CHAPTER XXI.
MAZARIN.
Before his death Richelieu had himself designated Giulio Mazarini, called
Mazarin in his adopted country, as the man best qualified to carry on his
policy. Born in Sicily of humble parentage, Mazarin had nevertheless received
an excellent education at Rome and in Spain. For a short time he had followed
the profession of arms, but soon found his true vocation in the diplomatic
service of the Court of Rome. Before Casale, in 1630, he had negotiated an
arrangement between France and Spain, which ultimately brought the Mantuan War
to a conclusion. From 1631 to 1636 he served as Nuncio Extraordinary in France,
and in 1639 he formally entered the service of France and was naturalized. He
did good work, especially as an envoy in Piedmont, and was rewarded in 1611 by
the Cardinalate. The King now called him to his councils and announced his
choice to the Parlements of France.
Louis at first made a point of showing that the death of Richelieu
caused no change. A sudden rupture would have implied that the dead Minister
had been the true ruler of France. The existing officials were retained in
power. The late Cardinal’s offices were distributed among his relations. Armand
de Wignerod, now Duke of Richelieu, became General of the Galleys and Governor
of Havre. Armand de Maillé-Brézé, now Duke of Fronsac, received the office of
Superintendent of Navigation, and the command of Brouage. The Marshal de La
Meilleraye inherited the government of Britanny. But the difference was soon
felt. The Cardinal’s enemies were, liberated from their prisons, or returned
from exile. Gaston of Orleans appeared at Court and was later allowed to be
reunited to his wife, Margaret of Lorraine. The families of Vendome and Guise
came back to France. The body of the late Queen-Mother was brought from abroad
and interred at Saint-Denis. The new rule was milder and more conciliatory.
The foreign policy of France was not changed. Great efforts were made to
continue the war with vigour, especially on the northern frontier, where the
King himself proposed to take the command. Guébriant was strengthened and
encouraged to propose an effective plan of action on the Rhine. The conquest of
Catalonia was to be pressed; Prince Thomas of Savoy was assured of continued
French support; and an expedition against Franche Comté was planned.
The new Minister meanwhile was strengthening his position. Supple and
elusive, he masked his advance with consummate skill. Of Richelieu’s creatures
those whose rivalry was most to be feared were Sublet de Noyers, the able
Minister of War, and the younger Bouthillier, now Comte de Chavigny. Sublet de
Noyers was first pushed aside, and Michel Le Tellier, Mazarin’s dependant, took
his place. Meanwhile the King’s health was breaking; a long minority, a long
Regency were in view. Without exciting suspicion, without haste or eagerness,
Mazarin succeeded in winning his way to the Queen’s confidence. Now a cipher,
she must later become a power. His beauty, his grace, his exquisite address,
facilitated his task. Yet, when the plans for the Regency were discussed,
Mazarin was careful on the one hand not to thwart the King’s intention of
closely limiting his wife’s authority, and on the other to secure that the odium
of these measures should fall upon others, especially upon Chavigny. In April,
1613, the King’s plan was announced. Anne of Austria was to be Regent, the Duke
of Orleans her Lieutenant-General; but both were to be controlled by a
permanent Council, irremovable, deciding all questions and filling its
vacancies by a majority of votes. In this Council the Queen’s vote or that of
Orleans was to count for no more than those of the other members—Condé,
Mazarin, the Chancellor Seguier, and the two Bouthilliers. Peace and war,
finance, and appointments to all important posts, were expressly reserved for
the Council. Two persons alone were excluded from the general amnesty, the
Duchess of Chevreuse, and the unfortunate Châteauneuf. The former was to remain
in exile, the latter in prison until the end of the war. Th:-- declarat-ion was
communicated to the Parlement at a lit de justice and registered (April 20,
21).
On May 14 the King expired; and measures were at once taken to defeat
his last intentions. The consent of the principal persons was obtained; the
magistrates were sounded; and on May 18 the Queen and the young King appeared in
the Parlement. The chief councillors
were present but Mazarin was conspicuously absent. Orleans, Condé, and the
Chancellor, demanded that the recent declaration should be cancelled, and the
sovereign authority of the Queen Regent recognized. After the stern repression
of Richelieu, the Parlement rejoiced to find its intervention in matters of
high government not only tolerated but invited. The necessary resolutions were
speedily passed; and the declaration registered by the express command of the
late King was expunged from the Records. A fresh declaration was issued,
vesting the royal power and the care of the young King in the Queen as Regent,
with Orleans as her Lieutenant-General, and Condé as his Deputy. The same
evening the Queen confirmed Mazarin in his post, of Chief Minister.
The new rule began propitiously. Francisco de Melo had crossed the
frontier and was besieging Rocroi. The French army, which Louis had intended to
lead in person, had been entrusted to the young Duke of Enghien, son of the
Prince of Condé, with the Marshal de L'Hôpital to supplement his lack of
experience. Enghien marched to the relief of Rocroi, and, in spite of
L’Hôpital, resolved to risk a general engagement. The Spanish General, eagerly
pressing his siege and expecting no such bold move, allowed the French army to
approach, and neglected to protect his forces by entrenchments. On May 18 the
two armies confronted each other: the Spaniards numbering between 24,000 and
26,000, including five tercios of the redoubtable Spanish infantry:
the French inferior by some 3-4000 men, the proportions of cavalry and infantry
being similar in the two armies. A rash forward movement on the French left
nearly led to disaster, but the mistake was remedied before Don Francisco had
seized his opportunity. The day was now far advanced, and the contest was
deferred till the morrow.
During the night word came to the French leader that Melo expected
reinforcements in the morning. The attack must be made at once if at all.
Before dawn the French moved forward. Enghien and Gassion on the right
overthrew the Flemish cavalry which opposed them. On the left once more La Ferté,
advised by L’Hôpital, advanced rashly, was taken in flank, and thrown into
disorder by the German horse. The French artillery was captured and was turned
upon the French centre, which began to retreat. At this moment Enghien rallied
his victorious cavalry and fell upon the flank and rear of the Spanish centre.
The Walloons and the Germans were driven in flight. The Spanish infantry still
remained unshaken. On the other hand the French retreat was arrested, and their
centre once more advanced. The French left reformed; the Spanish right was
attacked in front and behind. Enghien left his victorious wing, and led the
infantry of his centre against the tercios
viejos. Three times they repulsed the attack. the fourth time their
steadfast ranks were broken; when the slaughter had been with difficulty
arrested the Spanish infantry was no more; of 6000 men present at the battle
only 1500 escaped. The victory was complete; and the main credit of it fell to
the young commander, though the services of Gassion with the cavalry on the
right, and of Sirot , in checking the retreat of the centre, had also been
conspicuous.
A great general, who was also a Prince of the Blood, had come upon the
scene. The decision to attack was his; the admirable dispositions of the
approach and before the battle, the brilliant inspiration in the heat of combat,
the final and crushing blow, all these were due to him. At the age of 21, Louis
de Bourbon, Duke of Enghien, had proved himself to be one of the boldest and
most skillful commanders of the time. How would his Government regard him? With
jealousy, fear, and suspicion, or as the fittest instrument to fulfill the
destinies of France? It must be reckoned to the credit of Mazarin that Enghien
seldom failed to receive his full support and confidence until he had incurred
suspicion through the rebellion of his relatives.
Mazarin saw the necessity for cooperation between the army of the Low
Countries and that of the Rhine. As a preliminary step towards this end, he
accepted Enghiens proposal to lay siege forthwith to Thionville (Diedenhofen)
on the Moselle. The army of Champagne was ordered to assist. Guébriant was
strengthened and commanded to give occupation to the Bavarians and other German
forces in the south. On June 14 the investment of Thionville began; but, before
it was complete, a force of 2000 men contrived their entry and raised the
garrison to adequate strength. The siege was vigorously pushed; and, in spite
of accidents, Thionville was forced to capitulate on August 10. Sierck was then
taken, and Enghien advanced even to the gates of Luxemburg. His task in this
direction was now completed, and he availed himself of permission duly granted
to return to Court. Had he waited a few days, orders would have reached him
cancelling his leave and bidding him march to Guébriant’s succour in Alsace.
The time wasted in Paris was precious; and, when at length Enghien had joined Guébriant
handed over to him the requisite reinforcements, and sent turn forth to find
his winter-quarters elsewhere than in Alsace, winter had almost begun. Disaster
and death came to Guébriant, and the Bernardines were left without a leader.
Turenne was at once chosen to command the broken and demoralized army. It can
hardly have been only good fortune that led Mazarin in his first year of power
to choose for high command two generals so different in stamp from those
employed by Richelieu. It was certainly more than good fortune that caused him
to use them and support them after their high qualities had been proved.
Older by ten years than Enghien, Henry de La Tour d’Auvergne, Vicomte de
Turenne, younger brother of the Duke of Bouillon, was at the head of a regiment
in 1630, had recently held a command in Italy, and became Marshal of France in
1643. Patient, laborious, and thoughtful, Turenne attained by slow degrees the
eminence which Enghien reached more rapidly. The task now before him was
arduous. He had to restore order where all discipline had ceased, to
reconstruct an army out of mutinous units, to conciliate the jealousy of the
Bernardine captains. This work was not completed until the following June.
Meanwhile Mazarin had been gaining strength. At first he was regarded as
a temporary stop-gap, and hardly taken seriously. The easy liberality of the
Regency in its early months confirmed this opinion. A Government which refused
nothing could not in the nature of things last long. Ambition saw an easy path
to power. Even the Protestants seemed once more to be a danger; and the mission
of Turenne to Italy had in part at least the object of removing from France
their most illustrious leader. Their strength was, however, small, and their grievances
in reality slight; a little firmness and tact and the punctilious observance of
the edicts allayed the disquiet. Personal ambitions were more dangerous. Condé
and Orleans could be kept in check by playing off one against the other. But a
clique was soon formed among those who had espoused the Queen’s cause in the
days when her friendship was perilous, and who now claimed the reward of their
fidelity.
The head of this clique was the Duke of Beaufort. Vain, showy, and
incapable, his ambitions were in direct proportion to his ignorance of affairs.
All the malcontents gathered about him. His followers, Saint-Ibal, Montrésor, Béthune,
and Fontrailles, pluming themselves upon their merit, received the name of Les Importants. Their object was no
doubt to displace the Cardinal and open a fair field for the display of their
own supposed capacity. They formed an alliance with the Bishop of Beauvais, who
seemed most likely to supplant Mazarin in the Queen’s confidence. They were
hostile to Richelieu’s heirs and Richelieu’s agents. They drove from the
Council the two Bouthilliers, thereby in fact removing from Mazarin’s path two
Ministers whose experience, and ministerial record marked them as his rivals.
But for the moment Mazarin seemed to stand almost alone, and his fall was daily
expected. The Duchess of Chevreuse, that indefatigable intriguer, returned to
Paris and counted on reassuming her former ascendancy over the Queen. She
allied herself with Châteauneuf, n whom his contemporaries recognized high
qualities and capacities, which he never had sufficient opportunity to prove.
Her policy was reconciliation with Spain; and she remembered that the Queen was
a Spaniard. She remembered also the treatment which she had received from
Richelieu, and, by pressing the claims of the Vendome family to Britanny, was
preparing an alliance with Beaufort and a blow at her enemy’s heirs.
Amid these intrigues Mazarin steered his way patiently and skillfully,
steadily increasing his personal ascendancy over the Queen’s mind. Owing to a
quarrel with Madame de Longueville, Condé’s beautiful daughter, the Duchess of
Montbazon was ordered to leave the Court. The Duke of Beaufort, at that time
her lover, resolved to avenge the insult to his mistress. In August, 1613, it would
seem, he determined to attempt the assassination of the Cardinal. Several
schemes having failed, the design became known: and the Duke of Beaufort was
arrested on September 2 and imprisoned on the following day at Vincennes.
It seems probable that there was a plot; had there been none, it would
still have been useful to invent one. With Beaufort in prison, the cabal of the Importants, was easily scattered.
Châteauneuf, Madame de Chevreuse, and the Vendome family were banished from the
Court; other supporters of the party retired, fled, or were disgraced. Mazarin
felt himself strong enough to recall Chavigny to the Council. The Queen took up
her residence at Richelieu’s palace, henceforward known as the Palais-Royal, where she was constantly
accessible from Mazarin’s own dwelling. This act marked the establishment
between the Queen and her Minister of still more intimate relations. The
remaining adherents of the Important party were gradually dispersed or reduced to impotence. Mazarin even succeeded in
procuring the recall of Goring, the British Ambassador, on account of his
friendship with Madame de Chevreuse.
The summer of 1644 was devoted to a campaign such as Richelieu affected.
An overwhelming force, commanded by Gaston of Orleans, undertook the siege of
Gravelines, supported by the Dutch fleet. Enghien had only an inferior command,
and had to be pacified by the gift of the government of Champagne. Meanwhile
the Dutch were to undertake the siege of Sas-van-Gent. The siege of Gravelines
was begun in May, and the town capitulated on July 28. Sas-van-Gent held out
until September. When the fall of Gravelines appeared certain, Enghien was
allowed to join Turenne; and the two generals advanced together against Mercy
and fought the three vigorous actions in the neighborhood of Freiburg (August).
Mercy was forced to retreat; and the French armies, working down the Rhine,
seized Philippsburg. Speier and Worms placed themselves under French protection;
Mainz opened its gates; Landau was taken; and the whole of the left bank of the
Rhine from Breisach to Coblenz was thus in the possession of France (September,
1644).
Though Orleans, when policy required his employment as a commander,
followed on the old lines, wherever Enghien or Turenne commanded, bold and
rapid movements, intrepid attacks, took the place of Richelieu’s cautious
strategy, his tedious sieges This was even more evident in the following year,
when the defeat of Turenne at Herbsthausen near Mergentheim was avenged by
Enghien and Turenne near Nördlingen (August 3, 1645). The campaigns in Bavaria,
1646, 1647, and 1648 forced the Elector Maximilian first to temporise and
finally to yield. These operations, described elsewhere, prove either that the
generals had escaped from the control of the Government, or that the conduct of
the war was no longer mainly regulated by the fears of the Minister for his own
personal ascendancy. The latter is more probably the case. Mazarin was secure
in the royal favour as Richelieu had never been; victories enhanced his credit;
France and her Government needed peace; and peace could only be won by a
vigorous offensive. Enghien, who in 1646 became by his father’s death the Prince
of Condé, was more dangerous in inactivity than at the head of victorious
armies; Mazarin trusted his own influence and his own astuteness to defeat the
claims of all possible rivals. Such may have been his calculations; yet the glory
of these six years of almost unbroken success must in part belong to the
Minister who was not afraid of victory.
Conquests in
Flanders.—The Dutch make peace. [1645-8
In Flanders the summer of 1615 was devoted to another campaign under the
Duke of Orleans. A number of places were seized in the direction of
Dunkirk—Mardyk, Linck, Bourbourg; but the Duke did not venture to besiege
Dunkirk itself, which was covered by Piccolomi. The French army then turned
aside and occupied various strongholds on the Lys, among others Béthune. A
separate army laid siege to one of the few uncaptured fortresses in Lorraine,
la Mothe-en-Argonne, and took it. After the Duke of Orleans had left the front
his lieutenants continued this petty warfare until late in the autumn. Lens,
Orchies, and Arleux were occupied. Gassion even crossed Flanders between Ghent
and Bruges and joined hands with the Dutch, who captured Hulst. However, the
results of great efforts and expenditure during these two years were hardly
adequate.
A different spirit pervaded the campaign of 1646. Political reasons
suggested that the armies of the north should be divided. Orleans and Enghien
received separate commands. But the two rivals united their forces and Enghien
infused more energy into their joint operations. Courtrai was taken in the face
of the united forces of Lorraine, Piccolomini, Beck, and Lamboy. The Dutch were
beginning to be jealous of the French advance, and refused to cooperate in a
joint campaign. After the recapture of Mardyk, lost during the previous winter,
Orleans left the army and Enghien was in sole command. The difference was soon
felt. On September 19 the siege of Dunkirk was begun. This place was the chief
arsenal of the Spaniards in these parts and the base of their maritime raids.
The Dutch, whose desire to protect their commerce for the moment outweighed
their fears of France, ordered Tromp to blockade the port while Enghien
vigorously pushed the attack by land. On October 11 Dunkirk surrendered. The
French frontier was thus moved forward in this direction to nearly its present
line, including also Fumes and Courtrai, which now form part of Belgium.
Battle of
Lens.—Catalonia.
The danger to Dutch trade from the possession of Dunkirk by the French,
the proposal of France to exchange Catalonia for the Spanish Netherlands, the
declining health of Frederick Henry and his death in March, 1647, all
contributed to stimulate the Dutch desire for peace. Their cooperation in
1645-6 had been but slight; they now seriously prepared to treat. Though their
Treaty of Minister was not concluded until January, 1648, it had been settled in
principle more than a year before; and the year 1647 saw the French left alone
in their northern struggle with Spain. In this year Louis de Bourbon, now
Prince of Condé, was occupied in Catalonia, and Turenne was detained in Germany
by the revolt of the Bernardine troops. France was exhausted, and the conquests
of Dixmuyden in Flanders and La Bassée between Béthune and Lille were
compensated by the loss of Menin, Armentières, and Landrecies. In October
Gassion was killed at the siege of Lens. In 1648 Condé, recalled from
Catalonia, was nominated to the command in Flanders. A final effort was to be
made to extort peace. Ypres had been taken and Courtrai lost, when a July he
was summoned to Paris in consequence of the opening troubles of the Fronde.
Once more at the front, and joined by Erlach with 4000 men from the army of
Breisach, he advanced to the relief of Lens, which he found had already
surrendered to the Archduke Leopold. Retreating towards Béthune, he enticed the
Spaniards to leave their entrenchments, and a general engagement followed
according to his desire (August 20). The French army, though its right wing at
first was roughly handled, was completely victorious. Both wings of the
Spaniards were driven in flight. Beck was wounded and captured, refused all
assistance, and died of his wounds. Leopold and Fuensaldaña fled to Douai. The
Spanish infantry, no longer maintaining the tradition of those who had fallen
at Rocroi, surrendered in thousands. The Spanish loss was 8000 men, 30 cannon,
all their baggage, and 120 banners. Six days later Paris was in revolt. Many
years were to pass before a similar victory was gained by the arms of France.
The great successes of France were won in fields where Condé or Turenne
commanded. In Catalonia the occasional gains were outweighed by the repeated
failures. In 1643 the whole of Catalonia, with the exception of Rosas and
Tarragona, was in French hands. The war was to be vigorously pursued by land
and sea. La Mothe Houdancourt commanded by land, the young Admiral de Brézé by
sea. Brézé did his part. A fleet convoying provisions to Rosas was attacked and
defeated with the loss of six vessels. A little later (September 8) the main
fleet of Spain suffered a disastrous reverse off Carthagena, and the French
became masters of the western Mediterranean. The complete conquest of Catalonia
and perhaps further acquisitions seemed to be in sight. But La Mothe
Houdancourt did nothing, leaving the blame, as if would seem unjustly, on
Michel Le Tellier, the Minister of War. The following year he was defeated
before Lerida, which the Spaniards were besieging; and, when at length he
undertook the siege of Tarragona, he was forced to raise it (September). The
general was recalled, and Harcourt, with brilliant record from Casale and Turin,
was sent in his place. Siege was to laid to Rosas (April 2, 1615), which at
length, after a glorious resistance, capitulated (May 28). Fleix was lost, but
afterwards recovered, and Balaguer surrendered after a prolonged investment
(October 20). The discontent of the Catalans was for the moment appeased.
Harcourt in May, 1646, laid siege to Lerida, and endeavored to reduce the
fortress by famine. But in November it was still holding out when the Spanish
army attacked and surprised the French in their lines. Supplies were thrown
into the beleaguered town; Harcourt was forced to raise the siege, abandoning
his heavy artillery and his baggage. Catalan complaints broke out again; and,
perhaps to show the province that France was in earnest, Condé himself was sent
to take command as Viceroy.
But Catalonia was the grave of reputations. Condé determined to lay
siege once more to Lerida. After a month even he was forced to acknowledge that
the difficulties of climate and locality were insurmountable, and the siege was
abandoned. He was recalled, and Mazarin’s brother Michel, now a Cardinal, was
nominated to succeed him. But after long delays he did no more than visit
Barcelona, and speedily returned to Rome. Schomberg, who took his place, was
fortunate enough to carry Tortosa by assault, and to force its citadel to open
its gates (July 18, 1648). Events in France then put an end to French efforts
in this region. Catalonia had been chiefly valued as a possible exchange for
the Spanish Netherlands. Had such a bargain been possible, the Catalans would
have been unhesitatingly left to their fate. But this project, if ever
seriously entertained by Spain, was frustrated by the opposition of the Dutch;
and the waste of men and treasure thus found no adequate compensation.
Designs upon the Italian coast.
In Italy alone the power of Spain remained substantially unshaken.
France kept her hand upon Savoy, but the futility of attacks upon the Milanese
had long since been demonstrated. The war of Parma (1642-4) divided the possible
friends of France and weakened those Italian Powers which still retained a
formal independence. When France had succeeded in bringing this war to a
conclusion, she suffered another blow in the election of Giambattista Pamfili
to the papal chair as Innocent X (1644). He was not only well-disposed to
Spain, but a personal enemy of Mazarin, as was soon seen when he refused to
make the Minister’s brother a Cardinal, though his suit was warmly pressed.
The chief hope of France in this direction lay in the disaffection of
Naples and Sicily, overtaxed in a cause which was not their own. Here the naval
power which Richelieu had created might be used to full advantage. This Mazarin
saw, but he failed to find fit instruments to execute his policy, and perhaps
to formulate that policy with clearness and precision. He made his first
advance against the Spanish presidi on
the coast of Tuscany and in Elba, the maritime outposts which linked Naples
with the dependent Republic of Genoa and so with the Milanese. The neutrality
of the Grand Duke of Tuscany was secured. The fleet was entrusted to Admiral de
Brézé, a bold and skillful seaman (1646). Prince Thomas of Savoy was to command
on land, part of the troops being drawn from Piedmont and shipped at Savona.
The enterprise was mismanaged. Telamone and San-Stefano were seized; but,
instead of Porto-Ercole, Orbitello was then attacked, an inaccessible fort girt
with malarial swamps. The Spanish fleet came up and was beaten off by Brézé;
but, to the great loss of France, the gallant Admiral himself was killed by a
cannon-shot (June 14, 1616).
His lieutenant, Du Daugnon, pretending that his fleet required repairs,
hurried off to Provence, where he left his ships and made for Brouage. This
important command was vacant by Brézé’s death. Du Daugnon seized and held it in
defiance of the Government; and, owing to the rivalries of Condé and Vendome,
the post of Admiral remained unfilled. Meanwhile the Spaniards entered
Porto-Ercole, whence they directed attacks against the besiegers. Other
reinforcements came by land through papal territory. Prince Thomas was forced
to raise the siege and return to Piedmont by land.
The design, but for the malarious climate of the Tuscan Maremma, was not
unpromising. It failed, owing to the death of Brézé, the treachery of Du Daugnon,
and the incompetence of Prince Thomas. Mazarin resolved to try again. In
September a fresh expedition set forth under La Meilleraye, and at Oneglia took
up troops from Piedmont commanded by du Plessis Praslin. Piombino was seized
and Porto-Longone on the island of Elba was captured after a brief siege. A
firm base was thus acquired for operations in the kingdom of Naples, should
such appear desirable.
Mazarin was reckoning on disorder in Naples and Sicily. He was looking
for a King to replace King Philip; and Thomas of Savoy had perhaps been chosen
to lead the first expedition as the fittest person for such a post. Condé himself
was sounded but refused. Fontenay Mareuil was sent to Rome to learn what could
be learnt and to encourage a Neapolitan revolt. When the rebellion (described
in a subsequent chapter) occurred, its course was uniformly unpropitious for
Mazarin. It was a popular rebellion, whose leaders had no solid authority, and
were not supported outside Naples. The nobles, even the middle class, were
hostile. No Government was established with which the French King could treat.
The intervention of the Duke of Guise was ill-judged and unwelcome. The French
fleet appeared before Naples, but could not act in concert with Guise; its own
operations were hesitating and indecisive; and it finally returned to Provence
without attempting any serious action. The rebellion collapsed, and the places
seized on Elba and in Tuscany were left isolated and insecure. Mazarin had seen
what sea-power might do against Spain in Italy, but he failed to realize his
vision. These failures seriously shook his prestige; and the enterprise against
Milan which he undertook in conjunction with Savoy and Modena during the winter
1647-8 was equally unsuccessful.
Negotiations in Westphalia. [1643-8
Mazarin’s authority was shaken; but, before the ground actually crumbled
beneath his feet, he was able to achieve one capital effort of statesmanship.
He was a born negotiator; indeed his enemies averred that he was apt to
negotiate when action was required. More than once his diplomatic action
influenced the course of the great German War. When hostilities between Denmark
and Sweden had for a time diverted one of the chief members of the coalition to
easier fields of conquest, Mazarin was instrumental in bringing about the Peace
of Brömsebro (1645). War between Poland and Sweden was another danger which he
averted; and he secured French influence in Poland by arranging the marriage of
Mary di Gonzaga with her King. He stirred up Rakoczy of Transylvania against
Austria. He concluded at Copenhagen (1645) a separate treaty with Denmark which
secured free passage for French commerce through the Danish straits. But the
Peace of Westphalia was the great triumph of his diplomacy.
The preliminaries of a double Congress had been arranged in 1641; but no
actual conference took place until 1644. The French envoys, d'Avaux and
Servien, were dispatched in October, 1643; but their first mission was to the Hague,
where they renewed the alliance with the United Provinces and bound the States
General once more to conclude no separate peace (1644). Preliminaries were
slowly advanced, and meanwhile the efforts of Mazarin were directed to securing
the support, of the Imperial towns of Germany. He represented France as the champion
of German liberties against the encroachments of the Emperor. He worked at the
same time upon the German Princes, and, following Richelieu’s tradition,
especially upon the Elector of Bavaria. After negotiations had definitely
begun, the Duke of Longueville was sent, in order that a person of greater
dignity and position might supplement the trained ability of Servien and d'Avaux
and keep their jealousies in check.
Nothing could be more complicated than the conflict of forces and
interests. On the side of France, satisfaction for the Swedes, the restoration
of the Palatinate to its rightful lords, the demands of the United Provinces,
the obligations incurred towards Catalonia and Portugal, the protection and support
of the lesser German States—all these had to be borne in mind simultaneously
with the claims of France to territorial extension in Alsace, the Sundgau,
Breisach, Philippsburg, and in Flanders. On the other hand, the efforts of
Spain were directed against peace; and, through her influence, at the end of 1646
the United Provinces were detached from the common cause; and in 1647 the
Emperor seemed inclined to suspend negotiations. The secession of the Dutch, however,
while making peace with Spain almost impossible, rendered the remaining
problems more manageable; and, after the Elector of Bavaria had a second time
been brought to his knees, after the battle of Lens had crippled for the moment
the influence of Spain, Mazarin, whose position at home was becoming more and
more precarious, made his last effort; and in October, 1648, peace was
concluded between Sweden and France on the one hand and the Emperor on the
other. Longueville had returned to Paris, and d'Avaux had been recalled; and thus
Servien, who was in Mazarin’s complete confidence, was left alone to conduct
the final negotiations. The Austrian rights and possessions Alsace and the
Sundgau, with Breisach and Phihppsburg, were ceded to France. The three
bishoprics of Toul, Metz, and Verdun, were abandoned in all sovereignty to
France, who had held them by the right of the strongest since the time of Henry
II. The French were to surrender the forest towns of Sackingen, Waldshut, Laufenburg,
and Rheinfelden, and to pay an indemnity of three million livres to Archduke Ferdinand and Charles.
The terms secured for the allies of France have been detailed elsewhere.
The Emperor abandoned the cause of the Duke of Lorraine, whose territories
remained in French occupation. Duke Charles was forced to throw in his lot with
Spain, while the Empire was debarred from affording any further assistance to
the Spanish Power. The recognition of the right of the several Estates of the
Germanic body to conclude separate treaties with foreign Powers left France at
liberty to ally herself with any of the German Powers, or with any combination
of them. The King of France was thus established as patron of Germanic
liberties, which meant in effect of German particularism. The war of 1870 was
needed to efface completely the consequences of this treaty.
Peace was indeed necessary for France, where discontent was rapidly
coming to a head. The Spanish statesmen encouraged the rising insubordination,
by which they hoped to profit, now that their account with Holland had been
closed. Hence they declined the terms of Mazarin and did their best to break
his treaty with the Empire. A Spanish garrison still held Frankenthal in the
Palatinate; the Spanish Habsburgs had claims upon Alsace. That fortress and
those claims they refused to surrender; and thus the Austrian House in compensation
had to forgo the indemnity promised for Alsace, and to leave the cities of the
Black Forest in the hands of France. Hard as these additional concessions were,
to continue the war was even harder; in spite of the efforts of Spain, the
Peace of Westphalia was ratified in February 1619.
The Fronde. The Parlements.
Mazarin was the heir of Richelieu, of his policy, of his system, of his
debits and his credits. That policy had led to war by sea and by land, to north,
south, east, and west. That system had mortgaged the future to meet the
present, needs. The strain of six more years of war had not improved the financial
situation. At Richelieu’s death the revenue for three years had been
anticipated. It does not appear that the position was materially worse in 1648
than it had been in 1642. But every source of revenue had been pledged; the traitants or contractors had amassed
enormous wealth; and each draft that the Government made upon the public
revenue necessitated a new and a ruinous bargain with the great financiers.
Against the territorial gains secured by the Treaty of Westphalia, we must,
place an impoverished nation, an empty treasury, the domination of usury, the paralysis
of law a precarious tyranny. Debts and assets alike Mazarin had inherited; he
had not improved, he had not sensibly impaired his heritage. But, unlike
Richelieu, he was unable to avoid the reckoning. The conflict, which began in
1648, was only a symptom of the deep- seated disorders of the State.
Mazarin’s opponents were desultory and irresolute, and, from their
resemblance to the schoolboys who slung stones in the moats of Paris, and ran away
when the authorities appeared, received their name of Frondeurs. The Fronde,
which paralyzed the Government of France for five years, was the outcome of
many forces, political, constitutional, social, and personal. In essence it was
a revolt against the lawless despotism established by Richelieu. But the French
kingdom, the French people, were not so organized as to offer much hope of
reform by way of revolution. Of all French institutions the monarchy alone had
the vitality required for the reconstruction of society. That was to be the
task of Louis XIV and Colbert; they laid the foundations on which the Constituent
Assembly and Napoleon built. Yet constitutional aspirations existed, and were
stimulated perhaps by the example of rights successfully asserted beyond the
Channel. The English Parliament was forced to use, to test, and to develop its
powers. It had proved capable of successful warfare and of government, France
also had her Parlement of Paris, her
provincial Parlements, similar indeed
in name alone to the two Houses of the English people, and representing but one
narrow class, but invested with powers which were capable of considerable
extension, possessed of a high and venerable tradition, the recognized
exponents of the law, the would-be arbiters between King and people. Besides
the Parlements, there were other “sovereign” bodies, the Cour des Aides, the Chambre
des Comptes, the Grand Conseil,
with definite though inferior functions, indispensable to the lawful action of
the Government.
Richelieu had set himself to confine the Parlements to the adjudication of causes between party and party.
In 1641 he had caused a declaration to be registered at a lit de justice, expressly forbidding the Parlement to take cognisance of any matter touching the State, its administration, or its government; edicts
on such matters were to be registered and published without comment; and
financial edicts could only be the subject of respectful representations; they
could not be rejected or amended. But at the very beginning of the new reign
the aid of the Parlement had been
needed to ratify the reversal of the dispositions for the Regency made by the
late King. The edict of 1641 had been treated as a dead letter. Richelieu had
coerced the Parlement by exiling or
imprisoning obnoxious councillors, and by depriving the contumacious of their
offices. Mazarin, always averse from strong measures, had endeavored to reach
his ends by conciliation and accommodation. The magistrates had ceased to fear;
disorder and discontent produced a cumulative effect; until at length the Parlement was moved to attack the whole
problem of government and to raise the most vital issues.
Since 1643 sedition had been growing. In that year revolts against oppressive
taxation broke out in Poitou, Saintonge, Angoumois, Rouergue. In the following
year there were risings in Alençon, in Dauphiné, a' Montpellier, and at
Valence. The Controller-General, Particelli d’Éméry, showed considerable ingenuity
in creating new debts to liquidate the old, in alienating revenues and domains,
and inventing new offices to sell. But fresh sources of income were needed, and
in 1644 the toisé was proposed. An
old edict, which forbade the erection of buildings in a zone surrounding the
walls of Paris, had been disregarded; and flourishing suburbs had grown up. The
King’s Council issued an edict (January, 1644), imposing a tax of 40—50 sous on
each square fathom (toise) covered by
the illegal buildings. The occupants resisted, and the Parlement took up their cause. The tax was suspended for the time;
and in its place a new proposal required all wealthy persons to contribute to a
forced loan. But the Parlement insisted in the first place on exempting all
members of the four sovereign Courts; and eventually so many restrictions were
introduced that the forced loan, if levied, would have fallen on the financiers
alone. The Government could not afford to offend the great financial interests;
and in the end, after a struggle lasting over nearly two years, both toisé and taxe des aisés were abandoned. During the contest four members of
the Parlement were exiled, or imprisoned;
but the Government, was forced to recall the exiles, and the victory rested
with the Assembly.
In 1647 a new tariff' was drawn up of dues to be levied on goods
entering Paris, and was sanctioned by the Cour
des Aides. This measure, if successful, would have been extended to the
other towns of the kingdom. But the Parlement again intervened; and the struggle began once more and lasted through the year.
In 1648 the expiration of the period for which the Paulette had been
established seemed to give an opportunity of exacting concessions from the Parlement in return for its continuance,
which involved the recognition of the heritable property of the magistrates in
their offices. A lit de justice was
held on January 12, 1648, at which edicts were registered revoking the tariff
and the taxe des aisés, imposing new
imposts, creating new offices, and especially twelve posts of maîtres des requêtes. The other maîtres des requêtes, resenting the
consequent diminution of their individual profits, appealed to the Parlement; and the Parlement took up the examination of this and the other edicts,
although they had already been registered. The Government, at its wits’ end for
funds, proposed, in return for the continuance of the Paulette, to require four
years’ salary from the magistrates concerned. The exemption of the Parlement from the effects of this
measure did not suffice to win its support. The Parlement made common cause with the other sovereign corporations;
and on May 15, 1648, it was agreed that representatives of each should be
deputed to meet in the Hall of Saint-Louis, and discuss the general situation.
Thus the financial disorder had its political effect. Extraordinary
measures were needed, for which the cooperation of the Parlement was indispensable. The ruinous nature of the expedients
usually chosen could not escape observation. Remonstrance grew to
expostulation, thence to resistance; and at last the four sovereign bodies
united to take their stand, as protectors of their own interests in the first
place, but incidentally as champions of the poor, as critics of the Government,
and as defenders and reformers of the Constitution. For these functions,
excepting that of criticism, these judicial bodies were ill-fitted. They knew
nothing of the wider problems of government; they had never felt its
responsibility; they possessed no legal power of initiative, no executive
authority except that of administering and enforcing the law. Thus they were
insensibly led to exceed their legitimate functions; their new activity found
them without experience; and they eventually became the tools of selfish
interests and ambitions.
Even their earliest efforts presented a medley of philosophic reform and
impracticable conservatism. By July 12, twenty-seven articles had been prepared
by the Assembly of the Hall of Saint-Louis, and had been laid before the Parlement for consideration, amendment,
and adoption. These articles proposed such vital changes as the suppression of
the intendants, the revocation of all contracts dealing with the tallies, and
the reduction of the tailles by
one-quarter. No edict imposing new taxes or creating new offices was
henceforward to be valid without the consent of the Parlement voting freely; no person was to be detained in prison for
more than twenty-four hours without being brought before his natural judges.
Another article forbade the creation of new offices in the sovereign companies,
and any change in their constitution, while others suppressed all commercial
monopolies and privileges, and established a special Court of justice to deal
with financiers. Finally the advances already made by the traitants were not to be repaid to them.
The union of the Chambers had been at first rigorously opposed by the
Government. Some of the deputies were exiled, others imprisoned. But in June
Mazarin ceased to resist the movement; the prisoners were delivered, the exiles
recalled; and the Paulette was
conceded to all the companies on the old conditions. Éméry was dismissed, and
La Meilleraye, who knew more about siege-works than about finance, took his
place (July). The intendants were abolished, except in the frontier provinces
of Champagne, Picardy, Burgundy, Provence, Languedoc, where they were to be
retained for military purposes only. The taille was diminished, and a Chamber of justice was established to investigate
financial abuses. The uncertainty as to all bargains with the financiers led to
a partial bankruptcy. The Government seemed to have capitulated.
Declaration of Saint-Germain.
But Mazarin was only temporizing. Condé was summoned to Paris in July;
terms were no doubt then arranged with him, and a course of action was settled.
An open rupture with the Parlement was to be avoided until a victory had been won; then the army of the
Netherlands was to restore the royal authority. On the news of the victory of
Lens the execution of this plan was begun. Two of the most uncompromising
councillors of the Parlement, one of
them named Broussel, were arrested. But the Government had reckoned without the
mob of Paris, among whom de Retz, who now first comes to the front, had
secretly established a powerful influence. On hearing of the arrests the people
rose in arms; and during the night of August 26-7 innumerable barricades were
raised and manned. The Government was helpless; Broussel and his colleague were
released; and order was for the moment restored.
On September 18 the Court left Paris and retired to Rueil. To strengthen
his own position and remove his rivals Mazarin procured the exile of Châteauneuf
and the imprisonment of Chavigny. The Court was preparing to resist the Parlement, whose decrees were cancelled,
when suddenly this course was abandoned, and negotiations were opened at
Saint-Germain. Condé, who was now at Court, seems to have been the prompter of
this change of policy. The envoys of the Parlement were admitted to treat; and on October 24 the Declaration of Saint-Germain was
registered, which embodied the chief part of their demands, including a clause
exempting all officers of justice from imprisonment under lettres de cachet, and one providing that no subject should be
treated as a criminal otherwise than by legal process. The victory of the
constitutional party seemed complete. But government was impossible on these
terms. The revocation of the intendants crippled the administration; the remission of taxes meant bankruptcy; and the
restrictions on fresh financial legislation were likely to cut off all sources
of fresh revenues. The Declaration of Saint-Germain registered at Paris, and
the Treaty of Westphalia signed at Münster on the same day, show the diverse
results at home and abroad produced by the Richelieu-Mazarin policy.
With the Declaration of Saint-Germain the constitutional interest of the
Fronde ends. France needed a strong Government. That principle was
inadequately, unworthily perhaps, embodied in Mazarin. The monarchy needed
settled principles, respect for law and justice. That need the Parlement dimly perceived. Had these two
powers been able to work together, an orderly and law-abiding Government might
have been established. But the Minister saw in law only the limitation of
authority; the Parlement saw in
Mazarin’s Government only the negation of law. Both might be excused for
holding such views. But in consequence the principles formulated in the Hall of
Saint-Louis remained a dead letter; the monarchy set itself steadfastly to
nullify the concessions made to law and justice. Thus Mazarin did not dare to
restore the intendants, but he
employed commissioners drawn from parliamentary families with similar powers
and for similar duties, and so enlisted individual councillors in the service
of absolutism, which collectively they had condemned.
Henceforward principles recede more and more into the background. The
struggle becomes a sordid conflict of individual ambitions with hardly a gleam
of redeeming virtue. The various forces, personal and collective, group
themselves variously at various times, and produce a complexity of disorder
which hardly admits of simple exposition. But, neglecting minor complications,
we may yet endeavor to fix the chief factors of the problem, and to indicate
the principal issues at stake during the Fronde.
The central figure is Mazarin; the principal issue is his predominance.
His strength lay partly in his elusive wealth of resource, his supple
insistence, his unscrupulous opportunism, his patience and perseverance, but
still more in the fidelity of his friends, especially that of the Queen-Mother.
It seems impossible to believe that a simple relation of mistress and servant
existed between the two; affection and trust seldom inspire such resolute
attachment; the theory of a secret marriage, though not proved, is highly
probable. Thus the cause of Mazarin, though not perhaps essentially the cause
of the Monarchy, was always the cause of the Court, and could always rally to
it the forces of loyalty and traditional obedience. The firm support of his
able adherents, Servien, Lionne, Le Tellier, and the Fouquets, with many other
humbler agents, also did much to win for him the ultimate victory.
The Duke of Orleans played in the Fronde a part not unlike that which he
had played under Louis XIII. After the Queen he stood by right of birth highest
in the realm. His name gave a semblance of legality to seditious action: his
opposition diminished the credit of the Government. Thus each party made
efforts and sacrifices to win him which far exceeded his personal value. He was
governed by councillors who used his prestige to accomplish their selfish ends.
The Abbé de La Rivière hoped by his means to win a Cardinal’s hat, and played
fast and loose with Mazarin, to whom he owed his place; in the struggle he went
down and de Retz for a time controlled the Duke. His romantic and headstrong
daughter, Anne-Marie-Louise de Montpensier, la Grande Mademoiselle, had at one
time hopes of marrying her cousin, Louis XIV, and more than once, acting in her
father’s name, turned for the moment the course of events.
Condé stood second by birth in the hierarchy of princes, but his military
talents and repute seemed to justify a boundless ambition. Several of the
French regiments were raised by his family, and many of the officers obeyed him
rather than the King. By instinct he supported the Crown; he was averse from
the constitutional notions of the Parlement,
and hated mob-rule. His many generous qualities were disfigured by arrogance;
his biting tongue made him many enemies; in debate he was hasty and intemperate;
he could not bear to be overruled, hardly to be questioned. His brother was now
Governor of Champagne; he himself had Burgundy and Berry; in 1648 he received
Stenay, Jametz, Clermont-en-Argonne, spoils of Lorraine, and other gifts. But
he was not satisfied, and demanded further concessions for himself and his
relations. His claims were inconsistent with the royal authority; and this, as
much as his personal rivalry with Mazarin, drove him at length into rebellion. He
was much influenced by women; and the counsels of his sister, Madame de
Longueville, and of Isabelle de Montmorency, Duchess of Chatillon, had a great
share in determining his course of action. His brother, Conti, without his
talents, was a useful figure-head in the rebel camp, and was completely swayed
by Anne de Longueville, who in her turn was governed by her lover, the Prince
de Marsillac, afterwards Duke of La Rochefoucauld and author of the Maxims. Chavigny was firmly attached to
the Condé interest, and, when this star was in the ascendant, was regarded as
the natural successor of Mazarin. Châteauneuf, on the other hand, another aspirant
to the post of Chief Minister, was pursued by the undying hatred of the House
of Condé for his share in the condemnation and death of Montmorency (1632). He
was therefore supported by the enemies of Condé.
The head of the illegitimate House of Vendome had but little part in
these events. But the rivalry of his family with the House of Condé was an
important factor, and had been clearly shown when the post of Admiral was
vacated by the death of Brézé. His elder son, the Duke of Mercoeur. was won by
Mazarin and married the Minister’s niece, Laure Mancini, in the critical year
of 1651. His second son, Francois, Duke of Beaufort, escaped from Vincennes
about the beginning of the troubles. He came to Paris before the time of the
Barricades and was made the idol of the Paris Halles, and thus was closely associated with de Retz and the
leaders of the Parisian Fronde. The populace of Paris was at first, enlisted in
the cause of the parliamentary Fronde; afterwards it was used to coerce the Parlement, or the municipal government
of Paris, as happened to suit the immediate ends of de Retz, or Beaufort, whose
personal charm made him a power, while his stupidity made him the tool of
cleverer men.
Paul de Gondi, better known as de Retz, Coadjutor to his uncle, the Archbishop
of Paris, had as such a seat in the Parlement of Paris. There, by his insight and skill in guiding assemblies, he played an
important part; in spite of his disorderly life he had considerable influence with
the Church and especially with the clergy of Paris; he spared neither pains nor
money to win the favour of the Paris mob. His ambition aimed first at the cardinalate
and through that dignity at the post of Chief Minister; for this end he even endeavored
to rival Mazarin in the Queen’s affections. Closely linked from the first with
Madame de Chevreuse, and, according to his own statement, the lover of her
daughter, he shifted his alliance as events suggested, working even will
Mazarin, whose power was incompatible with his own ambitions; and his quarrel
with Condé in 1651 did more than anything else to wreck the fortunes of the
Fronde, then at the hight of its power. His memoirs assign to him a more
important place in history than he really filled; but he was probably the
ablest, as he certainly was among the least scrupulous, of the conspirators. He
saw, perhaps more clearly than any, the political and constitutional needs of
France; but he was willing to sacrifice every principle to his own advancement.
Over the army the Queen and the Chief Minister never completely lost
control; even the prestige of Condé could only divert a few regiments from
their allegiance; Turenne’s influence with Bernard of Weimar’s soldiery yielded
to Mazarin’s gold. Turenne himself and his brother the Duke of Bouillon, though
more than once they joined the rebels in the hope of recovering Sedan, were induced
to accent compensation in other parts of France, and rallied to the Crown
(1652). Thenceforward the Government had a leader of hardly inferior qualify to
oppose to Condé and his Spanish allies.
The general and just discontent of France gave considerable strength to
the rebels; the feeling against Mazarin outweighed for a considerable period
all other considerations; but, apart, from personal rivalries, this feeling
only found expression in the Parlements,
and among the mob and the bourgeoisie of Paris. The provincial Parlements supported, though not firmly, the constitutional movement. That of Bordeaux,
through its quarrel with Épernon, the Governor of Guienne, was dragged furthest
into the revolutionary course; those, of Aix and Rouen were chiefly influenced
by a personal grievance, the additional posts that had been created therein for
financial purposes. The bourgeoisie came by degrees to see that the Princes
cared even less for their interests than Mazarin had done. The lovers of peace
and order gradually rallied to the Government; the nation possessed no
alternative organization; individual leaders, one by one, lost credit or were
reconciled; and at the last Condé was left, almost alone, to fight with foreign
aid against his country and his King.
Space does not permit us to dwell on the women of the Fronde, whose
activity gives to that movement its character of romance, inconsequence, and
frivolity. But besides those mentioned above a place must be found for Claire-Clemence
de Brézé, Condé’s slighted wife, who developed during his captivity unexpected qualities
of fortitude and energy; and Anne di Gonzaga, wife of Edward, a son of the
Elector Palatine Frederick V, who throughout the disturbances exercised a
controlling and moderating influence. An able judge of political possibilities,
she was the councillor of all and betrayed none, and eventually threw all her
weight on the side of the Queen, contributing not a little to the final reconciliation.
Treaty of Rueil.
The course of events can only be briefly summarized. After the
Declaration of Saint-Germain the Court returned for a time to Pars. The Parlement continued its attacks upon the
Government; claims were put forward by Madame de Longueville on behalf of her
husband and her younger brother which Mazarin was unable to concede; financial
difficulties were chronic; the rentes were not paid; the Parlement grew
more pressing; de Retz stimulated its opposition; the war of pamphlets,
characteristic of this struggle, began to rage; and in January the Court
decided to leave Paris and to bring the capital to reason by blockade. In this
short war (January 6 to Apr 1, 1619) Condé stood firm by the Crown, and even Orleans
remained with the Court; but Madame de Longueville, Conti, the Dukes of
Beaufort and Bouillon, Marsillac, and de Retz, placed themselves at the head of
the rebels in Paris, while Longueville raised Normandy. Negotiations were
opened with Spain. Turenne was won for the rebellion, and was preparing to
march with the army of Germany to its aid, when his troops, bought by Mazarin’s
agents with money provided on the security of Condé’s jewels, deserted him, and
he was forced to take refuge in Holland. Harcourt kept Longueville in check;
the Spaniards sent an ambassador, who was received by the Parlement, but their army was slow to move; Rantzau, commanding at
Dunkirk, who was suspected of treason, was seized and imprisoned: Condé
directed the blockade, which became more and more pressing; the Parisian levies
could not face the regular troops; and finally the rebels were forced to treat
(March 4). On April 1 the Treaty of Rueil was registered in the Parlement. Arms were laid down; the
Bastille and the Arsenal were surrendered; a complete amnesty was conceded; and
no general meetings of the Parlement were to be held till the end of the year. The Declaration of Saint-Germain was
confirmed; and the decrees against Mazarin were annulled. Efforts were made to
meet the exorbitant demands of the rebel leaders; but they remained
unsatisfied, and the peace was only a truce.
The provincial risings on this occasion were not dangerous. Movements at
Rheims, in Anjou, Poitou, Maine, were easily suppressed. The members of the Parlement of Aix, who had attacked their
Governor, the Comte d’Alais, were for the time satisfied by the suppression of
the new posts in their Court, but sporadic conflicts continued Provence
throughout the period. The Parlement of Normandy came to terms, and Longueville was fain to accept the amnesty. At
Bordeaux, after the general cessation of hostilities, the city and the Parlement continued to make war on the
Duke of Épernon; but for the present this conflict seemed to have only local
and personal significance.
All the principal persons were ostensibly reconciled with the Court;
even Beaufort and de Retz paid their visits of ceremony in August; but
discontent was only repressed, not cured; and thus, for the Minister no less
than for France, peace was much to be desired. But to secure peace with Spain
on tolerable terms some striking success was needed to counterbalance the
effect produced by the internal troubles. An effort was accordingly made in the
north, and the Court went to Amiens to support it; but the best leaders were
ruled out, Turenne by his recent treason, Condé by the attitude of his family.
Harcourt, who received the command, proved an inferior substitute; siege was
laid to Cambrai and afterwards abandoned; the results of the campaign were
insignificant. Condé might have extorted peace; confidence and employment might
have kept him steady. By slighting and suspecting him the Government gave to
Madame de Longueville and her friends their opportunity; the Prince was
surrounded by youthful and arrogant nobles, the petits- maîtres, who exacerbated his passions and stimulated his
ambition. When the Court returned to Paris in August Chavigny reappeared; in
September an open quarrel occurred between Mazarin and Condé over the proposed
marriage between the Duke of Mercoeur and Laure Mancini; Mazarin was not yet
ready for an open breach and in October consented, in return for Condé’s
promise of support, to make no important appointment without consulting him.
The honors which Condé procured for his friends and their wives excited
jealousy at Court, not unwelcome to Mazarin.
In December the rentiers,
whose interest was not regularly paid, appointed deputies to press their
claims; and a pretended attack upon one of these deputies was got up by de Retz
to discredit the Government. By accident or design, in the disorder which
followed, a shot was fired into one of Condé’s carriages; and the Prince
brought forward in the Parlement a
formal charge of attempted murder against Beaufort, de Retz, and Broussel, the
leaders of the old Fronde.
Mazarin’s enemies were now divided. Condé affronted the Queen by
protecting the Chevalier de Jarzé, who, as she thought, had personally insulted
her: by assisting the Duke of Richelieu, a minor, to a secret marriage the
Prince showed designs upon Havre, of which the Duke was titular Governor, and
offended Madame de Chevreuse, for whose daughter the Duke had been intended by
his guardian, and Mazarin who had hoped that he would marry one of his nieces.
The cup was full; Mazarin adopted the course long urged by de Retz and Madame
de Chevreuse; in order to secure Orleans La Rivière was dismissed; and on
January 18, 1650, Condé, Conti, and Longueville were arrested and imprisoned at
Vincennes. Madame de Longueville fled to Normandy; driven from Dieppe, driven
from Arras, she at length reached Stenay, where Turenne had taken refuge.
Tavannes took command of Condé’s troops in Burgundy. But the alliance of
Mazarin and the old Fronde, supported by Orleans and the Vendome family, seemed
strong enough to face any opposition. As a symbol of the new policy, Châteauneuf
was recalled and received the seals. Chavigny was ordered to leave Paris.
The course of events was in fact favourable for a time. Marsin, who was
at the head of the army of Catalonia, and devoted to Condé, was arrested at
Perpignan. Gaston was left to conduct the Government at Paris under the
guidance of Le Tellier and Servien, while the Court made a series of military
expeditions. Normandy was completely subdued, and Longueville’s officers were
displaced. Richelieu was obliged to give up Havre. Condé’s fortresses in Bar
were recovered except Stenay. Tavannes was forced to surrender Bellegarde in
Burgundy, and his army was disbanded. Turenne concluded a treaty with Spain
(April 30), but some time elapsed before he could act vigorously. At Bordeaux
the principal resistance concentrated; hither repaired Claire-Clemence, Condé’s
wife, with her little son, Bouillon with forces drawn from his county of
Turenne, La Rochefoucauld with the levies of Poitou. After a visit to
Compiegne, to provide for the defence of the northern frontier, the Court at
length returned to Paris (end of June) and prepared for the main expedition,
that of Guienne, where La Meilleraye with the King’s forces was already
confronting the rebels.
On August 1 the Court was in the neighborhood of Bordeaux, having
purchased the neutrality of Du Daugnon at Brouage, by confirming him in the
irregular command which he had held since 1646. Negotiations were at once
begun, but were interrupted owing to some unnecessary severities, which led to
reprisals on the part of the rebels; and prolonged operations were needed to
bring the town to reason. An amnesty and peace were at length granted to Bordeaux
on easy terms (September 29). The Princess of Condé, Bouillon, and La Rochefoucauld,
received liberty to retire whither they pleased. The King and the Court entered
Bordeaux, and the south-west appeared pacified. In the south, Provence alone
still gave cause for anxiety. Montrond, the last stronghold of the Princes in
the centre of France, surrendered towards the end of October. But, when the
Court returned to Paris in November, Mazarin still saw work to be done.
While the Court was before Bordeaux, the Spaniards under Turenne had
advanced into Champagne, captured Rethel and Château Porcien with other places,
and defeated Hocquincourt near Fismes (August 26). This advance had terrified
Paris, and necessitated the removal of the Princes to Marcoussis, a castle to the
south-west of Paris near Limours. Mazarin was anxious to restore his prestige
by recovering the lost places; and, after patching up an accord with Orleans
and removing the Princes to Havre for greater security, he set out in December,
and successfully accomplished his task, defeating Turenne. But, while he was
away, a conspiracy that had long been preparing gained strength.
Mazarin had found his allies of the Fronde exacting. The nomination as
Cardinal, which Retz had demanded, he thought it impolitic to concede. During
his absence the Coadjutor had won more and more influence over the Duke of
Orleans, and now saw his way by an alliance with the imprisoned Princes to
clear Mazarin from his path to power. This alliance had been prepared by the
Princess Palatine, and involved the exile of Mazarin, the liberation of the
Princes, the post of Chief Minister for Châteauneuf, and the marriage of Conti
to Mademoiselle de Chevreuse; it was not, however, concluded till the end of January.
In December a petition for the release of the Princes was presented to the Parlement, who proceeded to consider the
question. Just before Mazarin’s return de Retz declared for liberation; and
during the whole of January the Chief Minister, deprived of the Queen’s
effective aid by her illness, maintained an unequal fight to prevent the union
of his enemies. On February 1 Retz announced to the Parlement that Orleans had decided for the release, which was voted
a few days later, together with a demand that Mazarin should be dismissed. On
the night of February 6-7, 1651, Mazarin quitted Paris, leaving the Queen to
extricate herself and protect his interests. But she was detained by force, and
became practically a prisoner in the hands of the Fronde. In vain Mazarin tried
to win credit by releasing the Princes from prison (February 13). For the
moment the game was up, and the Minister fled through Picardy and Lorraine to
Bouillon, and thence to Brühl, in the diocese of Cologne.
The alliance of the two sections of the Fronde did not last long.
Mazarin from his place of exile corresponded constantly with the Queen through
Lionne, Servien, and Le Tellier; and his friends, though for a time he thought
otherwise, served him well. The elements of discord were skillfully utilized.
The nobility and clergy assembled at Paris and demanded a meeting of the
Estates General, a proposal distasteful to the Parlement. It was found necessary to break up the assembly of the
nobles after promising a meeting of the Estates when the King should have
attained his majority. The Parlement demanded that all Cardinals should be excluded from the King’s Council, as
owing allegiance to a foreign Power. Both Châteauneuf and Retz, as aspirants to
that dignity, were menaced by this decision. The pretensions of Condé were
equally incompatible with their ambitions. The dismissal of Chateauneuf and the
substitution of Chavigny seemed to show that Condé had abandoned Retz, and was
determined to reign alone. The announcement made the same day (April 15), of
the rupture of the marriage between Conti and Mademoiselle de Chevreuse proved
at least that he cared little if this was believed, or what other persons he
might offend. Orleans was thereby alienated; and the Princess Palatine, whose
plighted word had been treated as null and void, was bitterly aggrieved.
The supremacy of Condé, though temporary, was for the moment complete.
He held Burgundy and Berry besides his strong places in Bar. His brother was
Governor of Champagne. His friends were installed in the governments of
Limousin, Saintonge, Angoumois, Anjou, and Bearn. The Condé regiments were united
in the north under Tavannes. He now obtained Guienne in exchange for Burgundy,
and claimed Provence instead of Champagne for his brother, two provinces chosen
as discontented and accessible to Spanish naval aid. It was indeed desirable to
remove Épernon and d'Alais; but, prompted by Mazarin, the Court resisted Condé’s
demands. Retz approached the Queen’s advisers to urge the murder or arrest of
Condé. Condé was warned; in July he left Paris and exacted as the condition of
his return the dismissal of Le Tellier, Servien, and Lionne, which was
reluctantly conceded; but Chavigny at the same time was removed from office.
The Parlement intervened (August) to
reconcile Condé and the Queen, but to no purpose. In despair she turned to
Retz. A new Ministry was formed. Châteauneuf was restored. The seals were given
to Matthieu Molé, the intrepid and independent First President of the
Parlement; the finances to La Vieuville, as a reward for the services of his
friend, the Princess Palatine, who was drawing closer and closer to the Queen.
Retz was to have the Cardinal’s hat; and Mademoiselle de Chevreuse was to marry
the young Mancini. The new alliance had only one bond of union— hatred of
Conde, which reconciled for the moment the incompatible interests of Retz,
Chateauneuf, and Mazarin. Each party to the treaty had the firm intention of
duping the others; and Retz did well to obtain an effective nomination
(September 21) and to take his own measures at Rome to hasten the action of the
Holy Father, while the unstable coalition lasted.
Secure for the moment, of Retz and his friends, the Queen summoned on
August 17 a great meeting of Princes, officials, the sovereign Courts, and the
municipal authorities of Paris, and laid before them a formal indictment of
Condé. Condé and Retz appeared in the Parlement,
each supported by an armed force; and on August 21 a fracas occurred, in which
Ret narrowly escaped murder at the hands of La Rochefoucauld. The Court seemed
to hesitate; immediately before the ceremony of the King’s majority (September
7) the charges against Condé were withdrawn, and the banishment of Mazarin was
confirmed. Rut Condé’s patience was exhausted; he left Paris on September 6,
and, backed by Orleans, demanded that the establishment of the new Ministry
should be deferred. When this was refused, he moved southward. On September 15
he was at Montrond, with his sister, Nemours, La Rochefoucauld, and a few other
friends; and there they persuaded him to declare for open war. Conti joined him
later.
Rebellion of Condé.
Condé relied upon Bordeaux, where the Parlement and above all the populace were still in open revolt; on
the fleet at Brouage and La Rochelle, where Du Laugnon was Governor; on Marsin,
who had been replaced a command of the army in Catalonia; on Tavannes, who was
at the head of the Condé troops with the army of Picardy; on Stenay, one or two
places in Burgundy, and the stronghold of Montrond in the Bourbonnais; on the influence
of La Rochefoucauld in Poitou, of Rohan in Anjou, of La Force in Perigord; and
above all on Turenne. He seized the public money in the districts where he was
master, and levied the tallies.
Marsin brought him four regiments from Catalonia; the rest were loyal. Tavannes
collected the Condé regiments at Stenay. Orleans controlled a certain number of
troops and might be won. But Torenne and his brother refused to fight against
the King, now that there was no longer any Regency; and Condé was driven to
make a disastrous alliance with Spain. In return for the promise of men and money
he engaged himself to make no peace in which Spain should not be included. To “faith
unfaithful falsely true”, he was held in bondage by this treaty; he could in
consequence offer no terms which the Court could accept. His Spanish allies
supported him when failure seemed imminent and withdrew their aid when complete
success appeared possible; they loyally stood out for his complete restitution
in 1659; but until peace was signed they used him as an instrument to weaken
France; they did not desire to see him in power.
In the south during the winter Condé was steadily forced back by
Saint-Luc and Harcourt. The Spanish fleet appeared in the Gironde and occupied
Bourg. Negotiations were opened with Cromwell; and an extraordinary scheme for
a republican government of France was drawn up under Condé’s name. Meanwhile
Mazarin had been recalled; and on January 29, 1652, he reached Poitiers with a
little army raised in Liege. The news of his return decided Orleans to join the
rebels (January 21), but this defection was more than counterbalanced by the
arrival at Court of Turenne and Bouillon (February 2); the duchies of Chateau
Thierry and Albret, the counties of Evreux and Auvergne, were the compensation
for Sedan, and the price of their adhesion. In February the rebels were driven
from Anjou, and Angers fell, in spite of Beaufort;, who was commanding Gaston’s
troops. In March Tavannes joined him with the Condé regiments from the north,
and Nemours with a Spanish contingent. But Beaufort was incompetent and
quarrelsome; the royal advance continued and the city of Orleans was only saved
by the picturesque intervention of Mademoiselle de Montpensier (March 25). In
these circumstances Condé, who had been struggling hopelessly in the south, decided
to take command on the Loire; he left Agen with a few followers (March 23), and
joined his army at Lorris on April 1. A week later he surprised that portion of
the royal army which was commanded by Hocquincourt at Bleneau, and drove it in
rout, capturing 1500 men. The Court at Gien was in danger but was saved by the
skill of Turenne. But, instead of following up his success, Condé repaired to
Paris, where he remained for some months; perhaps entangled by the Duchess of
Chatillon, but also retained by the necessity of watching Orleans and de Retz.
Turenne reorganized the royal army, defeated the rebel army at Étampes
(May 4), and laid siege to that town. To save it, the Spaniards detached the
Duke of Lorraine; he crossed France, plundering and burning; but, unwilling to
risk the army which was his sole possession, he contented himself with
persuading Turenne to raise the siege, and, when threatened by that general,
returned to the Netherlands. After his retreat Turenne occupied Saint-Denis
with 12,000 men, menacing Condé’s army of 6000 at Saint-Cloud. Wishing to reach
a safer position at Charenton Condé asked leave to pass through Paris, which
was refused, and, while making for this point by a detour to the south, he was
caught by Turenne at Saint-Antoine and forced to fight with his back to the
gate among the houses of the suburb. After a fierce struggle, in which Turenne’s
forces were roughly handled, artillery came up and Condé’s defeat seemed in
view, when Mademoiselle de Montpensier extorted from her father permission to
unbar the gates and the Bastille opened fire on the royal troops. The remains
of Condé’s army took refuge in the city (July 2).
A rising had already taken place in Paris on June 25, in which some
officers of the Parlement suffered
violence. On July 4 the mob attacked the Hôtel de Ville, wither an assembly
representative of all the interests of Paris had been called; some thirty of
the deputies were killed or wounded and the Town Hall was burnt. The enemies of
Condé alleged that he had instigated this outrage in order to force the city to
join his cause. Amid growing dissatisfaction, on July 20, a provisional Government
was established by authority of the Parlement,
with Orleans as Lieutenant-Governor. Condé as Commander in-Chief, Beaufort as
Governor of Paris, and Broussel as Provost of the Merchants. But this was the
last effort of the Fronde. Money could not be raised. The army was melting.
Disunion prevailed. Beaufort killed Nemours in a duel. On August 6, by royal
decree, the Parlement was transferred
to Pontoise, and the rival assembly there established steadily grew in
authority and numbers. To facilitate an accommodation, Mazarin once more
withdrew from France (August 19) and a general amnesty was offered.
Return of Louis and Mazarin.
On August 9 Vendome had defeated Du Daugnon and the Spanish fleet off Ré.
Montrond capitulated early in September. The agents of Mazarin stimulated the
Parisian populace against the Fronde, which was becoming more and more unpopular.
The Spanish Government determined to make one more effort to support the
faction; and early in September the Duke of Lorraine and Ulric of Wurttemberg,
with 8000 men, set forth for Paris. Turenne met them at Villeneuve-Saint-George
and held them in check all through September. Retz and Châteauneuf opened
abortive negotiations with the Court; even Chavigny was willing to abandon Condé,
but, crushed by his master’s wrath on hearing of his treachery, he fell ill and
died (October, 1652). Towards the end of September the change of feeling in the
capital became unmistakable; Broussel resigned; and the King was invited to
come to Paris. The supply of provisions to the Duke of Lorraine was stopped. He
was forced to retire, and Condé followed him. Beaufort resigned, and Gaston
announced his intention of retiring to Blois. On October 21 the King entered
Paris, and the Government was re-established. Beaufort, Chateauneuf, Rohan,
Fontrailles, with ten councillors of the Parlement,
and the Duchesses of Chatillon and Montbazon, were exiled; and an edict was
registered forbidding the Parlement to concern itself with questions of State, administration, or finance. Orleans
retired to Blois and ordered his troops to withdraw from Condé’s army. Retz was
offered a mission to Rome; on his refusal he was arrested (December 19). He
escaped in 1654 and went to Rome, where for a time the Pope supported him
against Mazarin, who wished him to resign his claims to the archbishopric of
Paris. Later, he was forced to leave Rome and became a wanderer. He resigned
his see in 1662, and was permitted to live in France, but took no further part
in affairs.
Mazarin’s return was delayed by the necessity of resisting Condé in Champagne,
where he had firmly established himself. After recovering Chateau Porcien and
some less important places, the Cardinal left Rethel and Sainte-Menehould in
the hands of the enemy, and in February, 1653, returned to Paris, where he
resumed all and more than all of his former power. Of his enemies and rivals,
Condé was a proclaimed traitor and commander-in-chief of the forces of Spain,
Retz a prisoner, Bouillon, Chavigny, and La Vieuville dead; Châteauneuf died in
this year. The Parlement was humbled.
Turenne was the King’s servant, and the King identified Mazarin’s authority
with his own. Only a few outlying troubles remained to be remedied. Bordeaux,
where Conti and Madame de Longueville had ruled by the aid of a violent
faction, called the Ormée, had to be
reduced to obedience. Harcourt, as Governor of Alsace, had taken advantage of
the disorder to seize Breisach for himself and made overtures to Spain and
Lorraine. Du Daugnon still held Brouage, and one or two other leaders were in
possession of governments which they could not be permitted to retain.
Mercoeur, the new-Governor of Provence, needed aid to establish his authority
against the Comte d'Alais, now Duke of Angouleme, who had joined the party of
Condé. Épernon, who had been assigned to Burgundy in place of Condi, had to
reduce Dijon and Bellegarde. Bordeaux made terms on July 31, 1653. Conti
received his pardon; Madame de Longueville returned to her husband and after
his death entered a Carmelite convent; the Princess of Condé followed the
Prince to Flanders; Marsin took refuge in Spain. Guienne was restored to the
Duke of Épernon. When Harcourt came to terms and surrendered Breisach (March,
1654) the Fronde was ended.
End of the war between Spain and France.
During the troubles France had steadily lost ground in Italy and the
Netherlands. In 1849 Ypres was taken by the Spaniards, and Modena made peace; in
the following year Piombino and Porto-Longone fell. In 1651 Barcelona was
captured, and on the Flemish frontier Fumes and Bergues-Saint-Vinox. In 1652
France was forced to abandon Gravelines, Mardyk, and Dunkirk, while Casale surrendered
and was assigned to the Duke of Mantua as the price of his adhesion to Spain.
From 1653 onwards the tide turned, slowly at first, afterwards more rapidly.
The campaigns in which the genius of Condé was matched against the high ability
of Turenne are full of interest to the military historian, but only the general
results can be indicated here. Turenne had the advantage of the ungrudging
support of his Government and that of undivided authority; and, though France
was seriously embarrassed, her resources were yet superior to those of Spain.
Condé on the other hand was hampered by the jealousy of his colleagues, and
sometimes by the timidity of a superior. Moreover, owing to the clause in his
treaty which gave him the sovereignty of any conquests he might make on the
soil of France, the Spanish Government stood to lose by any reverse and not to
gain by his success. Hence, in spite of some brilliant strokes, the fortune of
war was on the whole adverse to him and his allies.
In 1653-4 he was driven from Rethel and Sainte-Menehould in Champagne
and from Stenay and Clermont in Lorraine, and, defeated before Arras, had the
poor consolation of making a skillful retreat. Mazarin’s intrigues with Lorraine
led the Spanish Government to arrest Duke Charles (February, 1654); and his
troops took service under the Ring of France in the following year. In 1655
Landrecies and other places were taken by the French, and treasonable
intentions of Hocquincourt to surrender Peronne and Ham were discovered and
frustrated. In 1656 negotiations for peace were opened, but the Spanish demands
on behalf of Condé proved an invincible obstacle; Turenne’s defeat before
Valenciennes (July 16, 1656) stiffened the resolution of Spain; and Mazarin
broke off the discussion. Further successes were needed before he could obtain
such terms as he desired. The Cardinal had already more than once approached
Cromwell with a view to joint action against Spain; he recognized the
Commonwealth in 1652; the peace of April, 1654, between the English and the
Dutch seemed to offer hopes; but the Vaudois and other misunderstandings
ensued, and the Treaty of Westminster (October 24, 1655), which established
friendly relations between England and France, and led to the expulsion of
Charles II and the Duke of York from French dominions, was only a step in the
right direction. At length in March, 1657, by the Treaty of Paris, it was
agreed that the two Governments should together undertake the conquest of
Mardyk, Dunkirk, and Gravelines. Operations began in May, and Mardyk fell in
September. The French arms, however, suffered a reverse before Cambrai (May
30); and it was not till 1658 that the allies got effectively to work. Dunkirk
was invested (May); Don Juan of Austria and Condé were defeated at the battle
of the Dunes by Turenne, whose force included 6000 English (June 14); the city
surrendered a fortnight later and, with Mardyk, was handed over to England as
agreed. Bergues-Saint-Vinox, Dixmuyden, and Fumes were then recovered in rapid
succession. On July 29 Gravelines was invested, and a month later it
surrendered. The conquests of Oudenarde, Menin, and Ypres followed.
The Peace of the Pyrenees.
In the same year Mazarin had succeeded in extorting from the new Emperor,
Leopold, before his election, a promise to cease his clandestine support of
Spain, and had joined the League which was formed to maintain the independence
of the Princes of the Empire as secured by the Treaty of Westphalia. Deprived
of the assistance which the Austrian House had been supplying, the position of
Spain was becoming more and more desperate. A proposal to marry Louis to the
daughter of the Duke of Savoy was perhaps intended as a lure; at any rate
towards the end of 1658 Spain offered peace and the Infanta Maria Teresa. An
armistice was concluded in May, 1659; but the Infatuation of Louis for Marie
Mancini, one of the Cardinal’s nieces, threatened to ruin the plan. This
obstacle was, however, removed, and negotiations proceeded with goodwill on
both sides from August to November, when the Treaty of the Pyrenees was signed.
France retained Gravelines but surrendered all her other Flemish conquests
except Bourbourg and Saint-Venant. Between Bourbourg and Saint-Venant Spain
kept Saint-Omer and Aire, but abandoned the rest of Artois. In Hainault France
acquired Landrecies and Le Quesnoy: between Sambre and Meuse, Avesnes, Philippeville,
and Marienbourg: in Luxemburg, Montmedy, Damvillers, and Thionville. The county
of Charolais and a few French conquests in Franche Comté were given back to Spain.
The Spanish King resigned all his rights in Alsace. The last forts in Catalonia
were evacuated by France; and the Pyrenees became the frontier between France
and Spain on this side. The King of France promised to give no aid to Portugal;
the Dukes of Savoy and Modena were to be restored to the positions which they
held before the war. To Condé the possession of all his rights was secured,
together with his office of Grand Maître,
and his government of Burgundy. In return he ceded his remaining fortresses,
Rocroi, Le Catelet, Linchamp, to Louis XIV. Maria Teresa abjured all rights in
the succession to the Spanish Crown; but a clause stipulating the payment of
her dowry as a condition of this renunciation left a loophole for dispute
hereafter. The peace contained clauses in favour of the Duke of Lorraine: but
he refused the terms offered, and made his own peace in February, 1661. Bar was
then restored to him on condition of homage: France received Moyenvic,
Clermont, Jametz, Stenay, Sierck, Pfalzburg, Saarburg. The fortifications of
Nancy were razed, and France retained the right of passage through Lorraine
from Metz to Alsace. On these hard conditions his duchy was restored to him.
The last years of Mazarin saw other questions settled. The restoration
of Charles II in 1660 took place without much assistance from France; Hyde’s
party, then in favour with the English King, resented Mazarin’s caution, maliciously
advertised such surreptitious aid as he provided, and did their best to
counteract the influence of Henrietta Maria. In 1660 Gaston of Orleans died,
Louis visited, and finally pacified Provence; and his marriage was celebrated
at Fuenterrabia (June). The rash enterprises of Sweden, which Mazarin had
viewed with alarm, were terminated by the death of Charles Gustavus; and peace
was restored in the north-east of Europe by the Treaties of Oliva (May 3, 1660)
and Copenhagen (June 6, 1660) under the influence of France. Henrietta of
England was married in March, 1661, to the Duke of Orleans, brother of the French
King; and France set on foot the scheme for the marriage of Charles II with the
Portuguese Princess, Catharine of Braganza. When Mazarin died (March 9, 1661)
he might claim that he left all in order, except the administration and the
finances of France.
Even before the Fronde, war had ravaged the frontier provinces, and
taxation had devastated the interior of France; Lorraine, especially, was a
desert. In 1646 it is said that 23.000 persons were in prison for failure to
pay the tailles. The gabelle furnished a third of the
convicts. Troops protected the tax-collector, and the usurers gave him his
orders. In January, 1048, Omer Talon said, “The country has been ruined for ten
years”; and his testimony is supported by the sober judgment of Matthieu Molé. The
Fronde brought war and the pillage of unpaid troops to almost every part of
France. The environs of Paris and Bordeaux suffered most, but few regions
escaped, except perhaps Britanny, the Lyonnais, and Dauphiné, on which the
taxes fell with added weight. The Croats and other horsemen under Johann von
Werth, the mercenaries of Charles of Lorraine, made destruction a fine art; but
even among French troops discipline was impossible without pay. The charity of
Saint-Vincent de Paul and of the votaries of Port Royal, hardly touched the
fringe of the distress, which'continued long after the Fronde had ceased. The
Mediterranean was given up to pirates; plague followed on famine; hard winters
and inundations aggravated the misery; and 1658 and 1660 were years of more
than usual scarcity. The cessation of civil war revived the rule of the
usurers.
Mazarin owed much to the Fouquets. Basile Fouquet (the Abbe) was his chief
of secret police, both during and after the Fronde. Nicolas was useful in the Parlement as procureur-general. Their services were rewarded by the installment
of Nicolas at the head of the finances in 1653. Servien, nominally his
colleague, became a cipher. Fouquet, charged with the receipt of revenue, had
funds to meet such expenditure as he favoured, and none when payment did not
suit his purpose. His influence with the financiers, in whose illicit gains he
shared, made him useful to Mazarin, who shut his eyes to his defalcations, and
perhaps had a part of his gains. The enormous fortune (thirty millions) left by
Mazarin must have been almost entirely accumulated after the Fronde. Fouquet
rendered no exact account of receipts, and bought up old claims at a low
figure, which he then paid in full. On the death of Servien (1059), Jean-Baptiste
Colbert, who managed Mazarin’s private fortune, denounced Fouquet’s
transactions to his master, but Mazarin contented himself with a warning. Fouquet
bought everyone who was worth buying. The money, which he made by fraud, he
spent like a prince. Of men of letters he was the magnificent patron. At the
death of Mazarin he was the most powerful man in France, and prepared, if
necessary, to assert his power by civil war. The story of his fall must be
reserved for a later volume.
It is said that Mazarin on his death-bed left Colbert as a legacy to his
master, with the advice to rule in person and without a Chief Minister, two
gifts that were more valuable than all the Cardinal’s fortune. Both Richelieu
and Mazarin possessed transcendent gifts, but the task of universal government
must always be beyond one man’s power, especially when complicated by the
necessity of preserving a precarious ascendancy and defeating incessant
intrigue. Neither Minister attempted to establish, perhaps neither dared to
establish, machinery to supplement his individual deficiencies. Only a King can
delegate power without impairing his authority. The inordinate, ambition of
Louis XIV laid arduous burdens on his people; but his personal rule was at
least free from the gravest defects that disfigure the brilliant record of the
two Cardinals.
The personality of Mazarin fills his period no less than that of
Richelieu the previous eighteen years. In both periods all serious public
action in France was directed by or against the Chief Minister. But whereas
Richelieu gave a new form to the polity of France, the energies of Mazarin were
devoted to working out in his own way the formulas provided by his predecessor.
In foreign policy he garnered where Richelieu had sown. At home he perpetuated
Richelieu’s errors and supplied none of his omissions. The second period seems
to repeat the first; only the means of action are different. While Rihelieu
relied mainly on force for the accomplishment of his ends, Mazarin trusted to
subtlety, adroitness, diplomacy, and tact. Forces which Richelieu would have
crushed, at the risk of perishing in the attempt, Mazarin allowed to grow and
work till they became dangerous; he then eluded, diverted, managed them, until
their energy was exhausted. The brilliant victories of France, and the
disorders of the Fronde, may alike be attributed to this more elastic policy;
but in the result Mazarin, though always the central point of all observation,
seems rather to follow than to direct the course of affairs. By adopting in
every crisis the less detrimental of alternatives presented, he secured in the
end successes more complete and substantial than his predecessor; but he added
no new idea to the repertory of statesmen; the ends which he reached had
already been indicated before his coming, a consummate opportunist, he left no distinctive
and individual mark on the State or policy of France.
|