|  |   CHAPTER XLIII.
  
        THE INTRIGUES OF ELIZABETH FARNESE,
          
          1715-1733
          
           
        
    
        
       THE Peace of
        Utrecht had reconciled all the contending Powers in the War of the Spanish
        Succession, except the two Sovereigns principally concerned in the dispute. The
        questions at issue between Philip V and Charles VI still remained to be settled
        by future wars and negotiations. In the military and diplomatic transactions
        which ensued, Spain, directed by the will of a youthful and ambitious Queen,
        and the counsels of an enterprising Minister, seemed inspired with new vigour, and promised again to take a first rank in the
        affairs of Europe.
  
       After the death of
        Philip V’s first wife, Louisa of Savoy (February, 1714), a woman of courage and
        understanding, the Princess des Ursins, had
        assumed for a while the government of the King and Kingdom. But the uxorious temper
        of the melancholy, devout, and moral Philip, demanded another consort; and the
        Princess resolved to procure for him a Queen of a docile disposition, who would
        not contest with her the empire which she exercised over the King. With this
        view she consulted Alberoni, who now enjoyed a
        considerable share of the royal confidence and favour.
        This extraordinary man, the son of a working gardener, and a native of
        Piacenza, had been by turns a bell-ringer, an abbé,
        the steward of a bishop, the favorite and confidant of the Duke of Vendome, and
        lastly, the agent of the Duke of Parma at Madrid. Alberoni recommended Elizabeth Farnese, the niece of his Sovereign, the reigning Duke of
        Parma, as the future Queen of Spain. She was, he said, a good Lombard girl,
        brought up on the butter and cheese of the country, and accustomed to hear of
        nothing in the little Court in which she had been educated but embroidery and
        needlework. The consent of Louis XIV was obtained to the union, and, on
        September 16th, 1714, not much more than half a year after the death of
        Philip’s first wife, his nuptials with the Parmesan Princess were celebrated by
        proxy at Parma.
  
       The Princess
        des Ursins learned, when it was too late,
        the real character of Elizabeth Farnese. She discovered that, instead of a
        simple, pliant girl, whom she might easily control, the new Queen possessed a
        penetrating mind and a resolute spirit. Alarmed by this intelligence, she had
        dispatched a messenger to Parma to prevent the marriage from taking place; but
        he arrived on the very morning of the ceremony, and was not admitted to an
        audience till it had been concluded. The very first interview with the new
        Queen showed the Princess des Ursins how
        fatally she had been deceived. Having preceded Philip to a small village beyond Guadalaxara, in order to meet her new mistress in her
        capacity of camerara-mayor, she
        approached Elizabeth with all the confidence of a favorite, when, to her utter
        dismay, the Queen ordered her to be arrested, and, though the weather was cold,
        to be conveyed, as she was, in her court dress, to Burgos! Alberoni had procured the order for her arrest from Philip V, at the instance of the
        Duke of Parma, and with the consent of Louis XIV.
  
       “A wife and a
        hassock”, Alberoni was accustomed to remark, “are all
        that the King of Spain needs”. From temperament, it was a necessity for Philip
        to be governed; and the function was now principally shared by his Queen and
        his Confessor, the Jesuit Daubenton. Alberoni himself soon gained the confidence of the Queen by
        his bold and ambitious views. He aimed at restoring Spain to the rank to which
        she seemed entitled by her extent, her resources, and the character of her
        inhabitants. He pursued the labours commenced
        by his predecessor, Orri, for the restoration of
        the finances; in which task he was assisted as well by the wholesome
        amputations of territory which Spain had experienced, and which curtailed much
        needless expenditure, as by the suppression of the privileges of Aragon and
        Catalonia. Several plans occupied the imagination of Alberoni and his Sovereign, when the finances should have been reestablished, and the
        naval and military forces of the kingdom restored to their ancient vigour. As the throne of Spain was to descend to Philip V’s
        son by his first wife, Elizabeth wished to secure for her own children the
        Duchies of Parma and Tuscany, as well as the reversion to the throne of France,
        in case of the death of Louis XV, a sickly boy of fifteen years. To effect this
        latter object it would be necessary to deprive the Duke of Orleans of the
        French Regency, and to change the order of succession in Great Britain in favour of the Pretender; in a word, to overthrow the
        Treaty of Utrecht. But before entering upon so adventurous a policy, Alberoni demanded five years of peace; and, therefore,
        after the death of Louis XIV, in opposition to the counsels of Cardinal
        del Giudice, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, he made advances to Great
        Britain and Holland. On December 15th, 1715, a Commercial Treaty was concluded
        with England on terms very favourable to
        this kingdom.
  
       The exhausted
        state of France and the enormous debt contracted by the late wars also rendered
        peace necessary to that country, where the Regency had been seized by Louis
        XIV’s nephew, Philip Duke of Orleans. Louis had by his will appointed a Council
        of Regency, of which, indeed, the Duke of Orleans was to be the nominal chief,
        but with a preponderating voice only in case opinions were divided; and as the
        Duke of Maine, Louis’s natural but legitimatized son, had, by the same
        instrument, been entrusted with the guardianship of the young King, a general expectation
        had prevailed that he would dispute the Regency with the Duke of Orleans. But
        Maine had not the qualities requisite for such an enterprise; while the Duke of
        Orleans, though a voluptuary, could rouse himself when occasion called, and
        especially in matters which concerned his own interest. He resolved to seize
        the Regency by means of the Parliament of Paris. Accompanied by the Princes of
        the Blood, the legitimatized Princes, and the Dukes and Peers, he proceeded, on
        the morning after Louis XIV’s death, to the Palais, where the
        Parliament was assembled, and was received by that body with respect. In his
        address to them he insisted on his right to the Regency, both by his birth and
        by the wishes of the late King, verbally expressed to him. He protested that it
        was his intention to relieve the people of their burdens, to re-establish the
        finances, to preserve the peace, to restore unity and tranquillity in
        the Church; above all, he flattered the Parliament by demanding beforehand “the
        wise admonitions of that august assembly”. When he had thus predisposed the
        mind of the Parliament in his favour, the will
        of Louis XIV was read amid a silence of disapprobation. Philip then protested
        against an act which, he said, had been extorted from the late King; he silenced
        the attempted remonstrances of the Duke of Maine, and the Parliament
        proclaimed him Regent by acclamation. He was also invested with the
        guardianship of the young King, and with the command of the forces; in short,
        he was entrusted with an almost absolute power, and the testament of Louis, as,
        indeed, that Sovereign had anticipated, was entirely set aside.
  
       The state of
        France, as we have said, rendered two objects of paramount necessity—to keep
        the peace, that is, to observe the Treaty of Utrecht, and to restore the
        finances. With regard to this last subject, it will suffice to remark that the
        chief feature of the Regent’s financial administration was his adoption of the
        schemes of the adventurer Law; the establishment of a national bank for the issue
        of paper money, and the erection of the gigantic commercial monopoly of the
        Mississippi Company, the shares in which were to be purchased with the notes of
        the bank. The sudden prosperity of this scheme, the gambling frenzy which it
        created in the nation, the bursting of the bubble, and the utter ruin of the
        credulous shareholders, found a counterpart in the South Sea Scheme in England,
        which was excited by the Mississippi speculation and ended with a similar
        result.
        
       The foreign policy
        of the Regent reversed that pursued by Louis XIV during his later years. The
        connection between  France and Spain, established at the expense of
        so much blood policy, and treasure by Louis XIV, was at once severed by his
        death. The relationship between the ruling families, instead of a bond of
        union, proved a source of discord, and served only to embitter the political
        disputes between the two countries.
  
       At first, however,
        the policy of the Duke of Orleans seemed undecided. As Spain had approached
        George I, so the Regent appeared inclined to adopt the cause of the Pretender.
        He, at all events, permitted James, who had been residing in Lorraine since the
        Peace, to traverse France in order to embark at Dunkirk for his descent on
        Scotland in December, 1715. The result of that abortive enterprise is well
        known. After its failure the Pretender retired to Avignon. Both Philip V and
        the Regent, however, soon began to appreciate better their true interests and
        position. Part of their policy, may, perhaps, be justly ascribed to personal
        dislike. Philip V had conceived a perfect hatred for his cousin, and firmly
        believed all the crimes which rumour imputed
        to him. He had formed the design of claiming the Regency of France on the death
        of Louis XIV; but when the moment arrived, he could not summon courage to cross
        the Pyrenees.
  
       As Philip V was
        governed by Alberoni, so the Regent was guided by
        the Abbé Dubois, who had been his preceptor. The rise of Dubois was
        almost as extraordinary as that of the Spanish Minister. He was the son of an
        apothecary at Brives-la-Graillarde,
        a small town in the Limousin, and was born
        September 6th, 1656. Sent to Paris by his parents at the early age of twelve,
        and almost abandoned to his own resources, he was only too happy to obtain the
        means of studying at the College St. Michael, or Pompadour, by becoming the
        servant of the principal. After completing his studies and serving as tutor in
        several families, he at length obtained a preceptorship in that of
        the Marquis de Pluvant, master of the wardrobe
        to Monsieur, the Duke of Orleans, brother of Louis XIV. Here he formed the
        acquaintance of M. de St. Laurent, tutor to Monsieur’s son, the Duke of
        Chartres, afterwards the Regent; and finding thus an introduction to the
        Orleans family, with whom he contrived to ingratiate himself, he was, on the
        death of St. Laurent, appointed to succeed to his office. Under Dubois’ care
        the natural abilities of the young Duke of Chartres were developed with a
        rapidity which delighted the Court. Whilst serving in this capacity Dubois
        gained the favour of Louis XIV by bringing
        about a match between the Duke of Chartres and the King’s natural but
        legitimatized daughter, Mdlle. de Blois, in spite of the opposition of the
        Duchess of Orleans. In reward for this service Louis gave him the Abbey of St.
        Justin Picardy, and subsequently permitted him to join the embassy of
        Marshal Tallard at London.
  
        On the death
        of Monsieur, in 1701, Dubois, with the modest title of secretary,
        became in fact the intimate adviser of his former pupil, the new Duke of
        Orleans. He had accompanied the Duke in his first campaign under Marshal
        Luxembourg, and was present at the battle of Steinkerque (1692),
        where he displayed all the courage and coolness of a professional soldier. But
        when in 1707 the Duke proceeded to Spain to take command of the army, the
        Princess des Ursins, who dreaded Dubois’
        intriguing spirit, caused him to be excluded from the Prince’s suite. The
        elevation of the Duke of Orleans to the Regency inspired Dubois with the hope
        of realizing all his most ambitious dreams. One thing, however, stood in his
        way. His character was so notorious for dissoluteness and utter want of principle,
        that even the Regent himself, who knew his abilities hesitated to make him a
        Minister. But an appeal to their long friendship touched the Regent’s heart,
        and he named him Counsellor of State. Such was the man who was to
        direct for some time the policy of France, and play a leading part in the
        affairs of Europe.
  
       Dubois took a
        rapid and correct view of the state of Europe, in the interest of his master.
        This interest was twofold : to assure the possession of the Regency, and to
        secure the French throne in the line of Orleans, instead of that of Philip V,
        in case of the death of Louis XV. To accomplish this an alliance was to be made
        with England; the interest of that country in excluding the King of Spain from
        the French Succession being identical with that of the Regent. George I had
        need of such an alliance. France was the only Power which could lend any
        material aid to the Pretender, the so-called James III; while, on the other
        hand, without the aid of England, Philip V stood no chance of prevailing against
        the Duke of Orleans. The policy of the French and English alliance was thus
        founded principally on views of family interest; but this interest for the
        moment coincided with that of all Europe, for which peace was a necessity.
        
       THE TRIPLE
        ALLIANCE, 1717.
        
       The return of the
        Whigs to power on the accession of George I had drawn closer the relations
        between England and the Dutch Republic. Holland was become almost a satellite
        of Great Britain, to which she looked for the maintenance of her barrier. The
        ancient alliance between the two countries was renewed in (February 17th) 1716,
        by which former treaties were confirmed. George I, with an eye to his
        newly-acquired Duchies of Bremen and Verden, had also
        concluded a defensive alliance with the Emperor, Charles VI, called the Treaty
        of Westminster (May 25th). On the other hand, the Whigs, as well as George I
        himself, had always loudly expressed their dissatisfaction at the Treaty of
        Utrecht; they had denounced the Tories as the authors of it, and it was a
        delicate task to require them to turn round and support it. The clamours, too, against France had been increased by the aid
        recently afforded to the Pretender, and by the continuation of the works
        at Mardyck. Thus many difficulties stood in the
        way of Dubois’ project; but they were at length surmounted by his skill and
        perseverance. Finding that Lord Stanhope was to pass through Holland in July,
        1716, with George I, on his way to Hanover, Dubois repaired to the Hague
        on pretence of collecting books and objects
        of virtú; where, as if by chance, he
        contrived to have an interview with his old acquaintance, the English minister.
        He availed himself of the opportunity to recommend his plans; matters were
        prepared for a treaty, and, in the following August, Dubois went to Hanover,
        where the alliance was finally arranged. The States-General, fearful of
        offending the Emperor, manifested at first great reluctance to accede to the
        treaty; but these scruples being at length overcome, the Triple Alliance was
        signed at the Hague, January 4th, 1717. By this treaty the provisions contained
        in the Treaty of Utrecht were renewed; Louis XV promised never to aid the
        Pretender, and to induce him to cross the Alps; fresh stipulations were made
        respecting the destruction of the works at Dunkirk and Mardyck;
        and it was agreed that English commissaries should be appointed to see that
        this Article was faithfully executed. By this alliance the Regent prevented the
        possibility of a war for the succession of France, and gave his country the
        peace which it so sorely needed. But the price of this security was a heavy
        one. For some years she was subservient to England, and instead of uniting with
        Spain in opposing England’s expansion she lost her one chance of securing a
        great colonial empire. As it was, French statesmen did not even utilize the
        period of rest given to France by the Treaty of 1717, and during the ensuing
        years her trade was sacrificed, her fleet declined, and her finances were not
        restored. This alliance was most unwelcome to the Emperor, and on receipt of
        the news he wrote to the States-General that the Barrier Treaty was at an end.
        Nobody, however, was so vexed and surprised as the King of Spain. Relying on
        his treaty with England, Philip deemed himself secure of that Power, and when the
        Regent communicated to him the project of the Triple Alliance, he had replied
        with indifference. Alberoni, however, was not yet
        prepared to act, and wished to postpone a war till he should have accumulated
        the necessary resources to conduct it with vigour.
        For this purpose he had obtained the Pope’s permission to levy a tax on the
        Spanish clergy, under the pretence of
        assisting the Venetians in the war they were then waging with the Turks; and,
        indeed, he actually dispatched a force of 8,000 men to assist in the defence of Corfu. But before his preparations were
        complete, he was hurried into a war with the Emperor by a comparatively trivial
        incident. In May, 1717, the Grand Inquisitor of Spain, in returning from Rome,
        ventured to traverse the Milanese without an Imperial passport, and was
        arrested as a rebellious subject of Charles III of Spain! Exasperated by this
        insult, Philip V declared that he would immediately vindicate the honor of his
        Crown. In vain did Alberoni remonstrate and represent
        to Philip that he had but the semblance of a fleet and army; Philip was
        inflexible, and all that the minister could obtain was that hostilities should
        first be directed against the Island of Sardinia, instead of Naples and Sicily. Alberoni, finding himself thus prematurely driven
        into a war by the hastiness of his Sovereign, resolved to surprise Europe by
        the boldness of his measures. But, first of all, he extorted from the Pope a
        cardinal’s hat, partly by threats, and partly by representing the services he
        had rendered to the Venetians in their struggle with the Turks. Matters being
        thus arranged, an armament was dispatched for the conquest of Sardinia. Nine
        thousand Spaniards were landed there towards the end of August, 1717; and, with
        the aid of the discontented inhabitants, got possession of the whole island in
        less than three months.
  
       One of the first
        effects of this attack on the Emperor’s western possessions was to hamper him
        in his war and negotiations with the Ottoman Porte.
        
       TURKISH HISTORY
        
       We have already
        recorded the peace concluded between the Sultan and the Tsar, and how Charles
        XII of Sweden was subsequently compelled to quit the Turkish dominions. One of
        the chief motives with the Porte for assuring tranquillity on
        this side was that it might turn its arms elsewhere. Great activity was
        observed in the Turkish arsenals, but the object of it was long uncertain. The
        Emperor assembled, in 1714, an army of observation of 50,000 men in Hungary and
        Transylvania. It appeared at last that the mighty preparations of the Turks
        were directed against Venice, with the view of recovering the Morea, a loss
        which the Porte had not been able to brook. In December, 1714, the
        Venetian Bailo at Constantinople was
        informed by the Grand Vizier Damad Ali
        Pasha that it was the intention of his master not to rest till he had recovered
        the Morea: he was directed to leave Constantinople in three days, and, together
        with all other Venetians, the Turkish territories in three weeks; but before
        that time had expired he was imprisoned in the castle of the Dardanelles, and
        his suite of forty-two persons in the Seven Towers, as hostages for the safety
        of Turkish subjects in the Venetian dominions. The Signoria, relying on a
        peace guaranteed by the Emperor, had made but small preparations for defence. Their rule in the Morea was highly unpopular. The
        inhabitants preferred the Turkish Government as both cheaper and less
        oppressive, and were not, therefore, disposed to fight in the cause of their
        Venetian masters. Hence, when the Turks entered the Morea in the summer of
        1715, the inhabitants in many places hastened to submit; and as the Venetians
        were neither strong enough to cope with the Turks in the open field, nor the
        fortresses of the peninsula in a state to resist a lengthened siege, the whole of
        the Morea was wrested from them in the course of a few months.
  
       The Emperor was
        alarmed at the sudden success of the Turks; and as Louis XIV had died during
        the campaign, he was the more disposed to listen to the prayers of the
        Venetians for help. He was strongly exhorted to this step by Prince Eugene, who
        represented to him the danger that would accrue to his Italian, and even to his
        German, States, if the Turks should get possession of the Ionian Islands. A
        treaty of alliance was accordingly signed with the Signoria, April 13th,
        1716. It purported to be a renewal of the Holy League of 1684, and the casus
          belli against the Porte was, therefore, the violation of the Peace
        of Carlowitz; but, instead of being merely
        directed against that Power, it was extended to a general defensive alliance
        with the Venetian Republic. Under the energetic superintendence of Eugene, the
        preparations for war were soon completed. In the course of April three Austrian
        divisions entered Hungary, Eugene himself being at the head of the largest, of
        70,000 men. On the other hand, the Grand Vizier, with 100,000 men, marched
        towards Belgrade; while the agents of the Porte incited to insurrection the
        malcontent Hungarians, and their leader Ragotski,
        who aimed at obtaining the principality of Transylvania, and even the title of
        King of Hungary. The Vizier having attacked Eugene in his fortified camp
        before Peterwardein, on August 3rd, that
        commander offered him battle on the 5th, in which the Vizier himself was slain,
        and the Turks utterly defeated. This victory is principally ascribed to the use
        of heavy cavalry, with which the Turks were as yet unacquainted. Temesvar surrendered, and even Wallachia declared for
        the Emperor. In the same year an attempt of the Turks upon Corfu was repulsed,
        chiefly through the military talents of Baron Schulenburg, whose services the
        Venetians had procured.
  
       The Porte,
        discouraged by these reverses, made proposals to the Emperor for a peace early
        in 1717; and Sir Wortley Montague and Count Colyer,
        the English and Dutch residents at Constantinople, endeavored to forward this
        object by their mediation. But their offers were not listened to. In the
        spring, Eugene took the command of 140,000 men, and many princes and nobles
        flocked to his standard as volunteers. He now directed his march on Belgrade,
        near which place he was attacked, on August 16th, by a much superior Turkish
        force, which, however, he entirely defeated. Belgrade capitulated on the 18th.
        The Porte now renewed its offers of peace. Eugene declined to treat except on
        the basis of uti possidetis; and the Cabinet of Vienna insisted that
        Venice should be included in the treaty. As the Porte had obtained some
        advantages over the Venetians in the course of the year, it was at first
        unwilling to concede this point. In the spring of 1718, Eugene increased his
        demands by requiring the cession of Bosnia, Servia, and Wallachia. But the
        hostile attitude assumed by Spain induced the Emperor to lower his terms. He
        abandoned his pretensions to Wallachia and the other provinces, but insisted on
        the basis of uti possidetis, which the Turks at last agreed to accept,
        as well as to abandon the cause of Ragotski. A
        congress was now assembled at Passarowitz, which
        was opened by a speech of Sir Robert Sutton, as English mediator, June 5th.
        Although the Emperor had pretended to enter into the war on account of the
        Venetians, they were made the scape-goats of the peace, as the uti possidetis of
        course deprived them of the Morea, while Charles VI retained all his conquests.
        Thus the Peace of Passarowitz (July 21st,
        1718), gave a mortal blow to the power of Venice in the East.
  
       Although victor
        at Peterwardein and Belgrade, the Emperor,
        unable at once to employ all his forces against Spain, appealed to the Triple
        Alliance against the violation of Italian neutrality. Alberoni,
        on the other hand, sought to propitiate England by some commercial advantages,
        and strained every nerve to raise men and money. Under these circumstances,
        France and England entered into a convention in July, 1718, to carry out
        Stanhope’s project for bringing about peace between Spain and Austria. The
        Emperor was to be compelled to renounce all pretensions to Spain and the
        Indies, and Philip V to the ancient Spanish provinces of which the Emperor was
        now in possession, as well as to the reversion of Sicily in case of failure of
        heirs in the House of Savoy. Sicily was to be assigned to the Emperor, the Duke
        of Savoy taking Sardinia instead, with the title of King. The Emperor was to
        promise the eventual investiture of the Duchies of Parma, Piacenza and Tuscany
        to Don Carlos, or another son of the Queen of Spain; but with a provision that
        they should never be united with the Crown of Spain; and Leghorn, Porto Ferrajo, Parma, and Piacenza were to be provisionally
        occupied by Swiss garrisons, in the pay of the mediating Powers. Three months
        were to be allowed to Philip V and the Duke of Savoy to accede to the treaty
        after its ratification by the Emperor; and in case of refusal their accession
        was to be enforced. The Emperor immediately agreed to these terms, and on
        August 20th was signed at London the treaty known as the Quadruple Alliance, so
        called because the Dutch were also invited to accede to it. But the Republic,
        offended at not having been previously consulted, and alarmed for their trade
        with Spain, refused at first to do so; and their adhesion was not obtained till
        six months later. The King of Spain, and also, at first, the Duke of Savoy,
        refused to accede to the treaty; but the latter gave his consent to it in
        November.
  
       These latter
        negotiations were the work of Stanhope, supported by Dubois, and were due to
        the action of Spain. Alberoni had attempted to oppose
        one coalition by another; and as already related, he tried to reconcile the
        Tsar and the King of Sweden, and unite them in a descent on Scotland in favour of the Pretender. He had already landed 30,000
        Spaniards at Palermo, on July 1st, 1718. A great part of the Piedmontese troops had already been withdrawn, and the
        rest now retired into the citadel of Messina. In June a British fleet was
        dispatched to the Mediterranean, and Stanhope hastened to Madrid to make a last
        effort to obtain the submission of Philip. While he was at Madrid, news arrived
        of the landing of the Spaniards at Palermo, and Stanhope offered to restore
        Gibraltar if Philip would immediately accede to the Quadruple Alliance; but
        without effect. Admiral Byng almost annihilated the Spanish fleet of twenty-two
        sail in an engagement off Cape Passaro, August
        11th. Yet the Allied Powers still hesitated to make a formal declaration of
        war. England was unwilling to do so except in conjunction with France, and the
        Regent was reluctant to take such a step against the grandson of Louis XIV. At
        last Dubois, who was now minister for Foreign Affairs, found a pretext for it
        in the conspiracy of Cellamare.
  
       Alberoni, in conjunction with the Duchess of Maine, and through Cellamare,
        the Spanish ambassador at Paris, had concocted a plot for carrying off the
        Regent; upon which Philip V was to claim the Regency, and to procure
        confirmation of his authority from an assembly of the States-General of France.
        This scheme was betrayed to Dubois by a clerk employed to copy the dispatches,
        and a Spanish abbé, the bearer of them, was
        arrested at Poitiers on his way to Spain. This discovery was followed by the
        arrest of the Duchess of Maine and her husband, as well as that of Cellamare, as a violator of international law; and Dubois
        availed himself of the popular indignation excited by the plot to declare war
        against Spain, January 10th, 1719. An English declaration had preceded it by a
        fortnight.
  
       Active operations
        were commenced in the spring. In April a French division crossed the Bidasoa, pushed on to Passages and destroyed the dockyard,
        where several men-of-war were building; then being joined by the main body
        under Marshal Berwick, laid siege to Fuenterabia,
        which capitulated June 18th. Philip was unable to stem this invasion; yet in
        March he had dispatched six ships of war, with 6,000 men, and arms for 30,000
        more, to make a descent in Scotland under the conduct
        of the exiled Duke of Ormond. The Pretender was invited from Rome to take
        advantage of any events which might occur. But the Spanish squadron was
        dispersed by a storm; only two frigates succeeded in reaching Kintail, and
        the partial rising of Highlanders which ensued was speedily quelled. In Spain,
        St. Sebastian surrendered to the French August 19th. Berwick then reentered
        France; skirted with his army the northern side of the Pyrenees, and
        entered Cerdagne; where, however, he effected
        little or nothing. In the autumn an English fleet appeared off the coast of
        Galicia, captured Vigo, October 21st, and did much damage.
  
       It was clearly
        impossible for Spain to resist, single-handed, the formidable combination
        organized against her. The Austrian troops, released by the Peace of Passarowitz, had now had time to proceed to the scene of
        action, and the English fleet had landed large bodies of them in Sicily. The
        French invasion of Spain would recommence next year, and the English were preparing
        to attack Spanish America. But the French and English Cabinets had resolved
        that the fall of Alberoni should be an indispensable
        condition of a peace.
  
       Philip V was
        influenced to dismiss his enterprising minister by his confessor Daubenton, whom Dubois had gained; while the Spanish Queen
        was threatened with the withdrawal of the guarantee of the Italian Duchies to
        her children. In December, 1719, Alberoni received
        orders to quit Madrid in eight days and Spain in three weeks. This was the end
        of his political career, though he lived till 1752. He retired through France
        to Genoa; whence, however, he was driven by Pope Clement XI, who threatened him
        with prosecution as an enemy of the Catholic faith. Till the death of that
        Pontiff he found a refuge in Switzerland; and after that event he regained his
        place in the Consistory.
  
       After the
        dismissal of Alberoni, the Spanish ambassador at the
        Hague acceded to the Quadruple Alliance (February, 1720). The Emperor was put
        in possession of Sicily; the ex-King of Sicily (Victor Amadeus II of Savoy)
        became King of Sardinia, a possession which has since remained in his House;
        and the reversion of Parma and Tuscany was guaranteed to the children of the
        Spanish Queen. The policy of Dubois was thus crowned with success, and on
        Clement XI’s death he received a cardinals hat from Innocent XIII.
  
       The adhesion of
        Philip V to the Quadruple Alliance was followed by several treaties. As the
        Emperor had shown a. dislike to the stipulations regarding the Italian Duchies,
        Philip concluded a secret treaty with France in March, 1721, by which that
        country engaged to support the interests of Spain in the Congress about to be
        opened at Cambrai. The English Cabinet manifested their displeasure at
        this treaty, which had been made without their concurrence; and Dubois, to
        appease them, hastened to bring about another Treaty of Madrid in June, 1721,
        between Great Britain and Spain, to which France also acceded, containing terms
        very advantageous to English commerce. On the other hand, Great Britain engaged
        to replace the Spanish ships destroyed by Byng.
  
       The connection
        between France and Spain was at this time drawn closer by marriage contracts
        between the reigning families. Louis XV was to be affianced to the Infanta,
        then only three years of age, who was to be educated in France; while the
        Prince of Asturias, the heir apparent of the Spanish Monarchy, and Don Carlos,
        the heir of Parma and Tuscany, were to be united to two daughters of the Regent
        Orleans. The young princesses were exchanged on the Bidasoa,
        January 9th, 1722. These marriages had been effected through the influence
        of Daubenton, and were followed by attacks upon
        religious freedom in France. Under Philip V, the slave of the Jesuits,
        religious bigotry and intolerance flourished as vigorously as under the House
        of Austria; 2,346 persons were burnt during his reign, and the consort of the
        Prince of Asturias was regaled on her arrival in Spain with the spectacle of
        an auto da fé. Daubenton procured that the Jesuit Limières should succeed the venerable Abbé Fleury
        as confessor of Louis XV; the press and book trade in France were subjected to
        a rigorous surveillance, and Fleury’s posthumous work, the Discours sur les Libertés Gallicanes, was
        suppressed.
  
       The end of the
        Orleans regency was now approaching. Louis XV would attain his legal majority
        February 16th, 1723, and the Regent had caused him to be crowned in October,
        1722. When the King became of age, the Duke of Orleans resigned the title of
        Regent, but as president of the Council of State continued to conduct the
        Government under the guidance of Dubois, who was now Prime Minister. The
        Cardinal, however, did not long enjoy his newly-acquired honors. He died on
        August 10th, 1723, and the Duke of Orleans did not long survive him, dying on
        December 2nd, 1723, at the premature age of forty-nine. The Duke of Bourbon now
        became Prime Minister. His administration was but a continuation of the former
        system, though with infinitely less talent.
        
       Soon after these
        events Europe was surprised by the abdication of Philip V, an event caused by
        religious motives. The Crown of Spain was transferred to Don Luis, Prince of
        Asturias, then sixteen years of age, Philip’s eldest son, by Louisa of Savoy
        (January 10th, 1724). Don Luis, however, died in the August following his
        accession, and Philip found himself in a difficult position. His renunciation
        of the Crown had resembled a solemn religious act, and his resumption of it
        might occasion unfavourable comments. His
        religious scruples, however, were removed by the Papal Nuncio; after much
        apparent reluctance, Philip again ascended the throne, and Elizabeth Farnese
        reigned once more, to the detriment of the peace of Europe.
  
       Meanwhile a
        congress had been opened at Cambrai to decide the questions between
        Austria and Spain. Formal proceedings, however, did not begin till January,
        1724, were very protracted, and had no results. The Duke of Bourbon was
        inclined to support Spain, and to form an intimate alliance with that country;
        but at the same time he was anxious to arrange as soon as possible a marriage
        for Louis XV, with the double object of maintaining himself in power and, in
        the event of no heir being born, of preventing the succession of the Orleans
        branch. In this policy he was supported not only by his mistress, Madame
        de Prie, but also by French public opinion. In
        April, 1725, the Spanish Infanta was sent back to Spain without even
        a word of apology. The French Court at first endeavored to procure for the
        young King Louis an English princess, but after considering the advisability of
        marrying Louis to Elizabeth, daughter of the Tsarina Catharine I, and to
        Princesses of Modena and Lorraine, Mary Lesczynski,
        daughter of Stanislaus, ex-King of Poland, was selected to be Queen of France.
        The family of Stanislaus was at that time residing at Weissembourg,
        in Alsace, on a small pension allowed them by the French Government, and were
        delighted at this unexpected turn in their fortunes. Mary, who was nearly seven
        years older than Louis, was married to him September 4th, 1725.
  
       The dismissal of
        the Infanta naturally gave the deepest offence to the Spanish Court.
        Philip immediately recalled his ambassador from Paris, and his ministers from
        the Congress of Cambrai, which was consequently broken up. Yet he had
        himself been secretly preparing to inflict the very same insult of which he so
        grievously complained. Philip, when he found it impossible to come to any terms
        with the French Court, and that nothing was likely to be done at the Congress
        of Cambrai, had reconciled himself with the Emperor, Charles VI. The
        Baron Ripperda, a Dutchman, who had turned
        Catholic and had contrived to gain the confidence of Queen Elizabeth, had been
        dispatched, in the autumn of 1724, to Vienna, with secret instructions to
        negotiate a marriage between her son, Don Carlos—already affianced, as we have
        seen, to Mdlle. Beaujolais—and the eldest Archduchess, Maria Theresa.
        Almost the sole object of the Emperor’s policy at that juncture, he being
        without male heirs, was to secure the succession of his daughters, according to
        the Pragmatic Sanction which he had promulgated in 1713. By this instrument the
        Austrian succession was regulated in the order of primogeniture, first in favour of his male descendants, and, in their default,
        of females. In case these also should be wanting, Charles next appointed the
        Archduchesses, daughters of the Emperor Joseph; then the Queen of Portugal and
        other daughters of the Emperor Leopold, and their descendants in perpetuity. As
        he advanced in years, the Emperor, despairing of male issue, caused the
        Pragmatic Sanction to be confirmed by the Austrian States, and by those of
        Silesia, Bohemia, and Hungary. The weak point of it was that Charles’s
        daughters were named to the succession before those of his elder brother, the
        Emperor Joseph I; and this in the face of a contrary Act of Succession made by
        his father, the Emperor Leopold, in 1703, by which it was provided that, in
        default of male heirs, the Austrian inheritance should first fall to the
        daughters of Joseph. By cancelling this arrangement Charles VI indicated that a
        like fate might overtake his own, and hence his anxiety to obtain a
        confirmation of the Pragmatic Sanction from foreign Powers as well as from his
        own subjects. To procure the guarantee of Spain, he was inclined to meet the
        advances of that Power; while Philip, after the dismissal of his daughter from
        France, urged Ripperda to conclude with the
        Cabinet of Vienna almost at any price. A treaty was accordingly signed at
        Vienna April 30th. By it the two Sovereigns mutually renounced their claims to
        each other’s dominions; Philip guaranteed the Pragmatic Sanction and opened the
        Spanish ports to German commerce; while Charles promised to use his good
        offices to procure the restoration of Gibraltar and Minorca to the Spanish
        Crown, and recognized Don Carlos as heir to Parma and Tuscany. The assent of
        the Germanic body to this arrangement respecting the Italian duchies was
        expressed in a subsequent treaty between the Emperor, the Empire, and Spain,
        signed June 7th, 1725.
  
       By this treaty
        Philip renounced all the advantages which he had hoped to obtain through the
        mediating Powers at the Congress of Cambrai, and acquiesced in the
        provisions of the Treaty of Utrecht and of the Quadruple Alliance. It contained
        nothing, therefore, calculated to offend either England or France; but such was
        not the case with the Secret Treaty concluded in November. Nothing, of course,
        was certainly known of this except through the imprudent and foolish boasting
        of Ripperda; but it was believed that marriages
        had been arranged between the two Archduchesses, Maria Theresa and Maria Anna,
        and Don Carlos and Don Philip, the sons of Philip V by Elizabeth Farnese; that
        the contracting parties had agreed to effect the restoration of the Stuarts;
        and that the Emperor had engaged to assist Philip in the recovery of Gibraltar
        and Minorca by force. The marriage of Don Carlos might one day revive the
        Empire of Charles V through the union of Spain and Germany. The exultation
        displayed by the Court of Madrid, and the honors lavished upon Ripperda, who was made a minister and grandee of Spain,
        strengthened the alarm of the French and English Cabinets. Their suspicions
        were soon confirmed by the confessions of Ripperda himself,
        whose vanity and presumption brought upon him the hatred of the Spanish
        grandees, and deprived him of the confidence of the Queen. In a few months he
        was driven from his office, and took refuge in the hotel of Stanhope, the
        English Ambassador, to whom he revealed the whole of the negotiations between
        Spain and the Emperor. Philip dragged him by force from this asylum, and caused
        him to be confined at Segovia. War seemed inevitable. George I, during his
        Alliance sojourn at Hanover in 1725, had already engaged Frederick William I of
        Prussia to conclude at Herrenhausen an
        alliance with France and England (September 3rd). The Dutch, in the interests
        of their commerce, threatened by the establishment of an East India Company by
        the Emperor at Ostend, acceded to this alliance, known as the Alliance of
        Hanover, by a treaty signed at the Hague, August 9th, 1726. Sweden and Denmark,
        which Powers were to be subsidized by England and France, also acceded in March
        and April, 1727. On the other hand, the Empress of Russia, incensed by the
        conduct of George I in protecting Denmark and Sweden against her designs, and
        alienated from France by reason of Louis XV’s marriage, joined the Alliance of
        Vienna August 6th, 1726 ; and in the following year Frederick William of
        Prussia, who had never heartily approved of the Hanoverian League, secretly did
        the same.
  
       Thus all Europe
        became divided between the alliances of Vienna and Hanover; and though both
        sides pretended that these treaties were only defensive, yet each made
        extensive preparations for war. George I entered into a treaty with the
        Landgrave of Hesse Cassel for the supply of 12,000 men; manifestoes were
        published, ambassadors withdrawn, armies put on foot; the sea was covered with
        English fleets; an English squadron under Admiral Hosier annoyed the trade of
        Spain; and in February, 1727, the Spaniards laid siege to Gibraltar, and seized
        at Vera Cruz a richly laden merchant vessel belonging to the English South Sea
        Company. But these vast preparations led to no results of importance. Of all
        the European Powers, Spain alone had any real desire for war. The mediation of
        Pope Benedict XIII, the death of Catharine I Empress of Russia (May 17th,
        1727), the Emperor’s principal ally, and above all the pacific character of
        Cardinal Fleury, the French minister, prevented the outbreak of a war. In June,
        1726, Louis XV had dismissed the Duke of Bourbon and called Fleury to his
        counsels, who was then seventy-three years of age. Fleury adopted the pacific
        policy of the two preceding Governments, and maintained the entente cordiale
        with Great Britain. The preliminaries of a general pacification were signed at
        Paris, May 31st, 1727, by the ministers of the Emperor, France, Great Britain,
        and Holland, and a Congress was appointed to assemble at Aix-la-Chapelle to
        arrange a definitive peace. But Spain still held aloof and endeavored to
        temporize. The hopes of Philip being again awakened by the death of George I in
        July, 1727, he renewed his intrigues with the Jacobites,
        instigated the Pretender to proceed to a port in the Low Countries, and to
        seize an opportunity to pass over into England. But Philip’s expectations were
        soon dispelled by the quiet accession of George II and his acceptance of the
        policy of his father. The Spanish Queen, however, still held out; till, alarmed
        by the dangerous state of Philip’s health, whose death might frustrate her
        favorite scheme of obtaining the Italian Duchies she induced her husband to
        accept the preliminaries by the Act of the Pardo, March 6th, 1728.
  
       A Congress was now
        opened at Soissons, to which place it had been transferred for the convenience
        of Fleury, who was its Bishop. But though little remained to be arranged except
        the matter of the Italian Duchies, the negotiations were protracted. Spain, by
        her large military preparations, seemed still to contemplate a war; and by the
        conclusion of a double marriage between the Prince of Asturias and the Infanta of
        Portugal, and the Prince of Brazil and Infanta of Spain (January,
        1729), was evidently endeavoring to withdraw Portugal from the English
        alliance. The Spanish Queen entertained an implacable resentment against France
        and England, and spared no exertion to bring the Emperor into her views. But
        the conduct of Charles at length undeceived her. In order to obtain the
        guarantee of all the Powers to the Pragmatic Sanction, the object of all his
        policy, he raised every obstacle to the negotiations. He thwarted the Spanish
        interests with regard to the Italian Duchies, by objecting to the introduction
        of Spanish garrisons, and by reviving obsolete pretensions of the Empire to
        Parma and Tuscany. Thus the negotiations at Soissons became a mere farce, and
        the various plenipotentiaries gradually withdrew from the Congress. Meanwhile
        the birth of a Dauphin (September 4th, 1729) having dissipated the hopes of
        Philip V and his Queen as to the French succession, Elizabeth devoted herself
        all the more warmly to the prosecution of her Italian schemes; and finding her
        efforts to separate France and England unavailing, she at length determined to
        accept what they offered. She had previously tested the Emperor’s sincerity by
        demanding that the Italian fortresses should be occupied by Spanish, instead of
        neutral troops, and by requiring a categorical answer with regard to the
        projected marriage between the Archduchess and Don Carlos. The Emperor having
        returned an evasive answer, she persuaded Philip to accept the proposals of
        Fleury and Walpole and to make treaties with France and England, which were
        concluded at Seville November 9th, 1729. England and Spain arranged their
        commercial and other differences; the succession of Don Carlos to the Italian
        Duchies was guaranteed; and it was agreed that Leghorn, Porto Ferrajo, Parma, and Piacenza should be garrisoned by 6,000
        Spaniards, who, however, were not to interfere with the civil government.
        Nothing more was said about Gibraltar. Philip, indeed, seemed now to have
        abandoned all hope of recovering that fortress; for he soon afterwards caused
        to be constructed across the isthmus the strong lines of San Roque, and
        thus completely isolated Gibraltar from his Spanish dominions. The Dutch
        acceded to the Treaty of Seville shortly after its execution, on the
        understanding that they should receive entire satisfaction respecting the India
        Company established by the Emperor at Ostend.
  
       Charles VI was
        indignant at being thus treated by Spain, in violation of all the engagements
        which the Spanish Sovereigns had so recently contracted with him; and above all
        was he disappointed at seeing his hopes frustrated of obtaining a guarantee of
        the Pragmatic Sanction. He recalled his ambassador from Madrid, and dispatched
        a considerable force into the Milanese to oppose the entry of the Spanish
        troops into Italy. On the death of Antonio Farnese, Duke of Parma, January
        10th, 1731, he took military possession of that State, and his agents persuaded
        the Duke’s widow to declare herself pregnant, in order to prolong this
        occupation. The Queen of Spain, wearied with the slowness of Cardinal Fleury in
        carrying out the provisions of the Treaty of Seville, suddenly declared, in a
        fit of passion, that Spain was no longer bound by that treaty. War seemed
        inevitable, but was averted by the dexterity of Walpole. Great Britain and the
        Dutch States, in concert with the Spanish Court, without the concurrence of
        France, now entered into negotiations with the Emperor, which were skillfully
        conducted by Lord Waldegrave, to induce him to accede to the Treaty of
        Seville; and, on March 16th, 1731, was concluded, what has been called the
        Second Treaty of Vienna. Great Britain and the States guaranteed the Pragmatic
        Sanction; and the Emperor, on his side, acceded to the provisions of Seville
        respecting the Italian Duchies, and agreed to abolish the Ostend Company. He
        also engaged not to bestow his daughter on a Bourbon Prince, or in any other
        way which might endanger the balance of power. The States of the Empire gave
        their sanction to the treaty in July, and Philip V acceded to it before the end
        of that month. John Gaston de' Medicis, Grand
        Duke of Tuscany, finding himself thus abandoned by the Emperor, concluded with
        the Court of Spain what was called the Family Convention, and named
        Don Carlos his heir. Charles VI. at first manifested some displeasure at this
        action of the Duke; but he was at length induced to authorize a decree of
        the Aulic Council by which the guardianship of Don Carlos was
        assigned to the Grand Duke of Tuscany and the Duchess of Parma. In November an
        English squadron disembarked at Leghorn 6,000 Spaniards, who took possession of
        that place, as well as Porto Ferrajo, Parma, and
        Piacenza, in the name of Don Carlos, as Duke of Parma and presumptive heir of
        Tuscany.
  
        
        
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