| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER IX
           FROM THE ELECTION OF POPE LEO
          X TO THE ELECTION OF CHARLES V AS EMPEROR, AND THE DIET OF WORMS, 1513-1521
   
 THE choice of the conclave which assembled after the obsequies of Pope
          Julius II had been performed fell on Cardinal John de' Medici, the second son
          of Lorenzo the Magnificent, who assumed the name of Leo X. Lorenzo, by creed a
          deist, had regarded the Church merely as a source for his son of lucrative
          emoluments, and dignities which might be crowned with the tiara. Leo, who was
          in his thirty-eighth year at the time of his election, was still only a deacon,
          and had to be ordained priest and bishop before his coronation could be
          performed; yet, besides some minor preferments, he enjoyed six rectories,
          fifteen abbacies, one priory, and one archbishopric: all of which had been
          procured for him, before he had completed his seventeenth year, through his
          father's influence with Louis XI of France and Popes Sixtus IV and
          Innocent VIII.
   Innocent, although he had solemnly promised at his election not to bestow
          the purple on anybody under thirty years of age, had made John a Cardinal in
          his thirteenth year. In the house of his father, who was surrounded by men of
          kindred tastes and sentiments, the youthful Cardinal had imbibed a fine taste
          in ancient and profane literature, but very little respect for the doctrines of
          the Church. Amidst an extensive collection of the rarest specimens of art
          and virtù, he had become a first-rate
          connoisseur in such subjects; while the splendor of the Medicean palace and of the fetes and exhibitions in
          which Florence was unrivalled, had imbued him with that love of show and
          magnificence which characterized his pontificate.
   During his exile from Florence he had relieved the tedium of his banishment
          and improved his acquaintance with mankind by visiting most of the principal
          cities in Germany (including the Netherlands) and France. Besides his
          accomplishments, Leo possessed the gentlest temper, the most winning manners.
          It was probably to these qualities, or the reputation of them, that he owed his
          election; though some have ascribed it to a fistula with which he was at that
          time afflicted, and which seemed to promise another speedy vacancy to the Papal
          throne. The Cardinals had had enough of two ferocious Popes, one of whom had
          endangered their lives by the dagger or the cup, the other by leading them up
          to the cannon's mouth. Leo, even before he left the Conclave, signalized his
          literary tastes by naming as his secretaries two celebrated writers, Pietro
          Bembo and Jacopo Sadoleto. The approach of holy
          week had compelled him to celebrate his coronation in a slight and hasty
          manner, and it was therefore repeated a few weeks later when he took possession
          of the Basilica of St. John Lateran, the peculiar Patriarchal Church of the Roman
          Pontiffs. The day selected for the ceremony was the anniversary of the battle
          of Ravenna (April 13th), and Leo figured in the procession on the same white
          charger which he had ridden on that occasion. The standard of the Church was
          borne by Alfonso of Ferrara, while Julius de' Medici carried that of the
          Knights of Rhodes. This splendid spectacle, with the accompanying fetes, cost
          100,000 florins. Leo soon betrayed an indecent haste to enrich and advance his
          family and friends. His cousin Julius was immediately created Archbishop of
          Florence, and received soon after a Cardinal’s hat and the Legation of
          Bologna. Innocenzo Cibo and three
          other nephews of Leo, together with Bernardo di Bibbiena,
          his secretary, and Lorenzo Pucci, an adherent of the Medici family, were also
          speedily invested with the purple.
   The policy of Leo at first seemed undecided. He appeared willing to put an
          end to the hostilities with France, and he earnestly dissuaded Louis XII from a
          fresh enterprise which he was contemplating for the recovery of the Milanese.
          But though Louis would willingly have abandoned his Council of Pisa, now
          transferred to Lyon, his heart was set on the Italian expedition; and it was
          with the view of releasing for it his troops on the Spanish frontier that he
          had concluded with Ferdinand the truce already mentioned, which, however, did
          not regard Italy. A little previously (March 24th, 1513) he had entered into an
          offensive and defensive alliance with the Venetians, who had been alienated
          from the Holy League by the arrogant pretensions of Maximilian; ceding to the
          Republic Mantua, whose Marquis he sacrificed, in return for the Cremonese and
          the Ghiara d'Adda.
          On the other hand, Maximilian's daughter, Margaret, concluded at Mechlin, April
          5th, a counter treaty in the names of the Emperor, the Catholic King, the King
          of England, and the Pope, the parties to which not only agreed to pursue the
          war against the French in Italy, but also to make each a separate attack on
          France. Henry VIII was to invade Normandy, Picardy, and Guienne; Ferdinand, Béarn and
          Languedoc; the Pope, Provence and Dauphine; while Maximilian was to penetrate
          through Burgundy into the interior of the French Kingdom. But Henry VIII, who
          wished to wipe out the disgrace of the preceding year, was the only party who
          entered with sincerity into this treaty.
   Ferdinand, as we have seen, had already made a truce with France, which,
          with his usual duplicity, he carefully concealed; and when called on to ratify
          the treaty of Mechlin, he declined to do so, on the ground that his minister
          had exceeded his instructions. Leo X had not the slightest intention to
          undertake so distant an expedition; and Maximilian was induced to join the
          league only for the sake of 100,000 gold ducats which the English King engaged
          to pay to him.
   Louis XII resolved to hasten his attempt for the recovery of Milan before
          Henry should be ready for his projected invasion of France. The campaign that
          followed is one of the most extraordinary on record. In the course of a few
          weeks the Milanese was won and lost. Early in May a large French army under
          La Trémouille and Marshal Trivulzio crossed the Alps and entered Piedmont by way
          of Susa. Cardona, the Spanish Viceroy, who after his successful campaign in
          Tuscany had taken possession of several Milanese towns, retired on their
          approach, and took up a position near Piacenza; the Swiss, not being strong
          enough to oppose the advance of the French, also retreated upon Novara; while
          the Milanese subjects, disgusted with the brutality and avidity of that people,
          as well as by Maximilian Sforza’s want of spirit and capacity, rose on every
          side and welcomed the French, whom they had murdered by thousands only the year
          before.
   The Duke of Milan found it necessary to take refuge in the Swiss camp, and
          immediately on his departure the French flag was hoisted at Milan. Meanwhile
          Genoa was attacked by a French squadron—the partisans of the Adorni and Fieschi rose, drove out the Doge Gian Fregoso,
          and restored the city to the suzerainty of France. The Venetians, on their
          side, had advanced to the Adda: and thus the whole of the Milanese, except
          Novara and Como, was reduced in the short space of three weeks.
   The French, however, were destined to be deprived of their conquest as
          speedily as they had made it. The Swiss considered it a point of honor to
          maintain Maximilian Sforza in the duchy to which they had restored him; and Leo
          X, alarmed at the reappearance of the French in Italy, aided the Swiss with
          money, but secretly, in order not to break with Louis. La Trémouille and Trivulzio had
          laid siege to Novara, when the approach of a fresh army from Switzerland
          compelled them to raise it, and to retire towards Trecase,
          a village three miles off. But after the junction of these reinforcements the
          Swiss resolved on assuming the offensive. Before daybreak on the 6th of June,
          and covered by a wood which lay between them and the enemy, they advanced in
          silence upon his camp, and seizing, after a murderous struggle, the French
          artillery, an arm with which they themselves were unprovided, they turned it
          upon the French ranks. The victory was complete. In less than two hours a large
          and well-organized army, commanded by captains of renown, was completely beaten
          by a body of infantry unsupported by cavalry or guns. The only part of the
          gendarmerie in the French ranks which did its duty was the Walloons, under
          Robert de la Marck, Duke of Bouillon. His two sons, Jametz and Fleurange,
          had fallen covered with wounds, when Bouillon, by a desperate charge, recovered
          their bodies, and bore them off on the necks of his men's horses. Fleurange, so well-known by his name of “Le jeune Aventureux”, and by
          his Memoirs, one of the most original productions of that period, almost
          miraculously survived; though he had received no fewer than forty-six wounds!
          This battle decided the fate of Italy.
   The French army was completely demoralized; after the passage of the Sesia, it is said that not a single cavalier retained his
          lance. They hastened to recross the Alps; and the inconstant Milanese were now
          obliged to entreat mercy of the victorious Swiss, by whom they were amerced in
          heavy fines. After the defeat of the French, Cardona began to gather the fruits
          of a victory whose dangers he had not shared. Pescara was dispatched with 3,000
          foot to levy a fine upon the Genoese; and, although there was no declared war
          between Spain and Venice, Cardona proceeded to occupy Bergamo, Brescia,
          Cremona, and other places which the Venetians had abandoned, and which now felt
          the effects of Spanish avarice and ferocity. At the instance of the Cardinal
          of Gurk, the Emperor’s Lieutenant in Italy, who gave Cardona a
          reinforcement of Germans, that general after an abortive attempt on Padua,
          crossed the Brenta, burnt Mestre, Marghera,
          and Fusine, and advancing to the shore of the
          Lagoon, insulted Venice by a distant cannonade. He then retired to Verona,
          after defeating with great loss the Venetian commander Alviano,
          who had issued from Padua to intercept his march (October 7th, 1513).
   Meanwhile Louis XII had need of all his forces to defend his own dominions.
          Louis had endeavored to avert the English invasion by means of his ally, the
          Scottish King, James IV; to whose gallantry also the French Queen Anne had
          appealed, as her knight and champion, according to the romantic ideas of that
          age. James sent some ships to the aid of France, and threatened to invade
          England with a large army; but he was only preparing his own destruction. The
          Scots were overthrown by the Earl of Surrey in the bloody and decisive battle
          of Flodden, in which their King was slain (September 9th, 1513); nor did his
          unfortunate attempt arrest for a moment the English preparations against
          France.
   The war, however, went at first in favor of the French. The English
          admiral, the gallant Sir Edward Howard, was repulsed and killed in an attempt
          to cut some French galleys out of the port of Conquet (April
          25th, 1513); and Préjean de Bidoulx, the French commander, venturing out of harbor,
          made a descent upon the coast of Sussex. He was, however, repulsed, and could
          not prevent the passage of an English army to Calais.
   With a portion of this force the Earl of Shrewsbury and Lord Herbert
          (afterwards Earl of Somerset) laid siege to Térouenne,
          in Artois (June 17th). King Henry himself with the main body of his army landed
          at Calais, June 30th; but it was not till August 1st that he began his march
          to Térouenne. Whilst he lay encamped before that
          place, he was joined by the Emperor Maximilian with a small body of cavalry.
          That needy Sovereign, unable to discharge the obligations he had incurred by
          the treaty of Mechlin, was willing to make some amends by personal service; and
          he scrupled not to degrade the majesty of the Empire by declaring himself the
          soldier of the English King, and receiving as such a stipend of 100 crowns a
          day. The youthful Henry, however, bowed to the superior experience of his
          soldier and Maximilian in reality directed the operations of the campaign.
   Térouenne made
          an obstinate defence. It was relieved by some
          Albanian Stradiots in the service of
          France, who penetrated to the town, bearing provisions and ammunition on their
          horses’ necks. But the campaign was decided in a singular manner. The French
          gendarmerie, while retiring from a skirmish with the English and German cavalry,
          perceiving on the hill of Guinegate two
          large bodies of infantry and some batteries of guns, were seized with a panic,
          clapped spurs to their horses, and never turned their heads till they gained
          their camp at Blangi (August 16th). Hence
          the French themselves gave to this affair the name of the Battle of the Spurs.
          Few French were killed, but many of their most distinguished captains were made
          prisoners, among them the Duke of Longueville, grandson of the famous Dunois.
   Térouenne now
          surrendered and was razed to the ground. The alarm was great at Paris. Louis
          XII, who was laid up with gout, caused himself to be carried in a litter to
          Amiens, to concert measures for the defence of
          the Somme. But instead of pushing on to Paris, Henry, at the instigation of the
          Emperor, invested Tournay, a town very conveniently situated for
          Maximilian, but the possession of which could neither be of any service to the
          English, nor contribute much to the success of the war.
   Tournay surrendered after a short siege (September 24th), and was
          retained by Henry; to the mortification of the Emperor, who departed before the
          end of the month. But Margaret, with her nephew Charles, repaired to Tournay,
          and dissipated in some degree by her arts and flattery the clouds which had
          begun to rise in Henry's mind. The match between Charles and Henry’s sister
          Mary was confirmed; and the English King agreed to advance 200,000 gold crowns
          for the preservation of their common conquests till the following summer, when,
          as Ferdinand's truce with Louis would have expired, a combined attack was to be
          made on France by Ferdinand, Maximilian, and Henry. After making this
          arrangement, Henry returned home (October 21st).
   While these things were passing in the north of France Maximilian, relying
          on the strength of the English exchequer, had hired a large body of Swiss, as
          well as Duke Ulrich of Würtemberg with a few thousand
          cavalry, to invade Burgundy. This force marched straight upon Dijon, into which
          town La Trémouille, then Governor of Burgundy,
          had thrown himself. Unable to meet the Swiss in the field, La Trémouille attacked them by their weak point—their
          love of money; and by a treaty which he concluded with their commander, Jacob
          of Wattenwyl, Bailiff of Bern, he agreed that
          Louis XII should abandon the Council of Pisa, withdraw his pretensions to the
          Milanese, restore to the Roman See and to the Empire all that had been wrested
          from them, and engage to enlist no troops in Switzerland without the consent of
          all the Cantons. Such extravagant concessions were evidently made only to be
          disavowed; yet the Swiss did not stop to inquire what powers La Trémouille and Wattenwyl had
          to conclude a treaty which regulated the fate not merely of Dijon and Burgundy,
          but also of a great part of Christendom. Of the stipulated sum, La Trémouille could pay down only 20,000 crowns; and he
          gave as hostages for the remainder the mayor and four of the richest citizens
          of Dijon, together with his own nephew, De Mézières.
          Yet he advised Louis not to ratify the treaty, and to leave these hostages to
          their fate! The astonishment and indignation were universal. Maximilian and
          Henry VIII denounced the Swiss as villains and traitors, and they were not
          better received at home, while Louis XII was at first inclined to put La Trémouille on his trial. At length, however, he
          accepted the excuses of his general and paid the Swiss 50,000 crowns as an
          installment.
   Thus ended the eventful campaigns of 1513. Before the end of the year Louis
          XII reconciled himself with the Pope, and by a treaty signed at the abbey
          of Corbie, October 26th, he agreed to renounce the Council of Pisa and
          acknowledge that of the Lateran; before which assembly his envoys formally made
          submission, December 31st, when Leo remitted all the ecclesiastical censures
          fulminated by his predecessor against the French realm.
   The coalition, no longer animated by the impetuous spirit of Julius II, was
          now evidently falling to pieces; and Louis, to further his views upon Milan,
          sought the friendship of the Emperor and of the Catholic King. Maximilian was
          conciliated by the offer of Louis's second daughter, Renée, for one of his
          grandsons, either the Archduke Charles or Ferdinand, to whom Renée was to bring
          as her portion the French claims on the Milanese duchy. The death of Louis's
          consort, Anne of Brittany (January, 1514), who had employed herself in
          effecting this arrangement, opened up new bases for negotiation. Ferdinand now
          offered Louis, in his own name and that of Maximilian, the hand either of
          Maximilian's daughter, Margaret, Governess of the Netherlands, or of his grand-daughter
          Eleanor of Austria, sister of Charles and Ferdinand. Louis, who was very
          desirous of an heir, selected Eleanor, and a general truce for a year was
          provisionally signed, March 13th, with the view of preparing a regular treaty.
   
           LUIS XII MARRIES LADY MARY
           The death of the French Queen removed the only obstacle which had delayed
          the marriage of her daughter Claude and Count Francis of Angoulême, whose
          wedding was solemnized a few months after (May 18th, 1514). Louis now invested
          them with the Duchy of Brittany, without opposition from the Breton States,
          although, by the marriage contract of Louis and Anne, Brittany should have
          fallen to their second child Renée. Queen Claude died in 1524, whereupon
          Brittany, was not allowed to pass to her first-born son, the Dauphin Francis,
          but was in 1532 formally and definitively annexed to the French Crown.
   The war continued in Italy in 1514, but its operations are not worthy to be
          detailed. Cardona and the Imperial captains resumed hostilities against the
          Venetians, and the ferocious Frangipani devastated the Friuli and the March of
          Treviso, inflicting great loss and misery on the inhabitants, but contributing
          nothing to the issue of the war. The French were driven from the few remaining
          places which they held in Italy. The citadels of Milan and Cremona capitulated
          in June; and on the 26th of August, the fortress of La Lanterna at
          Genoa, though deemed impregnable, was compelled to surrender.
   During this period the policy of Leo X was vacillating and difficult of
          explanation, except that he followed wherever self-interest led. Leo had as
          much ambition as Julius II, but without the same nobleness of view or frankness
          of character. If he aimed like his predecessor at extending the dominion of the
          Roman See, it was only that he might enrich his family with the spoils; if he
          entertained the project of freeing Italy from the Barbarians, it was only in
          order that its various States might be united under the House of Medici. He
          pursued these schemes with the greatest duplicity, courting and betraying all
          parties in turn. Leo was much alarmed at the projected marriage between the
          Archduke Charles and Renée of France, which at no distant period would have
          cemented France, Spain, Austria, and the Netherlands into one colossal Power;
          and he used every exertion to prevent its accomplishment. The dissatisfaction
          of Henry VIII with the same project, which involved a breach of the contract
          between Charles and Henry's sister Mary, afforded Leo the means of frustrating
          it.
   The scheme of an alliance between France and England appears to have
          originated at Rome between the Pope and the English ambassador Bambridge, Cardinal-Archbishop of York; and it was
          forwarded in England by Wolsey, now rapidly rising in his master's favor, and
          already Bishop of Lincoln and Tournay. Communications were opened between
          the French and English Courts through the Duke of Longueville, who had remained
          prisoner in England since the Battle of the Spurs. Wolsey, who facilitated the
          negotiations by persuading Henry to relax his pretensions, except in the case
          of his own see of Tournay, was rewarded with the Archbishopric of York on
          the death of Bambridge, who had been poisoned by
          a servant. The Duke of Longueville proposed a marriage between Louis XII,
          already engaged to Eleanor, and Mary of England; and Henry VIII, burning to
          revenge himself on his father-in-law, by whom he had been so often duped, listened
          eagerly to the proposal.
   Louis XII on his side readily entered into a scheme which, while it
          relieved him from a formidable attack, secured him a youthful and charming
          bride. He consented to abandon Tournay; and on the 7th August, 1514, three
          treaties were signed at London. The first of these was an alliance, offensive
          and defensive, between England and France; the second stipulated a marriage
          between Louis XII and the Lady Mary, who was to have a dowry of 400,000 crowns;
          and by the third Louis engaged to pay Henry 100,000 gold crowns annually for a
          term of ten years, in satisfaction of the arrears of the debt of Charles VIII
          to Henry VII. The previous negotiations between Louis, Ferdinand, and
          Maximilian were thus upset, and Renée subsequently married Ercole II,
          Duke of Ferrara. Longueville espoused Mary at Greenwich by proxy for his
          master, August 13th; and on the ninth of October, Louis solemnized his nuptials
          in person at Abbeville, whence the new Queen of France was conducted with great
          pomp to the palace of the Tournelles at
          Paris.
   Louis being thus freed from a dangerous enemy, his scheme for the recovery
          of the Milanese began to revive, and he talked of another expedition into Italy
          in the following spring. But this he was not destined to accomplish. Although
          only fifty three years of age his feeble health had long compelled him to
          observe a strict regimen, which was completely disturbed by the round of
          pleasure and dissipation into which his marriage with a youthful, lively, and
          handsome bride had plunged him.
   The King’s dinner, usually served at eight in the morning, was deferred
          till noon, and instead of retiring to rest at six in the evening, he was
          frequently kept up till past midnight. The levity of Mary’s conduct found a
          severe censor in the Countess Claude. All her suite were sent back to England,
          except a few confidential attendants, among whom was Anne Boleyn, the future
          wife of Henry VIII; nor does the English King appear to have resented the
          proceeding. Louis's altered way of life soon undermined his constitution, and
          he was seized with a dysentery, which carried him off, January 1st, 1515, after
          a reign of seventeen years. He died regretted by the French people, and on the
          whole he deserved their love, for his rule had been mild and paternal, and no King
          since St. Louis had shown so much sympathy for his poorer subjects. Yet his
          foreign policy was not only injudicious but also frequently culpable. He
          betrayed most of his allies, and he gave many proofs of cruelty in his Italian
          wars, and especially in his treatment of Lodovico Sforza, Duke of Milan. Louis
          XII was the first King of France for some centuries who caused his head to be
          engraved upon the silver coin, whence his gros d'argent, or
          piece of 10 sols, obtained the name of teston (tester).
   The death of Louis thwarted some ambitious projects of Pope Leo X, who had
          hoped, with the assistance of that Sovereign, to establish his brother Julian
          in the Kingdom of Naples, as well as to add Parma, Piacenza, Modena, Reggio,
          and perhaps all the Ferrarese, to the Florentine dominion of his nephew
          Lorenzo, thus uniting nearly all Italy under the sway of the House of Medici.
          When the sinking health of Louis frustrated all expectation of help from that
          quarter, Leo turned his thoughts towards the realizing of some part of his
          schemes by the aid of Ferdinand of Aragon and the Emperor. With this view he
          sent Pietro Bembo to Venice in December, 1514, to detach, if possible, that
          Republic from the French alliance and reconcile her with the Emperor; but the
          Venetians rejected the proposed conditions, and remained faithful to France. At
          the same time Leo concluded a separate treaty with the Swiss, whose Confederacy
          had this year received its thirteenth Canton (at which number it remained until
          its dissolution in 1798) by the accession of Appenzell.
   
           ACCESSION OF FRANCIS I.
           Such was the state of Italian affairs when the Count of Angoulême succeeded
          to the French throne with the title of Francis I. Born at Cognac, September
          12th, 1494, Francis was now in his twenty-first year, but in appearance and
          manner seemed four or five years older. Handsome, of tall and graceful figure,
          he excelled in all martial exercises, while a natural elegance of manner
          recommended him to the fair sex. From his tutor, Arthur Gouffier de Boissy, a nobleman who had imbibed in
          Italy a love then rare for literature and art, Francis had derived a certain
          respect for learning, which he manifested by patronizing its professors,
          although his own reading was mostly confined to romances of chivalry. Indeed,
          all his qualities were showy and superficial : his ruling characteristics were
          sensuality and a levity amounting to caprice; yet, being brave, talkative,
          libertine, the French nation saw and loved in him her own image, and fancied
          that she was about to have a Sovereign of distinguished greatness.
   After the death of Louis XII Mary declared that there was no prospect of
          her giving birth to an heir of the French Crown, and Francis entered upon an
          inheritance which, according to the scandalous chronicles of the time, he had
          himself put to hazard by his attempts on the Queen's virtue. Mary shortly after
          married the handsome and accomplished Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, her
          professed admirer, who had accompanied her to France, though not named among
          the embassy. Francis affected great indignation at this match, though in his
          heart perhaps not displeased at it, since it prevented the English princess
          from contracting a marriage which might have been disadvantageous to France; he
          even interceded with Henry in favor of the indiscreet lovers, and the English
          King forgave without much difficulty the temerity of his favorite Brandon.
   With the accession of Francis I began in fact the reign of his mother,
          Louise of Savoy, to whom, in his pursuit of pleasure, he readily abandoned the
          cares of government. One of his first acts was to create Louise Duchess
          of Angoulême and Anjou, and to invest her with some of the
          prerogatives of royalty. Although but forty years of age, she was already in
          the twentieth year of her widowhood; and as during the reign of Anne of
          Brittany she had been kept at a distance from Court, she now resolved to
          compensate herself for the privations which she had endured. Her warm temper
          and propensity to gallantry are acknowledged by the gravest writers of the
          times, and she saw without displeasure the same disposition in her son, whose
          dissipations might serve to give her a firmer hold of power.
   Anne of Brittany was the first Queen of France who surrounded herself with
          an establishment of Maids of Honor; but under her auspices the Court had been a
          school even of an austere and repulsive virtue. Louise, in whose eyes the
          manners of the previous reign were an odious restraint, retained, but
          perverted, the institution; the Court became a scene of license and debauchery;
          and it is from this time that we must date the influence of women in the
          political affairs of France—a characteristic almost peculiar to that nation.
          Antony Duprat, First President of the Parliament of Paris, foreseeing
          probably the future greatness of Louise, had attached himself to her in her
          retirement, and after the accession of Francis his fidelity was rewarded with
          the Chancellorship. Talented but arbitrary, the grand idea of Duprat’s life
          was to render the royal authority absolute. About the same time the office of
          Constable, vacant since the death of John of Bourbon in 1488, was bestowed on
          Charles of Bourbon, who was reputed to enjoy a place in the affections of
          Louise.
   The middle and lower classes of the French people looked back with regret
          to the economical government of Louis XII; but the accession of Francis I was
          hailed with joy by the higher orders, who hoped to profit by his very faults
          and vices. The reign of a Prince, young, gay, fond of pleasure, ambitious of
          military glory, promised amusement and dissipation at home, enterprise and
          promotion abroad. The Italian claims of Louis XII, derived from his
          grandmother, Valentina Visconti, descended in due order upon her
          great-grandson, Francis I, who, after the death of his father-in-law, assumed
          the title of Duke of Milan, and determined to carry out Louis’s projected
          enterprise upon that duchy. The army was put on a new footing; every lance garnie was increased from six to eight men, and a
          large number of lance-knights were engaged under command of Charles of Egmont,
          Duke of Gelderland, and the La Marcks. The engagement of Pedro Navarro,
          the celebrated Spanish captain and engineer, was an acquisition almost equal to
          an army.
   After the battle of Ravenna, the Viceroy Cardona had ruined Navarro's
          reputation with Ferdinand by imputing to him the loss of a field from which he
          had himself disgracefully fled; Ferdinand refused to pay Navarro's ransom, who
          had remained prisoner in France, and who, by birth a Basque, was easily induced
          to throw up his allegiance to the King of Aragon, his country’s conqueror. In
          the Cevennes and the Pyrenees he now raised a large body of men, whom he
          organized after the model of the redoubtable Spanish infantry.
   With a view to his Italian expedition, and the safety of his own dominions
          during his absence, Francis concluded treaties with various Powers. The
          Archduke Charles of Austria, now fifteen years of age, had just assumed the
          government of the Netherlands in place of his aunt Margaret. Charles, aware of
          the hostile feelings which his maternal grandfather Ferdinand entertained
          towards him, readily entered into an offensive and defensive alliance with
          Francis (March, 1515), which was to be strengthened by a projected marriage
          between him and Renée, sister of the French King's consort. Charles engaged not
          to lend his grandfather Ferdinand any aid against France unless he terminated
          within six months his differences with the French Court respecting Navarre, by
          restoring John D'Albret to the throne of
          that country. Francis also renewed, April 5th, the treaty of Louis XII with
          Henry VIII, stipulating, however, that Milan and Genoa should not be reckoned
          among the allies of England; and he was careful to assume in the instrument the
          titles of Duke of Milan and Lord of Genoa. He also endeavored to effect with
          the Spanish King a renewal of the treaty of Orthez;
          but Ferdinand refused his consent unless Italy were now included in it, and
          Francis of course rejected a condition which would have defeated his darling
          project. Ferdinand now dispatched ambassadors into Switzerland, who, in
          conjunction with those of the Emperor and the Duke of Milan, and aided by the
          Cardinal of Sion and the anti-Gallican party among the Swiss, effected a
          renewal of the coalition between the Confederate Cantons and those Powers. In
          vain Francis endeavored to propitiate the Swiss, who insisted on the
          fulfillment of the whole treaty of Dijon; and in order to divert the French
          attack on Milan they even promised to invade Burgundy and Dauphine, whilst
          Ferdinand entered Guienne. The Venetians
          remained faithful to the French alliance; but the negotiations with the Pope
          did not lead to any satisfactory result, although Leo was now connected with
          the royal family of France. In February, 1515, a marriage between Julian de'
          Medici and Filiberta of Savoy, half-sister of Francis’s mother, had
          been celebrated at Rome with great pomp and splendid fetes, which were repeated
          at Turin. Yet all that could be obtained from Leo was a promise of neutrality;
          in spite of which he joined in July the Swiss coalition, which guaranteed Milan
          to Maximilian Sforza.
   The French King was more fortunate in his negotiations with Octavian Fregoso,
          Doge of Genoa, who engaged to abdicate as soon as the French army should have
          passed the Alps; stipulating, however, for the Genoese the restoration of their
          privileges, and for himself the Dogeship of Genoa, the Order of St. Michael, a
          company of gens d'armes, and a large
          pension.
   The French army had assembled at Lyon by the middle of July, whence Francis
          issued an ordinance constituting his mother Regent of the Kingdom during his
          absence. The French cavalry consisted of 2,500 lances, and 1,500 Albanian light
          horse, besides the King's household and numerous volunteers; the infantry
          amounted to 40,000 men, of which more than half were lance-knights; the
          artillery numbered seventy-two large guns and 300 smaller ones, and there was a
          body of 2,500 pioneers. The Swiss had occupied the passes of Mont Cenis and
          Mont Genèvre, then deemed the only practicable
          routes across the Alps; a body of 10,000 more was at Susa, and the rest of
          their army was cantoned at Coni, Saluzzo,
          and Pinerolo. At Saluzzo they
          had been joined by Prosper Colonna with a chosen body of Papal cavalry. The
          main body of the Roman and Florentine army, under Julian de' Medici, were by
          order of the Pope advancing very slowly by Modena and Parma, watching the turn
          of events.
   The immense amphitheater of gigantic mountains which separates Italy from
          the rest of Europe, although so long fondly regarded by the Italians as marking
          the boundary between barbarism and civilization, has never proved an effectual
          barrier against the lust of conquest. The passage of the Alps by immense hosts
          has, from the earliest periods down to modern times, presented some of the most
          remarkable episodes in the history of war; and of all that are recorded,
          perhaps none is more extraordinary than that now effected by the captains of
          Francis. As it was impossible to force a passage over Mont Cenis and Genèvre, and as the Cornice Road between the Maritime Alps
          and the sea, besides a great loss of time, would have ultimately presented the
          same difficulties, Trivulzio, Lautrec, and
          Navarro, guided by chamois hunters and the shepherds of the Alps, explored a
          new route from Embrun by the valley of Barcelonette to Argentière and the sources of the Stura. A path hardly to be traversed by a pedestrian was,
          by the daring ingenuity of Navarro, made practicable for artillery. Enormous
          masses of rock were blown up with gunpowder; bridges were thrown across
          unfathomable abysses; heavy guns were hoisted immense heights, and swung with
          ropes from peak to peak. On the fifth day, the army with its artillery stood on
          the plains of Saluzzo, before the enemy were
          aware that it had begun to scale the mountains.
   The French had with them only a few days' provisions, so that if the Swiss
          had known their route, and blockaded the passage, which was easy enough to do,
          the whole French army must have been inevitably starved. Meanwhile a small
          division, composed chiefly of cavalry, under the renowned captains La Palisse,
          Bayard, Humbercourt, and D'Aubigny, had
          penetrated more to the north by Briançon, Sestrières, and Rocca Sparviera,
          in the direction of Villafranca, over paths never before trodden by horses. So
          unexpected was their appearance that Prosper Colonna, who was dining in full
          security at Villafranca, was captured, together with 700 of his men, without
          striking a blow. The Swiss retired in consternation on Novara and Milan; the
          main French army advanced by Turin and Vercelli, while a corps of 8,000
          detached to the south, recovered without bloodshed Genoa and all the country
          south of the Po.
   The Swiss now found the whole burden of the war thrown upon them; for the
          Spanish Viceroy Cardona was kept in check near Verona by Alviano and the Venetians, while the Papal and
          Florentine army did not stir. The Swiss having retired to Gallerate, began to listen to the counsels of three of
          their leaders, who were in the interest of France; and in spite of all the
          attempts of the Cardinal of Sion to prevent it, they entered into a treaty with
          Francis. The French King engaged to pay the 400,000 crowns stipulated by the
          treaty of Dijon, and 300,000 more for the places which the Swiss had seized in
          Italy; to bestow on Maximilian Sforza the Duchy of Nemours in place of that of
          Milan, together with a pension, a company of gens d'armes,
          and the hand of a French princess; while the Swiss were to take service under
          the French Crown, on the terms which had been rejected by Louis XII. The
          Cantons of Solothurn, Freiburg and Bern, and the Republic of Upper Wallis,
          assented to this arrangement, but the rest determined to fight for Sforza.
   
           BATTLE OF MARIGNANO.
           Francis borrowed from his nobles and captains all the ready money and plate
          they could spare, in order to seal the treaty by paying a first installment.
          Meanwhile, however, another Swiss army of more than 20,000 men, under Rosch,
          Burgomaster of Zurich, arrived from Bellinzona,
          and gave a decided superiority to the Swiss arms. The new comers were indignant
          at a treaty which deprived them of their hopes of plunder, and they easily
          persuaded the greater part of their countrymen to enter into their views. In
          all haste they marched upon Buffalora to
          seize the French money which had been forwarded to Lautrec at that place, and
          he had the greatest difficulty in saving it from their grasp. After this
          disappointment, the Swiss occupied Milan.
   Francis with his army was at the village of Marignano, or Malegnano, only about ten miles off; Alviano and the Venetians had advanced by forced
          marches to Lodi, and thus held Cardona and Lorenzo de' Medici in check, who had
          effected a junction at Piacenza. Everything promised a campaign on a grand
          scale; but the impetuous ardor of the Swiss, who had now been rejoined by the
          Cardinal of Sion, brought matters to a speedy issue. On the 13th of September,
          after a violent and almost frantic address from the Cardinal, the redoubtable
          horns of Uri and Unterwalden resounded through the
          streets of Milan; and though the day was far spent, the Swiss marched out by
          the Porta Romana to give battle.
   As their columns advanced along the high road, flanked on each side by a
          ditch, the French artillery made large gaps in their ranks, which were
          instantly filled up. When the alarm was given, Francis was about to sit down to
          table, and he immediately rushed out to place himself at the head of his guard.
          The Swiss penetrated to the French artillery and captured several batteries.
          The battle raged till near midnight, when the moon having gone down and left
          all in darkness, the French and Swiss battalions bivouacked intermingled.
   Francis slept on a gun-carriage. At day-break, he rallied his scattered
          divisions by trumpet signals, when about 20,000 lance-knights and all his
          gendarmerie gathered round him. The Swiss renewed the attack with vigor, and
          the fortune of the day still hung trembling in the balance, when about nine
          o'clock Alviano appeared on the field with
          a small body of Venetians. At the cry of “St. Mark!” the Swiss, fancying that
          the whole Venetian army was upon them, began to retire, but in such admirable
          order that the French were fain to leave them unmolested.
   The slaughter had been great on both sides. The veteran Trivulzio, who had been present at eighteen general
          engagements, observed that what he had hitherto seen had been mere child’s
          play, but that this was a battle of giants. The Chevalier Bayard had displayed
          his accustomed valor. After the victory, Francis insisted on receiving the
          order of knighthood from his hand, than which no worthier could have bestowed
          it. The battle of Marignano subsequently formed the main stock of
          Francis I’s military renown; yet, with the exception of personal valor, we
          should look in vain for the foundation of it. So far from directing any of the
          movements, it is plain, from his boastful letter to his mother, that he had no
          conception of what was going on around him. He had not advanced beyond the
          tactics of Agincourt; he thought that the knights had done it all, not the
          infantry and artillery.
   The Cardinal of Sion in vain attempted to persuade the Swiss to defend
          Milan; the day after the battle they began their homeward march, leaving only
          1,500 of their number to hold the citadel for Sforza. The Cardinal fled into
          Austria. The citadel was taken October 4th, through the effects of a mine
          directed by Navarro. Sforza now abdicated the duchy in favor of Francis I, and
          retired into France, where a pension of 30,000 crowns was assigned to him; and
          he is said to have rejoiced at being delivered from the insolence of the Swiss,
          the exactions of the Emperor, and the impositions of the Spaniards. He died
          forgotten at Paris in 1530.
   Francis seemed now in a position to prosecute with success his other claims
          in Italy; but he had as little idea of making use of his victory as he had of
          the manner in which it had been gained. The Italian republicans were the
          natural allies of France, and with the aid of Venice and Florence, Naples might
          easily have been conquered. But Francis’s chivalrous notions led him to despise
          the Florentines and Venetians as a mob of roturiers enriched by commerce;
          Louise had a poor ambition of allying herself with the Medici, the oppressors
          of Florentine liberty; and Duprat, who, it is said, entertained the notion
          of receiving the tonsure and obtaining a Cardinal’s hat, was also disposed to
          court Leo X. Francis blindly followed the guidance of his mother and her
          counselor; and thus the policy of Louis XII and D'Amboise was revived, and
          Italy was sacrificed to the Medici, as it had been before to the Borgias.
   The victory of Marignano had struck Leo with consternation the
          safety of the Papal army was compromised, and he immediately sought to rescue
          it by opening negotiations. By flattery, dissimulation, and the arts of
          intrigue, backed by the favor of the queen-mother, Leo contrived to impose upon
          Francis, in the midst of his glory, conditions which might have appeared hard
          even after a defeat. In October, only a month after the battle of Marignano,
          a defensive alliance was concluded at Viterbo between the Pope and
          the French King. Francis guaranteed all the dominions which Leo now held or
          might hereafter recover, made over to him Bologna, and engaged to support
          Julian and Lorenzo de' Medici at Florence, and to grant them titles and pensions
          in France. Leo, in return, merely undertook to support Francis in the Duchy of
          Milan, which he already held by conquest, to recall the Papal troops serving
          against Venice, to restore Parma and Piacenza to Milan, and Modena and Reggio
          to the Duke of Ferrara. Cardona, who would have had to sustain the first attack
          of the victorious French, obtained leave to be included in the treaty, and to
          retire to Naples with his army through the States of the Church.
   The alliance was ratified in December, at a personal interview between Leo
          and Francis at Bologna. The negotiations were preceded by fetes and rejoicings
          and by splendid Church ceremonials, in which Francis demeaned himself as the
          humble son and servant of the Pontiff, kissing his foot and hand, and
          supporting his train; while Leo forbore to show Francis the least token of
          respect, lest the Vicar of Christ should seem to pay homage to a temporal
          Sovereign. But if Leo thus insisted in public on his spiritual privileges, he
          won the King in their more familiar intercourse by his urbanity and seductive
          manners. He persuaded Francis to connive at his seizing the Duchy of Urbino for
          his nephew Lorenzo, to whom it was made over after the death of his brother
          Julian de' Medici, in March, 1516. Julian, out of gratitude for former services
          during his exile, had protected the reigning Duke.
   Leo’s arbitrary proceedings about this time engendered a conspiracy in the
          College of Cardinals itself. Cardinal Alfonso Petrucci, in revenge for the
          expulsion of his brother Borghese from Siena, incited three or four of his
          brother Cardinals to join him in a plot to assassinate the Pope. The conspiracy
          was fortunately discovered, and Leo at first seemed inclined to pardon the
          guilty parties; but suddenly changing his mind, to the consternation of the
          Sacred College, deprived Cardinals Petrucci, Bandinello de' Sauli,
          and Raphael Riario, of their dignities and
          preferments, and handed them over to the secular arm. Petrucci was beheaded in
          prison the following night; the rest purchased their lives and the restoration
          of their dignities with a large sum of money. Leo incurred such odium by these
          proceedings, that he found it necessary to surround himself with guards even
          during the celebration of Mass; and in order to neutralize the adverse party in
          Consistory, he created in a single day no fewer than thirty-one Cardinals. By
          this measure he also replenished the Roman treasury, as many of the hats were
          sold.
   Besides the affair of the Duchy of Urbino, Leo while at Bologna also
          persuaded Francis to postpone his expedition to Naples till the death of
          Ferdinand of Aragon; an event which, from the state of that Sovereign’s health,
          could not be far distant. Nor did he forget the interests of the Papacy. Duprat was
          induced to enter into a Concordat, by which some of the most important articles
          of the Pragmatic Sanction of 1438 were revoked and the rights of the Gallican
          Church bartered away. The royal demand for periodical Councils was abandoned,
          and annates, or first fruits of ecclesiastical benefices, were restored to the
          Pope, who, on the other hand, invested the French King with the right, before
          belonging to Chapters and Convents, of nominating to archbishoprics,
          bishoprics, and abbeys; as well as, with few exceptions, the power of deciding,
          without appeal to Rome, all ecclesiastical suits. Thus, as Mezerai observes, a whimsical change was made between
          the Papal and Royal functions; the Pope abandoning his spiritual privileges to
          a temporal Prince in return for certain worldly advantages. The negotiations
          were long protracted, and the Concordat, which was highly unpopular in France,
          was not signed till August 18th, 1516. It continued in force till destroyed by
          the civil constitution of the clergy in 1790. The abolition of the Pragmatic
          Sanction was proclaimed in the Council of Lateran; which servile synod, consisting
          almost entirely of Italian prelates, who did little more than register the
          Pope's decisions, was soon afterwards dissolved (March 16th, 1517).
   Francis showed a better policy in conciliating the Swiss than in his
          negotiations with the Pope. He offered them the same terms as he had proposed
          before his victory; engaged to ratify the treaty of Dijon, and promised
          pensions to the heads of the Cantons, while all he asked in return was
          permission to levy troops in Switzerland. A treaty of peace and alliance was
          signed at Geneva with eight of the Cantons, November 7th, 1515, which in the
          following year was acceded to by the rest. The alliance, however, was not to
          extend to any attack on the Pope, the Emperor, the Austrian dominions, Savoy, Würtemberg, the House of Medici, Florence, or M. de Vergier, Marshal of Burgundy. The Swiss retained Bellinzona and the county of Arona.
   Having thus placed his affairs in Italy on what he deemed a favorable
          footing, Francis, after disbanding the greater part of his army, and appointing
          the Duke of Bourbon Governor of the Milanese, returned to France early in
          February, 1516. His success had filled the Catholic King, who trembled for the
          safety of his Neapolitan dominions, with rage, jealousy, and alarm; and under
          the influence of these feelings he had immediately endeavored to form a league
          with his son-in-law, Henry VIII, and with the Emperor Maximilian against
          Francis. Maximilian was enticed with a large sum of money, with which he was to
          prepare an expedition against the Milanese; and Henry, though he had had such
          signal proofs of Ferdinand’s duplicity, was persuaded by Wolsey to join the
          alliance. Henry, who was probably jealous of the brilliant success of the
          French King, had some grounds of complaint against Francis for supporting the
          Duke of Albany as Regent of Scotland, in opposition to Henry's sister Margaret,
          the Queen Dowager; and Wolsey, with an eye to his own interest, fomented the
          passions which rankled in his Sovereign's breast. Wolsey owed mainly to the
          French monarch the Cardinal’s hat which had been recently bestowed upon him
          (September 10th, 1515), with the title of St. Cecilia beyond Tiber; but the
          grateful return expected for it, in the surrender of the bishopric of Tournay,
          might be evaded by a breach with France; and there was also another prospect of
          advantage which determined Wolsey in the same policy. Leo X had taken secret
          part in the negotiations just mentioned, with the view of instating Francesco
          Maria Sforza, younger brother of the abdicated Duke Maximilian, in the Duchy of
          Milan, instead of the French King; on the accomplishment of which, Francesco
          Maria had engaged to bestow on Wolsey a pension of 10,000 ducats. The Cardinal
          seems to have had no difficult game with his master; for so great was Henry’s
          credulity that the Emperor is said to have extracted considerable sums from him
          on presence of investing him with the Duchy of Milan, and even resigning to him
          the Imperial Crown.
   But in the midst of Ferdinand’s schemes, an event occurred which had been
          foreseen by everybody but himself. On the 23rd of January, 1516, he died in a
          small house belonging to the Hieronymite monks, of Guadalupe, at the village
          of Madrigalejo, near Trujillo, through which he
          was passing on his way to Seville. His leading characteristics were avarice,
          perfidy, and ingratitude. His cold and cautious temper enabled him to become an
          adept in dissimulation; and it is said that, by whatever feelings he was
          agitated, his countenance never betrayed the emotions of his mind. His
          treacheries were generally perpetrated under the hypocritical pretense of
          religion: and amongst them the worst is perhaps that by which he deceived his
          kinsman, Frederick of Naples. Ferdinand was, however, in some respects a great
          Prince, and must at least be admitted to have been the most successful one of
          his age. To his policy, aided by some fortunate events, must be ascribed the
          origin of the overshadowing greatness of the Spanish monarchy; though the
          measures which he took to establish them broke at the same time all spirit of
          enterprise in the people and prepared their eventual decline. Ferdinand's
          enterprises had been on so extensive a scale, in comparison with his scanty revenues,
          that in spite of all his economy, or rather niggardliness, he scarce left
          enough to defray his funeral expenses. By his marriage with Germaine of Foix,
          he had had a son, who, however, lived only a few hours. Gonsalvo de Cordova, the Great Captain, had expired a
          little before his master, at the age of sixty-two (December 2nd, 1515) .
   The death of Ferdinand led Francis to resume his design of conquering
          Naples; in which, as Leo X had advised him to postpone the enterprise till
          after that event, he fully expected the assistance of the Pontiff. But, while
          he was meditating this expedition, an unexpected descent of the Emperor
          Maximilian caused him to tremble for the safety of the Milanese. While the
          French were overrunning Upper Italy, Maximilian had been intent in Germany upon
          one of those matrimonial speculations by which the fortunes of the House of
          Austria were proverbially so much better advanced than by its arms. It will be
          recollected that by the treaty of Presburg in
          1491, Maximilian obtained the eventual succession to the throne of Hungary. In
          September, 1502, King Wladislaus married Anne of Foix, great-niece of
          Louis XI; by whom, in the following year, he had a daughter, Anne, and in 1506
          a son, who received the name of Louis, in honor of Louis XII, the near kinsman
          of the Queen. The birth of this child made Maximilian anxious about the results
          of his compact with the Hungarian King, although he procured it to be ratified
          afresh by the Diet; and he began to entertain the project of securing the
          succession for his house by a double marriage between two of his grandchildren
          and Louis and Anne, the son and daughter of Wladislaus. The scheme was
          opposed by Sigismund I, King of Poland, younger brother of Wladislaus; and
          in order to overcome his opposition, Maximilian allied himself with the
          Teutonic Knights, with Basil Ivanovitch, Great
          Duke of Muscovy, and with Christian II, King of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, to
          whom he gave in marriage his granddaughter Isabella.
   Sigismund, alarmed at this formidable combination, withdrew his opposition;
          in 1514 the long-protracted negotiations were brought to a happy ending; and in
          July of the following year Wladislaus and Sigismund repaired to
          Vienna, when the youthful Louis was betrothed to Maximilian’s granddaughter
          Mary. At the same time a marriage was agreed upon between Anne, the daughter
          of Wladislaus, and one of Maximilian's grandsons, which eventually took
          place in 1521 by the union of Ferdinand and Anne.
   Having completed these arrangements, Maximilian at length turned his
          attention to the affairs of Italy; and before the end of 1515 he raised, with
          the money received from Ferdinand of Aragon and Henry VIII, a large army of
          Swiss, German, and Spanish troops, with which he entered Italy in March, 1516.
          At this unexpected apparition, Lautrec, abandoning successively the lines of
          the Mincio, the Oglio,
          and the Adda, sought safety behind the walls of Milan; where the alarm was so
          great that the Duke of Bourbon, despairing of the defence of
          the suburbs, ordered them to be burnt; an act long remembered with indignation
          by the inhabitants. Leo X now again began to trim. He neglected to succor the
          French, as stipulated by the treaty of Bologna; nay, he even dispatched
          Cardinal da Bibbiena as Legate to the
          Emperor, and instructed his general, Marcantonio Colonna, to join the Imperial
          army. The success of Maximilian seemed certain.
   As he approached Milan, 13,000 Swiss in Bourbon’s army refused to imbrue
          their hands in the blood of their countrymen; the Constable was forced to
          dismiss them, and Maximilian was so elated that he assumed all the airs of a
          conqueror, and threatened to destroy Milan. But his good fortune vanished as
          suddenly as it began. His exchequer was exhausted, the pay of his Swiss in
          arrear, and one morning their colonel, Stafner,
          entered the Emperor’s chamber while he was in bed, and insolently demanded the
          money. In vain Maximilian resorted to threats, promises, entreaties; Stafner told him bluntly that, if the money was not
          forthcoming, he and his men would pass over to Bourbon’s service. The Emperor
          was thunderstruck. His danger at once stared him in the face, and rising in a
          hurry, he hastened to the quarters of his German troops; but not deeming
          himself secure there, he started for Trent, pretending that he was to receive
          there 80,000 crowns, and hoping by this pretext to conceal what was in reality
          a flight. The Germans, after waiting in vain for his return, made a precipitate
          retreat; while the Swiss disbanded, and made up for the loss of their pay by
          sacking Lodi and other towns. Such was the ridiculous end of this apparently
          formidable enterprise. Maximilian became the laughing-stock of Europe, and
          never again appeared at the head of an army. No sooner did the tide turn than
          the Pope began again to veer, and affected a zeal to fulfill the treaty of
          Bologna; while Francis, then intent upon the Concordat, winked at his conduct,
          and did not suffer it to interrupt the negotiations.
   
           ACCESSION OF CHARLES IN SPAIN.
           The demise of the Catholic King brought a new actor on the political scene,
          and altered for a while the policy of Europe. Ferdinand’s grandson and
          successor, the Archduke Charles, son of Philip the Fair and Joanna of Spain,
          had just completed his sixteenth year, having been born at Ghent, February,
          24th 1500. Maximilian, his paternal grandfather, had entrusted Charles’s early
          education to Adrian Boyens, Dean of St. Peter’s in Louvain, who, though
          the son of a tapestry weaver of Utrecht, had risen to his higher station by his
          learning and abilities. Charles, however, seems to have profited little by
          Adrian's teaching. Although docile and submissive, he displayed in his youth
          but little quickness of apprehension, and is said never to have acquired a
          mastery of the Latin tongue. His qualities were such as ripen slowly. Even his
          bodily development was tardy; and it was observed that he did not begin to get
          a beard and put on the appearance of a man till his twenty-first year.
   In M. de Chièvres, of the Croy family,
          a practical man of the world, Charles found a more congenial tutor than in the
          learned and pious Adrian. Chièvres, who set but
          small value on book learning, encouraged his pupil’s love for the chase; but at
          the same time instructed him in history and the art of government, and
          endeavored to fit him for an active part in life. Charles showed more facility
          in acquiring the modern than the ancient languages; and besides Flemish, his
          native tongue, is said to have understood German, French, Italian, and Spanish.
          It may be suspected, however, that his acquaintance with most of these was but
          superficial. He commonly wrote in French, but of a very barbarous kind.
   In his aunt Margaret, Governess of the Netherlands, Charles found another
          admirable instructress in the art of governing. His education was completed by
          his early succession to power, and the practical application of the lessons he
          received. Chièvres made him read all the
          state papers and correspondence, and report upon them to the Council; and he
          thus glided, by imperceptible degrees, from the precepts of political conduct
          to the actual cares of government.
   Ferdinand had regarded his grandson Charles with aversion, as a rival who
          would one day deprive him of Castile; and he had even made a will by which he
          bequeathed the government of Castile and Aragon, during Charles’s absence, to
          Ferdinand, the younger brother of that Prince; an arrangement by which
          Ferdinand, who had been educated in Spain, and was present on the spot, might
          have been enabled to seize the Crown, had he been so inclined. Ximenes,
          however, persuaded the Aragonese monarch to
          revoke this will, and to make another only a few hours before his death, by
          which Aragon and the Two Sicilies were
          settled on his daughter Joanna and her heirs; while the administration of
          Castile was entrusted to Ximenes during Charles's absence, and that of Aragon
          to Alfonso, Archbishop of Saragossa, King Ferdinand's natural son.
   Charles, on his side, was not unaware of his grandfather's enmity towards
          him. Hence he regarded Ferdinand as a foe who would exclude him from his lawful
          inheritance; and a few months before that Sovereign’s death, he had dispatched
          his former tutor, Adrian Boyens, into Spain, ostensibly as an ambassador,
          but with powers to assume the office of Regent immediately on Ferdinand’s
          demise. A misunderstanding consequently arose between Ximenes and Adrian,
          which, however, was arranged by the former allowing Adrian to share the regency
          with him, though the real authority was engrossed by Ximenes. That Cardinal,
          indeed, though now near eighty years of age, was the only person capable of
          exercising it with vigor and effect; and the conjuncture required all his
          energy and ability.
   The Castilian grandees heard with indignation that Charles had assumed the
          title of King as soon as the news of Ferdinand’s death arrived in Brussels; for
          although his mother Joanna was still confined in the Castle of Tordesillas, her
          mental incapacity, however obvious, had never been declared by any public act.
          But Ximenes, in spite of the murmurs and cabals of the nobles, caused Charles
          to be proclaimed at Madrid, which, under his administration, had become the
          seat of government, and the other towns, whose privileges Ximenes had favored
          by way of counterpoise to the power of the grandees, followed the example. In
          Aragon, where Archbishop Alfonso ruled with a weaker hand, Charles was indeed
          acknowledged as the lawful heir, but did not obtain the regal title till after
          his arrival in Spain. Ximenes also displayed his vigorous policy in the
          measures he adopted for retaining Navarre in obedience.
   The death of Ferdinand encouraged John d'Albret to
          attempt the recovery of his Kingdom; but he was defeated by the Spanish general
          Villalva, and compelled to a precipitate retreat (March 25th, 1516). As the
          Navarrese had shown their affection for the House of Albret, Ximenes, with
          great harshness and cruelty, caused their castles, towns, and villages, to the
          number of near 2,000, to be dismantled and burnt; Pamplona alone, and a few
          places on the Ebro, were preserved as fortresses, and the rest of the country
          was reduced almost to a desert. John d'Albret died
          in the following June.
   Yet the power of Charles, however extensive, seemed to rest on insecure
          foundations. Discontent still lurked among the Castilian nobles, the Spanish
          possessions in Africa had been endangered by a victory of the celebrated
          pirate Haroudji Barbarossa; Navarre and the
          Netherlands were both exposed to the attacks of the French, and the hostility
          of that nation would render Charles’s contemplated journey to Spain both
          difficult and hazardous. All these were motives for courting the alliance of
          Francis I; nor did this Sovereign repulse the overtures made to him. Francis
          found that he could not rely on Leo, nor consequently on Tuscany, in his
          projected expedition to Naples; and as he had not yet succeeded in effecting a
          treaty with the whole of the Swiss Cantons, his Milanese possessions were still
          exposed to danger from that quarter. Such being the situation of the two Kings,
          a treaty was effected between them at Noyon, August 13th, 1516, which,
          according to the practice of those times, was strengthened by a marriage
          contract.
   Although by a preceding treaty Charles was already engaged to Renée, second
          daughter of Louis XII, he now contracted to espouse Louise, the infant daughter
          of Francis, when she should attain the age of twelve years, receiving as her
          dowry the French claims upon Naples; in consideration of which Charles was to
          pay 100,000 gold crowns annually till the marriage took place, and half that
          sum so long as there was no issue by it. Francis reserved the right of aiding
          the Venetians against the Emperor; and, what was of more importance to Charles,
          of succoring the Queen of Navarre and her children, if Charles failed to do her
          justice within eight months.
   At this period the two youthful Kings appeared to be on the best possible
          terms; they vied with each other in marks of friendship and esteem; they
          exchanged the collars of their Orders: Charles, who was five years and a half
          younger than the French King, addressed him as “my good father”, and Francis
          returned the endearing appellation of “my good son”.
   By the treaty of Noyon the Netherlands were also protected against the
          terrible incursions of Charles, Duke of Gelderland, and the piracies of his
          worthy associate, De Groote Pier, or Big Peter, which inflicted great damage on
          the Netherland maritime commerce. Henry of Nassau, Stadholder of Holland, had
          long maintained an arduous struggle against these enemies; but after the treaty
          of Noyon Francis mediated a truce of six months, and the Duke of Gelderland
          restored a portion of Friesland that he had overrun, on receiving a payment of
          100,000 gold crowns.
   Henry of Nassau had won the favor of Francis during the negotiations at
          Noyon, and he was now allowed to espouse Claude, sister of Philibert of Chalon,
          Prince of Orange, and heiress of that sovereign House; who, as possessing large
          territories in Burgundy, could not marry without the consent of Francis, her
          feudal lord.
   The treaty of Noyon was soon followed by the peace of Brussels, between the
          Emperor on one side, and the French King and the Venetians on the other
          (December 4th, 1516). Maximilian had now begun to perceive the hopeless nature
          of his contest with the Republic of Venice; the offer of 200,000 ducats was an
          irresistible attraction to his poverty, and he resigned all his conquests with
          the exception of a few places in Friuli, and on the borders of Tyrol. An end
          was thus put to the wars which had arisen out of the League of Cambray,
          and for a few years Europe enjoyed an unwonted tranquility.
   Venice had recovered almost all the places which had been ravished from
          her, and to all appearance came out of the contest without material damage. But
          her decline had already begun. The places restored to her, exhausted of their
          wealth and population, required large sums to be laid out upon them; to meet
          the expenses of the war, the public revenues had been mortgaged for a long
          period; the dignities of the State had been sold to the highest bidders, and a
          crowd of public servants had thus intruded themselves who had no other
          recommendation than their money. At the same time the commerce of the Republic
          was rapidly falling off through the maritime discoveries of the Portuguese,
          while another blow had been struck at it by the short-sighted and grasping policy
          of the Spanish ministers. A Venetian fleet had coasted every year the shores of
          the Mediterranean, and after touching at Syracuse and other Sicilian ports,
          proceeded to Tripoli, Tunis, Oran, and other places in Africa, where the
          manufactures of Europe were exchanged for the gold dust of the Moors; with
          which the Venetians proceeded to the ports of Spain, and purchased cargoes of
          silk, wool, and corn. The ministers of Charles raised the duty on these
          exports, as well as on all articles brought by the Venetians, to twenty per
          cent, or double the former rate, expecting by this method to increase their
          revenue in proportion; but its only effect was to annihilate the trade, and to
          deal a severe blow to the commerce and agriculture of Spain.
   More than eighteen months elapsed after the death of Ferdinand before
          Charles determined on taking possession of his Spanish dominions. At the
          instance of Adrian he had, indeed, dispatched a second and a third minister
          into that country, to share the government of Ximenes, who, however, continued
          to assert his superiority, and frustrated all their attempts to overthrow him.
          Yet, even under his vigilant administration, abuses crept in. The most
          considerable offices in Church and State were sold by the Netherland
          counselors, and large remittances of Spanish gold found their way to the Low
          Countries. The Netherlanders regarded Spain as their Indies, and plundered it,
          much as the Spaniards themselves plundered the New World.
   Charles’s delay in proceeding to Spain was occasioned by the selfish policy
          of Chièvres and his other ministers, who
          were unwilling to see the seat of government transferred to a foreign country;
          and the youthful monarch naturally listened with deference to the advice of his
          former tutor. Cardinal Ximenes, on the other hand, was urgent in his entreaties
          that Charles should appear among his Spanish subjects; and at last, on the 17th
          of September, 1517, he landed at Villaviciosa,
          in the Asturias, accompanied by a large train of Netherland nobles.
   
           DEATH OF XIMENES.
           Charles, with his sister Eleanor, hastened to pay a visit to their
          unfortunate mother at Tordesillas, when Joanna’s joy at the unexpected sight of
          her children is said for a moment to have overcome her dreadful malady. A
          different treatment was reserved for the great Cardinal and minister. Ximenes
          hastened to meet his master, but the exertion proved too much for his strength;
          he was seized with fever, which compelled him to stop at the Franciscan
          monastery of Aguilera, near the town of Aranda. His characteristic boldness did
          not forsake him with his health. In common with the whole Spanish nation, he
          viewed with regret the influence acquired over the young King by his Netherland
          courtiers; and he addressed a letter to that monarch from his sick bed, in which
          he entreated Charles to dismiss them, and to grant him an interview at Aranda.
          But the Spanish grandees united with the Netherlanders to thwart the vigorous
          minister, whom they all alike detested. By their advice Ximenes was treated
          with studied neglect, and Charles was persuaded to send him a letter, which,
          though couched in cold and formal expressions of regard, was in fact a virtual
          dismissal. The aged prelate was thanked for all his past services, and a
          personal interview appointed for receiving the benefit of his counsels; after
          which he would be allowed to retire to his benefice, and seek from heaven that
          reward which heaven alone could adequately bestow.
   It may be too much to say with some historians that this letter was the
          immediate cause of the Cardinal’s death, yet it probably had an injurious
          effect on a constitution already enfeebled by age and sickness. He expired soon
          afterwards (November 8th, 1517), in the eighty-first year of his age. The
          despotic government of Ximenes, supported by military force and by the terrors
          of the Inquisition, had been completely successful in upholding the royal
          prerogative; he avoided assembling the Cortes, and his regency must be regarded
          as having initiated that repressive and hard-hearted despotism which
          characterized the rule of the Austrian House in Spain. During the eleven years
          that he had presided over the tribunal of the inquisition, Ximenes is said to
          have condemned to the stake 2,536 persons, and 51,167 to smaller punishments.
   Charles, the first of that name in Spain, soon afterwards made his public
          entry into Valladolid. The Cortes of Castile discovered great unwillingness to
          acknowledge him as King; they refused to grant him that title except in
          conjunction with his mother Joanna, and on condition that her name should take
          precedence of his in all public acts; and they stipulated that if at any time
          she should recover her reason, her claim to the throne should entirely
          supersede that of her son. On the other hand, they displayed great liberality
          in voting Charles the hitherto unheard of sum of 600,000 ducats. The Aragonese proved still more intractable than the
          Castilians. After long delays, and with much difficulty, they at length,
          indeed, acknowledged the title of Charles on the same conditions as the
          Castilians, but they voted him only a third as much money. They had profited by
          the example of the Castilians, and by seeing their liberality abused by the
          rapacity of the Netherland courtiers. Such was the avarice of those foreigners
          that they are said to have remitted to the Low Countries, in the short space of
          ten months, the enormous sum of more than a million ducats, acquired by their
          venality and extortion.
   The Spaniards were still more disgusted by seeing all the highest posts of
          honor assigned to Netherlander. William de Croy, a nephew of Chièvres, already Bishop of Cambray, was appointed,
          though not of canonical age, to the Archbishopric of Toledo, the primacy of
          Castile, vacant by the death of Ximenes; while the chancellorship, which had
          been filled by the same eminent man, was given to Sauvage, another
          Netherlander, and other appointments of a like nature followed. The pride of
          the Castilians was stung by these acts. The leading cities, though unsupported
          by the nobility, formed a league to defend their rights, and laid before the
          King a remonstrance in which they complained of the favor shown to foreigners,
          the increase of taxes, and the export of the coin. Charles neglected their
          complaints; but through this league was laid the foundation of the Junta, or
          union of the cities of Castile, which well-nigh succeeded in overthrowing the
          monarchy. Thus by an impolitic conduct forced upon him by his ministers, and
          which nothing but his youth and inexperience can excuse, did Charles alienate
          for a time the hearts of his new subjects, and deprive himself of that weight
          which their cordial affection and assistance would have given him in the
          affairs of Europe.
   
           CONQUESTS OF SULTAN SELIM I.
           In the general tranquility enjoyed by Europe at this period, public
          attention was chiefly directed to the movements of the Turks, whose history we
          must here briefly resume. The peace concluded between Venice and Bajazet II
          in 1502, remained undisturbed during that Sultan’s life. The Venetians,
          occupied with the wars which ensued upon the League of Cambray, submitted,
          in one or two instances somewhat ignominiously, to Bajazet’s dictation,
          and as Wladislaus, King of Hungary and Bohemia, had also been careful to
          maintain his truce with the Porte, the Sultan, being thus delivered from all
          anxiety on the side of Europe, directed his arms towards the East, and
          succeeded in subduing Caramania. But the reign
          of Bajazet was disturbed by the revolt of his youngest son Selim, the
          darling of the Janissaries; and in 1512 Selim compelled his father to renounce
          in his favor the throne which Bajazet had destined for his favorite
          son Achmet. The dethroned Sultan determined to retire to Demitoca, his birthplace; but on the third day of his
          journey thither he died of poison, administered to him by a Jewish physician at
          Selim’s instigation. Achmet, who endeavored to assert his claim by arms,
          was defeated, captured, and strangled; and Selim, that he might have no rival
          near the throne, also put to death his younger brother Korkud,
          and caused five of his nephews to be strangled before his eyes at Prusa.
   The years from 1514 to 1516 were employed by Selim I in conquering northern
          Mesopotamia and a considerable part of Persia. He next reduced Syria, and
          turned his arms against Egypt, where the Mamaluke dynasty
          had been established since the middle of the thirteenth century. Tumanbey, Sultan of the Mamalukes,
          was subdued in the spring of 1517, and put to death at Cairo, by Selim’s
          command. The Sultan spent the summer in Egypt in regulating the affairs of his
          new conquest; and after passing the winter in Damascus, he returned, in August,
          1518, after an absence of two years, to Adrianople, when he began to direct his
          attention to the affairs of Europe.
   The rapidity and magnitude of these conquests naturally drew the attention
          and excited the alarm of the European potentates. Venice and Hungary, the
          States more immediately exposed to the fury of Turkish arms, had deemed it
          prudent to conciliate the friendship of the Porte; and both Wladislaus,
          King of Hungary and Bohemia, and the Republic of Venice had, at Selim’s
          accession, renewed the peace which they had entered into with his father. The
          Venetians, ever alive to the interests of their commerce, congratulated Selim
          after his conquest of Egypt, a country so important to their trade with the
          Indies. They endeavored to obtain from its new ruler the confirmation of their
          ancient privileges, and transferred to him the tribute of 8,000 ducats, which
          they had before paid to the Sultan of Egypt, for the possession of Cyprus. On
          these terms the peace was confirmed, September 17th, 1517, and was not
          disturbed during Selim’s lifetime.
   
           AFFAIRS OF HUNGARY.
           Hungary also escaped any serious attack, though subject to constant border
          warfare. King Wladislaus had died March 13th, 1516. Large in person,
          phlegmatic and melancholy in temperament, in mind so simple and candid that he
          would believe no ill of anybody, in temper so compassionate and humane that he
          could with difficulty be persuaded to sign a death-warrant, assiduous in his
          devotions, but incapable of any active exertion, Wladislaus was one
          of those characters that might adorn private life, but are totally unfitted for
          the throne. Under his feeble sway, the nobles acted as they pleased; the
          revenues of the Kingdom, which under King Matthias had amounted to 800,000
          ducats, gradually sunk to a quarter of that sum; and such was the poverty in
          which he left the royal household, that there was not money enough to defray
          the expenses of the kitchen. Thus, during the long minority of Louis II, who
          was only ten years of age at the time of his father’s death, the way was
          prepared for those calamities which we shall presently have to relate.
   The Diet of Tolna observed in their resolutions, 1518, that arms and laws
          are necessary to a State, but that neither arms nor laws were to be found in
          Hungary. Indeed the country at this time seems to have been almost in a state
          of barbarism. In 1514 a dangerous peasant war, similar to those of Germany, had
          broken out, headed by a Szekler named Dosa, which, after the spilling of
          much blood, was put down; and Dosa being captured, a council of war,
          held by Zapolya, decreed that a striking example
          should be made of him and his followers. Forty of the latter were kept a
          fortnight without food, when only nine remained alive; these were let loose
          upon Dosa, who was seated upon a red-hot iron throne, while an iron crown
          and scepter in the same state were thrust upon him, and his flesh was torn with
          red-hot pincers. The famished wretches were now compelled to eat his flesh, or
          were sabred if they refused; while Dosa exclaimed,
          “Eat, ye hounds that I have myself brought up!”
   Nothing can absolve Zapolya from this
          devilish act of cannibalism.
   At a subsequent Diet, the peasantry were reduced to a state of slavery, and
          became adscripti glebae, or serfs attached to the soil, were compelled
          to pay heavy taxes to their masters, and were forbidden the use of arms, under
          penalty of losing the right hand. The consequences of these cruel laws were not
          removed till the reign of Maria Theresa in 1764. John Zapolya,
          Count of Zips, the perpetrator of the horrible deed just related, was son of
          the Palatine Stephen Zapolya, and had been
          appointed Voyvode of Transylvania in 1510,
          at the age of twenty-three.
   The House of Zapolya, which took its name
          from a village near Pozega in Slavonia, had risen to great eminence under King
          Matthias Corvinus. It was chiefly through its influence that Wladislaus had
          been seated on the throne, and hence it not only enjoyed a great share of
          power, but even cherished pretensions to the succession. After the death
          of Wladislaus, John Zapolya attempted
          to obtain the office of Gubernator from the nobles assembled on the field
          of Bakos, the place where in open air the Diets were held; but the attempt
          was frustrated, and he himself was obliged to fly for his life. It was now
          resolved that the young King Louis should conduct the affairs of the Kingdom,
          with the assistance of the whole Hungarian Council; an arrangement attended
          with the most disastrous results, as the oligarchs of all parties who thus
          stepped into power sought only to enrich themselves at the expense of the
          State, and kept the young King as poor and as powerless as they could. Thus
          Hungary, by its misgovernment and dissensions, subsequently became an easy prey
          to the Turks.
   The peasant war in Hungary just recorded had been fomented by an
          injudicious step on the part of Pope Leo X. That Pontiff had, like his
          predecessors, professed a zeal against the Infidels; and though he could
          provide Wladislaus with no funds for a Turkish war, he authorized the
          preaching of a crusade in Hungary. A disorderly mob of 80,000 peasants was thus
          collected; who being without discipline and provisions, at the instigation of
          the lower clergy attacked the estates of the nobles. In spite of his
          ill-success, Leo resumed the subject with Francis I during the conferences at
          Bologna; and the French King appears, from a letter which he addressed to the
          King of Navarre, to have entered zealously into the Pope’s views. Nothing, however,
          was done, and the matter seems to have remained in abeyance till the treaty
          at Cambray, March 11th, 1517, between the Emperor and the Kings of France
          and Spain.
   During these negotiations the conquest and partition of Greece, and the
          recovery of the Holy Land, were discussed by the three contracting Powers;
          which scheme was to be kept secret from the rest of Europe, and especially from
          the Pope. Maximilian, however, revealed the proceedings of the Congress to Leo
          and to Henry VIII. Leo, who was alarmed at the rapid conquests of Selim, or
          pretended to be so in order the better to promote his mercenary designs,
          decreed a war against the Infidels in the last session of the Lateran Council,
          and obtained the grant of a tithe on all ecclesiastical property in Europe, for
          the purpose of defraying the expenses; and he published a bull enjoining all
          Christian Princes to observe a five Years’ truce. But though the Pope put on
          every appearance of earnestness, nothing resulted from these measures but a
          profitable compact between himself and the French King. Leo granted to Francis
          all the proceeds of the tithe in his dominions, and all the contributions of
          His subjects towards the crusade, while Francis in return cancelled the Pope's
          written engagement to restore Modena and Reggio to the Duke of Ferrara.
   Nevertheless, Leo published the crusade after a solemn procession, in which
          he himself walked barefoot, and celebrated a High Mass in the church of St
          Maria sopra Minerva. The scheme met with no better success in other countries.
          Maximilian, indeed, embraced it with his usual ardor for new enterprises, and
          Leo nattered his vanity by appointing him generalissimo of the Christian army,
          by sending him a consecrated hat and sword, and declaring the Eastern Kingdom
          an Imperial fief; whereupon Maximilian, who already in imagination beheld
          himself enthroned at Constantinople, caused a medal to be struck on which he
          was designated as Emperor of the East and West. He could not, however, inspire
          the German States with his own enthusiasm. They answered his appeal with
          remonstrances against Papal exactions, and applauded a treatise of Ulrich von
          Hutten, in which the Pope was denounced as a far more dangerous enemy to
          Christendom than the Turk. When the grant by the Lateran Council of an
          ecclesiastical tithe was published in England, an oath was tendered to the
          Papal collector that he would make no remittances to Rome; and in Spain, the
          clergy availing themselves of the discontent and tumults which prevailed,
          positively refused to obey the Pope’s mandate.
   In this want of zeal among the Christian nations, it was fortunate that
          Selim’s attention was engrossed by his Eastern provinces, and the revolts of
          his unruly Janissaries. His last enterprise was directed against Rhodes; but he
          was not destined to accomplish it. Flying from Constantinople to avoid the
          plague, he was seized with that malady at Tchorlu,
          and died September 21st, 1520. The fame of this great conqueror is sullied by
          acts of the most impious cruelty. He is even said to have contemplated the
          murder of his son and successor Solyman, for
          fear of experiencing at his hands the fate which he had himself inflicted on
          his father.
   In pursuance of his pacific policy at this period, and also with the desire
          of recovering Tournai, Francis courted the alliance of Henry VIII. With this
          view he withdrew the Duke of Albany from Scotland, and dispatched the
          Admiral Bonnivet into England with letters
          to Wolsey, in which the French King seemed to pour out his whole soul, styling
          the Cardinal his lord, his father, and his friend. Each letter was accompanied
          with a present, besides which a large pension was settled on the English
          minister. Wolsey was not insensible to addresses which gratified at once his
          avarice and his vanity. He persuaded his master to restore Tournai, but on
          payment of 600,000 crowns in twelve years; and on these terms a treaty was
          executed at London in October, 1518. It included a marriage contract between
          the Dauphin Francis and Mary, the daughter of the King of England, both
          recently born infants; which, however, was in time voided by the Dauphin's
          death.
   It was at this period, also, that a marriage whose results were destined to
          be so disastrous to France, was contracted between the Pope’s nephew Lorenzo
          de' Medici, now Duke of Urbino, as well as head of the Florentine Republic, and
          Madeleine de la Tour, daughter of John Count of Auvergne and Boulogne, of the
          Royal blood of France through her mother Jeanne of Bourbon. In April, 1518, the
          nuptials were celebrated with great pomp at Paris, and on the return of the
          wedded pair to Florence the fetes were renewed during a whole week. But their
          happiness was destined to be of short duration. Lorenzo died within a year, it
          is said of a malady contracted at Paris by his licentious amours on the very
          eve of his marriage. He was the last legitimate descendant of Cosmo the Great.
          His consort had expired only a few days before in giving birth to a daughter,
          afterwards the celebrated Catherine de' Medici. Cardinal Giulio de' Medici now
          became for a while the ruler of Florence; but the greater part of the Duchy of
          Urbino was incorporated with the States of the Church.
   The Emperor Maximilian had died a few months before. Although only
          fifty-nine years of age, he had long anticipated his dissolution, and during
          the last four years of his life is said never to have traveled without his
          coffin and shroud. In these circumstances he was naturally anxious to secure
          the Imperial Crown for his grandson Charles; and in 1518 he obtained the
          consent of the majority of the Electors to the election of that Prince as King
          of the Romans. The Electors of Treves and Saxony alone opposed the project, on
          the ground, that as Maximilian had never received the Imperial Crown, he was
          himself still King of the Romans, and that consequently Charles could not
          assume a dignity that was not vacant. To obviate this objection, Maximilian
          pressed Leo to send the Golden Crown to Vienna; but this plan was defeated by
          the intrigues of the French Court. Francis, who intended to become a candidate
          for the Imperial Crown, entreated the Pope not to commit himself by such an
          act; and while these negotiations were pending, Maximilian died at Wels in
          Upper Austria, January 12th, 1519, either from having fatigued himself too much
          in hunting or from the effects of over-indulgence at table.
   In his more private capacity, Maximilian had many good and amiable
          qualities. Of middle size and well-knit frame, he excelled in bodily exercises
          and feats of arms, and on more than one occasion he slew his adversary with his
          own hand. His eyes were blue, his nose aquiline, his mouth small, the
          expression of his countenance animated and manly, his manners frank and
          dignified. His chivalrous qualities endeared him to the German knighthood, his
          affability to the citizens, in whose festivities he frequently partook; while a
          certain tinge of romance rendered him irresistible with the fair sex. He was
          versed in several languages, a patron of literature, and himself an author; but
          the memoirs which he has left of himself, as the Weiss-Kunig (White
          King) in prose, and in the Theuerdank, in rhyme,
          are written in so far-fetched and enigmatical a style as to be of little value
          as materials for history.
   Although no captain, he was well acquainted with the details of military
          service, and was the founder of the lance-knights. In short, he was a brave
          soldier and a good-tempered man; but here his praise must end. As a politician
          he was vacillating and irresolute; so full of levity and restlessness that he
          would quit the most important enterprise for a hunting party; so governed by
          the caprices of imagination, that he would form a thousand schemes which he as
          readily abandoned. By his reckless expenditure and extravagant projects, he was
          often brought to ridiculous straits; and it was a common saying that he never
          signed a treaty without expecting a pecuniary consideration. His chief aim was
          the aggrandizement of his family; and though he achieved little or nothing by
          his arms, he founded, through his own marriage and those of his son and
          grandsons, the future greatness of the House of Austria.
   Three candidates for the Imperial Crown appeared in the field: the Kings of
          Spain, France, and England. Francis I was now at the height of his reputation.
          His enterprises had hitherto been crowned with success—the popular test of
          ability, and the world accordingly gave him credit for a political wisdom which
          he was far from possessing. He appears to have gained three or four of the
          Electors by a lavish distribution of money, which his agent Bonnivet was obliged to carry through Germany on the
          backs of horses; for the Fuggers, the rich
          merchants and bankers of Augsburg, were in the interest of Charles, and refused
          to give the French any accommodation. But the bought votes of these venal
          Electors, some of whom sold themselves more than once to different parties,
          could not be depended on. The infamy of Albert of Brandenburg, Archbishop
          Elector of Metz, in these transactions, was particularly notorious.
   The chances of Henry VIII were throughout but slender. Henry’s hopes, like
          those of Francis, were chiefly founded on the corruptibility of the Electors,
          and on the expectation that both his rivals, from the very magnitude of their
          power, might be deemed ineligible.
   Of the three candidates, the claims of Charles seemed the best founded and
          the most deserving of success. Including Frederick of Austria, the rival of
          Louis of Bavaria, the House of Austria had already furnished six emperors, of
          whom the last three had reigned eighty years, as if by an hereditary
          succession. Charles’s Austrian possessions made him a German Prince, and from
          their situation, constituted him the natural protector of Germany against the
          Turks. The previous canvass of Maximilian had been of some service to his
          cause, and all these advantages he seconded, like his competitors, by the free
          use of bribery. On the other hand, it was objected that, though Charles was a
          German Prince, he had never resided in High Germany, and did not speak its
          language; that he had as yet given no proof of capacity, and that the magnitude
          of his dominions was not only calculated to fill the Germans with apprehension
          that he would be able to devote little time to the affairs of the Empire, but
          also to inspire them with fears for their liberties. Indeed, at one time
          Charles’s prospect of success appeared so doubtful that his aunt Margaret, whom
          he had reinstated in the government of the Netherlands, proposed to him that he
          should substitute his brother Ferdinand as a candidate; counsels which he at
          once rejected, though he promised to share the hereditary Austrian dominions
          with his brother, and at some future time to procure his election as King of
          the Roman.
   Leo X, the weight of whose authority was sought both by Charles and
          Francis, though he seemed to favor each, desired the success of neither. He
          secretly advised the Electors to choose a King from among their own body; and
          as this seemed an easy solution of the difficulty, they unanimously offered the
          Crown to Frederick the Wise, Elector of Saxony. But Frederick magnanimously
          refused it, and succeeded in uniting the suffrages of the Electors in favor of
          Charles; principally on the ground that he was the Sovereign best qualified to
          meet the great danger impending from the Turk. The election of Charles as King
          of the Romans and Emperor Elect seems also to have been assisted by Franz
          von Sickingen and Casimir of Brandenburg,
          who, as the day of election drew near, in order to frighten the Electors from
          choosing a foreigner, occupied the roads leading to Frankfort with 20,000 men.
   
           CHARLES V
           The new Emperor, now in his twentieth year, assumed the title of Charles V.
          His well-set frame, of middle size, his blue eyes, aquiline nose, and light
          complexion, recalled the lineaments of his grandfather Maximilian, but altered
          somewhat for the worse by the mixture of Spanish blood. His health was feeble,
          his countenance wore an air of sadness and dejection, his under lip hung down,
          and he spoke but little and with hesitation. He had as yet shown no symptoms of
          those talents and that force of character which he afterwards displayed;
          insomuch that the Spaniards, among whom he lived, deemed him to have inherited
          the intellectual weakness of his mother, which, however, was far from being the
          case. He was proclaimed as Emperor Elect, the title taken in 1508 by his
          grandfather Maximilian, which he subsequently altered to that of “Emperor of
          the Romans”, after his Imperial coronation at Bologna in 1530.
   Before the election of Charles at the instance of Frederick the Wise, a
          more rigorous capitulation than usual was extorted from him, the enormous
          extent of his power rendering the Electors jealous of their liberties. The
          Elector Palatine was deputed by the College to carry these articles into Spain
          for Charles’s signature, and to invite him into Germany. Between the death of
          Maximilian and the election of Charles, the Palatine and the ecclesiastical
          Electors of Cologne, Metz, and Treves had formed the Electoral Union of the
          Rhine for their common defence, and the
          preservation of the rights of the Electoral College.
   The Pope and the Kings of France and England were all equally dissatisfied
          with the result of the election. Leo, however, put a good face upon the matter,
          and sought to retain some portion of his pretensions by gracefully conceding
          what he had no longer the power to hinder. He hastened to recognize Charles as
          Emperor Elect, and to dispense with a constitution of Pope Clement IV, which
          forbade the Kingdom of the Sicilies to be
          united with the Imperial Crown; hoping that Charles in return would not
          withhold from him the homage prescribed by long established custom. But the new
          Emperor manifested no inclination to gratify the pretensions of the Pontiff;
          and his example on this occasion had the effect of abrogating the usage.
   Charles’s Spanish subjects loudly expressed their dissatisfaction at his
          acceptance of the German Crown, which was tendered to him at Barcelona by the
          Rhenish Palsgrave and a solemn embassy, November 30th, 1519. They complained
          that his new dignity would not only require his frequent absence from Spain,
          but would also drain it of men and money in the political quarrels of Germany
          and Italy. Nor was their discontent confined to murmurs. Several Castilian
          cities drew up a remonstrance against Charles quitting Spain, and serious
          disturbances broke out in Valencia, where the nobles had joined the burgesses
          in organizing a Hermandad, or armed brotherhood. The citizens of Valladolid,
          the usual place for holding the Castilian Cortes, were conspicuously refractory;
          and Charles therefore summoned that assembly to meet at Compostella in Gallicia, as he was in want of a fresh donative, in order
          to appear in Germany with adequate splendor. At this affront the citizens of
          Valladolid rose in arms, and would have massacred the Netherlander had not
          Charles and his courtiers contrived to escape in a violent storm.
   Toledo sent deputies to Compostella only to protest against the
          legality of the assembly; Salamanca refused the oath of fidelity; Madrid,
          Cordova, and other places protested against the donative. Fortunately for
          Charles, the Castilian grandees were alarmed at this new spirit of independence
          among the commons, which, though now directed against the Sovereign, might one
          day be turned against themselves; and by their aid, together with the arts and
          bribes of the Court, a majority of the Cortes was induced to vote a supply.
          They forced Charles, however, to exclude the Netherlanders from office, who
          indemnified themselves by selling the places which they could no longer hold,
          and the Spanish ducats continued to gravitate towards the Low Countries.
   The impatience of Charles to receive his new crown induced him to leave his
          Spanish dominions even in this state of open discontent, which was still
          further increased by the unpopular appointment of Cardinal Adrian to the
          Regency of Castile. Charles embarked at Coruña, May 22nd, 1520; and on the
          26th he landed in England, having taken that country in his way on pretext of
          paying a visit to his aunt Catharine, but in reality for the purpose of
          diverting Henry VIII from forming any alliance with France.
   Henry was then meditating the recovery of that Kingdom, which he considered
          as his ancient patrimony; a scheme in which nobody could be of more use to him
          than the Emperor. Charles gained Henry’s minister, Wolsey, by large donations,
          and by dazzling him with the prospect of the tiara; and he now added a pension
          of 7,000 ducats to one of 3,000 livres which he had settled on Wolsey on his
          accession to the Spanish thrones. He could not, however, prevent an interview
          which had been already arranged between the French and English Kings for the
          7th of June, and after a four days’ stay in England he set sail for the
          Netherlands (May 30th).
   Both the Emperor and the French King foresaw that a speedy breach between
          them was inevitable, and they were consequently both disposed to court the
          friendship of Henry VIII. Not only was the vanity of Francis deeply wounded by
          the ill-success of his competition for the Empire, but he also viewed with
          alarm the enormous increase of Charles’s power; and he entertained great hopes
          of forming an alliance with the English King, who had the same cause as himself
          for animosity against the Emperor. The circumstances and the splendor of the
          meeting between the two Kings at the camp of the cloth of gold, are so familiar
          from the descriptions in our English historians that we need not here dwell
          upon them.
   Instead of proceeding to Brussels, the wary Emperor had lingered at Gravelines, with the view of effacing by another meeting
          with Henry any impression that might be made upon him by his visit to Francis.
          After taking leave of Francis, the English King proceeded to Gravelines, and conducted Charles and his aunt Margaret
          back to Calais, where they passed some days together. Here Charles, who had
          further assured himself of the support of Wolsey by renewed promises of
          securing him the tiara, as well as by putting him in immediate possession of
          the episcopal revenues of Badajoz and Placencia in Spain, dexterously
          proposed that Henry should be the arbiter in any dispute that might arise
          between Francis and himself; and the English King readily fell in with a
          proposal which flattered his own favorite pretension of being the arbiter of Europe.
          It is said that an injudicious throw which the French King gave Henry in a
          wrestling match, diverted towards himself any ill feeling which the English
          Sovereign might have harbored against the Emperor, and greatly facilitated the
          designs of Charles and Wolsey. On such trivial circumstances may the fate of
          Kingdoms sometimes depend!
   The Emperor’s attention was next engrossed by his German coronation. He was
          consecrated at Aix-la-Chapelle, October 23rd, 1520, by the Archbishop of
          Cologne, and received the Roman Crown from the hands of the three spiritual
          Electors. In January, 1521, he held his first Diet at Worms. Here several
          princes and prelates were put under the ban of the Empire for breaches of
          the Landfriede, or public peace; but the only
          case necessary to be noticed in this general history was that of the Duke of Würtemberg.
   Originally a county, Würtemberg had been erected
          into a duchy by the Emperor Maximilian in 1495, in favor of Count Eberhard the
          Great, or the Bearded; to whose kinsman, Ulrich, it had now descended. This
          Prince, whose chief characteristics were his sensuality and his enormous
          fatness, had excited a rebellion of the peasants by the irksome taxes which he
          had imposed in order to supply his extravagance; and in 1514 a war broke out
          which obtained the name of “The war of poor Conrad”.
   Ulrich found it necessary to quell this dangerous insurrection by
          conciliating the aristocracy; and the treaty of Tubingen in July, 1514,
          continued to be the fundamental law of Würtemberg down to 1819. Its provisions show the despotic power of some of the Princes in
          that age; as, for instance, that forbidding anybody to be hereafter punished
          without legal trial and verdict! Ulrich, however, evaded the treaty, and his
          government became more cruel and tyrannical than ever. During the interregnum
          which ensued on the death of Maximilian, he seized Reutlingen, a town belonging
          to the Swabian League, between which and his foresters a deadly feud had long
          existed. The League's forces assembled under Duke William I of Bavaria and
          George Frunsberg, and expelled Ulrich from his dominions, which were taken
          possession of by the League as security for the expenses of the war (1519). In
          the following year the League, for a sum of 240,000 gulden handed over Würtemberg together with Ulrich’s children, Christopher and
          Anne, to Ferdinand, who was then governing the Archduchy of Austria for his
          brother Charles, the Emperor Elect. Ulrich in vain appealed for protection to
          the Swiss, among whom he had taken refuge; and he wandered about in exile from
          Court to Court. Ferdinand, on taking possession of Würtemberg,
          confirmed the treaty of Tubingen, but exercised many oppressions in order to
          raise the sum he had agreed to pay. Charles, after his arrival in Germany,
          treated Würtemberg as his own property. He put Ulrich
          under the ban of the Empire, and heedless of the remonstrances raised on all
          sides, gave his dominions to Ferdinand, who some years later (1530) received
          the title of Duke of Würtemberg and Teck.
   Several other important affairs were transacted at the Diet of Worms. The
          Imperial Chamber was reformed, the abuses of the lower courts were abolished,
          and a Council of Regency, consisting of a Lieutenant-General of the Empire and
          twenty-two Assessors, was appointed to discharge the Emperor's functions during
          his absence from Germany. As the right of primogeniture did not yet exist in
          Austria, Charles, according to his promise, ceded the greater part of the
          Austrian territories to his brother Ferdinand; who subsequently (in 1540)
          obtained the complete and hereditary possession of the whole of them. The Diet
          voted an army of 24,000 men to accompany Charles to Rome to receive the
          Imperial Crown but on the express stipulation that these troops should be used for
          no other purpose than an escort, and to swell the pomp of his coronation.
   The Diet of Worms, however, derives its chief importance from circumstances
          then considered as merely secondary; the affairs, namely, of a new heresy, and
          the appearance at Worms of Martin Luther. The Reformation had been going on
          some years in Germany; but as it had not till now become a political matter, we
          have hitherto abstained from adverting to it, in order to relate its progress
          in a connected form. And before entering on this subject, we will cast a brief
          retrospect on the state of the Church, and on the origin and development of
          that new learning which was to work so mighty a revolution in ecclesiastical
          affairs, and collaterally in the intercourse and policy of nations.
   
 CHAPTER XHISTORY OF THE REFORMATION DOWN TO THE EDICT OF WORMS, 1521, AND LUTHER’S CONCEALMENT AT THE WARBURG. GENERAL AFFAIRS OF EUROPE TO THE DEATH OF LEO X, 1521. | 
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