| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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 A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER III.
            AFFAIRS OF FRANCE AND BURGUNDY  CONTINUED TO
          DOWN TO THE YEAR 1493
             
            
           THE mind of Charles the Bold
          at first floated among uncertain schemes; he thought of a Kingdom of Belgic
          Gaul, a Kingdom of Burgundy, a vicariate of the Empire with the title of King;
          and he even entered into negotiations with George Podiebrad,
          King of Bohemia, who undertook to help him to the Empire after the death of
          Frederick III. It was with these views that Charles had obtained from Sigismund
          the Weak the assignment of the Rhenish lands before referred to; and in 1472 he
          added to these acquisitions by the purchase of Gelderland.
           It was through one of those
          revolting crimes not uncommon in those ages among sovereign Houses, that
          Charles obtained possession of this province. Arnold, duke of Gelderland, had
          in his old age married a young wife, who soon became weary of him, and to get
          rid of him, entered into a conspiracy with her stepson, Adolf. On a cold
          winter’s night, in 1470, the unnatural Adolf seized his old father, who was
          sick and in bed, dragged him five leagues barefoot over the snow, and confined
          him in the basement of a tower, lighted only by a small loophole. The Duke of
          Burgundy, perceiving the advantage that might be made of this event, contrived
          that both the Pope and the Emperor should require him to liberate Duke Arnold,
          who was his kinsman; and, in obedience to their commands, Charles summoned
          Adolf to appear at his Court, and to bring his aged father with him.
           In this meeting before their
          judge, the aged father is said to have challenged his unnatural son to mortal
          combat. Charles’s perhaps not very sincere attempts to reconcile them were
          unavailing; Adolf proved refractory both to reason and coercion; and, having
          attempted an escape from the durance in which he was placed, was recaptured and
          kept in prison till Charles’s death. Arnold now sold the Duchy of Gelderland
          and the County of Zutphen to Charles for the almost
          nominal sum of 60,000 ducats and a yearly pension; when Charles took armed
          possession of these territories; and in order to obtain investiture of them
          from the Emperor, as well as to negotiate with him respecting other schemes of
          ambition, he invited Frederick to an interview at Tréves,
          in September, 1473. His plans seem now to have settled in the revival of the
          ancient Lotharingian or Middle Kingdom, into which,
          however, Charles’s French fiefs could not enter; and it was, therefore, to
          consist of his Netherland provinces held of the Empire, the Bishoprics of
          Utrecht and Liége, Franche-Comté, and the Austrian
          possessions in Alsace and Swabia, pledged to Charles by Duke Sigismund.
           With these views, Charles
          represented to Frederick that he would make him more powerful and respected
          than any Emperor had been for three centuries; and he vividly described the
          irresistible force that must necessarily spring from the union of their rights
          and possessions. The chief inducement, however, held out to the Emperor to
          place the new crown upon the brow of Charles was a marriage between Frederick’s
          son Maximilian and Charles’s daughter Mary, the heiress of Burgundy. But this
          marriage of policy would never have been effected had not love lent its aid.
          Maximilian, then a youth of fourteen, with blooming countenance and flowing
          locks, dressed in black satin and mounted on a superb brown stallion, won all
          hearts at his entry into Tréves, and especially that
          of Mary. In all other respects, nothing could be more unsuccessful than this
          interview. The two Sovereigns were of the most opposite characters: Frederick,
          slow, pedantic, and cautious, was hurt and offended by the pride and insolence
          of the Duke; while Charles could not conceal his contempt for the poverty of
          the Germans and the impotence of their Emperor, who was quite thrown into the
          shade by his own magnificence.
           Louis XI employed his arts to
          sow dissension between them, and secretly warned Frederick that the Duke
          cherished designs upon the Empire. But there was little need of the French
          King’s intrigues to defeat a negotiation in which neither party was sincere.
          Charles had been offering his daughter to Nicholas, Duke of Lorraine, grandson
          of old King René, at the very time when he proposed her to the Austrians; and
          Frederick was alarmed at the opening prospect of Charles’s ambition,—by his
          demand to be made Imperial Vicar. The interview, which had lasted two months,
          amid a constant alternation of fetes and negotiations, was unexpectedly brought
          to an abrupt close. Charles was so sure of success that he had made all the
          necessary preparations for his expected coronation in the minster; seats had
          been prepared, and a splendid throne erected; a crown and scepter, a superb
          mantle embroidered with jewels, in short, all the insignia of royalty had been
          provided, and his Duchess had been brought to Tréves to share in the august ceremony. But two days before the time appointed for it,
          Frederick, whoso suspicions had been roused by Charles’s refusal that
          Maximilian and Mary should be betrothed previously to the coronation, suddenly
          left Tréves, and stole by night down the Moselle in a
          boat, without so much as taking leave of the Duke, or oven acquainting him with
          his intended departure! Charles was deeply wounded by the Emperor’s flight,
          which cast upon him an air of ineffaceable ridicule; and we may imagine that
          Louis XI was not among those who laughed least.
           Charles, however, had obtained
          investiture of Gelderland and Zutphen: and he soon
          after prosecuted his ambitious plans, and avenged himself for the Emperor's
          slight at the expense of the Electorate of Cologne. Robert of Wittelsbach,
          Archbishop-Elector of Cologne, had been involved in disputes with his Chapter;
          some of his towns, as Bonn, Cologne, and Neuss, had thrown off their
          allegiance; and the Chapter had elected Hermann, Landgrave of Hesse, as
          administrator of the bishopric, between whom and Robert a war arose. After his
          flight from Treves, Frederick proceeded to Cologne, where he took part with
          Hermann and the Chapter against Robert. The Archbishop sought the assistance of
          Charles the Bold, who, in July, 1474, appeared with a large army before Neuss,
          which was defended by Hermann.
           Neuss was among the most
          strongly fortified places of that period, and the siege of it, which lasted
          nearly a year, is one of the most remarkable of the fifteenth century. It is
          unanimously agreed by contemporary writers that Charles’s efforts on this
          occasion were the cause of his ultimate ruin. Besides his own large army, and
          his immense artillery, he had hired some thousands of mercenaries, and
          especially several Italian condottieri; and for these preparations, though he
          was the richest Prince in Europe, he had been obliged to procure a loan from
          the Bank of Venice. At the opening of the siege, the Duke caused 6,000
          cavaliers, clothed in the superb armor of that period, to parade round the
          town; a spectacle whose grandeur could not be equaled by any modern army. The
          Duke himself made the most active personal exertions; but though the little
          garrison of 1,500 Hessians was reduced to the extremity of eating horse-flesh,
          whilst Charles’s camp abounded with provisions, and he himself kept a splendid
          table, at which foreign ambassadors and other distinguished guests were daily
          entertained, he could not prevail over that little band.
           Frederick had promised to take
          the command of an Imperial army which he intended to raise; but with the
          characteristic slowness of the Germanic body, it was not ready to march till
          the spring of 1475; and the Emperor then prudently resigned the command to the
          Elector Albert Achilles of Brandenburg, an able general, with whom was joined
          Albert of Saxony. The contingents of the different lands marched under their
          particular standards. At the head of the troops of the Imperial cities the
          little ensign of the Empire was alternately borne by the captains of the towns
          of Strasburg, Cologne, Augsburg, Nuremberg, Frankfort, and Ulm; while the
          immediate nobility of the Empire marched under the famous banner of St. George,
          the guard of which was confided by turns to the knights of Franconia and
          Swabia. The Chapter of Cologne and the Rhenish Princes had also entered into
          treaty with Louis XI, who promised to attack the Duke of Burgundy with 30,000
          men; but he did not keep his word, and was perhaps retarded by a league which
          Charles had formed against him with Edward IV. Louis, however, lent some money
          to the Swiss Confederates, who invaded the Burgundian lands, committed
          considerable devastation, and took the town of Héricourt,
          November 13th, 1475; and they subsequently united in their confederacy some of
          the places belonging to the Duke of Burgundy.
           Charles had already delivered
          many fruitless assaults on Neuss, when, in May, 1475, on the approach of the
          Imperial army, which numbered upwards of 50,000 men, he ordered another attack;
          but his troops were repulsed with great slaughter. Charles had now lost the
          pith of his army, and if an attack had been made upon it, according to the
          advice of the Elector of Brandenburg, it might no doubt have been annihilated.
          But Frederick listened to the proposals of the Duke for a renewal of the
          marriage treaty between Maximilian and Charles’s daughter, together with an
          immediate payment of 200,000 crowns; and Charles raised the siege of Neuss. A
          peace was concluded (July 17th) between the Emperor and Charles, by which both
          parties sacrificed those whom they had pretended to help; and the Duke of
          Burgundy was thus extricated from this immediate danger, but only to
          precipitate himself soon afterwards into another which proved his destruction.
           The league just referred to
          between him and Edward IV had been contracted in July, 1474. Edward stipulated
          to pass the seas with an army, and to challenge the Crown of France; he was to
          obtain at least the Duchies of Normandy and Guienne,
          while Charles reserved for himself only Nevers, Champagne, and the towns on the
          Somme. He was probably never serious in the matter, and wished merely to divert
          the attention of Louis; but the English, after losing a great deal of time in
          preparation, at length, in July, 1475, landed at Calais an army of 15,000
          men-at-arms and 15,000 archers, led by the King in person. Charles had now
          raised the siege of Neuss; and though he joined the English about the middle of
          July, he gave them no assistance, and would not permit them to enter his towns;
          St. Pol, also, the Constable of France, who was in league with the Duke, but
          alarmed with what he had undertaken, fired on the English army when it appeared
          before St. Quentin. Disgusted at this reception, Edward listened to the
          overtures of Louis XI, and on August 29th a peace was concluded at Pequigny. Louis agreed to pay down 75,000 crowns, and
          50,000 more during the joint lives of himself and the English King, and it was
          stipulated that the Dauphin, when of age, should marry Edward’s eldest
          daughter. Louis is said to have obtained this peace by a liberal distribution
          of bribes to some of the chief English nobility. The most honorable part of it
          is the stipulation which he made for the release of his unfortunate kinswoman,
          Margaret of Anjou, for which he paid 50,000 crowns more. She was liberated from
          the Tower in the following January, and conducted into France.
           The Duke of Burgundy had now
          leisure to turn his arms against the Duke of Lorraine, who, during the siege of
          Neuss, had joined the Swiss, had defied Charles in his camp, and had invaded
          and plundered Luxemburg. In order to explain this conduct of the Duke of
          Lorraine, we must trace his history a little further back. René of Anjou,
          titular King of the Sicilies, had succeeded to the
          duchy on the death of Charles of Lorraine, as his son-in-law; but his title was
          contested by Antony, Count of Vaudemont, nephew of
          Charles of Lorraine, who, with the help of the Duke of Burgundy, had defeated
          and captured René. René, to procure his release, was obliged to give his
          daughter Yolande in marriage to Antony’s son Frederick; and he afterwards
          vacated the duchy in favor of his son John, titular Duke of Calabria. John, on
          his death in 1470, was succeeded by his son Nicholas, the Prince to whom, as
          before mentioned, Charles the Bold offered his daughter; but Nicholas dying
          suddenly, in August, 1473, the duchy again reverted to René, who was still
          alive, but too old to reign, and it was conferred on his daughter Yolande. She
          vacated it in favor of René II, her youthful son by Frederick of Vaudemont, and thus it returned to the old House of
          Lorraine: but Charles the Bold, who hated and suspected that family, caused the
          young Duke to be seized, and carried into his own territories; nor would he
          release René till he had wrung from him a treaty which made Lorraine completely
          dependent on Burgundy. It was in revenge for this treatment that René II had
          joined Charles’s enemies, as before related.
           After the peace with the
          Emperor, the Duke of Burgundy took the field against the Duke of Lorraine,
          having first concluded at Soleure a nine years’ truce
          with Louis XI. Each abandoned to the other his protégé—Louis, the Duke of
          Lorraine; Charles, the Constable of St. Pol, who had taken refuge at his Court.
          St. Pol had committed great treasons against the King; and he was brought to
          trial and beheaded on the Place de Grève, December
          19th. The judicial execution of so great a nobleman, descended from the House
          of Luxemburg, and allied to most of the Sovereigns of Europe, showed that the
          times had much changed since the League of the Public Weal. Louis’s abandonment
          of René, though not so heartless as the conduct of Charles, who had trafficked
          with the life of the man who had trusted in him, was still a glaring example of
          his faithless policy; for he had sworn by the Pasque Dieu that if he thought René in danger, he would come to his assistance: yet he
          did not stir a finger. Lorraine fell an easy prey to Charles, who took Nancy
          before the end of November, 1475. Contrary to his usual custom, he spoke the
          inhabitants fair, declared his intention of making Nancy his residence, and of
          incorporating Lorraine in his dominions.
           Charles next turned his arms
          against the Swiss, whom he hoped to overcome as easily as Lorraine. He had to
          deal, however, not only with the Swiss Confederates, but also with the German
          towns pledged to him by Sigismund of Tyrol. Charles had made himself personally
          unpopular with the Swiss and Alsatians by his proud and overbearing conduct;
          and the Alsatians were also further alienated by the insolence, cruelty, and
          extortion exercised by Charles’s bailiff, Peter von Hagenbach,
          and the knights whom he favored. This discontent was fomented by Duke
          Sigismund. Hagenbach was seized, brought to a solemn
          trial, and illegally sentenced to be executed at Breisach.
           Louis had watched these
          political blunders of Charles, and he used all his endeavors to increase the
          animosity which they were naturally calculated to excite. He had contracted an
          alliance with Frederick III against the Duke of Burgundy; and though the enmity
          between the Swiss and the House of Habsburg seemed irreconcilable, yet, with
          the same view of injuring Charles, he had succeeded in bringing about a treaty
          between the Emperor and the Swiss League. Louis had himself formed, in January,
          1474, a compact called the “Perpetual Alliance” with the eight Cantons of which
          the Swiss Confederacy then consisted; and this remarkable treaty served as the
          basis of all subsequent ones between France and Switzerland down to the French
          Revolution. It secured troops for the French Kings, subsidies for the Swiss
          proletarians, commissions and pensions for the higher classes. Louis promised
          yearly 20,000 francs in quarterly payments so long as he lived, and the Swiss
          undertook to provide soldiers whom he was to pay; the Cantons were to enter
          into no truce or alliance without the French King’s consent, and he on the other
          hand promised to make them parties to all his treaties. But though Louis had
          thus strengthened himself by alliances against the Duke of Burgundy, he did not
          openly break the truce which he had made with that Prince; and taking up his
          residence at Lyon, he remained on the watch for any opportunities which the
          rash expedition of Charles might throw in his way. The Burgundian army which
          marched against the Swiss in January, 1476, was chiefly composed, after feudal
          fashion, of men of various nations, called together only for a short time, and
          having different kinds of weapons and methods of fighting; so that they were no
          match for the Swiss and other German levies, composed of soldiers inured to
          arms, and exercised in military discipline. Charles was joined on his march by
          large bodies of Italians, whose leaders were men of the worst character; yet he
          gave them all his confidence. He had especially employed two Neapolitans to
          raise troops for him among the Italian bandits, James Galiotto and Count Campobasso; the latter of whom traitorously sold the Duke’s secrets
          to Louis XI, and hinted how the King might seize and murder him. A more
          respectable coadjutor was Frederick, son of the Neapolitan King Ferdinand, whom
          Charles had lured with the offer of his daughter. When the Swiss heard of the
          approach of the Duke of Burgundy, they were seized at first with fear. They
          represented to him that theirs was a poor country, and that the spurs and
          horses’ bits of the Burgundian knights were of more value than the whole Swiss
          League could pay, if captured, for their ransom; and they offered, but without
          effect, to restore the Pays de Vaud, which they had conquered from the Count of Romont, a Prince of the house of Savoy. The Pays de
          Vaud was occupied by the men of Berne, and they had garrisons also in Granson and Yverdon; but
          Charles’s army had already occupied the Jura district, when he himself
          appeared, early in the spring of 1476, before Granson,
          and took the town and castle. The Swiss army had concentrated itself at no great
          distance, and everybody advised Charles not to abandon his advantageous
          position, covered by the Lake of Neuchatel on one side, and by his artillery on
          the other. He was, however, too proud and rash to listen to any counsels, and
          on March 3rd he delivered battle. Nothing could be more unskillful than his
          array. He himself led the van, which, instead of consisting of bowmen and light
          troops for skirmishing, was composed of his choicest gens d'armes,
          and as the road was hemmed in by the lake and mountains, they had no room to
          deploy. To receive the charge, the Swiss had fixed the ends of their long
          lances in the earth; and in order to draw them from this position by a feint
          the Duke ordered his first line to retreat; but this maneuver alarmed the
          second line, which took to flight. At this crisis the troops of other Cantons
          arrived; the cry of Sauve qui peut! rose among the Burgundians; nothing could stop
          their flight, and the Duke himself was carried away by the stream of fugitives.
          But the loss was ridiculously small on both sides. The Swiss captured all the
          Duke’s artillery and camp, and rifled his vast and splendid tent. Among the
          spoils was the large diamond which had once sparkled in the diadem of the Great
          Mogul.
           This victory, though so easily
          won, acquired great military reputation for the Swiss. But they did not use
          their advantage skillfully. Although they occupied the passes leading into
          Burgundy, they neglected those towards the Pays de Vaud, and Charles penetrated
          through thorn to Lausanne, in the neighborhood of which he long lay encamped,
          till his army was sufficiently recruited to venture another attack. He then
          marched against the town of Morat; but it was so
          valiantly defended during a fortnight by Hadrian of Bubenberg that the Swiss army had time to come to its relief. The united force of the
          Cantons had been joined by the nobility of Swabia and Tyrol, by the vassals of
          Duke Sigismund, and by the contingents of Basle and of the towns of Alsace; the
          young Duke René of Lorraine also fought with them. The Burgundian army is said
          to have been thrice as strong as the Swiss; yet the latter began the attack,
          June 22nd, and Charles again rashly abandoned an advantageous position to meet
          them. This time his defeat was bloody, as well as decisive. His loss is
          variously estimated at from 8,000 to 18,000 men, including many distinguished
          nobles and knights; among them the Duke of Somerset, who led a band of English
          archers in the service of Charles. Duke Charles, with only eleven attendants,
          after a flight of twelve leagues, arrived at Morges on the Lake of Geneva, and proceeded thence into Gex.
          He had sunk into the deepest despondency; he suffered his beard and nails to
          grow; and his countenance resembled that of a madman, so that his courtiers and
          servants feared to approach him.
           René II took advantage of
          Charles’s distress to attempt the recovery of his Duchy of Lorraine; with which
          view he hired some Swiss and German mercenaries and opened a secret
          correspondence with Campobasso. With this force and the help of his own
          subjects, René drove the Burgundians from the open country into the town of
          Nancy, to which he laid siege. Rubempré the
          commandant relied for the defense of the place chiefly on a body of English
          archers, who not choosing to endure the famine which ensued in a cause in which
          they were engaged merely as mercenaries, compelled him to surrender the town
          (October, 1470). The rage of Charles at this news was uncontrollable; though
          winter was approaching, he resolved immediately to attempt the recovery of
          Nancy, which he instructed Campobasso to invest: and he himself joined the
          besieging army in December, though he had been able to procure but little aid
          from his subjects.
           Meanwhile René was approaching
          to raise the siege with a well-disciplined army, which it was evident Charles’s
          force would be unable to withstand. Charles made an assault on the town, which
          was repulsed, and René then offered him battle, January 5th, 1477. Before it
          began, Campobasso went over to René with his Italian troops. Charles displayed
          both valor and conduct in the fight, and was well supported by his nobles; but
          it was from the first a hopeless struggle, and he was obliged to retreat
          towards Luxemburg. Campobasso, however, had taken up a position to intercept
          him; Charles’s army broke and fled in all directions, and he himself, urging
          his horse over a half-frozen brook, was immersed and killed unrecognized. Thus
          perished miserably, in the midst of his ambitious dreams, Charles of Burgundy,
          the great Duke of the West. The peasants now rose on all sides, and for many
          days Lorraine presented a scene of murder and pillage. On January 10th a
          messenger of René appeared before Louis XI to relate the finding of the Duke of
          Burgundy's body, and bearing with him Charles’s battered casque in proof of his
          tale. By this victory young René II recovered Lorraine.
           LOUIS XI SEIZES
          BURGUNDY AND INVADE FLANDERS
             Louis betrayed an indecent joy
          at the death of an enemy whom he had not ventured openly to oppose. He had
          begun to profit by the Duke’s misfortunes immediately after his defeat at Granson. He instituted a process for high treason in the
          Parliament of Provence against the aged René, who had assisted Charles: and to
          frighten the old man, a dreadful sentence was pronounced against him. But Louis
          then entered into negotiations with him; and he was compelled to make his
          daughter Margaret, just set free from her captivity in London, renounce the
          inheritance of Provence in favor of Charles du Maine, the childless son of her
          father's brother, at whose death in 1481 the County of Provence devolved to the
          French Crown. René was compensated with the Duchy of Bar, and the payment by
          Louis of Margaret’s ransom.
           The death of Charles offered
          the opportunity of seizing Burgundy, the most important of all the French
          fiefs. Immediately on receiving intelligence of that event the King ordered La Trémouille, who commanded a corps of observation in the
          territory of Bar, and Chaumont d'Amboise, Governor of Champagne, to take
          military possession of both Burgundies, and to announce to the inhabitants his
          intention of affiancing Mary of Burgundy, his god-daughter, to the Dauphin. At
          the same time royal letters were addressed to the “good towns” of the Duchy to
          recall to their recollection that the said Duchy belonged to the Crown and
          Kingdom of France, though the King protested that he would protect the right of
          Mademoiselle de Bourgogne as if it were his own. Louis also revived his claim
          to Flanders, Ponthieu, Boulogne, Artois, and other lands and lordships
          previously held by the Duke of Burgundy. To conciliate John, Prince of Orange,
          whom he had formerly despoiled of his principality, and who had been
          confidentially employed by the Duke of Burgundy, the King named him his
          Governor in the Burgundian Duchy and County, and promised to restore his lands.
          Commissaries were appointed to take possession of Burgundy, who required the
          Burgundian States, assembled at Dijon, to do homage to the King of France: but
          the States raised a difficulty by asserting that they did not believe in
          Charles’s death; a very common opinion, though his body had been exhibited six
          days at Nancy. A report ran that he was a prisoner in Germany; another that he
          was hidden in the Forest of Ardennes. In their dilemma, the States appealed to
          Charles's daughter, Mary, and the faithful counselors by whom she was
          surrounded; who answered, that Louis’s claim to Burgundy was unfounded, that
          Duchy being in a different situation from other fiefs vested as appanages in
          French Princes; and at all events, if the King insisted on uniting Burgundy to
          the French Crown, that it contained several lordships to which he could make no
          pretensions; especially the Counties of Charolais, Macon, and Auxerre. The
          Burgundians, however, did not think it wise to incur Louis’s anger, and did him
          homage, January 10th, 1477; though a few towns, as Chalon, Beaune, Semur, made some show of resistance. Franche-Comté also
          submitted, though this province was feudally dependent, not on the Crown of
          France, but on the Empire.
           Mary herself was in still
          greater embarrassment than the Burgundians. The different provinces of the
          Netherlands had their own separate rights and privileges, and all of them had
          more or less felt themselves aggrieved by the despotic and military authority
          exercised by Charles’s ministers. The wealthy and industrious citizens of
          Bruges, Antwerp, Brussels, and other towns had been oppressed and disgusted by
          the insolence and extortion of Charles’s nobles; and they rose in opposition to
          the collectors of the taxes. The States of Flanders assembled at Ghent, before
          they would support the government with their money, obtained a promise from
          Mary that their privileges should be confirmed, and the abuses of the previous
          government abolished. It was now that she granted to the Hollanders and
          Zealanders the charter called the Grand Privilege, by which all the effectual
          rights of sovereignty were transferred to the local States. Mary agreed by this
          instrument that she would neither raise taxes nor conclude a marriage without
          their consent; that they might assemble without her authority; that she would
          undertake no war, not even a defensive one, without their approval; that the
          right of coining money should be vested in them; lastly, that they should
          choose their own magistrates, she only enjoying the privilege of selecting from
          the names presented to her.
           Meanwhile Louis was engaged in
          reducing the towns in Picardy. At Péronne he was waited on by Mary’s
          Chancellor, Hugonet, and the Sire d'Humbercourt,
          with a letter, in which she signified that the government was in her hands,
          naming the members of it, and that Hugonet and Humbercourt had full powers to treat. In reality, however,
          Mary was now entirely under the control of the Flemish States, who contemplated
          erecting a sort of Republic, and had appointed a regency quite independently of
          her. Louis listened not to her envoys, who had scarcely departed when a
          deputation came to him from the States of Flanders and Brabant to negotiate a
          peace; and they remarked that Mary was entirely guided by the advice of her
          three Estates.
           “You are mistaken”, answered
          Louis; “Mademoiselle de Bourgogne conducts her affairs through people who do
          not wish for peace; you will be disavowed”, and he handed to the deputies the
          letter presented to him by Mary's envoys. The deputies returned in fury to
          Ghent, where they presented themselves at the levee of the Duchess to give a
          public account of their mission. When they mentioned the letter, Mary exclaimed
          that it was an imposture, and that she had never written anything of the kind.
          At these words the Pensionary of Ghent, the head of the deputation, drew the
          fatal dispatch from his bosom, and handed it to her before the assembly. Mary
          was struck dumb with astonishment and shame.
           The same evening Hugonet and Humbercourt were
          arrested. They had previously been very unpopular; the people were lashed into
          fury against them by the addresses of certain intriguers; they were arraigned,
          and after being dreadfully tortured, were condemned to death. Having vainly
          entreated in their favor the judges at the Town Hall, Mary hastened to the Yrijdags Markt, where the people
          were assembled in arms; and ascending the balcony of the Hoog-Huys, with tearful eyes and disheveled hair, implored the
          people to spare her servants. Those in the neighborhood of the Hoog-Huys cried out that the prisoners should be spared; but the
          remoter crowd, who beheld not the spectacle of Mary’s touching grief, persisted
          in the sentence. After a short contention, the merciful party were forced to
          yield; and Mary returned to her palace, her heart swelling with unspeakable
          anguish at the treachery of Louis. Three days after Hugonet and Humbercourt were beheaded (April 3rd, 1477).
           After this bloody catastrophe
          Louis altered his tone. He complained loudly of what had been done; stepped
          forward as the protector of Mary, who had been kept a kind of prisoner, and
          declared the democrats of Ghent and Bruges guilty of high treason. Nothing
          seemed to resist the progress of the French; they occupied Hainault, threatened
          Luxemburg, and penetrated into Flanders. At length Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres awoke,
          and put on foot an army of 20,000 men, though scarcely to be called soldiers.
          The command of them was given to the unnatural Adolf of Gelderland, who after
          the death of Charles had been liberated from imprisonment by the citizens of
          Ghent, and had set up pretensions to Mary’s hand. He led the Flemings to Tournay; but here the men of Bruges began to quarrel with
          the men of Ghent; the French seizing the opportunity, routed both, and Adolf of
          Gelderland, after a brave defense, was slain (June 27th, 1477).
           MARRIAGE OF
          MAXIMILIAN AND MARY. 
             Such was the end of one of
          Mary’s suitors. She had had several more: as the Dauphin; the son of the Duke
          of Cleves; the Duke of Clarence, brother of Edward IV; Lord Rivers, Edward’s
          brother-in-law, and others. Various circumstances had prevented the Emperor
          from pursuing the Burgundian match for his son during the lifetime of Charles,
          and indeed, as we have seen, he had been leagued with the Swiss against that
          Prince; but in April a formal embassy arrived at Bruges, whither Mary had
          withdrawn after the bloody scene at Ghent, to demand her hand for Maximilian.
          That prize was an object of so much contention and intrigue that it required
          all the address of Mary’s confidants, Madame Hallewyn,
          Olivier de la Marche, and Charles’s widow, Margaret of York, to procure the
          ambassadors an audience. It had been arranged by Mary’s council that she should
          postpone her reply; but when the ambassadors recalled to her recollection a
          written promise which she had made to marry Maximilian, and a ring which
          accompanied the letter, and inquired if she was willing to keep her promise,
          policy gave way to love, and she at once acknowledged her engagement. She was
          betrothed April 21st; but four months elapsed before the Austrian Prince came
          to seek his bride in Flanders. This was owing partly to the want of money,
          partly to the dilatoriness of Frederick. The bridegroom was so poor that Mary
          is said to have advanced him 100,000 florins in order that hoe might make a
          befitting appearance at Ghent. The marriage, which took place August 18th,
          1477, laid the foundation of the increased greatness of the House of Austria.
           The lands and towns of the
          Netherlands had employed the interval between the death of Charles and the
          betrothal of his daughter, not only to obtain from Mary the confirmation of
          their ancient privileges, but also to extort new ones. Maximilian, brought up
          in the tenets of the Habsburg family respecting the divine rights of Princes,
          looked with no favorable eye on these citizens; and his own character in turn
          was not much calculated to please a somewhat coarse commercial people. He was a
          polished knight and even a poet, after the fashion of those times; and worse
          still, a poring, tasteless devotee of the old school learning. Instead of marching
          against the French, who were burning several Belgian towns, he repeated at
          Bruges the celebration of his wedding, and then retired to Antwerp, where he
          lived in ease and luxury.
           The attention of Louis,
          however, was diverted from Belgium by the affairs of Franche-Comté and
          Burgundy. Louis had got Franche-Comté, chiefly through the influence of John,
          Prince of Orange, whom, as we have said, he had made Governor of the
          Burgundies; but being jealous of Orange’s influence there, he soon began to
          raise up rivals against him, and he refused to restore John’s lands. This drove
          the Prince into open rebellion. He renewed his allegiance to Mary, whose
          father-in-law, the Emperor, in a proclamation, reminded the inhabitants of
          Franche-Comté of their duty to the Empire. The Prince of Orange at the head of
          a considerable force defeated Louis's lieutenant Craon,
          at Vesoul (March 19th, 1477), and took possession of that town, as well as of
          Rochefort and Auxerre, in the name of Mary. In this state of things Louis
          proposed a truce to Maximilian and Mary, to which they foolishly assented
          (September). The French King likewise secured himself on the side of
          England by renewing the truce of Pequigny for the
          term of his own life and that of Edward IV. The House of York was indeed hampered
          by its own home quarrels, in which, early in 1478, Clarence fell a victim to
          the unappeased resentment of the King and to the machinations of his brother
          the Duke of Gloucester. Louis is said to have been consulted respecting that
          unfortunate Prince, and not obscurely to have advised his death by quoting a
          line from Lucan.
           In January, 1478, Maximilian
          and Mary purchased a peace with the Swiss League by the payment of 150,000
          florins; but Louis was still able, by means of bribery, to secure the services
          of those venal mountaineers. Little, however, was done in that year, and in
          July the truce between the French King and the Netherland Sovereigns was
          renewed for a twelvemonth: only to be broken, however, in the spring of next
          year, when the Netherlanders resumed the offensive, seized Cambray,
          and invaded the Vermandois. Louis contented himself
          with holding them in check, and directed all his efforts towards Franche-Comté,
          where Chaumont d'Amboise, helped by large bodies of Swiss, soon overran the
          whole province. Dole, the capital town, though valiantly defended by the
          students of the University, who were cut to pieces in a sally, was taken,
          sacked, and burnt, when most of the other towns quietly submitted. Yet they
          were plundered by the Swiss, for pillage, as well as pay, was the motive of
          their service.
           The French were not so
          successful in the Netherlands, where they had to contend with the terrible
          leaders of the Walloons; men whose character may be inferred from their names,
          as “the Boar of the Ardennes” and “the Bull-calf of Bouvignes”.
          These leaders, with the Prince of Chimai and others,
          invaded Luxemburg with 10,000 men. Maximilian himself entered Artois and
          Hainault, and completely defeated the French at Guinegate,
          a hill near Térouenne in Artois; but he neglected to
          make any good use of his victory, which, in fact, had cost him so dear that he
          had been obliged to abandon the siege of Térouenne.
          War was still conducted in a most barbarous manner. Maximilian caused the
          French commandant of the little town of Malaunoy to
          be hanged, because his stubborn resistance had delayed the Netherland army
          three days; and Louis, in retaliation, hanged near fifty of his prisoners of
          the highest rank: seven on the spot where his commandant had been executed, and
          ten before the gates of each of the four towns of Donay,
          St. Omer, Lille, and Arras. The letters of Louis at this period abound
          with a sinister gaiety; he talks of nothing but hanging and making heads fly.
           The war after this period
          offers nothing worth recording. On August 27th, 1480, a truce was concluded for
          seven months, which was afterwards prolonged for a year. During this truce the
          King reviewed, near Pont-de-l'Arche, in Normandy, an
          army of 30,000 combatants, including 6,000 Swiss—the first instance on record
          of a camp of maneuver in time of peace. In 1481 died Charles du Maine, the last
          heir of the second Angevin House of Provence. The agreement by which Provence
          was to fall to the French Crown on this event has been already mentioned, and
          as Charles made Louis his universal heir, Anjou and Maine also fell to him, as
          well as the claims of the Angevin House on Naples: a fatal legacy, which Louis
          XI’s practical and prosaic mind neglected to pursue, but which was destined to
          be the source of many misfortunes to his successors. René had died in the
          previous year. The annexation of Provence with its ports made France a great
          Mediterranean Power.
           Another important death was
          that of Mary of Burgundy, March 27th, 1482, in consequence of a fall from her
          horse at a hawking party near Bruges. She left a son and a daughter, Philip and
          Margaret; a second son, born in September, 1481, had died immediately after
          baptism. Mary with her last breath recommended her husband to the Flemings as
          the guardian of her son Philip, now four years of age; but they erected a kind
          of Republic, and paid not the slightest heed to Maximilian. He was recognized,
          indeed, as Regent in Hainault, Namur, Brabant, and some other lands where the Kabbeljauwen, or democratic party prevailed; but the Hoeks, or aristocrats, were against him, and the Flemings
          would not hear of his guardianship. The citizens of Ghent seized the person of
          young Philip, and the Flemish Notables, supported by a cabal long since entered
          into with the French King, appointed a regency of five nobles, who immediately
          began negotiations for peace with France. They opposed Maximilian on all
          points, even the disposal of his daughter, whom they wished to betroth to the
          Dauphin, and to send into France for her education.
           The health of Louis was now
          fast declining. He had been struck with an apoplexy, which had impaired
          his mental as well as his bodily faculties, and had reduced him to a living
          skeleton; yet he still persisted in directing everything. He was grown so
          suspicious that he avoided all the large towns, and at length almost entirely
          confined himself to his Castle at Montils-lez-Tours, in Touraine, which, from the triple
          fortification of ditch, rampart, and palisades with which he surrounded it,
          obtained the name of Plessis. Forty crossbow-men lurked constantly in the
          entrenchment, and during the night shot at everybody who approached; while a
          strong guard surrounded the Castle and occupied the rooms. All round Plessis
          were to be seen corpses hanging on the trees; for Tristan l'Ermite,
          Provost of the Maréchaux, whom Louis called his compère, or gossip, caused persons to be tortured and
          hanged without much troubling himself for proofs of their misdeeds.
           Louis had sent his wife into Dauphiné; his son was educating, or rather growing up
          without education, at his birthplace, the Castle of Amboise. Louis was
          accustomed to say that he would always be wise enough if he knew these five
          Latin words: Qui nescit dissimulare nescit regnare. Even
          Louis’s daughter Anne, and her husband, the Sire de Beaujeu,
          were rarely permitted to see the King, though they had always been faithful and
          affectionate. He was attended only by astrologers and physicians, and some of
          those low people in whose society he delighted. In order to divert himself, he
          sent for rare animals from distant climes, and hired musicians and peasants,
          who danced before him the dances of their countries. From the King’s fear of
          death, Jacques Coithier, his physician, gained a
          great ascendency over him, and being a brutal and avaricious man, extorted
          10,000 gold crowns a month, besides making the King give him several lord-ships
          and the presidency of the Chambre des Comptes. Pope Sixtus IV, aware of the King’s abject superstition, sent
          him so many relics from Rome that the people became riotous at the spoliation
          of the churches. Among them were the corporal, or linen cloth, on which
          “Monseigneur St. Pierre” had said Mass, the rods of Moses and Aaron, &c.
          Yet, which is a most singular trait in his character, Louis remained to the day
          of his death inaccessible to the influence of the clergy.
           DEATH OF LOUIS
          AND THE REGENCY OF ANNE OF FRANCE
             It was from such a retreat
          that Louis pushed his old policy of bribery, espionage, and cabal, with more
          vigor than ever. We have already alluded to his intrigues with the Flemings: he
          caballed not only with the Flemish aristocracy, but also with the demagogues of
          Ghent. Maximilian, who kept memoranda of all the insults and injuries he had
          ever received from the French, maintained the war as a sort of point of honor,
          though it had been unattended with any important operations; but his influence
          ceased with the death of his wife, and he concluded a peace at Arras, December
          23rd, 1482. The principal article stipulated a marriage of Margaret,
          Maximilian’s daughter, then two years old, with the Dauphin Charles, and that
          she should be brought up in France. Artois and Franche-Compté,
          with Auxerre, Macon, Noyers, Bar-aur-Seine, and the
          Charolais, were to be her dowry; but the Duchy of Burgundy was left to Louis. On
          the other hand, the lands forming her dowry were to revert to her brother
          Philip if the marriage was not consummated, or if Margaret died without
          children. In pursuance of the treaty, the infant Margaret was carried to Paris.
           Louis XI died August 30th, 1483,
          in his sixty-first year. He was a bad man but a politic King, and laid the
          foundation of that centralization and that absoluteness of the French monarchy
          which were at length brought to completion by Cardinal Richelieu. In these
          plans, however, Louis was much assisted by fortunate circumstances. The death
          of his brother gave him Guienne; that of Charles the
          Bold enabled him to take possession of Burgundy; while Anjou, Maine, and
          Provence fell to him by the extinction of the House of Anjou. Louis favored
          industry, and encouraged all ranks of men, even ecclesiastics and nobles, to
          devote themselves to commerce; he planted mulberry trees, and endeavored to
          introduce the culture of the silkworm into France; he brought skillful workmen
          from Italy to establish the manufacture of stuffs of gold, silver, and silk;
          and Tours became under his auspices what Lyon is now on a larger
          scale. Yet in spite of the favor he had always shown to the middling and
          trading classes, he was as unpopular among them as he was among the
          nobility. It was indeed impossible that such a character should inspire
          love; and even without any personal considerations, and merely in a political
          point of view, the popularity which his other measures were likely to win was
          forfeited by the heavy taxes which his system of policy compelled him to
          impose. Taxation had been almost tripled since the death of Charles VII,
          owing to the large army maintained by Louis, the number of his spies and secret
          agents, and the vast sums which he spent in bribery and corruption in most of
          the Courts of Europe. Louis XI was the first French King to assume officially
          and permanently the titles of “Most Christian King” and “Majesty”, though the
          former had been occasionally used before.
           Charles VIII, the son and
          successor of Louis, was in his fourteenth year at the time of his father’s
          death, and therefore, according to the ordinance of Charles V, had attained his
          majority. But though there was no occasion for a regency, Charles’s tender
          years, coupled with his feebleness both of mind and body, rendered him unfit
          immediately to assume the reins of government; and Louis had foreseen and
          provided for this contingency by naming Charles’s sister, Anne, who was eight
          years his senior, to carry on the government till her brother should be in
          condition to undertake it. Anne had secured the favor and approbation of Louis
          by many qualities which resembled his own; and he was wont to say of her, in
          his usual cynical way, that “she was the least foolish of any woman in the
          world: for as to a wise woman there is none”. Her masculine understanding and
          courage would indeed have rendered her worthy of the throne of France, if it
          could have devolved to a female. Anne’s husband, Peter of Bourbon, Lord of Beaujeu—whence she was commonly called “la Dame de Beaujeu”—a man of good sense and some practical ability,
          was little consulted by her in the administration of affairs, though a useful
          instrument in carrying out her views.
           Louis Duke of Orleans, who had
          married Jeanne, second surviving daughter of Louis XI, and who, as first Prince
          of the Blood, considered himself entitled to direct the King, felt himself
          aggrieved by this arrangement. The first days of emancipation from the iron rod
          of his father-in-law were, however, devoted not to ambition, but to pleasure.
          This young Prince of twenty-one was united to an ugly wife, for whom he felt no
          affection; and immediately after the King's death he began a round of
          dissipation, in which women, dice, tournaments, and the luxuries of the table
          succeeded one another. He soon, however, occupied himself with the more
          dangerous schemes of ambition, and entered into intrigues with Maximilian of
          Austria, Francis II, Duke of Brittany, and several of the French nobles; and
          thinking to obtain his ends through the people, he persuaded the Council to
          summon the Etats-Généraux to meet at Tours, January
          5th, 1484.
           To divert the storm which she
          foresaw, Anne sought by her measures to gain the love and confidence of the
          people. She threw aside the hated tools of her father, and among them Oliver
          Necker, who was condemned to death for various crimes, one of the blackest
          being his having caused a prisoner to be executed whose wife had sacrificed to
          him her honor as the price of her husband’s life. Even Philippe de Comines was
          compelled to retire. The taxes which weighed heaviest on the people were
          abolished, and a body of 6,000 Swiss, besides other mercenaries, was dismissed.
          With the princes and nobles Anne adopted the politic arts of her father, and
          gained many of them to her cause by a skillful distribution of money and
          honors; and by these means she contrived to render the proceedings of the Etats harmless.
           The Duke of Orleans, however,
          was not appeased by the pensions and honors which she had bestowed on him, and
          some disturbances in Brittany afforded him an opportunity to display his
          discontent. Pierre Landais, a tailor by origin, the
          minister and favorite of Duke Francis, had driven the Breton barons to revolt
          by his cruelties, who, having failed in an attempt to seize him at Nantes, had
          assembled at Ancenis; and hereupon Landais, with consent of Francis, invited the Duke of
          Orleans into Brittany, holding out to him the prospect of marrying Francis’s
          eldest daughter and heiress, although negotiations were actually on foot for
          betrothing her to the Archduke Maximilian. Francis himself was the last male
          representative of the House of Montfort; but he had two daughters, Anne and
          Isabella, and as Brittany was not a male fief, it would of course descend to
          the elder. The Duke of Orleans listened to the proposal, and in April, 1484,
          proceeded into Brittany; but the story of his having been captivated by the
          personal charms of Anne can hardly be true, as that Princess was then only
          seven years of age.
           The Breton nobles were now
          proceeded against with the greatest rigor. Their houses were razed, their woods
          cut down, and in their despair they resorted to the French Regent for
          protection, binding themselves by oath to acknowledge the French King as their
          natural lord after the death of Duke Francis, with reservation, however, of the
          ancient laws and customs of Brittany. On the other hand, the Duke of Orleans,
          proclaiming that he intended to deliver the King from those who held him
          prisoner, formed a league with Count Dunois, the Duke of Alençon, the old
          Constable of Bourbon, and other malcontent lords; and he persuaded the
          Parliament of Paris to annul the decree of the Etats-Généraux which invested Anne with the regency. But the machinations of this faction were
          disconcerted by the death of Landais, who was the
          soul of it. Duke Francis and his minister having dispatched an army to reduce
          the malcontent barons at Ancenis, the ducal forces,
          inspired by the universal hatred against Landais,
          joined the insurgents, and marched upon Nantes; the inhabitants of that city
          rose, Landais was seized in the very chamber of the
          Duke, and hanged after a summary process, July 18th, 1485.
           ACCESSION OF HENRY
          VII IN ENGLAND
             The Duke of Orleans and the
          confederate lords had also lost an ally by the revolution which placed Henry
          Tudor, Earl of Richmond, on the throne of England. The flight of that Prince to
          Brittany after the battle of Tewkesbury, in 1474, and his abortive expedition
          to England after the death of Edward IV, in which, with a view to effect a
          marriage between him and the heiress of Brittany, he had been assisted by Landais, are well known to the English reader. About
          Christmas, 1483, the English emigrants in Brittany, who were pretty numerous,
          held a meeting in Rennes Cathedral, and swore allegiance to Henry, on condition
          that he should marry the eldest daughter of Edward IV. The news of this
          proceeding caused Richard III to strain every nerve to get rid of Richmond; and Landais, who found his own designs frustrated by the
          projected marriage between Henry and Elizabeth of York, entered into
          negotiations with Richard. The English King promised military aid against the
          insurgent Breton barons, engaged to confer the estates and honors of Richmond
          on the Duke of Brittany, and to present Landais with
          the confiscated properties of the English emigrants, on his undertaking to
          seize and imprison Henry; but the latter having got intelligence of this
          design, escaped with great difficulty into Anjou a little before the day
          appointed for its execution; and Duke Francis, who does not appear to have
          known the whole extent of his minister's base plan, dismissed the other English
          emigrants, who were received and sheltered by the French Regent. In 1485,
          Richmond, with the help of the French Court, made preparations in Normandy for
          another invasion of England. The Regent was induced to take this step by
          Richmond’s promise to convert the truce between England and France into a peace,
          and to withdraw the pretensions of the English Crown to Normandy, Guienne, and the other lands which had formerly belonged to
          it. The result of Richmond’s second attempt we need not detail. He sailed from Harfleur August 1st, 1485, with less than 2,000 men, and
          landing at Milford Haven, was joined by large bodies of Welsh and English;
          Richard was defeated and slain in the battle of Bosworth, August 22nd; and
          Richmond mounted the throne of England with the title of Henry VII.
           By the death of Landais and of his ally Richard III the French confederate
          lords found all the plans of their faction disconcerted; and although they had
          armed their vassals and hirelings, they were glad to submit to the terms
          dictated by the Regent Anne. Dunois was banished to Asti, in Piedmont, a town
          belonging, by maternal descent, to the Duke of Orleans; while the Duke himself
          was obliged to allow the King’s troops to take possession of all his
          fortresses. The Constable of Bourbon escaped with impunity, in consideration of
          his great age, and because the Regent's husband was his brother and heir. The
          Duke of Brittany, in a treaty concluded at Bourges (November), acknowledged
          himself the vassal of France, though the question whether he owed simple or
          liege homage was left in abeyance, and thus ended what has been called la
            guerre folle, or the foolish war. But a step of
          the Regent Anne, who in order to strengthen her brother’s claim to Brittany
          procured from the house of Penthièvre a confirmation
          of their transfer, in the preceding reign, of their pretensions to Brittany to
          the French Crown, occasioned another war. Francis was so incensed by the
          Regent’s act that he called the Breton States together in 1486, and extorted an
          oath from them on the consecrated Host, the Gospels, and the relics of the Holy
          Cross, that after his death they would recognize his two daughters as the only
          true heirs of the Duchy, and would oppose with all their might any other
          pretenders. He also formed, in 1486, a fresh coalition among the French
          Princes, which included, besides the Duke of Orleans, Dunois, who had now
          returned from Asti, the Count of Angouleme, the whole house of Foix, the Sire d'Albret, and his son John (who had become by marriage King
          of Navarre), the Prince of Orange, the Governor of Guienne,
          the Duke of Lorraine, and several other princes. The hope that the
          Archduke Maximilian, who had hitherto been prevented by troubles in his own
          dominions from accomplishing anything for his confederates, would now be able
          to assist them, in a great degree prompted this new coalition. But we must here
          take a brief view of these disturbances.
           FLANDERS
           In 1485 Maximilian seemed to
          have brought his disputes with his Netherland subjects and neighbors to a happy
          termination. Having quieted the disturbances in Liege, Utrecht, and Holland, he
          had leisure to proceed against the Flemings, who had forced him to entrust his
          son Philip to their guardianship, just as they had obliged him to send his
          daughter Margaret into France. Appearing before Ghent, the seat of the Flemish Regency,
          he compelled it to a capitulation, by which he recovered the guardianship of
          his son Philip. He now deprived Ghent of its fortifications and artillery; he
          imposed taxes, publicly tore the charter of the city, abolished the democratic
          government of the guilds, and established in its place an aristocratic council.
          In February, 1486, he had been elected King of the Romans, and in the following
          April he was crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle by the Archbishop of Cologne.
           Maximilian now determined on
          breaking the treaty of Arras, and entering Artois with a considerable army, he
          took Térouenne and Sens; but Crevecoeur, the French
          general, by keeping within the fortified places, exhausted Maximilian's
          resources, and obliged him to dismiss his mercenaries and retreat. In the
          following year, 1487, the French took St. Omer, and gained a victory near Béthune. The war, however, was carried on by neither side
          with vigor. Maximilian was now involved in contentions with Ghent and Bruges,
          which prevented his making any vigorous diversions in favor of the
          confederates; whilst the Regent wished to destroy their faction before putting
          forth her whole strength in Artois.
           The disturbances in Flanders
          soon assumed a very serious aspect. Maximilian having caused Adrian de Vilain, one of the Ghent demagogues, to be seized and
          carried off to Brabant, the prisoner contrived to escape by the way, and
          returning to Ghent, succeeded in exciting an insurrection. Meanwhile Maximilian
          had been entrapped to Bruges by a stratagem. Against the advice of all his
          friends, he accepted the invitation of the inhabitants to attend the
          celebration of Candlemas; but he had not been long there when news arrived that
          Ghent was in full revolt (February 10th, 1488); and on Maximilian’s preparing
          to proceed thither, the citizens of Bruges shut their gates, and tumultuously
          demanded the dismissal of his obnoxious counselors. Maximilian, who had displayed
          considerable intrepidity in this conjuncture, was at last obliged to take
          refuge in the house of a grocer in the market-place, where he was made
          prisoner. His suite were pursued by the infuriated populace; several were
          seized and tortured, and sixteen put to death, among whom was Peter de Langhals, the schout or Mayor of Bruges. In vain did the
          States of the other provinces threaten and remonstrate. Maximilian was kept
          prisoner till May 16th, nor was he released till he had agreed to a burdensome
          and disgraceful capitulation, and given three of the leading nobles as hostages
          for its performance. By this capitulation he promised the Flemish malcontents
          to observe the treaty of Arras; to renounce the guardianship of his son Philip,
          so far as Flanders was concerned; to restore popular government in Ghent and
          Bruges; and to withdraw his German troops from Flanders within three days, and
          from the rest of the Netherlands within eight. He was obliged to read these
          conditions from a lofty scaffold erected in the market-place, and to swear in
          the most solemn manner to observe them.
           These occurrences prevented
          Maximilian from assisting the French princes. A want of concert also prevailed
          among them. By prompt action the Regent succeeded in occupying Guienne, the seat of the greatest danger, and in compelling
          the submission of Angouleme and D'Albret. The rest of
          the malcontents fled to Brittany; but the principal nobles of that duchy, in
          number more than fifty, were jealous of the Duke of Orleans, and suspected some
          of the other confederates of treachery; and they entered into an agreement with
          the French Court to compel Duke Francis to dismiss them. Accordingly, when a
          royal army entered Brittany, Francis found himself deserted by a great part of
          his troops.
           We shall not pursue the
          details of the war which followed. In May, 1488, the Dukes of Brittany and
          Orleans were declared guilty of high treason, and to enforce this decree
          against them, a fresh army of 12,000 men, under La Trémouille,
          was dispatched into Brittany. The malcontents were completely defeated in the
          battle of St. Aubin du Cormier, July 28th, 1488, when the Duke of Orleans and
          the Prince of Orange were made prisoners. Among the forces of the Duke of
          Brittany was a body of 400 English archers, commanded by Lord Woodville,
          brother of the Queen Dowager, who had obtained secret permission from
          Henry VII to lead them into Brittany. After the defeat, Woodville and all the
          English were mercilessly put to death by the French; as well as a body of
          Bretons accoutered in the garb of Englishmen, and wearing the red cross in
          order to strike greater terror into the enemy. The Prince of Orange had put on
          the red cross, and only saved himself by tearing it off, and hiding himself
          under some dead bodies. He was sent to the Castle of Angers. The Duke of
          Orleans, after being carried to several fortresses, was at length confined in
          the Tower of Bourges.
           After this defeat the rest of
          Brittany speedily submitted, and Duke Francis was obliged to accept at Sablé the hard conditions imposed upon him in the name of
          Charles VIII; one of the principal of which was that neither of his daughters
          should be given in marriage without the French King’s consent. Scarce was the
          treaty signed when Francis died, September 9th, 1488; upon which the Council of
          France immediately claimed the guardianship of his daughters, and required that
          the eldest, Anne, should not assume the title of Duchess till commissioners had
          decided between her claims and those of Charles. Francis by his will had
          appointed the Marshal de Rieux to be Regent, or
          protector, of the Duchy, and guardian of his daughters. Rieux would have married Anne, who had not yet attained her twelfth year, to the Sire d'Albret, who was at least forty-five, though Anne
          showed the greatest repugnance to the match; and as Rieux pressed his plan, and as great part of Brittany was occupied by French troops,
          Anne fled to Redon, and afterwards took up her abode at Bonnes by invitation of the citizens, where she patiently awaited the aid promised by
          Henry VII of England.
           The alliance of that cautious
          and niggardly monarch had been sought both by the Regent of France and the Duke
          of Brittany; the former had pressed, if not for help, at least for neutrality;
          while Francis had urged all his former services towards Henry as a claim for
          his support. The English King, with his usual temporizing policy and aversion
          to war, had left matters to take their course, trusting that Brittany would
          prove a match for the French arms; and had only rendered the small and indirect
          assistance of Woodville’s corps. But the warlike spirit and old animosity of
          the English towards the French revived at the prospect of Brittany being
          swallowed up by France, and Henry saw himself under the necessity of taking
          some decisive step. In the present temper of the English nation it was not
          difficult to procure a considerable subsidy; and by a treaty concluded with the
          Marshal de Rieux, Henry agreed to maintain at least
          6,000 men in Brittany from February till November, 1489; the cost of which,
          however, he was to be repaid, and to receive two seaport towns as security. One
          of the conditions of the treaty was, that the hand of Anne should not be
          disposed of without Henry's consent. Alliances were at the same time made with
          Maximilian and with Ferdinand of Aragon.
           In pursuance of this treaty,
          the English landed in Brittany early in 1489, under command of Lord Willoughby
          de Broke, and in May, 2,000 Spaniards made a descent in Morbihan. The French
          retired into their garrisons, and left the English and their allies masters of
          the open country, hoping to wear them out by the length and desultory nature of
          the warfare. And so indeed it proved; for the English, finding they could get
          no assistance from the feeble and divided Court of Brittany, departed when the
          term of their engagement had expired, without having achieved anything
          considerable.
           Rieux had brought Henry to consent
          to Anne’s marriage with the Sire d'Albret; but the
          aversion of Anne, seconded by the Breton Chancellor Montauban, who represented
          that Albret’s power was not sufficient to be of any
          use to Anne in her present necessities, at length obtained a commutation of
          this marriage for one with Maximilian, which was celebrated by proxy in 1490.
          But neither was Maximilian in condition to lend any effectual assistance; and
          all that Anne obtained by this union was the title of Queen of the Romans.
           MAXIMILIAN AND THE FLEMINGS. 
           We shall here resume
          Maximilian’s history. The Emperor Frederick III would not acknowledge the
          capitulation which his son had made with the Flemings, and he endeavored to
          raise an army in order to take vengeance on them for the insult offered to the
          Empire by the imprisonment of the King of the Romans. The Diet assembled for
          that purpose produced, however, little but long speeches; and but for the zeal
          and patriotism of Duke Albert of Saxony, who furnished troops from his own
          resources, nothing could have been attempted in the Netherlands. Frederick
          accompanied the Imperial army of which Duke Albert was general; and in a Diet
          held at Mechlin he procured the treaty extorted from Maximilian to be annulled,
          and the warmest resolutions to be adopted against the Flemings. The war which
          followed, however, does not present any events of importance. The siege of
          Ghent was attempted, but abandoned (July, 1488); and the French, on their side,
          alarmed at the prospect of having to contend at once with Germany, England, and
          Aragon, did not venture to attack Duke Albert. In 1489 the Regent Anne made
          proposals for a peace to the German States assembled at Frankfurt; and though
          Maximilian was at first averse to it, a treaty was concluded by the advice of
          the German Princes, July 22nd, on the basis of that of Arras. Charles VIII
          promised his friendly intervention to restore the obedience of the provinces of
          Flanders, Brabant, and their adherents to Maximilian, and he engaged to
          re-establish in their lands, Albret, Dunois, and
          their allies, Maximilian making the same promise with regard to the adherents
          of France in the Netherlands; but the question respecting the liberation of the
          Duke of Orleans, as well as some other points, was referred to an interview to
          take place in three months between the Most Christian King and the King of the
          Romans. Charles agreed to evacuate his acquisitions in Brittany, but certain
          conditions were attached which afforded a loophole for opening up the whole
          treaty.
           The assistance of the French
          being thus withdrawn from his domestic enemies, Maximilian soon got the better
          of them. Having assembled his Kabbeljauwen adherents
          at Leyden, under the name of the States of Holland, he pursued the war with the Hoeks, and took from them the town of Rotterdam. The
          Flemish towns and Philip of Cleves, their leader, now submitted, and a treaty
          was concluded, October 1st, 1489, by which they agreed to recognize Maximilian
          as Regent, to pay him a compensation of 300,000 gold pieces, and to compel the
          counselors who were in office at the time of his imprisonment to ask pardon on
          their knees, bareheaded, dressed in black, and without their girdles. Having
          brought the affairs of the Netherlands to this happy conclusion, Maximilian
          proceeded into Austria, leaving Albert of Saxony, the Count of Nassau, and the
          Prince of Chimai stadholders in the Low Countries. In
          the following year their fleet of thirty-eight ships, commanded by Jan van
          Egmont, obtained a complete victory over that of the Hoeks,
          July 21st, 1490, and captured the Hoek leader, Francis van Brederode,
          who died soon afterwards of his wounds. Duke Albert remained Imperial
          Stadholder in the Netherlands till his death in 1500.
           We have mentioned Maximilian’s
          marriage with Anne of Brittany in 1490. The method of its celebration by proxy,
          conducted after a German fashion, afforded the French some merriment. The
          Duchess being put to bed, a naked sword was placed at her side, and
          Maximilian’s representative, the Count of Nassau, holding his credentials in
          his hand, placed his naked leg next to the sword. This laughable consummation
          was at first regarded as legal; but as Maximilian delayed to appear in
          Brittany, the French jurists found occasion to declare the wedding null; and
          their decision was confirmed by a decree of the Council, which pronounced the
          ceremony an unseemly trick. In fact the French Court had determined that the
          heiress of Brittany should marry Charles VIII; and the Sire d'Albret,
          then commandant of Nantes, who had given up all hope of Anne for himself, was
          bribed to forward their views by a large sum of money, a pension of 25,000
          francs, the restitution of his lands, and other favors. Early in 1491 Albret betrayed Nantes to the French. The young Duchess,
          who was at Rennes, was now in a dangerous position, and Maximilian’s
          lieutenants were precluded from lending her any aid by insurrections in the
          Netherlands. The heavy taxes and the tampering with the currency had caused
          symptoms of rebellion in Ghent. In Friesland, Jan van Egmont having put two men
          to death for refusing to pay the tax called Knight-Money, the people rose and
          assembled under a banner in which was depicted a loaf and cheese; whence these
          insurgents were called the bread-and-cheese folk. Towards the end of 1491 they
          seized Alkmaar. A third insurrection was excited by the French, who persuaded
          the young Duke of Gelderland, then in their custody, to make an attempt for the
          recovery of his Duchy, and they supported him with 1000 horse. His cause was
          also espoused by Robert and Eberhard de la Mark, by the Bishop of Liege, and by
          René II, Duke of Lorraine.
           CHARLES VIII BEGINS TO REIGN. 
           Meanwhile Charles VIII,
          qualified by his advancing years, had begun to take a greater share in the
          government. The Sire de Beaujeu, husband of the
          Regent Anne, had become Duke of Bourbon by the death of his elder brother in
          April, 1488; he and his consort often retired to their estates, and Anne no
          longer appeared so frequently in the Council, though her influence continued
          paramount with the King. The first decisive step by which the King showed that
          he was no longer in tutelage, was the liberation of his brother-in-law, the
          Duke of Orleans. Notwithstanding the Duke’s neglect of Jeanne, and his project
          of obtaining a divorce, she was devotedly attached to him; she had insisted on
          sharing his captivity, and had frequently, but in vain,
          implored her sister, the Regent, for his liberation. She had
          more success with Charles. She threw herself at his feet, and by tears and
          entreaties obtained her prayer; though Charles could not help remarking, that
          he prayed Heaven she might never have cause to repent it. One evening, on
          pretense of hunting, Charles rode towards the Tower of Bourges, and stopping at
          a little distance, sent for the Duke of Orleans. It was nearly three years
          since Louis had crossed the threshold of his prison. As he approached the King,
          he threw himself on his knees and burst into tears, while the King fell on his
          neck, and gave him every token of esteem and affection. A solid proof of these
          sentiments was his bestowing the government of Normandy on Louis (May, 1491).
           After his liberation, the Duke
          of Orleans abandoned all his designs upon Anne of Brittany, from gratitude both
          to his wife and to the King; and indeed any further prosecution of them would
          have been unavailing. Charles VIII having entered Brittany with large forces,
          and sat down before Rennes, where the Duchess was residing, her counselors and
          friends advised her to capitulate. On November 10th a treaty was made, by which
          Charles and Anne agreed to refer their respective claims to the decision of
          twenty-four commissaries; Rennes was to be placed in the hands of the Dukes of
          Orleans and Bourbon; and a pension of 40,000 crowns was assured to Anne in case
          her pretensions were rejected. Anne also stipulated that she should have
          liberty to retire into Germany to her husband, the King of the Romans. But this
          was only meant for the public eye, and to deceive the representative of
          Maximilian. In secret another engagement had been entered into, which was to
          deprive that Prince at once of a wife and a son-in-law.
           It has been already related
          that Charles VIII had been affianced to Maximilian’s daughter, Margaret of
          Austria, who had been sent into France for her education. Her tender years, for
          she was now only eleven, had prevented the consummation of the marriage, and
          Charles resolved to substitute Anne of Brittany in her place. The acquisition
          of that Duchy seemed to outweigh the probable loss of Artois and Franche-Comté,
          the dowry of Margaret. On the very day that the treaty was signed, the King
          entered Rennes, and had a long conversation with the Duchess; and three days
          afterwards they were secretly betrothed. The King then set off for Langeais in Touraine, where he was soon joined by Anne, and
          their marriage was publicly solemnized, December 6th, 1491. Anne was then close
          on fifteen; Charles twenty-one. By the marriage contract, they mutually
          assigned to each other their pretensions to the Duchy, and Anne, whose sister
          had died the year before, engaged, in case she should survive the King, not to
          contract a second marriage, except with a future King of France or his heir.
           The couple thus singularly
          united formed the most striking contrast, both in mind and person. Anne was
          eminently handsome, of majestic presence, of bold and energetic character;
          while Charles was deformed in body, and in mind weak and fantastic. A
          celebrated Italian physiognomist of that age describes him as having a great
          head, a long nose, and large prominent eyes; though his body was robust, his
          legs were weak and slender. Brantôme, and some other
          French writers, have characterized him as a great King, apparently from
          admiration of his extravagant plans of ambition, though he was entirely
          deficient in the qualities necessary for their execution. He seems indeed to
          have possessed courage, and a certain goodness of heart; but he was so
          illiterate as scarcely to be able to read; he was without prudence or judgment,
          and averse to all labor and application.
           The rage and astonishment of
          Maximilian at the news of the double injury inflicted on him may be imagined.
          Thoughts of vengeance immediately rose in his mind, but without any prospect of
          being able to gratify it; for he could expect assistance neither from the
          Empire nor from the Netherlander; his only hope rested on England, which he
          thought would not suffer Brittany to be incorporated with France. Henry VII,
          however, though he allied himself with Maximilian, was moved thereto rather by
          the hope of extracting supplies from his subjects than by any serious idea of
          making war upon France. Maximilian addressed long, but unheeded, manifestoes to
          the European Courts, in which he satisfactorily proved how much he had been
          wronged; and he sent the Count of Nassau to Paris to demand back his daughter
          Margaret and her dowry; but the French King, relying on the cabals and
          disturbances which he hoped to excite in Flanders, returned an evasive answer.
           The greater part of the year
          1492 elapsed without much being done. Henry VII had procured large sums from
          his Parliament on pretext of the war, which had excited considerable enthusiasm
          in England; nothing less was dreamt of than the conquest of France, and many
          pledged or sold their manors to appear in the field and partake the expected
          triumph. Yet, though Henry declared himself ready for action in May,
          the expedition was put off under various pretenses till October, when 1500
          English men-at-arms and 25,000 foot sat down before Boulogne. Henry, however,
          had been long before negotiating with the French Government, and on September
          3rd, a formal treaty was concluded at Etaples. By
          subsequent conventions (November 3rd and December 13th) Charles VIII engaged to
          pay Henry within fifteen years 620,000 gold crowns in the name of Anne of
          Brittany, as an indemnity for the cost of the English succors; also 125,000
          gold crowns in his own name, as arrears of a pension formerly promised to the
          Kings of England for a hundred years by Louis XI through his plenipotentiary,
          the Bishop of Elne, though Louis himself had never
          ratified it, and had broken off all connection with England after the death of
          Edward IV. Henry VII excused himself to his subjects for this peace by alleging
          that he could expect no help either from Maximilian or Ferdinand and Isabella
          of Spain. These Sovereigns indeed concluded a treaty with Charles at Barcelona
          January 19th, 1493, by which the latter, in his anxiety to remove all obstacles
          to the Neapolitan expedition that he was contemplating, restored to them
          Roussillon and Cerdagne, without exacting the
          repayment of the sums formerly advanced by Louis XI on these two counties. The
          recovery of these provinces was regarded by the Spaniards as only second in
          importance to their recent conquest of Granada, for they opened to the French
          the passes of the Pyrenees.
           The war with Maximilian now
          alone prevented Charles from crossing the Alps. Maximilian had met with some
          successes. Arras had been delivered to him, while a general insurrection had
          broken out in Franche-Comté after the repudiation of Margaret. The French arms
          would no doubt have retrieved these checks; but negotiations were opened, and a
          peace concluded between Charles and Maximilian at Senlis,
          May 23rd, 1493. The Princess Margaret, Maximilian’s daughter, was given up as
          well as the provinces which formed her dowry, a few towns exempted, which were
          to be permanently retained, and a few others which were to be held till the majority
          of Maximilian’s son Philip. Margaret afterwards contracted two unfortunate
          marriages; first, with Don Juan heir of Castile, and after his premature death,
          with Philibert, Dulco of Savoy, who also died,
          leaving her a second time a widow, at the age of twenty-four. At a later
          period, under Charles V, she became renowned as the prudent and politic
          Governess of the Netherlands.
           By these sacrifices in order
          to obtain a peace with his immediate neighbors did Charles prepare for his rash
          expedition into Italy; but before relating the events which it produced we must
          return to the affairs of that country and of the rest of Europe.
            
           CHAPTER
          IV
            AFFAIRS OF ITALY. SPANISH HISTORY DOWN TO THE CONQUEST OF GRANADA.
          AFFAIRS OF HUNGARY, THE HOUSE OF AUSTRIA TILL 1492
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