| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
|  |  |  | 
| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER V
          WARS OF CHARLES VIII AND LOUIS XII IN ITALY.
          PONTIFICATE OF ALEXANDER VI. INTERVENTION OF FERDINAND THE CATHOLIC IN ITALY
             
            
           THE weak mind of
          Charles VIII of France was filled with visions of glory and conquest; he deemed
          himself a paladin, and christened his firstborn son Roland after the hero of
          Roncesvalles. Louis XI had prudently declined to prosecute the claims to Naples
          bequeathed to him by Charles du Maine; in the mind of his son the conquest of
          that Kingdom was to be only the stepping-stone to the Empire of the East and
          the expulsion of the Turks from Constantinople. Charles assumed the title of
          King of Jerusalem, and received without a smile the homage paid him by his
          courtiers as Greek Emperor; which title he had bought from Andrew Palaeologus. His
          impolitic enterprise against Naples was warmly opposed by his sister, the late
          Regent, and by all the old statesmen of the school of Louis XI; but nothing
          could divert him from what he called his “voyage d'Italie”,
          in contemplation of which he made friends with his neighbors by three
          disadvantageous treaties; and he was supported in his scheme by interested
          politicians, as Etienne de Vese, formerly his valet
          de chambre, but now first president of the Chambre des Comtes,
          and by Briçonnet, Bishop of St. Malo, who expected to
          gain a Cardinal’s hat.
           In the spring of
          1494 Charles VIII dispatched ambassadors to some of the principal Italian
          States to beg their assistance in recovering Naples. King Ferdinand had died
          January 25th, and the Kingdom had devolved to his son Alfonso II, who was still
          more odious and unpopular than himself, for, with all his harshness and
          cruelty, Ferdinand possessed some good qualities. He loved and encouraged
          literature and art; he patronized Laurentius Valla, and Antonio Panormita, and his own letters and speeches, which have
          been published, display both eloquence and erudition. But Alfonso was nothing
          but a rough unlettered soldier. Charles VIII found slight encouragement from
          the Italians, except Ludovico il Moro, with whom he had a secret engagement.
          Ludovico undertook to provide him with troops and money, on condition of
          receiving the protection of the French and the Principality of Taranto, after
          the conquest of Naples should have been accomplished. The Venetians, alleging
          their danger from the Turks, declared that they should remain neutral. The
          Florentines, agreeably to their ancient traditions, would have sided with the
          French, but Peter de' Medici, who had entered into a treaty with Alfonso, while
          protesting his affection for France, gave the French ambassadors an evasive
          answer. Pope Alexander VI, though, as we have said, at first inclined to
          France, had begun to perceive that the establishment of a great foreign Power
          in Italy would defeat his plans for the aggrandizement of his family. Alfonso,
          too, after the death of his father, had courted the Pope’s friendship, and an
          intimate alliance had sprung up between them, cemented by the marriage of their
          natural children, Sancia, daughter of Alfonso, and
          Alexander's son Geoffrey. The Pope had therefore exhorted Charles to submit his
          claims to the decision of the Holy See, and subsequently, as Lord Paramount of
          Naples, had invested Alfonso II with that Kingdom.
           The conduct of the
          French King displayed little of the vigor requisite for the great enterprise in
          which he had embarked. Although the French army had assembled at the foot of
          the Alps, he wasted his time at Lyon in tournaments, festivals, and amours, and
          when he was at length driven from that city by a pestilence ho found that he
          had squandered all his money. The undertaking seemed on the point of being
          abandoned, when a loan of 50,000 ducats from a Milanese merchant enabled the
          army to resume its march. Charles crossed Mont-Génèvre September 2nd, 1494, and passing through Susa and Turin, was met at Asti by
          Ludovico Sforza with a brilliant retinue, including many ladies. Charles now
          renewed the follies of Lyon, and contracted a disorder by his debaucheries
          which detained him at Asti till the 6th of October. He was still so poor that
          he was compelled to borrow, and he pledged the jewels of the Duchess Dowager of
          Savoy and the widowed Marchioness of Montferrat in order to proceed. Ludovico,
          who had accompanied the King as far as Piacenza, was recalled to Milan by
          the death of his nephew, the dispossessed Duke Gian Galeazzo,
          who expired in the Castle of Pavia, October 22nd, at the age of twenty-five.
          His death was universally ascribed to poison administered to him by order of
          his uncle, and the proceedings of Ludovico strongly confirm this suspicion.
          Gian Galeazzo had left an infant son; but Ludovico,
          on pretense that the times were too dangerous for a minority, caused himself to
          be elected Duke by a body of his partisans; and his title was afterwards
          confirmed by a diploma which he obtained from the Emperor Maximilian. The
          widowed Duchess Isabella was confined with her two infant children in the
          Castle of Pavia. . 
           At Piacenza
          Charles held a council respecting the route to be adopted. The union of Tuscany
          with the Pope and the King of Naples seemed to impose an impenetrable barrier
          to his advance; but it was known that there was a strong party in Florence
          opposed to the Medici; and though Charles had driven from France all the agents
          of that family, he had respected the privileges of the other Florentine houses
          of commerce. Pisa also expected her liberation from the Florentine yoke at the
          hands of the French. It was resolved to proceed through Florence and Rome. No
          sooner did the French enter Tuscany than the lurking discontent against Peter
          de’ Medici exploded. Conscious of his danger he hastened to Sarsanella to deprecate the anger of the French King, and without even consulting his
          fellow-citizens, agreed to give Charles immediate possession of all the Tuscan
          fortresses, including Leghorn and Pisa, on condition that they should be
          restored after the conquest of Naples. He also undertook to supply Charles with
          a loan of 200,000 florins, in consideration of which Florence was to be taken
          under protection of France; and it was agreed that a treaty to this effect
          should be executed at Florence.
           The facility with
          which Peter de’ Medici made these large concessions excited the astonishment
          and ridicule even of the French themselves. Very different were the feelings of
          the Florentines, who, however much they desired the French alliance, were
          indignant at Peter’s pusillanimous submission. On his return he found the gates
          of the Public Palace closed and guarded, the interview which he requested with
          the magistrates was refused, and symptoms of tumult appeared among the people.
          In vain did the young Cardinal Giovanni de’ Medici proceed with his servants
          and retainers through some of the principal streets shouting Palle! Palle!—the well-known
          rallying cry of the family—not a voice responded. At the Porta St. Gallo, Peter
          and his brother Julian also attempted to excite a movement in their favor by
          distributing money among the populace, but they were answered only with
          threats; and alarmed by the sound of the tocsin they fled to the Apennines,
          where they were soon joined by the Cardinal in the disguise of a Franciscan.
          The Signory now declared the Medici traitors, confiscated their possessions,
          and offered a reward for their heads; at the same time Charles allowed the
          Pisans to expel the Florentine magistrates and to become free; and the Lion of
          Florence was flung into the Arno amid cries of Viva Francia!
           This revolution
          placed a remarkable man at the head of the Florentine Republic, Girolamo
          Savonarola. Born at Ferrara in 1452, of a respectable Paduan family settled in
          that town, Savonarola’s temperament was marked by a nervous sensibility,
          heightened, it is said, by a disappointment in love. He viewed with disgust the
          crimes and profligacy then prevalent in Italy; hence he was inclined to
          renounce the world, and at the age of twenty-three he took the monastic vows in
          a Dominican convent at Bologna. His learning was considerable. He had been a
          deep student of the scholastic philosophy, and of the works of Thomas Aquinas;
          from the former he acquired a tendency to subtlety and sophistry, from the
          latter, combined with an assiduous reading of the Old Testament and the
          Apocalypse, his religious exaltation was much augmented. He began to fancy that
          the dreams to which he had been subject from childhood were visions and
          inspirations, and he spent whole nights in prayer and contemplation. In 1489 he
          proceeded to Florence and entered the Dominican convent of St. Mark, of which
          he became Prior in 1491. At Florence he began to advocate a reformation of the
          Church, which was, indeed, very much needed. He was also the champion of civil
          liberty; and while as a religious reformer the wicked lives of the Popes
          supplied him abundantly with topics, so as a political one he denounced the
          tyrannical domination of the Medici. He regarded Lorenzo de’ Medici as the
          destroyer of his country’s freedom; he would neither visit him nor show him any
          mark of respect; though Lorenzo, struck by the friar’s reputation, courted his
          friendship and even sent for him on his deathbed to hear his confession. But
          the highly dramatic scene which is said to have ensued between them, described
          by Villari and other biographers, in which the friar
          refused to give Lorenzo absolution unless he restored the liberty of the
          people, seems hardly to be true.
           Savonarola appears
          to have gained his great influence by means of his sermons. These were not in
          the old scholastic method, but original both in matter and language, and highly
          dramatic; filled with apostrophes and interrogations, and delivered with great
          fire and vehement gesticulation. We are not surprised to hear that he often
          made his hearers weep; a more astounding effect was, that they are said to have
          caused several merchants and bankers to refund their ill-gotten gains. In this
          case, if it be true, he certainly worked a miracle. Through his ministry the
          whole aspect of the city was changed. Luxury and show were abandoned; the songs
          of the carnival gave place to hymns; and the Bible and the works of the Frate
          formed almost the only reading of the people.
           Such a character
          was most formidable to a ruler like Peter de’ Medici. Savonarola seized the
          moment to overthrow him, and at the head of a Florentine embassy appeared
          before Charles VIII at Lucca, where he addressed that monarch in the style of a
          prophet, and promised him victory in this world, Paradise in the next, provided
          he protected Florence. Charles replied with vague protestations, and entering
          Florence November 17th, took up his residence in the palace of the Medici. The
          wealth of the city was tempting, and Charles imagined that it lay at his
          disposal he intimated his intention of recalling Peter de’ Medici, of
          appointing him his lieutenant, and of imposing a fine upon the citizens. But he
          had miscalculated his own strength and the disposition of the Florentines. The
          solid lofty towers and palaces of Florence, with small windows at great height
          from the ground and secured by massive bars of iron, have the air of prisons
          and the strength of fortresses, for which indeed they often served in the factious
          wars of the Republic. These the wary Florentines had filled with armed men, and
          they had also given notice to the surrounding peasantry to hasten to the town's
          help at the first sound of the tocsin. When the citizens energetically
          protested against Charles's intentions, he exclaimed:
           “Then I shall bid
          my trumpets sound”.
           “Sound them!”
          replied Pietro Capponi, the intrepid leader of the
          people: “they shall be answered by our tocsin!” and with these words he
          snatched from the King’s Secretary the royal ultimatum and tore it into shreds.
          Charles was thunderstruck. Fresh negotiations were entered into; the French
          King abandoned the Medici, and contented himself with a subsidy of 20,000
          ducats and military occupation of some of the principal Tuscan towns. During
          their stay at Florence, the French pillaged the palace of the Medici in the Via Larga, when all its rich collections of art and
          literature were scattered and lost.
           STORY
          OF ZIZIM.
             Charles now
          resumed his march. Pope Alexander VI, alarmed at his approach, anxiously
          debated whether he should fly with his Cardinals, or endure a siege, or submit
          to the French. At length he decided to resist, and allowed Ferdinand, Duke of
          Calabria, to enter Rome with a division of the Neapolitan army; but symptoms of
          insurrection in the city obliged the Pope again to negotiate. Charles refused
          to treat till he had entered Rome, into which he was admitted December 31st;
          the Neapolitans defiling through the southern gate of St. Sebastian while the
          French were entering by the northern Porta del Popolo.
          Their van began to enter the gate at three in the afternoon, and it was nine
          before the rear had passed by torchlight. In front marched serried battalions
          of Swiss and other German lance-knights, whose robust and warlike figures wore
          displayed to advantage by their tight jackets and pantaloons of variegated and
          brilliant colors. Their arms were long pikes, enormous halberds, arquebuses,
          and two-handed swords. The first rank of each battalion wore helmets and
          cuirasses; and to every 1,000 men was assigned a company of 100 fusiliers. Then
          came the French light infantry and crossbow-men, mostly Gascons, and remarkable
          for agility rather than strength. These were followed by long columns of
          the compagnies d'ordonnance, about 1,600
          lances, or 9,600 horsemen. The King himself came next, surrounded by 100
          gentlemen and 400 archers, in magnificent costumes, forming his household
          guard. He was clad in gilt armor adorned with jewels, and wore his crown. An
          eyewitness describes him as the ugliest man he ever saw, but is loud in
          praising the appearance of his troops. The rear was brought up by thirty-six
          brass cannons, with a number of culverins and falconets. The lightness of this
          artillery, which was drawn by horses instead of oxen, and the rapidity with
          which the guns were maneuvered, excited the surprise of the Italians. The
          infantry had also adopted many new evolutions in maneuvering and fighting. The
          whole French army, including camp followers, amounted to between 50,000 and
          60,000 men. Alexander VI had shut himself up in the Castle of St. Angelo. His
          fears were not groundless, for he had many active enemies in the King's suite,
          and especially Cardinal Julian della Rovere, who advised Charles to call a Council, depose the
          Pope, and reform the Church. The Cardinal had in his possession proofs of
          certain negotiations into which Alexander had entered with Sultan Bajazet, who well knew that the views of the French King
          extended to Constantinople. Such was the friendship of the heads of Islam and
          of Christendom, that the Pope was said to make Bishops and Cardinals at the
          nomination of the Sultan. Their alliance was cemented by a singular
          circumstance.
           After the death of
          Mahomet II in 1481, his Grand Vizier, Mahomet Mischani,
          wishing to secure the succession for the Sultan’s younger son Dschem, or Zizim, to the
          prejudice of Bajazet, the elder, for some time
          concealed the death of Mahomet till Zizim should
          arrive in Constantinople. But the secret got wind; the Janissaries with wild
          cries broke into the Seraglio, demanding to see their master, and when they
          beheld the Sultan's corpse, cut down his faithless Vizier. Parading the streets
          of Constantinople with Mischani’s head on a lance,
          they shouted for “Sultan Bajazet and double pay!” and
          when the new Sultan at length arrived in the capital from his government of Amasia, he found himself obliged to comply with their
          demand. Zizim, who was in Caramania at the time of his father’s death, succeeded in seizing Prusa;
          but he was defeated by Bajazet in a decisive battle
          on the plains of Jenischer, and fled into Egypt,
          where he was honorably received by the Egyptian Sultan; and after another
          unsuccessful attempt to wrest the scepter from his brother, he found an asylum
          among the Knights of Rhodes, with only thirty attendants. To secure so valuable
          a pledge, the Knights, with the consent of Pope Sixtus IV, sent Zizim to France (1483), where he was kept
          several years in different fortresses belonging to them in that Kingdom. Bajazet II cultivated a good understanding with the Knights
          as the keepers of his brother, allowed them 45,000 ducats yearly for his
          maintenance, and made them the costly present of the right hand of St. John the
          Baptist, one of the most precious relics in St. John’s Church at Rhodes. At
          length in 1489, Pope Innocent VIII, by granting extraordinary privileges to the
          Order, and making their Grand-Master a Cardinal, induced them to deliver up Zizim, who was brought to Rome. In the following year,
          Innocent, finding all his attempts to get up a crusade abortive, negotiated a
          treaty with Bajazet, from whom he received the
          arrears of Zizim’s pension, together with some rich
          presents. He had previously refused the much higher offers of the Sultan of
          Egypt; which included 400,000 ducats for Zizim’s ransom, the re-erection of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and in case of success
          against Bajazet, the abandonment of all the Turkish
          possessions in Europe.
           Under Pope
          Alexander VI Zizim became the victim of the most
          detestable policy. In Alexander’s negotiations with the Sultan with a view to
          obtain the latter’s assistance against the French invaders, it was represented
          to be Charles’s object to get possession of Zizim’s person, in order to make use of him in his designs upon the Turkish Empire; and
          at the same time the payment of the yearly pension was strongly pressed. Bajazet promised the desired assistance, and in his letter
          to the Pope expressed without circumlocution the great pleasure it would afford
          him if his Holiness would as quickly as possible release his brother from all
          the troubles of this wicked and transitory world. When this service should have
          been performed and proved by the receipt of Zizim’s body, then the Sultan was ready to pay 300,000 ducats wherewith to purchase any
          territories that Alexander might desire for his sons. It is not clear how far
          Alexander was inclined to accede to Bajazet’s offers;
          and the negotiations were still going on when Charles VIII appeared in Italy.
           It would not have
          been difficult to frame an accusation against Alexander; his crimes were only
          too many and too notorious. Cardinal Ascanio Sforza
          and several of his colleagues charged him truly with having bought the
          Pontificate, forgetting, however, that they themselves had been the sellers!
          But among his numerous enemies he had at least one friend who enjoyed the ear
          of Charles—Briçonnet, Bishop of St Malo, who had been
          gained with a Cardinal’s hat. He and a few other courtiers spoke in favor of
          Alexander; and Charles declined the magnificent part of reforming the Church.
          On January 11th, 1495, a treaty was concluded between him and the Pope, by
          which Alexander agreed to leave Cività Vecchia, Terracina, and Spoleto in French hands till the
          conquest of Naples should have been effected, and to deliver Zizim into Charles's hands for six months; for which the
          French King was to pay down 20,000 ducats, and to procure the security of
          Venetian and Florentine merchants for the restoration of Zizim at the expiration of the stipulated period; but Alexander would not promise
          Charles the investiture of Naples, except “with reservation of the rights of
          others”. He consented, however, that his bastard son, the Cardinal of Valencia,
          should follow the French King to Naples, with the title of Legate, but in
          reality as a hostage. This was the notorious Caesar Borgia, who, according to
          the remark of Guicciardini, seemed to be born only
          that a man might be found wicked enough to execute the designs of his father.
           Charles conducted
          himself while at Rome as master, except that he submitted to perform in St.
          Peter’s the degrading ceremonial invented by the pride of the Roman Pontiffs.
          He quitted Rome January 28th, 1495, carrying with him Caesar Borgia and Zizim. But Caesar escaped the following day, and Zizim did not long survive. He was already attacked with a
          lingering disorder, of which he died, February 28th, at the age of thirty-five.
          It was very generally believed that a slow poison had been administered to him
          before he left Rome by order of Pope Alexander: who was willing either to earn
          the Sultan’s blood-money, or at least to frustrate Charles’s plans, which the
          possession of Zizim’s person would have helped to
          forward. The unfortunate Zizim is described as having
          something noble and royal in his aspect; his mind had been cultivated by the
          study of Arabic literature; his address was polite and engaging, and he had
          borne his misfortunes at once with dignity and modesty.
           At Velletri
          Charles was overtaken by Don Juan de Albion and Antonio de Fonseca, ambassadors
          of Ferdinand and Isabella, who were instructed to declare that their Sovereigns
          would not permit the Aragonese dominion in Naples to
          be overthrown. Alexander VI, in order to obtain the interference of the Spanish
          Sovereigns in this matter, had granted them several important privileges; among
          them the title of “Catholic” (1494), in consideration of their eminent virtues,
          and their zeal in defense of the true faith, as shown by the subjugation of the
          Moors, the extirpation of the Jewish infidelity, and other acts. The Spanish
          ambassadors now exhorted Charles to submit his claims to the Pope’s
          arbitration; and affirmed that if he declined this method the treaty of
          Barcelona recognized their masters’ right to interfere in defense of the
          Church. Ferdinand had, indeed, sent an ambassador to Charles at Vienne, before
          he crossed the Alps, to protest against any attempt upon Naples. But the French
          put quite a different interpretation on the treaty, and at Velletri Charles and
          his generals attacked the ambassadors in the most furious terms, reproaching
          them with the perfidy of their masters. Fonseca replied to these remarks by
          publicly tearing up the treaty.
           This Spanish
          protest did not arrest the advance of Charles. Two little towns in the Campagna
          which resisted were taken by storm, and the garrisons barbarously put to the
          sword—a manner of war-making which greatly alarmed the Italians, accustomed to
          their own almost bloodless combats. A French corps had penetrated into the
          Abruzzi, and as they advanced the people everywhere rose in their favor, such
          had been the revolting despotism of Alfonso and his father. Although Alfonso
          had displayed considerable military talent, he was struck with terror at the
          approach of the French. As soon as his son, the Duke of Calabria, returned from
          Rome, Alfonso abdicated in his favor, and the former, now aged twenty-five,
          ascended the Neapolitan throne with the title of Ferdinand II. The abdicated
          monarch, who is said to have been haunted with constant visions of the nobles
          he had put to death, retired into Sicily, where he died a few months after in a
          convent at Mazzara.
           Ferdinand II, in
          order to prevent the French from entering the Terra di Lavoro,
          had posted himself with all his forces in the defiles of San Germano, near the river Garigliano;
          but on the approach of the French the Neapolitan infantry disbanded, and
          Ferdinand retired with his gens d'armes to
          Capua, with the view of disputing the passage of the Volturno.
          The rumor of a riot, however, called him to Naples, and when he returned to
          Capua he found the gates closed against him, Gian Giacopo Trivulzio, one of his principal commanders, having
          treacherously entered into a capitulation with the French and gone over to the
          service of Charles. Ferdinand now hastened back to Naples, and found it in
          insurrection; wherefore, leaving some troops to hold the castles, and burning
          or sinking all the vessels which he could not carry off, he retired to Ischia,
          and afterwards sailed to Sicily with about fifteen ships. Charles now entered
          Naples (February 22nd, 1495) amid the acclamations of the populace: a few days
          after the castles capitulated; and in a few weeks the whole Kingdom had submitted,
          with exception of five or six towns and a few fortresses.
           All Europe was
          struck with amazement at this sudden and unexpected conquest. But the very
          facility of Charles’s success was fatal to its permanence. The Italians became
          objects of contempt to him and his young courtiers; and instead of securing the
          places which still held out, he plunged headlong into luxury and dissipation.
          He alienated the hearts even of those Neapolitan nobles who had favored his
          cause, by depriving them of their offices, which he bestowed on his own
          courtiers and favorites; and he offended Ludovico Sforza by refusing him the
          promised Principality of Taranto. Ludovico now began to repent of having called
          the French into Italy; he knew that they detested him for his conduct towards
          his nephew; he had neither foreseen nor desired their rapid success; and the
          neighborhood of the Duke of Orleans, the sole legitimate descendant of the
          Visconti, who had been detained at Asti by illness, and who openly proclaimed
          Ludovico a usurper, filled him with apprehension and alarm. With these feelings
          he turned towards those States which were also averse to see French domination
          established in Italy, and especially Venice, which became the center of
          agitation against the French. Envoys of various Powers assembled there, as if
          by common consent, whose conferences were conducted by night, and with such
          secrecy, that Comines, the French ambassador, was astounded when ho at length
          heard of them. The Italians naturally turned their eyes towards the Emperor and
          the Spanish King. Maximilian was still smarting under the insults and wrongs he
          had received at the hands of Charles VIII, while Ferdinand of Spain was averse
          to see the bastard branch of the house of Aragon driven from Naples, and the French
          established in such near proximity to his own Kingdom of Sicily. Under these
          circumstances a treaty of alliance was signed at Venice, March 31st, 1495, by
          the Emperor, the Spanish King, the Pope, the Venetian Republic, and the Duke of
          Milan. Although Sultan Bajazet II was no party to the
          treaty, his ambassador had taken part in the negotiations, and he offered to
          help the Venetians with all his force against the French. Florence refused to
          join the league.
           The treaty of
          Venice is remarkable as the first example in modern history of extensive
          combinations among European potentates. To all appearance the alliance was
          merely defensive; but the contracting parties had secretly agreed to help
          Ferdinand II against the French, and to make a diversion on the territory of
          France. Its fruits soon began to show themselves. The Pope refused Charles VIII
          the investiture of Naples; a Venetian fleet appeared on the coast of Apulia;
          and a Spanish army landed in Sicily. When Charles found that he could expect
          neither coronation nor investiture at the Pope’s hand he resolved to dispense
          with both, and to supply their place by the ceremony of a solemn entry into
          Naples. This he accordingly performed, May 12th, 1495, in the costume of
          Eastern Roman Emperor—a scarlet mantle trimmed with ermine, a crown closed in
          front, a golden globe in his right hand, a scepter in his left.
           Although Charles
          had perhaps determined to abandon his new conquest before he heard of the
          league which had been formed against him, the intelligence of it certainly
          quickened his movements. The French character seems scarcely to have altered
          since those days. The Court of Charles diverted itself with little interludes,
          or soties, in which the parties to the coalition were turned into
          ridicule. But the laughter was mingled with alarm. Nothing could be worse
          advised than the course pursued by Charles in this conjuncture. He should
          either have evacuated Naples entirely, or resolved to hold it against all
          comers; instead of which, he divided his army, starting himself from Naples,
          May 20th, at the head of 1,000 lances (or 6,000 horse), and 5,000 foot, leaving
          the rest of his army under command of Colonna and Savelli, two Ghibelin Roman nobles, who subsequently repaid his
          confidence and favor by deserting him. The arrangements made by Charles for the
          conduct of the government were equally imprudent. His cousin, Gilbert of
          Bourbon, Count of Montpensier, who seldom quitted his
          bed till noon, was named Viceroy; while Etienne do Vese,
          whose solo merit consisted in having advised the expedition, and who had been
          made Duke of Nola and Governor of Gaeta, was entrusted with the finances. There
          was, however, neither money in the treasury nor provisions or ammunition in the
          fortresses. The only good appointment was that of Robert Stuart, a Scot of
          noble birth, and in France Lord of Aubigny, who was
          made Constable of Naples and Governor of Calabria. D'Aubigny had led the French van, and proved himself a good soldier. The French returned
          through the Roman States without molestation. The Pope had fled with his troops
          to Perugia, nor could Charles’s protestations of friendship induce him to
          return.
           In Florence many
          changes had been effected since the French King passed through it. The
          expulsion of the Medici had necessitated a new form of government. The chief
          counselors on this occasion were two doctors of laws, Paoloantonio Soderini and Guidantonio Vespucci. Soderini, who had been ambassador at
          Venice, proposed as a model, the constitution of that Republic; and the
          Florentines, comparing its stability with the frequent changes in their own
          government, were for the most part inclined to adopt his views. He proposed to
          abolish the Councils of the Commune and of the People, and to substitute for
          them a Consiglio Maggiore, or Greater Council, like
          the Venetian Gran Consiglio, in which the people
          should elect magistrates and pass laws; and a smaller Council of Ottimati, or chief men, forming a kind of Senate, like the
          Venetian Pregati. He was for retaining the Signoria,
          or executive government, the Otto, or Eight, the Dieci,
          or Ten, and the Gonfaloniers. The only opposition to these plans regarded the
          two Councils, and especially the greater one. Vespucci, and those of the
          aristocratic party who were unfriendly to the Medici, and desired a restoration
          of the government which had prevailed under the Albizzi,
          objected that the great Council of Venice was composed of gentlemen; that the
          Venetians had had from the earliest times a numerous and powerful aristocracy,
          which had never been seen at Florence; that the Medici had destroyed what
          little difference once subsisted between the various orders, and reduced all to
          a dead level, which admitted only an absolute democracy or an absolute tyranny;
          and that even the Venetian populace were more serious and tranquil then the
          Florentine. To which it was replied, that the Venetian people had not, like the
          Florentines, the right of citizenship, which rendered a plebeian of Florence
          equal to a noble of Venice. It was further urged that the establishment of too
          narrow a government would breed discontent and riot, and thus produce either an
          unbridled license or the return of the Medici.
           This last reason
          apart, it can hardly be doubted that abstractedly the view of Vespucci and his
          party was the wiser one; for experience has shown that no free constitution can
          for any lengthened period maintain itself without a considerable admixture of
          aristocracy. Proofs of this may be seen on the one side in the histories of
          Rome, Venice, and England; on the other, in those of Florence, Genoa, and
          France. But Soderini’s views prevailed, chiefly
          through the preaching of Savonarola, whose sermons at this period were almost
          entirely political. The monk of St. Mark’s threw himself vehemently into the
          popular party; but his aims were not altogether those of Soderini.
          His wish was to convert Florence into a theocracy, of which Christ was to be
          Head and King; that is, in other words, Savonarola himself and his monks. He
          did not, indeed, seek any actual share in the government; he was only to be the
          Prophet of the Republic; but we may see by the example of Calvin at Geneva that
          the spiritual head of a theocratic State is absolute. To enforce his views, he
          assumed the prophetic character which he had gained by one or two lucky predictions;
          and his pretensions were aided by the superstition and the belief in the
          supernatural which then prevailed. Hence he did not scruple to proclaim from
          the pulpit that the Virgin Mary counseled the new constitution, and that the
          Lord commanded the abolition of Parliaments! It should also be stated that the
          services which he had rendered to Florence in its transactions with the French,
          had naturally given him some influence with the more sober politicians, and
          they were not averse from employing his influence in favor of their views.
           Florence now
          became divided into three parties, first: those who supported the new
          constitution and Savonarola. These were called Frateschi (followers of the friar) and Bianchi (or Whites). At a later period they got
          from their adversaries the name of Piagnoni, or
          weepers. Secondly, those who favored the new order of things, but were not
          followers of Savonarola. They were mostly rich and powerful men, who hated the
          Medici. From their violence, they obtained the name of Arrabiati,
          or raving madmen; and later, from their love of good cheer, that of Compagnacci, jolly companions, or Libertines. The chief of
          this party was Pietro Capponi, a man of ancient
          family, whose defiance of the French King has been related. A brave soldier and
          good captain, he got the name of “the Arm of the Republic”; but he was better
          in the field than in the council-chamber. He had little faith in Savonarola.
          Lastly, there was a third party, which secretly were partisans of the Medici.
          These were called Bigi, or Greys. The chief
          supporters of Savonarola were Soderini and Francesco Valori, afterwards called “the Florentine Cato”, a man of
          more heart than head.
           Such was the
          political state of Florence, when in 1495 Charles VIII again marched through
          Tuscany on his retreat from Naples. Savonarola went out to meet him at Poggibonsi, where, assuming his sacred and prophetical
          character, he reproached the King both with his negligence in reforming the
          Church and the breach of his engagements with Florence: and he warned Charles
          that if he did not alter his conduct the hand of God would lie heavy upon him.
          The Prophet, however, was not blind to the temporal interests of his country.
          He insisted that Charles should restore Pisa to the Florentines, which city had
          formed a coalition with Siena and Lucca. Charles faltered out an ambiguous
          answer, postponing his decision; but in point of fact he decided for the
          Pisans, as he left a French garrison in that city, as well as in the other
          maritime places.
           BATTLE OF
          FORNOVO
             Charles resumed
          his march for Lombardy, June 23rd. That land had already become the theatre of
          war. Ludovico Sforza had summoned Louis, Duke of Orleans, to evacuate Asti and
          renounce his pretensions to Milan; but the troops sent to enforce this summons
          were repulsed by the Duke of Orleans, who, following up his success, surprised
          Novara (June 11th), which was delivered to him by a party unfriendly to Sforza.
          Ludovico would probably have been overthrown had Louis marched straight to
          Milan; but be had not courage enough for so bold a step, and his delay enabled
          Ludovico to procure a number of lance-knights from Germany, besides other
          reinforcements. With part of these he blockaded the Duke of Orleans in Novara,
          and the rest were dispatched to the neighborhood of Parma, where the Venetian
          army, under Francesco Gonzaga, Marquis of Mantua, was assembling, to arrest the
          progress of Charles. Their force was reckoned at 35,000 combatants, among whom
          were 2,600 lances, and from 2,000 to 3,000 Stradiots,
          a sort of irregular light cavalry levied by the Venetians in their Greek and
          Albanian dominions, whose mode of fighting somewhat resembled that of the
          Arabs. The numerical superiority of the Allies seems to have inspired them with
          a contempt for the French, whom they suffered to pass unmolested the defiles of
          the Apennines, between the Lunigiana and the
          Parmesan, through which the infantry were obliged to drag their guns during
          five days of assiduous and exhausting toil. At length the French army stood on
          the plains of Lombardy (July 5th), at the village of Fornovo on the Taro. The sight of the numberless tents which covered the hills above
          that stream struck Charles and his generals with alarm, and he tried to
          negotiate with the two Venetian Proveditori—functionaries
          who generally accompanied the Venetian armies to act as a check upon the
          commanders. He merely requested a free passage, and repudiated any intention of
          attacking the Duke of Milan or his Allies. The Venetians, however, decided for
          a battle.
           Charles when he
          entered Italy had been obliged to raise money by pawning ladies’ jewels; but
          now on his return his army of 10,000 men was accompanied and impeded by a
          baggage train of 6,000 beasts of burden: a strong proof of the rich spoil they
          were carrying away. Besides this booty a great many works of art, as
          sculptures, bronze gates, architectural ornaments, &c, had been seized at
          Naples and shipped for France, but were recaptured by a Biscayan and Genoese
          fleet. After the French had crossed the Taro, this enormous baggage train,
          which had been placed in the rear for safety, naturally drew the attention of
          the Allies, whose first attack was directed to that quarter; and the King
          himself, hastening with his household troops to defend the baggage,
          precipitated himself into a danger from which he escaped only by the fleetness
          of his horse. But the hope of plunder proved a snare to the Allies. The Stradiots, instead of charge the French gens d'armes, as they were ordered, made towards the baggage to
          share the spoil, and were soon followed by other troops; meanwhile the main
          body of the French came up, and easily overthrow the disordered ranks of the
          Allies (July 6th).
           The battle of Fornovo, which lasted only an hour or two, cost the
          Italians between 3,000 and 4,000 men, whilst the loss of the French was only
          about 200. The safety of their army was now assured, which arrived before Asti
          without further molestation, July 10th. The Italians proceeded to join the Duke
          of Milan, who, as we have said, was blockading the Duke of Orleans in Novara.
          Meanwhile the careless Charles was solacing himself in his camp at Asti with a
          new mistress, Anna Soleri, regardless of the pressing solicitations for help
          which he received from the Duke of Orleans; and it was not till September 11th
          that he moved forward to Vercelli on the road to Novara. Negotiations for peace
          had however been entered into with Sforza and the Venetians, through the
          mediation of the Duchess of Savoy, and on the 10th of October a treaty was
          signed at Vercelli, by which it was agreed that Novara should be evacuated.
          Lodovico Sforza engaged to acknowledge himself the vassal of the French King
          for Genoa, and to permit that city to fit out armaments for the service of
          France; he agreed to remain in the Venetian league only so long as nothing was
          meditated against France; to allow the French a passage through his
          territories, and even to accompany Charles to Naples, if he returned into Italy
          in person. Charles on his side promised not to support the pretensions of the
          Duke of Orleans to Milan, and Lodovico agreed to pay 50,000 ducats to that
          Prince, and to cancel a debt of the King’s of 80,000.
          The Venetians would not directly accede to this treaty; but they declared that
          they had no war with the King of France on their own account, and that they had
          merely seconded the Duke of Milan as their ally. Charles also cultivated the
          good will of the Florentines by sacrificing to them the Pisans, though an
          amnesty was stipulated in their favor. Without waiting for the execution of
          these arrangements, he hastened back to France, leaving a corps at Asti under
          command of Trivulzio; and reaching Lyon, November
          9th, after fourteen months’ absence, he again abandoned himself to pleasure,
          from which not even the death of his only son Roland could snatch him.
           Charles had not
          quitted Naples a week when his competitor, Ferdinand II, landed at Reggio with
          an army composed of Spanish and Sicilian troops. We have already mentioned the
          protest of Ferdinand of Aragon against Charles’s enterprise; and he had now sent
          a body of Spaniards to aid the Neapolitan King, under command of Gonsalvo de Cordova; but that commander was completely
          defeated at Seminara by Stuart d'Aubigny with a small body of French and Swiss, and compelled to re-embark for Sicily.
          Thus Gonsalvo was unsuccessful in his first battle;
          but it was the only one he ever lost. Ferdinand II, however, did not despair.
          His party in Naples was daily increasing, and speedily returning with a mere
          handful of soldiers, he ventured to land within a mile of that city. Montpensier, who went out to oppose him with nearly all his
          garrison, had scarcely left the town when his ears were saluted with the sound
          of alarm bells from all the churches. At this signal for insurrection the
          Viceroy hastened back; an obstinate fight ensued in the streets, in which the
          French were worsted and obliged to shut themselves up in the Castle of St.
          Elmo, the Castello Nuovo, and the Castello d'Uovo,
          whilst Ferdinand entered the city amid the acclamations of the multitude. This
          happened on July 7th, a day after the battle of Fornovo.
          Nearly the whole of the southern coast now raised the banner of Ferdinand II,
          and the Venetians assisted in recovering several towns on the Adriatic.
           The French at
          Naples were soon starved into surrender. Montpensier,
          in violation of a capitulation which he had entered upon, had previously
          quitted the castles with 2,500 men, with whom he succeeded in embarking, and
          landed at Salerno. The French might still have supported themselves in Italy
          had they received any assistance from Charles VIII; but for this, with
          exception of a small body of infantry landed at Gaeta, they looked in vain. The
          sensual Charles, sunk in indolence and luxury, which had produced a bad state
          of health, was completely governed by Cardinal Briçonnet,
          who had been bribed, it is supposed, by the Pope and the Duke of Milan; and he
          threw so many obstacles in the way of a second Italian expedition that Charles
          gave it up in disgust. Montpensier, aided by some
          Roman and Neapolitan barons, continued the war, till he was shut up by
          Ferdinand and his allies at Atella in the Basilicata;
          when, being deserted by his Swiss and other German mercenaries, he was forced
          to make a second capitulation (July 20th, 1496), by which he surrendered most
          of the places held by the French, on condition of their being allowed to return
          to France with their personal effects. The French troops were cantoned at Baie and the neighborhood to await transport, where an
          epidemic broke out which carried off great numbers of them, including Montpensier himself. It is said that Ferdinand II had
          purposely selected these unhealthy quarters. Soon after the fall of Atella, Gonsalvo de Cordova
          defeated D'Aubigny in Calabria, and compelled him
          also to retire to France.
           The Kingdom of Naples,
          or of Sicily this side the Faro, was thus again brought under obedience to
          Ferdinand II, who, however, did not long live to enjoy his success. Having
          contracted an incestuous marriage with his aunt, Joanna, who was of much the
          same age as himself, he retired for the honeymoon to the Castle of La Somma, at
          the foot of Vesuvius, where he shortly after died, September 7th, 1496, at the
          age of twenty-seven. He was succeeded without opposition by his uncle Frederick
          II, a popular and able Prince. Frederick soon compelled the French garrisons in
          Gaeta, Venosa, and Taranto, which had been excepted
          from Montpensier’s capitulation, to evacuate those
          places, and embark with the body of the French army. Thus before the close of
          1496 all trace of Charles’s rapid conquest had disappeared. Its effects,
          however, remained: especially it had inspired the more warlike, or less
          thinking, portion of the French people with a blind ardor for distant
          conquests; and the like passion had also been roused in the Germans and Spaniards
          who served in these wars. Italy, prostrate by its own quarrels, seemed to offer
          an easy prey to the foreigner; nor did this foretaste of danger suffice to
          reunite its peoples.
           War had continued
          to rage in Tuscany, where Lucca, Siena, and Pisa still resisted the domination
          of the Florentines. The French generals had neglected to carry out the
          arrangement of Charles with the Florentines, and Leghorn alone had been
          restored to them. At Pisa, the French commandant, Entraigues,
          infatuated by love for a Pisan belle, had been persuaded by her to give up the
          citadel to the inhabitants instead of to the Florentines, whilst other French
          officers sold Sarzana and Pietra Santa to the Genoese and Lucchese. Pisa, protected by Lodovico Sforza and the
          Venetians, retained its independence fourteen years. Ludovico persuaded the
          Emperor Maximilian to undertake the siege of Leghorn in person, at the head of
          the allied forces; but the enterprise proved a ridiculous failure.
           At the beginning
          of 1947 Charles VIII made a feeble attempts to revenge himself on Sforza for
          the loss of Naples. Some 1.200 men under Trivulzio and Cardinal Julian Della Rovere made an attack upon
          Genoa, which entirely failed; and a truce of six months was then agreed upon
          between France and the allies. A blow struck at Milan might probably have been
          successful; but the Duke of Orleans, now, by the death of the Dauphin Roland,
          heir presumptive of the French Crown, had incurred the jealousy of Charles, who
          felt no inclination to support his claims to the Milanese. On the expiration of
          the truce in October, it was renewed only between France and Spain. Ferdinand
          the Catholic, who had no more regard for the bonds of kinship than for the
          faith of treaties, had already begun to harbor designs against the dominions of
          his Neapolitan cousin, which were to be carried out in conjunction with France.
           SPANISH MARRIAGES. 
           During Charles
          VIII’s brief stay at Naples, the Spanish Sovereigns had negotiated some
          marriages for their children, which were destined to have an important
          influence on the future fortunes of Europe. The expedition of Charles had had
          great effect in opening out wider views and a larger policy among Princes.
          Hitherto the marriages of Spanish Kings had been mostly confined to the
          Peninsula; but an important marriage treaty was now negotiated with the House
          of Austria. It was arranged that Don John, Prince of Asturias, the heir
          apparent of Spain, should marry Margaret, daughter of the Emperor Maximilian,
          and that the latter's son, the Archduke Philip, heir of the Netherlands in
          right of his mother, should espouse Joanna, second daughter of Ferdinand and
          Isabella. In the following year (October, 1496), a marriage, which had been
          arranged as early as 1489, was also contracted between Catharine, youngest daughter
          of Ferdinand and Isabella, and Arthur, Prince of Wales, son of our Henry VII.
          Towards the autumn of 1495, a large Spanish fleet conveyed Joanna to Flanders,
          and she was married to Philip at Lille. In the ensuing winter, the same fleet
          carried Margaret to Spain, who was united to Don John at Burgos, April 3rd,
          1497; but the youthful bridegroom did not long survive. Soon after this
          marriage was celebrated that of Isabella, eldest daughter of the Spanish
          Sovereigns, with Emanuel, King of Portugal, who had succeeded to the Portuguese
          throne on the death of his cousin, John II, in 1495. Isabella was the widow of
          Emanuel’s kinsman, Alfonso. Bred up in all the bigotry of the Spanish Courts,
          Isabella stipulated, as the price of her hand, that Emanuel should banish the
          Jews from his dominions; and that otherwise enlightened monarch, blinded by the
          passion which he had conceived for Isabella during her residence in Portugal,
          consented to a measure which in his heart he disapproved. On the death of Don
          John, the only male heir to Castile (October 4th, 1497), the succession
          devolved to Isabella, who, however, also died in giving birth to a son, August,
          1408. This child died in his second year, and thus Joanna, Isabella’s next
          sister, became the heiress of the Spanish Crowns.
           But to return to
          the affairs of Italy Alexander VI, in whom Savonarola inspired a kind of
          terror, and who had long hesitated to attack the Florentine prophet, at length
          prohibited him from preaching; but Savonarola continued to thunder against the
          corruption of Rome and to invoke the vengeance of heaven upon that City. His
          asceticism took every day a more rigid form, and at length began to breed
          dissension in Florence. On Shrove Tuesday, 1497, he caused to be burnt in the
          public place a pile of books, pictures, musical instruments, &c, obtained
          from their possessors either voluntarily or by compulsion; but the charge that
          rare manuscripts and valuable works of art were destroyed on this occasion
          seems to be unfounded, or at all events exaggerated.
           It was from the
          midst of orgies, which might vie in filthiness with those of the worst and most
          shameless of the heathen Roman Emperors, that the Pope launched against his
          Florentine censor the most awful of his spiritual weapons. The wickedness and
          crimes of the Papal family were this year more than usually conspicuous. Julia
          Farnese, the Pope’s mistress, called from her beauty Julia Bella, with whom he
          lived in open sacrilegious adultery, and who was accustomed to parade herself
          with unblushing effrontery in all Church festivals, bore him a son in the month
          of April. Nor was the stain of blood wanting. In July, Francis Borgia, Duke of Gandia, the Pope’s eldest and favorite son, having supped
          with his brother Caesar, Cardinal of Valencia, at the house of their mother Vannozza near the Church of St. Peter in Vinculis, they rode home together on their mules, but
          parted company on the way. The Duke was never more seen alive; but his body,
          bearing nine wounds, was found next evening in the Tiber, into which it had
          been thrown, at a place where it was usual to discharge into the river all the
          filth of the City. Contemporary testimony points almost unanimously to his
          brother the Cardinal as the murderer. It was in fact, as Michelet well
          expresses it, a change of reign—the accession of Caesar Borgia. With a few
          inches of steel the Cardinal of Valencia had achieved much. He had made himself
          the eldest son—the heir; and compelled his father to unfrock him, to make him a
          layman, in order that he might found the fortunes of the House, as we shall
          presently have to tell. But the stroke fell upon Alexander like a thunderbolt.
          He confessed his sins in open Consistory, and announced his intention of
          amending his life. His repentance, however, was of short duration. In a few days
          he resumed his old habits, transferred to the murderer all the affection he had
          felt for the victim, and recompensed himself for his short abstinence by a new
          outbreak of debauchery and cruelty. It was about this time also that Alexander
          pronounced a divorce between his daughter Lucretia and her husband, Giovanni
          Sforza, Lord of Pesaro, from whose protection she had withdrawn herself.
           With all his
          enthusiasm, Savonarola was not yet prepared for schism; he submitted for a
          while to the Pope and abstained from preaching. During the carnival of 1498,
          however, he remounted the pulpit with fresh vigor; and, being now resolved to
          venture everything upon the struggle, he openly attacked the infallibility of
          the Pope, and wrote letters to the principal Sovereigns of Europe, urging them
          to call a General Council and depose him. Enraged by the monk's contumacy,
          Alexander threatened the Florentines with interdict unless they prohibited him
          from preaching. An interdict would have injured their trade, and a Pratica, or extraordinary council, forbade Savonarola to
          mount the pulpit; and at this juncture an incident occurred which put an end to
          his labors and his life.
           The supremacy of
          the Dominicans had long excited the jealousy and envy of the other mendicant
          orders, and the declining fortunes of Savonarola seemed to offer an
          opportunity for his destruction. Francesco di Puglia, a Franciscan friar of Stª
          Croce, had in his sermons often denounced Savonarola as a heretic and false
          prophet, and he now proposed that to prove the truth of their respective
          doctrines both should enter the fire. Savonarola took no notice of this
          challenge; but there was in St. Mark’s one Fra Domenico da Peseia,
          who had recently had a violent personal dispute with Francesco about his
          Prior’s teaching; and being of a warm and fanatical temper, and a devoted
          disciple of Savonarola, he signified he willingness to accept the proof
          proposed. With this view he published his master’s three “Conclusions”:—
           1. The Church of
          God wants renovation: it will be scourged and renewed.
           2. Florence, also,
          after the scourging, will be renewed and prosper.
           3. The Infidels
          will be converted to Christ. And he invited all to subscribe them who were
          willing to maintain their truth or falsehood by the ordeal of fire.
           Francesco declined
          to enter the flames with Domenico, but offered to do so with Savonarola; who, however,
          would not sign his own propositions. The party of the Compagnacci,
          or Libertines, at this time prevailed in the Signory; they thought it a good
          opportunity to ruin Savonarola, and fomented the quarrel by again publishing
          the “Conclusions” and inviting signatures. The trial now seemed to be
          inevitable. Savonarola had often told the people that his words would be
          confirmed by supernatural signs, and the time seemed to be come. The Piagnoni were as desirous of the trial as the Compagnacci, for they were confident that their Prophet
          would enter the fire and work a miracle. As to Savonarola himself, though he
          disliked the experiment in his own person, yet he was inwardly satisfied with
          Domenico’s ardor, and with seeing that fate concurred to make the trial
          necessary. Domenico, he reasoned, could not be so ardent unless inspired by
          God; and he thought it natural enough that the Lord should work a miracle to
          confound his adversaries. One Fra Silvestro, too, in whose visions he believed,
          had seen the angels both of Domenico and Savonarola, who had told him that
          Domenico would come out unharmed. As to himself, Savonarola alleged several
          reasons why he should not enter into such "miserable contests"; and
          he even somewhat abated his pretensions to prophecy.
           “For myself”, he
          declared, “I reserve myself for a greater work, for which I shall always be
          ready to give my life”. A pretty plain confession that he thought he should be
          burnt on this occasion.
           EXECUTION OF
          SAVONAROLA
             The Signory had
          fixed a day for the trial; and they decreed that if Domenico should perish in
          it, Savonarola must leave Florence within three hours. Several Dominican and
          Franciscan friars, and many lay people of both sexes, had signed the challenge;
          but the champions selected were Fra Domenico and Fra Giuliano Rondinelli, a brother of Francesco di Puglia. The Dieci had still remained friendly to Savonarola, who, on
          the morning of the trial, sent them a message to take care that neither of the
          champions should be able to get out and leave his opponent in the fire; and
          with this view he suggested that the pile should be lit at one end before the
          monks went in, and at the other directly they had entered!
           On the morning of
          the 7th April, 1498, the Dominican friars of St. Mark, in number about 200, marched
          in solemn procession to the Piazza della Signoria,
          the place appointed for this singular ordeal. Domenico went first, having a
          cope of flame-colored velvet, and in his hand a cross; his head was erect, his
          countenance serene. Savonarola, clothed in white and carrying the Sacrament,
          followed the champion of his doctrines. The Procession was closed by the rest
          of his community, chanting with sonorous voices the psalm, “Exurgat Deus et dissipentur inimici ejus”. Thus they proceeded to the Loggia de Lanzi, where also the Franciscans had arrived. The Loggia
          had been divided by a partition in the middle; the side nearest the Palace was
          assigned to the Dominicans, the further one was occupied by the Franciscans.
          Before the Loggia was stationed a guard of 300 men, while 500 more were arrayed
          before the Palace, and an equal number under the opposite Tetto dei Pisani. In the middle of the piazza, from the
          marble lion called Marzocco near the Palace, towards the Tetto dei Pisani, stretched the pile, composed of wood
          intermixed with resin and other combustible materials, and having a narrow lane
          in the middle for the champions.
           Various feelings
          agitated the motley crowd in the piazza. Weepers and Libertines, Dominicans and
          Franciscans, jostled one another in anxious expectation, while a few more
          indifferent spectators waited quietly as for some scene in a play. Savonarola,
          excited by the number of beholders, by the chants of his monks, and by the
          enthusiasm of Domenico, was anxious to obviate all delay; but Francesco and his
          brother Giuliano had not appeared in the Loggia, and when Savonarola pressed
          them to make haste and not keep the people waiting, they began to find various
          pretexts for delay.
           They objected that
          Fra Domenico’s red cope might be enchanted by Savonarola, they made the same
          objection to the frock with which he had exchanged it, and when this was
          doffed, offered other objections of the same kind, which were all complied
          with. The people, who had been waiting many hours, began to murmur at these
          delays, and seditious cries were raised. Their discontent was augmented by a
          heavy shower, which, however, did not disperse them. But fresh objections were
          started.
           The Franciscans
          demanded that Fra Domenico should lay aside his crucifix, to which he assented;
          but he insisted on entering the fire with the Sacrament. Hereupon a long
          theological dispute: the Franciscans alleging that the consecrated Host would
          be burnt, while Savonarola and Domenico maintained, quoting the authority of
          many doctors, that though the accidents might be destroyed the substance could
          not. The Signory now lost all patience, and directed that the trial should not
          take place. It is said that the whole affair was nothing but a trick, concerted
          between the Signory and the Franciscans, in order to ruin Savonarola; but this
          improbable allegation seems to rest only on a suspicion of Fra Benedetto, the
          biographer and devoted partisan of Savonarola. However this may be, the
          indignation of the people at the almost ludicrous result is indescribable.
           Savonarola was
          abandoned even by his own followers, who exclaimed that he ought to have
          entered the fire alone, and thus at last have given an indisputable proof of
          those supernatural powers which he so loudly claimed. To unprejudiced minds,
          this opinion will probably appear to be not far from the truth. If such was the
          judgment of Savonarola’s friends, we may imagine the triumphant fury of his
          enemies at the discovery of his imposture. It was with difficulty that he and
          Fra Domenico regained their convent in safety, escorted by a few troops under
          their friend Marcuccio Salviati.
          Here they had to endure a siege from the Libertines and Weepers combined, in
          which some lives were lost; but Savonarola with Fra Domenico at last
          surrendered themselves into the hands of the officers of the Signory. They were
          conducted to the Palace, and imprisoned in separate chambers. Fra Silvestro,
          who had concealed himself in the convent, was captured on the following day.
          The Pope, delighted at these events, gave the Florentines his absolution and
          benediction, and permitted the Signory to try the captive monks. Savonarola was
          examined under torture, during which he now asserted, now retracted, his
          doctrines. Fra Domenico showed more courage and constancy, and would make no
          retraction. Fra Silvestro, weak both in head and heart, sought only to save his
          life, confessed anything that was desired, renounced his tenets, and traduced
          the character of Savonarola. In this extremity of misfortune, Savonarola was
          deserted even by the monks of St. Mark. In a letter to the Pope, they affirmed
          that they had been deceived by Savonarola's cunning and simulated devotion, but
          at the same time they testified to the purity of his life. Alexander absolved
          them, and empowered the Archbishop of Florence to give absolution for all
          crimes, even homicide, committed to procure Savonarola’s ruin.
           In a letter of
          congratulation to the Signory, the Pope requested them to put Savonarola into
          his hands alive. This was refused as inconsistent with the dignity of the
          Republic; but they allowed Alexander to send two Apostolic Commissaries to
          Florence to try him. They entered Florence amidst shouts from the populace of
          “Death to the Frate”; which was, indeed, predetermined. The forms of a trial,
          again accompanied with torture, were repeated, and the three captive monks were
          condemned to death. Fra Domenico retained his courage and fanaticism to the
          last, and requested, as a favor, to be burnt alive. On the 23rd of May, the
          three monks were led forth to execution. On the Ringhiera,
          a sort of platform in front of the Palace, were erected three tribunals; at
          that nearest the gate sat the Bishop of Vasona; at
          the middle one were the Apostolic Commissaries; while the third, close to the
          Marzocco of Donatelli, was occupied by the
          Gonfalonier and the Eight. From the Marzocco, as in the former trial, a pile of
          wood and combustibles extended towards the Tetto dei Pisani; but now, at the further end of it, was a huge
          stake with a transverse beam, on which the condemned were to be hanged before
          their bodies were committed to the flames. As they descended the staircase of
          the Palace they were stripped of their monastic habit, by some friars of their
          own order belonging to St. Maria Novella; but their frocks were replaced in
          order to be again taken off by the Bishop of Vasona,
          when he delivered over the condemned to the secular arm. Next, before the
          Apostolic Commissaries, they heard their sentence as heretics and schismatics;
          finally, at the third tribunal, their civil condemnation was pronounced.
          Savonarola was hanged the last, amid the jeers and insults of the
          populace. The bodies of the monks, when life was extinct, were cut down
          and burnt; their relics were collected and thrown from the Ponte Vecchio into
          the Arno.
           The aims of Savonarola
          to reform the Church and to restore civil liberty were laudable; but he failed
          in the means which he adopted to achieve them, and through a weakness of
          character which disqualified him from becoming a great reformer. His chief
          failing was spiritual pride, engendered by seeing the most cultivated people in
          Europe hang upon his lips and regard him as a prophet. This pride caused his
          fall, by inducing him to advance pretensions which were untenable, and which,
          when brought to the test, he had not the courage to support. His conduct was
          guided by sentiment rather than by reason. He had not the intellectual power of
          Luther or Calvin. He thought that the Church might be reformed by what he
          called a flagellation, and still retain its ancient doctrines and practices;
          and he did not proceed to inquire whether the abuses in it were founded on a
          wrong view of religion and a misinterpretation of Scripture. In short, he
          desired a reformation within the Church; which, as we shall see further on, was
          tried and found wanting. Luther, as ho advanced in life, flung off monasticism,
          while Savonarola clung closer and closer to his Dominican frock and his convent
          of St. Mark. Hence his influence never extended beyond his immediate hearers
          and the walls of Florence. He let fall, indeed, some expressions which
          subsequently induced the Protestants to claim his authority, and Luther
          published in Germany, in 1523, one of his tracts, in a preface to which he
          declares Savonarola to be the precursor of his doctrine of justification by
          faith alone. But though Savonarola may have let fall some words which seem to
          support that view, in others he expressly repudiates the doctrine. In fact, he
          does not seem to have had any very clear notions on the subject, and perhaps
          did not understand the metaphysical question which underlies it, as to the
          nature of the will. It is at all events certain that he never contemplated
          separation from the Church of Rome.
           ACCESSION OF
          LOUIS XII IN FRANCE.
             A few days after
          the execution of Savonarola, a letter arrived from the King of France to
          request his pardon. That King, however, was no longer Charles VIII, but Louis
          XII. A remarkable change had been observed in the conduct of Charles towards
          the close of his life, the result probably of declining health. He was no
          longer the trifling dissipated creature of his earlier days; his conversation
          had become graver, and he had renounced his disorderly life. His expedition to
          Italy had inspired him with a certain degree of taste, which he displayed at
          the Castle of Amboise, where he took up his residence early in 1498. Here he
          began to build on a large scale, and employed sculptors and painters whom he
          had brought with him from Naples—the first indication of the introduction of
          Italian art into France. He was meditating another expedition into Italy, and,
          being sensible of his former mistakes, he resolved to take measures for
          assuring a permanent conquest. On the 7th of April, 1498, as he was proceeding
          from his chamber with Anne of Brittany, his consort, to see a game of tennis,
          in passing through a dark gallery he struck his head against a door. Although a
          little stunned by the blow he passed on, conversing cheerfully with those
          around him, when he was suddenly struck with apoplexy, and, being carried to an
          adjoining garret, expired in a few hours. He had not yet completed his
          twenty-eighth year.
           With Charles VIII
          was extinguished the direct line of the House of Valois. The Crown was now
          transferred to the collateral branch of Orleans, and Louis, Duke of Orleans,
          descended from the second son of King Charles V and his consort Valentina
          Visconti, of the ducal House of Milan, succeeded Charles VIII with the title of
          Louis XII.
           The new King,
          feeble both in body and mind, was one of those characters to which the absence
          of strong passions or opinions lends the appearance of good nature, and even of
          virtue. He was naturally formed to be governed, and with him ascended the
          throne a prelate who had long been his director, George d’Amboise, Archbishop
          of Rouen.
           Amboise was the first
          in that series of Cardinal-ministers whose reign in France lasted a century and
          a half; for though Cardinals Balue and Briconnet had been members of the Council, they did not
          enjoy the high post and the influence of Amboise. A man severed by his vocation
          from the world, without wife or children, and having no family to found, must,
          it was concluded, be necessarily devoid of avarice and ambition! Yet the
          clerical profession was precisely that which offered in those days the easiest
          avenue to wealth combined with the distant prospect of a diadem. The views both
          of Louis XII and of his minister were directed towards Italy. The King’s heart
          was set on the conquest of the Duchy of Milan and the recovery of the Kingdom
          of Naples; the Archbishop wanted to be Pope, and his best chance of attaining
          that dignity lay in the success of his master's projects. The El Dorado of both
          lying beyond the Alps, they could afford to be moderate in France.
           The disinterested
          Amboise could never be persuaded to accept a second benefice, yet left at his
          death an enormous fortune, wrung for the most part from the Italians. In
          pursuance of his schemes, it was necessary that Franco should be contented and
          quiet; and the domestic government of Louis XII was accordingly mild and equitable.
          One of his first cares was to banish all fear lest he should remember former
          wrongs when a partisan chief in the war of Brittany, and he hastened to
          announce as his maxim, “that it would ill become a King of France to avenge the
          quarrels of the Duke of Orleans”. In accordance with it, among other instances,
          Louis de la Trémouille, the famous captain who had
          made Louis prisoner at St. Aubin, was confirmed in all his honors and pensions;
          and Madame Anne of France, with her husband, Peter, Duke of Bourbon, was
          invited to Blois, and loaded with favors. While the higher ranks were thus
          propitiated, the middle classes were conciliated by some useful reforms in the
          administration of justice, and by a government founded on order and economy.
           One of the first
          affairs that engaged the attention of the new King brought him into near
          connection with the Court of Rome, and decided the color of his future Italian
          policy. By the marriage contract between Charles VIII and Anne of Brittany,
          that Duchy reverted to his widow upon his death, and was thus again severed
          from the Crown of France. It was, indeed, provided by that instrument that Anne
          should contract no second marriage, except with Charles's successor or the heir
          to the throne: but this clause seemed defeated by the circumstance that Louis
          XII was already married, and was without issue. He determined, however, to
          remove this obstacle by procuring a divorce from his ugly and deformed wife
          Jeanne, daughter of Louis XI.
           We have before
          adverted to the mistake of those who hold that a mutual passion had long
          existed between Louis XII and Anne; the Emperor Maximilian, to whom she had
          been affianced, alone possessed Anne's heart. She had even lived on ill terms
          with Louis during the life of Charles VIII, but her choice was now restricted
          to him, and whatever might be her affection for Brittany, the dignity of a
          Queen of France was not to be despised. She had displayed a somewhat theatrical
          grief on the death of Charles VIII; yet in little more than four months after
          that event she signed a promise of marriage with Louis XII, insisting, however,
          on much more favorable conditions as to her Duchy of Brittany than she had
          obtained under her former contract, and which infinitely multiplied the chances
          of Brittany being again separated from France. Thus Louis, to procure a
          divorce, stood in urgent need of the Pope’s services, just at the time when the
          latter had withdrawn his son Caesar, the Cardinal of Valencia, from the
          ecclesiastical profession, and had determined to make him a great temporal
          Prince. With this view Alexander had already demanded for Caesar the hand of a
          daughter of King Frederick of Naples; and being nettled by a refusal, he
          resolved to throw himself into the arms of the French party. The disgraceful
          alliance between Louis and the Borgias was thus cemented by their mutual wants,
          and Caesar Borgia was dispatched into France.
           George d'Amboise
          and his master could not have been ignorant of the strange history of Caesar
          Borgia—it was only too notorious. He was, however, well received at the French
          Court, where his handsome person, sumptuous dress, and magnificent suite
          attracted general attention. He came provided with the necessary bull for the
          divorce, and was determined to sell it at the highest possible rate. It was a
          sale in open market of a solemn function of the Church. The Archbishop of Rouen
          was gained by a Cardinal’s hat and the prospect of the tiara. A bargain was
          soon struck. Caesar, who had his father under his thumb, could make and unmake
          as many Cardinals as should be necessary to secure Amboise’s election after
          Alexander VI’s death; in return for which he was to be helped by the French
          arms in recovering the territories claimed by the Church, and converting them
          into a Principality or Kingdom for himself. Louis also engaged to renounce all
          attempts upon Naples, except in favor of the House of Borgia; a circumstance
          from which it appears that the Pope had even then formed designs upon that
          Kingdom. The divorce was soon granted, though on pleas the most frivolous and
          unjust; Jeanne defended herself but feebly, and retired to Bourges, where she
          became the foundress of a religious order. Caesar Borgia was made Duke of Valentinois in Dauphine, received in money 30,000 gold
          ducats, with a pension of 20,000 livres, and the Order of St. Michael. Above
          all, he was appointed to a company of one hundred lances; and the French flag
          being thus put into his hands, he assumed the style of Caesar Borgia “of
          France”. The title was afterwards confirmed by a matrimonial connection with
          the French royal family, and in May, 1490, he espoused Charlotte, daughter of
          Alan d'Albret, a near kinsman of Louis XII; but the
          young bride remained in France.
           Before these
          negotiations were completed, Caesar Borgia exhibited a touch of his Italian
          arts. In hope of extorting further concessions from Louis, he had delayed
          producing the bull of dispensation for affinity; but the Bishop of Cette, one of the Papal Commissaries, having informed the
          King that it had been signed by the Pope, and was in Caesar’s hands, Louis
          caused the ecclesiastical judges to pronounce his divorce. A few days after,
          the Bishop of Cette died of poison! The King’s
          marriage with Anne of Brittany was celebrated January 7th, 1499.
           Louis’s designs on
          Milan were supported by the Venetians, whom Ludovico Sforza had offended by
          thwarting their views on Pisa; and in February, 1499, they contracted an
          alliance with France against the Duke of Milan; the French King agreeing to
          assign to them Cremona and the Ghiara d'Adda, or the country between the Adda, the Po, and the Oglio. The state of Europe seemed to favor the enterprise
          of Louis XII. In England, Henry VII, occupied in strengthening himself upon the
          throne, paid little heed to the affairs of the continent. Maximilian bore more
          ill-will to France, but had less power to show it. As Emperor, he was without
          revenue or soldiers, nay almost without jurisdiction; his hereditary lands
          alone afforded him some resources.
           Towards the end of
          Charles VIII’s reign he had been preparing an expedition against France, in
          order to force Charles to restore Burgundy, and some towns in Artois, which
          latter, by the treaty of Senlis, were to revert to
          his son Philip as soon as the latter should come of age, and should do homage
          for them to the King of France. But although Philip had long since assumed the
          government of his provinces, and offered to perform the required homage, yet
          France had on different pretexts deferred fulfilling the stipulations of the
          treaty. Soon after Louis XII’s accession, Maximilian penetrated into Burgundy
          with a considerable army, which, however, he was soon obliged to dismiss for
          want of the necessary funds to maintain it. But the desire of Louis to enter
          upon his Italian campaign led him soon after to restore the towns in question
          to Philip, and to consent that his claims on Burgundy should be referred to
          arbitration.
           The Empire, whose
          States cared more about the Swiss League than the German claims in Italy, soon
          afterwards engaged in a war with the Swiss, whom Maximilian was striving to
          reduce under the authority of the newly created Imperial Chamber; and it was in
          vain that the Duke of Milan sought his assistance. Of all European States,
          Spain alone had the power and the will for active interference in the affairs
          of Italy; and Louis XII had secured the neutrality of that country by the
          treaty of Marcoussis, August 5th, 1498, by which all
          the differences between France and Spain had been arranged. Nay, Ferdinand the
          Catholic probably beheld with pleasure an expedition from which he might
          eventually hope for some benefit to himself. The only Italian ally of Ludovico
          Sforza was King Frederick of Naples, who could spare no troops for his
          assistance; the only foreign Power whose aid he could invoke was the Turkish
          Sultan, and his application to Bajazet II was
          supported by the Neapolitan King. The ravages, however, which the Turkish
          hordes consequently inflicted on the Venetian province of Friuli, and even as
          far as the neighborhood of Vicenza, did not arrest the progress of the French,
          and only served to cast odium upon the Duke of Milan as the ally of the Moslem
          Infidels.
           THE FRENCH
          INVADE ITALY.
             The preparations
          for the Italian expedition were completed about the end of July, 1499. Louis,
          who did not himself intend to pass the Alps, reviewed his army at Lyon, which
          consisted of about 23,000 men, with fifty-eight guns. The command was entrusted
          to three experienced captains, of whom two might be called foreigners; namely,
          Robert Stuart d'Aubigny, and Trivulzio,
          by birth a Milanese noble; the third was Louis, Count of Ligui,
          the patron and master in the art of war of the illustrious Bayard. Lodovico’s
          general, Galeazzo di San Severino, did not venture to
          oppose the French in the field, and shut himself up in Alessandria; whence,
          having probably been bribed, he stole away one night to Milan. As soon as his
          soldiers became aware of his flight, they evacuated Alessandria in confusion,
          and were pursued and dispersed by the French gens d'armes.
          On the other side, the Venetians had entered all the towns between the Adda and
          the Oglio without striking a blow. But, what was
          worse, symptoms of disaffection appeared in Milan itself. The citizens had
          resolved not to endure a siege, and the Duke's treasurer was murdered in the
          streets while attempting to levy money. Sforza, feeling that he was no longer
          safe in his capital, set off for Tyrol to seek aid from Maximilian. Milan now
          declared for the French (September 14th); the other towns followed the example
          of the capital, and thus the conquest of the Milanese duchy was achieved in
          less than a month. Delighted at this brilliant success, Louis crossed the Alps
          to enjoy his triumph, and entered Milan, October 5th, amid cries of Viva
          Francia! His first acts were popular. The citizens were gratified by the
          promise of a reduction in taxes; but as this could not be effected to any great
          extent, Louis soon lost the brief popularity he had acquired. After a few
          weeks’ sojourn, he returned to France, having appointed Trivulzio his Lieutenant in the Milanese. Genoa, which after the submission of Milan had
          again placed itself under the French, was entrusted to the command of Philip of Cleres, Lord of Ravenstein,
          assisted by Tiattistino Fregoso,
          the head of the French party in that city.
           The French soon
          became unpopular in Milan. Trivulzio exercised the
          government entrusted to him in the most tyrannical manner, while the French soldiers
          made themselves hated and suspected by their extortions, their brusquerie, and
          their amours. The party of the exiled Duke rapidly revived, and an extensive
          plot was laid to effect his restoration. Sforza had been received by Maximilian
          at Innsbruck with magnificent promises; but in fact the Emperor had no power to
          serve him, and was so poor that he even wanted to borrow what money the Duke
          had succeeded in retaining. Sforza, however, was of opinion that he had better
          employ it himself; and in spite of the treaty between the French and Swiss, he
          succeeded in engaging 8,000 or 9,000 of the latter in his service. At the news
          of his approach by the Lake of Como a general insurrection broke out at Milan
          (January 25th, 1500); Trivulzio and the Count of Ligni, leaving a garrison in the citadel of Milan, retired
          to Novara, and thence to Mortara; where they shut
          themselves up to await reinforcements from France. The capture of Novara had
          been facilitated by the treachery of the Swiss garrison in the French service,
          who finding their countrymen better paid and fed by Sforza, passed over to his
          ranks, The great competition for the hiring of the Swiss, and the consequent
          influx of money among them, bad introduced a lamentable change in their
          manners. They were become a people of mercenary adventurers, ever ready to sell
          their blood for gold, which was spent in brutal debauchery; and treachery of
          course followed, of which we shall have to narrate numerous instances.
           The Duke of Milan
          was naturally very anxious to detach the Venetians from France; but though he
          begged them to dictate the conditions of a peace, and though secretly they were
          not displeased at the reverses of the French, they were not yet prepared to
          violate their treaty with Louis. Both the French and the Milanese armies had
          been largely recruited when they met near Novara, April 5th, 1500. The infantry
          on both sides was almost entirely composed of Swiss; those in the French army,
          however, had been furnished by the Common League, and marched under the banners
          of their several Cantons; while those in the ranks of the Duke had been hired
          without the sanction of their government. The Swiss Diet had issued an order
          that Swiss should not engage one another, a breach of which would have rendered
          those in Lodovico’s service guilty of treason; and the latter, in consequence,
          when the French, after a short cannonade were about to charge, withdrew into
          Novara, and were followed by the rest of the army. In the ensuing night
          Lodovico’s Swiss began to parley with the French, and engaged to evacuate the
          country on receiving a safe-conduct. As a pretest for their desertion, they
          clamorously demanded their arrears of pay; and all they would allow the victim
          of their perfidy was, that he should conceal himself in their ranks when they
          evacuated the town. On the following morning, Sforza, now old and feeble, put
          on the frock of a Cordelier, to pass himself off for chaplain of the Swiss
          mercenaries, and might have escaped in this disguise had not a Swiss soldier
          betrayed him for a reward of 200 crowns. He was seized and taken to the Castle
          of Novara. The Swiss in their retreat perfidiously seized Bellinzona,
          at which Louis XII was forced to connive; and they thus secured an entrance
          into the Milanese Duchy.
           Consternation
          reigned at Milan. When Cardinal d'Amboise returned thither accompanied by Trivulzio, a long procession of men and women, with bare
          heads, and clothed in white, repaired to the town-hall to deprecate his anger
          for their “accursed rebellion”. D'Amboise, however, did not abuse his victory.
          Only four of the ringleaders were put to death at Milan, and the other
          rebellious towns were amerced in moderate sums for the costs of the war.
          Charles d'Amboise, a nephew of the Cardinal's, was substituted for Trivulzio, as Governor of Milan. But Louis XII did not
          extend to his Italian rivals the same generosity which he had previously
          displayed towards his French opponents. Ludovico Sforza was carried into
          France, and Louis caused him to be confined in the great tower of Loches, where
          he, like Cardinal Balue, was shut up in an iron cage
          eight feet long and six broad. It was only towards the close of his life, which
          was prolonged ten years, that the hardship of his captivity was mitigated, and
          the whole Castle laid open to him. Ludovico Sforza had been one of the ablest
          of Italian Princes. His administration and system of police wore excellent;
          Milan in his hands became the city which it is at present; and it was he who
          completed the admirable network of Milanese irrigation, by making the gigantic
          canal which connects its rivers. Leonardo da Vinci, the loftiest and most
          universal genius of the age, chose Ludovico for his master, and quitted
          Florence to live at Milan. Besides Ludovico, four or five other members of the
          Sforza family, including his brother, the Cardinal Ascanio,
          had fallen into the hands of the French King; who caused Ascanio to be confined in the same tower at Bourges where he himself had been two years
          a prisoner, and doomed three sons of Galeazzo Maria
          Sforza to languish in an obscure dungeon. Duke Lodovico’s two sons, Maximilian
          and Francis, found refuse with the Emperor.
           AMBITION
          AND CRIMES OF BORGIA.
             The war between
          Florence and Pisa still continued. In consequence of his alliance with the
          Florentines Louis XII sent in June, 1500, a body of troops to aid them in
          reducing Pisa. The Pisans professed their willingness to submit to the French
          King but declared their determination to resist the Florentines to the last
          gasp. It is said that they received an attack of the French with shouts of Viva
          Francia! which rendered it impossible to bring the French troops a second time
          to the assault; and it became necessary to raise the siege. The assistance of
          Louis was of more service to the Borgia family. Alexander VI and his children
          hastened to avail themselves of the presence of the French in Italy, in order
          to push their schemes of ambition and aggrandizement. Lucretia Borgia, who,
          after her divorce from Giovanni Sforza, had been married to Alfonso, Duke of Biseglia, a natural son of Alfonso II of Naples, and had
          been declared perpetual Governess of the Duchy of Spoleto, was now further
          invested with Sermoneta, wrested from the House of
          Gaetani. At the urgent entreaty of Pope Alexander, Louis also lent a small
          force to Caesar Borgia, to assist the Papal troops in reducing the Lords of
          Romagna and the March; as Sforza of Pesaro, Malatesta of Rimini, the Riarii of Imola and Forli, and
          others. Forli was obstinately defended by Catharine Sforza, widow of Jerome Riario, but was at length taken by assault, and Catharine
          sent prisoner to the Castle of St. Angelo at Rome. By the spring of 1501 all
          the small principalities of Romagna and its neighborhood had been reduced;
          Caesar Borgia entered Rome in triumph, under the mingled banners of France and
          the Pope, and twelve new Cardinals were created in order that he might be
          declared Duke of Romagna and Gonfalonier of the Church. Thus was the French
          flag prostituted in order to promote the designs of the Pope and his insatiable
          bastard son. Louis even notified to all the Italian Powers that he should
          regard any opposition to the conquests of Caesar Borgia as an injury done to
          himself; a policy disapproved by all the French council except D'Amboise, to
          whom Borgia held out the hope of the tiara.
           During these
          proceedings the Pope’s family displayed all their characteristic crimes and
          wickedness. After the capture of Faenza, Astorre Manfredi, its youthful, handsome, and amiable Lord, was murdered, after having
          been first subjected to the most unnatural and disgusting treatment by Borgia.
          The Duke of Biseglia, Lucretia’s third husband, was
          stabbed on the steps of St. Peter’s (June, 1500,) by a band of assassins hired
          by her brother, who were safely escorted out of the city, and all pursuit after
          them forbidden. The Duke, whose wound was not mortal, was conveyed to a chamber
          in the Pope's palace, where he was tended by his sister and by his wife. The
          Pope placed a guard to defend his son-in-law against his son, a precaution
          which Caesar Borgia derided. “What is not done at noon”, he said, “may be done
          at night”. He was as good as his word. Before Biseglia had recovered from his wounds, Caesar burst into his chamber, drove out his
          wife and sister, and caused him to be strangled. Borgia's motives for this
          murder have been variously ascribed to his incestuous passion for his sister
          and to his hatred of the House of Aragon. Some modern writers have supposed
          that the crime was perpetrated in order to make room for Lucretia’s fourth
          marriage with Alfonso d'Este, future Duke of Ferrara;
          a supposition little probable, and founded apparently on a mistake of dates, as
          this marriage did not take place till towards the end of 1501, instead of a few
          weeks after the murder. It was accomplished by bringing the influence of France
          to bear on the House of Este; Alfonso was persuaded that it would secure him
          from the ambition and the arms of Caesar Borgia. Lucretia became the idol of
          the poets and literary men who swarmed in the Court of Ferrara, and especially
          of Cardinal Bembo. Caesar Borgia, strong in the support of France, was now
          aiming to establish a Kingdom in central Italy. His projects were aided by the
          Florentines, who, however, soon became themselves the objects of his attacks,
          and were compelled to purchase his goodwill by giving him command of a division
          of their army, with a pension of 3,600 ducats.
           In the spring of
          1501 the French army was ready to pursue its march to Naples. King Frederick,
          alarmed at the gathering storm, had some months before renewed the propositions
          formerly made by his father Ferdinand I to Charles VIII; namely, to acknowledge
          himself a feudatory of France, to pay an annual tribute, and to pledge several
          maritime towns as security for the fulfillment of these conditions. Louis,
          however, would not hear of these liberal offers, although Ferdinand the
          Catholic undertook to guarantee the payment of the tribute proffered by
          Frederick, and strongly remonstrated against the contemplated expedition of the
          French King.
           Ferdinand, finding
          that he could not divert Louis from his project, proposed to him to divide
          Naples between them, and a partition was arranged by a treaty concluded between
          the two monarchs at Granada, November 11th, 1500. Naples, the Terra di Lavoro, and the Abruzzi were assigned to Louis, with the
          title of King of Naples and Jerusalem; while Ferdinand was to have Calabria and
          Apulia with the title of Duke. The duplicity of Ferdinand towards his kinsman
          Frederick in this transaction is very remarkable. For months after the signing
          of the treaty he left the King of Naples in expectation of receiving succors
          from him; and it was not till the eleventh hour (April, 1501,) that he
          announced to Frederick his inability to help him in case of a French invasion.
          The contemplated confiscation of his dominions was of course still kept in the
          background, and meanwhile the forces of Ferdinand, under Gonsalvo de Cordova, were admitted into the Neapolitan fortresses.
           Frederick opened
          to them without suspicion his ports and towns, and thus became the instrument
          of his own ruin. He had in vain looked around for assistance. He had paid the
          Emperor Maximilian 40,000 ducats to make a diversion in his favor by attacking
          Milan, but Maximilian was detached from the Neapolitan alliance by a counter
          bribe, and consented to prolong the truce with France. Frederick had then had
          recourse to Sultan Bajazet II, with as little effect;
          and this application only served to throw odium on his cause. The recent
          capture of Modon by the Turks (August, 1500), and the
          massacre of its Bishop and Christian population, had excited a feeling of great
          indignation in Europe. Frederick’s application to Bajazet was alleged against him in the treaty of Granada; and Ferdinand and Louis took
          credit to themselves for the desire of rescuing Europe from that peril by
          partitioning his dominions. Thus religion was as usual the pretext for
          spoliation and robbery. Nor did Ferdinand’s hypocrisy stop there. He made the
          atrocities at Modon a pretense for getting up a
          crusade, which served to conceal his preparations for a very different purpose.
          The armament under command of Gonsalvo de Cordova,
          the “Great Captain”, as he was called after his Italian campaign, did indeed
          help the Venetians to reduce St. George in Cephalonia; but it returned to the
          ports of Sicily early in 1501, where it was in readiness to execute the secret
          designs of the Spanish King. Gonsalvo, the faithful
          servant of a perfidious master, the ready tool of all his schemes, acted his
          part well in this surprise of friendship. Alexander VI had been induced to
          proclaim the crusade with a view to fill his own coffers. He drove a brisk
          trade in indulgences, which he now extended to the dead; for he was the first
          Pope who claimed the power of extricating souls from Purgatory. To carry out the
          farce, Louis XII signed a treaty of alliance against the Turks with Wladislaus King of Hungary and Bohemia, and with John
          Albert King of Poland, brother of that Prince.
           The French army,
          which did not exceed 13,000 men, began its march towards Naples about the end
          of May, 1501, under command of Stuart d'Aubigny, with
          Caesar Borgia for his lieutenant. When it arrived before Rome, June 25th, the
          French and Spanish ambassadors acquainted the Pope with the treaty of Granada,
          and the contemplated partition of Naples, in which the suzerainty of this
          Kingdom was guaranteed to the Holy See; a communication which Alexander
          received with more surprise than displeasure, and he proceeded at once to
          invest the Kings of France and Aragon with the provinces which they respectively
          claimed. Attacked in front by the French, in the rear by Gonsalvo, Frederick did not venture to take the field. He
          cantoned his troops in Naples, Aversa, and Capua, of which the last alone made
          any attempt at defense. It was surprised by the French while in the act of
          treating for a capitulation (July 24th), and was subjected to the most
          revolting cruelty; 7,000 of the male inhabitants were massacred in the streets;
          the women were outraged; and forty of the handsomest reserved for Caesar
          Borgia’s harem at Rome; where they were in readiness to amuse the Court at the
          extraordinary and disgusting fête given at the fourth marriage of Lucretia.
          Rather than expose his subjects to the horrors of a useless war, Frederick
          entered into negotiations with D'Aubigny, with the
          view of surrendering himself to Louis XII, whom he naturally preferred to his
          traitorous kinsman, Ferdinand; and in October, 1501, he sailed for France with
          the small squadron which remained to him. In return for his abandonment of the
          provinces assigned to the French King, he was invested with the County of Maine
          and a life pension of 80,000 ducats, on condition that he should not attempt to
          quit France; a guard was set over him to enforce the latter proviso, and this
          excellent Prince died in exile in 1504.
           Meanwhile Gonsalvo de Cordova was proceeding with the reduction of
          Calabria and Apulia. At the commencement of the war Frederick had sent his son
          Don Ferrante to Taranto, of which place Don Giovanni di Ghevara,
          Count of Potenza, the young Prince’s governor, was commandant. After a long
          siege, Taranto was reduced to capitulate by a stratagem of Gonsalvo’s.
          A lake which lay at the back of the town seeming to render it inaccessible, it
          had been left unfortified in that quarter, and Gonsalvo,
          by transporting twenty of his smaller ships over a tongue of land into the
          lake, had the place at his mercy. The conduct of Gonsalvo towards the young Prince illustrates both the political morality of those times
          and the convenient religion by which it was supported. The Great Captain had
          taken an oath upon the Holy Sacrament that the young Prince should be permitted
          to retire whithersoever he pleased; but Don Ferrante had scarcely left Taranto
          when he was arrested and sent to Spain. Gonsalvo was
          released from his oath by a casuistical confessor, on the ground that, as he
          had sworn for Ferdinand, who was absent and ignorant of the matter, that
          Sovereign was not bound by it. Thus the devout superstition of the Spaniards
          could be rendered as flexible in cases of conscience as the atheism of the
          Italians. The Spaniard entered Taranto, March 1st, 1502; the other towns
          of southern Italy were soon reduced, and the Neapolitan branch of the House of
          Aragon fell for ever, after reigning sixty-five years.
           In the autumn of
          1501, Louis had entered into negotiations with the Emperor, in order to obtain
          formal investiture of the Duchy of Milan. With this view, Louis’s daughter
          Claude, then only two years of age, was betrothed to Charles, grandson of
          Maximilian, the infant child of the Archduke Philip and Joanna of Spain. A
          treaty was subsequently signed at Trent, October 13th, 1501, by Maximilian and
          the Cardinal d’Amboise, to which the Spanish Sovereigns and the Archduke Philip
          were also parties. By this instrument Louis engaged, in return for the
          investiture of Milan, to recognize the pretensions of the House of Austria to
          Hungary and Bohemia, and to second Maximilian in an expedition which he
          contemplated against the Turks. It was at this conference that schemes against
          Venice began to be agitated, which ultimately produced the League of Cambray.
           The treaty between
          Louis and Ferdinand for the partition of Naples was so loosely drawn, that it
          seemed purposely intended to produce the quarrels which ensued. The ancient
          division of the realm into four provinces, though superseded by a more modern
          one, had been followed in the treaty; disputes arose as to the possession of
          the Principato and Capitanata; Gonsalvo occupied the former with his troops; and
          some negotiations which ensued on the subject having failed, Louis instructed
          the Duke of Nemours to drive them out. In the course of 1502 the Spaniards were
          deprived of everything, except Barletta and a few towns near Bari. It was in
          the combats round this place that Bayard, by his deeds of courage and
          generosity, won his reputation as the model of chivalry and became the idol of
          the French soldiery. While France was thus winning Naples with her arms, she
          was preparing the loss of it by her negotiations. Towards the end of 1501, the
          Austrian Archduke Philip and his consort Joanna, passing through France on
          their way to Spain, in order to receive the homage of the Spanish States as
          their future Sovereigns, were magnificently entertained by Louis XII, and
          experienced such a reception from that monarch as quite won Philip’s heart, and
          made him forget all the former injuries inflicted by the French Court upon his
          father. Philip and Joanna reached Toledo in the spring of 1502, where they
          received the homage of the Cortes of Castile; and a few months after Ferdinand
          also persuaded the punctilious States of Aragon to swear fealty to Joanna,
          which they had previously refused to do to his eldest daughter Isabella. But
          the ceremonious formality of the Castilian Court was irksome to Philip and as
          he felt little or no affection for his consort, who was both plain in person
          and weak in mind, he set off in December for the Netherlands, leaving Joanna
          behind, who was too far advanced in pregnancy to accompany him. On March 10th,
          1503, she gave birth to her second son, Ferdinand. Joanna, who repaid Philip's
          coolness with a doting and jealous affection, was inconsolable at his
          departure, and fell into a deep dejection, from which nothing could rouse her.
           As Philip was to
          return through France, Ferdinand commissioned him to open negotiations with
          Louis; and by the treaty of Lyon it was agreed that both Louis and Ferdinand
          should renounce their shares of the Neapolitan dominions in favor of the
          recently affianced infants Charles of Austria and Claude of France. Till the
          marriage should be accomplished, Louis XII was to hold in pledge the Terra di Lavoro and the Abruzzi; Ferdinand, Apulia, and the Calabrias; and the contested provinces were to be jointly
          administered by the Archduke Philip, as procurator for his son, and by a French
          commissary (April, 1503).
           This treaty was
          evidently in favor of Ferdinand, or rather perhaps of the Archduke Philip, who
          seems to have exceeded his instructions. Cardinal d'Amboise was entrapped into
          it by an artifice too gross for any eyes except those blinded by ambition.
          Ferdinand and Maximilian engaged to assist D'Amboise in attaining the tiara,
          and they agreed with Louis that a General Council should be summoned for the
          purpose of deposing Pope Alexander VI. But the King of Aragon, at least, so far
          from having any intentions to help the French minister to the Papal throne, did
          not oven mean to observe the treaty of Lyon. He had warned Gonsalvo not to attend to any instructions from the Archduke Philip unless they were
          confirmed by himself, and he continued to send that general reinforcement after
          reinforcement; while Louis XII, relying on the treaty, had ordered the Duke of
          Nemours to cease hostilities. Gonsalvo suddenly
          resumed the offensive with extraordinary vigor and rapidity, and within a week,
          two decisive battles were fought. On the 21st April, 1503, the Spanish captain Andrades defeated Stuart d'Aubigny at Seminara in Calabria, and compelled him to retire
          into the fortress of Angitola, where he soon
          afterwards surrendered. On the 28th of April, the Great Captain himself
          defeated the Duke of Nemours at Cerignola, near
          Barletta, when the French army was dispersed and almost destroyed, and the
          Viceroy was killed in the engagement. The remnant of the French retired on the Garigliano and to Gaeta; most of the Neapolitan towns,
          including the capital, opened their gates to the conqueror; Gonsalvo entered Naples May 14th, 1503; and the French garrisons in the castles of that
          city were soon afterwards reduced, chiefly by the famous engineer, Pedro
          Navarro. By the end of July the French had completely evacuated the Neapolitan
          territory, which thus fell into Ferdinand’s possession.
           Nothing could
          exceed the grief and anger of Louis at this intelligence. Philip shared his resentment,
          and intimated to Ferdinand that he would not quit the French Court till the
          treaty of Lyon had been ratified; but the Catholic King, regardless of the
          reproaches addressed to him, pretended that Philip had exceeded his powers and
          refused to sign. Louis dismissed the Spanish envoys, and resolved not only to
          attempt the recovery of Naples, but also to attack the Spanish frontier. The
          Sire d'Albret and the Marshal do Gié were directed to cross the Bidasoa and advance
          towards Fuenterabia with 400 lances and 5,000 Swiss
          and Gascon foot; while the Marshal de Rieux attacked Rousillon with 800 lances and 8,000 infantry. Another army
          under Louis de la Trémouille, the best general of
          France, was dispatched across the Alps, and was to be reinforced in Italy by
          large bodies of Swiss and Lombards, and by troops contributed by the Tuscan
          Republics and the little Princes of central Italy.
           Among these
          Princes Caesar Borgia could no longer be counted upon, who had repaid the
          benefits of Louis by conspiring against him with the Spaniards. Caesar Borgia
          had usurped the Duchy of Urbino, the Lordship of Perugia, and several other
          places, the possession of most of which he obtained by means of the basest
          treachery, or by those arts of address and persuasion in which this consummate
          villain is said to have been a master. He obtained Urbino by requesting the
          Duke, as a friend, to lend him his artillery, with which he entered the town as
          a conqueror. Machiavelli regards the bringing together of so many small States
          as a political benefit, which should not only lead us to overlook the crimes of
          Borgia in effecting it, but even to accord him our admiration; yet Pope
          Alexander in vain endeavored to persuade the College of Cardinals to unite
          these conquests into a Kingdom of Romagna in favor of his son. Borgia, however,
          as will appear in the sequel, was unwittingly laboring not for himself but for
          the Holy See.
           Louis XII had
          resolved to break with Caesar Borgia; yet it was necessary to prevent Alexander
          VI from throwing himself into the arms of Spain, and the French Court was
          negotiating with that Pontiff when news was unexpectedly brought of his death.
          Alexander seems to have fallen a victim to his own infernal machinations. He
          regarded the Cardinalate as a means for raising the enormous sums required to
          maintain the luxury of the Pontifical court, the armies of Caesar Borgia, the
          profligate extravagance of Lucretia, and the establishments of his other
          bastards and nephews. With this view he sold the dignity of Cardinal at prices
          varying from 10,000 to 30,000 florins; he entrusted these venal Princes of the
          church with employments which enriched them, and then caused them to be
          poisoned in order to seize their property, and resell their benefices and
          dignities. Altogether he created forty-three Cardinals, scarce one of which
          appointments was gratuitous. But he was at length caught in his own trap. He
          had invited Cardinal Adrian of Corneto to a little
          banquet at his vineyard, the Belvedere, near the Vatican, and an attendant was
          instructed to serve the guest with poisoned wine. The man, however, mistook the
          bottles; the fatal draught was administered to Alexander himself and his son,
          as well as to their intended victim, and all three were seized with a violent
          illness which in a week put an end to the Pope’s life at the age of seventy-two
          (August I8th, 1503). Caesar Borgia and Adrian ultimately recovered. Thus
          perished through his own machinations one of the greatest monsters who ever
          sullied the Pontifical throne. Alexander VI first established the
          ecclesiastical censorship of books, which has contributed to support the abuses
          of the Papacy against the attacks of reason and true religion. It was in his
          Pontificate that the mole of Hadrian was fortified by the architects Giuliano
          and Antonio da S. Gallo in the manner in which it still exists as the Castle of
          St. Angelo.
           The moment was now
          arrived when Cardinal d'Amboise hoped to realize all those dreams of ambition
          which had led him to connive at and encourage the crimes of Caesar Borgia. He
          hastened to Rome, and the march of the French army was arrested at Nepi, in order to support his election by its presence. But
          D'Amboise had a formidable though unknown competitor in Cardinal Julian della Rovere, who had hitherto
          appeared the warm ally of France. He was also deceived by Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, whom he had delivered from prison and
          loaded with benefits, and who had sworn to use his influence in favor of his
          benefactor. But Ascanio retained at heart a deep
          hatred for the overthrowers of his family, and he used D'Amboise's confidence
          only to betray him. He borrowed of D'Amboise 100,000 ducats, under pretense of
          buying “the voice of the Holy Ghost” while he was secretly arranging
          D'Amboise's defeat with Cardinal Julian.
           Julian, after
          saluting D'Amboise as future Pontiff, represented, that in order to the
          validity of his election, and to prevent future schism, the French troops ought
          to be withdrawn from the neighborhood of Rome, and that such a proof of
          moderation would only secure him more votes. D'Amboise assented, against the
          advice of Caesar Borgia; the Conclave, which had been delayed on various
          pretexts, was then assembled, and was easily convinced by Cardinals Julian and Ascanio that the election of a French or Spanish Pope would
          involve Rome in a war. D'Amboise, perceiving that he should not be able to
          carry his election, transferred his votes to Francesco Piccolomini,
          Cardinal of Siena, a nephew of Pius II, who was elected September 21st, and
          took the title of Pius III. The virtues of that Pontiff rendered him worthy of
          the tiara, which, however, he owed to his infirmities. At the time of his
          election he was laboring under a mortal disease, which carried him off in less
          than a month. During his short Pontificate he had meditated assembling a
          General Council for the reform of ecclesiastical discipline; and some Roman
          Catholic writers are sanguine enough to suppose that such a step might have
          averted the Reformation.
           D'Amboise soon
          perceived unequivocal symptoms of another defeat. The Romans to a man were
          against him, and he found it prudent to retire in favor of Cardinal Julian della Rovere, who had long
          pretended an attachment to the cause of France. It is said that Julian gained
          Caesar Borgia, who still commanded the votes of the Spanish Cardinals, by
          assuring him that he was the son, not of Alexander, but of himself. Borgia had
          no filial weakness, and the known character of his mother Vannozza might lend an air of probability to a story which it was not his interest to
          reject. It was a grand thing, as Michelet observes, to be the son of two
          successive Popes! However this may be, the Conclave speedily decided. Cardinal
          Julian was elected on the first scrutiny, October 31st, and D'Amboise had the
          mortification of kissing the toe of his former protégé and rival, now Pope
          Julius II. Like his predecessor, Julius had sworn to restore the ancient luster
          of ecclesiastical discipline, to call a General Council, and not to make war
          without the consent of two-thirds of the Sacred College. We shall see in the
          sequel how he kept his word.
           MARGARET GOVERNS
          THE NETHERLANDS.
             After Philip’s
          death, Maximilian set up pretensions to the regency both of Castile and the
          Netherlands, as natural guardian of his youthful grandson Charles. In the
          former of these claims he had little or no chance of success, and after some
          vain attempts to raise a party in Castile, and some empty threats of invasion,
          he quietly abandoned all his designs in that quarter. Charles was at this time
          residing in the Netherlands; for Maximilian had rejected Ferdinand’s demand to
          send that young Prince into Spain in order that he might become habituated to
          the language and manners of his future subjects. The States of the Netherland
          Provinces also, at first refused Maximilian’s claims to be guardian of his
          grandson and to conduct the government of the country; and they appointed a
          Council of Regency under the auspices of Louis XII as Lord Paramount of West
          Flanders. After a short period, however, being disturbed by internal
          commotions, and by the incursions of the Duke of Guelderland,
          who had broken loose during Philip’s absence, the Netherlanders, at the
          instance of the Lords of Croy and Chimay,
          to whom Philip had entrusted his son Charles, voluntarily submitted to the
          regency of Maximilian. The Emperor being at that time engaged in the affairs of
          Italy, appointed his daughter Margaret to be Governess of the Netherlands, who,
          after having been married to John, Prince of the Asturias, and afterwards to
          Duke Philibert II, of Savoy, was now again a widow. One of the first acts of
          Margaret was to bring about the celebrated League of Cambray;
          and as her father played a leading part in that unjust and impolitic
          transaction, it will be necessary here to take a brief review of the
          circumstances which occasioned that policy, and of the causes which prevented
          Maximilian from carrying it out successfully.
           Although
          Maximilian was much more active and enterprising than his father Frederick III,
          yet he had if possible still less real power. By his marriage with the daughter
          of Charles the Bold, he had indeed added much to the future grandeur of the
          House of Austria; but the same circumstance served rather to diminish than
          increase his authority as Emperor. The Netherlands, as well as the Austrian
          dominions of the House of Habsburg, were subject to frequent commotions and
          revolts; and as the German Princes were called upon to help the reigning house
          in quarrels which did not concern them, they considered themselves all the more
          entitled to assert their own views with regard to Germany. One of the most
          important concessions obtained from Maximilian was a reform of the supreme
          tribunal of the Empire, according to a promise extorted from him by the States
          assembled at Nuremberg in 1489, when he was in want of their aid against
          Hungary. This promise Maximilian had faithfully performed at the Diet of Worms,
          in 1495, the first held after his accession. Under Frederick III, the members
          of the tribunal in question were named by the Emperor, and followed him
          wherever he went. But in 1495 its composition was entirely altered. The Emperor
          now nominated only the President, or Kammerrichter,
          and the Assessors were appointed by the States. Thus the tribunal, from a
          mere Kaiserliches-Gerricht, or court of
          the Emperor, became a Reichs-Kammer-Gerricht,
          or court of the Empire. It no longer followed the Emperor, but sat on appointed
          days at a fixed place, at first Frankfort, afterwards Spires, and finally at Wetzlar. Another most important alteration was that the
          President was allowed to pronounce the ban of the Empire in the Emperor’s name.
          The same Diet of Worms also established a perpetual public peace, or Landfriede. The previous ones had only been for terms of
          years. But though Faustrecht, literally Fist-right,
          or the right of private war, was forbidden under heavy penalties, the
          prohibition did not prove effectual, and at an advanced period of the sixteenth
          century we still find the Sickingens, the Huttens, and the Götz von Berlichingens retaining their lawless habits. The Diet of
          Augsburg, in 1500, made perhaps a still more important alteration in the
          constitution of the Empire by insisting on the establishment of a permanent
          Council for the administration of political affairs. This Council was in fact
          nothing more than a permanent committee of the States, in which the three
          Colleges of Electors, Princes, and Free Cities were represented; and the only
          privilege reserved to the Emperor was that of presiding in person, or naming
          the President. In order to regulate the representation of the Princes, Germany
          was now divided into six circles, which were at first called “provinces” of the
          German nation; viz., Franconia, Bavaria, Swabia, Upper Rhine, Westphalia, and
          Lower Saxony. Each of these circles sent a Count and a Bishop to the Council;
          to which were added two deputies from Austria and the Netherlands. Two deputies
          were also named alternately by the chief Cities. Each of the Electors was
          represented, and one of them was always present in person.
           DIET OF
          CONSTANCE, 1507.
             The state of
          Maximilian’s foreign relations had compelled him to make these concessions,
          which were virtually an abdication of the Imperial power in favor of the
          States, or rather of the College of Electors, whose power would be predominant
          in the Council; and the matter was regarded in this light by Contarini, the Venetian ambassador to the King of the
          Romans at that period. The whole administration of affairs, foreign and
          domestic, was in fact vested in the Council, who assumed the title of the Reichs-Regiment, or Council of Regency. They negotiated of
          their own mere authority with Louis XII; and as they seemed willing to invest
          him with Milan, Maximilian anticipated them by himself bestowing it upon Louis
          as already related. As it was soon found, however, that neither the members of
          this Council nor the Assessors of the Kammer-Gericht,
          or Imperial Chamber, could obtain payment of their salaries, nor carry through
          any of their measures, they dissolved themselves, and returned to their homes;
          and Maximilian recovered for a while all his former power, and was again
          regarded as the fountain of justice.
           In consequence of
          this state of things, the Electors held a solemn meeting at Gelnhausen,
          in June, 1502, and pledged themselves to stand by one another for the maintenance
          of the rights of the Empire. Maximilian, however, was supported by a party
          among the Princes; and he had also wonderfully recovered his authority by his
          conduct in the war of the Bavarian succession, to which we have already
          adverted. At length, at the Diet of Constance, in 1507, a sort of compromise
          was made between the Imperial and Electoral authority, and the chief
          institutions of the Empire were settled on a permanent basis. The Kammer-Gericht, or Imperial Chamber, was again
          established according to the model laid down by the Diet of Worms, though with
          a few modifications. The Reichs-Regiment, or Council
          of Regency, appears, however, to have remained in abeyance during the reign of
          Maximilian, but was reestablished by the first Diet held by Charles V at Worms,
          in 1521, though with some few alterations in favor of the Emperor's authority;
          but its power was again broken in the Diet of 1524, by a combination between
          the Emperor and the Free Cities.
           Another important
          point established by the Diet of Constance was the system of taxation. There
          were two methods of assessment in Germany, the Roll, or Register (Matrikel), and the Common Penny (der gemeine Pfennig). The first of these was levied on the separate States of Germany,
          according to a certain roll or list; the second, which was a mixture of a
          poll-tax and a property-tax, was collected by parishes, without any regard to
          the division of States. The Diet of Constance, by finally establishing the Matrikel, recognized a very important principle; since that
          system contemplated the contributors as the subjects of the different local
          States into which Germany was divided, while that of the Common Penny
          considered them as the subjects of a common Empire. By this decision,
          therefore, the independence of the different States was recognized; while, on
          the other hand, the Imperial Chamber established the principle of the unity of
          the Empire.
           These two
          institutions, the Matrikel and the Imperial Chamber,
          lasted three centuries. The fame of having founded them has been attributed to
          Maximilian: but in fact he did all in his power to oppose them—they were forced
          upon him by the Electors and States, and chiefly by the exertions of Berthold,
          Count Henneberg, Elector of Metz. They were warmly
          opposed by certain parties in the Empire, and especially by the knightly and
          ecclesiastical orders. The Knights, attached to the old feudal system, objected
          to paying a money tax; they protested that as free Franks they were dutifully
          ready to shed their blood for the Emperor, but that a tax was an innovation,
          and an encroachment on their liberty; while the Prelates demurred to
          acknowledge the authority of a tribunal so completely temporal as the Imperial
          Chamber. Maximilian at this Diet virtually recognized the independence of the
          Swiss Confederates, by declaring them free from the jurisdiction of all the
          Imperial tribunals, as well as from the Matrikel, or
          States tax. He had then need of Swiss troops, but those which he raised among
          them received a stipend.
           We have before
          adverted to the hostile demonstration of this Diet of Constance against Louis
          XII, when that King was preparing his expedition against Genoa. Pope Julius II,
          who was also alarmed by the same preparations, and who was exceedingly jealous
          of the influence which the French were acquiring in Italy, importuned
          Maximilian to cross the Alps with an army; and his appeals were seconded by the
          Venetians, who offered a free passage for the German troops through their
          territories. Maximilian had been already meditating an expedition into Italy.
          He wished to establish the rights of the Empire in the Italian lands, to help
          Pisa against the Florentines, and also to march to Rome, in order to receive
          the Imperial Crown from the hands of the Pope. He therefore listened to these applications;
          and in an animated address to the Diet he exhorted them to resist the ambitious
          and encroaching spirit of the French King, who, he said, had already alienated
          some of the Imperial fiefs in Italy, and whose design he represented it to be
          even to avert from him the Imperial Crown itself. These topics, enforced with
          that eloquence and those powers of persuasion which Maximilian possessed in a
          high degree, made a great impression on the assembly. With an extraordinary
          burst of patriotism the Diet voted an army of 90,000 men, to be further
          increased by 12,000 Swiss; and measures were taken for raising this large force
          with an alacrity quite unusual. Alarmed by these mighty preparations, Louis,
          after finishing his Genoese expedition, quietly disbanded his army, and applied
          himself through his agents to tranquillize the minds of the Germans. This
          policy was quite successful, and had a result very mortifying to Maximilian.
          The Diet demanded that the Italian expedition should be conducted in their
          name, that they should appoint the generals, and that the conquests should
          belong to the whole Germanic body: which conditions being rejected by
          Maximilian, they reduced the forces voted to 12,000 men. Maximilian in vain
          endeavored to persuade the Venetians, who had altered their views, to join with
          him in a partition of the Milanese. They united with Chaumont, the French
          Governor of the Milanese, to oppose the passage of Maximilian, notified to him
          that he should be received with all honor in their territories if he came with
          an unarmed retinue on his way to Rome, but that they could not permit the
          passage of an army; while Pope Julius II also announced through his Legate that
          he had reconciled himself with Louis, and dissuaded Maximilian from his
          contemplated journey.
           But he was not to
          be diverted from his project. He now resolved to turn his arms against the
          Venetians, at whose conduct he was highly incensed; and in January, 1508, he
          began an expedition into Italy with what troops he could collect. One division
          of his army was directed against Roveredo; another
          against Friuli; he himself advanced with a third to Trent, where he assumed the
          title of “Roman Emperor Elect”. Having erected an Imperial tribunal, he
          dispatched a herald to Venice with an absurd message, summoning before him the
          Doge Leonardo Loredano and the whole Senate, and on
          their refusal to appear, he published against them the ban of the Empire.
           At first
          Maximilian’s arms were attended with success, and several places were taken;
          but he soon began to feel that want of means which commonly rendered all his
          enterprises abortive and ridiculous; and he was obliged to return into Germany,
          in order if possible to obtain fresh troops and more money. Meanwhile the
          Venetians, aided by the French, not only recovered the lost places, but even
          captured several Austrian towns; and Trent itself would have fallen into their
          hands had not Trivulzio, the French general, from a
          feeling of jealousy, withdrawn from them his support. Maximilian, finding no
          hope of succor, was compelled in May to abandon his ill-judged enterprise; and
          the Venetians, disgusted by the desertion of the French, entered into a
          separate armistice with him for a term of three years. As a kind of salve for
          his honor, Maximilian published a bull of Pope Julius II, by which the title of
          “Emperor Elect” (that is, Emperor chosen, but not yet crowned) was granted to
          him. (This event marks the severance of Germany from Rome. From Ferdinand I,
          brother of Charles V, downwards, this title of “Roman Emperor Elect” “Romanorum
          Imperator Electus”, was taken by all Maximilian’s
          successors in the Holy Roman Empire, immediately upon their German coronation.
          But the word “Elect” was soon dropped, and the German Sovereign, even on formal
          occasions, was never called anything but “Emperor”).
           This miscarriage,
          after such magnificent pretensions, and especially the insolent and even
          childish manner in which the Venetians celebrated their success, inflicted a
          deep wound on the Emperor’s vanity. Alviano, the
          Venetian commander, was gratified with a sort of Roman triumph for his
          victories over the Austrian general, Sixt von Trautson, in the Friuli: and he made a solemn entry into
          Venice, with a long train of German prisoners. At the same time, what was
          perhaps still more provoking, Maximilian and the Empire were abused and
          ridiculed throughout the Venetian dominions in caricatures, farces, and
          satirical songs.
           
 
 CHAPTER VIAFFAIRS OF ITALY, SPAIN AND THE EMPIRE, DOWN TO THE LEAGUE OF CAMBRAY | 
|  |  |  | 
|  |  |  |