| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER XI
          THE RIVALRY BETWEEN CHARLES V AND FRANCIS I TO 1525
          WE shall now
          revert to the general affairs of Europe at the point where we left them in
          chapter the ninth. While Charles was taking possession of his new dignity, and
          putting in order the affairs of the Empire, his Spanish dominions were in a
          state of open insurrection, the first symptoms of which, excited by the
          unconstitutional act of the Cortes assembled in Gallicia,
          had manifested themselves, as we have already observed, before his departure in
          1520. Toledo first rose, under the leadership of Don Juan de Padilla, eldest
          son of the Commendator of Castile, and of Ferdinand
          de Avalos, two nobles who now assumed the part of demagogues. The deputies who
          had voted the donative were either murdered or compelled to fly for their
          lives. Confederations were formed among the various towns, the chief of those
          implicated in the revolt being Toledo, Segovia, Zamora, Valladolid, Madrid,
          Burgos, Avila, Guadalajara, and Cuenca. The Dutch Regent Adrian Boyens was led to suppose that he could put down the
          insurrection by making an example of Segovia, with which view he sent Ronquillo
          thither early in June; but the Segovians being
          supported by the Toledans, the royal army was
          defeated. Antonia de Fonseca, dispatched to Ronquillo’s assistance, took Medina
          del Campo by storm, and treated it with such cruelty as excited several other
          places to revolt which had hitherto remained faithful; while Fonseca' s house
          at Toledo was razed to the ground by the infuriated populace. Adrian, alarmed
          at these occurrences, disclaimed the acts of Fonseca. In July, deputies from
          the principal Castilian cities met in Avila; and having formed an association
          called the Santa Junta, or Holy Congress, declared the authority of Adrian Boyens illegal, on the ground of his being a foreigner, and
          required him to resign it; while Padilla, by a sudden march, seized Joanna at
          Tordesillas. The unfortunate Queen, in an interval of reason, authorized
          Padilla to do all that was necessary for the safety of the Kingdom; but soon
          relapsed into her former imbecility, and could not be persuaded to sign any
          more papers. The Junta nevertheless carried on all their deliberations in her
          name; and Padilla, marching with a considerable army to Valladolid, seized the
          seals and public archives, and formally deposed Adrian. Charles now issued from
          Germany circular letters addressed to the Castilian cities, in which great
          concessions were made. These, however, were not deemed satisfactory by the
          Junta; who, conscious of their power, proceeded to draw up a remonstrance
          containing a long list of grievances. It is remarkable that these complaints
          much resemble those subsequently urged by the Commons of England against the
          Stuarts; thus showing that Spain was then prepared to throw off feudal
          oppression and assert the principles of civil liberty.
   The most important
          demands were, that the King should not reside out of Spain, nor marry without
          consent of the Cortes; that no foreigner should be capable of holding the
          Regency or any other office in Church or State; that no foreign troops should
          be brought into the Kingdom; that the Cortes should be held at least once in
          three years, whether summoned by the King or not; and various conditions were
          laid down to insure the worthiness and independence of the members, especially
          that neither they nor any of their family should hold places or pensions from
          the King; that the judges should have fixed salaries, and not receive any part
          of the fines or forfeitures of persons condemned by them; that all privileges
          enjoyed by the nobility which were detrimental to the Commons should be
          abolished; that indulgences should not be preached or sold in the kingdom till
          the Cortes had examined and approved the reasons for publishing them, and that
          the profits should be strictly applied to the war against the Infidels; and
          that all bishops should reside in their dioceses at least six months in the
          year.
           Charles having
          refused to receive the remonstrance, the Junta proceeded to levy open war
          against him and the nobles; for the latter, who had first sided with the Junta,
          finding their own privileges threatened as well as those of the King, began now
          to support the royal authority. The army of the Junta, which numbered about
          20,000 men was chiefly composed of mechanics and persons unacquainted with the
          use of arms. Padilla was dismissed, and the command given to Don Pedro de
          Giron, a rash and inexperienced young nobleman, who had joined the malcontents
          out of private pique against the Emperor. On the other hand, Charles authorized
          the Constable and the Admiral of Castile to assist Adrian Boyens,
          and they were joined by the Duke of Najera, Viceroy of Navarre.
   Towards the end of
          November, Giron marched with about 11,000 men towards Rioseco in order to seize the Regent Adrian, who had retired thither; but he was
          out-maneuvered by the Count of Haro, the royal
          general, who, proceeding to Tordesillas, recaptured that place, together with
          the person of Joanna and the great seal, as well as many leaders of the Junta
          (December 5th, 1520). That party, however, was not discouraged, and they now
          reappointed Padilla their general. But it was Padilla’s wife, Dona Maria de
          Pacheco, a woman of high spirit and noble birth, who was in reality the soul of
          the league; and by her advice all the costly plate and precious ornaments of
          the Cathedral of Toledo were seized in order to raise money for supporting the
          army. It was evident, however, that the affairs of the Junta were declining.
          Neither Padilla nor the Council of Thirteen could succeed in preserving order;
          Castile became a wide scene of anarchy and confusion; and those who loved
          tranquility or had anything to lose hastened to join the party of the King and
          the nobility. In the spring of 1521, Padilla attempted to form a junction with
          the French who had invaded Navarre and advanced into Castile—a maneuver which
          was prevented by the coming up of the royal army; and on the 23rd April, 1521,
          Padilla being utterly defeated, and captured near Villalar,
          was beheaded on the following day. The Bishop of Zamora was captured on the
          same occasion. He was so zealous a revolutionist as to have organized a
          regiment of clergy, which distinguished itself in the defence of Tordesillas.
   The defeat just
          mentioned proved the ruin of the Junta. Valladolid and most of the other
          confederated towns submitted, but Toledo, animated by the grief and courage of
          Padilla’s widow, still held out; till at length the inhabitants, impatient of
          the long blockade and despairing of all succor, surrendered the town. Dona
          Maria retired to the citadel and held it four months longer; but on 10th of
          February, 1522, she was compelled to surrender, and escaped in disguise to
          Portugal; after which tranquility was re-established in Castile.
           A still more
          violent insurrection had raged in Valencia, headed by the Hermandad, which,
          though without any leaders of note, contrived to maintain the war during the
          years 1520 and 1521. Their efforts, however, were ultimately directed, not
          against the prerogative of the King, but the power of the nobles, whom Charles
          left to fight their own battles. In Aragon the symptoms of insubordination were
          checked by the prudent conduct of the Viceroy, Don Juan de Lanusa.
          Andalusia remained perfectly tranquil during these tumults. Had the various
          Spanish realms united together, they might doubtless have enforced their own
          terms; but their different forms of government prevented them from joining in
          any common plan of reform; they still formed distinct Kingdoms, and retained
          all their former national antipathies.
   These commotions
          in Spain afforded the French the opportunity for invading Navarre, before
          referred to,—one of the methods by which Francis gave vent to his ill humor at
          the loss of the Empire. His competition with Charles for the Imperial Crown had
          been conducted apparently with the greatest good humor, and Francis had
          remarked in a playful tone to Charles's ambassadors, “We are two lovers, who
          woo the same mistress; whichever she prefers the other must submit, and harbour no resentment”. But in the bitterness of defeat all
          these generous feelings vanished. Francis now began to view the Spanish King in
          a new light; he no longer regarded Charles as an equal and ally, whose
          scattered dominions were insecure and in some degree at his mercy, and to whom
          therefore his friendship was necessary, but as a rival who had gained a marked
          superiority, and who by his elevation to the Empire had not only acquired
          claims to some parts of the French dominions, but also perhaps the power of
          enforcing them. Pretexts for quarrelling were sufficiently abundant. Navarre
          was a bleeding wound in the side of Spain, which by the treaty of Noyon Francis
          had at any time a pretense for opening. The House of Austria had never digested
          the loss of Burgundy, wrested from them by Louis XI. In Italy, where Francis
          had neither received nor sought investiture of Milan from the Emperor, the old
          Imperial claims threatened to be a fertile cause of strife. It was plain that
          before long a war must ensue from the rivalship of
          two youthful and ambitious sovereigns, whose growing disagreement was visible
          in all their transactions. The wounded pride of Francis called loudly for
          revenge, but there were many reasons which dissuaded him from seeking it by an
          open declaration of hostility. He trembled for the safety of his Italian
          conquests; he had no funds for carrying on an extensive war, except by the
          sacrifice of his magnificence and his pleasures; above all, he knew that if he
          declared war against the Emperor and the Pope, they would be immediately joined
          by the King of England. He therefore resolved to consult his safety and at the
          same time indulge his ill-temper by adopting towards Charles a petty and
          underhand system of annoyance, and with this view he had encouraged the
          Castilian communities in their rebellion, and endeavored to raise a party against
          Charles among the Electors of the Empire; his jealousy rendering him blind to
          the fact that such a course must inevitably kindle the war which it was so much
          his interest to avoid.
   Francis had
          certainly colorable grounds for an invasion of Navarre, as Charles had
          neglected that stipulation of the treaty of Noyon by which he was bound to do
          the deposed King justice within six months. John d'Albret and his consort Catharine were both dead, and the scepter of Navarre had
          devolved to their son, Henry II. The French King’s mistress, the beautiful
          Countess of Chateaubriand, of the House of Foix, whose family had reversionary
          claims to Navarre through their kinship to Henry II, also used her influence
          with Francis to induce him to invade Navarre; and he resolved to strike a blow
          which love and hatred combined to counsel. The Navarrese were favorable to the
          cause of their exiled King, and the citizens of Estella in particular invoked
          his presence in language which partook of Eastern poetry. “Do but come. Sire”,
          they wrote, “and you will behold rocks, mountains, and trees take up arms for
          your service”. Francis permitted Andrew of Foix, Lord of Lesparre,
          the third brother of Madame de Chateaubriand, to levy a small army of 5,000 or
          6,000 Gascons, with which, and 300 lances belonging to his eldest brother,
          Marshal Lautrec, he entered Navarre. As Ximenes had razed nearly all the fortresses in that little Kingdom, it was soon overrun; Pamplona
          alone, animated by the courage of Ignatius Loyola, made a short resistance.
   This siege
          indirectly caused the origin of the Society of Jesuits. Loyola, whose leg had
          been shattered by a cannon-ball, found consolation and amusement during his
          convalescence in reading the lives of the Saints, and was thus thrown into that
          state of exaltation which led him to devote his future life to the service of
          the Papacy.
           Lesparre was stimulated by his easy success to exceed the bounds of his commission,
          and instead of confining himself to the reduction of Navarre, to pass into
          Castile, where his attempt to form a junction with the malcontents under
          Padilla was defeated in the manner before related. At the invitation, however,
          of the heroine Dona Maria de Pacheco, he undertook the siege of Logrono, a
          frontier town of Old Castile, on the farther side of the Ebro. All the pride of
          the Castilians was roused by this insult. Forgetting their complaints against
          Charles and his Regent Adrian, they flew to arms; Lesparre was obliged to raise the siege, and retreat towards Pamplona; but being
          overtaken at Esquiros by the Castilian army under the
          Constable, the Admiral, and the Duke of Najera, was defeated and captured June
          30th, 1521. He shortly afterwards died of a wound received in the action.
          Navarre was now recovered by the Castilians as easily as it had been overrun by
          the French.
   Francis adopted
          the same policy of petty intervention on his northern border. Robert de la Marck, Duke of Bouillon and Lord of Sedan, long one of
          Charles’s best friends, and who had helped his election to the Empire, having a
          suit respecting a castle on the French frontier, had taken offence at the
          Chancellor of Brabant entertaining an appeal from his courts, which he
          contended were independent; and Louise of Savoy, in an interview with the Duke
          at Romorantin, fomented his discontent and approved
          his projects of vengeance. The Parliament of Paris sent an officer to cite
          before them, not only the President and Attorney-General of Charles's supreme
          Netherland court, but even the Emperor himself, or rather as the decree ran,
          the Count of Artois and Flanders; and the Duke of Bouillon was ridiculous
          enough to dispatch a herald to the Diet at Worms to challenge the Emperor
          before all his Princes. With the connivance of the French Court, though
          contrary to an ostensible prohibition, La Marck levied a small army in France, and together with his son Fleurange laid siege to Vireton, a town of Luxembourg. Henry
          VIII, at the request apparently of the Emperor, now interfered, and Bouillon,
          by order of Francis, raised the siege, March 22nd, 1521.
   Charles, however,
          was not inclined to let his insolence pass unpunished. The Imperials generals,
          the Count of Nassau, Sickingen, and Frunsberg, not only entered Bouillon's dominions, where
          they took and destroyed several places, but even crossed the French frontier
          and committed several acts of violence; and though, on the approach of a French
          army, Nassau granted Bouillon a truce of six weeks, yet hostilities still
          continued between the Imperialists and the French. Nassau, who had retired into
          Luxembourg, again entered France, captured Mouzon,
          and laid siege to Mézières, which was valiantly
          defended by Bayard; but on the approach of the Duke of Alençon with his army,
          Nassau was again compelled to retire.
   An open war seemed
          to be now impending between Francis and the Emperor, and in this state of
          things Henry VIII, assuming his favorite character, offered to mediate between
          them; a proposal which, after some reluctance on the part of Francis, was
          accepted by both Princes. Charles had no reason to object to such a course; he
          was assured of Wolsey’s support, and he was in intimate alliance with the Pope,
          whose Legates were to be present at the discussions. After some delay the
          conference was fixed to be held at Calais on the 8th of August. But before
          proceeding to that matter, we must take a brief view of the affairs of Italy
          and the conduct of the Pope.
           ALLIANCE BETWEEN
          THE POPE AND THE EMPEROR
   The thoughts of
          Leo were perpetually directed towards the temporal aggrandizement of his
          family. We have already seen how, with the French King’s connivance, he
          succeeded in wresting Urbino from Francesco Maria della Rovere, and bestowing it on his own nephew Lorenzo.
          Not content with withholding Modena and Reggio from Alfonso d'Este,
          he next designed to seize upon Ferrara itself. Having failed, in 1519, in an
          attempt to surprise that place, he tried in the following year to gain his end
          by treachery, and bribed Rudolf Hell, a German captain in Alfonso's service, to
          betray one of the gates to his forces. But Hell revealed the whole plot to his
          master; and Alfonso, though unwilling to take any public step in the matter,
          let the Pope plainly see that he was aware of his designs.
   In 1520 Leo
          treacherously procured the destruction of the Lords of Perugia and Fermo.
          Perugia was in the hands of Gian Paolo Baglioni, a famous condottiere, who had
          made himself master of his native city. According to contemporary writers
          Baglioni was a monster steeped in every vice—a fact, however, which can hardly
          justify Leo’s conduct; who, having entrapped him to Rome under promise of
          security, caused him to be apprehended and tortured; when he is said to have
          confessed enormities deserving of a thousand deaths. However this may be, he
          was beheaded in the Castle of St. Angelo, and the Pope escheated his
          possessions.
           Lodovico Freducci of Fermo was attacked on similar pretexts by
          Giovanni de' Medici with an army of 5,000 men, and slain in attempting to
          escape. After these examples many of the smaller tyrants in the March of Ancona
          submitted; some of whom, relying, like Baglioni, on Leo’s good faith, were
          tried for their former conduct and put to death. That most of them deserved
          their fate can hardly be doubted. The wretched state of morals among Italian
          princes may be safely inferred from Machiavelli’s Principe, as well as from
          their own histories; but the conduct of the Pontiff in condemning those over
          whom he had no temporal jurisdiction, in order to appropriate their
          possessions, can hardly be justified on the plea of their immorality.
           Leo seconded these
          acts of violence by the most treacherous and double-faced negotiations. Early
          in 1521 he had entered into a treaty with Francis I, by which it was agreed
          that they should unite to drive the Spaniards out of Naples; on the
          accomplishment of which the town of Gaeta, with all the northern part of
          Campania Felix as far as the Garigliano, was to be
          ceded to the Holy See, the remainder of the Kingdom being assigned to the
          second son of the French King; who, however, till he should attain his
          majority, was to be under guardianship of an Apostolic Legate. Francis, either
          from negligence, fear of England, or suspicion of the Pope's sincerity, seems
          to have delayed the ratification of this treaty, and to have withheld the
          promised subsidies.
   Piqued by this
          conduct, as well as offended by the proceedings of Lautrec, who had succeeded
          Bourbon as Governor of the Milanese, and especially by his refusing to
          acknowledge Rome’s authority in the matter of benefices, Leo now secretly
          entered into an alliance with Charles V, on the basis of a counter-project for
          driving the French, instead of the Spaniards, from Italy. The chief articles
          were, that Frances Sforza, second son of Ludovico, should be installed in the
          Duchy of Milan; that Parma and Piacenza should be ceded to the Holy See, and
          that its claims on Ferrara should be supported by the Emperor; that the annual
          tribute paid by Naples to the Holy See should be augmented; that the Neapolitan
          Duchy of Cività di Penna should be conferred on
          Alessandro de' Medici, a child of nine, and a pension of 10,000 crowns on
          Cardinal Giulio de' Medici, secured on the revenues of the Archbishopric of
          Toledo, then vacant. The Pope on his side undertook to forward the Emperor's
          claims upon Venice. This treaty, which was concluded while the Diet of Worms
          was sitting, bears the same date as the outlawry of Luther, or Edict of Worms
          (May 8th, 1521), and it can hardly be doubted that both were intimately
          connected. By the sixteenth article the Emperor engaged to reduce to obedience
          the adversaries of the Apostolic throne, that is, Luther and his adherents, and
          to avenge all the wrongs they had done it.
   After the
          conclusion of this treaty, the Pope and Emperor made attempts to gain partisans
          in the various Italian cities. Jerome Morone,
          formerly Chancellor of Milan, one of the numerous citizens whom the harshness
          of the French rule had compelled to quit their native country, proposed to Leo
          a scheme for attacking several places in the Milanese by means of malcontent
          exiles. The Pope adopted the project, and secretly advanced money for its
          execution; and when it proved abortive he permitted the exiles to take refuge
          at Reggio. Charles and the Pope also supported the Adorni and Fieschi in a plan which they had formed to wrest
          Genoa from the Fregosi, who governed it for the
          French; and the Pope fitted out some galleys for that purpose. But this scheme
          also was defeated by the vigilance of Octavian Fregoso.
   At this time, Odet of Foix, Lord of Lautrec, the Governor of the
          Milanese, was absent in France, and had left the supreme command to his
          brother, Thomas of Foix, commonly called Marshal de Lescun;
          who, hearing of the proceedings of the Pope, marched with some troops to
          Reggio, intending if possible to surprise the town, or at all events to demand
          an explanation. On his appearance before the place, Guicciardini,
          the Governor, gave him an audience outside the gates. Whilst they were
          conferring, Lescun’s men attempted to force an
          entrance into the town; a skirmish ensued; blood was spilt on both sides; the
          French were repulsed, and Guicciardini detained Lescun to answer for his conduct, but dismissed him on the
          following day. Lescun subsequently dispatched an
          envoy to the Pope to apologize for his conduct; but Leo, glad of so good an opportunity
          to throw off the mask, refused to hear the envoy, complained of the French
          King’s hostility, excommunicated Lescun as an impious
          invader of the territory of St. Peter, and publicly avowed in Consistory the
          treaty which he had concluded with the Emperor.
   Such was the
          position of affairs between the Pope, the Emperor, and the French King, when
          the appointed conference was held at Calais. It was managed on the part of
          Charles by the Count of Gattinara, a Piedmontese, for Chievres had
          died at Worms in the preceding May; on the part of Francis, by the Chancellor Duprat. Wolsey was master of the situation, the arbiter
          whom both sides sought to gain. Duprat was assiduous
          in supplying all his wants, which the Cardinal was not scrupulous in intimating
          : now providing him with a litter, as Wolsey complained of the fatigue of
          riding his mule; now sending far and wide for some better French wine than
          could be procured at Calais. The Cardinal, however, was already sold to the
          Emperor for the reversion of a more splendid prize than it was in the power of
          Francis to offer.
   Before the
          conference, Henry VIII and his minister had already made preparations for
          hostilities against Francis, by providing a body of 6,000 archers, and devising
          plans for the destruction of the French fleet. Nay, so ardent was Wolsey in the
          cause, that though, as he says, “a spiritual man” and in general prone enough
          to assert the superiority of the toga over arms, yet he expressed his readiness
          to march with his cross at the head of the English troops. He affected,
          however, the greatest impartiality, and declared that his only solicitude was
          to ascertain who had first broken the peace. To have effected a satisfactory
          mediation between the two Sovereigns would have been impossible. Each made claims
          which he knew the other would not grant—Francis demanding the restitution of
          Navarre and Naples; Charles requiring that Milan and Genoa should be evacuated,
          homage for Flanders remitted, and Burgundy restored. Under these circumstances
          it is not surprising that Wolsey's mediation only resulted in procuring a
          treaty for the suspension of hostilities between the French and Netherland
          vessels engaged in the herring fishery.
           Technically
          speaking, Francis was certainly committed by Lesparre’s invasion of Spain, of which the Emperor had complained before the opening of
          the conference, at the same time requiring Henry to declare against France as
          the first aggressor; but, in any event, the result of the conference was
          predetermined. In fact, the Emperor himself, in a speech which he made to the
          people of Ghent, in July, had told them that “he would leave the French King in
          his shirt, or else Francis should so leave him”. While the conference was going
          on, Wolsey, escorted by 400 horse, went in great state to Bruges to visit the
          Emperor, who received him as if he had been a sovereign prince. Here, in the
          name of his master, the Cardinal concluded with Charles a treaty, the chief
          purport of which was, that in the following year the Emperor should invade
          France on the south, and Henry on the north, each with an army of 40,000 men.
          At the same time a marriage was agreed on between the Emperor and Henry's
          daughter Mary, to be celebrated when the latter should have attained the age of
          ten. Mary was to have a dowry of £680,000, but from this sum was to be deducted
          all money owed by the Emperor to England. We have seen that Mary was already
          betrothed to the Dauphin, and that the Emperor himself had engaged to marry
          Francis’s daughter Charlotte. The treaty was to be kept profoundly secret till
          such time as Charles should visit England, on his return to Spain, when Henry
          was to declare war against France.
   The Pope was not
          idle during these negotiations. He sanctioned the treaty (August 25th) by
          a beneplacitum, and on the 4th September
          he issued a bull of excommunication against Francis I, releasing his subjects
          from their allegiance. A treaty was also arranged at Bruges, between the
          Emperor, the King of England, and the Pope, which was ratified November 24th,
          at Calais. The Emperor and the King of England promised to support Leo, whose
          greatest care, it was affirmed, was for spiritual affairs, against the German
          and other heretics. It was at this time that Henry VIII published his book
          against Luther, which procured him the title of “Defender of the Faith”.
   Meanwhile the war
          went on. On the southern French frontier the Admiral Bonnivet and the Count of Gruise, who had been dispatched with
          an army to revenge the disaster of Lesparre, not only
          succeeded in recovering Lower Navarre, or that part of the Kingdom north of the
          Pyrenees—which the House of Albret did not again
          lose—but also took Fuenterabia. This news arrived
          before the conference at Calais was concluded. Charles V, supported by Henry
          VIII, immediately demanded the restoration of Fuenterabia,
          which opened to the French the road into Biscay; and on the refusal of Francis,
          the negotiations ended. In the north, Francis entered the Cambresis at the head of his army in October, and on the 22nd came up with Nassau between Cambray and Valenciennes; but with a hesitation quite
          unusual with him, and contrary to the advice of his best and most experienced
          captains, missed the opportunity of attacking the Imperialists at an advantage.
          The French, however, succeeded in capturing Hesdin,
          after which Francis retired to Amiens, and disbanded the greater part of his
          army. But this success was more than counterbalanced by the loss of Tournai,
          which surrendered to the Imperialists before the end of December, after a
          blockade of six months. During this period we find Wolsey, in his assumed
          character of a peaceful mediator, writing the most treacherous letter to
          Francis (October 20th), in order to deter him from a battle with the Emperor,
          the result of which the Cardinal feared; and this in direct contravention of
          his master's advice to the Emperor, to provoke the French King to fight. Wolsey
          had followed up this letter by sending an embassy to Francis, then near
          Valenciennes, to persuade or frighten him into a truce. To this Francis would
          not consent; but the delay which this embassy occasioned arrested his
          operations, and probably caused the loss of Tournai. Thus was opened that
          series of wars between the rival Houses of France and Austria, which, with
          little intermission, lasted nearly two centuries, and which may be divided into
          two periods; namely, till the peace of Vervins, in
          1598, and to the death of Louis XIV, in 1715.
   The war, which was
          now fairly kindled, soon spread into Italy, where, as we have seen, hostile
          symptoms had already displayed themselves. The French rule in that country had
          been anything but wise or popular : the government was conducted with military
          harshness, and the Italians were made to feel that they were a conquered
          people. Lautrec, the eldest brother of the frail Madame de Chateaubriand, a
          good soldier, but a man of cruel and inflexible character, conducted his
          viceroyalty on a system of terror; his own family, as well as the treasury, was
          enriched by confiscations and executions, and he is said to have banished half
          the principal inhabitants of the Milanese. Even the veteran Marshal Trivulzio, a native of Milan, one of the first captains of
          the age, who had assisted the French in their enterprises in Italy ever since
          the days of Charles VIII, was treated with contumely by Lautrec, on account of
          his Guelf principles. At the age of eighty Trivulzio crossed the Alps in winter to lay his complaints at the feet of Francis I, but
          was denied an audience through the influence of the Countess of Chateaubriand.
          He died heartbroken soon after in France. But the French interests in Italy
          were as much damaged by intrigues at home as by bad policy abroad. The Court
          was divided into two factions, each led by a woman; for the period had arrived
          when cabal, female influence and the caprices of mistresses, were to play so
          great a part in the affairs of France, to direct and often to damage her most
          important enterprises. At the head of one party was the King’s mother, Louise
          of Savoy, whose principal adherents were the Chancellor Duprat,
          the Admiral Bonnivet, and René, the Bastard of Savoy,
          Louise’s brother, for whom she wished to obtain the command in Italy.
   On the other side
          was the King’s mistress, Madame de Chateaubriand, with Lautrec and her other
          brothers : but the love of Francis was now beginning gradually to decline, and
          with it the credit of the Countess. Lautrec had neglected to pay the King'’
          mother sufficient court : he had even had the audacity to speak too freely of
          her conduct; and Louise in her wrath resolved to punish him, were it even at
          the expense of the interests and honor of France. When the cloud of war began
          to lower over Italy, Lautrec, who, as we have said, was in France, received
          orders to repair to his government; but he declared that he was in want of
          money to pay the troops, and refused to stir unless he was supplied with
          400,000 crowns. The King and Semblançay, the minister
          of finance, promised on oath that the money should be remitted to him, and
          Lautrec departed. When, however, it was collected, Louise seized it for her own
          use, thus gratifying at once her rapacity and her revenge. When in the
          following year Lautrec, after his defeat in Italy, again returned to France,
          and denied having received the money, Louise's tool, Semblançay,
          to clear himself, accused her to the King. Semblançay was subsequently sacrificed to her vengeance, and hanged on a false charge in
          1527. The want of this money was the main cause which deprived the French of
          the Milanese.
   The Papal and
          Imperial army, to which Leo’s influence added the troops of Florence, took the
          field in August, 1521. This war is attributed by Guicciardini,
          on the authority of Leo’s cousin, Cardinal Giulio de' Medici, to the restless
          ambition of that Pontiff. The Spanish troops were led by Ferdinand de Avalos,
          Marquis of Pescara, the Papal army by Frederick Gonzaga, Marquis of Mantua,
          with Guicciardini over him as commissary-general;
          while the command in chief was entrusted to Prosper Colonna. The last, though
          an able general, was too slow and cautious in his movements; he lost a
          fortnight in waiting for reinforcements, and then, instead of marching upon
          Milan, laid siege to Parma, which he entered September 1st. By the advance,
          however, of Lautrec on one side, and the Duke of Ferrara on the other, he was
          again obliged to retire on the Lenza, where he wasted
          another month, suspicious of the Pope’s real intentions.
   Leo had taken
          advantage of his treaty with Francis early in the year to hire the services of
          6,000 Swiss, whom the French permitted to pass through the Milanese, and he now
          procured additional reinforcements from Switzerland. That Confederacy was not
          disposed to lose its mercenary traffic in blood by any declaration of
          neutrality. Although a Diet convened at Lucerne at the beginning of August
          decided on assisting the French, the influence of the Cardinal of Sion
          prevailed in the Cantons of Lucerne, Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden, in favor of
          the Imperialists, and hence the number of Swiss in each army was nearly equal,
          or about 20,000. Having received some of these reinforcements, Colonna crossed
          the Po, October 1st, and carried the war into the Cremonese,
          where Lautrec was posted. That commander relied mainly on his Swiss, whom,
          however, he had disgusted by his hauteur, and still more by failing to pay
          their wages, which the peculation of Louise had deprived him of the means of
          furnishing. The heads of the Cantons, moreover, sensible of the infamy that
          would be incurred if the two bodies of Swiss should be engaged against each
          other, having sent orders to recall both, the Cardinal of Sion bribed the
          messengers who were to convey the order to the Imperial camp; and thus it was
          delivered only to the Swiss in the French service, whose discontent not only
          prompted them immediately to obey it, but even induced many to join the
          Cardinal and the Imperialists. Lautrec, thus deserted, was obliged to shut
          himself up in Milan. Morone having sent a message to
          Colonna, that if a night attack were made on the town, the Ghibelins,
          or Imperial faction, would open one of the gates, Pescara advanced with the
          Spanish infantry, on the night of the 19th November, to the Porta Romana,
          through which he was admitted. Lautrec and his brother Lescun,
          thus taken by surprise, escaped the same night with the remnant of their army
          to Como, whence they proceeded to Lonato, in the
          territory of Brescia.
   Cardinal Giulio
          de' Medici, whom Leo had dispatched to the allied army in the character of
          Papal Legate, entered Milan with the victorious troops, and at Rome it was
          commonly believed that the Duchy was destined for him; but for the present Morone was invested with the government, as lieutenant for
          Francesco Maria Sforza. The rest of the Milanese cities, except the citadel of
          Milan, the town of Cremona, and a few other places, eager to throw off the
          French yoke, now submitted to the Imperialists; and thus in a campaign of three
          months, the French lost nearly all the Milanese without a single pitched battle
          having been fought. The schemes of Leo X were thus entirely successful, and all
          his darling projects seemed on the point of accomplishment. Soon after the fall
          of Milan, Parma and Piacenza were occupied by the Allies, which places,
          conformably to the treaty with the Emperor, were to be made over to the Pope.
          The news of these successes reached Leo at his favorite villa of Malliana. He was seized the same night with a slight
          illness, and immediately returned to Rome, where his symptoms grew worse; and
          on the 1st of December he died so unexpectedly that there was not time to
          administer the last sacraments.
   Leo X had nearly
          completed his forty-sixth year at the time of his decease, and had filled the
          Apostolic chair eight years, eight months, and nineteen days. In temper he was
          bland and easy, but indolent and luxurious; little attentive to appearances, so
          that, to the horror of his master of the ceremonies, he would ride out to enjoy
          his favorite diversion of hunting, in boots, and without a surplice. He was a
          passionate lover of music, of which he was not only a connoisseur, but also a
          good performer himself; and as he was liberal, or rather prodigal, in rewarding
          the ministers of his pleasures, he would sometimes give 100 ducats to a
          musician who had sung with him. He delighted in the company of buffoons, was
          fond of games of chance or skill, and took an almost childish pleasure in
          splendid fetes and pompous exhibitions. Although little versed in theology or
          sacred learning, one of his best traits was the liberal patronage which he
          afforded to literature and art. Thus his Court exhibited a kind of intellectual
          sensuality, which while it formed a striking contrast to the gross debauchery
          of Alexander VI, or the stern economy and martial bearing of Julius II, was
          just as far removed from those qualities and virtues which might be expected in
          a Christian Pontiff.
           Leo’s political
          character, the chief traits of which are treachery and cruelty, may be gathered
          from the preceding narrative. That such a Pope should not have been popular at
          Rome can only be accounted for by his extravagant expenditure, which involved
          him in debt and emptied the Roman treasury. In so low a state, indeed, was his
          exchequer, that it was necessary to use at his funeral the wax tapers which had
          already served at the obsequies of a Cardinal. Immediately after his death his
          character was assailed in the most scurrilous libels; nay, it was even debated
          in Consistory whether his name should be expunged from the records of the Holy
          See. Leo’s prodigality, however, produced a sort of artificial prosperity at
          Rome, which under his Pontificate was much enlarged and beautified.
           Upon Leo’s death
          Prosper Colonna was obliged to dismiss the greater part of the Swiss and other
          German contingents in the Papal army for want of funds to pay them; the
          Florentine troops, who had no direct interest in the war, returned into
          Tuscany, while Giovanni de' Medici went over to the French with a
          well-disciplined corps of about 3,000 foot and 200 horse, called, from the
          colors which they bore, the Black Bands. Several of the Italian Princes seized
          the opportunity to recover the dominions of which they had been deprived:
          Alfonso d'Este regained the greater part of his
          possessions; the expelled Duke of Urbino was received with enthusiasm by his
          former subjects, and similar revolutions happened at Perugia, Rimini, and other
          places. Meanwhile all eyes were directed towards Rome, where the Conclave had
          assembled (December 27th) for the election of a new Pope. The contest lay
          between Giulio de' Medici and Soderini, also a
          Florentine, who was supported by the French interest. Charles V did not, as it
          has been asserted, break his promise to Wolsey on this occasion; he recommended
          that Cardinal to the Sacred College, but perhaps without any very ardent wish
          for his success. The votes in favor of Wolsey amounted not to twenty, while
          twenty-six, or those of two-thirds of the thirty-eight Cardinals assembled,
          were necessary to secure the election. Giulio de' Medici was undoubtedly the
          candidate best qualified for the vacant throne. He belonged to one of the most
          powerful families in Italy; had presided in Leo’s councils, and was intimately
          acquainted with his projects as well as with the views of the various European
          Courts. The Cardinals, however, were averse to the notion of the Papacy being
          converted into a family succession. The contest, which subjected the Cardinals
          to the severest privations, and was conducted with the most violent and
          disgraceful altercations, had long seemed doubtful, when one of the Conclave,
          some say Giulio de' Medici himself, suddenly and as if by mere chance named
          Adrian of Utrecht, the Regent of Spain, who was immediately elected (January
          9th, 1522). The election was so distasteful to the Roman populace, who feared
          that the Papal seat might be removed to Spain or Germany, that at first none of
          the Cardinals dared leave his house
   NEW DEFEAT OF
          THE FRENCH
   Early in the
          spring, both parties made preparations for resuming the war in Italy. The
          French affairs were not altogether desperate. Lautrec, as we have seen, still
          held several places, and René, the Bastard of Savoy, succeeded in raising
          10,000 men in Switzerland, where the influence of the Cardinal of Sion had
          declined in consequence of the trick he had played off. Lautrec, however, was
          still in want of money; for although Duprat had by
          the most unprecedented extortions, and by the sale of some of the royal
          domains, raised funds sufficient to support a brilliant army, the money was
          either squandered by Francis among his mistresses, or diverted by the avarice
          of his mother. On the other side, Jerome Adorno and George Frunsberg had with inconceivable rapidity led 5,000 Germans through the Valtellina to
          Milan, where Colonna and Pescara lay with the Imperial army. The French gens d'armes and Venetians under Lautrec, being joined by the
          Swiss reinforcements, that commander crossed the Adda, March 1st, 1522; and
          after an abortive attempt to relieve the citadel of Milan, laid siege to Pavia,
          which, however, the advance of Colonna obliged him to raise. As the Swiss began
          to grow clamorous for their pay, Lautrec directed his march upon Arona, whither some money had been sent. It was necessary,
          however, to dislodge Colonna from a position which he had taken up at a villa
          and park called the Bicocca, between Milan and Monza. As the position seemed
          almost impregnable, and the Imperial army was daily weakened by desertion,
          Lautrec wished to defer the attack; but the Swiss would listen to no arguments,
          and sent in their last demand in three words—argent, congé, ou bataille (pay, dismissal, or battle). Thus between
          two alternatives—for money he had none—Lautrec was obliged to order an assault
          (April 29th). It failed, as he had anticipated, in spite of the most prudent
          arrangements. The Swiss being repulsed with great slaughter, refused to renew
          the attack in support of Lescun, who had assailed the
          position on the opposite side. After this defeat matters appeared to be
          irretrievable. The Swiss having retired into their own country, Lautrec
          returned to France, leaving the defence of the
          Milanese to his brother. The task, however, was a hopeless one, and Lescun found himself obliged to enter into a capitulation
          with Colonna, May 26th, by which he agreed to evacuate the whole of the
          Milanese Duchy, with the exception of the citadels of Milan, Novara, and
          Cremona; after which, he also retired into France. Genoa fell into the hands of
          the Imperialists shortly afterwards, almost by accident. Some Spanish and
          German soldiers having entered by a breach in the walls which they perceived to
          be undefended, the inhabitants were incited to rebel; Ottaviano Fregoso was deposed and imprisoned, and Antoniotto Adorno, who accompanied the Imperial army, made
          Doge in his stead. After these reverses, Francis I abandoned for a while his
          designs upon Italy, being compelled indeed to defend his own frontier against
          the combined attacks of Charles V and Henry VIII.
   During the events
          just narrated the Emperor was still residing in Germany. Adrian’s election to
          the Papacy, which obliged him to vacate the Regency of Spain, as well as the
          still unsettled state of that country, determined Charles to proceed thither;
          especially as he wished to visit England on his way, in order to reconcile
          himself with Wolsey, now smarting under his disappointment. During the six
          weeks which he spent in England, the Emperor courted the favor of Henry, and
          succeeded in soothing Wolsey by fresh promises. He engaged to make good to the
          Cardinal a pension of 12,000 livres, secured to him by the French King on the
          bishopric of Tournai, of which the contemplated rupture with France would
          deprive him; nor did he neglect to render himself popular with the English
          people, whose confidence and goodwill he acquired by making the Earl of Surrey
          his High Admiral. During the Emperor’s stay in England the agreement entered
          into between himself and Wolsey, the preceding year at Bruges, was formally
          ratified; and Henry declared war against France, May 29th, 1522. Although the
          ostensible pretext for this rupture was the refusal of Francis to accept the
          terms proposed at the conference of Calais, and to sequester Fuenterabia into the hands of the English, there were other
          grounds of complaint. Francis, aware of the English preparations, had suspended
          the payments which he had engaged to make; he had put an embargo on English
          ships, and had connived at the return of the Duke of Albany to Scotland in the
          preceding autumn, with the view that he should excite the Scots to make a
          diversion, which, however, proved a failure. When Henry remonstrated, the
          French King protested that he had not instigated Albany's conduct; but Henry
          refused to believe him, and wrote him an insulting letter, accusing him of
          breach of faith.
   As France was thus
          left to contend with the greatest and most formidable Powers of Europe, it was
          fortunate for that country that its eastern frontier at least was secured by
          neutral States. The Swiss, who had renewed their alliance with France by the
          treaty of Lucerne, May 5th, 1521, being unwilling that the County of Burgundy,
          or Franche-Comté, which bordered on their own territories, and was at that time
          an appanage of Charles’s aunt Margaret, should become the seat of war, had
          procured a treaty to be executed between Francis and Margaret (July 8th, 1522),
          guaranteeing that there should be no hostilities for three years between
          Franche-Comté and the neighboring French provinces as far north as Mouzon sur Meuse. This treaty being continually renewed for
          more than a century, the two Burgundies enjoyed the advantage of peace and
          commerce during a long period of the struggle between France and the House of
          Austria, and preserved the French frontier on that side from attack. It was at
          present further covered by the neutral territories of Lorraine and Bar, as well
          as of Savoy, whose ruler, Duke Charles III, the uncle of Francis, maintained a
          good understanding both with his nephew and the Emperor. The war was begun in
          June on the part of the English by some descents on the maritime towns of
          France, in which Cherbourg and Morlaix were taken and
          plundered. Surrey, with the main body of the English army, then landed at
          Calais, and after an unsuccessful attempt upon Boulogne joined the Imperialists
          in the Netherlands, under the Count of Buren, and invaded Picardy. Little,
          however, was effected, although Francis had not yet assembled any formidable
          force. The siege of Hesdin, not a very strong place,
          occupied six weeks; and at the beginning of November, the English, after losing
          a great many men by dysentery, were compelled by the season to quit France. The
          French, by long experience, had learned the most effectual method of opposing
          them—by abstaining from pitched battles, defending their walled places,
          harassing convoys, and attacking advanced posts, they succeeded in wearing out
          the English. On the Spanish frontier the campaign of 1522 was also favorable to
          the French, the Marshal de la Palisse having forced
          the Spaniards to raise the siege of Fuenterabia.
   The Emperor, after
          his sojourn at the English Court, set sail for Spain, and arrived at the port
          of Santander July 26th. As he had resolved to spend some years in Spain, and
          had now taken the reins of government into his own hands, he adopted such
          measures as were likely to make him popular. With wise humanity he refused to
          shed any more blood, though strongly advised to do so by his council; and on
          the 28th of October he published a general amnesty, from which only eighty
          persons were excepted, and even these he took no measures to apprehend. He
          humored the pride of the Castilians; he applied himself to conform to the
          manners and to speak the language of the country; he appointed only natives to
          posts of trust and dignity, whether in Church or State; and thus, by securing
          the affections of the Spaniards, he at length acquired a more extensive
          authority over them than had been enjoyed by any of his predecessors. While,
          however, he rendered himself popular by his manners, he took care to enlarge
          and secure his power by abridging the liberties of the people. Instead of
          allowing the burgesses deputed to the Cortes to begin with their grievances and
          then grant a servicio, or supply, he
          reversed the practice—took the supply first, and then heard the grievances. He
          summoned these assemblies but seldom, and caused the three estates to meet in
          different places in order to prevent them from combining together; nor would he
          allow them to debate except in presence of a president appointed by himself. He
          introduced the practice of corruption by granting or promising favors to the
          deputies, so that a seat in the Cortes began in process of time to be looked
          upon as a profitable thing, and we find a deputy paying 14,000 ducats for one
          as early as 1534. After the year 1538, when the nobles were no longer summoned,
          and the Cortes were composed of burgesses alone, they were assembled every
          three years, and granted whatever was demanded.
   But though the
          period of Charles’s sojourn in Spain was in general characterized by a policy
          which tended to strengthen his government, it was also disfigured by his
          persecution of the Moors. In this respect Charles’s bigotry, one of the worst
          traits in his character, led him to follow in the steps of his predecessors.
          The unfortunate Moors found no safety but in flight; and it is calculated that
          by the year 1523, 5,000 houses were deserted in Valencia alone. In 1525, at the
          instigation of Pope Clement VII, Charles formed the wild and wicked project of
          compelling all the Moors in Spain to forswear Islam and adopt Christianity.
          Their mosques were shut up, the Koran was taken from them, all dealing with
          them was forbidden, and leave was given to capture and enslave those who were
          found wandering beyond their own villages. Those not baptized before the 8th of
          December were ordered to quit Spain by the 1st of January, 1526; while, in
          order to prevent them from proceeding to Africa, Coruña was the only port at which they were allowed to embark. Thus the penalty of
          banishment was aggravated by compelling them to traverse the whole of Spain,
          amidst insults and wrongs of every description. The unfortunate Moors offered
          50,000 crowns for a respite of five year; an offer, however, which only led
          Charles to impose harsher terms; and he now ordered that those who were not
          baptized by the 15th of January should forfeit their goods and be sold into
          slavery. Driven to desperation, many took up arms, and obstinately defended
          themselves in the mountains of Valencia. At length, after great slaughter, the
          rest, with the exception of about 100,000 who succeeded in escaping to Africa,
          submitted to the rite of baptism, with what sincerity it is needless to say.
          Yet they were still subjected to the greatest oppressions. They were required
          to lay aside their language and national dress before the expiration of ten
          years, and in short became little better than beasts of burden in the service
          of the Spaniards. Subsequently, however, they purchased the privilege of
          retaining some of their customs with a payment of 80,000 ducats.
   Charles, before
          landing in Spain, had appointed an interview with the late Regent Adrian at
          Barcelona; but the latter, either ashamed of his misgovernment, or unwilling it
          should be supposed that the Emperor influenced his conduct as Pope, embarked
          for Italy as soon as he heard of Charles’s arrival. It was not till the
          beginning of September, 1522, that Adrian reached Rome to take possession of
          his new dignity; and during the interval the Papal government had been
          conducted by a triumvirate of Cardinals, renewed every month by lot. If the
          Romans regretted the elevation of Adrian at the time of his election, that ill
          impression was strengthened among the higher classes, when they beheld a humble
          and austere old man, unacquainted with the language or manners of Italy,
          ignorant of and averse to the policy of the Court of Rome, and so totally
          devoid of all taste for art that when shown the group of the Laocoon he turned
          away with horror, exclaiming, “These are pagan idols!”. Adrian’s phlegmatic
          temper, and his parsimony, were not calculated to create a better feeling; in
          short, no more striking or more distasteful contrast could have been offered to
          those who had admired the warlike pomp of Julius II, or the more refined
          splendor of Leo X. His humility, however, produced a great impression in
          Adrian's favor among the populace, who were inclined to reverence him when,
          after having come on foot to Rome, he put off his shoes and hose before
          entering the city, and passed through the streets bare-footed and bare-legged
          towards his palace. If the wealthier and more educated Romans disliked the
          Pope’s manners, his actions disgusted them still more. He was very scrupulous
          in bestowing places. He even revoked some grants of spiritual dignities, and
          thus drew upon himself a host of the bitterest enemies. He found the Roman
          treasury exhausted through the extravagance of his predecessor, who had left a
          debt of 700,000 ducats, and was hence obliged to lay on new taxes, which made
          him very unpopular. He was almost constantly buried in his studies, during
          which he was inaccessible, so that business was delayed; and even those who
          obtained an audience were put off with a set phrase—cogitabimus, videbimus (we’ll think about it, we’ll see to it).
          Being a foreigner, and having no family interests to serve, he was indifferent
          to the temporal aggrandizement of the Holy See and the intestine disputes of
          Italy, so that he was ready to do justice to the potentates who had been
          despoiled by Leo’s ambition. He confirmed the Duke of Urbino in the dominions
          which he had recovered, and restored to the Duke of Ferrara several places of
          which he had been deprived. His simple habits rendered him indifferent to
          wealth. Such of his friends and kinsfolk as came to Rome with the view of
          pushing their fortunes he sent back with the present of a woolen garment, and
          enough money to defray their traveling expenses. He looked with calm and
          unruffled judgment on the abuses of the Church and of the Court of Rome, which
          he showed an inclination to reform; yet his scholastic education caused him to
          reject with aversion the doctrines of Luther, and disposed him to adopt the
          severest measures in order to repress them : for he belonged to those “Magistri Nostri” of Louvain who
          had so long opposed the rising literature and theology.
   The simplicity of
          Pope Adrian’s character was regarded by the subtle and designing politicians of
          Italy as the effect of inexperience and incapacity, and hence he became the
          butt on which the wits of the day exercised their talent for ridicule. With
          regard to foreign politics the same dispositions rendered Adrian desirous of
          peace. He at first declared himself neutral, and persisted some time in that
          course, notwithstanding that his countryman Lannoy,
          Viceroy of Naples, visited him at Rome in hope of making him declare for the
          Emperor. He entertained the extravagant project, which could never have entered
          the head of any one but a recluse unacquainted with mankind, of reconciling two
          jealous and rival Princes, and inducing them to unite in a league against the
          Turks, who were now striking fresh terror into Europe, by their conquests.
   SOLIMAN I
           We have already
          recorded the death of Sultan Selim I in September, 1520. At that event the joy
          was great in Europe, for his son and successor, Solyman I—such was the erroneous opinion entertained of one of the greatest and most
          warlike of the Turkish Sultans—passed for a mild and pacific Prince, who had
          neither the disposition nor the talent to carry on his father’s plans of
          conquest. Solyman, who was in his government of
          Magnesia at the time of Selim’s death, immediately hastened to Constantinople,
          and having no competitor, ascended the throne without opposition or
          disturbance. He conciliated the Janissaries by slightly increasing their daily
          pay as well as the donative, while he secured discipline and subordination by
          some wholesome examples of severity. Ghasali Bey,
          Governor of Syria, was the only one of the Sultan’s officers who gave him any
          trouble, but his attempted insurrection was put down by a total defeat in
          February, 1521, when, having fallen into Solyman’s hands, he expiated his treason with his life. This example had its due weight
          with Shah Ismail, and with Chair Bey, Governor of Egypt, who abandoned the
          rebellion they had contemplated.
   The tranquility of
          the eastern provinces of his Empire enabled Solyman to devote all his attention to the affairs of Europe, and during the whole of
          his reign the Osmanli power was directed towards the West. Venice, Hungary, and
          Rhodes were the points which chiefly claimed his attention. The conquest of
          Rhodes especially was the object nearest to his heart, and with the view of
          effecting it he desired to be at peace with Venice, in order that his fleet
          might undertake that enterprise without molestation. He therefore sent an
          ambassador to Venice to offer a renewal of the treaties which that Republic had
          effected with his father Selim; and as the Venetians on their side were anxious
          to preserve their commercial privileges in Egypt, they readily listened to his
          proposals.
   Solyman would willingly have been at peace with the Hungarians also till the
          conquest of Rhodes had been effected, but this the relations between the two
          States and the continual border warfare forbade. The Turkish beys near the
          Hungarian frontier had flown to arms at the news of Selim’s death, and had
          already captured several fortresses. Solyman had,
          indeed, offered King Louis II peace, but on terms incompatible with Hungary's
          honor and independence. He required that Louis should acknowledge himself his
          vassal by paying a yearly tribute; a proposal deemed so insulting by the
          Hungarian King, that with a barbarous disregard of the law of nations worthy of
          the Turks themselves, he caused the ambassadors who brought it to be cast into
          prison and secretly strangled, and their bodies to be thrown into a fish-pond.
          This act at once determined Solyman’s course. He
          resolved to obtain possession of Belgrade and the line of the Danube, whence he
          might at leisure push his conquests further northwards. With this view a large
          force was moved in three divisions, the first of which, or left wing,
          accompanied by Solyman in person, was directed
          against Schabatz, whilst the center, or main body,
          composed of Janissaries and Spahis, marched against Belgrade, and the third
          division, or right wing, took the direction of Transylvania.
   Hungary seemed to
          offer an easy prey. Her frontier fortresses were badly garrisoned and
          provisioned; her finances did not permit the hire of mercenaries; the
          arrière-ban, which was reckoned at 60,000 men, met scantily and slowly, and it
          was with difficulty that a small army was assembled in the southern provinces.
          Louis applied for aid to the Pope, the Venetians, and the Emperor; but though
          his complaints were everywhere heard with real or affected sympathy, no hand
          was stretched forth to help him. Leo X alleged in excuse his empty treasury,
          and the disturbances in Italy; the Venetians, who had made their peace with the
          Turk, said that they could do nothing unless all Europe combined in the cause;
          and the Diet of Worms, in spite of the long and eloquent speech of Hieronymus Balbus, the Hungarian ambassador, was too busy with its own
          affairs to afford any assistance; the Imperial army had enough to do to
          maintain the public peace, and the affairs of Hungary and the Turks were not
          even mentioned in the Diet’s recess. Under these circumstances the Hungarians
          could offer but a feeble resistance. Schabatz being
          taken after an obstinate defence, July 8th, Semlin surrendered without a blow, and a number of smaller
          strongholds were captured and razed. Belgrade must now have surrendered, even
          if its fall had not been hastened by cowardice and treachery. The garrison
          being driven from the town made so heroic a defence in the citadel that Solyman himself began to despair
          of success; when the Bulgarian mercenaries, alarmed by the blowing up of one of
          the towers, began to treat with the enemy without the commandant's knowledge,
          and offered to surrender on condition of being allowed to withdraw. The offer
          was accepted; the Turks were admitted on the evening of the 29th of August,
          when they massacred all the Hungarians, and even some of the Bulgarians : they
          who escaped were permitted to settle at Constantinople. Solyman,
          after taking possession of these fortresses, caused them to be repaired and
          well garrisoned; and he might now have pushed his conquests further northwards
          if such had been his plan; but his views were centered on the long-projected
          attack on Rhodes, the preparations for which employed the following winter
          (1521-1522). On September 10th, 1521, Solyman in a
          letter congratulated Philip de Villers de L'Ile-Adam,
          who had recently been raised to the Grand-Mastership of the Knights of St.
          John, on his appointment, detailed his Hungarian conquests, and offered peace
          and friendship. L'Ile-Adam immediately saw the irony
          of the letter, and replying in the same tone, hastened his preparations for defence
   The Knights of
          Rhodes had long had complete command of the sea which surrounded their island;
          they infested the Turkish coasts, interrupted the navigation, and held
          thousands of Osmanlis in the harshest slavery, and their reduction had
          therefore long been ardently desired by the Turks. In June, 1522, the naval
          armament begun by Selim passed through the Dardanelles. It consisted of 300
          ships with 10,000 chosen troops on board; while an army of 100,000 men
          assembled at Scutari, at the head of which Solyman himself
          intended to march to the southern coast of Asia Minor. The Knights of Rhodes,
          like the Hungarians, found none to help them. The Venetians, doubtful at first
          of the destination of the Turkish armament, dispatched a squadron of
          observation to watch over the safety of Cyprus, but its commander had strict
          orders to lend no help to Rhodes. Solyman, in
          accordance with the precepts of the Koran, began by addressing a letter to the
          Grand-Master, declaring war and requiring the surrender of the island (June 1st). L'Ile-Adam, on the other hand, had taken measures for
          the most resolute defence. All the houses in the
          neighborhood of the capital were destroyed, lest they should afford shelter to
          the advancing foe; strong chains were stretched across the harbor, the defence of which, and of the seven principal forts, was
          entrusted to the Knights according to their division into eight tongues;
          namely, French, English, Germans, Spanish, Portuguese, Italians, Proven9aux,
          and Auvergnats, under their respective Grand Priors.
          The Grand-Master himself took up his post on the north side of the town, and
          directed all the operations.
   The Turkish fleet
          cast anchor in the Bay of Parombolin, several miles
          from the capital, June 24th. More than a month was spent in preparing for the
          siege and awaiting the arrival of Solyman, during
          which succors might easily have been sent. A small force would have sufficed to
          turn the scale and save this bulwark of Christendom, but it was not
          forthcoming. Towards the end of July Solyman arrived
          with his army at the little port of Marmaris, on the Anatolian coast; he
          immediately crossed over to Rhodes, and pitched his tent on the east side of
          the town. The first assault was delivered August 1st, without success, and
          during several weeks the attacks were renewed with the same result. In the
          course of September, some breaches having been effected, and some of the
          outworks taken, a general assault was made on the 24th, when the Osmanlis were
          repulsed with the loss of 15,000 men. Solyman,
          however, was resolved to leave the Fate of the island only as a conqueror; he
          turned the siege into a blockade; and on the 21st of December, the number of
          the garrison being considerably reduced, and their ammunition exhausted, the
          Grand-Master found himself obliged to capitulate. The terms obtained were
          tolerably favorable. The garrison was permitted to march out with their arms;
          the inhabitants who chose to remain at Rhodes were exempted from taxes for a
          term of five years, were allowed the free exercise of their religion, and
          received an assurance that their children should not be seized for Janissaries.
          Ships were provided for such of the Knights as wished to repair to Crete, for
          which island most of them, with the Grand-Master, embarked, January 1st, 1523.
          In the following March they proceeded to Naples, whence, at the Pope’s
          invitation, they repaired to Cività Vecchia, and subsequently took up their abode at Viterbo. Six years later (May, 1530) Charles V. presented
          to the remnant of the order the island of Malta, which became their final home.
          Thus fell one of the most practically useful of the religious orders. Its fall
          appears to have inspired the non-military orders with the desire of supplying
          its functions, and to have suggested to the Minorites a scheme which is here
          worth recording only for the light which it throws on the statistics of
          monachism, and the illustration it affords of the dread produced by the success
          of the Turks. In June, 1523, the Minorites handed into the Roman Curia a plan
          for raising an army of more than half a million men among the religious orders.
          The number of the Minorite convents alone was reckoned at 40,000; but taking
          them at 36,000, each of which was to supply only one man, that order alone
          could bring a like number of men into the field. On the same principle it was
          calculated that the convents of all the orders, including the Minorites, could
          furnish 144,000 men! And as each Minorite convent had, at least, ten parishes
          attached to it, or in all 360,000 parishes, if these also furnished a man
          apiece, the result would give a force of 504,000 men. But this proposal was
          never seriously entertained at Rome.
   Pope Adrian
          attributed the ill-success of his project for a league against the Turks
          chiefly to the French King, who had shown no inclination to respond to his call
          : and he was further irritated against Francis by discovering that his agents
          had been attempting to stir up an insurrection in Sicily. Under these
          circumstances he was induced to listen to the persuasions of Lannoy, and to join Charles’s party. In pursuance of his
          new policy, he endeavored to detach the Venetians from their league with
          France, which he feared might lead Francis to undertake another invasion of the
          Milanese. From other causes the Venetians themselves were growing weary of the
          French alliance. Their ambassador, Badoero, had
          painted to them in strong colors the dissoluteness of Francis and his Court,
          which had weakened and impoverished the nation to an incredible degree; he
          attributed to the King’s misconduct all the misfortunes with which France had
          been afflicted, and he hinted his suspicions that a great Prince of the blood
          royal was about to go over to the enemy. These representations induced the
          Signory to listen to Pope Adrian, who succeeded in concluding what was called
          the “League of Rome” (August 23rd, 1523; an alliance which comprehended besides
          the Pope, the Emperor, the King of England, the Archduke Ferdinand of Austria,
          Francesco Maria Sforza, Duke of Milan, and the Republics of Venice, Florence,
          Genoa, Siena, and Lucca. It was, however, one of the redeeming traits in the
          character of Francis that he could throw off his indolence and rouse himself to
          exertion when danger threatened. In the face of this formidable league he
          adopted a resolution so bold that it may even be accounted rash. Instead of
          standing on the defensive, he determined to strike the first blow, and carry
          the war into Italy. Francis was aware that the position and compactness of his
          dominions gave him a great advantage; and it is not impossible that his
          enterprise might have succeeded had it been speedily and judiciously carried
          out, and not been disconcerted by an unforeseen accident, which must now be
          related.
   Charles, Count of Montpensier and Duke of Bourbon, was at this time the only
          formidable vassal of the French Crown. He inherited Auvergne and Montpensier from his brother Louis, who had succeeded to
          them on the death of his father Gilbert, grandson of John I, Duke of Bourbon;
          and on the death, without male heirs, of Peter II, Duke of Bourbon, who was
          also the grandson of John I by his eldest son Charles I, the Count of Montpensier claimed the Duchy of Bourbon as next heir in
          the male line. Duke Peter II, as we have seen, had married Anne, daughter of
          Louis XI. This Sovereign had required a promise from Peter, before his
          marriage, that if he had no male heirs, all his lands should revert to the
          French Crown; a contingency which happened, as Peter left only a daughter,
          Suzanne. Louis XII, however, recognized the claims of the branch of Montpensier to the Duchy, without altogether rejecting the
          right of Suzanne; and, to avoid all disputes, he mediated a marriage between
          her and Charles Montpensier. Thus the latter united
          in his own person two duchies, four counties, two viscounties, besides a great
          number of smaller possessions and titles. He was, in fact, the richest lord in
          Christendom. He had not only the great central fiefs of the Bourbonnais,
          Auvergne, and La Marche, but also Beaujolais, Forez, Dombes, the wild and rugged mountains of Ardeche, Gien, commanding the
          Loire; and in the north, Clermont in Beauvais. Many of these dominions were
          confiscations, which Louis XI imagined he had placed in safe hands, those of
          his daughter and his son-in-law. In case of the failure of heirs to Francis I,
          Bourbon cherished even the hope of succeeding to the Crown; for although the Alençons, who were descended from a brother of King Philip
          VI, possessed a nearer claim, he held that they had forfeited it by a former
          revolt. Nay, he had even gone so far as to solicit, in such an event, the help
          of the Venetian Republic. Bourbon had distinguished himself as a soldier. He
          had accompanied Louis XII, in 1507, in his expedition against Genoa, and had
          shared in the victory gained over the Venetians at Agnadello,
          in 1509. Soon after the accession of Francis I, he was made Constable of France
          and Governor of Languedoc, each of which dignities brought him a revenue of
          24,000 livres, in addition to which he received a pension of 14,000 livres as
          chamberlain, and several smaller ones. These honors and emoluments he is said
          to have owed to the affection of Louise, the King's mother : and it is even
          said that a promise of future marriage, pledged by an exchange of rings, had
          passed between her and Bourbon, in the event of the death of Bourbon’s wife,
          Suzanne, whose feeble constitution promised no great length of years. Bourbon's
          services at the battle of Marignano had been so
          important that Francis rewarded him with the government of the Milanese, which
          he signalized by the repulse of the Emperor Maximilian. Haughty and taciturn,
          Bourbon’s temper, however, was the very reverse of that of Francis, with whom
          he appears to have been never very cordial; and he was soon removed from the
          government of Milan, either through the jealousy of the King himself, or by the
          influence of Francis’s mistress, the Countess of Chateaubriand, who procured it
          for her brother Lautrec. From this time the King seems to have studiously
          heaped injuries on Bourbon. His salary, as Governor of the Milanese, was left
          unpaid; nay, even his expenses were not refunded. In the Netherland campaign of
          1521, the command of the van, which fell to the Constable of France by virtue
          of his office, was taken from him and given to the Duke of Alençon. Nor was he any
          longer consulted on public affairs. Bourbon, who is said to have often had in
          his mouth the answer of an old Gascon noble to Charles VII, “Not three Kingdoms
          like yours could make me forsake you, but one insult might”, was not a man
          tamely to brook this treatment.
   An event which
          might have healed the breach only resulted in making it wider. Bourbon’s wife,
          Suzanne, died April 28th, 1521, after having, with the approval of her mother,
          Anne of France, renewed the disposal of her territories in favor of her husband.
          Bourbon's marriage with Louise of Savoy, who at the age of forty-five still
          retained considerable beauty, might have prevented the misfortunes which ensued
          : so far, however, from fulfilling that engagement, he openly manifested his
          desire to espouse Renée, the second daughter of Louis XII, and sister of Queen
          Claude. This was enough to rouse the pride of Louise, and sting her to revenge;
          and, unluckily for Bourbon, she had at her disposal the means of gratifying it.
          As daughter of Margaret, sister of Duke Peter II of Bourbon, and wife of Duke
          Philip II of Savoy, she represented the eldest branch of the Bourbons, but
          through the female line. It was by no means certain, as we have seen in the
          case of Suzanne, that the duchy was exclusively a male fief. The domains had
          come into the family through women, and Charles’s claim, as sole male heir, was
          founded on family compacts among the Bourbons, and on the tradition of Salic
          law being applicable to all the branches of the reigning house of France. There
          was, at all events, ample ground for an appeal to law, and Louise instituted a
          suit against Charles in the Parliament of Paris : while the King also put in a
          claim for the confiscated estates which Louis XI had bestowed upon Duke Peter
          II and his consort Anne, as escheated fiefs which reverted to the Crown; and he
          made them over to his mother.
           The Parliament,
          however, for the first time, displayed an unwillingness to support the Crown
          against one of its great vassals, and continually adjourned its decision. The
          King, indeed, in spite of his brilliant qualities, was unpopular with the
          people, and especially with the magistracy. The concordat, the fiscal
          oppressions of Duprat, Francis's own violence and
          disdain of order, had produced this feeling. Bourbon, on the contrary, gave
          himself out as the leader of the popular party. The Constable’s cup of
          bitterness was now full, and forgetting all the duties of patriotism, he
          resolved to gratify his revenge by leaguing himself with the enemies of his
          country. It is said that his mother-in-law, Anne of France, who died November
          14th, 1522, had exhorted him to this step on her death-bed. She had devoted her
          last days to his defence, had confirmed her
          daughter’s will in his favor, and had bequeathed to him all her possessions.
          Bourbon soon after invited Charles to invade France; promising to assist him
          with 500 men-at-arms, and 10,000 foot, and at the same time demanding one of
          the Emperor's sisters in marriage; either Eleanor, the Dowager-Queen of
          Portugal, or Madame Catharine.
   The negotiations
          which ensued soon came to the ears of Francis. Entering unexpectedly when
          Bourbon was dining with Queen Claude, the King publicly charged him with his
          misconduct. “Seigneur”, he exclaimed, “it is showed us that you be, or shall be
          married—is it truth?”. The Duke said it was not so. The King said that he knew
          it was so; moreover saying that he would remember it. The Duke answered, and
          said, “Sir, then you threaten me—I have deserved no such cause”; and so
          departed. After dinner the Duke went to his lodgings, and all the noblemen of
          the Court with him.
           The negotiations,
          however, went on; and two months afterwards we find Bourbon opening direct
          communications with Wolsey. His proposals to treat were received with avidity
          by the English Court; and powers were granted to Dr. Sampson and Sir Richard
          Jerningham to treat with the Emperor and Bourbon on the subject. A principal
          condition was that Bourbon was to do homage and swear fealty to Henry as King
          of France. Bourbon’s treaty with the Emperor was finally concluded, at the end
          of July or beginning of August, with M. de Beaurain at Bourg in Bresse; for the Duke had retired into the
          territories of Savoy, where it was easier to conduct the negotiations than in
          France. The confederates, though not agreed as to the spoil, soon came to a
          conclusion as to the means of attack. A powerful English army was to invade
          Picardy by the 25th of August; by the same period 10,000 lance-knights under
          Count Furstenberg were to march into Burgundy, where they were to be joined by
          Bourbon with his men, and the united force was to form a junction with the
          English. In addition to all this, a Spanish army was to invade the French
          Kingdom from the south. These arrangements were punctually executed by the
          Emperor and the King of England. Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, with the
          English van, landed at Calais August 23rd; while early in September, the
          Spaniards began the campaign in the Pyrenees. The Constable’s cooperation,
          however, was prevented by an unforeseen accident. The French army destined for
          the invasion of Italy was assembling in great numbers, and as their route lay
          through Bourbon’s territories, it was impossible for him to move till their
          columns should have passed. Francis himself was detained at Lyons, waiting an
          answer to some proposals which he had sent to the Swiss and the Venetians; and
          during this interval intelligence reached him of Bourbon's conspiracy. The
          secret appears to have been revealed by two Norman gentlemen, whom the Duke had
          attempted to corrupt, and to induce them to admit the English into Normandy.
          Francis's first impulse was to conciliate his rebellious vassal. The suit
          against the Constable had not proceeded satisfactorily. The Parliament of
          Paris, which was to have pronounced its judgment on the 1st of August, instead
          of doing so, declared itself incompetent, and referred the cause to the King’s Council; in other words, it intimated that it was not free, and
          did not choose to be responsible. What should Francis do? Bonnivet,
          with the French van, was waiting for him on the other side of the Alps; the
          Italian expedition could not be abandoned, nor could so dangerous a subject as
          Bourbon be left behind. In this dilemma, Francis, early in September, proceeded
          with an escort of German mercenaries direct to Bourbon’s residence at Moulins,
          told him frankly all that he had heard, promised that his lands should be
          restored, and offered him the post of Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom, but on
          condition that he should accompany the army into Italy. Bourbon, on his side,
          confessed that overtures had been made him, but protested that he had never
          listened to them. He could not refuse the King's offer, who then departed,
          leaving a gentleman named Uvarty to accompany the
          Duke; that is, to watch his movements. But Francis’s offers, even if sincere,
          came too late. The Constable felt that he had compromised himself beyond
          redemption, and had no idea of joining the King. To gain time he feigned
          sickness; then after a few days he set forwards slowly for Lyons, but at La Palisse escaped from Uvarty, and
          hastened to his castle of Chantelle, on the borders of the Bourbonnais and
          Auvergne.
   No sooner was
          Bourbon’s flight known than several companies of men-at-arms were dispatched to
          arrest him. Having no means of resisting a siege, and hearing that several of
          his accomplices had been taken, the Constable fled (September 10th), in the
          disguise of a valet, with only one companion, the Sieur de Pomperant,
          and after many hairbreadth escapes they succeeded in joining the lance-knights,
          who had invaded the eastern frontier. When Bourbon found that his contemplated
          movements were impeded by the presence of the King and his army, he had written
          to his confederates to delay their operations; but his letters arrived too late.
          The English army had already landed at Calais. An attempt which Francis made to
          divert the English forces, by inciting the Scots to border warfare, proved a
          failure. Suffolk was joined early in September by the Count of Buren with the
          Imperial troops, but waited in vain for the Constable's arrival. Under these
          circumstances the English commander, as the season was advancing, wished to
          confine his operations to the siege of Boulogne, a place which Henry was very
          desirous of taking, but Buren at length persuaded him to advance into the
          interior.
   The allied army,
          after routing La Trémouille near Bray, on the Somme,
          forcing the passage of the river and taking that town (October 20th), pursued
          their march towards Paris, and reached the Oise, within eleven leagues of that
          capital. Paris trembled. Henry fancied the Crown of France already on his brow.
          But Suffolk was forced to retreat, in the midst of his success, by the approach
          of Vendome, the desertion of some of his allies, and a season of unprecedented
          rigor; and by the middle of December he got safely back to Calais. In the
          south, the Spaniards were equally unsuccessful. They had advanced as far as
          Bayonne, when they were repulsed by Lautrec, and compelled to retreat; a check,
          however, which was in some degree compensated by the recovery of Fuenterabia, disgracefully surrendered by the French
          commandant Frauget. In the east, the 10,000
          lance-knights under Count Furstenberg had passed the Rhine (August 26th),
          traversed Franche-Comté, entered Champagne near Langres,
          and penetrated as far as Monteclair on the Marne;
          where, disappointed of the expected aid from Bourbon, and having no cavalry,
          they were terribly harassed by the gens d'armes of
          the Count of Guise and M. d'Orval, the Governors of
          Champagne and Burgundy, and compelled to a precipitate flight. It was with
          difficulty that Furstenberg regained the Vosges mountains; his rear guard was
          nearly destroyed in attempting to recross the Meuse near Neufchateau,
          whilst the ladies of the Court of Lorraine clapped their hands as they beheld
          this feat of arms from the walls of the town. It was during this retreat of the
          lance-knights that their path was crossed by the Duke of Bourbon, who was
          flying towards Germany, accompanied by about sixty gentlemen. Francis sent a message
          after him, demanding his constabular sword and the
          collar of his order. “The collar”, replied Bourbon, “I left under my pillow at
          Chantelle; the King took my sword when he gave the command of the van at
          Valenciennes to the Duke of Alençon”. Having declined an invitation into
          England, he succeeded in getting safely into Germany, whence he passed through
          Tyrol to Mantua, whose Marquis was his first cousin.
   Instead of five or
          six provinces and a great party, Bourbon could now offer Charles only his talents,
          his valor, and his despair. He soon perceived that the ardor of friendship was
          gradually succeeded, in the conduct of the Emperor, by the coldness of
          protection, and he felt that he could not press for the completion of the
          treaty and the hand of Eleanor till he had achieved something that might
          deserve it. On the 16th of January, 1524, he was declared a traitor by Francis,
          and his lands were confiscated. Several of his adherents were sentenced to
          death. Among them was Jean de St. Vallier, Count of
          Poitiers, whose treason was the more unpardonable as he was captain of the 200
          gentlemen composing the maison du roi, or King’s body-guard. Such was Francis’s
          indignation when informed of St. Vallier’s crime that
          he could scarce refrain from killing him with his own hand. Yet he was saved by
          his daughter. It was St. Vallier’s son-in-law, Louis
          de Breze, Grand-Seneschal of Normandy, who had
          revealed the plot of the Norman gentlemen : De Breze’s wife, the lovely Diane de Poitiers, pleaded in favor of her father, and
          established at the same time her own influence over Francis.
   The discovery of
          so alarming a conspiracy, the extent of which was unknown, caused Francis to
          give up all idea of leading his army in person. Nevertheless, the expedition
          was not abandoned. The French army assembled at Susa numbered 40,000 men, and
          the condition of the enemy might have afforded an able general a good chance of
          success; but Bonnivet, to whom the command was
          entrusted, though a great favorite at court, had little military talent.
          Prosper Colonna, the Imperial commander-in-chief, was laid up by a severe
          attack of illness; Pescara was in Spain; and the Marquis of Mantua, the Papal
          commander, was determined not to advance beyond Parma. The Duke of Urbino, the
          Venetian general, was instructed to avoid a battle, as a defeat might have
          endangered all the continental possessions of Venice. By a coup de main Bonnivet might have seized Milan, the fortifications of
          which were in a dilapidated condition; but Francis, aware of his impetuous temper,
          had exhorted him to be cautious, and he now fell into the opposite fault. The
          season was wasted in petty operations; Italy, like France, was visited with an
          early and rigorous winter, and the approach of the army of the league obliged Bonnivet to take up his winter quarters between the Ticinello and Ticino.
   ELECTION OF POPE
          CLEMENT VII
   During the
          progress of this campaign Pope Adrian VI died after a short illness (September
          14th, 1523). The joy of the Romans at this event was unbounded, and was expressed
          with all the malicious wit for which they were famed. On the night after
          Adrian’s death the house of Macerata, his physician, was adorned with garlands,
          and the following inscription was placed over his door : “The Roman Senate and
          People to the deliverer of his country”. In the Conclave which assembled
          October 21st, a hard struggle for the vacant dignity ensued between the two
          chief candidates. Cardinals Giulio de' Medici and Pompeo Colonna; the former of
          whom was elected (November 18th), and assumed the name of Clement VII. The
          Emperor again supported Wolsey, but very lukewarmly; it is even supposed that,
          from the occurrences of the campaign in France, Charles had begun to suspect
          him of being in Francis’s interest. Wolsey’s name was proposed, but immediately
          rejected, in spite of the instructions to the English ambassadors to spare no
          promises of promotion, as well as of large sums of money, which, it was
          thought, would at least be successful with the younger Cardinals, for the most
          part needy men. But Wolsey was unpopular with the Sacred College. Henry VIII
          appears to have given his ambassador at Rome double instructions, and to have
          been resigned to accept Cardinal de' Medici as Pope in case Wolsey were not
          elected. Wolsey did not again forgive the Emperor, although he procured the
          Cardinal to be named Legate ad latere in
          England for life, with extraordinary powers.
   Clement’s election gave universal satisfaction. Few Pontiffs had ascended the chair
          with a higher reputation for administrative ability, besides which he was known
          to be a generous patron of literature and art; and he was himself not only very
          well informed in theology and philosophy, but also in questions of practical
          science. He avoided the errors of his two predecessors—the prodigality and
          indecorous habits of his kinsman Leo, and the repugnancy which Adrian had
          manifested to the tastes of his Court. The illegitimacy of Clement’s birth, by which he was canonically disqualified for any ecclesiastical dignity,
          had been fraudulently got over by Leo X; who, at the time when he made his
          cousin a Cardinal, suborned witnesses to testify that his father and mother had
          been united in wedlock. The only other remaining male descendants of Cosmo the
          Great were also illegitimate : Clement’s cousin, Ippolito,
          a bastard son of the late Julian de' Medici, and Alessandro, reputed a bastard
          of Lorenzo of Urbino, by a Moorish slave, and inheriting the dark skin, thick
          lips, and woolly hair of his mother. She herself, however, could not tell
          whether he was the son of Lorenzo, or of Clement VII, or of a muleteer.
          Alessandro was now only about fourteen years of age; Ippolito, some two years
          older, was the hope of the Medici family. To him Clement provisionally
          entrusted the government of Florence when he went to Rome to take possession of
          the Papal throne; but the real power was lodged in the hands of Cardinal Passerini, a man of rough manners and small ability, and
          very unacceptable to the Florentines.
   The war was
          renewed in Italy early in the spring of 1524. The Imperialists had lost their
          best captain by the death of Colonna, a commander whose skill and caution,
          which left nothing to chance, procured him the name of the Italian Fabius, and
          made him the most formidable opponent of French impetuosity. Bourbon, with the
          title of Lieutenant-General of the Emperor in Italy, and a command superior to
          that of Lannoy and Pescara, joined the Imperial army
          at Milan with 6,000 lance-knights. Bonnivet was
          outmaneuvered by Pescara, who got into his rear and obliged him to shut himself
          up in Novara. A body of 10,000 Swiss, who had crossed the St. Gothard and advanced as far as Gattinara on the Sesia, seeing the French caught as it were in
          a trap, declined to share in their misfortunes, but offered to do what they
          could to facilitate their escape, to which indeed all Bonnivet’s views were now confined. Towards the end of April he succeeded in forming a
          junction with the Swiss, and then directed his march towards Ivrea, intending
          to get into France by the Bas Valais. A march of thirty miles would have placed
          him in safety, but this short retreat proved most disastrous. Pescara and
          Bourbon, having forced the passage of the Sesia at Romagnano, hung upon and harassed the retreating columns. Bonnivet, who had placed himself in the rear was wounded
          and obliged to retire; Vandenesse, who succeeded him,
          shared the same fate. But the greatest misfortune of that day was the death of
          the brave, humane, and generous Chevalier Bayard, who having in turn assumed
          the command, was struck by a ball which broke his spine (April 30th, 1524).
          Being placed against a tree. Bayard yielded his last breath among his pursuing
          enemies. The Imperial generals caused two solemn Masses to be performed for
          him, and then sent his remains into France to be interred at Grenoble, his
          native town. On the arrival of the body in Dauphiné it was escorted by the whole population of the places through which it passed,
          till it reached its final resting place.
   A desperate charge
          of a body of Swiss, in which, however, they all fell victims, arrested for a
          while the pursuit of the Imperialists, and enabled the French army, under the
          conduct of St. Pol, to gain Ivrea in safety. Hence, they crossed the St.
          Bernard, to the foot of which they had been pursued, and reached France without
          further molestation. Bourbon now obtained the Emperor’s leave to invade France,
          expecting that his presence would be the signal for insurrection; a step taken
          against the advice of Charles's wisest counselor, and contrary to the wishes of
          the Pope and the Italian States, who therefore remained neutral. But the league
          against France was renewed by the Emperor, his brother Ferdinand, Henry VIII,
          and the Duke of Bourbon; and it was arranged that Bourbon should invade France
          from the Alps; that the Emperor should make a second attack on the side of the
          Pyrenees; and that Henry VIII, should send Bourbon 100,000 ducats with which to
          begin the campaign, and either continue this subsidy monthly, or, after Bourbon
          had obtained some marked success, make a descent on
          Picardy in order to cooperate with the Imperial forces. Wolsey, however,
          insisted, before advancing a ducat, that Bourbon should swear fealty to Henry
          VIII as King of France and England, to which the Duke reluctantly consented. He
          took the oath in presence of Lannoy, the Viceroy of
          Naples, and of Beaurain and Pace, the Imperial and
          English envoys; but he refused to do homage to Henry, on the ground that it was
          inconsistent with the sovereign rights of his own duchy. He was promised the
          County of Provence, which, together with his own domains, and Lyons and Dauphiné was to be erected into a Kingdom.
   The army of
          invasion, consisting of about 18,000 men, was under the joint command of
          Bourbon and Pescara : Lannoy was to follow with the
          reserve. The Imperialists entered Provence by the Cornice road, crossing the
          Var at St. Laurent, July 7th, 1524. Here they were delayed some days through Lannoy’s neglect in not forwarding the cavalry : a step
          attributed to the Viceroy’s jealousy of Bourbon, who had been placed over his
          head. Bourbon wished to march on Avignon and Lyons, where he would have had
          most chance of support from his friends and vassals : but this plan was
          overruled by Pescara. The Emperor instructed the generals to lay siege to
          Marseilles, the possession of which would have always secured him an easy
          entrance into France. Several of the most considerable towns of Provence,
          including Aix the capital, surrendered in a few weeks, and on August 19th,
          Marseilles was invested. But Bourbon had miscalculated the French temper.
          Instead of flocking to his standard, his invasion only incited them to display
          their loyalty to Francis, who was enabled to raise large contributions for his
          Kingdom’s defence.
   There was no
          possibility of blockading Marseilles by sea. The French galleys, under La
          Fayette and the Genoese refugee Andrew Doria, had
          defeated the Spanish fleet under Hugo de Moncada. On the land side the town was
          obstinately defended by Renzo da Ceri and Philip
          Chabot, while the approach of Francis with a large army threatened to place the
          besiegers in jeopardy. Pescara appears to have received some private
          information respecting the formidable means of defence within the town; and suddenly changing his mind respecting the success of the
          enterprise, he entered the tent where Bourbon was consulting with his officers,
          and without even deigning to salute the Duke, exclaimed : “Gentlemen, those who
          are in a hurry to go to Paradise can remain; for myself, I shall return. We
          have left Italy bare of troops, and our retreat may be cut off. Trust me, there
          is nothing left for it but to decamp”. After a general assault on the evening
          of the 24th of September, Bourbon found himself compelled to adopt the counsel
          of his rival, who was supported by Zollern and Lodron, the commanders of the German contingent.
   Bourbon had, in
          fact, been neglected, and in some degree betrayed. The invasion of Picardy was
          never executed; and though Sir John Russell brought him £20,000, the stipulated
          payments had not been regularly made, so that his troops had begun to mutiny
          for want of pay. Henry, or rather Wolsey, was apprehensive that England would
          be deserted by the Emperor; while Charles, on his side, ascribed the failure of
          the enterprise to the double dealing of Wolsey.
           Bourbon began his
          retreat on the 28th of September, and reached Monaco on the 8th of October. The
          enemy had escaped; but Francis was unwilling that his brilliant army, amounting
          to 30,000 men, including 14,000 Swiss and 1,500 men-at-arms, should separate
          without striking a blow : and in spite of the approaching winter he resolved to
          cross the Alps, hoping by so unexpected an enterprise to recover the Milanese.
          His wife Claude, a simple, pious, and modest lady, whom he treated with gross
          neglect, had died July 25th. All his mother’s persuasions were unable to detain
          Francis, and it was not till he had reached Pinerolo,
          on the other side of the Alps, that he published an ordinance appointing Louise
          Regent.
   The dispirited
          remains of the Imperial army, even when joined by Lannoy with the reserve, were incapable of making head against the fresh and
          well-appointed forces of Francis, which arrived at Vercelli on the same day
          that the Imperialists reached Alba in Montferrat. The latter therefore resolved
          to shut themselves up in the fortified towns, and to exhaust the French by
          sieges. Francis Sforza evacuated Milan on the King’s approach; the citadel,
          however, was still held by a garrison of 700 Spaniards; and as the flatterers
          of Francis persuaded him that it was beneath the dignity of a King of France to
          enter Milan before the citadel had surrendered, he sat down before Pavia, and
          allowed the Imperialists to fortify themselves on the Oglio and the Adda. Although Pavia was ill-fortified, an attempt to take it by storm
          was repulsed with great loss by the commandant, Antonio de Leyva, and the siege
          was converted into a blockade.
   Lodged in a fine
          old Lombard abbey, which he sometimes exchanged for Mirabella, an ancient villa
          of the Dukes of Milan, Francis seems to have spent the winter agreeably enough,
          abandoning himself to pleasures which were rarely interrupted by any serious
          business. His affairs seemed now to be more flourishing than those of his
          adversaries. The Imperial army was almost disorganized, was ill-paid, and
          smitten with sickness, while his own was well supplied and continually
          recruited. The Emperor, in spite of his vast dominions, found it difficult to
          raise pay for his troops, though they did not exceed 16,000 men. Henry VIII,
          occupied with the affairs of Scotland, evaded his engagements; nay, he even
          demanded back the money which he had advanced to the Imperialists. The Italians
          were either cold or disaffected to the Imperial cause.
           Pope Clement, who,
          agreeably to the hereditary policy of the house of Medici, was not displeased
          to see Francis in possession of the Milanese, as a counterpoise to the power of
          Charles in the south, disguising his political views under the cloak of the common
          Father of the faithful, proposed to mediate a general truce of five years; and
          when that proposition was rejected both by the French and the Imperialists, he
          demanded that his own neutrality and that of Florence should be respected; but
          under this cloak he sent his minister Giberto to
          negotiate a secret treaty with the French King. He also engaged Francis to
          support his family at Florence. Giberto negotiated at
          the same time for the Venetians, who now regretted their rupture with their
          ancient allies the French; and these negotiations were confirmed by the
          Venetian Senate in January, 1525. Clement’s best
          counselors advised him to march an army to the Po, to unite it with that of the
          Venetians, and thus to cause the neutrality of the two most powerful States of
          Italy to be respected; but with all his political ability, the irresolution of Clement's character prevented him from taking so bold a
          step.
   BATTLE OF PAVIA.
          A.D. 1525
   The favorable
          prospects which now opened upon Francis Albany were, however, destroyed by his
          own rashness. Elated with his rapid success, he not only sent the Marquis of Saluzzo to seize Genoa, but, as the pacification with the
          Pope opened a passage through the States of the Church, he also deemed it
          possible to grasp the long-coveted possession of Naples, and with a fatal
          imprudence still further dismembered his army by dispatching the Duke of Albany
          and Renzo da Ceri with 8,000 foot and a numerous
          cavalry towards the south. At this news the French party in Naples showed
          symptoms of revolt, and the council in alarm wrote to the Viceroy Lannoy to return with his army. Lannoy would have obeyed this summons had not Pescara, with the penetrating judgment
          of a true general, pointed out that Naples must be defended at Pavia; that a
          single reverse of Francis would suffice to make Albany evacuate that Kingdom;
          whilst on the other hand no victory at Naples could terminate the war in
          Lombardy. Early in January, 1525, Albany marched into Tuscany unopposed, where
          he was reinforced with 3,000 infantry. When he entered the Papal States,
          Clement published the treaty of neutrality which he had hitherto kept secret,
          complained of the march of the French, and represented himself as forced.
   Meanwhile Bourbon,
          who had gone into Germany to procure reinforcements, returned with about 12,000
          men, whom he had levied with help of the Archduke Ferdinand, and with whom he
          joined Lannoy and Pescara at Lodi. About half of
          these men were volunteers, led by the celebrated George Frunsberg.
          Bourbon had borrowed the necessary money from the Duke of Savoy, chiefly
          through the aid of the Duchess Beatrix, whose sister, Isabella of Portugal, was
          about to be married to Charles V. The Duke himself, however, had not much
          reluctance to aid the Emperor against his nephew the King of France, whose
          alliance was very burdensome to him. Pescara determined to seize the advantage
          offered by these reinforcements. Breaking up from Lodi, January 25th, 1525, he
          directed his march on Marignano, as if to threaten
          Milan; but instead of proceeding thither turned to the left and approached
          Pavia. Francis was now advised by his best captains to raise the siege of Pavia
          and to take up a position between that place and Milan; but Bonnivet,
          who enjoyed his entire confidence, counseled him to remain, and represented to
          him the shame of flying before the traitor Bourbon. The French army was indeed
          strongly posted in a fortified camp in the park of Mirabella, on the west bank
          of the Ticino, where it issues from Pavia. Pescara slowly approached that town,
          and on the 3rd of February took up a position at Sta. Giustina,
          within a mile of the French outposts. The Vernacula,
          a small, but deep river, flowed between the hostile armies, and secured each
          from a sudden attack. The French camp appeared too strong to be assaulted, and
          Pescara therefore endeavored to wear out the enemy by a series of petty
          skirmishes, in the hope of bringing on a general engagement; for his troops had
          neither provisions, clothes, nor money; the weather was wet and cold, the men
          began to perish, and were, in short, in such extreme necessity as could no
          longer be endured. Not succeeding, however, in this object, he determined on a camisade or nocturnal surprise.
   The garrison of
          Pavia was to support the attack, and form a junction with Pescara at a
          farm-house or dairy in the middle of the park. A body of 2,000 Germans and
          1,000 Spaniards appointed to execute the camisade,
          began to make a breach in the park wall about midnight (February 23rd); but the
          wall proved stronger than was expected, and day began to dawn before their
          labor was over. The appearance of these men in the park, however, had the
          effect of drawing the French from their position. The combat which ensued is
          variously described by different authors, and we shall therefore confine ourselves
          to the relation of some of the main incidents. The French artillery began to
          play on the troops who were entering the park, causing them great damage, till
          Francis himself charging the enemy with some of his gens d'armes,
          compelled his artillerymen to suspend their fire lest they should hit the King.
          This injudicious step on the part of Francis was of great importance in turning
          the fortune of the day; although he displayed great personal valor, and killed
          with his own hand a knight said to have been Ferdinand Castriot,
          Marquis of St. Angelo, the last descendant of Scanderbeg.
   The Germans under
          George Frunsberg were now coming up, and as the
          French also observed the garrison of Pavia advancing in their rear, they gave
          themselves up for lost, and began to fly. Even the Swiss did not maintain their
          ground with their usual firmness, but joined the flight, on seeing their leader
          John von Diesbach fall. The Duke of Alençon, the
          King’s brother-in-law, who commanded the rearguard, also fled, leaving the King
          to his fate. Francis hastened after the Swiss, and endeavored to rally them,
          but was carried away by the retreating mass. The particulars of his capture are
          differently related. The most probable account seems to be that having been met
          in his flight by four Spanish fusiliers, one of them brought down his horse by
          a blow on the head with the butt end of his arquebuse.
          Francis rolled off into a ditch; when two Spanish light horsemen coming up, and
          perceiving from the prisoner’s dress, and from the order of St. Michael, with
          which he was decorated, that he must be a person of importance, threatened the
          fusiliers that they would kill him unless they were admitted to share the
          ransom. Fortunately Pomperant, the companion of
          Bourbon’s flight, coming up at this juncture, recognized the King, and
          entreated him to surrender to the Duke. This Francis indignantly refused, and
          called for Lannoy, who arrived in time to save his
          life. Lannoy received the King's sword, and gave him
          his own. The battle had not lasted two hours; but it was a fatal one for
          France. Bonnivet, when he saw that all was lost, and
          through his fault, charged into the thickest of the fight, and found the death
          he sought. Besides him fell La Palisse, or Marshal de Chabannes, Lescun, or
          Marshal de Foix, Bussy d'Amboise, the aged La Trémouille, Richard de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, the York
          pretender to the Crown of England, and other persons of distinction.
   Among the
          prisoners were Francis’s future brother-in-law, Henry d'Albret,
          King of Navarre, Marshal Anne de Montmorenci, Fleurange, the Count of St. Pol, the Bastard of Savoy, and
          others. The loss of the French was estimated at 8,000 men, that of the
          Imperialists at only 700. On the very same day the remnant of the French army
          began a precipitate retreat, which was not molested by the Imperialists, and
          within a fortnight not a man of it was left in Italy.
   After Francis’s
          wounds had been dressed in the tent of the Marquis del Guasto,
          he was at his own express desire conducted to the neighboring monastery of the
          Certosa, instead of the town of Pavia. On the road he recovered all his
          cheerfulness, laughing and joking with the Spanish soldiers, whose words he
          caused to be translated to him. Thence he was carried to Pizzighittone,
          where, though treated with every mark of respect, he was kept under strict
          ward. According to Ferron, Bourbon had an interview with him at that place,
          when the King not only received his rebellious vassal graciously, but even
          invited him to dinner with the rest of the generals. From Pizzighittone Francis addressed a long, rambling epistle to the Emperor, couched in terms
          sufficiently humble. The celebrated laconic letter to his mother, “Madam, all
          is lost, but honor”, is a literary invention.
    
           CHAPTER XIITHE RIVALRY OF CHARLES V AND FRANCIS I (CONTINUED TO 1530) | 
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