CHAPTER XXII.
SPAIN AND SPANISH ITALY UNDER PHILIP III AND IV.
After forty-five years of wasting warfare against the Dutch Protestants
Spain had been forced by sheer exhaustion to accept the humiliating truce of
1609, by which for twelve years the principles upon which she had staked her
position as a great Power were to remain in abeyance. To all men unblinded by
the spiritual pride that had dazzled Spaniards to their undoing, it was a
confession that the nation was unequal to the mighty mission bequeathed to it
by the Emperor: that of imposing religious unity upon Christendom under the
hegemony of the House of Habsburg. Misery and famine stalked unhindered through
the land, whilst the luxurious and the idle squandered lavishly the national
resources wrung by corruption from a ruined people. All classes but the poorest
evaded their national obligations, and sought to justify the hollow boast of
boundless public wealth by endeavoring to live without work upon the private
plunder of the State. The high hopes fostered in the first years of the reign
by the golden showers of Lerma’s prodigality had been succeeded by a cynical
desire to enjoy the passing hour whilst it lasted, and to prolong it as much as
possible by insisting more loudly than ever upon the invincible power of Spain
and the inexhaustible wealth of her King. But for this determination of the
Court and the people as a whole to shut their eyes obstinately to facts, and to
treat the great task in which they had failed as being still incumbent upon
them, a policy of retrenchment and close concentration of national effort upon
domestic amelioration might yet have been adopted and have saved Spain from the
slough of ruin into which she was sinking. But the spirit of pompous
exaggeration and arrogance had entered into the heart of the nation, and,
exhausted though the country was, not a jot of the proud claims of old was
abated. The King, who was really a foolish trifler, spending all his time in
alternate prayer and pastime, was “the greatest prince that the world ever saw”;
and Lerma, whose abilities hardly reached mediocrity, was adulated like a
demigod. Each Castilian Cortes as it met after the usual three years’ interval
was told in the speech from the throne that supplies must be voted bountifully,
in order that the King might “defend our holy Catholic faith and secure
obedience to the Roman Church” and the deputies, bribed to a man with pensions,
places, and grants, broke their self-denying oath, and in return for their
personal aggrandizement voted whatever they were asked, while their formal
petitions for the relief of the suffering people were ignominiously rejected or
contemptuously disregarded by the King. The expulsion of the Moriscos, though
economically disastrous, raised to a higher pitch than ever the self-satisfied
vanity of the majority of Spaniards; and a chorus of praise convinced Lerma and
the King that they were heaven-sent statesmen in thus utilizing the first year
of relief from foreign war afforded by the truce by pursuing Spain’s sacred
mission of Christian unification within the borders of the realm itself.
While Spaniards were living in this fool’s paradise and accepting the
semblance for the reality of things, their rivals with clearer vision were
preparing to challenge claims that appeared incapable of enforcement. Archduke
Leopold of Austria, on behalf of the Emperor, had in August, 1609, obtained
possession by strategy of the fortress of Jülich. Henry IV had warned Archduke
Albert in Flanders that any such aggression would be resented by him, but
depending, as usual, upon ultimate support from Spain, the Emperor Rudolf
disregarded the warning. The heroics of Lerma and the patent weakness of Spain,
combined with this and other public and private sources of irritation,
convinced Henry IV and Sully that the time had come for dealing a heavy blow
for the liberation of religion in Europe from Habsburg dictation. The
Hollanders were as ready as Henry to resent the Catholic occupation of Jülich-Cleves,
and Protestant England sympathized with them. Charles Emmanuel, Duke of Savoy,
that unquiet son-in-law of Philip II, chafed under the yoke of his Spanish
kinsman, who had used him for the ends of Spain alone, and had cheated him out
of the guerdon for which he had hoped in Italy. But for the puling Philip III,
Charles Emmanuel’s own son would have been heir to the Spanish Crown, and
hitter resentment filled the Savoyard’s heart against those who had made him a
mere catspaw of Spanish ambition. Probably the only confederate who was really
in earnest about fighting besides Henry himself was Charles Emmanuel, who hoped
to grasp Lombardy with the title of King: but when the French forces stood
ready to cross respectively the Rhine and the Pyrenees, and to help Savoy to
sweep the Spaniards from Lombardy, the knife of Ravaillac changed the whole
current of European history (May 15, 1610).
There is no proof whatever that the mad fanatic who stabbed the King of
France was paid or inspired by Spain; but his crime prevented what might have
been the inevitable triumph of the cause of religious independence in Europe,
and gave to the Spanish nation, whose corrupt and decadent condition we have
reviewed, another half-centurv of fallacious importance in the councils of
Europe The second marriage of Henry IV with a daughter of the Tuscan House of
Medici had been a triumph for the Catholic cause; and during the last weeks of
the King’s life he and his wife had pursued opposite courses in their foreign
policy. Iñigo de Cardenas, the Spanish ambassador in France, who had arrogantly
quarreled with Henry, and had dared to commit a severe assault on the Venetian
ambassador before the King’s eyes in Notre Dame itself, was in close
relationship with Mary de' Medici, and was planning with her the marriage of
the Dauphin Louis with the daughter of Philip III. Whether Henry’s permission
for such an alliance would ever have been obtained is doubtful, though he is
said to have smiled upon the idea once; but Ravaillac’s deed solved all
difficulties. The new Queen Regent, Mary de' Medici, had no sympathy with
Protestants, and shared none of her husband’s great ambitions. Spain in her
eyes was still the overwhelming Power in Christendom, and she was about to
gather around her tricky Italians inn Spanish pay instead of the sagacious
Sully and the experienced Jeannin. To her, an alliance with Spain, secured by a
double marriage, seemed to offer safety for her son’s throne—which was
naturally all she cared for—while to Philip it promised relief from French
opposition in Italy. In the circumstances, therefore, there was no difficulty in
arranging a marriage between Louis XIII and Philip’s elder daughter Doña Anna, a
backward delicate girl of eleven, and another between the heir of Spam, Philip
Prince of Asturias, whose age was seven, and Elizabeth of Bourbon, the daughter
of Henry IV. Many members of Philip’s Council, with traditional arrogance,
thought a union with children of the ex-Huguenot King beneath the dignity of
Spain; but Savoy was still n arms to attack Lombardy, and when the marriage
treaties were baited with a pledge that neither France nor Span should ever
again ally with the House of the turbulent Duke, Philip’s and Lerma’s
hesitation was overcome; and, with a prodigality of splendour matching the
reputed, rather than the real, wealth of Spain, the marriage treaty was
ratified by the Duke of Mayenne in Madrid in August, 1612.
A close friendship between France and Spain always brought uneasiness to
England, and directly after Henry IV’s death, when the Franco-Spanish marriages
were known to be in contemplation, James I instructed Digby to offer Henry,
Prince of Wales, as a husband for the Infanta Anna. The suggestion was coldly
declined by Lerma. A little later James tried his hand again, and begged
Philip’s second daughter Maria for his son, with a similar result, since the
Prince of Wales would not openly accept the Catholic faith. Lerma and Philip
thus once again found themselves courted and desired by both England and
France; and the old dreams of universal Spanish predominance were revived. The
truce with Holland brought to the Spaniards freedom from the depredations of
their enemies upon the ocean, and the trade of Spain began somewhat to revive.
The Barbary arid Turkish corsairs that thronged the Mediterranean were checked
by the Spanish galleys from Sicily: and the coasts of Spain, now freed from the
Morisco abettors of the pirates, gained in security and prosperity. For the
first time for many years the suffering country seemed able to enjoy some
degree of material comfort, though still burdened with a war in Italy provoked
by the seizure of Montferrat by Savoy (1613).
Charles Emmanuel was at that period the firebrand that threatened to consume
the whole edifice of Spain’s new-born condition of relief. Now with feigned
submission, now with insolent defiance, he kept his kinsman Philip disturbed
and suspicious both with Spanish officers and with foreign Powers. On the
occasion of the death of his son-in-law Francis IV, Duke of Mantua and
Montferrat, he had taken possession of the latter duchy, having been promised
aid by Spain’s persistent enemy, the Republic of Venice. He was soon forced to
evacuate Montferrat ; but he now, calling himself the liberator of Italy, invaded
Lombardy, and was, in 1615, thoroughly beaten by the Spanish Viceroy, the
Marquis de Hinojosa. But though overpowered, Charles Emmanuel was more than a
match for Hinojosa, and cajoled the latter into a treaty of peace, guaranteed
by France at the instigation of Venice. In Madrid this peace, which in effect
left Charles Emmanuel in possession of Asti and other conquered places, was at
once repudiated by Philip’s Government; and Hinojosa was replaced as Viceroy of
Milan by Don Pedro de Toledo, with orders to crush the Duke at any cost.
Protected and aided on the French side by the Huguenot Marshal Lesdiguières
even against the orders of Mary de' Medici, Savoy managed to hold out month
after month; but at length Don Pedro struck him a crippling blow at Vercelli,
and in 1617 a peace was hastily patched up at Pavia, by which the conquests on
each side were to be given up, and Montferrat. restored to Francis’ brother,
Ferdinand, Duke of Mantua. This lingering little war, of scant importance in
itself, is mentioned here in some detail, not for its own sake, but because it
resulted in an extraordinary intrigue which moved Spain profoundly, and to
which reference will be made later.
Philip III and Lerma.
Thanks to the policy of Mary de' Medici and the timorous character of James
I, now dominated by Diego Sarmiento de Acuña, afterwards Count Gondomar, Spain
during these few years bulked in the eyes of foreign nations almost as
imposingly as in the days of her real power; though the canker of corruption
was eating ever deeper into the heart of the nation. The King was content with
the bare shadow of sovereignty. “Lerma and the woods are King” was a common
saying of the time: for when Philip was not hunting or dancing he was in
ecstasies of self-abasing devotion; and Lerma, with his almost equally powerful
lieutenant, Rodrigo Calderon, Marquis de Siete Iglesias, governed the country
with none to say them nay. The Queen, Margaret of Austria, died in childbirth
in 1611; and, though Philip was said to be heartbroken at his loss, he was kept
so busy hunting on Lerma’s estate that he could not afford time even to attend
his wife’s funeral. He was still a young man, but his health was already
failing, and his bouts of gaiety were more frequently than before interrupted
by spells of gloomy religious apprehension. His father and grandfather had
insistently wrung from one Pope after another independent royal control over
the temporalities of the Spanish Church: Philip’s demands from the Pontiffs
were of a different description; the beatification of saintly Spaniards, the
enforcement of the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, the gift of holy
relics, and for himself—at the age of thirty-four—a pledge that in the year of
his death every altar throughout the world at which mass was said for his soul
should be specially privileged; he promising, on his part, that for the rest of
his life, with God’s help, he would never again commit mortal sin.
Such a king Lerma well might rule by dexterous flattery and fear, for
Philip had no idea of the value of money or the merest elements of the science
of government, and Lerma made things comfortable for him. But there were others
who were not so easily managed. The whole tendency of society was to partake,
with as little labour as possible, of the golden shower which was supposed to
fall from the inexhaustible reservoirs of the State. How the money was obtained
or who worked for it those who enjoyed it neither knew nor cared. The King was
the richest monarch in the world, and those who so constantly reiterated this
statement proved it, not by the figures of his actual receipts, but by the
amount of money which he was reputed to spend. The vast amounts supposed to be
received were indeed, to a large extent intercepted by corrupt officials; the
revenues from nearly all sources were pledged two on three years deep to
Genoese or German usurers at extortionate interest; and for years Lerma had to
depend for ready money mainly upon the sales of grants from the Crown lands.
While the noble class remained exempt from regular taxation, the revenue was
thus progressively depleted, and owing to the constant enrichment of monastic
institutions by grants and legacies of land tied up thenceforth in perpetual
mortmain and exempt from national burdens, vast tracts of land all over Spain,
besides being deprived of the incentive of private ownership, were condemned to
unproductiveness or careless cultivation. The direct tax, or rather tribute,
voted triennially by the Cortes of Castile remained at the moderate figure of
400,000 ducats a year; but the constant new needs were met by progressive
increase of the alcabalas and “millions”,
or excise upon food. The former impost, which had been originally a 10 per
cent, tax upon every sale effected, was gradually forced up during the next
reign to an equivalent of 14 per cent.; and the “millions” excise grew from
2.000,000 ducats a year to nearly 3,000.000. No possible system of taxation
could be devised more destructive to industry of all sorts than this. The cost
of living was increased by the “millions”, while the alcabalas, together with the local and provincial octrois and
tolls, practically confined the sale of commodities to the place of production.
Ten years before the period now under review (1614-20), the Venetian ambassador
in Spain had reported that, “seeing the state at which affairs have arrived,
the increasing discontent of subjects caused by bad government, the servitude
in which the King lives, the intolerable burden of taxes, and other reasons
indicate that if this system continues it will produce the effects usual in
such cases, with greater detriment to the King than either France or Italy
could inflict upon him”. The national resources had somewhat increased since
Contarini thus wrote; but the locusts that battened upon them had grown to a
far greater extent. Every functionary, from Lerma downward, was surrounded by a
swarm of parasites and hangers-on of parasites, down to the ragged mendicants who
lived in loathsome plenty upon the perquisites of a procurer’s scullions.
The fall of Lerma.
Intrigue and envy were inevitable in such a Court as this. When Lerma
had centred in himself and his relatives and dependents patronage, honors, and
plunder almost beyond compute, and had even obtained formal grants of money for
himself from the Cortes of Catalonia and Valencia, it is not surprising that
those who were outside the circle of his bounty should have cast jealous eyes
upon the wealth they could not reach. Lerma’s old friend, Rodrigo Calderon, was
the first to be attacked, for he was an upstart and had no great family behind
him. The friars surrounding the Queen had made the first move some years
before, and this was soon seconded by the Kings confessor; but Calderon,
insolent and obnoxious as he was, was not the quarry they really aimed it. He
held his own for a long time, by the aid of Lerma, but at last was accused of
having killed a man. It was a small thing indeed for which to bring a proud favorite
low, but the churchmen made the most of it to Philip in his morbid moods; and
Calderon was first dismissed, and afterwards imprisoned. The stories of his
tremendous booty ran from mouth to mouth, ever increasing; and, as the
conspirators intended, people began to ask: if the servant had plundered all
this treasure from the King, what had the master stolen? Lerma had kept his
son, the Duke of Uceda, near him at Court, believing that he, at all events,
would be faithful to his father. Uceda was young, good-looking, and plausible,
without either scruples or ability; but he was served by a young noble of far
greater talent and boundless ambition, who had his private grudge against
Philip’s present advisers. This was Gaspar de Guzman, Count of Olivares, whose father
had been the trusted ambassador and councillor of Philip IT. Guzman's claim to
a grandeeship had been rejected, and he had carefully laid his plans to capture
for himself the supreme position in the State, whoever might have to fall.
Uceda’s greed and vanity had been worked upon, and, when the blow fell on
Rodrigo Calderon, Lerma recognized that his own son and hair was foremost
amongst, those who were whispering to the King distrust of Calderon’s patron.
Lerma’s sway had been so absolute and so enduring that he hardly took the cabal
against him seriously at first. But he found the King colder and more distant
day by day, though he feigned not to notice it. When it was too late he took
his ungrateful son to task, and warned him that ruin for them all lay in the
course he was pursuing. The Count de Lemos, his clever son-in-law, was brought in
to counteract the treachery of Uceda; but when he, in his turn, indignant at
the coolness of Philip towards Lerma and himself, remonstrated with the King
for his treatment of his old minister, Philip drily told him he might retire
when he pleased. Lerma dreamed for a time of gaining the goodwill of the young
Prince of Asturias; but Olivares had taken care to besiege and capture the
heart of the boy, and the heir of Spain pouted and sulked when his father’s
falling favorite came before him. Father Aliaga, the King’s confessor, a former
creature of Lerma, threw the weight of his influence on the side of Uceda, and
all the friars and nuns who moulded Philip’s thoughts followed his example. When
Calderon had been finally imprisoned and ruined, Lerma understood that the
forces, clerical and lay, against him were too strong to be withstood, and his
last throw was to obtain for himself from the Pope (Paul V) a Cardinal’s hat,
which might place him in a superior ecclesiastical position to his opponents.
The clever move at least enabled him to keep intact his vast fortune—44,000,000
ducats in grants alone, it was said—but in the summer of 1618, while the Court
was at the Escorial, a message was taken to hi, by the Prior, to the effect
that he might go to Lerma or Valladolid, or whithersoever he pleased, but was
to see the King no more. His rule over Spain, which had been absolute for
twenty years, had, from sheer ineptitude and pride, led the nation down the
rapidly increasing slope, upon the brink of which it had stood at the death of
Philip II; and when Lerma fell from power it was not to give place to a
successor of sounder views and clearer judgment, but to enable a fresh crew of
spoilers led by his own undutiful son to complete the ruin which he had begun.
Lerma’s disastrous errors of policy had been mainly fiscal and
economical: but the fallacious pretence of wealth and power maintained by him
had enabled Spain to secure the French marriage treaties and alliance, and to
command the subservience of James I of England. The great triumph of Lerma’s
administration was the pompous exchange on the frontier of the two young brides
who were to cement the national union. The immaturity of the Infanta Anna had
delayed the ceremony from 1618, when it had been due, until late in 1615, and
the poverty of the country was forgotten when the splendid train of Philip III,
with all his children and Court, slowly travelled over the rough roads of
Castile to Burgos, where the marriages were performed by proxy on October 18.
Lerma’s own expenditure on the journey was stated to have reached 400,000
ducats, though he fell ill and remained at Bribiesca, not far beyond Burgos,
Uceda representing him for the rest of the ceremonial. The exchange of brides
took place on the river between Fuenterrabia and Irun on November 9. Impressed
as the spectators were by the solemn stateliness of the occasion, none could
foresee the momentous effects upon both countries, and upon civilization at
large, of these two marriages. Anne of Austria had, it is true, renounced by
deed on the day before her wedding all future claims for herself and her French
descendants to the Spanish succession; but the accession of her grandson to her
ancestors’ throne 85 years later plunged all Europe into prolonged war, revolutionized
the political divisions of the Continent, and gave to Spain its long-lived
Bourbon dynasty.
While Anna made her way to the capital of her husband’s realm, where her
agitated life was to be passed, the beautiful young Elizabeth of Bourbon was
carried through the wet valleys of Guipuzcoa, and the bleak plains beyond, to
Burgos, where her ten year old betrothed awaited her coming. On December 19,
1615, she made her state entrance into Madrid. Riding from the Convent of San
Geronimo, past Lerma’s palace and gardens at the corner of the Prado, through
the Carrera de San Geronimo, the Puerta del Sol, and the Calle Mayor, the
black-eyed Princess in her crimson satin and diamonds, and her great fluted
ruff, charmed the Madrileños with her ready smiles and perfect self-control;
but the sight of the streets through which she passed must have presented to
her a sad contrast with those of Paris that she had left. Lerma had erected a
splendid triumphal arch at the corner of his domain, and the municipality had
done the same at the Town Hall; the streets for a mile were hung with rich
tapestries, there were fountains and statues, pyramids of flowers and
allegorical devices at every corner, and the palaces of the nobles vied with
the churches in their adornments. Yet most of the houses behind this finery
were squalid and gloomy; the roadways were rough and broken and in their usual
condition, indescribably filthy; the few windows that looked upon the streets
were strongly barred like those of prisons, and the frowning fronts of the
houses unhidden by the hangings were neglected and ruinous. Since the
conclusion of the truce Lerma had made some attempt to improve the appearance
of the capital, and to reform its government, but the municipality,
notwithstanding its exemptions and privileges, was itself bankrupt, with all
its revenues deeply pledged to usurers; and crime, vagrancy, and mendicancy
defied all efforts to diminish them. The misery and scarcity were so great in
the very year when all this costly ceremonial was enacted, that, in despair of
earthly aid, the Virgin of Atocha was carried with regal state through the
streets and her intercession implored to save the city from utter destruction
by famine; whilst the money that might have fed the starving citizens was being
squandered by Philip in profitless festivities, and in the building of one more
huge convent, that of the Encarnacion,
to swell the already ruinous number of such foundations in Madrid.
The Spaniards in Italy.
With a central government so weak and corrupt as this, with responsibility
thus evaded by all authority, it was natural that the great personages who,
either by expenditure of vast sums of money, or by favour, obtained one of the
twenty viceroyalties in the gift of the Crown, should during the period of
their office, usually three years, follow their own courses with but little
control from Madrid. It had always been an axiom of the House of Habsburg that
a great Spanish noble might not safely be employed in important central
administrative offices at home, and that as far as possible they should either
hold ceremonial posts about the person of the King, or else be employed abroad.
Philip III had been the first conspicuously to break through this rule, by the
favour he extended to Lerma, with the unhappy results we have seen; but the
minister himself had preserved the tradition, as much as he could, and had
taken care that the more powerful and active of the members of the old
aristocracy were kept as far from the centre as possible, governing and
plundering the King’s possessions abroad. The lame peace effected with the Duke
of Savoy at Pavia in 1617, leaving, as it did, the ambitious Duke unpunished
for his insolence, had caused the deepest indignation in the proud, impatient,
Spanish satraps who lorded it over Italy. Pedro Giron, Duke of Osuna, the most
arrogant of them all had during his viceroyalty of Sicily, which, thanks to the
enormous bribes sent by him to Lerma and Uceda he had exchanged for that of
Naples in 1616, shown extraordinary activity with his galleys from Messina in
harrying the Moslem pirates, and raiding their African strongholds. When the
merchant Republic of Venice, always the covert enemy of Spain and frequently
the friend of the Turk, sided with Savoy, he swore to cripple the Seigniory so
as to make it harmless in the future. He had sent from Naples a strong force to
aid that employed from Milan against Savoy; and during the war he had not only
covered the Adriatic with his galleys, but had obliged the Venetians to abandon
Istria, and to recall their land forces from aiding Charles Emmanuel. Venice
and Spain were not nominally at war, but that mattered little. Philip III
himself encouraged Osuna to damage Venice all he could, “without letting anyone
know that you are doing it with my knowledge, and making believe that you are
acting without orders”. (December, 1616'.)
When the peace was signed early in 1617, Osuna. who aspired to play the
part of a dictator in Italy, was openly scornful of such a conclusion to a war
in which Spain had been to some extent successful. Nor was the Viceroy of Milan,
Pedro de Toledo, Marquis of Francavila, who had been obliged to sign the peace
for want of resources from Spain, better pleased than his colleague; and from
the first day he practically repudiated the conditions to which he had been one
of the contracting parties. With two such magnates, both possessing great armed
forces, and both swayed by the proud traditions of universal Spanish
predominance, continued tranquility in Italy was not to be expected. No sooner had
the peace with Savoy been arranged than Osuna approached the Pope, by means of
his inseparable factotum, Quevedo, and attempted to gain the aid of Rome,
ostensibly against the Turk, but really against the Venetian Seigniory. Paul V
was not an admirer of Osuna, with whom he had had many disputes in the past,
and he refused to be drawn into what he feared looked like a piratical
adventure. But fortitied by the secret knowledge and approval of his King,
Osuna raised his own flag on a fine fleet of galleys, and in pretended defiance
of his sovereign’s orders, attacked the Venetians off Gravosa, and inflicted
tremendous damages upon them. The fact that Osuna’s personal flag was that
under which the battle was fought was afterwards adduced as evidence of his
desire to attain an independent sovereignty. Whatever may have been the case
later, if is certain that both Philip and Lerma knew and approved of this
action of the Viceroy.
The Seigniory were indignant at the outrage, and loudly protested at
Madrid that Osuna must be disavowed: whilst in Italy itself all the native
enemies of Spanish pride were burning with rage. The outcry was so great,
swelled by the enemies of Lerma at home and the foes of Spain abroad, that even
Osuna began to fear the consequences, and sent Quevedo to plead his cause in
Madrid, by showing how necessary it was at any cost to frustrate the secret intrigues
of Venice against Spain. Uceda was bribed enormously, and every officer through
whom the matter passed was paid, including the King’s confessor Aliaga and even
Philip himself; with the result that the action of the Viceroy, illegal as it
seemed, was approved. This was in October, 1617; and thenceforward both Osuna
and Toledo, cooperating by land and sea, grew in boldness, harrying the
Venetians, plundering their traffic, raiding their islands, and demonstrating
to the world that the boasted power of the Republic was illusory. The Spanish
ambassador in Venice was a man of their own class, Alonso de la Cueva, Marquis
of Bedmar, who from inside the city of St Mark cooperated with the Viceroys,
and reported the effects of their action. The Seigniory could get no redress
from Madrid, though Philip and Uceda now openly repudiated their Viceroy’s
proceedings; the Venetians had proved unable to punish Osuna themselves, and
some course had to be taken by which the Viceroy might be suppressed, or the
Republic would suffer irreparably.
Whether the conspiracy denounced by the Seigniory as having for its
object the treacherous seizure of Venice by Osuna, with the connivance of
Toledo and Bedmar, was true or an invention has always been a subject for
dispute among historians. What actually happened was, that in June, 1618, Quevedo
was sent by Osuna in disguise to Venice, for some mysterious purpose. Suddenly
the Council of Ten decreed the wholesale execution, by hanging and drowning, of
many foreigners in its service, on the accusation of complicity in a Spanish
plot to destroy the Republic; and Quevedo with difficulty escaped in the garb
of a beggar, from the assassins in wait for him. All the world was told by
indignant Venice that Osuna, Toledo, and Bedmar had engaged the French corsairs
and other foreign mercenaries in Venice to sack the city and overturn the
government, and the punishment of Osuna for treason was violently demanded of
Philip’s government. Spanish writers usually contend that the entire conspiracy
was an invention of the Venetians, and Quevedo’s great literary skill aids them
in their contention. Ranke and Daru have imagined an explanation that still
finds supporters: to the effect that Osuna had really been in league with
Venice to proclaim himself independent sovereign of Naples, and that, finding
the Viceroy’s plot frustrated, the Seigniory, which the double object of
effacing its own complicity, and finally ruining Osuna, denounced the supposed
conspiracy. The theory seems untenable, for if any such plot against his own
sovereign had been hatched by Osuna with the knowledge of the Seigniory, he
might have been effectually destroyed at any time, by the mere denunciation of
it, without the elaborate pretence of a conspiracy against Venice. Weighing the
whole of the circumstances, with much additional evidence that has of late
become available, it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that a conspiracy
did exist to surprise and pillage Venice, and that Osuna was a leading spirit
in the plot; but the elaborate trial of the Viceroy in Spain, when his
protectors had fallen, furnished no convincing evidence that he had any
intention at this time of making himself an independent sovereign.
Bedmar was withdrawn from Venice; but the complaints of the Seigniory
had for the time no other effect in Madrid. The palace intrigues by which Lerma
was disgraced, however, led those courtiers who had not been bribed from Naples
to keep alive the irritation against Osuna. Deputations of the nobles and
clergy of Naples came to complain of his harshness, his pride, and his immorality,
and to whisper doubts of his loyalty. Osuna himself saw that the coming men in
Spain would oust him from his place, perhaps ruin him; and there is no doubt
that in 1619 he did suggest both to the Venetian agent in Naples, and to
Marshal Lesdiguières in Provence, a plan by which he might rule Naples independently
of the weak and wasteful overlordship of Spain. Such a secret could not long be
kept; and suddenly, in 1620, the blow fell, and the great Viceroy was summoned
to Madrid, soon to answer to a new sovereign and a new favorite whom he had not
bribed the accusations of treason brought against him, and subsequently to die
miserably in prison, with his crime unproved.
The loss of his second self, Lerma, deprived Philip of his one stay.
Uceda was weak and useless in council, and the true state of affairs in the
country which the fallen minister had so scrupulously hidden from the King for
so many years, was now brought home to him with double poignancy by the
ineptitude of his present advisers. The knowledge overwhelmed him, for he was
nerveless and incapable; and his long spells of gloomy despair were but rarely
now relieved by the frivolities in which he formerly delighted. Ill and failing
as he felt himself to be, he prayed the Council of Castile to tell him promptly
the whole truth about the miseries of his people, and to suggest remedies for
them. The report, which reached him in February, 1619, finally opened his eyes,
now that it was too late, to the appalling results of his rule. “Your realm”,
he was told, “is being totally ruined and destroyed, owing to the excessive
burdens, taxes and imposts, which compel your subjects to abandon their
families and their homes to escape death from starvation”. The cause alleged
was but a partial one; it was, as the more clear-sighted observers were even
then beginning to see, not so much the amount of the imposts as the oppression,
corruption, and unjust incidence of them that had ruined Spain; and the
remedies proposed by Philip’s Council were hardly more thoroughgoing than the
reasons alleged for the evil. “Fewer grants and honors should be given”, said
the Council; “and those already granted should be revoked; make the nobles, now
squandering their lives and money at Court, go and farm their lands; and let
the Church dignitaries reside in their own preferments; compel people to dress
and live modestly and plainly; and let the King and his Court set the example;
stop the foundation of fresh religious houses, and the tying up of land in perpetual
mortmain”; and finally, the only suggestion that really touched the root of the
evil, “since agriculturists are the sinew and support of the State, let them
not be hampered, vexed, and obstructed in the sale and circulation of their
produce, but let them have every privilege possible to encourage and help them”.
The wretched King knew the truth now, for the first time; but he knew also that
his life was ebbing, and for the future he could only hope and pray that his
son might do better than he had done for his suffering people. Against the
advice of most of his councillors he was persuaded by those few who sought only
to distract him, to make a royal progress to Portugal with all the old lavish
splendour to witness the oath of the Portuguese Cortes to young Philip as heir
to the thrones. The journey lasted for many months, and in the feasting and
ceremonies all the good intentions were forgotten.
On the King’s return he found himself again involved in wars in Germany,
in Bohemia, in the Valtelline; all of them were wars in which Spain had no
direct interest, except to aid everywhere the suppression of religious dissent.
As Philip III had begun, so he ended, upholding still the arrogant, impossible
claim of desolated, ruined Castile to dictate to all the world the faith it
should obey. In the first months of 1621 he fell gravely ill in Madrid. His
life, according to his scanty lights, had been a good one: his devotion since
his childhood had been blighting in its intensity, his charities had been
extravagant, his submission and meekness to ecclesiastics had at times bordered
upon the ridiculous, and his chastity had reached fanaticism; but, withal, now
that he felt death approaching him, his fear and remorse were terrible to
behold. From the depth of despair he passed to ecstasies of trust in the
efficacy of the Church to save him. All around his bed were relics of dead
saints, and images to which he addressed his frantic appeals. Solemn religious
offices went on unceasingly before his eyes, and for many days he anticipated
his momentary death, notwithstanding the assurance of his physicians that it
was not so near as he thought. He bade farewell to his children more than once,
and distributed amongst them relics and sacred images, warning his heir to keep
the rough crucifix which his father’s dead hand would grasp, to serve a similar
sad office when the new King’s dread hour should come. In an agony of remorse
he prayed continually for mercy and deplored the unhappy results of his
two-and-twenty years’ rule; but when he died at last, on March 31, 1621, a cry
of grief went up from all his people at the loss of the saintly sovereign, who,
they said, had served his faith so well, had battled against heresy throughout
the world, had founded convents without number, had expelled all the Spaniards in
whose veins ran Mohammadan blood, and had caused the canonization of more
Spanish saints than any King before him. The people knew that the land was
desolate, that the workshops were empty, the looms idle, and a whole nation
sunk into pretentious sloth; but they did not know that the qualities which
they most revered in their monarch had been the main cause of their ruin. That
knowledge, like the King’s repentance, came too late to work a remedy.
Four-fifths of his will are occupied by pious exhortations to his successor and
legacies for religious purposes; but, with all this saintly parade, he followed
the example of his ancestress Isabel the Catholic, and ordered that his grants
from the royal domains—mostly made in return for hard payment —should be held
void.
Lerma’s warning to his undutiful son was fulfilled in a shorter time
than even he could have expected it. Uceda’s friend, Gaspar de Guzman, when
once he had made his position secure in the young Prince’s household, left no
room for doubt as to his ambitious projects for himself. One after the other,
the servile courtiers were given to understand that they must serve him if they
hoped for future advancement, and the Prince, who at first found his new
governor too masterly to please him, was initiated into licentious pleasures
before his time in order that he might be made plastic in the hands of his
initiator. When it was already too late, Uceda endeavored to get rid of Guzman,
now Count of Olivares, by offering him the great post of ambassador in Rome;
but Olivares aimed at a higher mark and refused to leave young Philip’ side.
Uceda was with Philip III at the last, and had bethought him of summoning to
his aid the Cardinal Duke of Lerma, to influence with his experience and
authority the last, dispositions of the King. But Philip III was dying, and Olivares
held in his hand the will of the real King of Spain—the pale, tow-haired boy
with the great hanging underlip, who was waiting with unconcealed impatience
for his father’s last breath; and Olivares, in the Prince’s name, peremptorily
forbade Lerma’s approach.
It was the first of many blows which fell in rapid succession upon all
those who had enjoyed power and office in the last reign. Even as Philip III
had done when his father had died, so did Philip IV as soon as the corpse of
his father, clad in the garb of a Franciscan monk, was borne out of the Alcazar
on the cliff and over the dreary plains to the Escorial. Olivares had on
several occasions during the last days of Philip III feigned a desire to
abandon his office and retire, to Andalusia; but he knew his young master well.
The Prince implored him to stay, and promised to place himself entirely in his
hands. “How goes it in the Prince’s apartment?” asked Uceda of Olivares, as the
King lay dying. “All is mine”, replied the Count. “All?” exclaimed Uceda. “Yes,
everything without exception”, retorted Olivares, “for the Prince overrates me in
all things but my desire to serve him”. It was Uceda’s notice to quit, and
before the expiration of the new King’s nine days’ retirement to San Geronimo
for mourning, a clean sweep was made of the men who, under Philip III, had
brought Spain to the dire pass in which she found herself. Orders were given
that every minister of Spain since 1603 was to give a strict account of all his
property, and how he came by it. Lerma himself was not spared; though he fought
stoutly but unsuccessfully for his vast possessions. Calderon in his prison,
when he heard the passing-bell for the dead King, cried, “The King is dead, and
so am I”; and soon his head fell under the axe in the great square of Madrid.
The Duke, of Osuna, the viceroy who hail ruled Naples with so high a hand, was
lodged in prison and persecuted till his stout heart broke. Uceda met with a
similar fate; and all the clan of Sandoval and Rojas were trampled under the
heels of Guzmans and Zuñigas.
The state of things with which the new sovereign had to deal was pitiable
in the extreme; and there is no doubt that, so far as their lights extended,
both the boy-King and his strong-willed minister sincerely wished to reform the
abuses, the results of which were patent to everyone. Young Philip himself was
good-hearted, as his father had been, but far more sensual in his tastes, and
less devout in his habits. As years went on and he gained experience he
deliberately assumed in public the stolid gravity and marble impassivity which
he thought befitted the monarchy of Spain; but in his youth, and in the society
of his favorites, he was gay and witty. His ability was far greater than that
of his father had been, and his delight in books, music, poetry, the drama,
and, above all, pictures, made him the greatest patron of the authors and
artists of Spain’s golden age. But idleness marred all his talents, and the mad
lust of pleasure which he was powerless to resist, kept him as his father had
been kept, nearly all his life, in the leading strings of favorites. The man to
whom on the first day of his reign he handed his conscience, Gaspar de Guzman,
Count of Olivares, and first Duke of San Lucar, was twenty years his senior. An
indefatigable worker, with an ambition as voracious as his industry, Olivares
was the exact opposite to the idle, courtly, and conciliatory Lerma. His greed
was not personal, as Lerma’s had been, though his love of power led him to
absorb as many great offices as his predecessor had appropriated. He was
arrogant and impatient, violent in his rage if opposed, and careless of all
considerations but those which served his ends. Able as he undoubtedly was, he
appraised his ability too highly and contemned all opinions but his own; and his
attitude towards foreign Powers would only have been warrantable at the time
when the Spanish power was irresistible. From an economic point of view
Olivares was not much wiser than his Spanish predecessors; but his conception
of the political unity of Spain as the thing primarily needful, was sage and
statesmanlike, though premature: and upon this rock he was wrecked. The
portraits of him by Velasquez enable us to see the man as he lived. As he
stands, dark, stern, and masterful, with his heavy shoulders bowed, seemingly
by the weight of his ponderous head, with its fierce, black, sunken eyes, we
know that this man would dominate or die. He was the finest horseman in Spain;
and he treated men as he treated his fiery, big-boned chargers, taming them to
obedience by force of will and tireless persistence. Such was the man who led
Spain during the crucial struggle which decided, not only whether France or
Spain should prevail politically on the Continent, but whether Spanish or
French influence should in future predominate in the artistic, literary, and
social development of Europe. In that great contest Spain lost not so much
because Olivares was inferior to Richelieu, as by reason of the inflexible
traditions that hampered Spanish action at home and abroad, and pitted a decentralized
country, where productive industry had been killed and the sources of revenue
destroyed, against a homogeneous nation in which active work was being
fostered, and whose resources were being placed at the command of the central
authority.
The supremacy of Olivares.
Olivares was clever enough to place in the nominal post of chief adviser
of the Crown his uncle. Don Baltasar de Zuñiga, an experienced and able
diplomatist, who until his death, a year after the accession, attended to
political affairs, while Olivares was fastening his hold upon all those who
surrounded the King. Before Philip was out of bed, his minister was always the
first to enter his room; he drew the curtains, opened the window, and then, on
his knees by the bedside, rehearsed the business of the coming day. Every
garment that the King put on passed first through the hands of Olivares, who
stood by whilst Philip dressed; after the monarch’s midday meal, Olivares
entertained him with chat; and late in the evening, before the King retired his
minister attended to give him an account of the dispatches received, and to
consult him as to the answers. Philip’s natural idleness led him to shirk as
much of the work as possible; and jealous observers, who called the minister
“the King’s scarecrow”, sneered that Olivares purposely appeared before the
King with his hatband stuck full of State documents, and with great bundles of
papers under his arm and hung from his waistband. After a short time the King
merely glanced at the papers presented to him, and affixed the signature “Yo el
Rey” with a hand-stamp, to save himself trouble. The imputation of Olivares’
enemies, that the minister’s activity was the cause of the monarch’s indolence,
appears unjust in view of the original papers still extant, in which Philip is
implored by Olivares to attend to business and decide matters for himself. In
1626 a most emphatic appeal was made to this effect. Since the beginning of the
reign, Olivares says he had never ceased to urge that patriotism, duty, the
happiness of the country, and the future of Spain, all demand that the King
should not evade the labours of his position, “But lately”, he continues,
“affairs are growing worse than ever, and his conscience will not allow him to
remain silent. And, if the King will not put his shoulder to the wheel, the writer
will bear the responsibility no longer, but will leave Madrid, whatever the
consequences”. Nothing can exceed the force, not to say the violence, of this
appeal to the young King to do his duty to his subjects; and if Philip
eventually disregarded it, he, and not Olivares, should be blamed. The King was
well-meaning, however, and desired to do right, though his will was weak. His
answer to the exhortation of his minister (here printed for the first time) may
be transcribed in full. “Count. I have resolved to do as you ask me, for God’s
sake, my own, and yours. No action of yours towards me can be presumptuous; and
knowing, as I do, your zeal and love, I will do it, Count, and I return to you
the paper with this answer on it, that, you may make it an heirloom, and that
your descendants may know how their monarch ought to be addressed, and what an
ancestor they had. I should like to leave such a paper in my archives that my
children, if God send me any, may learn, and other monarchs too, how to prevail
in matters of right and justice.—I the King”.
It is evident, in any case, that Philip began his reign by casting upon
Olivares the whole weight of government, and that, especially after Zuñiga’s
death, the policy adopted was the minister’s alone. The position of the country
was one that might have appalled the boldest, and the best summary of it is
that; addressed by the King himself five years later to his Council. This
striking manuscript, to which reference will again be made, and Which has not
hitherto been printed, sets forth in the King’s own words how Spain stood in
1621. “The finances were so utterly exhausted—in addition to the terrible debts
incurred by Philip II—that every resource was anticipated for several years to
come. My patrimony was so distressed that in my father’s time alone grants and
voluntary gifts had swallowed up 96,000,000 ducats, without calculating what
had been given in four or five of the principal Spanish kingdoms, from which
returns have not yet been made. The currency had been raised to three times its
face value: a thing never seen in any nation before, which threatened us with
utter isolation and ruin, but for God’s help. Ecclesiastical affairs were in
such disorder that we were told from Rome that innumerable dispensations for
simony had been obtained for bishoprics and archbishoprics, besides an enormous
number for prebends. As for affairs of justice, they were in such a state that on
the very first day of my reign I was obliged to make the demonstration you will
recall....The State itself was so degraded that the King, my father, had been
forced to negotiate with the Hollanders as if they had been an independent
sovereign State, over which he had no claims; which confession was made,
although not a single minister was in favour of it; although the King rejected
it in his answers to the Consultas sent to him on the subject, and my uncle the Archduke also repudiated it, and
likewise all authorities both here and in Flanders. I found myself with only
seven ocean ships, and a maritime war on my hands; India lost to me, and
America on the point of being lost. The truce in Flanders was within three
months of its expiration, and in the twelve years’ truce my subjects had lost
their knowledge of war, and what is worse their prestige. I found German
affairs in such a condition that nothing less than a miracle seemed capable of
avoiding utter ruin in that direction The marriage of the Prince of Wales with
my sister was so far advanced that it looked impossible to evade it, without a
great war. Portugal was discontented with the Viceroy, and the rest of the
monarchy was ill-ruled or not ruled at all. Roman affairs were totally ruined:
we were in a state of war with Venice; and the realm of Naples was bordering
upon a popular revolt, with the coinage completely debased. This was the sad
condition in which I found my country on my accession, from no fault of the
King my father, or of his predecessors, as all the world knows, but because God
Almighty decreed that it should be so; and I myself experience this every day:
for no matter how adequate may be the remedies I adopt, our sins suffice to
condemn all our affairs to the most miserable state imaginable”.
The sad condition thus disclosed might have been ameliorated, as some
unofficial observers urged, by setting the idle people to work upon the land
again and by the encouragement of lost industries; but no measure would have
permanently arrested the decadence short of an entire reform of the fiscal
incidence and administration, and a rigid concentration of national resources
on the purposes of Spain itself. As we have seen from the King’s words,
however, there was no inclination to abate the old claims or to limit the old
arrogance; and the measures adopted by Olivares were mainly palliative rather
than remedial. The expenditure of the palace was cut down to a minimum, the
corrupt officials of the past reign were forced to disgorge their plunder, and
nothing but titles and other empty honors given to those whose services called
for reward. Philip afterwards boasted that in the first five years of his reign
he had made fewer grants than any of his predecessors had in six months, and
that he had spent hardly anything upon himself. But there was apparently no
thought of economy where it was most needed: namely, by the avoidance of war
abroad. In the Cortes of Castile, met by Philip a few months after his father’s
death, he set forth to the deputies that the very first of his obligations as
Spanish sovereign was “with holy zeal befitting so Catholic a prince to attend
to the defence and exaltation of our holy Catholic faith”. He states, as if no
doubt about it were possible, that it had been the duty of his father, and now
was his, to aid the Emperor to suppress rebellion, to expel the Prince Palatine
from Bohemia, to fight the Hollanders again—now that the truce was ended, as well
as to defend everywhere “our sacred Catholic faith and the authority of the
Holy See”. With such views as these, repeated again and again to succeeding
Cortes, it was inevitable that the national expenditure should continue
ruinously out of proportion to the revenues of the country, at this time
admitted to be not more than eight million ducats available from all sources,
of which, the Cortes was told, no less than three millions had to be sent
yearly to Flanders.
The folly of this persistence in traditional aims which had long ago
been proved unattainable, and of which, indeed, the importance, so far as
Spain’s national interests were concerned, had disappeared, is the more evident
when the entirely changed position of foreign politics is considered. The
Queen-Mother of France, with her strong Spanish Catholic sympathies and her
Italian methods, had been swept from power by a coalition of French parties;
and a civil war was raging in France which might end in a Huguenot domination.
The relations between Spain and. the governing authority of France were still
further embittered by the struggle in the Valtelline; and Philip III, seeing
France drifting away from him, had for two years before his death been in close
negotiation with James I of England for the marriage of his daughter with the
Prince of Wales; James abasing himself to the utmost in order to weaken the
already strained alliance between France and Spain. The more arrogant Philip,
Gondomar, and Lerma were, the humbler grew the King of England; and though it
is evident now that the Spaniards were never for a moment in earnest, their
diplomacy disarmed James at a time when his active interference in favour of
his son-in-law might have been disastrous to the House of Austria. From Philip
IV’s reference to the English match (quoted on the previous page) it is evident
that he had no more intention of effecting it than his father had. But when
Richelieu in 1622 sought to heal civil discord in France by urging, at the
first meeting of the Council after the death of Luynes, that the primary duty
of all Frenchmen was to check the renewed pretensions of the House of Austria,
and when even Mary de' Medici herself inclined in the crusade against Spain, it
became necessary for Philip and Olivares to smile, however falsely, upon the
proffered English friendship.
But when, late in 1622, James, growing impatient, asked for definite
help to be sent to his son-in-law from Spain, Olivares haughtily scoffed at the
very idea, and coolly put the marriage question aside as of no present
importance. Buckingham in England had been heavily bribed by Gondomar, and was
all impatience to carry through the Prince’s marriage. Blind to the insincerity
of Spain in the negotiation, he started with young Charles on their harebrained
journey to Spain. Their almost unheralded appearance in Madrid, in March, 1623,
threw Bristol into a panic, which subsequent events fully justified, and placed
Philip and his minister in a most difficult position. The Spanish populace and
clergy were furious at the idea of such a marriage. It is clear now, and was to
many observers even then, that, while still advancing her old arrogant claims,
Spain could never enter into a family alliance with a Protestant House; while,
even if he had wished, the Prince of Wales would not have dared to change his faith
at the bidding of Spain; and the idea of Buckingham outwitting in diplomacy
Olivares and the Spanish Council was ridiculous. Philip and his minister
cleverly disarmed the visitors by a show of extreme cordiality. Madrid was made
to look its best; the vast sums squandered a vain show ruined the town for many
years; and all the sumptuary decrees enjoining sobriety in garb and living were
suspended. The Infanta, who well knew that she was destined for the Emperor, and
would never be the wife of Charles, was almost unapproachable, and played her part
with reluctance. Buckingham’s debonair manner shocked Olivares, and the English
favorite was almost openly insulted by the stately Spaniard. So long as
festivities, cane-tourneys, bull fights, and balls were to the fore all went
merrily; but as soon as either Buckingham or Bristol tried to come to close
quarters with Olivares, he made it clear that Spain would finally consent to
the marriage only on quite impossible terms. To keep up appearances a
provisional treaty of betrothal was drawn up, and a pretence made that the alliance
was effected; but when Charles took leave of his host in September, not all the
extravagant presents and fine words on both sides could hide the fact that his
voyage had been in vain, and that England had suffered the affront which her
King’s servility and Buckingham’s foolishness had deserved.
The ambitious project of Olivares to revive the old dreams incited the
Spanish people and their young King to renewed outbursts of pride, and aroused
the distrust of the French. Philip, as yet but a mere lad, was given the title
of Philip the Great, and flattered with the idea that in him the vast dominion
of Charles V might be revived. The Valtelline was still occupied by Spanish
troops in spite of treaties; Spinola held in his grip the Lower Palatinate; and
Bohemia had been crushed into obedience to the Emperor. It was clearly time for
France to check the swelling power, and Richelieu prepared to do it. England
was attracted to his side, while yet the irritation caused by Charles’ rebuff
at Madrid was fresh, and Henrietta Maria became Queen of England; the Duke of
Savoy, ever ready to strike for Lombardy, joined, and the Hollanders, now at
war with Spain again, hailed with delight so powerful a coalition against their
enemy. The war began with the invasion of the Valtelline by Richelieu; and
together with Savoy the French overran Montferrat and the Genoese territory.
Italy in this war for the most part stood on the side of Spain, for the Papacy
was strong and the faith was threatened. The fever of glory seized again upon
the deluded Spaniards; and all thoughts of economy were thrown to the winds.
Money in amounts previously unheard of was raised. Nobles, churchmen, and
citizens were made to give freely of their substance, sometimes to their ruin:
ladies sold their jewels, and every device was used in order to obtain funds
for the war.
The result was on the whole favorable to Spanish arms, and a peace was
arranged with France, 1 January, 1626, leaving England still at war with Spain,
and the German and Flemish contests still going on. England, indeed, had been
again outwitted; for the Palatinate, for which she had fought, was not
restored, and the only effect of Lord Wimbledon's abortive attack upon Cadiz in
1625 was to deal a further blow to her prestige. Spain was also fortunate in
the Low Countries, where Spinola captured Breda; in Germany, thanks to the
genius of Tilly; and in South America, where the Hollanders were handsomely
defeated at Guayaquil, while the Moorish pirates were humbled in the
Mediterranean. Money, and ever more money, was needed for all this military
activity. The economies effected by Olivares enabled him to do much, and they,
with other measures adopted, had aided Philip to rehabilitate his forces. But
by 1626 these resources proved still insufficient, and Philip addressed a
curious statement to his Council of Finance, of which the unpublished
manuscript is still extant, giving an account of his pecuniary straits. When he
comes to consider, he says, not only the amounts that his subjects have to pay,
but the persecution and trouble they have to undergo from those who collect the
revenue, he would rather beg from door to door, if he could, to make up the
fresh funds he needs, than ask his subjects for them. The Council are harshly
taken to task for their lack of invention in not finding some way for providing
the means required for the wars. “Grief is in my soul to see these good
subjects who suffer so bitterly through the acts of my officers. If my own
life-blood would remedy it, I would give it freely: and yet you can propose no
remedy”. In the previous year he had had in his pay no less than 300,000 men;
he had raised his fleet from 7 vessels to 108; with Europe against him, he had
held his own everywhere, and had forced foreigners to respect him; and yet,
when he asks his Council of Finance to propose measures of relief, they only
obstruct him. This outburst appears to have been caused by the report of the
Council having been unfavorable to Olivares’ proposal to debase the copper
coinage. The measure had subsequently been adopted, but it had been found that prices
had risen in proportion.
An attempt was made in 1626 to extort more money than usual from the
free Parliaments of Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia. Philip, in great state,
with Olivares at his side, met his Valencian Cortes at Monzon, but was made to
understand roughly that not an iota of the ancient privileges would be bated,
however much he wanted money. Olivares stormed; but according to the
constitution a unanimous vote was necessary for supply, and one member bravely
held out until he was menaced with the garrotte and reluctantly yielded. Even then fresh difficulties were made, and for days
Philip chafed and his minister hectored, until at last Olivares threatened to
abolish by force the right of rejecting the King’s demands, and the Cortes of
Valencia in a panic were conquered. It was a triumph for Olivares and a first
step towards his policy of unifying Spain, but it cost him dear. The Catalan
Cortes were even bolder than the Valencians, and refused to vote anything until
their previous loan to the King was repaid. After three days of haggling,
Olivares, fearing a tumult, fled with the King to Castile, and though the
Catalans in a fright then passed the vote, their breach with the King and his
minister was never fully healed, and the bitterest struggle of the reign was
that in which the ancient county of Catalonia fought to free herself from
centralizing Castile. That the contest with the Catalan Cortes was provoked by
Olivares is seen in a paper he wrote to the King late in 1625, only a few
months before the meeting. In it he set forth a plan for the unification of the
realms for mutual action in war. This plan remained the kernel of Olivares’
home policy until his fall, and it will be seen that the intrigues against him
which finally triumphed were largely fomented by provincial interests.
The Mantuan and the German War.
The death of the Duke of Mantua, and the claim of Spain to interfere in
the succession, led early in 1628 to an attack by her upon Casale in
Montferrat, and brought her again face to face with Richelieu later in the
year; and thus the great struggle which was finally to ruin Spain was commenced
by Olivares. His first step, when he found himself thus pledged to a great
national war, was to make peace with England, who was then aiding the Huguenots
at La Rochelle. Charles I, like his father before him, was ready to make any
sacrifice to win back the Palatinate for Frederick, and the breach caused by
the quarrel about Charles’ marriage with the Infanta was healed by a treaty of
peace in January, 1629, though, as before, England failed in her main object.
The ensuing campaign in northern Italy ranged the French, the Pope, Venice, and
the new French Duke of Mantua (Nevers) against the House of Austria, with the
assistance this time of the unhappy Charles Emmanuel. Richelieu was victorious
everywhere. Savoy was occupied, and the heart of the Duke broken (July, 1030).
Spinola died during the campaign before Casale, and his successor, Santa Cruz,
lacked his experience and genius. Casale, which from the first had been the
Spanish objective, stood out stoutly during a long siege, until at length
Olivares was obliged to consent to an agreement, followed by ignominious peace,
in which all the sacrifice was on the side of Spain (April. 1631).
It was a hard lesson for Philip; bat unfortunately he did not profit by
it. Richelieu was as much superior to Olivares as a statesman as France was to
Spain in material resources and homogeneity; but the old tradition that Spain
must fight for the faith and the Imperial House throughout the world refused to
die; and Spanish blood and treasure were poured out like water in a quarrel
which concerned Spain hardly at all. In the meanwhile, in 1633, the old Infanta
Isabel, the beloved daughter of Philip II, and independent sovereign of
Flanders, died, and Spain was once again burdened with the fatal inheritance of
Burgundy, that had dragged her down. Philip’s representative in Flanders was
his brother, the Cardinal Infante Ferdinand, whom Olivares’ jealousy had sent
from Spain. He was able and ambitious; and his popularity with the Catholic
Flemings was great; but he too must needs follow the tradition of his House and
imperil the dominions he ruled to fight for the faith wherever it was assailed.
In 1634 the Emperor summoned his cousin and brother-in-law from Flanders to his
aid. The Infante led his army of 18,000 Spaniards to join the Imperial forces
before Nördlingen, and arrived soon after the Suede-German force sent to
relieve the town. The Imperial army with the Infante’s contingent outnumbered
the Swedes, and the battle, which lasted two days, was a complete victory for
the Catholics. In May, 1635, Richelieu met this heavy blow by declaring war
against Spain itself in order that, his foe might be weakened by a direct
attack upon Spanish Flanders.
Thenceforward Spain was not only fighting for Catholicism and the
Imperial House, but was engaged in a death-struggle with Richelieu for the
preservation of Flanders and for the maintenance of her own prestige in Europe.
Flemish dominion was draining what was left of her life-blood, and Germany made
ceaseless demands upon desolate Castile. In France, in the Valtelline—wherever
religious liberty dared to raise its head—Spain, or rather Olivares, considered
it necessary to fight. The silver fleets and cargo galleons fell a prey to the
Dutch rovers; the armies and fleets of Spain struggled, sometimes successfully,
sometimes disastrously, upon many fields, but never for the material profit, of
their own country. Private property in Spain was seized now without scruple by
the Government; the “millions” excise was increased until famine was rife
everywhere in the realms of Castile, the Church temporalities were drained, the
revenues of bishoprics confiscated, and salaries, pensions, and debts unpaid.
In Madrid the penury was so great that Philip, who always lived frugally
himself, begged his brother in Flanders to save to the utmost: to compel his
household to wear plain cloth, and to live sparingly, so that not a ducat might
be needlessly spent.
While the Spanish forces were distributed over Europe, Richelieu made
two bold attempts to gain a footing upon the soil of the Peninsula. The earlier
was in the summer of 1638, when every nerve was being strained to maintain the
Cardinal Infante in Flanders. A powerful French force crossed the Bidassoa,
captured the frontier town of Irun, and the harbour of Pasages, and then laid
siege to the picturesque stronghold of Fuenterrabia at the mouth of the river.
A French fleet cooperated with the land forces under Cardinal de La Valette,
and an attempt was made to storm the precipitous hill upon which the fortress
stands; but an army of Basque militia gallantly put the beleaguerers to flight,
La Valette escaping from the wrath of Richelieu to join the banished
Queen-Mother in England. In the following year, 1639, an attempt was made by
the French at the other end of the Pyrenees to enter Spanish territory. The
resistance of the Catalans, much more Provencal than Sparinh, and always jealous
of Castile, was thought likely to be slight. Olivares, moreover, being on bad
terms with them, left the province to a great extent to defend itself. This it
did with unexpected vigour and success. A provincial army of 10,000 men was
rapidly formed; but was practically annihilated by plague as it lay besieging
Salces, in Spanish Roussillon, which the French had captured. Another army of
Catalans, however, flocked to the standards; and when Condé arrived with a
fresh force of 20,000 Frenchmen, regiment after regiment of them broke against
the Catalan trenches and earthworks, and finally fled. Salces was surrendered
to its rightful owners in January, 1640, and the second French attempt to conquer
Spanish soil had failed.
The maritine attacks of the French on the Mediterranean coast of the
Peninsula were almost equally barren of result; and, had Philip been content,
even now, to abandon the vain pretensions which a century of struggle had
proved it impossible to enforce, he might not only have with ease held his own
country against the world, but have made his people prosperous and happy.
Flanders was, as ever, the bane. So long as it was necessary to send constant
reinforcements thither, not only had Spain to be drained of men and money; but
the naval force so necessary for the protection of Spanish commerce with Spain’s
productive and distant colonies had to be employed, and imperiled, in the
narrow seas, in order that reinforcements might reach Flanders. Prodigious, and
successful, efforts had been made, as has been seen, to raise the maritime
strength of the country. Certain nobles and ports, and some of the Spanish
Bishops, were under feudal obligations to find and maintain ships for the King’s
service; and these obligations had been either habitually evaded, or only
partially fulfilled. By dint of pressure upon the contributories, and by great
national sacrifices, a respectable fleet had been formed in 1639: when 70
ships, with a force of 10,000 men, on the voyage from Spain to Flanders took
refuge in the Downs to escape from a Dutch fleet under van Tromp. Both the
Dutch and the Spaniards at once appealed to Charles I. Charles endeavored to
bargain with Spain about the restoration of the Palatinate, in return for his
protection of the fleet; but van Tromp was in no mood for trifling, and
regardless of England’s neutrality, attacked, and practically destroyed, the
Spanish fleet, the result of so much effort and sacrifice, while it lay in the
Downs. The Spaniards cried that the English had rather aided than hindered the
attack, though Pennington was imprisoned for not vindicating the security of
English waters; but, in any case, the blow was a fatal one to Spain’s naval
power, and for a hundred years she remained hopelessly paralyzed at sea. It was
the first patent sign to the world of the material and moral decadence which
was creeping through all the organs of the nation. On land Spanish troops still
for a while fought bravely as of old, though no longer with the conviction of
Divine favour and unconquerable right. Loyalty to the person of the monarch was
engrained in their nature; and they suffered and died, if necessary,
uncomplainingly at his behest, because they thought that he and they, for some
inscrutable and irremediable reason, had been selected by the Almighty for
special chastening, and their oriental fatalism hardly cared to search for other
explanations for their ills.
The King himself constantly gives evidence in his many rescripts of the
same conviction. His own and his country’s misfortunes are always ascribed to
an adverse providence frustrating well-meant efforts, “in punishment of our
sins”. This feeling was itself a sign of moral deterioration in the national
fibre. In the greater times of the sixteenth century Spaniards were convinced
that Heaven was on their side, and it gave them strength; now they felt as certain
that it was against them; and, though it still fed their pride to know that
they were selected at all, they lacked incentive to bold action and dogged
persistence when assured beforehand that a supernatural power stronger than
their own had doomed them to misfortune. Their waning faith had the curious effect—so
strongly seen in Philip’s secret correspondence—of redoubling their dependence
upon inspired spiritual guides for the regulation of their conduct. Formerly,
their firm conviction that God was on their side was strong enough to justify
their acts, however cruel and oppressive, find they needed not to be certified
at every point by nuns, hermits and anchorites, friars and confessors, that all
was well with them and their actions. The religion which timorously needed
constant reassurance from inspiration was not of the robust kind that had led
to Spain’s ephemeral greatness, but rather a superstition constantly trembling
on the verge of infidelity. This was the feeling that saturated Spain during
the years of her glittering decadence, which began with Philip III, progressed
under his son and ended with their race.
Spain was thus a prey to fatalistic despair, sunk into misery by unwise taxation
which crushed industry and deepened the national disinclination to labour; her
coinage debased, her sons fighting abroad whilst the fields at home were left
fallow, or were partially cultivated by foreigners, who took abroad after each
harvest the money that Spain so direly needed. Everyone, from the King
downward, deplored the evils, but agreed that they arose from nobody’s fault;
and though some wits added the word “taxer” to the title of “Philip the Great”,
impressed on the new-fashioned stamped paper, which Olivares’ confessor had
invented by way of adding to the national revenue, the monarch and the people
in general sympathized with each other in the national suffering. Such a
feeling of mutual sympathy, if wisely fostered, might have been used to bring
about, temporarily at least, the solidarity which Spain always lacked. But
unfortunately the exhaustion of Castile, and the need for ever-growing sums of
money for foreign wars, led Olivares, in pursuance of his fixed idea of
centralisation, not only to destroy the chance of a sympathetic union of the
various realms, but to precipitate a civil conflict, which proved the country’s
crowning disaster. The Count-Duke (as Olivares was called) was rash and hasty
of speech, and, as the Venetian ambassador wrote in 1641, “hated the
constitutions, breaking out into violent abuse whenever he spoke of the
Catalans”. He could not forgive them or the Valencians for their sturdiness
during the Cortes of 1626, and when he accompanied the King to Barcelona in
1632.
The revolt of Catalonia.
During the abortive French invasion of Spanish Roussillon already mentioned,
the Viceroy was a creature of Olivares—one Santa Coloma, who chose the time
when the Catalans were fighting for their province to urge a policy of severity
against them. “Do not”, he wrote, “allow a single man the province able to work
to absent himself from the field, or a woman capable of carrying a bundle of
fodder on her back. This is no time to beseech, but to command. The Catalans
are naturally fickle, sometimes they will, and sometimes they will not. Make
them understand that the welfare of the nation and the army must go before all
laws and privileges... Seize their beds for the troops, even from the highest in
the province, if necessary, and let them sleep on the ground ... If pioneers be
wanted and peasants refuse to go, force them to do so, and if necessary carry
them bound. Do not spare force, no matter how loudly they cry out against you.
I will bear all the blame”. The sullen resentment abused in the Catalans by the
treatment thus enjoined came to a head when the Castilian troops sent to help
Catalonia against the French were quartered in the principality, in violation
of the constitution, instead of being sent home after defeating the French. The
Castilians, as usual, were unpaid: to them the Catalans were almost as foreign
as Frenchmen, and they plundered and ravaged as in an enemy’s country. Violence
was opposed by violence, and Olivares ordered that every village in Catalonia
should billet a certain number of Castilian troops. The result was that all
Catalonia flamed into opposition against the King’s soldiers, and Santa Coloma
fanned the flame by his severity. Street riots disturbed the large towns; the
Catalan nobles and clergy declaimed against the savagery of Philip’s troops,
and advised resistance. “Send me an army strong enough to crush this people”, wrote
Santa Coloma. But the King’s armies were scattered over Europe, and Olivares
had no troops to send and no money to raise fresh levies.
On May 12,1640, the people of Barcelona broke open Santa Coloma’s
prisons, and rescued from these their leaders: and four weeks later the fire of
insurrection blazed out. “Vengeance and Liberty” was the cry of the maddened
populace as they rushed through Barcelona murdering every Castilian soldier they
could catch. Santa Coloma flied to escape, but he was old and obese, and sank
fainting by the way, only to be cut into pieces by his fierce countrymen. From
Barcelona the train of resistance was fired through the province. Rebellion of
Christian Spaniards against their King had been unheard of for a hundred and
twenty years; and, when Philip heard the news, it must have been plain to him
that the sacredness of his sovereignty was impugned and he was no longer master
of his finest province. An attempt was made at conciliation. The new Viceroy,
the Duke of Cardona, restrained the revengeful violence of the Castilian
troops, and endeavored to soothe the Barcelonese; but Olivares saw in the
revolt a chance of crushing the free constitution which he hated, and Cardona
was disgraced, to die of a broken heart. “This revolt”, said Cardinal Borgia in
the Council, “can only be drowned in rivers of blood”—and these Olivares was
ready to let loose if he could destroy the charter of Catalonian autonomy. With
great effort a new army was raised in Castile, under the Marquis de Los Velez,
who was to operate from Saragossa as a base. The great object was to prevent
the autonomous kingdom of Aragon from joining its allied principality of Catalonia;
for Philip had always been popular with the Aragonese, and their defection would
have been fatal.
In September, 1610, while Los Velez was still in Aragon, the Spanish
troops in Perpignan were ordered to attack a Catalan village whose inhabitants
were negotiating with the French; and the Castilians were badly beaten. This
gave heart to Barcelona. The Catalan Cortes met and denounced the violation of
their rights: in demand for help against Philip was sent to his enemy Richelieu;
Barcelona was placed in a condition for defence; and defiance went forth from
Catalonia to Castile. But the promised French contingent to aid the Catalans
was delayed, and when Los Velez entered the southern end of Catalonia he met
with but little resistance, and the ruthless cruelty of the Castilians wrought
terrible vengeance upon the few who dared to oppose them. Tarragona was
garrisoned by a French force hastily summoned for its defence, but although Los
Velez’ army was already weakened by Aragonese desertions, owing to Catalan raids
into Aragon, and his stores and artillery were lacking, the French commander Épernon
surrendered at demand; and as Los Velez marched triumphantly northward the
Catalan cause seemed to be crumbling. But Barcelona was a more difficult
affair. There the citizens had formally renounced allegiance to Philip, and had
acknowledged Louis XIII as their King, surrendering the dominating stronghold
of Monjuich to a French commander, who, with 300 men, was in the city. Los
Velez assaulted the walls on January 26, 1641, and a most sanguinary struggle
ensued. The Catalan volunteers fought splendidly, as did the Castilian
assailants, and especially the Irish regiment under the Earl of Tyrone, who
fell in the fight. The attack upon Monjuich was led by the Neapolitan Marquis
of Torrecusa, and just as victory seemed within his grasp a body of Catalan
fishermen attacked the stormers from the rear, and panic-seized the Castilians.
The slaughter was appalling, and Los Velez, defeated and broken, was cast back
to Tarragona, leaving Barcelona triumphant in its defiance. Soon French troops
arrived in large numbers, and in April, 1641, the Castilians at Tarragona,
reduced to 14.000 men under the Prince of Butera (Fadrique Colonna), were
closely beleaguered by land and sea by French and Catalans.
Through the summer and autumn of 1641 the state of war continued; but
Catalonia could with difficulty pay and support the French armies sent by
Richelieu to the aid of the insurgents, and the provincials through their chief
Tamarit made a personal appeal to Louis XIII to come to his faithful city of
Barcelona and receive the oath of allegiance. He sent Marshal de Brézé as his
proxy, and thenceforward French national resources to a great extent maintained
the civil war. By the spring of 1642 the Castilian armies had been reorganized
after their repeated defeats, and the struggle continued, though the great
French forces that were pouring into the province, with the aid of the
Catalans, seemed to make the position hopeless for Philip. One Castilian army
after the other was captured or routed, and Philip in despair could only pray
the minister who had dragged him into this trouble by his rashness to find him
a way out.
This was the opportunity for the Count-Duke’s enemies. The Queen, Isabel
of Bourbon, had from the first resented his absolute dominion over her husband.
She blamed Olivares for inciting the King to legitimatize Don Juan of Austria,
his natural son by Maria Calderon, an actress, of whom she was bitterly
jealous; and she chafed under the yoke of the favorite’s wife, who was her
Mistress of the Robes, and was as arrogant as he. Olivares always spoke
slightingly of women, and when the Queen had made some remark on State affairs had
dared to say openly, that “monks must be kept for praying, and women for child-bearing”.'
Isabel made no secret of her hate, and instilled a similar sentiment into her
popular and promising only son, Prince Baltasar Carlos. Gradually all those,
and there were many, who suffered from the terrible oppression induced by
Olivares’ financial methods and the continuance of wasteful wars, looked
towards the Queen and her son for rescue. “My goodwill and the Prince’s
innocence”, she said, “must for once serve the King for eyes. If he continues
to look through those of the Count-Duke much longer my son will be reduced to a
poor King of Castile”. When affairs in Catalonia were at their worst, when
Roussillon was lost for ever to Spain, and French troops were successfully
upholding the rebel Catalans against their Ring, the Queen and nearly all of
the nobility, most of whom were in her favour, urged the king himself to take
command of his armies in the field, and win back the province that his
minister’s policy had lost. Olivares opposed the plan to the utmost, for he
knew that during a campaign his influence would be less powerful over Philip
than in the palace of Madrid, or in the beautiful suburban pleasance of the
Buen Retiro, which he had built, not at his own expense, as a toy for his
master. But Philip himself was anxious now to take part in winning back his
heritage. So he insisted, almost for the first time, against Olivares’ opinion,
and, in spite of the groans of his minister at the expense of the rival
journey, set out for Aragon.
Braganza and Olivares.
There was, indeed, good reason, beyond the disaster which Olivares’
centralizing idea had brought about in Catalonia, why Philip’s trust in him
should have declined. In another of the autonomous dominions an even worse
catastrophe had been simultaneously caused by the same hasty policy. The
Portuguese had never been reconciled to their union with Castile, though Philip
II had carefully respected their constitution, so far as regarded their
exemption from taxation for Spanish objects or by Spanish methods. Under Lerma,
and later, the blight of favoritism had fallen upon the relations between the
two kingdoms, and the Portuguese viceroyalties, bishoprics, and offices had
been largely bestowed on Spanish adherents of the favorite in Madrid. The
Portuguese had already suffered much from the connection with Spain: Cadiz had
taken away much of the commerce of Lisbon, and Portuguese shipping was not safe
from Spain’s enemies. The national discontent had grown gradually deeper as the
evil increased; but when, in 1686, Olivares burdened Portugal with the five per
cent. Castilian tax upon all property, movable and immovable, rebellion against
Spain became inevitable. The first rising, premature as it was, was suppressed;
but from that time all the patriotic elements drew together to plan the
liberation of the country. The Regent of Portugal at the time was the widowed
Duchess of Mantua, a daughter of Charles Emmanuel of Savoy and the Infanta Catharine,
and consequently Philip’s first cousin; and she, knowing the danger, did her
best to withstand the unwise action of the favorite. The real ruler of Portugal,
however, was Olivares’ low-born henchman Miguel Vasconcellos, who, Portuguese
by origin, was ruthless in the insolent oppression of his countrymen.
The easy suppression of the first attempt at revolt encouraged Olivares
to fasten the yoke of Castile more firmly than ever on Portugal; and he imprudently
chose the time when Catalonia was seething in discontent. A fresh special tax
was decreed upon Portugal, in violation of its constitution, and Vasconcellos
announced the minister’s intention of abolishing the Portuguese Cortes
altogether, and of making the country a province of Castile, with
representatives in the Castilian Cortes. At once there gathered around the Duke
of Braganza, the principal Portuguese candidate for the throne, a party
determined to win the independence of their country. The Duke, a timid,
lethargic man, had married an able, ambitious Spanish wife of the great House
of Guzman, Dukes of Medina Sidonia, and a relative of Olivares, who, being
aware of her character, looked upon her with distrust and suspicion. Tempting
offers of foreign viceroyalties were made to the Portuguese Duke, but, safe
among his own people, he was not to be caught, and even refused all invitations
to proceed to Madrid. Hereupon an attempt was made to kidnap him, but also without
success; and Vasconcellos, becoming seriously alarmed at the growth of the
conspiracy, and the importance of the conspirators, warned Olivares that he
must either crush discontent by force, or disarm Braganza.
This was in 1640, when the preparations for the war in Catalonia were
draining the strength of Spain, and Olivares was forced to parley with the foe
at the Portuguese gate, while he tried to crush the Catalans. To gain the confidence
of Braganza he gave him the control of the Portuguese ports, and sent him
10,000 ducats to raise troops to defend them. It must have been a counsel of
despair, for the result which ensued seemed almost inevitable. Portuguese
troops were raised, it is true, but they were all for the defence of Braganza,
and soon there was no power in Portugal that could withstand him. The Duke
himself remained quietly on his estate at Villa Viciosa, making no sign; but
his friends were busy and bold under the Archbishop of Lisbon and Pinto Ribeiro.
When the plot was nearly ripe, Braganza visited the Regent Duchess of Mantua in
Lisbon with a train strong enough to protect him, and the frantic cheers of the
populace announced that this was not a subject Duke but a potential King coming
in state to the capital of his nation. Olivares then perceived his mistake, and
peremptorily summoned Braganza to Madrid. A thousand excuses for delay were
made; but still Braganza clung to Villa Viciosa. Money was sent to pay for his
journey, and appeal made to his loyalty, his cupidity, his honor; but, though
he feigned acquiescence and sent his household ahead on the road to Spain, he
knew that if once he fell into the hands of Olivares he would never be King,
and prudently kept in his own stronghold. At length, in November, 1640, the
conspirators and his wife together prevailed upon Braganza to pluck up courage,
throw aside the mask, and proclaim himself King; and a small body of nobles and
soldiers in four divisions surprised the palace on December 1, overpowering the
few Spanish and German troops on guard. The populace were only awaiting the
first blow, and hailed the conspirators and Braganza as the saviours of
Portugal. The hated Vasconcellos, dumb with fright, was hacked to death with
knives; and, though the Regent offered a dignified verbal protest, she had
herself bitterly hated Vasconcellos and rejoiced at the vengeance that had
fallen upon lim. Braganza, still lingering timidly in the country, was
acclaimed John IV of Portugal; but there was practically no resistance, and in
three hours of revolt Portugal had shaken off the yoke of Castile, never again
to bear it.
The news came to Madrid within a week, at a time when Olivares, by
festivities and gaieties, was trying to divert the thoughts of the King from
the disaster of Barcelona. None dared to carry the dire news to Philip for fear
of Olivares’ vengeance, though all the capital was astir with the tidings, and
it was the favorite himself who performed the task in a characteristic way. “Albrivias! Albricias! your Majesty, good news! good news! You have won a fresh
duchy and a great estate”. “How so?” asked the King. “The Duke of Braganza,
sire, has gone mad and proclaimed himself King of Portugal, so that your
Majesty may seize the twelve million ducats worth of property which he owns”.
The King said little, but he was not deceived by Olivares’ mellifluence, for he
knew that a kingdom lost was not easily regained, and thenceforward was the
more ready to listen to those who besought him to take matters into his own
hands, and avert the dismemberment of his inheritance. High and low were urging
him on. The Queen missed no opportunity of enforcing the lessons of Catalonia
and Portugal; and even the people in the streets cried to Philip that he must
act the King now or be for ever fallen. “Everybody deceives the King”, cried
one working man, placing himself in the sovereign’s way as he walked in the
procession of the Holy Sacrament through his capital. “Sire, this realm is
perishing, and he who mends it not will burn in hell”
Before the King started for Aragon another blow threatened, which
further served the turn of the enemies of Olivares. The brother of the new
Queen of Portugal, the Duke of Medina Sidonia, Viceroy and Admiral of
Andalusia, was the greatest territorial magnate of Spain, and head of the House
of Guzman, of which Olivares was a cadet. The Duke was weakly ambitious, and
listened to the suggestion of his kinsman the Marquis of Ayamonte, that he
should follow the example of his brother-in-law and take advantage of the
weakness of the central power to proclaim himself King of Andalusia. The plot
was arranged with the new King of Portugal, and all promised well, when a
treacherous intermediary divulged it to Olivares. Fortunately Medina Sidonia
was feeble and foolish, and was easily terrified into complete submission,
though much of his vast wealth was confiscated; but Ayamonte, a kinsman of
Olivares, lost his head, though his life had been promised to him if he
confessed, and he had done so. So low had the armed power of Philip fallen at
this time (1641) by the drain upon it for foreign wars and the Catalan revolt,
that, had Medina Sidonia been a strong, instead of a weak conspirator,
Andalusia might have successfully resisted any force that Castile could have
sent against it.
In these unhappy circumstances Philip left in April, 1642, to lead his
armies against the Catalans, the Queen remaining as Regent in Madrid. Having
failed to prevent the journey, Olivares did his best to make it useless by
turning it into a slow progress of pleasure. Hunting parties and long sojourns
on the way delayed the King to July 27, when he entered Saragossa, not with the
simplicity of a soldier going to a campaign, but with the splendour of a
triumphant sovereign. The greater nobles usually avoided contact with Olivares,
but the presence of Philip in the Aragonese capital prompted the grandees to
visit their King there. They were not allowed even to see him, and were treated
by Olivares with bare civility. The King himself was kept closely secluded in
two rooms, and not allowed to join the army or leave Saragossa, on the pretext
of fear for his safety if he approached Monzon; and he had to content himself
with passing his time watching tennis matches from his window. In the meanwhile
the Queen was making the most of her chances in Madrid, visiting the barracks and
flattering the soldiers, smiling upon the populace, and with her grace and
sweetness winning all hearts. So dire was the want of money at Saragossa that
the Queen sold all her jewels, and sent the money to Olivares for military
purposes. Before Philip had arrived in Aragon the French had entered it; and
Monzon, the ancient capital, was soon in their hands. Around the King all was
defeat and humiliation. Roussillon, to the north of the Pyrenees, was lost;
Catalonia, was governed by a foreign viceroy for a foreign King; the Castilian
armies were unpaid, starving, and in rags; and Olivares himself, now that the
truth could no longer be hidden from Philip, knew that his fall was
approaching. Philip, almost for the first time in his reign, acted without
consulting him and appointed the Marquis of Leganes as the new
commander-in-chief; but he, too, was defeated by Marshal de La Motte before
Lerida almost immediately, and his army melted away, as others had done before.
Heart-sick at his helplessness, the King in Saragossa heard with dismay of the
entry of de La Motte into Barcelona as Viceroy for Louis XIII; and, unable to
strike any fresh blow for his province, he returned to Madrid after an absence
of nine months, at the very time of the death of Richelieu, whose statesmanship
had so successfully met the rash pretentiousness of his would-be Spanish rival.
Fall of Olivares.
When the King and his favorite returned to the Court at the end of
December, 1642, the Queen and her friends had everything in readiness for the
blow. Count de Castrillo, Count de Paredes, the Haros, the Carpios—all those,
indeed, whom the favorite’s insolence had wounded or injured—had plucked up
courage in his absence and feared him no longer. The ex-Regent of Portugal, the
Duchess of Mantua, had been interned at Ocaña and forbidden by Olivares to see
the King. On January 14, 1643, the Queen made her appeal to her husband. In the
presence of her son Baltasar Carlos, now approaching adolescence, she solemnly
exhorted the King, for the sake of his child, to dismiss before it was too late
the man who was dismembering his inheritance. As the King traversed the passage
leading from the Queen’s apartment he was intercepted by his foster-mother, Doña
Anna de Guevara, who also had been dismissed by Olivares. Casting herself at
Philip’s feet, she implored him in impassioned words, to listen to the voice of
his best friends. Her impeachment of the favorite was bold and scathing. “You
have spoken truly”, replied the King to her, as he turned, dazed and perturbed,
and re-entered his wife’s room. That night, too, in defiance of the favorite’s
orders, the Duchess of Mantua fled from Ocaña, and through a winter tempest
travelled rapidly to Madrid. Olivares treated her insultingly when she suddenly
appeared; but she was of royal birth, and the Queen secured her an audience of
the King, who heard in dismay, for the first time, how Portugal had been lost
through the obstinate insolence of Olivares and his tool Vasconcellos.
The Count-Duke saw that the tide against him was too strong to be
withstood, and begged the King to allow him to retire; but no decided answer was
vouchsafed at the time. On January 16, 1643, he had a short public audience of
the King; but watchful observers noticed that Philip’s eyes never once rested
upon him, and that evening Olivares found awaiting him a polite note from his
master granting him the requested permission to retire. Soon the news ran
through the city, and when the next day, Sunday—the day of St Anthony—the King
and his wife and children, and the Duchess of Mantua, drove in one coach to
worship at the royal Convent of the Barefooted Carmelites, all Madrid was there
to shout “Long live the King; death to the evil favorite”. “Now wilt thou be
Philip the Great indeed”, cried the people, “for there will be no Count-Duke to
make thee little”. Olivares had not quite lost hope even yet. On the Tuesday a
deputation of the grandees met the King while he was hunting, and offered their
loyal duty to him, now that the Count-Duke could no longer slight and insult
them; and Philip on his return to the palace asked impatiently if Olivares had
gone yet. On being told that he had not, the King cried in a rage, “Is he
waiting for us to use force?”. In vain the favorite, and especially his wife,
prayed for another chance, for one more audience: Philip was obdurate, and
Olivares with a sinking heart left Madrid the next day, to see the King no
more. “I must reign, and my son must be crowned in Aragon; and this will not be
easy, unless I deliver your head to my subjects, who all demand it”, Philip
wrote; and, although his life was left him, the fallen favorite was stripped of
his wealth, and died mad two years and a half after his disgrace.
There were few who had a good word for Olivares; for, with the exception
of the Count de La Roca, those who wrote his history were his bitter foes, and
his haughty irascibility made him detested personally by high and low. But he
was able and laborious, and if he failed, as he did, it was not so much because
his ideal in home politics was a bad one, as because it was an impracticable
one at the time. His real fault was one that he shared with his countrymen at large; namely, the obstinate
clinging to the old boastful tradition of Spain’s right and power to interfere
in the religious affairs of other countries, and to play a predominant part in
European politics. The ruin which mistaken political economy had wrought
Spanish industry and national resources rendered it impossible for Castile to
pay for such a policy as was favored, not by Olivares alone, but by most
Spaniards; and the desire of Olivares to obtain as free a hand over the other
autonomous parliaments as had been obtained over that of Castile, was a
statesmanlike consequence of this unstatesmanlike policy.
To obtain funds for this disastrous system of widely-diffused activity
in foreign affairs on the part of a nation economically and socially decadent,
not only was Spain itself exposed to the danger of disintegration, but the vast
American colonies were driven to desperation. The exactions of the greedy
courtiers, who alone were eligible for posts in the Spanish possessions, the
exclusion of foreigners from trade with the colonies, and the stoppage of all
commercial relations between the mother-country and the countries at war with
it, which provided most of the goods for American consumption that Spaniards
had ceased to produce, resulted in a systematic evasion by the colonists of
their obligations towards Spain. Contraband, on a scale so extensive as in some
directions to exceed legitimate trade, deprived the mother-country of the
revenue to be derived from its possessions. The mines, it is true, continued to
send the precious metals to Spain, and the King’s fifth share of the value
added on paper to the revenue accruing to him. But even this wealth, diminished
as it was by plunder and capture, hardly gained any currency in the Peninsula,
since it was forestalled in most cases by loans contracted abroad for the
payment and supply of troops, and added nothing to the national riches; whereas
the supply of commodities to the colonies from Spanish industry would have
provided a means of productive wealth to the people and taxable resources to
the government. The policy of bombastic inflation favored by all Spaniards at
the time thus worked in a vicious circle. The pressing need for money to carry
it out caused provincial discontent and the increase of expenditure for
provincial wars, and at the same time the stoppage of provincial revenue; the
exactions and restrictions burdening colonial trade drove the colonies to
wholesale contraband, whereby the national revenue from trade with them was
lost; and in Castile itself the need for quickly realizable taxation led, as we
have seen, to the burdening of transactions in food and manufactures, which
strangled both rural and urban industries.
1647] The revolt of Naples. Masaniello.
Holland, Catalonia, and Portugal had all been alienated by the attempts
to weaken or destroy their autonomous liberties and fiscal independence; and
the Italian possessions of Spain were as tenacious of their rights as the rest.
Again and again, under one pretext or another, the Neapolitans had rebelled
against their masters; usually with the countenance of the French, whose old
claims to the country had never been forgotten. Sometimes the cause of
discontent had been the Spanish Inquisition, sometimes the unpopularity of
Viceroys, sometimes the oppression of the poorer classes by the native nobles;
but a more frequent excitant than any had been the exactions of the Spanish
officers, and the tampering with the value of the coinage, a favorite device
both of Lerma and Olivares. The Neapolitan Parliament of nobles and burgesses
had, like the Cortes of Castile, lost its vigour under the corruption of the
Spanish Viceroys, and the classes had been systematically alienated from each
other. The poorer part of the population were helpless against injustice and
extortion, since the Parliament and aristocracy were either powerless or
antagonistic, and the only possible remedy for intolerable oppression was
violence. The constant exactions both of men and money from Naples for the
Spanish wars, and for the enrichment of Spanish officials, had kept the
Neapolitans in simmering discontent for years; and the sight of Catalonia and
Portugal in open revolt could not but act as a stimulus.
In the course of the war between France and Spain, which had never
ceased, Mazarin, who had succeeded Richelieu, sent a squadron to seize some of
the Spanish fortresses on the Tuscan coast, with the aid of Prince Tommaso of
Savoy in May, 1646. The Duke of Arcos, the Spanish Viceroy of Naples, knowing
the disaffection of the people, and recognizing the danger of the vicinity of a
French force, applied to the city of Naples for a forced loan to enable him to
resist invasion, which the French now threatened from Elba, where they had
captured a position. The only thing remaining to be taxed in Naples was fruit,
the principal food of the poorest; and the new impost, upon it caused widespread
distress. The people were well-nigh starving; Arcos was appealed to in vain. When,
however, on the other side of the Straits the Sicilians broke into revolt
against a similar tax in the spring of 1647 the Neapolitan Viceroy in a panic
abolished the objectionable excise. Arcos was short of troops in the city, and
the weakness of his action following upon his tyranny gave heart to the
Neapolitans. The populace, unaided by the better classes, broke into
insurrection on July 7, 1647. The cry was suddenly raised in the market-place
that the tax upon the fruit was after all to be levied; and led by a young
fisherman of Amalfi, Tommaso Aniello, popularly known as Masaniello, the rabble
swept through the streets, burning the excise stands, and swarmed into the
palace of the Viceroy in uncontrollable numbers. Arcos lost courage and
promised all he was asked, but incontinently fled, first to the monastery of
San Francesco, and afterwards to the Castel Nuovo, leaving the mob the rulers
of Naples. There was no general massacre at first; and, although the gaols were
broken open, the armouries sacked, and a few specially oppressive Spaniards
hanged, there was no anger expressed against the King of Spain’s rule, but only
against the abuses of his officers.
Arcos was weak as well as powerless, and for his personal safety fraternized
with the leaders of the revolt. The lack of restraining influences and the
collapse of the Spaniards soon had their effect, and the people got out of
hand. First petty robbery, then pillage, arson, rapine, and murder, became rife.
The thirst for blood seized the excited people, and massacre for cruelty’s sake
alone wrought them to increasing fury. Masaniello’s head was turned, and mad
with vanity and drink he gave himself the airs of a sovereign. His excesses
turned many of his adherents against him, and the Viceroy contrived by bribery
to divide the populace; the result being that, in order to escape a faction
opposed to him—Neapolitan plebeians in Spanish pay—Masaniello took refuge in a
church, throwing himself upon the protection of the authorities. While the
leader of the revolt rested in a cell of the adjoining monastery, a band of his
persecutors called him by name. Stepping forth from the cell to the cloisters,
Masaniello, believing that those who called were friends, answered, “You seek
me? Here am I, my people”. In a moment four bullets pierced his breast, and,
with a cry of “Ingrates”, the insurgent chief sank dead. From the cloister his dead
body was dragged through the streets with contumely, only to be almost worshipped
the next day, and the leader of one week became the martyr and the saint of the
next. At length a patrician, Prince Massa, won the adherence of the mob, and
some sort of revolutionary order was established. On October 1,1647, the
watchers on Santelmo saw a fine Spanish fleet sail into the Bay. Philip had
chosen his brilliant and beloved legitimized son Don Juan of Austria for the
suppression of the revolt, and his advent gave new hopes to the Spaniards.
While Don Juan, in cooperation with the garrison and a party of the Neapolitan
nobles, was endeavoring to win back the populace, another faction invited to
Naples Henry Duke of Guise, whose House, through their Anjou ancestors, had
ancient claims upon the Neapolitan monarchy. The Duke of Guise suddenly
appeared in the city at the end of November, and at first took the hearts of
the populace by storm. All the power of the French nation, thought the leaders,
would now be on their side, and the belief was confirmed when a strong French
fleet appeared in the offing. Guise was offered, and accented, the position of
Doge of an independent Naples, and for a few weeks all looked hopeful. But the
Duke was unwise, and offended his supporters by his hauteur; and the French
fleet did nothing effective to help him. It was evident that Guise alone could
never maintain his independence. Mazarin, indeed, had no wish to employ
national resources in aggrandizing a subject House, and the French fleet had
other work to do. The revolt had been dwindling by division since the death of
Masaniello, and after drawing away Guise and his followers by a feint to
Posilipo, Don Juan captured the city by a
coup de main in February, 1648, the popular government of Naples being thus
brought to an end, amidst cheers of “Viva
il Ré” from the mob, who yearned
again for a real master.
The Peace of the Pyrenees.
Personal and national troubles fell thick and fast upon Philip. The loss
of Olivares, upon whom he had leaned so long, was terrible to him. Conquering
his desire for idleness, he resolved for once to act the King, “without human
means”, as he wrote, “but depending solely upon the Divine help, resolved to fulfill
my duty as King, regardless of weariness”; and in pursuit of this resolve he travelled
again, in 1643, to Aragon to animate a new attack against Catalonia. On his way
he was induced to visit, in her convent at Agreda, the famous saintly nun Maria,
upon whose wise and patient counsel he was thenceforward to depend in all
things, and to whom alone in the world he bared his seared and suffering heart.
While Philip was with his army in 1643, his new-born activity and assumption of
responsibility had resulted in his gaining considerable advantages over the
French and Catalans; and his forces had, under his personal command, recaptured
Lerida from La Motte.
In 1644, when still a Saragossa, he was suddenly recalled to Madrid by
the fatal illness of his wife, who died, to his great grief, before his
arrival, September 28. She had been beloved by his people, and perhaps by
himself, for, notwithstanding his unfaithfulness, she had borne him many children,
of whom only two lived, Baltasar and Maria Teresa; and nearly two months after
her death he wrote : “I am in the greatest state of trouble that can be, for I
have lost in one person all I can lose in this life : and if I did not feel
that God disposes for the best I know not what would become of me”. His principal
solace now was Prince Baltasar, the sturdy youngster with whose appearance
Velasquez’ brush has made us so familiar. Anxious to indoctrinate him early in
the science of government Philip carried the lad with him to Saragossa to
receive the oath of allegiance from the Aragonese and Valencian Cortes in the
autumn of 1645. Once again the independent Cortes were stiff in their demands,
but this time Philip had no obstinate Olivares by his side, and, though with
grief and hesitation, he was obliged to give way with regard to the power of
the Inquisition in Aragon. Whilst, the King was at Saragossa in October, 1646,
his son fell ill. The grief-stricken father almost rebelled against Heaven at the
prospect of losing him, but prayer consoled him, and when the boy died (October
9) Philip wrote: “I have lost my only son, whose presence alone comforted me in
my sorrows. My consolation is that I feel God wishes to save me through these
tribulations.... All I could do was to offer up this last blow as a sacrifice
to Him, though it has broken my heart, and I know not yet whether it is not a
dream”.
Spain, like her King, was drinking the cup of sorrow to the dregs. The
war in Germany went on without intermission, while Catalonia still drained the
national resources to the utmost. The war with France on the Flemish frontier
never ceased, and Spain had now really reached the end of her resources. At
length, to the relief of the world, the Treaty was signed at Münster in
January, 1648, which secured the recognition of Dutch independence by Spain, after
an eighty years’ struggle against the inevitable. The bitter truth was now
confessed, but too late to save Spain; the dream of dominating Holland for the
sake of the Catholic faith was dead. Spain thenceforward would not be needed to
fight for the Emperor against his Protestant subjects, and, now that she was
useless to him, she found herself without allies face to face with France.
With a little further sacrifice of pride on the part of Spain peace
might, perhaps, have been made after the deaths of Louis XIII and Richelieu had
placed Anne of Austria in power as Regent for her son Louis XIV; but the lesson
was hard to learn, and Melo, who had succeeded as viceroy of Flanders, on the
death of the Infante Ferdinand, had won some successes against the French. In
May, 1643, however, young Condé gained over him the victory of Rocroi, which
broke the spell surrounding that indomitable Spanish infantry whose valour and
skill had made the Spanish empire. Thenceforward Spain was as decadent in land
warfare as at sea. But still the war with France dragged on. Some attempts to
patch up a peace were made in 1649: but the Spanish claims that France should
surrender all her conquests doomed them to failure. Mazarin’s political
troubles at home, however, were paralyzing him also, and the bewildering
changes of side of the great French generals, Turenne and Condé in particular,
caused them temporarily to take the Spanish side against their own countrymen.
The divisions in France were busily fomented by Spain, the aid of Condé brought
some success to the Spanish arms in Flanders; and in the battle of Valenciennes
he and Don Juan of Austria defeated Turenne (July, 1656). Moreover, friendly
relations had sprung up between the English Commonwealth and Philip. The
French, notwithstanding the relationship of the royal family with the Stewarts,
had bid high for Cromwell’s friendship; but for several years after the
execution of Charles the Spanish connection had been preferred by the English
Protector. Cromwell’s demands upon Spain in return for an alliance had included
the right to trade in the Spanish American colonies, the limitation of the
power of the Inquisition over English subjects, and the equalization of customs
dues in Spain upon English and Spanish merchandise. Philip needed the alliance,
but the old pride still stood in the way, and the demands of Cromwell were rejected.
The sudden and treacherous attack upon Santo Domingo (April, 1655), the seizure
of Jamaica (May), and the capture and destruction of the Spanish silver fleet
by Admiral Stayner (September, 1656), opened the eyes of the overburdened King
of Spain to the danger that, while fighting the French on land he would have to
face the English at sea; and in November, 1656, Cromwell actually concluded an
alliance with France. In April, 1657, Blake destroyed a large Spanish fleet off
Vera Cruz. Whatever terms the French might impose upon him, it was at last
clear to Philip that peace would have to be made; but the negotiations, which
had begun before the battle of Valenciennes and had been broken off in
consequence of that victory were resumed. While they were slowly dragging on
the war in Flanders proceeded vigorously. The battle of Dunkirk or the Dunes
(1658) in which Condé, Don Juan, and James Duke of York stood on the side of
Spain, proved finally the terrible deterioration of the Spanish infantry, first
demonstrated at Rocroi; rapidly Oudenarde, Gravelines, Bergues, Dixmuyden, and
other Spanish-Flemish towns fell into the hands of the French, and at last
exhausted Spain had to humble herself, and make peace on terms dictated by her
foe. The terms of the Peace of the Pyrenees (November, 1659) were hard; yet
they might have been still harder but for the anxiety of Anne of Austria to
marry her son Louis XIV to her niece, Philip’s only daughter, Maria Teresa. Roussillon
was to remain French, while Catalonia was, so far as the French were concerned,
to be abandoned to Philip. Artois was surrendered to Louis XIV. The battle had
been fought to the bitter end, and Spain’s impotence was patent to the world
Philip’s natural indolence had soon overcome his resolve to be his own
minister. Don Luis de Haro, his new favourite, was less corrupt and greedy than
his predecessors, for there was now little or nothing left to seize, and he was
not without ability as a diplomatist; but he had proved himself no match for
Mazarin in negotiation, as at Elvas he had been no match for Meneses in the
field. The principal honors of the peace were Haro’s, however, and the joy of
Spaniards at the treaty passed all bounds. Sacrifices were forgotten, for now
for the first time for over forty years Spain was free from foreign war. Haro
was made Duke of Carpio and Prince of the Peace; the betrothal of the Infanta
in Madrid to Marshal de Grammont as his King’s proxy in the presence of sixty
peers of France, surpassed all previous records of stateliness, and when in the
following spring of 1660 the King and all his family and Court slowly travelled
through desolated Castile to the French frontier, to give his daughter to the
young King whose sun rose as that of Philip sank, the stiff magnificence of the
ceremonial was the last great manifestation of a defeated and dying system. Two
thousand mules were needed to carry the baggage, with seventy caparisoned
horses and nine hundred saddle mules; seventy state coaches carried the nobles,
and eighteen horse litters were devoted to the ladies who followed the Infanta.
Velvets, brocades, cloth of bullion, and Tinning goldsmiths’ work, gloves,
perfumes and laces, such as only Spain could produce, burdened seventy-five
sumpter mules, for the use of the future Queen of France; but when the Infanta
had been surrendered on the historic islet of Pheasants, in the Bidassoa, and
Philip and his host of courtiers wended their way homeward, their dark doublets
and stiff golillas had grown
old-fashioned in their eyes, and the lank hair clear of their projecting
collars seemed antiquated and uncouth, by the side of the frizzled curls and
piled periwigs of the French nobles and the elegance of their wide-skirted coats
of embroidered brocade and their dainty lace cravats.
The war in Catalonia had continued; but, with the capture of Tortosa by
Philip’s troops in 1650, and the capitulation of Barcelona, after a terrible
siege of fifteen months, in October, 1652, the revolt so far as the Catalans
themselves were concerned was practically at an end. The French, however, had
fought on in the north of the province against Don Juan and Mortara, Philip’s
best general; but with the Peace of the Pyrenees this war also ended, to the
content even of the Catalans, who were heartily tired of war and of their
French masters. In the attempts to recover Portugal Philip had been more
unfortunate. In 1638 the Spanish frontier stronghold of Badajoz was closely
beleaguered by the Portuguese, and a desperate effort was made to relieve it by
the favorite, Haro. His approach caused the Portuguese to abandon the siege and
recross the frontier, whither Haro followed them, only to be routed ignominiously
at Elvas in January, 1659, and himself to join in the panic-stricken sauve qui peut which ensued. But with
the pacification of Catalonia and the Peace of the Pyrenees Philip was able to
make a serious attempt to reconquer his lost kingdom. Early in 1661 Don Juan,
with 20,000 men, crossed the border from Estremadura, while another Spanish
force somewhat smaller invaded Portugal from the north. The Portuguese troops,
with an English auxiliary force under Schomberg, though fewer than the Spanish,
succeeded in holding Don Juan at bay; and in Madrid Haro, as Don Juan said
through jealousy, refused or neglected to send the reinforcements which the
Prince demanded. The civil dissensions in Portugal enabled Don Juan in 1682-3
to overrun the Alemtejo; but in June, 1663, Schomberg met the Spaniards near
Evora, which they had captured, and utterly routed them with terrible loss, in
spite of Don Juan’s gallantry. But still the surrender of Portugal was too
bitter a humiliation for Philip to accept, and the war dragged on. Don Juan was
recalled, for there were new currents against, him in Madrid now, though Haro
was dead; and Count Caracena with a fresh army attacked Villa Viciosa. Marialva
and Schomberg, with superior strength, came to the rescue, and were met by
Caracena in June, 1665. After eight hours of hand-to-hand struggle the
Spaniards suffered a crushing disaster, losing all their guns and two-thirds of
their men. It was the last effort. Philip could do no more; and, though he
never formally recognized the independence of Portugal, even this humiliation
was inevitable for his successor.
The decadence of Spain.
Spain had in Philip’s reign not lost so much in actual territory—for
with the exception of Portugal, Roussillon, and Artois, her possessions had
remained practically intact after forty years of war—as in prestige, in
initiative, and, above all, in her belief in herself. The disillusionment that
had crept over the King had equally paralyzed his people, and from similar
causes. Pride alone was now the sustaining power, not, as it had been, a
fervent faith in personal and national selection. This pride, which upheld
inflated pretensions without the power to enforce them, fostered the love of
sulky magnificence which was the note of the reign, together with the scorn of
labour. Of this tendency idle display without gaiety, which in Philip’s time
had become a perfect craze, was a natural consequence; and the social decadence
and decline of morality, side by side with abject devotion, which characterized
both the monarch and his people, were the inevitable outcome of a conviction
that Spain was now selected for special suffering. Religion had little to do
with the conduct of daily life. Sins constantly repeated were constantly
repented in sackcloth and ashes. The agonizing remorse of the King for the
frivolities and immoralities into which his weakness betrayed him, did not
deter him from again falling at the next temptation; and there is ample reason
for believing that the majority of his people viewed their moral and social
transgressions as he viewed his own.
Like some other stages of the history of Spain, this period of rapid
declension in sincerity and endeavor coincided with one of great brilliancy in
literature and art. Philip’s new pleasure palace of Buen Retiro in Madrid,
built for him by Olivares as a place where royal state might be somewhat
relaxed from the grim austerity of the Alcazar, was a centre of culture, wit,
and poesy, where, in a dilettante society round a dilettante King, every
courtier who could spin a verse or coin an epigram was sure of a hearing. The
Spanish stage was never so brilliant or so fashionable as it was when Philip
reigned. It was a time when Lope de Vega, Calderon, Tirso de Molina, Montalban,
and Moreto, were bewitching Spain and providing plots which were later, in
French garb, to pervade the theatres of the world. Philip and his first wife
were constant patrons of the two theatres of the capital—the inner courtyards
of houses, in which the rooms looking upon the enclosed space served as private
boxes, whilst the ground accommodated the mass of spectators. Philip’s love for
comedies extended to comedians. His infidelities with actresses were public,
and set the fashion for his courtiers, with the consequence that brawls and
assassinations in and after stage performances were common. In the Buen Retiro
itself play-acting and literary contests constantly went on, in which the royal
family took part; and it was said the King himself wrote plays under the
pseudonym of Un ingenio de esta Corte for representation upon his own stage. Nor was the drama the only form of
literature fashionable, Quevedo was a privileged genius who could, and did,
write scathing and witty satires, but was for many years in high favour with
Philip. Velez de Guevara and a dozen smaller men were penning stories tilled
with malicious humour reflecting the foibles of the decadent society, portrayed
for us to the life in El Gran Tacaño,
and El Diablo Cojuelo; and, at second
hand, in Gil Bias de Santillana and The
Bachelor of Salamanca. With such a King and such a Court, alike saturated
with literary preciosity, it is not surprising that idlers and adventurers of
all sorts should have aimed at advancement by the writing of eccentric satires
in prose and verse; and that failing of success in their efforts, many lived by
their wits as best they might, cheating, swindling, and cozening.
That such was the case in Madrid is recorded by every visitor at the
time. The main amusement of the people was the dull, aimless parading in
carriages up and down the Calle Mayor in the winter and the riverbed in
summer. Where the rich crowded the birds of prey gathered. In vain laws were
passed forbidding the ostentatious riding in coaches, except with strict
limitations; in vain decrees were published prohibiting women from dressing
outrageously, and covering their faces in the streets; the parade, where nobles
and thieves jostled with masked women, continued unchecked to the scandal of
all. Spanish women, from being retiring and modest, as in a semi oriental
country, became shamefully free; and at the end of the reign of Philip IV, in
spite of all regulations and penalties, there were said to be 80,000
professional prostitutes in Madrid; and no woman took offence at being accosted
by strangers in the street. The two playhouses were constantly crowded in the
daytime with artisans; and even working people wore swords and imitated the
dress and demeanor of gentlemen. Snuff-taking and the wearing of large
black-rimmed goggles were the fashion, as savouring of literature; and
everywhere was pretence, affectation, sloth, and debauchery. The streets of the
capitals were filthy beyond belief. There was no attempt at drainage of any sort,
the garbage and refuse being simply cast into the roadways to rot and fester.
Amidst this unpromising environment wit, fancy, and art flourished with
an over-florid luxuriance which portended decay. Not only was Philip the great
patron of poetry and the drama, but also a discriminating lover of pictorial
art. Madrid in his day was the acknowledged emporium of rare and beautiful objects
in all the arts. Philip’s nobles vied with himself in the collections of art
treasures from Italy, Germany, France, and Flanders; and, thanks to the
patronage of the King, Spain developed in his day two schools of painting which
have retained the despairing admiration of art-lovers to the present day. When
the Prince of Wales visited Madrid, he collected with remarkable zeal all the
paintings that could be had, valuing and paying for them at excessive prices,
and he and Philip in their presents to each other included some precious gems
of art. When the Commonwealth sold King Charles’ pictures, Philip, through his
agents in London, hastened to buy some of the best of them, which may still be
seen at Madrid. But it was not only as a collector of paintings that Philip
shone. His friendship and patronage throughout his life to one of the great
artists of the world, Velasquez, encouraged the development of the master’s
genius from the severe early paintings inspired by Pacheco and Greco, through
the opulent freedom of Rubens’ influence and that of the great Italians, to the
full perfection of the School of Madrid, of which Velasquez was the supreme
exponent. A sovereign who fostered the art of Velasquez and Zurbaran, of
Murillo and Ribera, and who by his liberal patronage and admiration led to the
creation of the finest works of the Schools of Madrid and Seville, has some
claim to the gratitude of mankind.
Death of Philip IV
So long as his son Baltasar had lived Philip had resisted all
suggestions that he should many a second life, but the death of his heir left
no Spanish male successor to the throne: and, at the suggestion of the Emperor,
Philip in 1649 married his niece Mariana of Austria. She was a girl hardly over
fifteen, eager for pleasure and overflowing with life, but scheming and
self-seeking from the first. To the heavy, lethargic, disillusioned man whom
she married she could bring neither solace nor counsel; but she bore a son to
him seven years after the marriage, who promised at least to secure the
succession. The child, however, died at the age of four in 1661, and again the
bereaved father was plunged in despair, convinced, “that it is because I have grievously
offended God that He sends me these punishments for my sins”. But soon another
son, Charles, came to console him. The astrologers and saintly seers predicted
for the child a happy, glorious life; for the omens combined in his favour.
Alas! they were all wrong; for he was well-nigh a monstrosity in his
degeneracy, and consummated the ruin of his country before he died of senile
decay at the age of forty. With this poor weakling as his heir Philip’s
prospects in his last days were darkened. His stolid pride of place forbade, as
it had done all his life, an open demonstration of his grief. But the dull
earthy face grew ever more despairing, and his melancholy more profound. The
rumour ran that the King was bewitched, and the Inquisition was busy
persecuting the poor wretches who were supposed to have cast the spell upon
him. The witchery that was killing him was bodily decay and spiritual
depression. “I want no more health, or anything else, than shall be for God’s
service”, he wrote in the last year of his life, “only that His holy will be
executed upon me”. In September, 1665, six months after this was written, he
fell gravely ill. The first step taken to aid him was a curious one. The Inquisitor-General
and the King’s confessor approached his bed and asked to be shown a small bag
of sacred relics he wore. After the contents had been inspected the bag was
restored, and the ecclesiastics then went to the church of Atocha and burnt “an
old black-letter book of witchcraft, some printed portraits of his Majesty
stuck through with pins, and other things”. This having been done, medical
remedies were resorted to, but with as little effect. Already the Court was
divided into two jarring factions, that of the Queen and that of Don Juan of
Austria; and of Philip “the Great” on his death-bed small heed was taken; for
each faction was looking for its rising sun. So little decency, indeed, was
observed that the rival ecclesiastics wrangled noisily over the death-bed,
until they were expelled from the chamber. On September 17, 1665, just before
dawn, Philip breathed his last; and for the man who had been flattered as a
demi-god all his life few tears were shed by the courtiers whom he had loaded
with honors. The corpse of Philip, theatrical to the last, with painted hands
and face, and in the rich garments he wore in life, lay under a canopy of
state, “in the great room in his palace at Madrid where they used to act plays”;
whilst Mariana, mistress of Spain in right of the semi-imbecile now called
King, triumphed over Don Juan, whom his father had angrily refused to see on his
death-bed. The evils that had ruined Spain had originated long before Philip IV
was born, and only a hero and a genius could have averted the catastrophe of
the country. Philip was neither. He was only an overburdened, indolent man,
with vicious tastes, a weak will, and a tender conscience. To this combination
was due the descent of Spain like an avalanche, bearing with it to despairing
extinction the last degenerate scion of the Spanish Habsburgs and the splendid
inheritance of the Emperor Charles V.
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