the nobles. Between nobles and people stood the rich
burgesses, despised by the former and envied by the latter. The industry of the
Saracens, stimulated by a heavy burden of taxation, pressed hard on the
Christians. In the autumn of 1519, while most of the magistrates were absent on
account of the plague, the forty-eight trade-guilds of the city took up arms to
resist an expected attack of the Barbary pirates. The contemplation of their
own strength gave rise to a feeling of independence among the commons; they
began to claim a larger share in the government, and appointed a Junta of
thirteen members to rule over them. The nobles sought to interfere, but the
guilds formed a brotherhood (Germanía) to resist them, and petitioned
Charles to present the dispersion of their forces. On receipt of a favorable
reply the movement spread to such an alarming degree, that the nobles called
upon the King to come in person and check the disorder.
A
commission was sent to examine the situation, and, in accordance with its
report, the Germanía was ordered to lay down its arms. By this
concession Charles thought to persuade the Valencian nobles to take the oath of
allegiance, and to vote supply without insisting on his presence at their
Cortes. On their refusal he again changed his policy, favouring the Germanía and sending Adrian of Utrecht to enquire into its grievances (February, 1520).
In view of their danger the nobles, when Charles was on the point of quitting
Spain, consented to receive his oath by deputy; and, in answer to their appeal,
he sent Diego de Mendoza, a nobleman of haughty temper, to restore order
(April, 1520). After an interval of quiet riots broke out again. In June the
city was left in the hands of the Germania by the flight of the
governor. Shortly afterwards he was driven from Játiva to Denia, while all the
cities of the kingdom of Valencia, with the exception of Morella, rose against
their magistrates and appointed Juntas like that of the mother city.
The movement
spread as far as the Balearic Islands, and now began to show itself in its true
light. The grievances originally put forward were, that the people were
deprived of their rightful share in the government, that taxes were excessive,
and that justice was badly administered. But when the rabble gained the upper
hand, instead of attempting political reforms, they plundered the houses of the
nobles, and called upon them to produce the titles by which they held their
estates. This attack on property alienated the burgesses, who henceforth sided
with the nobles; and the action of the Germania became more violent and
fanatical than before. Despairing of help from the regency, the nobles armed
their vassals.
The army of the
Germania marched out against them, but was crushingly defeated at Oropesa and
Almenara (June and July, 1521). The governor, however, was again routed at
Gandia and driven to seek refuge at Peñíscola. Meanwhile, owing to the frantic
excesses of the populace, which now openly avowed its intention of
exterminating nobles and infidels, the moderate party was increasing. At its
head was the Marquis of Zenete, a nobleman of well-known benevolence and
impartiality. Negotiating between the opposing factions he succeeded in
obtaining the submission of the city and bringing back the governor. But the
more violent members of the Germanía were still encamped at Játiva.
Having imprudently put himself into their power he was treacherously
imprisoned, but escaped to Valencia, rallied all the moderate citizens, seized
and executed the ringleaders of the mob, and after a fierce fight remained
master of the city. Játiva and a few outlying towns were not subdued until
after Charles’ return. In March, 1523, the Queen Dowager, Germaine, was sent as
regent to punish the guilty. The pardons granted in return for submission were
revoked; a ruthless proscription and many executions followed; thousands fled;
and the guilds were ruined by heavy fines. Like the Comuneros the Agermanados never ceased to proclaim their loyalty. The two revolts were simultaneous, and
were at all events directed against the same enemy; but cooperation was never
attempted. Local jealousy and traditional hatred were still strong; the
Castilian in the eyes of a Valencian was, nay, is to this day, a foreigner.
The rebellion of
the Comuneros had hardly been suppressed, when Navarre was invaded by
Henri d'Albret with the connivance of Francis I. Charles had engaged to restore
Navarre to the House of Albret; but negotiations had failed to bring about
fulfillment, or confirmation of the promise. Henri d'Albret entered into
communication with the Comuneros, with a view to combined action; but
his army came too late. It was commanded with more courage than discretion by a
scion of the exiled family, Andre de Foix d'Asparros, or Lesparre. The garrison
of Navarre had been greatly weakened by the withdrawal of troops to crush the
revolt in Castile. St Jean Pied-de-Port was easily captured, the fortifications
of Pamplona were not yet sufficiently strong-to offer more than a feeble
resistance. Henri d'Albret was welcomed by his partisans within the kingdom,
and the whole of Navarre was overrun. Elated by his easy conquest, Asparros
crossed the frontier of Castile and laid siege to Logroño. The Duke of Nágera,
viceroy of Navarre, had hurried south to obtain assistance from the Regents.
Logroño made a heroic defence, while he marched to its relief with the troops
lately victorious at Villalar. Meanwhile Sangüesa had been recaptured in the
rear of the French, who now retired towards Pamplona fearing to have their
retreat cut off. They were overtaken by the Spanish army, two leagues from the
city; the garrison which they had left for its defense was unable to join them.
Driven to bay, Asparros ordered an immediate attack while the Spaniards were
resting after their long march. He was utterly defeated and taken prisoner at
Noain (June, 1521). The Albrets never again attempted to win back their kingdom
by force of arms.
Charles returned
to Spain (1522), no longer a diffident and delicate young man, passive in the
hands of his advisers. His views had broadened, and his temper was haughty and
autocratic. Spain was now part of a larger whole. The accident of the
possessions of the Aragonese Crown in Italy, the election to the Empire, and
the inheritance of the House of Burgundy checked and warped her development as
an African and Atlantic Power; but foreign courtiers were no longer allowed to treat
her as a conquered country. The Emperor learnt to know and respect the
Spaniards; Spanish statesmen sat in his Council; Spanish soldiers formed the
mainstay of his power abroad. The overthrow of the Comuneros had
compelled their fear and respect; association in world-wide schemes of
universal monarchy and championship of the Church endeared him to them, and
roused them from their natural lethargy and absorption in provincial and class
differences. Military glory turned away attention from the burden and
sufferings of the land and increased the national contempt for all professions
save that of arms. The middle class which under the Catholic Kings was
struggling into existence almost disappeared. But Charles attempted to found
his world-wide power on submission, and not on political, social, and economic
well-being. Spain was indeed formally united, and political unity was based on
religious unity as Isabel had intended; but the vigorous provincial and
municipal life, checked by harsh centralization, became a source of weakness
instead of a reserve of strength.
Literature
and learning in Spain.
A memorable
intellectual, literary, and artistic development accompanied the political
expansion and the growth of military glory. The striking originality of the new
generation contrasts with the effete imitation that sufficed for its
predecessor. The predominance of the Castilian dialect was already secured; but
even in the fifteenth century poets sought models in Provençal, Gallegan, and
Italian. Ausias March (who died in 1466), the most notable among them, wrote in
his native Lemosin. Literature was an exotic cultivated at Court; hardly a poem
of the hundreds collected into the Cancioneros of Baena, Stuñiga, and
Hernando del Castillo (published in 1511) possesses more than historical
interest. The frivolity, artificiality, and disorder of the reigns of John II
and Henry IV were reflected by their poets, and their tragedy by the
chronicles, probably, too, by ballads now modernized beyond recognition.
The introduction
of printing coincides with the accession of the Catholic Kings, and the next
half century produced translations of the Latin and Italian classics in
abundance. Though the Revival of Learning influenced Spain, it bore no fruit
there till later. The scholars who brought the new learning to the Peninsula
were mostly foreigners, or Spaniards trained abroad. Peter Martyr of Anghera,
the two brothers Geraldino and Marineus Siculus, were Italians; Arias Barbosa,
a Portuguese, taught Greek by the side of Fernan Nuñez de Guzman, a Spanish
nobleman; but Spain produced no Hellenists of note. Luis Vives, the humanist,
tutor to William de Croy, the boy Archbishop of Toledo, and to Mary of England,
was Spanish only by the accident of his birth. Antonio de Nebrija, or Lebrija,
the most distinguished native scholar of his age, was educated at Bologna,
though his teaching was, like his Latin Dictionary (1492) and Spanish and Latin
Grammars, addressed to his fellow-countrymen. His daughter Francisca was one of
a company of learned women who carried their teaching even to the universities
and the Court. Ferdinand himself was all but illiterate, but Isabel had a taste
for learning. After her accession she acquired some knowledge of Latin; so
carefully were her children educated, that Queen Juana could make impromptu
speeches in the learned tongue.
Isabel’s schemes
of reform included the education of the nobility; by her command Peter Martyr
opened a school at Court. His success exceeded his hopes, and learning became
so fashionable that the sons of grandees lectured at the universities. The
Church, though impoverished, aided the cause with splendid benefactions.
Schools were founded at Toledo (1490); the decayed studium generate of
Valencia was revived (1500); Barcelona followed suit (1507). The noble college
of Santa Cruz at Valladolid was finished in 1492; that of Santiago at Salamanca
some thirty years later. Both were founded by Archbishops of Toledo. As a
patron of learning no less than as a statesman Ximenes de Cisneros led the way.
In 1508 he founded the University of Alcala (Complutum), alma mater of so many
famous Spaniards, with professorial chairs of grammar, philosophy, and
medicine. Its chief purpose, however, was the study of the Holy Scriptures, and
its first-fruits were the earliest Polyglot Bible (of which the First Part was
published in 1514). The Semitic text is the work of converted Jews; a Greek
cooperated with Spanish scholars on the Latin and Greek texts. The level of
education was raised, and foundations were laid from which the Golden Age of
Spanish Literature could take its rise.
But the notable
books of the period owe little or nothing to classical or foreign influence.
Play-acting did not become popular till the time of Lope de Rueda (about 1550)
and even then its methods were rude and simple; but the secular drama emerged
from the religious early in the century. In the annus mirabilis 1492 the
first drama was publicly acted by a regular company. The representations of
Juan del Encina (1468-1534), the comedies of Torres de Naharro (published in
1517), and those of Gil Vicente (1470-1534), are much more than mere dialogues
without action, like the one in which Princess Isabel had taken the part of a
muse on a birthday of her brother Alfonso (who died in 1468). Gil Vicente was a
Portuguese, and the other two lived long in Italy; but, although there the
drama was already established, the Spaniards took their own line. Encina calls
his simple plays “eclogues”; Torres de Naharro cites Horace for method, and
awkwardly divides drama into fact (noticia) and fiction (fantasia);
but these classical reminiscences are merely superficial. Figures of everyday
life were put upon the stage, and dialogue was cast in Castilian octosyllabic
verse instead of in foreign hendecasyllables.
A book that may
be read for its own sake as well as for its historical importance is the Tragicomedy
of Calixto and Melibea (published in 1499), generally known as La
Celestina. The authorship of the first part is disputed; but probably the
whole is the work of Fernando de Rojas. La Celestina is a story told throughout
in dialogue, and divided into twenty-two acts. Its length is only one of the
circumstances that unfit it for acting; but its vivacious and natural dialogue
furnished a model for the drama. Its hero and heroine are the typical lady and
gallant, the stock romantic characters of the comedy "of cloak and
sword," the primitive Romeo and Juliet. Celestina, witch and go-between,
with her train of thieving lackeys, low women and bullies, more than
foreshadows the realistic and comic characters of the drama and novel, the
rogues (picaros) and buffoons (graciosos) who in later days were
to play so prominent a part. The book was translated into many tongues; its
influence at home and abroad is incalculable.
Another
masterpiece solitary in its kind, and contrasted in its noble earnestness with
the artificiality of the other poems of its author and his generation, is the Coplas
de Manrique, verses by Jorge de Manrique on the death of his father (which
occurred in 1476, two years before his own). Longfellow has done all that a
translator can do for this unsurpassed elegy; but half its beauty is lost with
the language in which it is written. Its stately pageant of mourning and final
resignation realize Christian chivalry as poets have dreamed of it, and the
solemn knell of the majestic verse is worthy of “the noblest daughter of
Latin”. At the beginning of the sixteenth century the knightly chronicle
degenerated into the romance of chivalry. Amadis of Gaul, the first and
best of the kind, perhaps originated in a French fabliau. More than one
allusion to it is found in Spanish writers, before it was published (1508) by
Garcia Ordoñez de Montalvo as a translation from the Portuguese. The success
produced many imitations and “continuations” dealing with exploits of “the
innumerable lineage of Amadis”. These heroes of the romances of chivalry are
impossible beings, living in a shadowy and impossible world. The first of them
exhausted the capability of the species; the others surpass it only in
absurdity, while the abuse of the supernatural makes their stories tame and
uninteresting. A Cervantes was hardly needed to dispel this fantastic dream of
a debased chivalry.
The advance from
chronicle to history due to the Revival of Learning was not made in Spain till
the middle of the sixteenth century. The story of the reign of the Catholic
Kings down to 1492 was written by their official chronicler Hernando del Pulgar
in the form of annals. Despite some graphic descriptions and florid speeches,
it is in general heavy and arid, lacking in the simple dignity of its kind, and
inferior to the Claros Varones de Castilla, a gallery of contemporary
portraits drawn with skill and energy by the same pen. Andres Bernaldez, curate
of Los Palacios, expanded his memoirs into a history of his time. He is at his
best, when he forgets the gravity of his subject and is content to gossip about
the events of which he was an eyewitness. Nebrija condensed Pulgar’s Chronicle;
Peter Martyr left a collection of letters on contemporary events, a rich but
untrustworthy and puzzling mine of information. These books, like the De
Rebus Hispaniae of Marineus Siculus, are Latin exercises upon historical
subjects.
Spain has never
lacked learned men; but, except perhaps in theology, the Spaniards have never
been a learned nation. The foreigners who came with Charles V were struck by
the ignorance and contempt of letters prevalent in Spain, as well as by the
semi-savagery of the bulk of its people. The Revival of Learning could not at
once produce fruit on soil so scorched and seamed by centuries of war. Moreover
the richest fruits of Spanish genius are indigenous. Inspiration for the
noblest poetry of Spain was found in the Bible and in her own history rather
than in Latin and Italian writers; her novel and drama sprang from her own
rough but teeming soil.
With the
exception of painting, which was still in its infancy, the arts had already
reached the fullest expression to which they have at any time attained in this
country. In architecture, in sculpture, in pottery, in gold, silver and iron
work, and in embroidery Spain never improved upon the skill of the Saracens and
the masterpieces of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The influences
which moulded her art are to be found partly in race, partly in climate, and
partly in history. Possessing great power of adaptation, she set her mark upon
all that she produced. In the northern and central regions design and
initiative in architecture are mostly French; but the influence of the Saracens
leavens this northern style and informs it with richer beauty, “the songs and
shrines being equally tinged with the coloring of northern piety and oriental
fancy”. Introduced at first as a mere accessory in vestments and jewelry, and
in Moorish caskets which guarded the relics of saints, little by little this
more gorgeous ornamentation permeated the whole building. It was still a
Christian cathedral; yet the lavishness with which the minor arts were used in
decoration produced a result that is not to be found elsewhere, and is known as
the plateresque or silversmith's style. Typical examples are the Puerta
del Perdón of Seville Cathedral, the horseshoe arch of a mosque overlaid
with Christian emblem and decoration (1519), and, in less mixed form, San
Marcos of Leon (1514). To this period belong some of the choicest works of
expiring Gothic and dawning renaissance building. The Church of San Juan de los
Reyes at Toledo perpetuates the memory of the battle of Toro. Cathedrals were
planned for Salamanca, Segovia, Plasencia, and Granada; but the most valuable
work of the age was the completion and decoration of the splendid designs of an
earlier time at Burgos, at Toledo, and at Seville. To it belong also the church
set down in the midst of the great mosque of Cordova, and the splendid but
incongruous palace of Charles V on the Alhambra Hill.
Sculpture in
Spain is usually associated with religious architecture. It is often in bolder
relief and of more intense expression than elsewhere, and attains its greatest
perfection in altar-pieces and sepulchral monuments. Such are the marvels of
marble and wood created by Philip de Vigarny or de Bolona (about 1500-43),
Alonso de Berruguete, a Spanish pupil of Michael Angelo (about 1520), and
Damien Forment of Valencia (about 1511-32), the tombs of King Juan II in the
Cartuja de Miraflores, that of the Infante Don Juan at Avila, those of Iñigo de
Mendoza and his wife at Burgos, and the kneeling statue of Padilla. They are, it
must be confessed, delicate and gorgeous rather than grand. Marble and
alabaster are treated like metal and lace; beauty is sought in details and no
longer in grand and simple lines. To the Spanish Saracens belongs the invention
of a dwelling combining with convenience and suitability to their climate a
high degree of beauty. Nowhere else has a fortress been made a home of strength
and beauty like the Alhambra (mainly fourteenth century) and the other alcazars of Spain. The semi-oriental domestic architecture adopted by the Christians of
Andalusia is seen at its best in the so-called Casa de Pilatos at
Seville (1521). Here there is no need to guard against the weight of snow, no
cold to be kept out, no smoke to blacken; so the roof becomes a terrace, the arch
is reared in fairy lightness, the glaze and color of brilliant tiles replace
the heavy wainscot and arras; stucco moulded into geometrical designs and
harmoniously colored makes up for the lack of pictures and for the scantiness
of the furniture. The Lonja or Silk-Exchange at Valencia (1482) is an
example, not without parallel, of the successful wedding of late Gothic design
to Saracen detail of window (ajimez) and decoration. As a subject race
the Saracens continued almost to monopolize the more delicate industrial arts.
Theirs are the pottery of metallic sheen, and the exquisite designs of lace and
filigree, damascening and inlaying, which with the rich silks and velvets
testify to their skill as handicraftsmen and to their exquisite taste in form and
color.
CHAPTER XII
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