READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER XVITHE BEGINNINGS OF THE COUNTER-REFORMATION
THE efforts of
Pope Paul III had been directed to the establishment of peace in the Church as
well as between the Emperor and France. He had dispatched Nuncios to the
Lutheran as well as the Catholic Princes of Germany, in order to bring about an
understanding respecting a General Council, and on this subject the
Nuncio Vergerio had had an interview in
Saxony with Luther, but without much success. In June, 1536, Paul issued briefs
for the assembling of a Council at Mantua in May of the following year. The assembly
was, however, opposed on various grounds by the Kings of France and England, as
well as by the German Lutherans, who objected to an Italian town. They were
not, of course, any better pleased with the substitution of Vicenza, where the
Papal Legates, Campeggio and Aleandro, nominated
to preside over the Council, actually remained several months; but the war
having then broken out between the Emperor and France, not a single prelate
appeared. The Reformers had now begun to question altogether the expediency of
a Council, and required that it should at least be composed, as in old times,
not only of priests, but also of Princes and the representatives of States; and
that the Pope should appear in it not as a judge, but as a party.
The Emperor’s
endeavors to support the Pope’s authority had only tended still further to
alienate the Lutherans. The Imperial Chancellor, Held, who was dispatched to
back the representations of the Papal Nuncio, Vorstius,
to the confederates of Smalkald, behaved
intemperately, and the debates which ensued were violent and unsatisfactory.
Held subsequently travelled about the country canvassing against the Lutherans,
and at length succeeded in organizing a Catholic League, called the Holy League
of Nuremberg (June, 1538). The principal members of this confederacy, which was
established for a term of ten years, were King Ferdinand, Duke George of
Saxony, the Dukes of Bavaria, the Archbishops of Mainz and Salzburg, with a few
other Catholic Princes. This league, which was subsequently confirmed by the
Emperor at Toledo (May 20th, 1539), was the more alarming to the Lutherans on
account of the truce concluded between Charles and Francis at Nice.
In the spring of
1539 a conference took place at Frankfurt between the Elector Palatine on the
part of the Emperor, and Joachim II, Elector of Brandenburg, as representative
of the League of Smalkald. The latter Prince,
who succeeded to the Electorate in 1535, was as warm in the Lutheran cause as
his father had been in support of the old religion. At this meeting a sort of
truce was arranged for a period of fifteen months, by which the decree of the
Diet of Nuremberg, and the edict of pacification issued at Ratisbon in 1532,
were to be observed till the next Diet, and meanwhile the jurisdiction of the
Imperial Chamber in religious matters was to remain suspended. In the interim
the disputed points of doctrine were to be amicably discussed by some eminent
doctors selected from each side, and a report rendered to the next assembly of
the States; and although the Pope annulled this convention as derogatory to the
authority of the Holy See, it nevertheless continued to be observed. About the
same time the Lutherans gained an accession of strength by the death of George,
Duke of Saxony (April 17th, 1539). That Prince, as we have seen, was a violent
opponent of the Reformation; and as his two sons had died, he appointed by his
will, that in case his brother and successor Henry, surnamed the Pious, a
zealous Lutheran, should attempt to introduce any innovations in religion, the
Emperor and King Ferdinand should assume the administration of his dominions.
These, which must be carefully distinguished from the Saxon Electorate or Duchy
of Saxe-Wittenberg, were vested in the younger, or Albertine branch
of the Saxon family, who possessed considerable territory in Misnia and Thuringia, including the towns of Leipzig,
Dresden, and others. Henry, however, succeeded without opposition, and
immediately began to introduce the Lutheran religion into Albertine Saxony.
Luther and other eminent divines were invited to Leipzig, who soon abolished
the Popish worship; much to the satisfaction of the people, who had long been
Lutheran at heart. Lutheranism now prevailed almost everywhere from the Baltic
to the Rhine.
Disputation at
Worms.
As arranged at
Frankfurt, a disputation between Papist and Lutheran doctors was held at Worms
in November, 1540, in presence of Morone, the Papal
Nuncio, and of Granvelle, who had recently been
appointed Imperial Chancellor, in place of the intemperate Held. The
disputation was chiefly conducted by Dr. Eck on the part of the Romanists, and
by Melanchthon on that of the Lutherans, but soon became involved in such
subtleties on the question of original sin, that by the advice of Granvelle the Emperor adjourned the discussion till the
meeting of a Diet at Ratisbon in the ensuing spring. The same year is memorable
for the institution of the Jesuits, the scheme of which had been submitted by
Ignatius Loyola to the Apostolic See in 1539. The Pope referred the matter to a
committee of three Cardinals, who gave it their approval, and Paul in
consequence, chiefly on account of the vow of implicit obedience, authorized
the new institution by a bull (September 27th, 1540). At the commencement of
1541 the Society counted only ten members.
The Emperor opened
in person the Diet which assembled Diet of at Ratisbon in April, 1541.
Cardinal Contarini, a member of the Oratory of
Divine Love, a man of great learning as well as warm religious feeling,
attended the assembly as Papal Legate. Luther was also present. Contarini made large concessions; but it was soon
evident that the discussion would be, as usual, fruitless, and the Emperor
dissolved the Diet (July 28th). Francis I protested to the Papal ambassadors
against the concessions made by Contarini, which
were also viewed with suspicion at Rome; and Paul annulled all the acts of the
colloquy on the ground that a secular assembly are not competent to discuss
religious matters. The Catholics and Reformers, however, came on this occasion
more nearly to an accommodation than at any previous or subsequent period. The
Pope and his Legate, as well as the Dukes of Bavaria, now pressed upon the
Emperor the necessity of putting down the Lutherans by force of arms; but
Charles, who had still need of their services against the Turks, was disposed
to act with more moderation. He replied that he had neither money nor power for
such an enterprise, and he issued a declaration which left matters nearly on
the same footing on which they had been placed by the Religious Peace of
Nuremberg.
Besides the Turks,
an enemy nearer home, the powerful Duke of Cleves and Gelderland, also induced
the Emperor at this period to court the friendship of the Lutheran Princes.
In 1540, after
Charles had punished Ghent, and a new war threatened to break out between him
and Francis, both Sovereigns had sought the alliance of Duke William, and
Francis enticed him with the promise of the hand of his niece Jeanne, only
daughter of Henry d'Albret, though the French
Court had already formed the plan of uniting what remained of Navarre to the
French Crown. With a view to his relations with the Duke of Cleves, Charles,
while still at Ratisbon, had concluded a treaty with the Landgrave Philip
of Hesse (June 13th). The Landgrave had been for some time on a
friendly footing with Queen Mary, Governess of the Netherlands, who was
suspected of a leaning towards the Lutherans. She advocated an anti-French and
anti-Roman policy, but her only wish was to see Germany united under the
Emperor. Charles, by his treaty with Philip, granted him an amnesty for all his
former enterprises against the House of Austria, whilst on the other hand the
Landgrave promised to embrace the political party of the Emperor, and to oppose
any alliance of the League of Smalkald with
France or England; and more particularly not to admit the Duke of Cleves into
the League, nor to support him in any manner; nay, if the Emperor should be
attacked, to assist him, if necessary, in person. In the following July,
Charles also concluded a treaty with Joachim II of Brandenburg, in which the
latter promised to stand by the Emperor in the affair of Cleves, and to assist
him in recovering the contested territories. He further engaged to embrace the
Imperial party in the question of Ferdinand’s election, which was now again
mooted; he agreed to oppose all recruiting for France, and he assured Charles
of his entire devotion. The Emperor, on his side, permitted the Elector of
Brandenburg to maintain the Lutheran religion in his dominions till the
assembling of a Council, or till the States should have come to a better
decision. The Lutheran worship established in Brandenburg was thus in a measure
legalized, and the Elector cheerfully undertook neither to overstep what had
been already done nor to join the League of Smalkald.
Bigamy of the
Landgrave
There was another
cause besides his friendship for the Netherland Regent, which induced the
Landgrave of Hesse to conclude this treaty with the Emperor. Philip
was weary of his wife, Christine, daughter of Duke George of Saxony, and he
determined to marry Margaretha von
der Saal. Philip now applied himself to consult the Scriptures, and in the
books of the Old Testament it was not difficult to find passages that seemed to
justify a plurality of wives. Christine, who appears to have been of easy
temper, gave her formal consent in writing to her husband’s marriage with Margaretha, with the reservation, in other respects, of her
own rights and those of her children. Philip’s conscience, however, was not
satisfied without the sanction of the theologians, and he appealed to Luther
and Melanchthon. The case was difficult. It was hard to sanction bigamy, harder
still to lose so staunch and powerful an upholder of the Protestant cause as
the Landgrave of Hesse. The paper in which they answered his application
contains all the reasons which could be urged against it; yet they withheld not
their consent, and were parties to the bigamy, but under the seal of
confession, and with the injunction of the strictest secrecy. Bigamy, however,
is not only a moral and religious crime: it is also a legal offence; and the
Landgrave began to fear that the Emperor and the Imperial Chamber might find in
it a fresh handle for pursuing him. Under this apprehension, he first
endeavored to draw closer his alliance with the Elector of Saxony, and engaged
to aid him in matters not provided for by the League of Smalkald, as the affairs of John Frederick’s
brother-in-law, the Duke of Cleves, provided the Elector would, in turn,
support him in his new marriage, which he effected in March, 1540. The strict
principles of the Elector forbade him, however, to enter into such an
arrangement, and Philip, in consequence, threw himself, as we have seen, into
the arms of the Emperor. His marriage, of course, soon became publicly known,
and occasioned great scandal. Melanchthon, who was then on the point of proceeding
to the Diet at Hagenau, was so mortified and
alarmed by the part which he had played in the business, that he was seized
with a dangerous illness; and it required all the consolations of Luther, who
was of a more robust frame of mind, to restore his self-possession.
The moderation
displayed by Charles at Ratisbon tended to conciliate the Lutherans, who
engaged to assist him against the Turks. They wished him to undertake the war
in person; but Charles was then meditating another expedition to Africa, to
repress the dreadful devastations committed on the coasts of Italy and Spain by
Hassan Aga, commandant of Algiers, a renegade eunuch in the service of Hayraddin Barbarossa, and he therefore entrusted the
conduct of the war against Solyman to his brother
Ferdinand. The peace with the Porte before mentioned, in 1533, to which Charles
was not a party, had left many things unsettled, and early in 1534,
Cornelius Duplicius Schepper was
dispatched to Constantinople to make, if possible, a more satisfactory arrangement.
He found a very altered state of things. Aloysio Gritti had lost great part of his influence; the power
of Ibrahim himself was fast sinking, against whom a formidable party, headed by
Barbarossa and Junisbey, the interpreter to the
Porte, had arisen in the Divan. Schepper’s efforts
were unavailing. In the last audience granted to him the Sultan repeated that
Hungary belonged to himself, that Janus Krai (King John) was merely
his slave, and acted only in his name, and he warned Ferdinand not to undertake
anything against that potentate. Soon afterwards Gritti was
dispatched to Hungary as the Sultan’s plenipotentiary, and entered Transylvania
at the head of 7,000 men. He was, however, hated and suspected, as well by the
party of Zapolya as of Ferdinand; 40,000 men rose in
arms, overpowered his little army, and delivered Gritti himself
to the executioner. This act naturally roused the anger of Solyman,
and left no room for peaceful solution of the points in dispute. Ferdinand sent
ambassadors both to Ibrahim and the Sultan, then in Bagdad, to clear himself
from blame, by charging John Zapolya with the
execution of Gritti; but Solyman would not accept his excuses, and demanded reparation. From this time, however, Zapolya began to sink in reputation with the
Porte. Junisbey, whom the Sultan had dispatched
to inquire into the circumstances of Gritti’s murder,
was gained over by King Ferdinand with promise of a pension; and Zapolya was condemned to pay 1,200,000 ducats, partly for
arrears of “pension” due to the Porte, and partly for valuables belonging
to Gritti on which he had seized. It was
soon after the return of Junisbey to
Constantinople that the Vizier Ibrahim was murdered, through some secret Court
intrigue. Meanwhile, as the Turkish hordes were pressing on from Bosnia
towards Eszék, Ferdinand’s general, Katzianer, advanced with an army of about 24,000 men,
mostly Germans, to keep them in check; but being surrounded by the Osmanli cavalry,
he was compelled to a disastrous retreat, in which he lost all his artillery
(November, 1536), while his army was dispersed and almost entirely cut up.
After this no
warlike movements of any importance occurred for some time. In 1538 the Emperor
and Ferdinand concluded a peace with John Zapolya,
which cost the latter the loss of the Sultan’s confidence. By this treaty,
Charles and his brother consented to recognize Zapolya as a brother, that is, as a King, and to concede to him all the territory of
which he then stood possessed; but on condition that after his death, whether
he left children or not, his dominions should revert to Ferdinand. In
September, 1539, Hieronymus Lasczi, who had now
deserted the service of Zapolya for that of
Ferdinand, proceeded to Constantinople as the latter’s ambassador; but before
any negotiations could be concluded the state of things was completely changed
by the death of Zapolya (July 21st, 1540). He had
married in the previous year, Isabella, daughter of Sigismund I, King of
Poland, who had borne him a son only nine days before his decease; and a party
immediately sprung up in the infant’s favor, at the head of which was Martinuzzi, or brother George, Bishop of Grosswardein. Some of Zapolya’s former
supporters, however, as Gregory Frangepani,
Peter Pereny, and others, recognized Ferdinand.
French intrigues were now revived; the friendly policy of Francis towards the
House of Austria had now terminated; and the French envoy at Constantinople
induced the Hungarian ambassadors themselves to beg of the Sultan, that in case
the throne of Hungary became vacant the Duke of Orleans should be elected to
it. Lasczi was now imprisoned, and war was
declared against Ferdinand. Solyman in person began
his march towards Hungary, and entered Buda without resistance (August 25th,
1541), before the forces voted by the Diet of Ratisbon, under command of Count
Furstenberg, could come up. A Turkish government under a Pasha of three tails
was established in the Hungarian capital, the principal church was converted
into a mosque, and Buda remained in the hands of the Infidels near a century
and a half. Zapolya’s wife and infant son
were ejected from the palace, and sent to Lippa on
the other side of the Theiss. Solyman,
after a three weeks sojourn in Buda, where he received and contemptuously
dismissed another embassy from Ferdinand, returned homewards and reached
Constantinople November 20th. Ferdinand had offered to hold Hungary as
tributary to the Porte; but the proposition was spurned by Solyman,
who even demanded a yearly tribute for Austria.
The rapid progress
of the Turks had created a panic in Germany, and the Diet which assembled at
Spires early in 1542 voted with unaccustomed alacrity a force of 40,000 foot
and 8,000 horse, the command of which was entrusted to Joachim II of
Brandenburg. With part of these troops Joachim marched to Pesth, which had a garrison of 8,000 Osmanlis; but
after cannonading the town, and in vain attempting to bring his men to the
assault, who were in a state of mutiny for want of pay, he found himself
compelled to retreat. In 1543 Solyman again appeared
in Hungary, and, after a short stay at Buda, laid siege to Gran. The garrison
made a brave defence, till the gilt cross on the
cathedral having been shot away, they were struck with a superstitious terror,
and surrendered (August 10th). Tata and Stuhlweissenburg next
fell, the latter after a brave defence, expiated by
the massacre of nearly all the population. In 1544, Vissegrad was
taken, the ancient and magnificent seat of royalty; after which, and the
capture of some castles near Tolna, the Turks carried the war into Croatia
and Slavonia. Ferdinand’s troops gained some partial advantages, but on the
whole his prospects were hopeless. In 1545 he concluded a truce with the Pasha
of Buda, and sent an ambassador to Constantinople to arrange terms of peace.
After lingering negotiations, Solyman, whose views
were then directed towards Persia, at length consented to a truce of five years
(June 13th, 1547), guaranteeing the maintenance of the status quo, on condition
of Ferdinand paying to the Porte a yearly tribute of 30,000 ducats. The Turkish
conquests in Hungary, like other territories subject to the Porte, were divided
into Sandjaks, which were at first twelve in
number, as Buda, Gran, Stuhlweissenburg, Mohács, Fünfkirchen, etc.
Charles V’s
expedition to Algiers
While Solyman was prosecuting his successful campaign in Hungary,
Charles was conducting with a very different result his long-projected
enterprise against Algiers. The success of his former expedition seems to have
inspired him with a taste for these maritime crusades. The present one,
however, was undertaken, against the advice of his admiral, Andrew Doria, at too late a period of the year. It was the 20th of
October before the Imperial fleet appeared at Algiers, having on board a fine
army of about 22,000 men, together with 100 Knights of St. John. Only part of
the troops had been landed when a high wind, accompanied with a heavy fall of
rain, carried away the tents, rendered the ammunition useless, and converted
the encampment into a swamp; and a violent storm which followed wrecked the
greater part of the fleet, and thus deprived the army of provisions. In these
trying circumstances Charles behaved with great fortitude; whilst he shared the
dangers and hardships of the meanest soldier, he displayed all the best
qualities of a general. When the scattered ships which had escaped were
reassembled, Charles commanded all the horses to be drowned in order to make room
on board for the men; but scarcely had this been done when another storm again
dispersed the ships. The anxious question now arose how the troops were to be
conveyed home; but this point was soon decided by a pestilence which carried
off the greater part of them. The Emperor was the last to embark, and after
encountering many more perils at length arrived with the remnant of his
armament at Cartagena (December 1st).
The news of
Charles’s disaster was received at the French Court with joy. The opportunity
appeared to Francis favorable for beginning a new war, and an occurrence which
had taken place in the preceding summer afforded him a pretext for declaring
it. Soon after the conclusion of peace between Venice and the Porte, Rincon,
the French envoy at Constantinople, had returned home for fresh instructions,
and was sent back in June, 1541, in company with a Genoese named Fregoso, who was to act as French ambassador at Venice.
Both these men were the Emperor’s subjects. Rincon, as we have said, was a Spanish
renegade; Fregoso was an opponent of Doria and the Imperial party at Genoa, from which city he
had been expelled and declared a rebel; and as they had entered the service of
Francis a price had been set upon their heads. For the convenience of Rincon, who
was very corpulent, and disliked the fatigue of riding or posting, he and Fregoso agreed to descend the Po in boats, disguised,
and without passports. A kind of small underhand warfare was already going on
in Italy between the troops of Du Bellay Langey,
the French governor of Turin, and the Imperialists; and he and the Marquis
del Guasto, the Governor of Milan, were
constantly on the watch to intercept each other’s couriers. Some of Guasto’s bravi having
fallen in with Rincon and Fregoso, proceeded to
arrest them; the envoys resisting, were killed in the skirmish which ensued,
and their papers seized. Francis was loud in his complaints of this proceeding,
which he denounced as a violation of the law of nations; for the present,
however, he stifled his resentment, and except for the unfortunate ending of
Charles’s expedition to Algiers would probably have suffered the affair to sink
into oblivion. But no sooner did he hear of that event than he sought to
connect himself with all who had any cause of discontent with the Emperor. He
had already formed an alliance with the Duke of Cleves, who disputed Gelderland
with Charles, and he now leagued himself with the Neapolitan malcontents; but
he could not persuade Henry VIII to enter into his plans. The alliance with the
Duke of Cleves, besides affording an opportunity to attack the Netherlands on
both sides, also enabled Francis to draw what troops he wanted from Germany
through the Duke’s dominions. On November 19th, 1541, the French King also
concluded at Fontainebleau a treaty with Christian III King of Denmark, for a
term of ten years, during which the latter engaged to close the Sound against
the enemies of France; and in the following July he effected, at Ragny, an offensive and defensive league with Gustavus I of
Sweden. The Scandinavian Powers were only just beginning to take part in the
general affairs of Europe. Francis having thus endeavored to set all Europe in
a flame in order to gratify his ambition and resentment, called into the field,
in the summer of 1542, no fewer than five armies; of which three were directed
against the Netherlands; the fourth, commanded by the Dauphin, marched towards
the frontier of Spain; while the remaining one, under the Admiral d'Annebaut, consisted of the troops cantoned in Piedmont.
Hostilities began
on the side of Cleves. The Duke caused one of his captains, Martin Rossem, a sort of condottiere, to assemble his irregular
troops on the frontiers of the Netherlands, but without expressly recognizing
him. To the remonstrances of the Queen Regent, the Duke replied that
the troops were not his, and that he believed them to be destined against the
Turks. Rossem, however, suddenly presented
himself before Liege, and demanded a passage over the Meuse. The citizens shut
their gates, and Rossem, crossing the river at a
higher point and devastating everything on his route, directed his march
towards Antwerp, with the design of taking and plundering that city. René, of
Nassau, Prince of Orange, who attempted to arrest his progress, was defeated
at Hoogstraeten, with a loss of 1,400 men; but
nevertheless succeeded in putting Louvain and Antwerp in a posture of defence. These occurrences determined Francis to begin the
war on the side of the Netherlands. He did not declare it till July 12th, 1542,
and then in the most virulent terms. One French army, under command of Charles
Duke of Orleans, though virtually under that of Claude, Duke of Guise, the
young Prince’s instructor in the art of war, assembled on the Luxembourg
frontier; another, led by the Duke of Vendome, threatened the frontier of
France. The Imperialists, not expecting to be attacked in Luxembourg, had made
little preparation for defence. Damvilliers, Yvoy, Arlon, Montmedy, even the capital, Luxembourg itself, fell rapidly
before the French arms, and were for the most part cruelly handled, the
capitulation of Luxembourg only being respected. Young and ardent, the Duke of
Orleans was dissatisfied with such easy conquests; he longed to flesh his
maiden sword in a pitched battle in the field; and hearing that one was likely
to be fought by the army in the south, under command of his brother the
Dauphin, he suddenly dismissed the greater part of his troops, retaining only
enough to cover the French frontier; a step of which the Queen of Hungary
immediately took advantage to recover Montmedy and
Luxembourg.
Siege of Perpignan
Francis was very
much chagrined at this news. He gave the Duke of Orleans, though his favorite
son, a very cool reception at Montpellier; and the Duke was further mortified
by finding that there was no more probability of a battle being fought in the
south than in the quarter he had just left. The Dauphin was at the head of
40,000 infantry, and 4,000 cavalry. Queen Margaret, the King’s sister, wished
this noble force to be employed in the recovery of Navarre; but, by the advice
of Montpezat, Governor of Languedoc, that
project was abandoned, and the army directed against Roussillon, which it was
thought would prove an easy conquest. The plan of the campaign was to take
Perpignan, to obtain command of the sea, to occupy Le Pertuis,
and thus to prevent any succors for Roussillon arriving from Spain. But the
scheme was ruined by the dilatoriness of Francis, who ordered that nothing
should be done before his arrival; and as he travelled with all the pomp and
slowness of a royal progress, it was the middle of August before the Dauphin’s
army entered Roussillon. Meanwhile a body of Aragonese,
under command of the Duke of Alva, had thrown themselves into Perpignan, and Doria had landed artillery and ammunition enough for the
most vigorous defence. The place, indeed, presented
so formidable an appearance that Du Bellay compared it to a porcupine darting
its quills on every side. The Dauphin did not appear before it till August
26th. The Admiral d'Annebaut, who had come from
Piedmont to superintend the siege, conducted it unskillfully. The sandy soil
rendered the works of the besiegers useless; the autumnal rains began to swell
the torrents into rivers, and to render the situation of the French army
extremely dangerous. On the 4th of October the King arrived within twelve
leagues of Perpignan; when, finding that no progress had been made, and after
several assaults had been repulsed, he ordered the siege to be raised. Thus
this splendid army, the finest ever collected during the reign of Francis,
retreated without striking a blow. The immense preparations which had been made
on all sides ended only in the capture of a few small places near Boulogne and
Calais by the Duke of Vendome, and some others in Piedmont by Du Bellay Langey; a result which must be ascribed partly to the
indiscretion of the Duke of Orleans, partly to the dilatoriness of Francis, but
still more to the plan of dividing the French forces, instead of striking in
one quarter a decisive blow with their united strength.
During this
campaign, the Emperor had remained quietly in Spain, without approaching the
scene of action. After his return from Africa, he had visited in succession
Tarragona, Tortosa, Valencia, Alcala de Henares,
and Madrid, presenting his son Philip to the people, and encouraging the
enthusiasm which the attack of the French had roused. The Cortes voted him
considerable supplies; he obtained a large dowry for his son by betrothing him
to the Infanta Mary of Portugal; and by ceding his pretensions to
the Molucca Islands, to the Infanta’s father, John III, he
procured a large sum by way of loan. The mines of America, too, had been more
than usually productive, and he was thus better provided with means for
carrying on the second campaign than he had been at the beginning of the first,
while on the other hand the resources of France were almost exhausted.
The Emperor
further strengthened himself by an alliance which he concluded with Henry VIII.
The part taken by Francis in the affairs of Scotland had increased the coolness
between him and the English King. Henry had been endeavoring to effect an
alliance with James V of Scotland, but his plans were defeated by the intrigues
of the French Court, which foresaw the loss of its influence in Scotland in the
event of a union between that country and England.
Enraged at this
disappointment, Henry resorted to force. An army of 20,000 men, under the Duke
of Norfolk, crossed the Tweed in the autumn of 1542, inflicting great loss and
devastation; and his ill-successes near Solway Firth hastened the
death of James, who expired December 14th. This event caused a change in
Henry’s policy. He laid aside his hostile preparations against Scotland, and
sought to bring about a union between the two countries by the marriage of his
son Edward with Mary, the infant daughter of James. It was evident, however,
that this plan would also be opposed by the French Court, and Henry therefore
determined to effect an alliance with the Emperor. A treaty was accordingly
concluded February 11th, 1543, by which the two Sovereigns agreed that Francis
should be summoned to renounce his alliance with the Turk, to compensate the
Emperor for the losses and injuries which he had suffered from it, and to
execute all his previous agreements, whether with Charles or Henry. If the
French King rejected these conditions, then war was to be declared against him,
and to be prosecuted by each Sovereign with an army of 20,000 foot and 5,000
horse, and with a fleet carrying 2,000 sailors, until the Emperor should have
recovered the Duchy of Burgundy and Picardy, and Henry the rest of France. The
treaty, which was not published till the following June, also contained some
clauses more particularly relating to the contracting parties themselves; and
especially they engaged reciprocally,—the Emperor that no English book, Henry
that no German one, should be printed in their respective dominions. No
operations, however, of any importance were undertaken in pursuance of this
treaty till the year 1544.
The campaign of
1543 opened like the previous one with some successes on the part of Rossem, especially the defeat of the Imperialists at Sittard, March 24th. Francis was thus led again to direct
his chief strength towards that quarter; but he had formed no settled plan, and
his orders were vacillating and contradictory. After some operations of too
little moment to be worth detailing, he retired towards the end of July to
Rheims, where he dismissed part of his army, and forgot the affairs of war in
the pleasures of the chase. In this campaign Francis received some assistance
from the Danes, who made descents on the Netherland coasts and attempted to
take Walcheren.
On the other hand
Charles had determined on punishing his rebellious vassal, the Duke of Cleves,
and with that view proceeded through Italy into Germany. The Italian Princes
flocked to pay him court at Genoa; and Cosmo de' Medici redeemed with 20,000
gold crowns the fortresses of Leghorn and Florence, which were held by Imperial
troops. On the 22nd of June Charles had an interview with the Pope at Busseto, in the Parmesan. Paul in vain endeavored to
persuade the Emperor either to purchase peace by ceding Milan to the King of
France, or to establish in it Ottavio Farnese, Paul’s
grandson, and son-in-law of Charles; but though the Pope offered 300,000 scudi for
the investiture of Ottavio, the Emperor refused to
grant it.
Charles punishes
Williams of Cleves
Towards the end of
July, Charles arrived at Spires, and made immediate preparations for punishing
the Duke of Cleves. It was fortunate for the Emperor that he had secured the
alliance of the Landgrave of Hesse. The Saxon Elector, the Duke of
Cleves’s brother-in-law, was covertly assisting him, and even wished to procure
his admittance into the League of Smalkald, to
qualify himself for which the Duke had received the sacrament in both kinds.
Philip, however, who had bound himself to the Emperor not to lend any
countenance or support to the Duke of Cleves, would not consent to his
admittance into the League. The Bishop of Spires and the ambassador of the
Elector of Saxony interceded with the Emperor in favor of the Duke; but Charles
replied that if the Turks were at his very gates, his attention should be first
directed to punish a rebel, who had chosen the moment of his country’s greatest
danger to ally himself with its enemies. The part played by the Duke of Cleves
was indeed very annoying. Besides the usurpation of Gelderland, he procured for
Francis the help of German troops, rendered possible an attack from Denmark,
and neutralized the power of the Netherlands. Charles had brought with him a
choice body of 4,000 Spanish and as many Italian veterans, to which he added
26,000 lance-knights and 4,000 horse, commanded by the Prince of Orange. And
now Francis and his sons, who had been so anxious to do battle with the
Emperor, were presented with a fair opportunity; yet with on inexplicable
infatuation, which marked all Francis’s operations in his later years, he was
amusing himself at this critical juncture with hunting at Rheims, and abandoned
the Duke of Cleves to his fate,—an ally who had done him such good service, and
whom he had united with the royal family of France. Charles laid siege to Düren; a battery of forty cannon effected a breach, and on
the 26th of August the place was carried by storm. A massacre ensued, and on
the evening of the same day not a living soul was left in Düren, except the troops who had entered by the breach. The
fall and fate of Düren, the strongest place in
the Duchy of Jülich, struck terror into the rest: Jülich, the capital, Roermonde,
Venlo, submitted; and the Duke of Cleves, who had dispatched courier after
courier to Francis with the most urgent prayers for help, but without effect,
hastened to Venlo to throw himself at the feet of the Emperor. Ultimately,
however, his hereditary dominions were restored, with the exception of two
towns, which were retained as pledges for his fidelity; but he was required to
give up Gelderland and Zutphen; to return to the
Catholic faith; to renounce the alliance of the Kings of France and Denmark; to
swear fealty to the Emperor and to the King of the Romans; to release the
people of Gelderland from the oath of fidelity which they had taken to him, and
to transfer Rossem with his formidable band
to the Imperial service.
Campaign of 1543.
Francis began to
bestir himself when it was too late. He reassembled his army, marched into
Luxembourg, and recovered the capital (September 27th). Hence the Admiral d'Annebaut was ordered to proceed to the relief of the
Duke of Cleves : but before he could set out a herald arrived from that Prince,
to announce to Francis, that he had been compelled to abandon the French
alliance, and at the same time to demand that his wife, the heiress of Navarre,
should be sent to him, in whose favor he forwarded a safe-conduct from the
Emperor. But Francis replied, that as his alliance was renounced, he was no
longer the Duke’s debtor, and that William, with regard to his consort, had
better apply to the King and Queen of Navarre, and see whether they were
disposed to grant him their daughter. Neither they, however, nor Jeanne d'Albret herself, as Francis well knew, were inclined
to carry out the marriage contract, which was now declared null and void. The
Duke of Cleves subsequently married a daughter of King Ferdinand, and five
years afterwards the heiress of Navarre espoused Antony of Bourbon, Duke of
Vendome. The remainder of the campaign of 1543 presents nothing worth relating.
Francis advanced as far as Câteau-Cambrésis, where
his army and that of Charles were so near that frequent skirmishes of outposts
took place; yet neither Sovereign ventured to quit the heights to risk a
general engagement. The chief incidents were the sieges of Landrecies and Luxembourg by the Imperialists. But,
though the latter were joined by 6,000 English, under Sir John Wallop, nothing
important was effected, and in November both armies went into winter-quarters.
The only gain to the Emperor was Cambray, the
capital of an episcopal principality, which had claimed the privilege of
neutrality. Charles persuaded the citizens to erect a citadel, as a defence against Francis, and after his return from Landrecies, introduced into it a garrison, which held the
city in subjugation.
While these things
were passing in the north the proceedings of the Turkish fleet under Hayraddin Barbarossa, the ally of Francis, drew down
upon the latter the indignation of Europe. Agreeably to a convention between
the Porte and Paulin, the French envoy, Barbarossa, with a numerous fleet,
appeared in the month of May off the coast of Calabria, and landing large bodies
of soldiers, destroyed olives and vines, and carried off into slavery all the
inhabitants whom he could seize. Reggio was burnt without attempting a defence, the citizens having fled for safety to the
mountains. Before the end of June, Barbarossa appeared at the mouth of the
Tiber. Rome trembled. Many of the citizens fled. The Cardinal de' Carpi was
dispatched to learn the intentions of those dreaded visitors, when a scene
ensued such as Europe had not yet beheld. Paulin, the French envoy was not
ashamed to appear, and to avow himself the director of Hayraddin’s movements.
He assured the Cardinal that there was nothing to fear, that the Turks, as
allies of France, would respect the neutrality of the Pope; and Barbarossa,
without committing any further ravages, directed his course towards Marseilles.
Here he put up to public sale the prisoners whom he had taken in Calabria, and,
strange to say, purchasers were not wanting.
Hayraddin, who had expected to find at Marseilles everything in readiness for some
grand enterprise, to be achieved by the united arms of Solyman and Francis, vexed and astonished to see in the harbour only twenty-two galleys and some transports, and these unprovided either
with men, or provisions, or ammunition, broke out into curses and menaces,
threatening the Sultan’s resentment if the summer were allowed to pass over
unemployed. Paulin hastened to Francis to acquaint him with
Barbarossa’s threats, and returned with a few soldiers and orders to attack
Nice, which had been already attempted without success by the Count of Enghien. The Duke of Savoy was totally unprepared to resist
such an attack. Towards the end of August the combined forces got possession of
the town, though bravely defended by Montfort, a Savoyard gentleman; but the
citadel, under command of Paolo Simiane, a
Knight of Malta, still held out; and on the 8th of September, the approach of
Andrew Doria’s fleet, as well as of Guasto with an army on the land side, compelled
the Turco-Gallic forces to retire. Thus Francis had not even the consolation
of success to place against the infamy of his conduct. To propitiate
Barbarossa’s ill-humour, he ordered all Mussulman
slaves in the French galleys to be liberated, and assigned Toulon as the winter
quarters of the Turkish fleet. All the French were ordered to evacuate that
place; and a letter written from it during the time of its occupation by the
Turks describes it as resembling Constantinople. France was the only European
power that acted offensively with the Mussulmans. The Venetians equipped a
fleet to protect the coasts of the Adriatic, and Francis, unwilling to offend
his ancient allies, sent Jean de Montluc,
afterwards Bishop of Valence, to excuse his conduct. In a long harangue to the
Venetian Senate, Montluc quoted Scripture
in Francis’s defence, and showed how King David and
King Asa had availed themselves of the services of the Infidels
Diet of Spires.
1544.
Early in 1544
Charles opened in person the Diet at Spires. It was one of the most august that
had assembled during his reign, and was attended by King Ferdinand and most of
the Princes of the Empire. In his opening speech (February 20th) Charles dwelt
chiefly on the unnatural alliance between the French and Turks, and insisted on
the necessity of crushing France in order to save Europe from the Turkish yoke.
King Ferdinand supported the impression thus produced by relating Solyman’s progress in Hungary. The Lutheran members of
the Diet having professed themselves unconcerned with the quarrels of the
Emperor, and affirmed that the French King had always been friendly to the
liberties of Germany, the Emperor produced some letters written to him by
Francis in 1540, in which this King, in consideration of the alliance concluded
between them, promised his active assistance in suppressing the Lutherans, whom
he denounced as rebels alike to the authority of their Sovereign and of the
Church. The indignation excited by this communication was increased when the
ambassador of the Duke of Savoy related the capture of Nice, the only asylum
that remained to his master, by the Mussulman pirates; and the King of
Denmark’s ambassador solemnly renounced the alliance contracted with Francis,
who had rendered himself odious to all Christians by his league with the Turks.
The French King, hoping that his treachery towards the Lutherans would have
remained concealed, had dispatched Cardinal John du Bellay and President
Olivier to Spires, to conciliate the friendship of that party. But the herald
who had been sent forward to procure a safe-conduct for the French ambassadors
was dismissed, with the intimation that he might consider himself fortunate to
escape with his life, since an envoy from the ally of the Mussulman pirates of
Barbary was without the pale of Christian international law. Alarmed at this
intelligence, the ambassadors, who had advanced to Nancy, fled thence by night,
and on their return to Paris, Du Bellay published a manifesto, which, on the
admission even of historians not unfavorable to Francis, was filled with the
grossest inconsistencies and falsehoods. Sometimes the Turkish alliance was
altogether disavowed, sometimes justified by examples drawn from the Old
Testament; in a word, there was no subterfuge to which the ministers of the French
King scrupled to descend. Francis also endeavored to clear himself in a
remarkable letter to John Frederick the Elector of Saxony.
The Diet voted the
Emperor supplies both against France and the Turk, and Charles pledged his word
to attack the Osmanlis on the conclusion of the French war. The
discussion of the affairs of religion was postponed to another Diet, to be
summoned exclusively for that purpose; unless a General Council could be
assembled, in which the Emperor engaged to preside. Meanwhile the decrees of
former Diets in favor of the Lutherans were confirmed; the free and public
exercise of their religion was allowed; they were again declared capable of
filling the places of assessors in the Imperial Chamber; and the custom of
swearing on relics the members of that tribunal was abrogated in their behalf.
These concessions were wrung from the Emperor by his political necessities. The
Pope, in a letter, bitterly reproached him with them (August 24th), and Charles
is said to have been secretly negotiating at this very time with Paul respecting
the methods of extirpating the Lutherans.
War in Piedmont
In Piedmont the
war had not ceased during the winter. After the raising of the siege of
Nice, Guasto had obtained some notable
advantages over Boutières, successor of Du
Bellay Langey, who had died in January, 1543.
Mondovi and Carignano had been recovered by
the Duke of Savoy. The arrival of the Count of Enghien,
however, in the spring, arrested the progress of Guasto.
The French and Imperial forces in Piedmont were nearly equal; but as both the
money and credit of Francis were exhausted, he impressed upon Enghien the necessity of caution, and forbade him to
risk a general engagement. Such an injunction was intolerable to the French
nobles. Blaise de Montluc, a captain
of the true Gascon stamp, was dispatched to the French Court for the
purpose of getting the veto removed, which he accomplished by his playful and
spirited eloquence. Enghien gained a signal
victory over the Imperialists at Cerisole (April
14th), more by the brilliant valor of himself and his troops than by good
generalship. Guasto had told the people of
Asti, when marching out towards Cerisole, to
shut their gates against him if he did not return victorious. They took him at
his word. Want of money, however, obliged Enghien to
discharge the Swiss in his service, and the inconsiderate demand of Francis,
who required him to send 12,000 of his best troops into France, not only
rendered his victory fruitless, but also nearly disorganized his army. The only
result was the recovery of Carignano. The
Imperial army, however, was in almost as bad a condition, and both generals
found it convenient to conclude an armistice of three months.
The Emperor,
meanwhile, with the help of some of the leading Protestants, as Albert of
Brandenburg, Maurice, Duke of Saxony, a young prince who had just succeeded his
father Henry, and some others, had assembled an army of 40,000 men in Lorraine,
which he joined towards the end of May, after it had already reduced Luxembourg
and some other towns, and was preparing to invade Champagne. The situation of
Francis was perplexing. His league with the Turks had deprived him of all other
allies : yet by them he had been treated more as a vanquished enemy than a
confederate Prince. During their stay at Toulon they had acted as if they were
in an enemy’s country, and furnished the benches of their galleys by carrying
off all the men they could seize on the adjacent coasts, while the women served
to supply their harems. The crews were even taken out of the royal galleys. To
induce so dangerous an ally to quit Toulon, Francis paid Barbarossa 800,000
crowns. He sailed, in April, for Constantinople, again carrying terror and
desolation along the coasts of Italy. This was his last notable exploit. He
died two years after at a very advanced age.
Henry VIII invades
France
Before Francis
succeeded in assembling his army in the north, the Emperor had taken Commercy and Ligny, and
invested St, Dizier. The gallant defence of the last place, however, which held out till the
17th of August, allowed the French King some breathing time. Meanwhile the
English forces had been engaged in the spring in a campaign in Scotland; but
though Edinburgh was taken and pillaged, they were unable to maintain themselves
there. In the summer the Duke of Norfolk landed at Calais with an English
division, and proceeded to lay siege to Montreuil, while Henry crossed the
Channel with the main body about the middle of July, and was soon after joined
by some 25,000 Flemings and Germans. The original plan appears really to have
been to cross the Somme and press on to Paris. But Henry and Charles did not
act cordially together. Each believed the other insincere respecting the
partition of France, and this distrust ended at length in open hatred. Henry,
instead of proceeding to join the Emperor, laid siege to Boulogne. An ancient
author has described his forces. The van and rear consisted each of about
12,000 foot, 500 lightly armed horse, and 1,000 more with breastplates and
lances. Their uniform was blue, with red trimmings. Interspersed were 1,000
Irish, clothed in long tight shirts, and a cloak, their only clothing, while
their heads had no other covering than their long hair. They were armed with
three javelins and a long sword, and an iron guard protected the left arm to
the elbow. The centre division, led by the King,
consisted of 20,000 foot and 2,000 horse, all in red uniform, with yellow
trimmings. The artillery comprised 100 large guns, and many smaller. A hundred one-horse
mills to prepare their flour, and ovens to bake it, were conveyed in wagons.
These and the baggage wagons required 25,000 horses; while 15,000 oxen and a
vast quantity of other animals followed the army to supply it with meat.
Both Charles and
Henry were inclined to negotiate with the French King; but the Emperor, in
spite of his successes, was the first to treat. He had penetrated as far as
Chateau-Thierry, within two days’ march of Paris. That capital was filled with
consternation. The citizens were flying on every side, both by land and water;
the Seine was covered with boats filled with fugitives. Francis hastened from
Fontainebleau, and, accompanied by the Duke of Guise, rode through the streets
of Paris haranguing the citizens, and exhorting them to take courage. “If I
cannot prevent you from being afraid”, said he, “I will at least prevent you
from being hurt”. This address restored confidence, and a great number of
citizens, students, and others, flew to arms. The Emperor found great difficulty
in procuring subsistence for his army, and to winter in France seemed wholly
impossible. Under these circumstances, negotiations were opened at the little
village of La Chaussée, between Vitry and Châlons,
and instead of crossing the Marne, Charles retired to Villers-Cotterets, and thence to Soissons, which he plundered.
Francis eagerly embraced his proposals for a peace, and preliminaries were
signed at Crespy, in the Laonnois, September 18th. Charles’s conduct on this
occasion seems precipitate, and must perhaps be ascribed to the policy which he
had adopted of peace at almost any price with France, in order to pursue his
plans against the Lutherans and Turks. It does not appear why he might not have
dictated terms at Paris, instead of Crespy. At
least two months remained for field operations; he was within two days’ march
of Paris; and Henry VIII, after taking Boulogne, which capitulated September
14th, was in full march upon that capital; a circumstance, however, such was
the want of communication between them, of which the Emperor was ignorant. And
perhaps, indeed, Charles was as much disinclined to forward the schemes of that
King as to increase the alienation of Francis by the humiliating capture of
Paris.
By the treaty
of Crespy each party was to restore the
places taken by either since the treaty of Nice; the French were to evacuate
the territories of the Duke of Savoy, with exception of Pinerolo and Montmelian,
and the dispute between Francis and his uncle was to be referred to
arbitration. Francis again renounced all claim to the Kingdom of Naples and the
suzerainty of Flanders and Artois, as well as to Gelderland and Zutphen. The Emperor, on his side, gave up the Duchy of Burgundy
and the towns and lordships on the Somme, formerly held by Duke Philip the
Good. It order to render these terms more palatable, the Emperor offered some
of the disputed provinces as a dowry either to his eldest daughter, Mary, or to
his niece, the second daughter of King Ferdinand, whichsoever the
Duke of Orleans might select for his wife; the former to bring him the
Netherlands and Franche-Comté, the latter the Duchy of Milan. The Duke was to
declare within four months which of the ladies he preferred, and the marriage
was to take place within a year. The Emperor was to retain possession of these
provinces till his death, but the Duke of Orleans and his wife were to be made
Governors immediately. One of the stipulations was that the Emperor and Francis
should cooperate in restoring the union of the Church; that is, should enter
into alliance against the Protestants, and should defend Christendom against
the Turks; and Francis not only abjured the Turkish alliance, but also promised
600 lances and 10,000 foot for the war in Hungary. At the same time another and
a secret treaty appears to have been signed, the contents of which have never
come to light, but which excited the suspicion and hostility of the Court of
Rome.
The peace of Crespy gave great offence both to the Dauphin and to
the King of England. The former was dissatisfied because his father, in order
to gain an establishment for his second son, had sacrificed the dignity of his
Kingdom, abandoned the ancient rights of the French Crown, and thus curtailed
those of the Dauphin when he should come to be King. And though he would not
offend his father by refusing to ratify the treaty, yet he secretly caused a
notarial protest to be drawn up against it, which he signed at Fontainebleau
(December 12th), in presence of the Duke of Vendome and the Counts of Enghien and Aumale thus
imitating the unworthy example of his royal father. The Parliament of Toulouse,
at the instigation probably of the Dauphin’s partisans, also entered a protest
against the peace. Henry VIII, on his side, was indignant that the Emperor
should have concluded a treaty with France without his participation or even
knowledge. He himself appears, however, to have entered into negotiations with
the French previously to the Emperor. The Earl of Oxford and the Bishop of
Winchester, Henry’s plenipotentiaries, had an interview with the ambassador of
Francis at Hardelot, near Boulogne, September
9th, when they demanded that Francis should abandon his alliance with Scotland,
and pay up the arrears of money which he owed and the expenses of the present
war. The French ambassador, so long as Charles was threatening Paris, pretended
to entertain these propositions; but no sooner had Francis concluded peace with
the Emperor than he rejected them with scorn. On hearing this, and also that
the Dauphin was marching against him, Henry, who had advanced to Montreuil,
retreated, and embarked his troops for England, leaving, however, a garrison of
7,000 men in Boulogne, the capture of which place was the only advantage he had
derived from the campaign.
After the peace
of Crespy the Emperor suddenly altered his
policy towards the Lutherans. Besides the assistance Francis had promised in
case of need against the Turks, he afterwards undertook to mediate a peace
between the Emperor and the Porte, and we have seen that a truce was actually
concluded between Ferdinand and the Turks in 1545. Being thus delivered from
his two most troublesome enemies, Charles for the first time found himself free
to act as he pleased in the religious affairs of Germany; and the change in his
views was soon apparent in the Diet that met at Worms in the following spring.
Articles of
Louvain
The Pope had been
highly ended by the proceedings of Articles of the Diet of Spires as well as by
the treaty of Crespy. The announcement of a
National Council to decide on ecclesiastical affairs, and the promise of a
General Council given without consulting the Court of Rome, were equally
distasteful to him. Paul, that he might appear to act independently, resolved
to anticipate any formal application; and on the 19th November, 1544, he issued
a bull, summoning the adjourned Council to meet at Trent on the following 15th
of March. The short notice was purposely contrived in order that the assembly
might consist almost entirely of his own courtiers and of Italian bishops, who
would thus have the regulation of all the forms to be observed; but the
prelates who then met were so few, being only about twenty in number, that it
was found necessary to adjourn the Council to the following 13th of December.
The Emperor overlooked the Pope’s apparent slight. He was glad to see that a
Council had, at all events, been summoned, and he meant that its labors should
not be confined to the uprooting of heresy, but should also include a reform of
the Church itself in its head and members, as formerly promised by his ancient
tutor, Pope Adrian. He therefore accepted the Pope’s bull, and gave orders that
the doctors of theology, both in Spain and the Netherlands, should prepare to
go to Trent. Before he quitted the Low Countries, he gave a specimen of what
might be expected from him, now that he was at peace with France, by causing
the University of Louvain to draw up a Confession of Faith in thirty-two
articles, which cut short all the questions raised by the Lutherans. To these
articles his Netherland subjects were required to conform under pain of death;
and to show that this was no unmeaning threat, he ordered a Calvinist preacher,
named Peter du Breuil, to be seized at Tournai,
and burnt alive by a slow fire in the public square of that town (February
19th, 1545)/ The German Lutherans had reason for alarm, for the period of the
religious peace was terminated ipso facto by the assembly of a Council.
The Diet opened at
Worms, March 24th, 1545, was chiefly occupied with the affairs of religion. The
Emperor, being laid up with gout, did not appear till May 16th. The Lutherans
refused to grant any supplies for the Turkish war till their safety should be established
by a perpetual law. They objected to the authority of the Council of Trent,
declared that they would not vindicate their opinions before a body assembled
purposely to condemn them, and demanded that a National Council should be
summoned instead, in which the disputed points might be settled, not by
authority, but by fair and friendly discussion. The Count of Grignon, the French ambassador, addressed them in menacing
terms, and called upon them to submit to the Council summoned by Paul. The
Emperor declared that he had no power to call a National Council; and Cardinal
Farnese, the Papal Legate, threatened that if the Lutherans persisted in
dictating to the Pope and Emperor it might be necessary to use coercion. These
dissensions were for a while appeased by a resolution for a fresh conference
between the theologians of both parties, the results of which were to be
referred to another Diet to meet at Ratisbon. The Emperor, however, had begun
to throw off the mask. As if it were no longer necessary to hide his real
sentiments, the Lutheran preachers were forbidden to hold forth at Worms;
whilst his own chaplain, an Italian monk, was allowed to inveigh against them
in the most furious manner, and to call upon the Emperor to fulfill the duty of
a Christian Prince by their annihilation.
In the phalanx of
Protestant Princes appeared only a single waverer. The young Duke Maurice
of Saxony, who, as head of the Albertine line of that house, ruled
the southern Saxon lands from Leipzig to the borders of Bohemia and Franconia,
had at the very commencement of his reign adopted a line of policy to which he
owed his subsequent advancement. Although a zealous Lutheran with regard to
doctrine, he carefully abstained from mixing himself up with the political
views of the Lutheran party, and consequently withdrew from the League of Smalkald. He had helped King Ferdinand in person in the
Hungarian campaign of 1542, as well as the Emperor in his expedition against
the Duke of Cleves; on which occasions he distinguished himself by his
intrepidity and his dexterity in all military enterprises. At Worms he sought
to ingratiate himself with the Emperor by inclining to recognize the authority
of the Council of Trent; and by his talents, his graceful person, and his
insinuating manners he succeeded in gaining the friendship of Charles.
The views of the
Emperor with regard to religious affairs were warmly seconded by the French
King, who not only dispatched an ambassador to Worms to support them, but also
caused a committee of the doctors of the Sorbonne to draw up resolutions for
the consideration of the Council of Trent; to which assembly he invited the
University of Paris to send a deputation. At the same time he displayed, in his
own dominions, his zeal for the Catholic faith by a persecution unparalleled
since the time of Diocletian. His clergy, taking advantage of an illness, urged
him to make his peace with God by the slaughter of the Protestants, and induced
him to enforce an edict passed by the Parliament of Provence so long ago as
November, 1540, the execution of which, at the intercession of the German
Lutherans, had been hitherto suspended.
Massacre of
the Vaudois
Among the High
Alps which separate Provence and Dauphiné from
Piedmont existed a scattered Christian population which had preserved from time
immemorial in their religious worship traditions and customs widely different
from those of the Church of Rome. They were called Vaudois, probably from
the valleys (vaux) which they inhabited, and had
undergone some persecution in the reign of Charles VIII, but had been saved by
Louis XII from the hands of the inquisitors. They may be traced to the days of
Bishop Claude of Turin, who in the ninth century energetically protested
against the worship of images and other Roman practices. They are mentioned in
the Chronique de Saint Tron, written
early in the twelfth century, as tainted with an inveterate heresy; and they could
not, therefore, have derived either their doctrines or their name from Peter
Valdo, who founded, towards the end of that century, a sect called Les pauvres de Lyon, or the Poor Brethren of Lyons.
Their pastors, whom they called barbas (uncles),
recognized with pleasure the similarity of their own tenets to those of the
Protestants of Switzerland and Germany; nor could the Reformers themselves have
seen without emotion the principles which they had deduced from reason and
research so strikingly confirmed by the practice of a community whose remote
and almost inaccessible position had preserved them during centuries from being
infected with the errors and abuses which had gradually been engrafted on the
Church of Rome. There were few topics or practices in which they differed from
the Reformers, and Farel, in a great synod held
in 1532, in the valley of Angrogna, in Piedmont,
in which all the colonies of the Vaudois were represented, had
brought them to still greater conformity.
It was on a
settlement of these people, which had been established two or three centuries
in Provence among the mountains which, rising near the celebrated fountain
of Vaucluse, stretch away towards the Alps, that Francis, incited by the
Cardinal de Tournon, determined to wreak the vengeance
of persecution. Their industry had converted that rugged district into a
smiling garden, abounding with corn, wine, fruit, and cattle; for one of their
maxims was, “To work is to pray” : a maxim often reversed by their Roman
Catholic persecutors. After their connection with the Reformers, the Vaudois had
departed from their former prudent reserve, and had drawn down upon themselves
persecution, which, in 1535, they had opposed with arms. On the 1st of January,
1545, Francis addressed a letter to the Parliament of Provence, directing them
to put in execution the decree of 1540, whose dreadful purport was, that all
fathers of families should be burnt, their wives and children reduced to
serfdom, their property confiscated, and their dwellings razed. And this was
required to be done in such a manner, “that Provence should be entirely cleared
and depopulated of such beguilers”.
Three men of
learning and liberality had attempted to avert this accursed sentence: Chasseneuz, a learned jurisconsult, first President of
the Parliament of Provence; Jacopo Sadoleti, the
amiable and enlightened Bishop of Carpentras and
Guillaume du Bellay Langey, the Governor of
Piedmont, which last had made a very favorable report of the Vaudois to
the King. But Chasseneuz was now dead, and
had been succeeded in his office by Meinier,
Baron d'Oppède, a man fitted for the execution
of such atrocities. D'Oppède kept the
King’s mandate a profound secret till he had assembled a small army of about
3,000 men, chiefly composed of disbanded soldiers from Piedmont, accustomed to
the wars of Italy, and reveling in blood and plunder. He was assisted by the
Papal Legate, Antonio Trivulzio, who supplied
1,000 foot soldiers and some cannon. When all his preparations were made, D'Oppède read the King’s letter to the Parliament of
Provence, April 12th, which immediately ordered the decree of 1540 to be
executed. The next day D'Oppède accompanied
by Paulin, whom we have known as envoy to the Porte and companion in arms
of Hayraddin Barbarossa, passed the Durance
with his force, and immediately began the work of havoc. The crops and fruit
trees were destroyed, the villages burnt, the inhabitants massacred. On the
18th D'Oppède arrived at the little town
of Merindol. It had been abandoned by all the
inhabitants except a poor idiot lad, who was immediately tied to a tree and
shot. At Cabrières about ninety of the townspeople
had remained, and as they made a show of defending themselves they obtained a
capitulation granting them their lives. But no sooner were they in the hands
of D'Oppède than he caused them all to be
massacred, on the ground that no faith is to be kept with heretics. Those who
had succeeded in escaping were hunted down like wild beasts. With the exception
of 600 or 700 of the more robust, selected for the galleys, the whole
population was destroyed. This coldblooded massacre, which filled the greater
part of Europe with indignation and horror, was deliberately approved and
adopted by Francis, the French clergy, and the Parliament of Paris. When the
Swiss interceded for the few Vaudois still left alive, Francis bade
them mind their own business and not interfere in the affairs of his Kingdom.
At the beginning of the following reign, the Dame de Cental,
one of the proprietors of the district ravaged, instituted a suit in the
Parliament of Paris against the authors of the massacre, which had completely
ruined her property; but that body acquitted them after twenty hearings, thus
deliberately sanctioning this atrocious deed.
In the following
year (1546) the persecutions were continued in France. At Meaux, which
continued to be a great centre of reform, fourteen
persons were burnt together, and a great many others subjected to corporal or
pecuniary penalties. It was fatal to any followers of Calvin if a French Bible,
or the Christian Institution of that reformer, was found upon him. One of the
foremost victims was Stephen Dolet, burned
August 3rd, 1546, on the place Maubert, at
Paris, on the charge of heresy, atheism, and eating flesh on a fast day! He was
the friend of Rabelais and Clement Marot, and a distinguished scholar, the
author of some celebrated Commentaries on the Latin language,
France was at this
time in a deplorable condition, the effect of its long wars as well as of
mal-administration. Some of the provinces were almost in a state of
anarchy. Perigord revolted against
the gabelle, and the judge sent to try
the malcontents narrowly escaped being murdered. The war with England still
remained on hand: Francis was determined to recover Boulogne; yet it was
difficult to raise the necessary funds without imposing fresh taxes, which
excited universal discontent. He was also meditating a descent on the southern
coast of England, as well as an attack on the side of Scotland. The Scottish
regent Hamilton had at first consented to a marriage between the infant Mary
and Edward Prince of Wales. The treaty, however, was scarcely signed (August
25th, 1543), when, listening to the Catholics, and that party which nourished
an old enmity against England, Hamilton changed his mind, reconciled himself
with Cardinal Beatoun, and connived at a violent
persecution of the Reformers, several of whom were burnt alive. A small French
force, under James Montgomery, Seigneur de Lorges,
landed in Scotland to support this movement, and to assist in an invasion of
Northumberland (July, 1545). The combined Scotch and French forces marched
towards the border, but Montgomery could not persuade the Scotch to cross the
Tweed, and the campaign resulted in a few unimportant skirmishes with the Earl
of Hertford. The French naval expedition against England, though prepared on a
grander scale, had an equally fruitless result. The French navy was at that
time much superior to the English. Their largest vessel, called a Carraquon, measured 800 tons and mounted 100 guns, most of
which, however, must have been of small caliber. In rivalry of this
extraordinary vessel, Henry VIII had built an exact counterpart, also called
a Qarraquon, but so badly constructed as to be
entirely useless. No better fate, however, attended the French vessel. Francis
repaired with his Court to the Havre de Grace, to be present at the sailing of
the expedition, when a grand fete was given on board the Carraquon (July 6th, 1545). Large fires having been
lighted for cooking, in spite of the remonstrances of the sailors,
the ship caught fire, and was completely destroyed, together with most of its
crew; and it was with difficulty that the Court ladies and the military chests
could be rescued. The armament nevertheless set sail. It consisted of 25
galleys brought round from Marseilles, 150 vaisseaux ronds, or ships of war, and 60 transports, the whole
under the command of the Admiral d'Annebaut. On
the 18th of July the French fleet appeared off the Isle of Wight. The English
fleet was much inferior, consisting only of sixty vessels. Nevertheless the
English came out, but being too inferior in force to venture a close
engagement, retired after a distant cannonade into Portsmouth. The French sunk the
“Mary Rose”, and the vessel called the “Great Harry” was near sharing the same
fate. The French commander, however, did not venture to attack Portsmouth, and
after making some descents on Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, set sail for
Boulogne, which town was then besieged by Marshal du Biez. Annebaut landed some of his forces to construct a fort
at Outreau, in order to command the entrance of
the harbour: but on the appearance of the English
fleet, which had been reinforced, retired into Havre. The fort at Outreau proved useless, and the English had still free
access to Boulogne.
Death of the Duke
of Orleans
While the siege of
that town was proceeding a great calamity overtook Francis—the death of his
favorite son, the Duke of Orleans. The Dauphin he regarded with jealousy and
hatred, and only a few weeks before a scandalous scene of anger and violence
had taken place between them. Francis had wished to make the Duke of Orleans in
some degree his brother’s rival, and regarded with satisfaction the future greatness
which he had provided for him by the treaty of Crespy.
But these hopes were never realized. During the siege the King resided with his
two sons at Foret-Moutier, near Abbeville. The
neighborhood was infected with the plague, which the Duke of Orleans is said to
have caught by venturing with his usual thoughtlessness into the house of a
peasant. He died September 9th, 1545. This event deprived Francis of all the
benefits he had promised himself from the peace of Crespy.
At the same time, however, it revived his own pretensions in Flanders and the
Milanese, which had been renounced only in favor of his son’s marriage; and on
this ground he opened fresh negotiations with the Emperor. Charles, who was
then at Antwerp engaged in borrowing money from the Netherland towns for the
war which he was meditating against the Lutherans, received the French
ambassadors very coldly. After expressing some decent regret for the death of
his intended son-in-law, he declared that it afforded no reason either why he
should recognize claims which he had always repudiated, and which Francis had
twice solemnly renounced, or why he should not demand the restitution of the
dominions of Savoy for a Prince who was at once his brother-in-law, his ally,
and his vassal; and he declared that all he could promise was that if France
did not attack him he would not attack France. With this answer the ambassadors
were fain to return. Thus the unfortunate Duke of Savoy lost all hope of
recovering the dominions, which, by the treaty of Crespy,
Francis was not bound to restore till the Duke of Orleans had been put in
possession either of Milan or the Netherlands.
Opening of the
Council of Trent.
The failure of
Francis’s negotiations with the Emperor determined him again to change his policy.
He recalled his prelates from the Council of Trent, then on the point of
assembling; he also instructed his envoy at the Porte to do all in his power to
thwart Ferdinand’s negotiations with Solyman, which
he had been previously forwarding, and to induce the Sultan to recommence
hostilities in Hungary. But being still embarrassed by his war with England,
the French King did not venture upon an open rupture with the Emperor. That war
had cost him much money and many soldiers, and as the winter approached his men
died by hundreds in the camp. The German Lutherans, alarmed by the preparations
which Charles was making against them in the Netherlands, had in vain sought to
reconcile the French and English kings, whose help they foresaw would be
needful to them in the approaching struggle. But neither was yet prepared to
accept the terms demanded by his adversary.
At the very moment
when the Council was about to meet at Trent for the reformation of the Church,
Paul III occasioned a new scandal by granting his son, Pier Luigi Farnese,
Parma and Piacenza, with the title of Duke; a step also highly offensive to the
Emperor, who regarded those cities as belonging to the Milanese, and he
therefore refused to confirm the investiture. Such was the origin of the Duchy of
Parma. The new Duke of Parma rendered himself so odious by his vices and
crimes, that he was murdered two years afterwards (September 10th, 1547), when
Ferrante Gonzaga, Governor of Milan, took possession of Piacenza in the
Emperor’s name. King Philip II, however, restored, in 1557, Piacenza to Ottavio Farnese, the son and successor of Pier Luigi; and
the house of Farnese continued to hold the Duchy of Parma as a fief of the Holy
See till the extinction of its male heirs in 1731.
The affair of
Parma did not disturb the understanding between Charles and the Pope, who were
now both intent on putting down the German Lutherans. The Council of Trent was
at length opened for dispatch of business, December 13th, 1545. The meeting of
this assembly may be considered as forming a new epoch in the history of
Europe, and we shall therefore postpone to another chapter an account of its
proceedings. A General Council had always been regarded as affording the last
chance of restoring the Church’s unity, and when its authority was rejected by
the Lutherans, no alternative seemed left but an appeal to arms. That method,
which might have crushed Protestantism in its infancy, had been hitherto
avoided; but we shall soon have to trace the rise, progress, and termination of
the wars which sprung from the Reformation.
Luther did not
live to behold these scenes of violence. At the very time when his doctrines
were under examination at Trent, the monk, whose strong head and fearless heart
had thus engaged in angry and anxious discussion the most powerful, and the
most learned men in Europe, was quietly expiring in the obscure little town
which gave him birth. He had gone to Eisleben to reconcile a quarrel
that had arisen between the Counts of Mansfeld; and while engaged in this
mission of peace, was attacked with inflammation, which put an end to his life,
February 18th, 1546, at the age of sixty-three. The Saxon Elector caused his
funeral to be celebrated with great pomp.
CHAPTER XVIIRESULTS OF THE REFORMATION. DECLINE OF ITALY |