READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF THE POPES FROM THE GREAT SCHISM TO THE SACK OF ROMEBOOK IV.
CHAPTER I.
AENEAS SYLVIUS PICCOLOMINI AND THE RESTORATION OF THE
OBEDIENCE OF GERMANY
1444-1447.
The man who played the chief part in settling the
ecclesiastical affairs of Germany was Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini, whose life
was closely connected with the fortunes of the Papacy in this crisis, and whose
character reflects almost every tendency of the age in which he lived.
Aeneas Sylvius was born at Corsignano, a village near
Montepulciano, in the year 1405, of the noble but decayed family of the
Piccolomini. He was one of a family of eighteen, of whom only two daughters
besides himself reached the age of maturity. As a youth Aeneas helped his
father to work in the fields, and picked up such education as his native
village afforded. At the age of eighteen he left home, and with scanty
provision of money betook himself to the University of Siena. There he applied
himself diligently to study. Mariano Sozzini taught him civil law; the
preaching of S. Bernardino kindled in him for a brief space the fervour of
monastic devotion. The fame of Francesco Filelfo as a lecturer in Greek
literature drew him for two years to Florence. At last he settled in Siena as a
teacher. But Siena was soon involved in war with Florence, and the prospects of
literature seemed dark, when, in 1431, Domenico Capranica, on his way to Basel,
needed a secretary, and offered the post to Aeneas. The journey to Basel was
difficult, as North Italy was involved in war. Aeneas took ship at Piombino,
and was nearly shipwrecked in a storm which suddenly arose. At last he reached
Genoa in safety, and travelled through Milan and over the S. Gothard to Basel,
where he arrived in the spring of 1432.
Capranica received from the Council the dignity of
Cardinal: but Eugenius IV refused him its revenues, and he could not long
afford to keep a secretary. Aeneas found a new master in Nicodemo della Scala,
Bishop of Freisingen, and when he left Basel transferred himself to the service
of the Bishop of Novara, with whom he went to Milan, and gained an insight into
the policy of the crafty Visconti. The Bishop of Novara was one of the Duke’s
confidential agents, and sent Aeneas to the camp of Niccolo Piccinino, while he
himself at Florence plotted against the life of Eugenius IV, in 1435. When the
plot was discovered, and the Bishop of Novara’s life was in danger, Aeneas took
refuge with Cardinal Albergata, a man of strict monastic piety, whom Eugenius
IV sent as one of his legates to preside over the Council of Basel. On his
journey thither Albergata visited Amadeus of Savoy in Ripaille, and Aeneas was
more impressed with the luxury than with the piety of Amadeus’ retreat. From
Basel Aeneas accompanied Albergata to the Congress of Arras, where he had ample
opportunities of learning the political condition of France and England. From
Arras he was sent on a secret mission to the Scottish King, most probably for the
purpose of instigating him to act as a check upon England in case the
resentment of the English King were aroused by the pacification of Arras, which
was detrimental to English interests.
The remarks on England and Scotland made by the
keen-sighted Italian are interesting, not only in themselves but as showing the
quickening power which the new learning had given to the faculty of
observation. Men’s interests were rapidly enlarging, their curiosity was
awakened, they looked on the world as their dwelling-place, and all things
human had an attraction for their own sake. Aeneas writes in the spirit of a
modern traveller, and his picture is vivid and precise. He went to Calais, but
was suspected by the English, who would neither allow him to go on nor return.
At length the interference of the Cardinal of Winchester enabled him to set
sail for London. London struck him as the wealthiest and most populous city he
had seen. He admired the grandeur of S. Paul’s Cathedral, and in the sacristy
was shown a Latin translation of Thucydides, which, he says, dated from the
ninth century. He was struck by the noble river Thames and the old London
Bridge, covered with houses, like a city in itself. He heard and recorded the
legend that the men of Strood were born with tails. But, above all else, he was
amazed by the shrine of S. Thomas at Canterbury, covered with diamonds, pearls,
and carbuncles, to which nothing less precious than silver was offered. He
failed, however, in the object of his visit, as the English court was too
suspicious of the secretary of Cardinal Albergata to give him a safe-conduct to
Scotland. Aeneas was obliged to return to Bruges; but determined not to be
baffled, he again took ship at Sluys and set sail for Scotland. A terrible
storm drove the ship to Norway, and only after a voyage of twelve days did
Aeneas land at Dunbar. He had made a vow in his peril to walk barefoot to the
nearest shrine of Our Lady. A pilgrimage of ten miles to the shrine of
Whitekirk, through the snow and ice, was the beginning of an attack of gout in
the feet, from which he suffered for the rest of his life.
Aeneas describes Scotland as a cold, barren, treeless
country. Its towns were unwalled; the houses were built without mortar, were
roofed with turf, and had doors of ox-hide. The people were poor and rough; the
men small but courageous, the women fair and amorously disposed. The Italian
was surprised at the freedom of manners in the intercourse of the sexes. The
Scots exported hides, wool, and salt fish to Flanders; they had better oysters
than England. The Highland and the Lowland Scots spoke a different language;
and the Highlanders lived on the bark of trees. They dug a sulphurous stone
out of the ground which they used for fuel. In winter their daylight lasted
scarcely more than four hours. There was nothing the Scots heard with greater
pleasure than abuse of the English.
Aeneas was well received by the Scottish King, who
gave him fifty nobles and two horses. When he had done his business, the
captain of the ship, in which he had come, offered him a passage back. But
Aeneas had had enough experience of the North Sea, and determined to return
through England. The ship set sails and was wrecked before his eyes in sight of
land. The captain, who was going home to be married, and all the crew save
four, were drowned. Thankful for his providential escape, Aeneas, disguised as
a merchant, crossed the Tweed, and entered the wild border country. He spent a
troubled night amid a throng of barbarous people who encamped, rather than lived,
in the desolate plain of Northumberland. When night came on, the men departed
to a tower of defense, fearing a possible raid of the Scots. They left the
women, saying that the Scots would not injure them, and refused to take Aeneas
with them. He and his three attendants stayed amid some hundred women who
huddled round the watch fire. In the night an alarm was raised that the Scots
were coming. The women fled; but Aeneas, fearing he might lose his way, took
refuge in a stable. It was, however, a false alarm, as the approaching band
turned out to be friends, not foes. At dawn he set out for Newcastle, and saw
the mighty tower which Caesar had built. Here once more he was in a civilized
country. At Durham he admired the tomb of the Venerable Bede. He found York a
large and populous city, with a cathedral memorable throughout the world, with
glass walls between slender pillars. He travelled to London with one of the
Justices in Eyre, who, little suspecting the real character of his companion,
denounced to Aeneas the wicked machinations of Cardinal Albergata at Arras. In
London Aeneas found that a royal order forbade any foreigner to sail without
the King’s permission. A judicious bribe overcame the guards of the harbor.
Aeneas set sail from Dover, and made his way safely to Basel.
For a time Aeneas remained at Basel, where he led a
jovial and careless life, making himself agreeable to men of all parties, and
gaining a reputation for elegant Latinity. When the combat between Pope and
Council broke out, he was driven to take a side; but he did so dispassionately,
with a clear perception of the selfish motives of the various parties. He first
came prominently forward in an eloquent speech in favor of Pavia as a meeting
place with the Greeks; by this step he hoped to win the favor of the Duke of
Milan, whose character he well knew. He was thanked by the Duke, and won the
favor of the Archbishop of Milan, who presented him, though a layman, to a
provostship in the Church of S. Lorenzo in Milan. To hold this as a layman, and
without capitular election, he needed a dispensation from the Council, which
had just prohibited the Pope from similar abuses in conferring patronage. There
were many who grudged the young favorite his success, and the application met
with some opposition in a general congregation. But the honeyed tongue of
Aeneas won the day: “You will act, fathers, as you think fit; but, if you
decide in my favor, I would prefer this token of your good-will without
possession of the provostship to its possession by any capitular election”.
After this the objectors were silenced by a shout of applause, and Aeneas
obtained his dispensation. When he reached Milan, he found another in
possession, by the nomination of the Duke and the election of the Chapter; but
Aeneas won over the Duke, as he had won over the Council, and his rival was
forced to give way. On his return to Basel he was nominated by the Archbishop
of Milan to preach before the Council on the feast of S. Ambrose. The
theologians were scandalized at this preference of a layman, but the Council
enjoyed the polished rhetoric of Aeneas more than the ponderous and shapeless
erudition of men like John of Segovia.
Aeneas was now bound to the Council by his
provostship, and showed himself a keen partisan. His pen was busily
employed in attacking Eugenius IV. In the Council he was a person of
importance, and held high positions. He was often one of the Committee of
Twelve which regulated its affairs. He often presided over the Deputation of
Faith. He went on several embassies into Germany, and accompanied the Bishop of
Novara to Vienna in 1438, to congratulate Albert on his accession to the
throne. On his return to Basel he narrowly escaped death from the plague; in
fact, the rumor of his death was spread, and the Duke of Milan took advantage
of it to confer his provostship of S. Lorenzo on a nominee of Eugenius IV. The
policy of the Duke had changed; he was no longer on the side of the
Council, and did not need the services of Aeneas. The Council was bound to
recompense its adherent, and conferred on Aeneas a canonry in the Church of
Trent. Again Aeneas found another in possession, and again he succeeded in
ousting him.
Soon after this came the Papal election at Basel. So
great was the reputation of Aeneas that he was urged to qualify for the post of
an elector by taking orders; the Council offered him a dispensation to allow
him to proceed on one day to the sub-diaconate and diaconate. But Aeneas had no
taste for the restrictions of clerical life, or, at least, did not consider the
inducement to be sufficient to lead him to undertake them. He acted, however,
as master of ceremonies to the Conclave, and on the election of Amadeus was one
of those deputed by the Council to escort the new Pope to Basel. Felix V made
Aeneas one of his secretaries, and it would now seem as though Aeneas had cast
in his lot for life
Aeneas, however, soon began to see that with the
election of Felix V the Council had practically abdicated its position. He did
not hope for much from the wisdom or generosity of the Council’s Pope. On all
sides he saw that men who had any future before them were leaving the Council,
and joining the side of Eugenius IV. For himself such a course of conduct was
impossible. He was still a young man, and his reputation had been entirely made
in the democratic surroundings of the Council. He had made himself remarkable
in the eyes of Eugenius IV only by the keenness of his attacks upon the Curia.
He had no previous services to plead, no weight to bring to Eugenius’ side, no
position which he could use in Eugenius’ favor. It was useless for him to
desert to Eugenius, and equally useless to stay with Felix. In this dilemma he
resolved to identify himself with the neutral policy of Germany. He took
advantage of the negotiations of Felix V to ingratiate himself with the Bishop
of Chiemsee, one of Frederick’s chief counselors. The bishop was struck by the
cleverness of the young Italian and his capacity for writing letters. He
recommended him to his master, and persuaded Frederick III to confer on Aeneas
the ridiculous honor of crowning him with the laurel wreath as Imperial poet.
We cannot guess how Frederick was induced to revive this distinction, which had
been bestowed on Petrarch; but Aeneas was proud of the title of “poet”, with
which he afterwards adorned his name.
Aeneas was offered the post of secretary at
Frederick’s court; but he did not deem it judicious to desert abruptly the
service of Felix V. He went back to Basel, and endeavored to persuade Felix
that he could serve his interests better at Vienna than at Basel. He so far
prevailed that, when Frederick visited Basel in 1442, Felix reluctantly gave
his consent to this arrangement, and Aeneas left Basel in Frederick’s train
never to return. No sooner had Aeneas changed his masters than he changed his
opinions also. Felix V was disappointed if he thought that the shrewd Italian
would have any feeling of loyalty towards a losing cause. Aeneas tried to renew
his connection with the Duke of Milan, and win back his Milanese provostship:
he loudly proclaimed that under Frederick III he identified himself with
the policy of neutrality.
At Vienna Aeneas found that he had to begin his career
afresh. He was only one amongst a crowd of hungry secretaries, all aspirants
for higher office, and all united in disliking the Italian intruder. In the
small matters of their common life Aeneas was given the lowest place at table
and the worst bed; he was the object of the sarcasms of his companions. But
Aeneas bore all things with equanimity, and was content to bide his time. He
attached himself to the Chancellor, Kaspar Schlick, a man whose career had many
points in common with his own.
Kaspar Schlick was sprung from a good citizen family
in Franconia, and in 1416 entered Sigismund’s chancery as a secretary. He had
little learning; but his native shrewdness was developed by the teaching of
experience, and his industry recommended him for employment. He went on many
diplomatic missions, and followed Sigismund in his eventful journeys through
Europe. He became Sigismund’s trusted adviser and friend, not only in matters
of state, but in the many amorous intrigues in which Sigismund delighted to
engage. Sigismund conferred on him riches and distinctions, and Sigismund’s
successors found that Schlick’s intimate knowledge of affairs, especially in
finance, rendered his services indispensable. He continued to be Chancellor
under Albert II and Frederick III. To him Aeneas first turned as to a patron,
and approached him with an elaborate eulogy in Latin verse. Schlick knew
something of Aeneas, for during his stay at Siena with Sigismund he had been
entertained by an aunt of Aeneas, and had acted as godfather for one of her
children. He took Aeneas under his care, secured him a regular salary, gave him
a place at his own table, and counted on his assistance in personal matters.
Schlick was an ignoble politician; with much acuteness and great capacity for
affairs, he had a narrow and sordid mind. He was greedy of small gains, and
this greed grew upon him with increasing age; in all that he did he had some
personal interest to serve. At first Aeneas wished to play the part of Horace
to a second Maecenas; but he soon learned to change his strain, and adapt
himself to the requirements of his patron’s practical nature. Verses
disappeared, and political jobbery took their place. It was not long before
Aeneas was required to exercise his ingenuity in the Chancellor’s behalf. The
Bishop of Freising died in August, 1443, and the Chancellor wished to obtain the
rich bishopric for his brother, Heinrich Schlick, a man who had nothing but his
powerful relationship to recommend him. The chapter elected Johann Grünwalder,
one of the Cardinals of Felix V, a natural son of the Duke of Baiern-München,
and called on the Council of Basel to confirm the nomination. Aeneas wrote to
the Cardinal d'Allemand, urging the impolicy of alienating so powerful a man as
the Chancellor. The Council, however, confirmed the election of Grünwalder, and
Schlick applied to Eugenius IV, who, after some skillful negotiations,
confirmed his brother. The struggle between the rival claimants lasted for some
years; but its immediate effect was to draw Kaspar Schlick towards the side of
Eugenius IV, and Aeneas readily followed his master. After all his services to
the Council, he had neither obtained any promotion for himself, nor could he
help a friend by his arguments.
Moreover, at Vienna Aeneas met Cardinal Cesarini,
who had been appointed by Eugenius IV legate in Hungary for the purpose of
warring against the Turks. Hungarian affairs needed rather delicate management
at the Court of Vienna. After the death of Albert II his wife bore a son,
Ladislas, of whom Frederick III was guardian. But the Hungarian nobles did not
think it wise to run the risks of a long minority in such perilous times. They
chose as their king Wladislaf of Poland, and Eugenius IV approved their choice.
Frederick III could not venture on war, and Kaspar Schlick, who owned lands in
Hungary, used his influence on the side of peace. But it required all
Cesarini’s tact to reconcile the positions of the Pope and the King. He was
ready to renew his acquaintance with Aeneas, treated him as a friend, and urged
him to take the side of Eugenius IV. Aeneas was keen-sighted enough to use the
opportunity. He saw at Frederick’s Court the immense superiority of the
diplomacy of the Papal Curia over that of the Council. The strong character of
Carvajal, the Papal envoy, produced a deep impression on him. Aeneas let it be
understood that he was not indisposed to help the side of Eugenius IV when
opportunity offered. He wrote to Carvajal, October, 1440, that he assumed an
attitude of judicious expectancy:
“Here stands Aeneas in arms, and he shall be my
Anchises whom the consent of the universal Church shall choose. So long as
Germany, the greater part of the Christian world, still hesitates, I am in
doubt; but I am ready to listen to the common judgment, nor in a matter of
faith do I trust myself alone”.
In December of the same year he had so far advanced in
his opinions as to advocate the ending of the schism by any means; he favored
the proposal of the King of France to summon an assembly of princes. It matters
not whether it be called a Council; so long as the schism be done away with,
the means used may be called by any name. “Let it be called a conventicle or a
meeting; I care not, provided it leads to peace”. He wrote a clever dialogue,
the Pentalogus, in which he commended
this plan to Frederick III. In May, 1444, he had already begun to consider how
the neutrality of Germany could be brought to an end. He wrote to Cesarini:
“The neutrality will be hard to get rid of, because it
is useful to many. There are few who seek the truth; almost all seek their own
gain. The neutrality is a pleasing snare, because no one can be driven from a
benefice, whether he holds it justly or not, and the ordinaries confer
benefices as they please. It is a hard matter to rescue the prey from the
wolf’s mouth. But, as far as I see, all Christendom follows Eugenius; only
Germany is divided, and I would gladly see it united, because I attach great
weight to this nation, for it is not led by fear, but by its own judgment and
goodwill. I shall follow the lead of the King and the Electors”.
Soon after this Aeneas went to the Diet at Nurnberg,
and there saw the feebleness of Frederick III, the divisions among the
Electors, and the chances of success which lay open to enterprise. He was
appointed by Frederick III a commissioner, to sit with others nominated by the
Electors for the consideration of ecclesiastical affairs. “We parted in discord
and division” is the only result which the letters of Aeneas chronicle.
On his way to Nurnberg Aeneas passed through Passau,
where Schlick was courteously entertained by the bishop, Aeneas made himself
agreeable to his host, and wrote to a friend in Rome a pleasant sketch of
Passau and its bishop. Before sending it he requested the bishop to look it
over and correct any inaccuracies which it might contain. This delightful means
of letting the bishop know that the pen of Aeneas was employed to sing his
praises secured its due reward. Aeneas was presented before the end of the year
to a benefice in Aspach, in Bavaria. The bishop sent him his presentation free
from all ecclesiastical or other dues.
The character of Aeneas at this time was not that of a
Churchman. He had led a careless, adventurous, self-seeking life. He had lived
amongst dissolute companions and had been as dissolute as the worst amongst
them. He cannot be said to have had any principles; he trusted to nothing but
his own cleverness, and his sole object was to make himself comfortable
wherever he was. He flattered those who were in authority; he was willing
to do anything required of him in hopes of obtaining a suitable reward. He
never lost an opportunity of ingratiating himself with any one, and would use
any means for that purpose. His store of knowledge, his fluent pen, his subtle
mind were at the command of any promising patron. One day he wrote to young
Sigismund, Count of the Tyrol, a long and elegant letter in praise of learning,
inviting him by numerous examples to fit himself by study for his high
position. A little while after, he wrote him a love-letter to help him to
overcome the resistance of a girl who shrank from his dishonorable proposals.
With characteristic levity and plausibility he even provided the youth with
excuses for his conduct. “I know human nature”, he says; “he who does not love
in youth loves in old age, and makes himself ridiculous. I know too how love
kindles in youth dormant virtues; a man strives to do what will please his
mistress. Moreover, youths must not be held too tight, but must learn the ways
of the world so as to distinguish between good and evil. I send you a letter on
condition that you do not neglect literature for love; but as bees gather honey
from flowers, so do you from the blandishments of love gather the virtues
of Venus”.
The private life of Aeneas, as we learn plainly from
his letters, was profligate enough; but it does not seem to have shocked men of
his time, nor have fallen below the common standard. His irregularities were
never made a reproach to him later, nor did he take any pains to hide them from
posterity. Such as he was he would have himself known induced perhaps by
literary vanity, more probably by a feeling that his character would not lose
in the eyes of his contemporaries by sincerity on his part. In those days
chastity was the mark of a saintly character, and Aeneas never professed to be
a saint. His temperament was ardent, easily moved and soon satisfied. The
pleasures of the flesh had strong dominion over him. His love affairs were
many, and he did not regard constancy as a virtue. A son was born to him in
Scotland after his visit there; but the child soon died. We know of another
son, the offspring of an English woman whom Aeneas met at Strasburg when on an
embassy from Basel. In a letter to his own father he shamelessly describes the
pains that he took to overcome her virtue, and asks his father to bring up the
child. His excuses for himself show an entire frivolity and absence of
principle. “You will perhaps call me sinful; but I do not know what opinion you
formed of me. Certainly you did not beget a son of stone or iron, seeing you
yourself are flesh, I am not a hypocrite who wish to seem good rather than be
so. I frankly confess my fault, that I am neither holier than David nor wiser
than Solomon. It is an old and ingrained vice, and I do not know who is free
from it. But you will say that there are certain limits, which lawful wedlock
provides. There are limits to eating and drinking; but who observes them? Who
is so upright as not to fall seven times a day? Let the hypocrite profess that
he is conscious of no fault. I know no merit in myself, and only divine pity
gives me any hope of mercy”.
In truth Aeneas took no other view of life than that
of a selfish voluptuary, for whom the nobler side of things did not exist. He
gave his experiences to his friend Piero da Noceto, who was in the chancery of
Eugenius IV, and wrote to him that he had thoughts of marrying his concubine,
who had already borne him several children. Aeneas advises the step: he will
know all about his wife beforehand, and will not have to endure the
disillusionment that often follows a honeymoon. “I have loved many women”, he
says, “and after winning them have grown weary of them; if I were to marry I
would not unite myself to any one whose habits I did not know beforehand”.
Aeneas was the confidant of the amours of Kaspar Schlick, and took an adventure
of Schlick’s with a Sienese lady as the subject for a novel in the style of
Boccaccio. This story, “Lucretia and Euryalus”, had great popularity and was
translated into almost every European tongue.
Thus the life of Aeneas at Vienna was by no means
edifying, nor was it satisfactory to himself. His associates in the Imperial
Chancery were mostly younger of than himself. Their manners were rude, their
enjoyments coarse, and their vices wanting in that refinement which to a
cultivated Italian gave them half their pleasure. Aeneas was never at home in
Germany: he could not speak the language fluently: the country, the climate,
the people, and the manners were all distasteful to him. He pinned at times to
return to Italy, and urged his friends to deliver him from his exile in a
foreign land. He began to feel that his life was somewhat wasted; he began to
think that he ought to turn over a new leaf and enter upon a new career. He
thought of taking holy orders; but if his cultivation did not keep him from
vice, it at least prevented him from assuming a position the duties of which he
could not with decency fulfill. “I do not intend to spend all my life outside
Italy”, he writes in February, 1444. “As yet I have taken care not to involve
myself in holy orders. I fear about my continency, which, though a laudable
virtue, is more easily practiced in word than in deed, and befits philosophers
better than poets”.
While this was the frame of Aeneas’s mind, the
proceedings of the Diet of Nurnberg gave a new direction to his energies. The
Diet did nothing except confirm the current witticism that “diets were
indeed pregnant, for each carried another in its womb”. It revealed,
however, to Aeneas the existence of the strong party among the Electors, which
had formed a league in favor of Felix V. He saw that the contest between the
two Popes was becoming important in German politics. It gave the Electors an
opportunity of acting without the King, and if their league in favor of Felix
succeeded, the royal power would have received a serious, if not a deadly blow.
The weakness of the Electors lay in the fact that their ecclesiastical policy
was not sincere. They did not venture to identify themselves with the national
desire for reform, and, supported by the authority of the Council of Basel, set
in order the affairs of the German Church. Their policy was oligarchical, not
popular; they wished to strengthen their own hands against the King, not to
work for what the nation desired. They looked for help, not to the national sentiment
of Germany, but to the French King, and negotiated with him to support them in
the old plan of demanding a new Council in a new place. But the French had just
shown themselves to be the national enemies of Germany; and Charles VII, now
freed from the pressure of the English war, was no longer willing to help the
Electors, but reverted to the old desire of France to have a Pope at Avignon.
The negotiations between him and the Electors led to no results.
This policy of the Electors naturally tended to bring
the King and the Pope together. Frederick III on his part had from the
beginning inclined in favor of Eugenius IV, and events had made the friendship
of Eugenius more desirable. Eugenius had so far wished to fulfill his promises
to the Greeks that he proclaimed a crusade against the Turks, and sent Cesarini
as his legate into Hungary. Cesarini, whose lofty character was never displayed
to better advantage than when acting as the leader of a forlorn hope, stirred
the courage of the Hungarians, filled them with enthusiasm for the cause of
Christendom against the infidel, and awakened a strong feeling of devotion
towards Eugenius IV.
In 1443 Wladislaf, the Hungarian King, compelled the
Turks to sue for peace on condition of restoring Serbia and quitting the
Hungarian frontier. But next year the expectations of a combined attack upon
the Turks by Venice and the Greeks led Cesarini to urge Hungary again to war.
The peace had not been approved by the Pope, and he absolved them from all
obligations to observe it. His exhortations were obeyed, and Wladislaf again
led forth his army to join his allies on the Hellespont. But at Varna he was
startled by the news that the Turkish Sultan Murad was advancing with 60,000
men against his army of 20,000. Cesarini counseled a prudent policy of defense;
but Wladislaf was resolved to try the issue of a battle. On the fatal field of
Varna, November 10, 1444, the Christian army suffered a severe defeat, and
Wladislaf fell fighting. The eventful life of Cesarini found on the battlefield
a noble end. Chivalrous and high-minded, he had always devoted himself
unsparingly to the loftiest and most difficult cause that was before him. He
failed in war against the Bohemians; he failed to regulate the ecclesiastical
violence of the Council of Basel; he failed to drive the Turks from Europe. Yet
his efforts were always directed to a noble end, and the very singleness of his
own purpose made him neglect the prudence which would have been familiar to a
smaller man. Amid the self-seeking of the age Cesarini rises almost to the
proportions of a hero; he is the only man whose character claims
our entire respect and admiration.
The news of the defeat of Varna filled Europe with
consternation but it was not without its advantages to Frederick III. The death
of Wladislaf opened the way for the settlement of Hungarian affairs, and the
recognition of Frederick’s ward, Ladislas. To gain this end more securely,
Frederick needed the help of Eugenius IV. Negotiations began to take a more
intimate and personal turn in relation to the affairs of Hungary. Yet still the
affairs of the Church were the subject of formal embassies, in which the old
plan of a new Council was ostensibly being pursued. In November, 1444, the
Fathers of Basel answered this proposal by an entire refusal. They had already
agreed to it in 1442, and the obstinacy of Eugenius IV had prevented it; on him
rested the blame of its failure. An envoy had next to be sent to bear a similar
proposition to Eugenius IV. This was not done till the beginning of 1445, and
then the person chosen was Aeneas Sylvius.
Aeneas at once saw that in dealings between Frederick
III and Eugenius IV there was scope for his cleverness and his powers of
intrigue. He readily started on his journey, and rejoiced to see his native
land once more. At Siena his kinsfolk were alarmed at his audacity in venturing
into the presence of the Pope, whom he had so often attacked and so grievously
offended. They represented to him that “Eugenius was cruel, mindful of wrongs,
restrained by no conscience, no feeling of pity; he was surrounded by ministers
of crime; Aeneas, if he went to Rome, would never return”. Aeneas, no doubt,
enjoyed the simplicity of these good people, and acted with dignity the part of
a possible martyr to duty. He tore himself from their weeping embrace,
declaring that he must either fulfill his embassy or die in the attempt, and
proceeded to Rome. Carvajal had already given Eugenius information of the
usefulness of Aeneas. He was well received by several of the Cardinals for his
literary or for his political merits. Amongst the officials of the
Papal Curia he met several of his old friends at Basel. Before he could
have an audience with the Pope it was necessary that he should be absolved from
the ecclesiastical censure pronounced against the adherents of the Council.
This duty was assigned to the Cardinals Landriano and Le Jeune, who afterwards
introduced Aeneas to the Pope’s presence. Eugenius graciously allowed him to
kiss not only his foot, but his hand and his cheek. Aeneas presented his
credentials, and then began to speak as a penitent on his own behalf.
“Holy Father, before I discharge my errand for the
King, I will say a little about myself, I know that you have heard much against
me; and those who have told you have spoken truly. At Basel I spoke, wrote, and
did many things, I do not deny it, not with the intent of injuring you, but of
benefiting the Church I erred, but in the company of many others, men of high
repute. I followed Cardinal Cesarini, the Archbishop of Palermo, the apostolic
notary Pontano, men who were esteemed in the eyes of the law and teachers of
the truth. I will not mention the universities which gave their opinions
against you. In such company who would not have erred? But when I discovered
the error of the Basilians, I confess that I did not at once flee to you. I was
afraid lest I should fall from one error into another. I went to the neutral
camp, that after mature deliberation I might shape my course. I remained three
years with the German king, and there my study of the disputes between your
legates and those of the Council left me no doubt that the right was on your
side. Hence, when this embassy was offered me, I willingly accepted it,
thinking that so I might regain your favor. Now I am in your presence, and ask
your pardon because I erred in ignorance”.
Eugenius answered graciously: “We know that you erred
with many; but to one who owns his fault we cannot refuse pardon, for the
Church is a loving mother. Now that you hold the truth, see that you never let
it go, and by good works seek the divine grace. You live in a place where you
may defend the truth and benefit the Church. We, forgetting your former
injuries, will love you well if you walk well”.
Thus Aeneas made his peace, and entered into a tacit
agreement with the Pope that if he proved himself useful his services should be
rewarded. Eugenius had gained an agent in Germany on whose devotion he might
rely, because it was closely bound up with self-interest. The diplomacy of the
Curia had again shown its astuteness.
After this reconciliation Aeneas was regarded as a
person of some importance at Rome, and was well received by several of the
Cardinals. But there was one person who was too blunt to disguise his contempt
for this self-interested conversion. One day Aeneas met Tommaso Parentucelli,
who had been a companion in the service of Cardinal Albergata, but who had
followed his master and had been an uncompromising opponent of the Council. He
was now Bishop of Bologna, and was respected for his character and his
learning. Aeneas advanced to greet him with outstretched hand, but Parentucelli
coldly turned away. Aeneas was piqued, and afterwards adopted a similar
attitude of disdain towards Parentucelli. “How ignorant are we of the future”
he remarks afterwards, when relating this incident; “if Aeneas had known that
Parentucelli would be Pope, he would have condoned all things”. A
reconciliation between the two was brought about by friends before Aeneas left
Rome; but Parentucelli was never cordial to one whose sincerity he doubted.
On the particular matter of his embassy Aeneas does
not seem to have done much. The party of Eugenius in Germany, headed by
Schlick, saw no way of ending the neutrality except by summoning another Council.
To this Eugenius was resolved not to consent, and Aeneas gave him the benefit
of his advice. In April he left Rome with an announcement that Eugenius would
send an embassy to bring his answer to the King. His envoys, Carvajal and
Parentucelli, followed close upon Aeneas.
Eugenius IV had already entered upon a policy of
attacking his enemies in Germany. On January 16, 1445, he issued a Bull cutting
off the lands of the Duke of Cleves from the dioceses of Koln and Münster. In
this matter he acted at the request of the Dukes of Burgundy and Cleves; but in
the Bull he spoke of the Archbishop of Koln as disobedient to the Roman See,
and called the Bishop of Münster, “Henry, the son of wickedness, who styles
himself Bishop of Münster”. The Electors had not fared so well as they hoped in
their negotiations with France. They were afraid lest the King might get the
better of them by his secret dealings with Eugenius IV, and were taken aback at
this hostile display on the part of Eugenius. They judged it prudent to retire
from their separate position, and once more make common cause with the King. At
the Diet on June 24, 1445, the neutrality of Germany was renewed for eight
months, at the end of which time the King was to summon an “assembly of the
German Church or a national Council”, which was to be proclaimed to the various
lands depending on the Empire, including England, Scotland and Denmark. Once
more the ecclesiastical question was to be also a national question for
Germany. The Electors were willing to abandon their separate negotiations
with Felix V on the understanding that Frederick III abandoned his agreement
with Eugenius IV.
But Frederick III, indolent and careless as he was,
saw in an alliance with Eugenius IV the sole means of maintaining himself
against the formidable alliance, which threatened him, of France with the House
of Savoy and the German princes. If he was heedless himself, the envoys of
Eugenius IV spared no pains to enlighten him. Schlick and Aeneas Sylvius were
ever at his side, and Carvajal was busy at Vienna arranging an alliance between
the King and the Pope. “The King hates the neutrality”, writes Aeneas Sylvius
at the end of August, “and would willingly abandon it if the princes would only
concur, to which end perhaps some means may be found”. In Rome Eugenius IV went
on with his proceedings against the Archbishop of Koln. It was known in Vienna
that the archbishop had been summoned to appear in Rome, and it was clear that
further steps must follow; yet the King raised no word of protest. He was
engaged in a secret treaty with the Pope; he was selling his neutrality, and
was being bought cheap. On September 13 Carvajal left Vienna to carry to Rome
Frederick III’s conditions. The terms which Carvajal had negotiated were
accepted by Eugenius IV. A treaty between Pope and King was once more
firmly established, and the end of the reform movement in Germany was rapidly
approaching.
The terms on which Frederick III sold his aid to
Eugenius IV are expressed in three Bulls issued in February, 1446. The Pope
granted to the King the right during his lifetime to nominate to the six great
bishoprics of Trent, Brixen, Chur, Gurk, Trieste and Piben; he granted the King
and his successors the right to nominate for the Papal approval those who
should have visitorial powers over the monasteries of Austria; the King should
have the right of presentation to 100 small benefices in Austria. Besides this,
the Papacy was also to pay the King the sum of 221,000 ducats, of which 121,000
were to be paid by Eugenius and the rest by his successors. The indolent and
short-sighted Frederick, no doubt, thought that he had made a good bargain. He
obtained a supply of money, of which he was always in need. He got into his own
hands the chief bishoprics in his ancestral domains, and thereby greatly
strengthened his power over Austria. By the nomination of visitors of the
monasteries he lessened the influence of his enemy, the Archbishop of Salzburg,
by exempting the monasteries from his jurisdiction. By the right of
presentation to 100 benefices he secured the means of rewarding the hungry
officials of his court. He thought only of his own personal interests; he cared
only to secure his own position in his ancestral domains. For the rights of the
Church, for his position in the Empire, he had no thought. All that can be
urged in Frederick’s behalf is, that the German princes were equally ready to
abandon the German Church and make terms with either Pope who would help them
to secure their own political power. On the other hand, Eugenius IV, though
making great concessions, was careful not to impair the rights of the Papacy or
take any irretrievable step. The Papal treasury was exhausted; but money was
well spent in regaining the adhesion of Germany, and Eugenius IV felt amply
justified in mortgaging for this purpose the revenues of his successors. The
Pope granted the nomination to six bishoprics, but only for Frederick’s
lifetime, after which the mischief, if any, might be repaired. The absolute
appointment of visitors of monasteries was not granted to Frederick and his
successors in Austria, but only the nomination of several from whom the Pope
was to select. The benefices granted to the King were not important ones; they
were to be between the annual value of sixty and forty marks, and did not include
appointments to cathedral and collegiate churches. There was nothing in all
this that materially affected the Papal position in Germany.
Moreover, Eugenius IV was anxious that the treaty
between himself and Frederick III should be as soon as possible openly
acknowledged. He promised Frederick 100,000 guilders for the expenses of his
coronation. He invited him to Rome to receive the Imperial crown; in case
Frederick could not come to Rome, Eugenius, old and gouty as he was, undertook
to meet him at Bologna, Padua or Treviso. In the reunion of the Papacy and the
Empire Eugenius IV saw the final overthrow of the Council of Basel and the
restoration of the Papal monarchy.
Eugenius IV, however, did not trust only to his
allurements to induce the indolent Frederick to declare himself. Knowing the
feeble character of the King, he resolved to play a bold game, so as to attain
his end more speedily. He had already succeeded in weakening, by his
threat of ecclesiastical censures, the electoral league in favor of Felix V. As
his negotiations with Frederick III advanced, he resolved to strike a decided
blow against his enemies in Germany. On February 9 he issued a Bull deposing
from their sees the Archbishops of Köln and Trier, and appointing in their
places Adolf of Cleves and John, Bishop of Cambrai, the nephew and the natural
brother of his powerful ally, the Duke of Burgundy. The German rebels were
openly defied, and the allies of Eugenius IV must range themselves decidedly on
his side.
If Eugenius IV acted boldly, the Electors answered the
challenge with no less promptitude. On March 21 they met at Frankfort, and
formed a league for mutual defense. The attack upon the electoral privileges
combined the whole body in opposition to the high-handed procedure of the Pope.
Undeterred by the alliance of Pope and King, the Electors united to assert the
principles on which the neutrality of Germany had been founded. If the time had
come when neutrality could no longer be maintained, it should, at least, be
laid aside on the same grounds as those on which it had been asserted. The
Electors again assumed the position of mediators between the rival Popes, but
set forward a plan of mediation which should lead to decided results, and which
should have for its object the security of the liberty of the German Church.
They abandoned their scheme for the recognition of Felix V, and were willing to
join with the King in recognizing Eugenius IV, but on condition that he
confirmed the decrees of Constance about the authority of General Councils,
accepted the reforming decrees of Basel as they were expressed in the
declaration of neutrality, recalled all censures pronounced against neutrals,
and agreed to assemble a Council on May 1, 1447, at Constance, Worms, Mainz, or
Trier. They prepared Bulls for the Papal signature embodying these conditions:
on the issue of these Bulls they were ready to restore their obedience and
submit the formal settlement of Christendom to the future Council.
The attitude of the Electors was at once dignified and
statesmanlike. It showed that the Bishops of Trier and Köln possessed political
capacity hitherto unsuspected. No special mention was made of individual
grievances, no direct answer was given to the attack made by Eugenius IV on the
electoral privileges. By accepting their terms the Pope would tacitly recall
his Bulls of deposition; if he refused to accept them, the Electors would be
free to turn to Felix V and the fathers of Basel. They might summon in name a
new Council; but it would consist of the members of the Council of Basel
reinforced by Germans bound to the policy of the Electors. They resolved that
envoys be sent to Frederick III and Eugenius IV, and unless a satisfactory
answer were obtained by September, they would proceed further. These resolutions
were the work, in the first instance, of the four Rhenish Electors; but within
a month the Markgraf of Brandenburg and the Duke of Saxony had also given in
their adhesion. The League of the Electoral Oligarchy, to act in despite of its
nominal head, was now fully formed.
Strong as was the position of the Electors, they
showed their weakness by not asserting it publicly. Their agreement was
kept secret; and the embassy sent to demand the adhesion of Frederick III was
instructed to lay the plan only before him and counselors, who were to be bound
by an oath of secrecy. Decided as was the policy of the Electors in appearance,
it was founded upon no large sentiment of earnestness or patriotism. It was
merely a diplomatic semblance, and, as such, must be cloaked in diplomatic
secrecy, that it might be exchanged, should expediency require, for a more
conciliatory attitude. The envoys of the Electors were headed by Gregory
Heimburg, who hoped against hope that he might use the opportunity of giving
effect to his own reforming ideas, and trusted that he might work through the
selfishness of the Electors towards a really national end. Frederick III
received through him the proposals of the Electors, by which he was sorely
embarrassed. At his Court were Carvajal and the Bishop of Bologna, who had just
brought him the Bulls which ratified his treaty with the Pope; but his oath of
secrecy to the Electors forbade him to take counsel with them. The separate
articles of the proposals of the Electors were discussed in the presence of the
six counselors sworn to secrecy. The King was ready to accept them in
principle, but made reservations on points of detail. The envoys were
instructed not to lay before the King the Bulls which they were to present to
the Pope, unless he fully accepted the provisions of the Electors. Frederick,
on his side, complained of this reserve as offensive to his dignity. “It is a
new thing”, he said, “that an agreement should be made behind my back, and that
I should be required to accept it without a full discussion of every article”.
The ambassadors of the Electors declared that they had submitted everything to
the King. But Frederick III was justified in refusing to join the Electors till
they had shown him the written proposals which they were to submit to the Pope;
and they refused to do this because they wished to keep in the background their
final threat of making common cause with the Council of Basel. The sole result
of these negotiations was that the King proclaimed a Diet at Frankfort on
September 1, and let it be understood that he was then prepared to consider
the termination of the neutrality.
In the beginning of July Heimburg and two companions
reached Rome. Frederick III, anxious to give some hint to Eugenius IV, told the
Pope’s envoys at Vienna that it would be well if one of them returned to Rome.
Carvajal was ill of a fever; so the Bishop of Bologna set out, and with him
went Aeneas Sylvius, to whom the King confided the secret of the Electors.
Aeneas pleads, as a technical excuse for this double dealing, that the King
himself had taken no oath of secrecy, but only his six counselors. It is,
however, probable that Aeneas needed no special enlightenment, but as secretary
was privy to the whole matter, and was himself bound to secrecy, if not
specially on that occasion, yet by the nature of his office. However that may
be, he went with Thomas of Bologna, and on the way let drop enough to indicate
to Thomas the advice which he ought to give to the Pope. They made such haste
on their journey that the ambassadors of the Electors only entered Rome the day
before them, and Thomas of Bologna was the first to have an audience of the
Pope. Aeneas expressly says, “The Bishop of Bologna, though he could not know
all that the ambassadors of the Electors brought with them, still guessed and
opined much”.
“Instructed by Aeneas, he warned the Pope about the
matter, and advised him to give the ambassadors a mild answer”. The duplicity
of Aeneas was invaluable to the cause of Eugenius IV: it averted the most
pressing danger, that the Pope, by his contemptuous behavior, should give the
Electors an immediate pretext for turning to the Council of Basel.
The presence of Aeneas was also useful in another way.
Frederick III had not been asked by the Electors to send an embassy to Rome;
but Aeneas was there to speak in the King’s name, and was called in to assist
at the audience. By this means Eugenius IV had a pretext for overlooking the
fact that what were submitted to him were the demands of the Electors; he could
treat them as the joint representations of the King and the Electors, and so
return a vague answer. Every precaution had been taken by the Electors to put
their cause clearly before the Pope. When Eugenius raised an objection to
receiving an embassy from the men whom he had deposed, he was informed that the
credentials of the ambassadors were signed simply with the subscription of the
whole College— “The Electoral Princes of the Holy Roman Empire”
However definitely the Electors put their propositions
before the Pope, he was resolved not to give them a definite answer. When they
were admitted to an audience, Aeneas spoke first on behalf of the King. He
recommended the ambassadors to the Pope’s kindly attention, and vaguely said
that the peace of the Church might be promoted by entertaining their proposals.
Then Heimburg, in a clear, incisive, and dignified speech, set forward the
objects of the Electors. There could not be a greater contrast than between
Aeneas and Heimburg; they may almost be taken as representatives of the German
and Italian character. Heimburg was tall and of commanding presence, with
flashing eyes and a genial face, honest, straightforward, eminently national in
his views and policy, holding steadfastly by the object which he had in view.
He was the very opposite of the shifty Italian adventurer, who recognized in
him a natural foe. Heimburg’s speech was respectful, but uncompromising.
Eugenius listened, and then, after a pause, shrewdly returned a vague answer.
The deposition of the archbishops, he said, had been decreed for weighty
reasons; as to the authority of General Councils, he had never refused to
acknowledge it, but had only defended the dignity of the Apostolic See; as to
the German Church, he did not wish to oppress it, but to act for its welfare.
The proposals made to him were serious, and he must take time to consider them.
Aeneas meanwhile unfolded to Eugenius the opinions of
Frederick III. He advised that the archbishops should be restored, without,
however, annulling their deprivation; that the Constance decree in favor of
General Councils should be accepted. If this were done, the recognition of
Eugenius might be accomplished; if not, there was great danger of a schism.
Eugenius listened and seemed to assent. The Cardinals endeavored to discover if
the ambassadors had any further instructions; but Heimburg did not consider
himself justified by the Pope’s attitude to lay before him the Bulls that he
had brought. The ambassadors were kept for three weeks awaiting the Pope’s
answer, and Aeneas has drawn a spiteful picture of Heimburg sweltering in the
summer heat, stalking indignantly on Monte Giordano in the evening with bare
head and breast, denouncing the wickedness of Eugenius and the Curia. At length
they were told that, as they had no powers to treat further, the Pope would
send envoys with his answer to the Diet at Frankfort. The ambassadors left Rome
without producing their Bulls. Heimburg regarded the Papal attitude as
equivalent to a refusal to entertain his proposals. Meanwhile ambassadors had
been sent also to Basel, and the Council had similarly deferred its answer till
the assembling of the Diet.
The results of the Diet of Frankfort would clearly be
of great importance both to Germany and to the Church at large. The policy of
the Electors had not received the adhesion of the King the oligarchy had
resolved to act in opposition to their head, and, if they were resolute, the
deposition of Frederick III was imminent. In this emergency Frederick entrusted
his interests to the care of the Markgraf Albert of Brandenburg and Jacob of
Baden, the Bishops of Augsburg and Chiemsee, Kaspar Schlick and Aeneas Sylvius.
At the head of this embassy stood Albert of Brandenburg, who had already shown
his devotion to Frederick by taking the field against the Armagnacs, and who
was bent upon overthrowing the intrigues of France with the Rhenish Electors.
The representatives of the King were all convinced of the great importance of
the crisis, and were not a little embarrassed to find at Frankfort no
ambassadors of the Pope. The Bishop of Bologna had left Rome with Aeneas
Sylvius, but had been delayed at Parma by sickness, and on his recovery had
gone to confer with the Duke of Burgundy about the measures to be adopted
towards the deposed Archbishops of Trier and Köln. John of Carvajal and Nicolas
of Cusa had come from Vienna; but they had no special instructions about the
answer to be returned by the Pope to the proposals of the Electors.
In spite of the gravity of the occasion, few of the
German princes or prelates were personally present at Frankfort. The four
Rhenish Electors were there; but the Electors of Brandenburg and Saxony only
sent representatives, as did also the majority of the bishops and nobles. From
Basel came the Cardinal of Arles, bearing a decree which approved of the
transference of the Council to one of the places which might be approved by the
King and the Electors, and generally accepting the proposals of the Electors
without making any mention of Felix V. The Electors took up a position of
friendliness to the Cardinal of Arles. When, on September 14, the proceedings
of the Diet began with a solemn mass, the Cardinal appeared, as was his wont,
in state as a Papal legate. The royal ambassadors made the usual protest that
Germany was neutral and could not recognize the officials of either Pope. The
Archbishop of Trier angrily denounced their conduct; they could admit the
legates of Eugenius, the foes of the nation, and would exclude those of the
Council. The majority agreed with him; but the citizens of Frankfort were still
loyal, and their tumultuous interference compelled the Cardinal to lay aside
the insignia of his office.
The proceedings began with the reading by Heimburg of
the speech which he had made to Eugenius IV, and the written answer of the
Pope. Heimburg further gave an account of his embassy, and the reasons which
had led him to abstain from presenting to the Pope the Bulls which the Electors
had drawn up; the question to be discussed was, whether the Pope’s answer gave
ground for further deliberation. On the Pope’s side his envoys submitted an
answer to the “prayers of the King and the Electors”. Eugenius was ready to
summon a Council within a convenient time; he had never opposed the decrees of
the Council of Constance, which had been renewed in Basel while a universal and
recognized Council was sitting; he was willing to do away with the old burdens
of the German Church provided he were indemnified for the losses which he would
thereby sustain. About the revocation of the deprivation of the archbishops he
said nothing. The answer of Eugenius IV was mere mockery of his opponents. He
granted nothing that they had asked; his concessions were merely apparent, and
he reserved to himself full power to make them illusory. His attitude towards
the Electors was practically the same as it had been towards the Council
of Basel.
The regal and the Papal ambassadors would not have
ventured to submit such an answer if they had not seen their way to effect
a breach in the ranks of their opponents. On September 22 Albert of Brandenburg
succeeded in inducing the representatives of his brother the Elector, the
Archbishop of Mainz, two bishops, and one or two nobles, to agree that they had
obtained an answer from the Pope, which afforded the basis for peace in the
Church, and that they would stand by one another to maintain this opinion. The
Archbishop of Mainz was won over by consideration of the assistance which he
might obtain from Frederick III and Albert of Brandenburg in the affairs of his
own dominions. Aeneas Sylvius is not ashamed to own that he was the instrument
of bribing four of the archbishop’s counselors with 2000 florins to help in
bringing him to this decision. The adhesion of Frederick of Brandenburg was due
to the influence of his brother Albert. The others who joined in the step had
all some personal interest to serve.
Round the basis thus secured adherents rapidly began
to gather. But it was clear to the Papal envoys that they must make some
concessions, and afford their new adherents a plausible pretext for withdrawing
their support from the Electoral League. Aeneas Sylvius undertook the
responsibility of playing a dubious part. He “squeezed the venom”, as he puts
it, out of the proposals of the Electors, and composed a document in which the
Pope undertook, if the princes of Europe agreed, to summon a General Council
within ten months of the surrender of the neutrality, recognized the Constance
decrees, confirmed the reforming decrees of Basel till the future Council
decided otherwise, and, at the instance of the King, restored the deposed
Archbishops of Trier and Köln, on condition that they returned to his
obedience.! The Bishop of Bologna and Nicolas of Cusa assented to these
proposals; John of Carvajal was dubious, and hot words passed between him and
Aeneas, who was afraid lest his obstinacy or honesty might spoil all. Aeneas
skillfully mixed up his relations with the Pope and with the King, and managed
to produce an impression that the Pope had commissioned him to make this offer.
The sturdy Germans, Heimburg and Lysura, were annoyed at this activity of the
renegade Italian in their national business. “Do you come from Siena”, said
Lysura to Aeneas, “to give laws to Germany?” Aeneas thought it wiser to return
no answer.
Aeneas may have exaggerated his own share in this
matter; but early in October the Royal and Papal ambassadors agreed to submit
to the Diet a project of sending a new embassy to Rome, to negotiate
with Eugenius IV on this basis. Their demands were to go in the form of
articles, not, as before, of Bulls ready prepared.
This seemed to the majority to be a salutary
compromise. The Electors of Mainz and Brandenburg considered it better than a
breach with the King. The Elector of Saxony and the Pfalzgraf thought that the
new proposals contained all that was important in the old. The summons of a new
Council would keep matters still open; anyhow, negotiations would gain time. On
October 5 the league that had been formed in favor of this compromise was openly
avowed, and received many adherents. It was resolved that the articles be
presented to Eugenius at Christmas; if he accept them, the neutrality should be
ended; if not, the matter should be again considered. The answer was to be
brought to a Diet at Nurnberg on March 19, 1447. The Archbishops of Trier and
Koln found themselves deserted by the other Electors; all they could do was to
join on October 11 in a final decree that the King should try to obtain from
the Pope a confirmation of the Bulls prepared by the Electors; failing that, he
should obtain Bulls framed according to the articles; these were to be laid
before the Electors at the next Diet, and each should be free to accept or
reject them. This reservation of their individual liberty was the utmost that
the oligarchical leaders now hoped to obtain for themselves. Next day the
Cardinal of Aries appeared before the Electors in behalf of the Council of
Basel, which had been invited to support the policy of the Electors, and had
issued Bulls accordingly. He proffered the Bulls, but no one would receive
them. With heavy hearts the envoys of Basel left Frankfort. On their way to
Basel they were attacked and plundered; only by the speed of his horse did the
Cardinal of Arles succeed in taking refuge in Strasburg. He afterwards said in
Basel, “Christ was sold for thirty pieces of silver, but Eugenius has offered
sixty thousand for me”.
The league of the Electors had been overthrown at
Frankfort, and with it also fell the cause of the Council of Basel. Germany was
the Council's last hope, and Germany had failed. The diplomacy of the Curia had
helped Frederick III to overcome the oligarchical rising in Germany; but the
Pope had won more than the King. The oligarchy might find new grounds on which
to assert its privileges against the royal power; the conciliar movement was
abandoned, and the summoning of another Council was vaguely left to the Pope’s
good pleasure. The ecclesiastical reforms, which had been made by the Council
of Basel, survived merely as a basis of further negotiations with the Pope. If
the Papal diplomacy had withstood the full force of the conciliar movement, it
was not likely that the last ebb of the falling tide would prevail against it.
There still remained, however, for the final settlement
of the question, the assent of Eugenius IV to the undertaking of his
ambassadors. Even at Frankfort Carvajal had been opposed to all
concessions; at Rome, where the gravity of the situation in Germany and the
importance of the victory won at Frankfort were not fully appreciated; there
was still a chance that the Pope’s obstinacy might be the beginning of new
difficulties. But the health of Eugenius IV was failing; he was weary of the
long struggle, and desired before the end of his days to see peace restored to
the distracted Church. The theologians in the Curia, headed by John of
Torquemada, counseled no concession; the politicians were in favor of accepting
the proffered terms. Eugenius showed his desire to increase the influence of
those who were conversant with German affairs by raising to the Cardinalate in
December Carvajal and the Bishop of Bologna. Frederick III, the Electors, and
the princes of Germany all sent their envoys to Rome. On behalf of the King
went Aeneas Sylvius and a Bohemian knight, Procopius of Rabstein; chief amongst
the others was John of Lysura, Vicar of the Archbishop of Mainz. They all met
at Siena, and rode into Rome, sixty horsemen. A mile outside the city they were
welcomed by the inferior clergy, and were honorably conducted to their
lodgings. A difficulty was first raised whether the Pope could receive the
ambassadors of the Archbishops of Bremen and Magdeburg, seeing that those
prelates had been confirmed by the Council of Basel; but this was overcome by a
suggestion of Carvajal that they should appear as representatives of the sees,
not of their present occupants. On the third day after their arrival an
audience was given to the German ambassadors in a secret consistory, where
Eugenius was seated with fifteen Cardinals. In a clever speech Aeneas Sylvius
laid the proposals before the Pope, and such was his plausibility that he
managed to satisfy the Germans without offending the dignity of the Pope. He
touched upon the evils of ecclesiastical dissension, spoke of the importance of
Germany and its desire for peace, skillfully introduced the German proposals,
and besought the Pope of his clemency to grant them as the means of unity.
Eugenius answered by condemning the neutrality, complained of the conduct of
the deposed archbishops, and finally said that he must deliberate.
On the same day Eugenius was seized by an attack of
fever, which confined him to his bed. The German question was referred to a
commission of Cardinals, and opinion was greatly divided. Only nine Cardinals were
in favor of concession; the others declared that the Roman See was being sold
to the Germans, and that they were being dragged by the nose like
buffaloes. The German proposals were not treated as though they were meant for
definite acceptance, but were regarded as the basis of further negotiation. The
ambassadors were entertained and cajoled by the Cardinals, while the illness of
Eugenius IV made every one anxious to have the matter settled speedily. Little
by little the articles agreed on at Frankfort were pared down:
1) As regarded the summons of a new Council, the Pope
agreed to it as a favor, without issuing a Bull, which might bind his
successor, but merely making a personal promise to the King and the Electors.
2) Instead of the acceptance of the decrees of
Constance and Basel, Eugenius agreed to recognize “the Council of Constance,
and its decree Frequens and other of its decrees, and all the
other Councils representing the Catholic Church”. All mention of the Council of
Basel was studiously avoided, and, by the express mention of the decree Frequens,
the omission of the more important decree Sacrosancta was in a
measure emphasized.
3) On the third point, the acceptance of the Pragmatic
Sanction of Germany as it had been established at the declaration of the
neutrality in 1439, Eugenius IV was willing to follow the example of Martin V
in granting the concordats of Constance. He recognized the existing possessors
of benefices, and agreed to send a legate to Germany, who would arrange for the
liberties of the German Church in the future, and the proper provision to be
made for the Papacy in return. Meanwhile, the condition of the German Church
was to remain as it was, “till an agreement had been made by our legate, or
other orders given by a Council”. The Germans, who had at first taken the Basel
decrees as the foundation of an ecclesiastical reformation, now accepted them
as a limit—a limit, moreover, which might be narrowed.
4) In like manner the Papal diplomacy secured for the
Pope a triumph in the matter of the deposed archbishops. Eugenius IV was asked
to annul their deposition, if they were willing to concur in the declaration in
his favor; he agreed, when they did so concur, to restore them to their office.
Moreover, to aid the progress of these negotiations,
Aeneas Sylvius undertook, in Frederick’s name, that the King would solemnly
declare, and publish throughout Germany, his recognition of Eugenius, would
receive with due honor a Papal legate, would order the city of Basel to
withdraw its safe-conduct from the Council, and, as regarded the provision to
be made for the Pope out of the ecclesiastical revenues of Germany, would act
not only as a mediator but as an ally of the Pope.
Thus diplomacy was busily spinning its web round the
bed of the dying Pope. True till the last to his persistent character, Eugenius
IV was resolved to see the restoration of the German obedience before he died.
The theologians might make the best terms that they could; but Eugenius made
them understand that he wished to see the end. He might well gaze with sadness
on the desolation which his unyielding spirit had wrought in the fortunes of
the Church. France was practically independent of the Papacy; Germany was
estranged; a rival Pope diminished the prestige of the Holy See; in Italy,
Bologna was lost to the domains of the Church, and the March of Ancona was
still in the hands of Sforza. He would bequeath a disastrous legacy to his
successor; but the recovery of Germany would at least improve the position.
Eugenius longed to signalize his last days by a worthy achievement; on their
side the envoys of the German King wished their mission to succeed. Now that a
goal of some sort was in view, all were eager to reach it. If the Pope died
before matters were decided, the powers of the envoys came to an end, for they
were only commissioned to negotiate with Eugenius. The Germans did not wish to
sacrifice the present opportunity, and see everything again reduced to doubt.
The physicians gave Eugenius ten days to live when the
conclusions of the Commission of Cardinals were laid before him. The Pope was
too feeble to examine them fully, much more to go through the labor of reducing
them to the form of Bulls. Scrupulous and persistent to the last, he dreaded
even the semblance of concession when the decisive moment came. When he finally
decided to give way he devised a subterfuge to save his conscience. On February
5 he signed a secret protest setting forth that the German King and Electors
had desired from him certain things “which the necessity and utility of the
Church compel us in some way to grant, that we may allure them to the unity of
the Church and our obedience. We, to avoid all scandal and danger which may
follow, and being unwilling to say, confirm, or grant anything contrary to the
doctrine of the Fathers or prejudicial to the Holy See, since through sickness
we cannot examine and weigh the concessions with that thoroughness of judgment
which their gravity requires, protest that by our concessions we do not intend
to derogate from the doctrine of the Fathers or the authority and privileges of
the Apostolic See”.
By this pitiful proceeding the dying Pope prepared to
enter into engagements which his successor might repudiate. He was ready to
receive the restitution of the German obedience; but the German envoys, on
their side, began to hesitate. They did not, of course, know the secret protest
of the Pope; but they doubted whether they ought to take a step which might
divide Germany, when they had no guarantee that the successor of the
death-stricken Eugenius would pursue his policy; John of Lysura, who was now as
zealous for reconciliation as before he had been anxious for reform, plausibly
argued that they were dealing with the Roman See, which never died; the Bulls
of Eugenius would bind his successor. If they left Rome without declaring the
obedience of Germany, the existing disposition of the Electors might change,
and everything might again become doubtful. So long as Eugenius could stir his
finger, it was enough. If they went away without accomplishing anything they
would be ridiculous. Lysura and Aeneas prevailed on the other ambassadors of
the King and of the Archbishop of Mainz to resolve on a restoration of
obedience to Eugenius IV.
On February 7 the ambassadors were admitted into the
Pope’s chamber. Eugenius still could greet them with dignity, but in a feeble
voice requested that the proceedings should not be long. Aeneas read the
declaration of obedience, and Eugenius handed him the Bulls, which he gave to
the ambassadors of the Archbishop of Mainz as being the primate of Germany. The
envoys of the Pfalzgraf and of Saxony excused themselves from joining in the
declaration; they were not empowered to do so, but they had no doubt that their
princes would give their assent in the forthcoming Diet at Nurnberg. Eugenius
thanked God for the work that had been accomplished, and dismissed, with his
benediction, the ambassadors, who were moved to tears at the sight of the dying
man. A public Consistory was held immediately afterwards before the whole
Curia; over a thousand men were present. Aeneas spoke for the King, Lysura for
the Archbishop of Mainz, the other ambassadors followed. The Vice-Chancellor,
in the Pope’s behalf, spoke words of thankfulness, and the Consistory broke up
amid the joyous peals of bells with which Rome celebrated its triumph. The city
blazed with bonfires; the next day was a general holiday, and was devoted to a
special service of thanksgiving.
The German envoys stayed in Rome, waiting for the
necessary copies of the Bulls, and anxious about the new election. Day by day
Eugenius grew visibly worse, and there were signs of disturbances to follow on
his death. Alfonso of Naples advanced with an army within fifteen miles of
Rome. There were troubles at Viterbo, and in Rome itself the people were
anxious to be rid of the severe rule of Cardinal Scarampo, the favorite of
Eugenius. Amidst this universal disquiet Eugenius died hard. When the
Archbishop of Florence wished to administer supreme unction the Pope refused
saying, “I am still strong; I know my time; when the hour is come I will send
for you”. Alfonso of Naples, on hearing this, exclaimed, “What wonder that the
Pope, who has warred against Sforza, the Colonna, myself, and all Italy, dares
to fight against death also”
At length Eugenius felt that his last hour was
approaching. Summoning the Cardinals, he addressed to them his last words. Many
evils, he said, had befallen the Holy See during his pontificate, yet the ways of
Providence were inscrutable, and he rejoiced, at last before he died, to see
the Church reunited. “Now, before I appear in the presence of the Great Judge,
I wish to leave with you my testament. I have created you all Cardinals save
one, and him I have loved as a son. I beseech you, keep the bond of peace, and
let there be no divisions among you. You know what sort of a Pope the Holy See
requires; elect a successor in wisdom and character superior to me. If you
listen to me, you will rather elect with unanimity a moderate man than a
distinguished one with discord. We have reunited the Church, but the root of
discord still remains; be careful that it does not grow up afresh. That there
be no dispute about my funeral, bury me simply, and lay me in a lowly place by
the side of Eugenius III”. All wept as they heard him. He received supreme
unction, was placed in S. Peter’s chair, and there died on February 23, at the
age of sixty-two. According to Vespasiano da Bisticci, he exclaimed shortly
before his death: “O Gabrielle, how much better had it been for your soul’s
health had you never become Pope or Cardinal, but died a simple monk! Poor
creatures that we are, we know ourselves at last”. His body was exhibited to
public view, and he was buried, according to his desire, in S. Peter’s, by the
side of Eugenius III.
Amid the disastrous events of his pontificate, the
personal character of Eugenius IV seems to play an insignificant part. At his
accession he had to face a difficult problem, which would have tried the tact
and patience of the largest and wisest mind. But Eugenius was a narrow-minded
monk, with no experience of the world and a large fund of obstinacy. He
quarreled with the Romans; he alarmed the politicians of Italy; he offended a
strong party in the Curia, and finally proceeded to defy a Council which was
supported by the moral approval of Europe. Such wisdom as Eugenius IV ever
gained, he gained in the hard school of experience. After the mistakes of the
first year of his pontificate, the rest of his life was a desperate struggle
for existence. The one quality that helped him in his misfortune was the same
obstinacy as first led him astray. Where a more sensitive or a more timid man
might have been disposed for compromise Eugenius stood firm, and in the long
run won a tardy victory, not by his own skill, but through the faults of his
opponents. Time was on the side of the representative of an old institution,
and every mistake of the Council brought strength to the Pope. Those who
at first attacked him through bitter personal animosity gradually found that he
was the symbol of a system which they did not dare to destroy. The wisdom and
skill of eminent men, which at first enabled the Council to attack the Pope,
were gradually transferred to the Pope’s service. Every mistake committed by
the Council lost it a few adherents, alarmed at the dangers which they foresaw,
or anxious for their own personal interests, but all determined on the
overthrow of that which they had forsaken. To them Eugenius IV was necessary;
and they paid him greater reverence through remorse for the wrongs which they
had formerly done him. No man is so zealous as one who has deliberately changed
his convictions; and the success of Eugenius at the last was due to the zeal of
those who had deserted the Council. Hence Eugenius IV was faithfully served in
his latter days, though he inspired no enthusiasm. He was the Pope, the Italian
Pope, and as such was the necessary leader of those who wished to maintain the
prestige of the Papacy, and to keep it secure in its seat at Rome. But he was
outside the chief interests, intellectual and political, which were moving
Italy. Politically, he pursued a course of his own, and was not trusted by
Venice, nor Florence, nor by the Duke of Milan, nor by Alfonso of Naples, while
in Rome itself his rule was harsh and oppressive both to the barons and the
people. He was a man of little culture, and such ideas as he had were framed
upon his monastic training. Yet, though he was untouched by the classical revival,
he was not opposed to it. Among his secretaries were Poggio Bracciolini, Flavio
Biondo, Maffeo Vegio, Giovanni Aurispa, and Piero de Noceto. He welcomed at
Rome the antiquary Ciriaco of Ancona and the humanist George of Trebizond, and
employed in his affairs the learned Ambrogio Traversari. He pursued the plan of
Martin V to restore the decayed buildings of Rome; and in his later days
summoned Fra Angelico to decorate the Vatican Chapel. He also invited to Rome
the great Florentine sculptor Donatello; but his plans were interrupted by the
disturbances of 1434 and his flight from the city. While at Florence he so
admired Ghiberti’s magnificent gates to the Baptistery that he resolved to
decorate S. Peter’s by a like work, which he entrusted to a mediocre but
eminently orthodox artist, Antonio Filarete. The gates of Eugenius IV still
adorn the central doorway of S. Peter’s, and are a testimony of the Pope’s good
intentions rather than of his artistic feelings. Large figures, stiffly and
ungracefully executed, of Christ, the Virgin, SS. Peter and Paul, fill the
chief panels; between them are small reliefs commemorating the glories of the
Pontificate of Eugenius IV, the coming of the Greeks to Ferrara, the Council of
Florence, the coronation of Sigismund, the envoys of the oriental Churches in
Rome. On the lower panels are representations of martyrdoms of saints. The
reliefs are destitute of expression and are architecturally ineffective. The
imagination of the artist has been reserved for the arabesque work which frames
them. There every possible subject seems to be blended in wild confusion—
classical legends, medallions of Roman emperors, illustrations of Aesop’s
fables, allegories of the seasons, representations of games and sports—all are
interwoven amongst heavy wreaths of ungraceful foliage. Eugenius IV showed his
respect for antiquity by restoring the Pantheon, but did not scruple to carry
off for his other works the stones of the Coliseum. Though personally modest
and retiring, he had all the Venetian love of public splendor; he caused
Ghiberti to design a magnificent Papal tiara, which cost 30,000 golden ducats.
Without possessing any taste of his own, Eugenius IV so far followed the
fashion of his time that he prepared the way for the outburst of magnificence
which Nicolas V made part of the Papal policy.
The object, however, which lay nearest the heart of
Eugenius IV was the promotion of the Franciscan Order, to which he himself had
belonged. The friars held a chief place at his court, and were admitted at once
to the Papal presence, where their affairs had precedence over all others, to
the great indignation of the humanists. Poggio rejoiced that under the
successor of Eugenius the reign of hypocrisy was at an end, and friars would no
longer swarm like rats in Rome. If the policy of Eugenius was to erect the
friars once more into a powerful arm of the Holy See, the corrupt state of the
body made such a restoration impossible. Yet Eugenius would give more attention
to remodeling the rules of a religious order than to the great questions which
surrounded him on every side. His notion of ecclesiastical reform was to turn
monastic orders into orders of friars, and he met the demands of the Fathers of
Basel by displaying great activity in this hopeless work.
In person Eugenius IV was tall, of a spare figure, and
of imposing aspect. Though he drank nothing but water, he was a martyr to gout.
He was attentive to all his religious duties, lived sparingly, and was liberal
of alms. He slept little, and used to wake early and read devotional books. He
was reserved and retiring, averse to public appearances, and so modest that in
public he scarcely lifted his eyes from the ground. Though stubborn and
self-willed, he bore no malice, and was ready to forgive those who had attacked
him. He had few intimates; but when he once gave his confidence he gave it
unreservedly, and Vitelleschi and Scarampo successively directed his affairs in
Italy. A man of monastic and old-fashioned piety, he was destitute of political
capacity, and was more fitted to be an abbot than a Pope. What might in a
smaller sphere have been firmness of purpose, became narrow obstinacy in the
ruler of the Universal Church. It is a proof of the firm foundation of Papacy
in the political system of Europe, that it was too deeply rooted for the
mismanagement of Eugenius IV, at a dangerous crisis of its history, to upset
its stability.
CHAPTER II.
NICOLAS V AND THE AFFAIRS OF GERMANY.
1447-1453
On the death of Eugenius IV the troubled state of Rome
made the Cardinals anxious about the future. It was of the utmost importance
for the peace of the Church that the new election should be peaceable and
orderly, that the new Pope should have an undoubted title; but the attitude of
the Romans, who had endured with murmurs the rule of Eugenius IV, made the
Cardinals dread a repetition of the tumults which had caused the Schism. The
citizens of Rome held a meeting in the monastery of Araceli to draw up demands
which should be submitted to the Cardinals. The Cardinals in dismay urged the
Archbishop of Benevento, Cardinal Agnesi, to attend the meeting and confer with
the citizens. The leader of the Romans was Stefano Porcaro, a man of
considerable knowledge of affairs, sprung from an old burgher’s stock in Rome.
Porcaro recommended himself by his capacity to Martin V, who obtained for him
the post of Capitano del Popolo in Florence. There he became acquainted with
many of the chief humanists, and on leaving Florence he travelled in France and
Germany. By Eugenius IV he was made Podestà of Bologna, where his reputation
increased, and he won the friendship of Ambrogio Traversari, who advised the
Pope to employ Porcaro as mediator with the rebellious Romans in 1434. Eugenius
refused all mediation, and his obstinacy was rewarded by success; but it
alienated Porcaro from the Papal service, and his classical studies drifted him
to the republicanism of ancient Rome. In the assembly at Araceli Porcaro rose,
and in a fiery speech stirred the citizens to remember their ancient liberties.
They ought, at least, to have an agreement with the Pope such as even the
smallest towns in the States of the Church had managed to obtain. Many agreed
with him, and the Archbishop of Benevento had some difficulty in reducing him
to silence. The assembly broke up in confusion, and many citizens gathered
round Porcaro.
But the Republican party was afraid to move through
fear of Alfonso of Naples, who lay at Tivoli with an army, with a view of
influencing the new election. He had already sent a message to the Cardinals
that he was there to secure for them a free election, and was at their
commands. The Romans felt he would use any movement on their part as a pretext
for seizing the city; and it was useless to escape from the rule of the Church
only to fall under that of the King of Naples. Accordingly the Republican party
held its hand. The keys of the city were given to the Cardinals, who made the
Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights guardian of the Capitol, and published a
decree ordering the barons to leave Rome. The bands who were flocking from the
country into the city were excluded, the barons unwillingly departed, and all
was quiet when, on March 4, the Cardinals went into conclave in the dormitory
of the cloister of S. Maria sopra Minerva.
Aeneas Sylvius gives a description of the preparations
for the conclave. The dormitory was divided into eighteen Cardinals present;
but on this occasion the partitions were of cloth, not of wood. Lots were drawn
for the distribution of the cells, which each Cardinal adorned with hangings
according to his taste. Each entered the conclave with his attendants, a
chaplain and a cross-bearer; each had his own food sent him every day in a
wooden box, on which his arms were emblazoned. These boxes were carried through
the streets in a way that made the city seem to be full of funerals; they were
accompanied by a procession of the Cardinal’s household and all his dependents,
who had so contracted the habit of flattery that, when their master was not
there, they were fain to grovel for the box that contained his dinner.
When the eighteen Cardinals entered the conclave it
was the general expectation that their choice would fall on Prospero Colonna,
the nephew of Martin V. But the old Roman proverb, “He who goes into the
conclave a Pope comes out a Cardinal”, was again proved true. Prospero Colonna
was supported by the powerful Cardinals Scarampo and Le Jeune but the party of
the Orsini was strongly opposed to an election from the house of their rivals,
and many of the Cardinals thought that it would be bad policy to run the risk
of kindling discord in the city. The opponents of Colonna were more anxious to
prevent his election than careful who else was elected. On the first scrutiny
Colonna had ten votes and Capranica eight. In the hopes of agreeing on another
candidate, various names were suggested of those outside the college, such as
the Archbishop of Benevento and Nicolas of Cusa. On the second scrutiny Colonna
still had ten votes, but the votes of his opponents were more divided, and
three were given for Thomas of Bologna. The election of Colonna now seemed
secure. “Why do we waste time”, said Cardinal Le Jeune, “when delay is hurtful
to the Church? The city is disturbed; King Alfonso is at the gates; the Duke of
Savoy is plotting against us; Sforza is our foe. Why do we not elect a Pope?
God has sent us a gentle lamb, the Cardinal Colonna: he only needs two votes;
if one be given, the other will follow”. There was a brief silence; then Thomas
of Bologna rose to give his vote for Colonna. The Cardinal of Taranto eagerly
stopped him. “Pause”, he said, “and reflect that we are not electing a ruler of
a city but of the Universal Church. Let us not be too hasty”. “You mean that
you oppose Colonna”, exclaimed Scarampo; “if the election were going according
to your wishes, you would not speak of haste. You wish to object, not to
deliberate. Tell us whom you want for Pope”. To parry this home-thrust, which
was true, the Cardinal of Taranto found it necessary to mention someone
definitely. “Thomas of Bologna”, he exclaimed. “I accept him”, said Scarampo,
who was followed by Le Jeune, and soon Thomas had eleven votes in his favor.
Finally, Torquemada said, “I, too, vote for Thomas, and make him Pope; today we
celebrate the vigil of S. Thomas”. The others accepted the election that it
might be unanimous, and Cardinal Colonna announced it to the people. The mob
could not hear him, and a cry was raised that he was Pope. The Orsini roused
themselves; the people, according to old custom, pillaged Colonna’s house.
Their mistake was lucky for themselves, as Thomas was a poor man, and they
found little booty in his house afterwards. The election was a universal
surprise. The Cardinal of Portugal, as he limped out of the conclave, when asked
if the Cardinals had elected a Pope, answered, “No, God has chosen a Pope, not
the Cardinals”.
Tommaso Parentucelli sprang from an obscure family at
Sarzana, a little town not far from Spezia, in the diocese of Lucca. His
father, Bartolommeo, physician in Pisa or Lucca, it is not certain which. At
the age of seven he lost his father, and his mother soon afterwards married
again; but she was careful to give her son a good education, and at the age of
twelve sent him to school at Bologna. As he had to make his own way in the
world, he went to Florence at the age of nineteen, and acted as private tutor
to the sons, first of Rinaldo degli Albizzi, and afterwards of Palla Strozzi.
By this means he saved in three years enough money to enable him to return to Bologna
and continue his studies at the University, where he attracted the notice of
the bishop of the city, Niccolò Albergata, who took him into his service. For
twenty years Parentucelli continued to be at the head of Albergata’s household;
he looked upon the Cardinal as a second father, and served him with zeal. But
he was a genuine student, and employed his leisure in theological reading.
He became famous for his large and varied knowledge, his great powers of
memory, and his readiness and quickness as a disputant. In Albergata’s service
he accompanied his master on many embassies, and obtained an insight into the
politics of Europe, while at the same time, by his own reputation for learning,
he made acquaintance with the chief scholars of Italy. No one had a greater
knowledge of books, and Cosimo de' Medici consulted him about the formation of
the library of S. Marco. The only luxury in which Parentucelli indulged was in
books, for which he had a student's love. He was careful to have fair
manuscripts made for his own use, and was himself famous for his beautiful
handwriting.
On the death of Albergata in 1443 Parentucelli entered
the service of Cardinal Landriani, and after his death in the same year was
employed by Eugenius IV, who soon made him Bishop of Bologna. But Bologna was
in revolt against the Pope, and Parentucelli gained, such scanty revenues
either from his see or from the bounty of Eugenius IV, that he was driven to
borrow money from Cosimo de' Medici to enable him to discharge his legation in Germany.
Such was Cosimo’s friendship that he gave him a general letter of credit to all
his correspondents. The embassy in Germany led to important results, and
Eugenius IV recognized the merits of Parentucelli by making him Cardinal in
December, 1446. He had only enjoyed his new dignity a few months before his
elevation to the Papacy. His first act was a sign of gratitude to his early
patron and friend. He took the pontifical title of Nicolas V in remembrance of
Niccolò Albergata.
If the election of Nicolas V was not very gratifying
to any political party, it was at least objectionable to none. The
Colonna, the Orsini, Venice, the Duke of Milan, the King of France, the King of
Naples, all had hoped for an election in their own special interest. All were
disappointed; but at least they had the satisfaction of considering that their
opponents had gained as little as themselves. No one could object to the new
Pope. He was a man of high character and tried capacity. He had made himself
friends everywhere by his learning, and had made no enemies by his politics.
Alfonso of Naples sent four ambassadors to congratulate him and be present at
his coronation. Aeneas Sylvius waited on him to receive a confirmation of the
agreement which Eugenius IV had made with Germany. “I will not only confirm but
execute it”, was the answer of Nicolas. “In my opinion the Roman Pontiffs have
too greatly extended their authority, and left the other bishops no
jurisdiction. It is a just judgment that the Council of Basel has in turn shortened
too much the hands of the Holy See. We intend to strengthen the bishops, and
hope to maintain our own power most surely by not usurping that of others”.
These words of Nicolas V express the entire situation of ecclesiastical
affairs. If his policy could only have been carried out, the future of the
Church might still have been assured. In the same sense he spoke about secular
matters to his old friend the Florentine bookseller, Vespasiano da Bisticci.
Vespasiano presented himself at a public audience, and Nicolas bade him wait
till he was done. Then he took him into a private room, and said with a smile,
“Would the people of Florence have believed that the simple priest who rang the
bell would one day become Pope to the confusion of the proud?”. Vespasiano
answered that his elevation was due to his merits, and that he now might pacify
Italy. “I pray God” said Nicolas, “that He will give me grace to carry out my
intention, which is to pacify Italy, and to use in my pontificate no other arms
than those which Christ has given me, that is, His Cross”.
The pacific character of the new Pope made him
generally acceptable. After his coronation on March 18, embassies from the
various Italian States flowed into Rome, and the dexterity and precision with
which Nicolas answered their harangues increased the opinion which men already
had of his capacity. He received the embassies in open consistory, so that
those who wished to regale themselves with a banquet of eloquence might be
fully satisfied. Already in Italy a cultivated taste had begun to attach great
importance to the neat and decorous performance of formal duties. Cities were
anxious to have in their service men whose speeches on public occasions could
win applause by the elegance of their style; and scholars rose to the rank of
State officials by the reputation which they gained from these public
appearances. Under Eugenius IV the Papacy had not given much encouragement to
this display of eloquence; but Nicolas V, himself a scholar and the friend of
scholars, was willing to fall in with the prevalent taste. His public audiences
were crowded with critics, and reputations were made or unmade in a morning.
The complimentary harangue began to hold the same relation to the new culture
of the Renaissance as had the scholastic disputation to the erudition of the
Middle Ages. In this arena of eloquence Nicolas V himself could hold his own
with the best, not so much by elegance of style as by the readiness with which
he could aptly reply, on the spur of the moment, to an elaborately prepared
speech. The very graces of the orator who had preceded him lent a foil to the
readiness of the Pope. Thus the Florentine embassy was headed by the learned
Gianozzo Manetti, who spoke for an hour and a quarter. The Pope, with his hand
before his face, seemed to be asleep, and one of his attendants touched his arm
to wake him. But when Gianozzo had finished, Nicolas took each of his
points in order, and gave a suitable answer to them all. The audience knew not
which to admire most, the grace of the orator or the aptness of the Pope. The
cleverness of Nicolas V soon won for him the respect of those who at first
looked with disfavor on the insignificant appearance of the successor of the
majestic Eugenius IV. Nicolas V had no outward graces to commend him. He was
little, with weak legs disproportionately small for his body; a face of ashen
complexion brought into still greater prominence his black flashing eyes; his
voice was loud and harsh; his mouth small, with heavily protruding lips.
Nicolas V, however, had more serious work in hand than
the reception of ambassadors. His first care, naturally, was to secure the
restoration of the German obedience. Aeneas Sylvius, who had acted as
cross-bearer at the Pope’s coronation on March 18, set out on March 30 to carry
to Frederick III the confirmation by Nicolas V of the engagements of his
predecessor. Aeneas advised the King to renew his declaration of obedience, and
order all men to receive honorably the Pope’s legates; so would he end the schism,
conciliate the Pope, win back Hungary, and prepare the way for his coronation
as Emperor. Aeneas himself soon received a mark of the Pope’s favor in the
shape of a nomination to the vacant bishopric of Trieste. As Aeneas found
himself rising in the world, and his age advanced beyond the temptations of
youthful passion, his objections to take Holy Orders had died away. In 1446 he
resolved to live more cleanly, “to abandon”, as he said, “Venus for Bacchus”.
He was ordained, and “loved nothing so much as the priesthood”. Only through
ecclesiastical preferment could he hope for any recognition of his services.
While he was at Rome there came a report of the death of the Bishop of Trieste,
and Eugenius IV was ready to appoint Aeneas to the vacant see. The Bishop of
Trieste outlived Eugenius; but Nicolas V carried out his predecessor’s
intention, disregarding the fact that, by the compact between Eugenius and
Frederick, Trieste was one of the bishoprics granted to the King’s nomination.
No difficulty, however, arose on this head, as Frederick III, independently of
the Pope, had nominated Aeneas. It is true that the Chapter of Trieste tried to
assert their rights, but were at once set aside by the King and Pope, and
Aeneas won his first decided step in the way of preferment.
As affairs stood in Germany, the King, the Archbishop
of Mainz, and the Elector of Brandenburg were ready to acknowledge Nicolas V;
the other Electors had not yet declared themselves. Wishing to make the best
terms for themselves, they turned to the King of France, who held a congress at
Bourges in June. Jacob of Trier went there in person; the other Electors sent
representatives. England, Scotland, Burgundy, and Castile were all ready to
follow the French King, who thus asserted in the affairs of the Church the
authority which had previously belonged to the Emperor. The conclusions signed
at Bourges on June 28 were a little in advance of those accepted by Frederick
III. The King of France and the Electors were ready to acknowledge Nicolas V if
he recognized the existing condition of ecclesiastical affairs, agreed to
summon a Council on September 1, 1448, in some place to be determined by the
French King, accepted the Constance decrees, and agreed to provide for his
rival, Felix V. There was in this a pretense of standing upon the conciliar
basis, and maintaining the cause of reform more definitely than Frederick III
had done; but it was done by an alliance with the French King, the enemy of the
German nation. It was the expression of anarchy and self-interest rather than
any care for the national welfare; it was merely a means of making better terms
than could be obtained by joining Frederick III. The Congress then moved from
Bourges to Lyons, that it might more easily negotiate with Felix V the terms
of his abdication.
Meanwhile Frederick III summoned an assembly of the
princes who had joined his party at Aschaffenburg on July 12, 1447. The
Archbishop of Mainz presided, and the assembly confirmed what had been done at
Rome. Frederick III withdrew his safe-conduct from the Council of Basel, and
ordered it to disperse; but no immediate heed was paid to his command. On
August 21 he published in Vienna a general edict announcing his adhesion to the
conclusion of the assembly at Aschaffenburg, and forbade, under the ban of the
Empire, any adhesion to Felix V or the Council of Basel. The proclamation was
celebrated by festivities in Vienna and by a solemn procession. But this
display of joy was fictitious, and the University was only driven to take part
in the procession under threat of deprivation of its revenues and benefices.
The academic feeling remained till the last true to the conciliar cause.
But the Papal diplomacy steadily pursued its course.
Aeneas Sylvius found himself, as Bishop of Trieste, occupied in the same
way as when he held the inferior office of royal secretary. He was sent to Köln
to win over the archbishop, and succeeded in the object of his mission. But at
Köln he found himself regarded by the University as an apostate; the sneers which
had elsewhere been spoken behind his back were there expressed before his face.
Aeneas found it necessary to justify himself in a letter addressed to the
rector of the University, and his apology is full of characteristic shrewdness.
He went to Basel, he said, an unfledged nestling from Siena; there he heard
nothing but abuse of Eugenius, and was too inexperienced to disbelieve
what he heard. Dazzled by the eminence of the Council’s leaders, he followed in
their track, and his vanity led him to write against Eugenius. But God had
mercy on him, and he went to Frankfort as Saul had gone to Damascus. If even
Augustine had written confessions, why should not he? At Frederick’s Court he
first began to hear both sides, and gradually became neutral, till the arguments
of Cesarini convinced him that he ought to leave the Council’s party. His chief
reasons for doing so were:
1) The wrongful proceedings against the Pope, who was
neither heretical, schismatic, nor a cause of scandal, and therefore ought not
justly to be deposed;
2) the nullity of the Council, which had been
translated by the Pope, did not represent the Universal Church, and was not
supported by any nation in Europe except Savoy;
3) the Council did not trust the justice of its own
cause; was faith only to be found at Basel, as Apollo gave oracles only at
Delphi?—by refusing to go elsewhere the Council showed disbelief in itself.
Thus Aeneas justified himself, and the cause of
Nicolas V progressed, as the Electors saw that they could gain something from
the Pope. Jacob of Trier began to make terms for himself. Dietrich of Koln used
Carvajal to mediate in a troublesome dispute between himself and the Duke of
Cleves. The Pfalzgraf, though the son-in-law of Felix V, was content with
exacting a few concessions from Frederick III, and sent his ambassador to Rome.
The Elector of Saxony obtained corresponding favors from the King. On no side
was there any real care for Church reform; it merely served as a cry under
cover of which the Electors sought to promote their own power and their own
interests. Early in 1448 the whole of Germany had entered the obedience of
Nicolas V.
In accordance with the undertaking of Eugenius IV, a
legate was sent to Germany to arrange for the liberties of the German Church in
the future, and the no less important question of the provision to be made for
the Pope out of its revenues. Cardinal Carvajal was wisely chosen for this
purpose, and the Concordat at Vienna on February 16, 1448, was the work of
himself and the King. It was not submitted to a Diet, though no doubt many
representatives of the Electors and the princes were at Vienna. It would seem
that the assembly of Aschaffenburg was dexterously turned into a Diet; and the
Concordat, made in the name of the German nation, was regarded as being a
necessary consequence of that assembly.
The Concordat of Vienna and the Pragmatic Sanction of
Bourges represent the net result of the reforming movement at Basel, and in
their form, as well as their contents, go back to the system pursued at the end
of the Council of Constance. The strength of the reforming party was its cry
for the redress of grievances which each national Church experienced from Papal
interference. Its weakness lay in the fact that it had not sufficient
statesmanship to devise a means of redressing these grievances without
destroying the constitution of the Church under the Papal monarchy. The Council
of Constance fell in pieces before the difficulties of this task, and produced
merely a temporary agreement between the Papacy and the national Churches
concerning a few matters of complaint. The Council of Basel, in its desire to
abolish abuses, threatened to sweep away also the basis of the Papal monarchy,
and so became engaged in an irreconcilable contest with the Papacy, in which it
was not supported by the public opinion of Europe. In this state of things
France used the opportunity to regulate by royal authority the relations of the
Gallican Church to Rome. Germany, after a vain endeavor to arbitrate as neutral
between the rival Popes, fell back upon the old method of a Concordat, and
aimed merely at extending the basis which had been established at Constance.
The Concordat of Constance was made provisionally for five years only; the
Concordat of Vienna was meant, on the Papal side, to be permanent. It was, of
course, true that Eugenius IV had agreed in February, 1447, that another
Council should be assembled within ten months. A year passed, and nothing was
done towards summoning a Council. The Concordat of Vienna confirmed all that
Eugenius IV had granted, 'so far as they do not go against this present
agreement; it made no mention of a Council, and the promise of Eugenius IV
lapsed through non-fulfillment.
Thus Germany was contented to accept as the settlement
of its grievances a private agreement between the King and the Pope. The
question arranged by the Concordat of Vienna was the relations henceforth to
exist between the Papacy and the German Church. It was little more than a
repetition of the Concordat of Constance; but such alterations as were made
were in favor of the Pope.
It dealt only with the grievances caused by Papal
reservations and Papal interference with elections. It admitted the right of
Papal reservation to benefices whose holders died at the Roman Court or within
two days' journey from Rome, to vacancies caused by Papal deprivation or
translation, to benefices vacated by the deaths of Cardinals or other officials
of the Curia, to offices held by any promoted by the Pope to a bishopric,
monastery, or other office incompatible with residence. Moreover, Papal
provisions were allowed to benefices, excepting the higher offices in
cathedrals and collegiate churches, such as might fall vacant in the months of
January, March, May, July, September, and November. The Concordat
of Constance had given to the Pope alternate benefices. The Concordat of
Vienna gave him alternate months, and it is noticeable that by this arrangement
the Pope secured 184 out of the 365 days of the year.
The Papal right of confirmation of other elections was
retained as before. In case the elections were canonical, the Pope was to
confirm them, unless from some reasonable and evident cause, and with the
consent of the Cardinals, the Pope thought that provision should be made for
some more useful and more worthy person If the elections were found to be
uncanonical, the Pope was to provide. The dues to the Curia, annates,
first-fruits, and the rest, were to be paid in two portions within two years.
If the rates were thought excessive, the Pope was willing to have a
revaluation; also he was ready to take into account any special circumstances
which affected at any time the revenues of the office so taxed. Benefices below
the annual value of twenty- four florins were to be exempt.
The Papal restoration was complete. The German Church
gained nothing. The only points which showed any care for its interests were
provisions that the Papal reservation should be exercised only in favor of
Germans, and that the Papal months should be accepted by the Ordinaries. These
advantages were, however, seeming rather than real. If so much were secured by
the Papacy, it would be difficult to prevent it from overstepping these slight
barriers.
No mention was made in the Concordat of the Council of
Basel or of its decrees. The reforming movement had been a political failure,
and the fruits of its labors were swept away by the reaction. The Council had
not succeeded in accomplishing any of its objects. It had not even impressed
the Curia with a sense of the gravity of the crisis from which it had escaped.
The restored Papacy was only bent on going back to its old lines, and showed no
desire to lay the foundations of a gradual reform of the abuses which had
exposed it to so grave a peril. The Concordat was signed at Vienna on February
18; it was confirmed at Rome on March 19, after careful investigation by
learned canonists and eminent Cardinals, though the intervening time
barely allowed it to be carried from one place to another.
The reason why Frederick III submitted to terms, which
were so manifestly in the Pope's favor, was the need which he felt of
maintaining his alliance with the Pope as the only means of checking the
electoral oligarchy, and preventing their further connection with France. He
had no ground for opposing the Papal power of reservation. His private
agreement with Eugenius IV allowed the Pope to confer upon him privileges which
were founded on the Papal right of reservation. The assent of the Electors was
gained by bribes of different kinds; the Archbishops were won over, like the
King, by grants of some of the Papal reservations. The Pope bought back the
obedience of Germany by granting to the existing representatives of the German
Church and nation some of the privileges which were restored to the Papacy. As
the existing generation died out everything would again revert to the Pope.
The conclusion of the Concordat of Vienna ended the
dwindling existence of the Council of Basel. On May 18 Frederick III forbade
the city of Basel, under threat of the ban of the Empire, to harbor the Council
within its walls. The citizens found it necessary at last to yield, and on July
7 five hundred of them honorably escorted the remnants of the Council on their
way to Lausanne, whither they transferred themselves under the protection of
the French King. Charles VII undertook the task of bringing the schism to an
end, and played the same part in ecclesiastical affairs as Sigismund had done
in the previous generation. Felix V was weary of his shadowy dignity. The
conciliatory temper of Nicolas V towards him and Charles VII made the ultimate
settlement tolerably easy. The ambassadors of England and of René of Anjou took
part in the work, and Charles VII obtained a promise from Nicolas V that a new
Council should be held in the dominions of France. On April 7, 1449, Felix V
laid aside his Papal office; but he did so in language that still asserted the
principle which he had been elected to maintain : “In this holy synod of Lausanne,
representing the Universal Church, we lay aside the dignity and possession of
the Papacy, hoping that the kings, princes, and prelates, to whom we judge that
this our communication will be acceptable, will aid the authority of General
Councils, will defend and support it; and that the Universal Church, for whose
dignity and authority we have fought, will by its prayers commend our humility
to the chief and eternal Shepherd”.
Well may the Papal chronicler remark that there is not
a sentence, scarcely a word, in this which does not merit censure. But Nicolas
V was not obstinate, like his predecessor; provided he won the substantial
point, he was not careful about words. He had saved the Papal dignity by
committing the conduct of the negotiation to Charles VII; Felix V might have
his say provided he abdicated peaceably. The Council was also allowed to save
its dignity. On April 19 it elected Nicolas V as Pope, and on April 25
conferred by a decree on Amadeus the office of Cardinal, which Nicolas V had agreed
to grant him, together with the first place next to the Pope, the position of
General Vicar within the dominions that had recognized him, and the
outward honors of the Papal rank. The Council then decreed its own dissolution,
and its members dispersed. True to his conciliatory policy, Nicolas V restored
D'Allemand to his office of Cardinal, and recognized three of the creations of
Felix V. John of Segovia received from the Pope a little bishopric in Spain,
where, hidden among the hills, he spent the rest of his days in Arabic studies,
translated the Koran into Latin, and exposed its errors. D'Allemand retired to
his see of Arles, where he was famous for his personal piety and good works,
and after his death, September 16, 1450, it was said that miracles were wrought
at his tomb. So great was his fame for sanctity that Clement VII in 1527
pronounced him worthy of the imitation of the faithful. Amadeus did not long
survive him; he died on January 7, 1451, more useful to the Church by his death
than by his life, says Aeneas Sylvius, though most of his contemporaries are
willing to forgive his previous misdeeds in remembrance of his renunciation.
Thus Nicolas V had the satisfaction of seeing the
schism brought to an end, its last remnants swept away, and the Papacy restored
to a supremacy which it had not enjoyed for nearly a century. In Italy also
Nicolas V had the satisfaction of bringing back order into the Papal States. He
soothed the rebellious spirit of the Romans by ordaining that only Romans
should hold magistracies and benefices within the city, and that the imposts
should be spent only for the good of the city. He soothed the barons by his
mildness, and did away with the grievances of the Colonna by allowing them to
rebuild Palestrina, on condition that it should not be fortified. The knowledge
which he had gained as Bishop of Bologna showed him that that city could be won
by a compromise. He was content that it should recognize the sovereignty of the
Holy See and admit a Papal legate, with certain powers of interference;
otherwise it might retain the rule of the Bentivogli and appoint its own
magistrates. The luckiest event, however, for Nicolas V was the death, on
August 13, 1447, of Filippo Maria Visconti, which left the affairs of Milan in
confusion, and turned elsewhere the ambition of Francesco Sforza, who withdrew
his forces from the March of Ancona, and left the Pope in undisputed
possession.
Filippo Maria Visconti is a typical character of the
last members of the princely families who had made themselves lords of the
cities of Italy. He succeeded by caution, prudence, and treachery in gathering
together the broad dominions of his father, Gian Galeazzo; but the strain which
the effort involved seems to have paralyzed his faculties. He had studied so
carefully the mode by which a principality was won, that he had learned with
fatal accuracy the ease with which it might be lost. His energies were entirely
devoted to the security of his own person, the suppression of possible rivals,
the maintenance of his own position. Though engaged in many wars to avert
possible danger from his own dominions, he never personally took the field, and
secured himself against his generals by playing off one against another. Thus
he held the balance between Sforza and Piccinino; when one seemed likely to
become too powerful his rival was pitted against him. Filippo Maria was
assiduous in his attention to public matters, and regulated by minute
ordinances the internal affairs of his state. He lived a lonely life in the
castle of Milan and his country houses, to which he had canals constructed to
convey him more secretly. He had no one around him whose character he had not
tried by exposing them to temptations, while they did not suspect that he was
watching. Access to him was difficult, and was only permitted after innumerable
precautions. He was surrounded by spies, who were employed in checking one
another. So afraid was he of assassination that he changed his bedroom two or
three times in the night, and was never without a physician, whose advice he
sought respecting the cause of every bodily sensation which he experienced. Yet
he was a man of learning, and was especially interested in the heroes of past
times and in the French romances of chivalry. He was careful in performing all
religious offices, and never did anything without secret prayer. Even when he
left his chamber and looked upon the sun, he uncovered his head and gave God
thanks. Yet he was full of superstitions, consulted astrologers, and was
terrified at a thunderstorm. He had such a horror of death that he would have
no one ill within his palace, nor would he allow the death of any one to be
mentioned in his presence. Yet when his own death drew nigh he faced it with
fortitude, and even hastened its approach by ordering his physician to open an
old wound in his leg. His aim in life was simply to live in quietness and
security, and his tortuous policy in Italy had no other object. He had a
cynical contempt for mankind, and pursued none but purely selfish ends; yet he
was neither cruel nor vicious, and possessed philosophic gravity and decorum.
If Filippo Maria Visconti had succeeded during his
lifetime in maintaining order in his dominions, he produced confusion by his
death. His only child was an illegitimate daughter, Bianca, whose hand had been
for the bait which kept Francesco Sforza true to her father's service, till he
at last succeeded in extorting a fulfillment of the promise so long delayed.
The rule of the Visconti was not a recognized monarchy; and no rights of
succession could pass through an illegitimate daughter. Yet Sforza aspired to
the Duchy of Milan, and his claim rested on grounds as good as those of the
other claimants. Alfonso of Naples asserted that Filippo Maria had named
him as his successor by will; but the lordship of Milan was but the chief
magistracy of the city, and could not pass by bequest. The Duke of Orleans, by
his marriage with Valentina, sister of Filippo Maria, claimed to represent the
Visconti house; but this was to regard Milan as a fief which passed through the
female line. Finally, Frederick III claimed that on the extinction of the
Visconti house Milan, as an Imperial fief, reverted to the Emperor; but this
disregarded the fact that Milan, though nominally subject to the Empire, had
been a free city for centuries before the Visconti made themselves its lords.
The Milanese on their part did not consider themselves as belonging to any of
these claimants. They had submitted to the rule of the great Visconti family,
which had been closely connected with the past glories of their city. When that
family came to an end they decided to go back to their position of an
independent republic, and other cities in the dominions of the Visconti
followed their example.
The new republics would clearly have enough to do to
hold their own against these numerous claimants; but Venice, always jealous of
its neighbors, saw in the difficulties of Milan its own opportunity. Engaged in
war with Venice, Milan was driven to take into its service Francesco Sforza,
who, with consummate sagacity, used the opportunity so offered. He raised up in
Milan a party favorable to himself; he won back towns from the Venetians, and
garrisoned them with his own soldiers. He defeated Venice so that she was
driven to sue for peace; then he suddenly changed sides, allied himself with
the Venetians and advanced against Milan, which was unsuspecting and unprepared
for a siege. In vain Venice, when it was too late, saw her mistake, made peace
with Milan, and dispatched an army against Sforza. Sforza, though suffering
from famine almost as much as Milan, persisted in his blockade, and kept the
Venetian troops at bay till the Milanese, in desperation, could endure no
longer. Then, gathering all the food he could, he entered Milan, February 26,
1450, as the savior, rather than the conqueror, of the people. He arranged that
supplies should rapidly be brought into the city, and managed to present
himself to the people as their benefactor. Admiration of his cleverness and
prudence overcame all resentment of his treachery. His first measures were wise
and conciliatory, and promised good government for the future. The Milanese
soon admitted that one who could plot so skillfully was likely to rule with
success. The condottiere general, the son of the peasant of Cotignola, took his
place amongst the princes of Europe.
Nicolas V was glad to see peace again restored in
North Italy, and a power established which was strong enough to keep in check
the ambition of Venice. He took no part in the operations of the war. His
pursuits were those of peace. He was busy in organizing the Papal finances, and
showed his gratitude for past favors to Cosimo de' Medici by making him his
banker, a step which benefited the Papal treasury, and at the same time
increased the prestige and credit of the great banking-house of the Medici.
Otherwise Nicolas was employed in planning the restoration of the buildings of
Rome, and in increasing the treasures of the Vatican Library. His object was to
make Rome once more a fit residence for the Papacy, to restore its former
splendor, and make it the literary and artistic capital of Europe. In 1450
Nicolas V proclaimed a year of Jubilee. The schism was at an end, and since the
first jubilee of Boniface VIII there had not been in Rome an undisputed Pope to
lend solemnity to the pilgrimage. Italy was peaceful, and access to Rome was
free. Crowds of pilgrims from every land flocked to Rome, to the number of
40,000 in one day. So great was the crowd returning one evening from S. Peter's
that more than 200 persons were killed in the crush upon the bridge of S.
Angelo, or were pushed into the water. Nicolas took care to prevent such an
accident in the future by pulling down the houses which narrowed the approach
to the bridge, and built a memorial chapel of marble to commemorate the
calamity.
The arrangements for supplying food to this great
multitude and for keeping order were excellent, and testified to the Pope's
administrative skill. The offerings that flowed into the Papal treasury were
large, and gave Nicolas V the means of carrying out still more splendidly his
magnificent schemes of restoring the City of Rome—for which a new festival was
in store, in the shape of an Imperial coronation. The peaceful settlement of
North Italy promised Frederick III an easy access to Rome, which he could never
have won by his own arms. He was now thirty-five years old, and bethought
himself of marriage, which he had never contemplated since the offer which
Felix V made him of his daughter. He sent two ambassadors to report on the
ladies of royal birth who were eligible as wife of the King of the Romans, and
finally fixed on Leonora, daughter of the King of Portugal and niece of Alfonso
of Naples. Aeneas Sylvius was sent to Naples to negotiate the marriage; and on
his way thither received the news that Nicolas V had conferred on him the
bishopric of his native city of Siena. His business in Naples was successfully
accomplished. Leonora, only fourteen years old, had other suitors, but she
preferred Frederick III, for she rejoiced to be called Empress. “For the title
of Emperor”, says Aeneas, “was held in more esteem abroad than at home”. It
was agreed that Frederick should meet his bride at some port in Italy, whence
they should proceed to Rome for the coronation.
When this had been arranged, Aeneas visited Rome at
the end of 1450, and had an opportunity of conferring another service on the
Pope. There was one shadow which still hung over Nicolas V—the shadow of a
future Council, which he had promised to the French King. French ambassadors
were at Rome urging the fulfillment of the promise, and Aeneas supplied the
Pope with a means of shelving the matter. Nicolas V had promised to hold a
Council in France, if the other princes of Europe were willing. Aeneas, in a
speech before the Pope and Cardinals, announced the betrothal of Frederick and
his approaching coronation. He then went on to demand, in Frederick's name, a
Council in Germany, as being the fittest land for such a purpose. Nicolas V
could answer the French ambassadors that the princes of Europe were not
unanimous in consenting to a Council in France. Again the cleverness of Aeneas
was found useful, and the unwelcome Council was dismissed for the present.
Aeneas also suggested to the Pope that it would be
well if Germany felt the influence of the religious spirit of Italy. In the
manifold productiveness of the fifteenth century in Italy, the fervor of
religious feeling had found some noble exponents. Chief of these was
Bernardino, born in 1380 of a good family in Siena. He gave to the poor his
patrimony and entered the Franciscan Order. Bernardino was filled with an
enthusiasm for moral reform, and strove to bring back the Franciscan Order to
original purity. He followed the example of its great founder, and, like
Francis, went barefoot throughout Italy, preaching to the crowds who in every
city thronged to hear him. Wherever he went he awakened the fervor of devotion,
which at all times can be kindled among the masses into a transient flame.
Aeneas Sylvius, in his youth, was almost stirred to become a friar by
Bernardino's eloquence, though his after-life does not show that the impression
lasted long. The Emperor Sigismund, during his stay at Siena, delighted to
listen to Bernardino's preaching, though he made little effort to give it any
practical result. Bernardino preached the gospel “of Christ and Him crucified”.
He attracted the attention of the crowd by displaying a wooden tablet
emblazoned with the name of Jesus in letters of gold, and with loud cries and
exhortations set it before them for worship. His success raised many enemies,
who besought the Pope to silence the unseemly fanatic. But the Papacy was wise
enough to countenance every religious movement that was not hostile to itself.
Bernardino’s teaching was examined and approved by Martin V and Eugenius IV.
The popular devotion found his sanctity attested by miracles. Even Aeneas
Sylvius saw him dispel by his prayers a storm that threatened to disturb his
congregation. He died in 1444, and such was his reputation for holiness that he
was canonized by Nicolas V during the year of jubilee.
Bernardino is said to have established by his exertions
more than five hundred Franciscan monasteries in Italy. He had many followers,
chief amongst whom was Giovanni of Capistrano, a village near Aquila. On him
Bernardino’s mantle fell, and at the suggestion of Aeneas Sylvius he was sent
by the Pope to evangelize Germany, and secure its allegiance to Rome. Great was
the success of Capistrano in Vienna. From twenty to thirty thousand thronged
daily to hear the preaching of the holy friar, though he spoke in Latin, and
his words had to be translated into German by an interpreter. They revered him
as though he were an Apostle, thronged round him to touch the hem of his
garments, and brought their sick in multitudes that he might lay his hands upon
them.
Capistrano’s mission had, however, another object than
merely to preach to the people of Vienna and reform Franciscan houses. It was
hoped that his prestige would have some influence on Bohemia, which had not
ceased to be a trouble to the Papacy. It is true that the Catholic reaction had
made huge strides under Sigismund, and great things were hoped from Albert II.
But Albert’s death left Bohemia with an infant king, and the national feeling
against German interference revived during the minority. Rokycana returned to
Prague and resumed his office as archbishop. The nation that had raised heroes
like Zizka and Procopius the Great found in George Podiebrad a leader who had
the wisdom to unite the nobles into a patriotic league, and pursue a policy of
moderation to all parties in Church and State alike. The religious question in
Bohemia was left more vague than ever by the dissolution of the Council of
Basel. Nothing had been said about the Compacts in the final agreement between
the Pope and the Council. The Compacts themselves had never received Papal
ratification. It suited Nicolas V to leave the matter open, behave with
moderation, and neither accept nor repudiate the Compacts, but wait till an
opportunity offered for ending the exceptional position which Bohemia still
claimed for itself. Meanwhile, Capistrano tried the effects of his eloquence,
Cusa of his learning, and Aeneas Sylvius of his cleverness.
Besides the religious object of winning back the
Hussites from their heresy, there was also the political motive of
strengthening in Bohemia the party of Frederick III, and allowing him to
proceed at leisure with his Italian journey. The Bohemians murmured against
Frederick’s guardianship of Ladislas, and demanded that their king should be
given up to their own care. Frederick did not dare to leave his kingdom till he
had taken some steps to secure quietness in Bohemia. Aeneas Sylvius was sent as
the head of a royal embassy to a Bohemian Diet, and we have a vivid picture
drawn by his pen. He and his companions passed through Tabor, where they were
hospitably received. As he entered the city gate he saw on either side of the
archway a shield: one bore the Hussite symbol of an angel holding the cup, the
other a picture of the blind general Zizka. Aeneas found that the old spirit
still survived amid the rude dwellers in the mountain fastness. He was struck
with holy horror at their disregard for ecclesiastical traditions. He had
expected to find them orthodox except in the matter of the Communion under both
kinds; he found them an entirely heretical and rebellious people. He left Tabor
with the feelings of one who had escaped from the companionship of the ungodly,
and advanced towards Prague. But the city was stricken by the plague, and the
Diet adjourned to Beneschau, where Aeneas discharged his mission. He besought
the Diet to await peacefully the return of Frederick III from Rome; Ladislas
was yet too young to rule. The Diet was not contented with this vague
assurance, and the rhetoric of Aeneas could not convince them. But Aeneas had
better success in arranging matters with George Podiebrad, the Governor of
Bohemia, whom he judged to be ambitious rather than misguided. He conferred
with him about the religious troubles in Bohemia; each complained that the
Compacts were not observed. Podiebrad demanded the recognition of Rokycana as
archbishop; Aeneas asserted that it was a breach of ecclesiastical order to
compel the Pope to recognize as archbishop any one whom he deemed unfit. No
result came from the argument; but Aeneas was satisfied that he had gauged
Podiebrad’s character and found him to be a harmless man who could be easily
managed. On his return Aeneas again passed through Tabor, and on this occasion
the Bishop Niklas of Pilgram, with an attendant crowd of priests and scholars,
came ready for a disputation with one who had a fame for learning. They were
all well versed in Latin, and Aeneas owns that the one good point about this
perfidious race was its love for literature. The discussion was like most
theological discussions—each side showed much learning and readiness.
The Taborites urged the scriptural nature of their
doctrine; Aeneas pleaded the authority of the Church, and of the Pope, its
earthly head. Yet Aeneas managed to extract some humor out of the discussion.
"Why do you extol to us the Apostolic See?" said one of the
disputants. “We know the Pope and his Cardinals to be slaves of avarice and
gluttony, whose god is their belly, and whose heaven is money”. The speaker was
a round fat man. Aeneas gently laid his hand upon his stomach, “Is this”,
said he, “the result of fasting and abstinence?”. There was a general
laugh, and Aeneas withdrew from the dispute. Not till he reached the Catholic
city of Budweis did he breathe freely, and feel as if he had emerged from the
infernal regions to the light of heaven. If Aeneas had not converted the
Bohemian heretics, nor convinced the Bohemian Diet, he, at least, obtained so
much that Frederick III recognized Podiebrad as Governor of Bohemia, and so
procured peace with that realm during his Roman journey.
No sooner had Aeneas returned to Vienna than he was
again sent off to Italy to arrange for Frederick’s coming, and receive his
intended bride on her landing. Frederick prepared for his departure, and
appointed regents during his absence. But when it was known that he intended to
take with him the young Ladislas, the discontent of the barons of Austria broke
out in revolt. Headed by Ulrich Eizinger, they formed a League, and demanded
that Ladislas, their rightful king, should be given up to them. When Frederick
refused, the League renounced allegiance to him, and took the government into
its hands. Frederick’s position was ignominious: he had no forces to send
against them, and judged it better to leave Austria in revolt, and proceed with
his Italian expedition. He spent Christmas at S. Veit in Carinthia, and on the
last day of December, 1451, he entered Italian ground.
Even in the person of the feeble Frederick III the
glamour of the Imperial title retained some power. When it was known that he
was actually coming to Italy, a certain amount of trepidation prevailed in the
Italian cities. So evenly balanced was their constitutional mechanism that the
slightest touch might incline it one way or another. Even Siena looked with
suspicion on its bishop, Aeneas Sylvius, lest he might use his influence with
Frederick to seize the lordship of his native town. Much as Nicolas V had
desired an Imperial coronation at Rome, to give occasion for another festival,
as well as to mark the close alliance between the Empire and the Papacy, he began
to listen to the alarming hints which were poured into his ears. Frederick
might plot against the peace of the Roman city; allied by his marriage with
Alfonso of Naples, he might threaten the wealth of the Pope and Cardinals. If
we are to believe Aeneas Sylvius, it needed all his cleverness to reassure the
Pope.
Frederick advanced from Treviso through the Venetian
territory. He did not think it wise, as Milan was in the hands of a usurper of
the Imperial rights, to go to Milan to receive the iron crown of
Lombardy. He was met near the Po by Borso, Marquis of Este, who received
him on bended knees and escorted him to Ferrara. There Lodovico Gonzaga of
Mantua came to welcome him, and Sforza's young son, Galeazzo Maria, brought a
condescending invitation to Milan. From Ferrara Frederick journeyed to Bologna,
where he was greeted by Cardinal Bessarion, the Papal legate. Thence he passed
into Florence and saw with wonder the splendor of the city. Frederick was
accompanied by his ward Ladislas, a boy of twelve, his brother Albert and a few
bishops and smaller princes, with about 2000 horsemen. His advent in Italy had
no political significance, but was merely an antiquarian pageant.
On February 2 came the news that Leonora, with her
convo had arrived at Livorno. Aeneas Sylvius was sent to meet her; but the
punctilious ambassador of Portugal refused to give up his precious charge
except to the Emperor himself. Aeneas, on his side, asserted the dignity of his
mission. For fifteen days they wrangled, till the matter was submitted to
Leonora, who professed herself obedient to the commands of her future lord. She
was escorted, on February 24, to Siena, where Frederick was anxiously awaiting
her. The Sienese marked by a stone pillar the exact spot where the Emperor first
embraced his bride. The elegant festivities of the Sienese charmed Frederick as
much as their scanty contribution of money displeased him. On March 1 he passed
on to Viterbo, where some unruly spirits showed their contempt for dignities by
trying to catch with hooks the baldachin held over the Emperor that they might
make booty of the rich stuff; then growing bolder, they made a rush for the
trappings of Frederick's horse. “We must repel force by force”, he cried, and,
seizing a lance from an attendant, he charged the mob. This was the beginning
of an unseemly brawl, in the midst of which Frederick entered his lodging.
On March 8 the King and his attendants came in sight
of Rome. Frederick turned to Aeneas, and said prophetically, “We are going
to Rome—I seem to see you Cardinal and future Pope”. The Cardinals and nobles
of Rome advanced to welcome Frederick, who, according to custom, passed the
night outside the walls. Nicolas V was still perturbed at the thoughts of his
coming. Aeneas went on before to assure him of the King’s goodwill. “I
prefer the error of suspicion rather than of over-confidence” was the Pope’s
answer. Next day Frederick and Leonora entered Rome with pomp, and were
escorted to S. Peter’s, where the Pope awaited them in the porch seated in his
chair. Frederick knelt and kissed the Pope’s foot; then Nicolas rose, offered
him his hand to kiss, and kissed his cheek. The King presented a massive piece
of gold, took the accustomed oath of fidelity, and was led by the Pope into the
church. Never before had there been such friendly greeting between Pope
and Emperor.
Nicolas V proposed to defer the coronation till March
19, as being the anniversary of his own coronation as Pope. Frederick acceded
to the Pope’s wish; but he did not care, meanwhile, to remain indoors at the
Vatican, and scandalized the Romans by rambling about the city before his
coronation, which was contrary to usage. He was greatly impressed by the old
buildings of Rome, as well as by the restorations on which Nicolas V was engaged.
The Pope and the King conferred freely within the Vatican, and their alliance
was confirmed by their mutual needs. Frederick wished the Pope to support him
against the rebellious Austrians, and compel them to submit to his authority as
guardian of the young Ladislas. Nicolas urged Frederick to use material weapons
to bring into subjection a perfidious race which had favored the conciliar
movement, and was yet far from showing a proper obedience to the Papal
commands. The league between Pope and Emperor was strengthened by these
conferences, and Frederick besought the Pope to give an additional proof of his
favor by conferring on him in Rome the crown of Lombardy, which he had not been
able to receive at Monza. In spite of the protest of the Milanese ambassadors,
Nicolas V, on March 16, performed this unprecedented act, and crowned Frederick
King of the Romans, with the crown of Aachen, which had been brought for the
purpose. On the same day the marriage of Frederick and Leonora was performed by
the Pope. It was noticed that Ladislas had a place assigned him below most of
the Cardinals, and some of the Cardinals had precedence over Frederick, who as
yet only ranked as the German King.
At length, on March 19, the Imperial coronation was
performed with due pomp and ceremony. Frederick first took the oath of
obedience to the Pope, was made a canon of S. Peter's, and, with Leonora,
received the unction at the hands of the Vice-Chancellor. The Pope said mass,
and then placed in the Emperor's hands the golden sword, the apple, and the
scepter, and on his head the crown. To make the ceremony more imposing,
Frederick had fetched from Nurnberg the Imperial insignia of Charles the Great.
Their venerable antiquity did not match the magnificent clothing of Frederick,
and suggested the thought that his predecessor paid more attention to his
actions than to his ornaments. The keen eye of Aeneas Sylvius detected on the
sword-blade the outlines of the Lion of Bohemia, which showed him that these
insignia dated only from the times of Charles IV. This spurious affectation of
antiquity was an apt symbol of the Imperial claims and of the decrepitude of
the Empire. It had grown in outward display in proportion as it had lost
in real power. The Empire was but a reminiscence of the past; the Emperor was
useful only as a figure in the pageant.
When the coronation was over, the Pope and the Emperor
walked hand in hand to the door of S. Peter's. The Pope mounted his horse, and
the Emperor held the reins for a few paces. Then he too mounted his steed, and
Pope and Emperor rode together as far as the Church of S. Maria in Cosmedin.
Nicolas then returned to the Vatican, and Frederick, according to ancient
custom, dubbed knights on the Bridge of S. Angelo. More than three hundred
received this distinction, many of them men of little worth, who excited the
mockery even of Aeneas Sylvius. A splendid dinner at the Lateran brought the
day's festivities to an end.
When this important matter had been happily
accomplished the Pope issued a series of Bulls in Frederick’s favor. Some
of the privileges so conferred were personal. He and a hundred persons, whom he
might choose, were empowered to select their own confessor. He might have
divine service performed for his benefit in a place which lay under an interdict;
he might carry about with him an altar, at which a priest might say mass at any
time; he and his guests might indulge in milk and eggs during times of fasting.
Other rights of more importance were also conferred on Frederick, which tended
to increase his power over the possessions of the Church in his own dominions.
In case of need he might employ the services of unbelievers to help him in war;
a provision which no doubt was meant to authorize him to use the troops of
Bohemia against his Austrian subjects. To dower his daughters or for other
grave necessities he might impose moderate taxes according to ancient custom on
the clergy of Austria. He was empowered to imprison and confiscate the goods of
all spiritual persons who had joined the rebellion against his wardship of
Ladislas. He might exercise the right of visitation over all the monasteries of
Austria. He received a grant of a tenth from all the clerical revenues in the
Empire—a grant without precedent, as no reason of an ecclesiastical character
was alleged as a colorable pretext. The Pope and the Emperor were bent upon
pushing to the furthest point their victory over the party of reform. The
German Church was helpless before them, and they saw no reason for sparing
it.
All these advantages were prospective; but Frederick
made money out of his coronation by selling at once patents of nobility. Titles
of Imperial Count and Doctor were sold for moderate prices. The open and
shameless greed of Frederick awoke the laughter of the wits of Rome.
From Rome Frederick III went to Naples at Alfonso's
request. He was received with much magnificence; the roads were strewn with
fragrant flowers, and troops of boys and girls with graceful dance and song
welcomed the Emperor and his bride. Alfonso promised to help Frederick to
recover Milan; but Frederick's character was not warlike, and the fulfillment
of the promise was little likely to be required. During Frederick's visit to
Naples Aeneas Sylvius stayed at Rome to keep watch over Ladislas. He was startled
by a summons, in the dead of night, to visit the Pope, who had received
intelligence of a plot to carry off Ladislas. Precautions were at once taken;
so suspicious was the Pope even of the Cardinals that he forbade them to invite
Ladislas to hunting parties outside the city walls; Frederick on his return
found Ladislas still safe. He stayed three days in Rome, and in a public
consistory thanked the Pope for his magnificent reception. Aeneas Sylvius
delivered a speech in favor of a crusade against the Turks, and was pleased to
think that his eloquence drew tears from his audience. On April 26 Frederick
left Rome;
Frederick III returned through Siena to Florence,
where he received a letter from the combined Austrians, Hungarians, and
Moravians threatening him with war unless he gave up Ladislas. Their deputies
made a scheme for the escape of Ladislas, and tried to enlist the Florentines
on their side; but again the plan was discovered in good time. In Florence
Frederick assumed the character of a mediator in Italian affairs. As matters
stood, Florence and Sforza were banded together against Naples and Venice,
while the Pope was neutral. Frederick urged on the Florentines peace and
goodwill towards Alfonso, and received an assurance of their peaceable intentions.
To Florence also came an ambassador from Sforza, asking Frederick to invest him
with the Duchy of Milan. Frederick did not refuse, but demanded a yearly
tribute or the surrender of a part of the Milanese territory. Sforza, who had
won his dominions by his sword, was not prepared to barter any part of them for
a title, and the negotiations failed for the time.
At Ferrara, Frederick hoped to appear as arbiter of
Italian affairs. Ambassadors from Florence, Venice, and Milan awaited him; but
those of Naples tarried, and the scheme of a Congress came to nothing. The only
display of his power which Frederick could make was the creation of Modena and
Reggio into a duchy, and the investiture therewith of Borso of Este. On May 21
Frederick entered Venice, and again tried to interpose his good offices to
mediate peace between Milan and the republic. “We know that we speak with the
Emperor”, was the answer of the doge Foscari, “and therefore we stated
our intentions at first; our answer, once given, cannot be changed”.
Frederick was reminded of his powerlessness in Italy. He showed his true
character to the Venetians by wandering about privately in ordinary attire to
the shops, that he might make better bargains for the articles of luxury which
Venice temptingly displayed to the needy German. On June 2 he left Venice. His
pleasant journey in Italy was at an end, and he had to prepare to face his
rebellious people, whom he had so lightly left to their own devices.
The Roman journey of Frederick was indeed sufficiently
ignoble. “Other emperors”, says a German chronicler, “won their crown by
arms; Sigismund and Frederick seemed to have begged it”. “He had neither sense
nor wisdom”, says the gentle Archbishop of Florence, “but all men saw the
greed with which he looked for presents, and the joy with which he received
them”. Poggio judged him to be only a doll of an emperor, before whom it was
useless to make a speech, as he would neither understand it nor pay for it.
Frederick was looked upon as a mere figure in an antiquated ceremony, and his
personal qualities were not such as to win any respect from the cultivated
Italians. The sole result of his expedition was to show clearly the selfish
nature of the alliance between Pope and Emperor. Nicolas V was bent only on
identifying the Papacy with the glories of Italian culture, and asserting
Italian supremacy over the ruder peoples of Germany. Frederick III had no
higher object than to extend his power over his ancestral dominions, and retain
his influence over the kingdoms of Ladislas. The clear vision of real
statesmanship was wanting to both. The danger from the Turkish inroads was a
real question on which Europe might have been united. Union, however, is only
possible under trustworthy leaders. The restored Papacy had done nothing to
redress the grievances of which Germany complained; the Emperor, who trusted to
the Pope’s help to maintain his position in Germany, was no fitting exponent of
the national feeling.
When Frederick returned he found Austria under
Eizinger, Hungary under Hunyadi, even Bohemia under Podiebrad, and the chief
nobles of Moravia banded together against him. They demanded that their king,
Ladislas, should be admitted to reign over his ancestral kingdoms; but this was
only a demand for their own freedom from Frederick's control. No sooner had
Frederick left Rome than an embassy from his rebellious subjects appeared to
plead their cause before the Pope. The answer of Nicolas was that they must
obey the Emperor. They requested that the excommunication, which had been
threatened against their disobedience, should be withdrawn. “This is a
temporal, not a spiritual matter”, said one of them; “it is not in your
province”. Nicolas angrily answered that all causes were subject to the
judgment of the Apostolic See; the Austrians must either obey, or they would be
excommunicated. The envoys hastily left Rome, and scarcely thought themselves
safe till they were out of Italy. They brought back news that the Pope was
altogether on Frederick’s side, and was opposed to the national cause. On April
4 Nicolas issued a threat of excommunication against Eizinger and his
followers, and wrote to Hunyadi and Podiebrad, charging them to give the
Austrians no help.
Frederick III, at the end of June, boldly entered
Neustadt, and tried to gather around him his partisans. He trusted to the
effects of the Pope's letter, which he sent for publication on all sides. But
the Bishop of Salzburg would not allow it to be published; the Canons of Passau
mocked at it; the Viennese threw the bearer of it into prison, and the
theologians of the University drew up a formal protest, in which they appealed
from an ill-instructed Pope to one better instructed, or to a General Council.
They asserted that Nicolas V had usurped the place of Felix V, and professed
themselves ready to join with the French to procure a future Council.
Frederick III was soon besieged in Neustadt, and had
no stomach for the fight. When he saw that his adversaries paid no heed to the
Pope, he turned to more pacific counsels. Aeneas Sylvius plausibly urged that,
after all, Ladislas could not be kept in wardship for ever. Frederick was
driven to hold a conference with Eizinger on September 2, and submit to
conditions which the Markgraf of Baden and the bishops negotiated. He agreed to
hand over Ladislas to the Count of Cilly, on condition that the Austrian troops
were withdrawn; the other matters in dispute were to be decided in a Diet to be
held at Vienna. On September 4 Ladislas was given up to the Count of Cilly,
who, in spite of the previous understanding that nothing was to be done till
the meeting of the Diet, took the youth to Vienna, where he was received with
triumph. The Bohemians negotiated with him that, before acknowledging him for
their king, he should ratify the Compacts and accept the nomination of Rokycana
as archbishop.
The Diet was fixed for November 12, but it was not
till Diet of Christmas that Frederick sent his three envoys, headed by
Aeneas Sylvius. At Vienna were the Dukes Lewis and Otto of Bavaria, William of
Saxony, Albert of Austria, Charles of Baden, and Albert of Brandenburg, with
representatives of other princes, and deputies from Hungary, Bohemia, and
Moravia. Albert of Brandenburg insisted that a dispute between himself and
the city of Nurnberg, which had been long pending, should first be settled. He
refused to accept any decision but the Emperor’s, and drew the princes after
him to Neustadt. The Diet seemed likely to break up at once, as the Imperial
envoys were driven to follow Albert. In vain Frederick endeavored to put off
the decision: Albert was violent, and would not be refused. While Frederick was
taking counsel with Cusa, the Pope’s legate, Aeneas, and the Bishop of
Eichstadt, Albert burst into the room, and rated Aeneas and the rest,
exclaiming loudly that he cared neither for Emperor nor Pope, Aeneas sadly
remarks that princes, being brought up amongst their inferiors, rarely know how
to behave towards their equals, but lose their temper and behave with violence.
The Emperor was driven to hear the case. Gregory Heimburg, on behalf of the
citizens of Nurnberg, spoke with warmth and justice of the wrong that would be
done, if princes closely allied with Albert sat to judge a cause in which he
was a party. The Emperor was in a sore strait. He did not wish to alienate the
cities by assenting to a notoriously partial judgment against Nurnberg; but he
was powerless to withstand Albert and his confederates. He bade one of his
counselors collect the opinions of the princes; Albert took him by the coat and
thrust him to the door, saying, “Are you a prince, that you mix with princes?”.
Frederick did not even venture to raise his voice against this act of
insolence. Still the pleading of Heimburg seems to have produced some
impression, and Aeneas managed to have the final decision of the case deferred
to inquire into a technical point which Heimburg had raised. Albert was left in
possession of the castles which he had seized, and the Emperor was spared the
shame which would otherwise have fallen upon him.
This preliminary scene gave the Imperial envoys no
hopes of any help from the German princes in the proceedings of the Diet at
Vienna. The Austrians, who felt that they were masters of the situation as
against the feeble Emperor, did not much wish for any settlement of the matters
in dispute. They urged that the time fixed for the Diet was now past, and that
their agreement had consequently lapsed. They raised every kind of difficulty,
and negotiations proceeded slowly. In the course of these proceedings Aeneas Sylvius
delivered his most effective speech Against the Austrians, in which he defended
the conduct of the Emperor in his wardship of Ladislas, justified the
interference of the Pope, and defended the Papal power against the attacks of
the Viennese University.
“The Austrians”, he said, “exclaim with haughty
mien, What have we to do with the Pope? Let him say his masses, we will handle
arms; if he lays his commands on us we will appeal”. The Waldensian heretics,
the Saracens themselves, could not say more. He proceeded to examine the
grounds of an appeal to a future Council. The decrees of Constance recognize,
as questions to be submitted to a Council, the case as of heresy, schism, or
grievous scandal caused by the Pope to the Universal Church; such grievous scandal
meant some change made by a Pope in ecclesiastical usage, such as allowing
priests to marry, pronouncing judgment of death, or alteration of ritual
against the wish of the community of the faithful, Aeneas had forgotten much
that he had urged at Basel; he had nothing to say against simony, oppression of
the Church, or refusal to accept the conciliar principle. He scoffed at the
Councils of Constance and Basel—they were tumultuous and disorderly. “I
saw at Basel cooks and grooms sitting side by side with bishops. Who would give
their doings the force of law?”—“But the Austrians appeal from an uninstructed
to an instructed Pope. What a wonderful thing is wisdom! What a splendid
procedure they suggest! The person of the Pope is divided into him from whom an
appeal is made and him to whom it is made! Such a scheme might suit Plato's
ideal State, but could be found nowhere else. They add to this an appeal to a
future Council, which, they say, is due according to the Constance decrees
within ten years of the dissolution of that of Basel. I am afraid it will be
twenty or a hundred years before a Council is held; since its summons depends
on the judgment of the Pope as to its opportuneness. If they expect one from
the Savoyards (so he calls the party of Basel), it is absurd for them to talk
of Councils every ten years, when the last sat for nearly twenty. Would that
the times were favorable to a Council, as the Pope wishes; it would soon dispel
the folly of these dreams. But they appeal to the Universal Church, i.e., the
congregation of all faithful people, high and low, men and women, clergy and
lay. In early days, when the believers were few, such an assembly was possible;
now it is impossible that it should come together, or appoint a judge to settle
any cause. It were as wise to appeal to the judgment of the Last Great Day”.
The arguments of Aeneas represent the position of the
restored Papacy; and it cannot be denied that the scorn of Aeneas was rightly
exercised upon the unwieldy mechanism of the conciliar system, whose logical
claims could scarcely be put fittingly into action. For his immediate purpose,
the speech of Aeneas produced no result. The princes sided with the Austrians
in refusing to open for discussion the general question of their relations to
Frederick. The only points that the Diet would consider were those referring to
details. It was taken for granted that Frederick’s wardship had actually come
to an end. The question for decision was the claims that arose in consequence.
Frederick had to submit his accounts, and the points which the princes
were prepared to settle were, how much he had spent, and how much was due.
Austrian castles had been pledged by the Emperor: who was to be held
responsible for redeeming them? There was much discussion, but at last the
princes agreed on what they considered fair conditions. The Imperial envoys
refused to accept them; whereon the princes again went to Frederick at
Neustadt. Albert of Brandenburg told the Emperor that he would get nothing
more: he must accept these conditions or prepare for war. The princes then
departed and left Frederick to his fate. Frederick was obliged to give way;
even then the conditions were not signed by his opponents, as the Count of
Cilly, who was now master of Ladislas, preferred to keep the matter open.
Thus Frederick’s league with the Pope had not been
able to save him from the direst humiliation. At the beginning of April, 1453,
the Emperor, who had been received with such pomp in Rome, was left master only
of his own land of Carinthia and Styria. His influence over Austria, Bohemia,
Hungary, and Moravia was gone, and he was powerless in Germany. The Papacy,
having allied itself with the Empire, shared its humiliation. The threat of
excommunication had been openly defied, and Ladislas was willing to negotiate
with the French King for the summons of a Council. At Frederick's request the
Pope recalled his admonition to the Austrians. Germany had not been subdued by
the first exercise which the Pope made of his newly-restored power.
CHAPTER III.
NICOLAS V AND THE FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE
1453-1455.
If Nicolas V was humiliated at Vienna, he was about
the same time profoundly afflicted by occurrences at Rome. He was sincere in
his wish to promote peace in Italy; he was most desirous to gain the affection
of the Roman people, whom he enriched by the jubilee and gratified by the
imposing ceremony of an Imperial coronation. Above all, he had shown his desire
to associate the city of Rome with the glories of the revived Papacy by the
magnificence of the public works in which he was engaged. Others might have
grievances to allege: surely the Roman citizens had no reason to look upon the
Pope in any other light than a splendid benefactor. Yet, at the beginning of 1453,
Nicolas V learned to his amazement that a dangerous plot against his personal
safety was formed within the walls of Rome.
The revival of classical learning in Italy had
developed a tendency towards republicanism; and though the movement of the
Roman citizens had been checked by the neighborhood of the King of Naples at
the time of the election of Nicolas V, the spirit that had then inspired it
still survived. Nicolas V had not thought it wise to take any severe measures
to assure the Papal Government. He trusted to his own good intentions to
overcome the opposition that had been threatened. The republican ringleader,
Stefano Porcaro, was sent into honorable exile, as Podestà of Anagni. But when
his period of office expired, Porcaro returned to Rome to play the part of
demagogue. Taking advantage of a tumult that arose at the carnival, he again
raised the cry of 'Liberty' amongst the excited crowd. Nicolas V thought it
better to remove such a firebrand from Rome, and Porcaro was exiled to Bologna,
where he enjoyed perfect freedom on condition that he showed himself every day
to the Legate, Cardinal Bessarion. But Porcaro's dreams had possessed his
imagination too deeply to be dispelled by any show of clemency, and the desire
to appear as the liberator of his country became more and more rooted in his
mind. From Bologna he managed to contrive a plot against the Pope, and to
assure himself of many confederates. His nephew, Sciarra Porcaro, gathered
together a band of 300 armed men, who were to be the chief agents in the
rising. Their scheme was to take advantage of the solemnity of the Festival of
the Epiphany, and while the Pope and Cardinals were at mass in S. Peter's, set
fire to the Papal stables, and, in the confusion, seize the Pope and his
brother, who was captain of the Castle of S. Angelo. While one band seized the
Castle, another, at the same time, was to occupy the Capitol. The booty of the
Pope and Cardinals, which they estimated at 700,000 ducats, would give them
means to carry out their plan of abolishing the Papal rule and securing a Roman
Republic. The aspirations of Petrarch, the dreams of Rienzi, were at last to be
real sed.
When all was ready, Porcaro left Bologna on the night
of December 26, 1452, and four days after reached Rome, where he hid himself in
the house of a kinsman. The conspirators were summoned to a banquet, in the
midst of which Porcaro appeared, clad in a dress of gold brocade, and incited
them to their great enterprise. Delay was fatal to the success of his plan.
Messengers came from Bessarion bringing the news of Porcaro’s flight from
Bologna. The armed men of his nephew caused suspicion by an encounter with the
police. Some of the conspirators gave information to the Senator and Cardinal
Capranica. Porcaro’s house was watched by night, and the presence of the
conspirators was detected. On the morning of January 4, the Senator, with fifty
soldiers, surrounded the house. Sciarra Porcaro, with four comrades, cut his
way through the soldiers and escaped from Rome. Stefano’s courage deserted
him; he did not dare to follow his nephew, but abandoned his confederates, and,
through a back door, made his escape to the house of a sister. Meanwhile, the
Papal Vice-Chamberlain addressed the people in the Capitol,
accused Porcaro of sedition and ingratitude, pronounced the ban against
him, and offered a reward to any who should deliver him up, alive or dead. His
sister’s house was no safe place of hiding, and by her advice he went with a
friend by night to beg a refuge from the generosity of Cardinal Orsini. His
friend, who went first to plead his cause, was made prisoner; when he did not
return, Porcaro fled to the house of another sister, where he was followed. His
sister hid him in a box, and tried to avoid detect on by seating herself on the
lid; but it was in vain. His hiding-place was discovered; he was carried off to
the Castle of S. Angelo, and after a summary trial was beheaded on the morning
of January 9. He died bravely, and his last words were: “People, today dies the
liberator of your country”. On the same day nine others followed him to the
gallows. Nicholas V sent throughout Italy to discover those who had escaped,
and Sciarra Porcaro was put to death at Città di Castello before the end of the
month. If Nicolas had been gentle at first he showed himself relentless in his
fright. One culprit's life was granted to the entreaties of the Cardinal of
Metz; but next day Nicolas withdrew his promise, and the prisoner was put to
death.
The Pope and the Curia were alike filled with alarm at
the discovery of this determined scheme. They did not know how far it
represented any plan concerted with the other powers of Italy. Naples,
Florence, Milan, and Venice all might have some share in this desperate attempt
to overthrow the Papacy and seize its revenues. Nicolas was full of suspicion,
and fell into cruelty which was alien from his character. It was a bitter blow
to him that enemies should rise up against him in his own city. The plot of
Porcaro permanently disturbed his peace of mind. He grew morose and suspicious,
denied access to his presence, and placed guards around his
person. Porcaro’s plot revealed to him the incompatibility of the Papal
rule with the aspirations after freedom which the Romans nourished.
The judgments of contemporaries differed as they fixed
their eye on the glories of the Papacy or of the Roman city. “Porcaro”,
says the Roman Infessura, “was a worthy man who loved his country, and
sacrificed his life because, when banished without cause from the city, he
wished to free her from slavery”. On the other hand, the men of letters whom
the Pope’s liberality had gathered to Rome cannot find language strong enough
to express their horror at the monstrosity of Porcaro’s plan, which seemed to
them to be a rising of barbarism against culture, of Roman ruffians against the
scholars who graced their city by their presence. Both judgments contain some
truth; but the difference which underlies them is still irreconcilable. Rome
had many advantages conferred upon it as the seat of the Papal power, the
capital of Christendom; it had in the Pope a munificent lord, and shared the
benefits of his greatness. But it had to pay the price of isolation from the
political life of Italy. There were always those who felt that they were
Citizens in the first place and churchmen afterwards, and who aspired to
recover for their city the political independence of which the Papal rule deprived
it.
Nicolas V was enfeebled in health by the pains of gout
as well as by his disappointments. A still heavier blow fell on him when the
news reached Rome that on May 29 Mahomet II had made himself master of
Constantinople. It might seem that no one, who had noticed the rapid advance of
the Turks, could doubt that the fall of Constantinople was imminent; yet
Western Europe was entirely unprepared for such an event. Men looked round with
shame and alarm when it actually took place. They felt shame that nothing had
been done to save from the unbelievers the relics of an ancient and venerable
civilization; they felt alarm when the bulwark was removed which had so long
stood between Europe and the Eastern tribes. It was natural that they should
ask themselves what had been done by the heads of Christendom, the Pope, and
the Emperor, to avert this calamity. It was natural that Nicolas V should feel
that the glories of his pontificate had been obscured by the mishap that in his
days such a disaster had occurred. It was true that the Greeks had not
maintained the union of the Churches which had been ratified at Florence. It
was true that Nicolas had urged upon them the necessity of so doing as a first
step towards obtaining help from Europe. It was true that the fanaticism of the
Greeks refused to seek for help on the condition of submitting to the Azymites.
Still the fact remained that Constantinople had fallen, and the Turks had
gained a foothold in Europe.
Yet Nicolas V had not been entirely neglectful. In answer
to the entreaties of Constantino Palaeologos, he had sent Cardinal Isidore of
Russia to commemorate the reconciliation of the two Churches. In December,
1452, a solemn service was held in S. Sophia, and amid the muttered execrations
of the Greeks the formality of a religious agreement was again performed.
Nicolas prepared to send succors to his ally, and twenty-nine galleys were
equipped for the purpose; but Mahomet II began the siege of the doomed city
unexpectedly, and pressed it with appalling vigor. The Papal vessels arrived
off Euboea two days after the fall of Constantinople, and through some mishap
were captured unawares by the Turks. Cardinal Isidore with difficulty escaped
in disguise, and made his way back to his own land, while the Greek Emperor
Constantine Palaeologos fell boldly fighting against the invader.
If Nicolas V could plead that he had been willing to
do what he could to avert this catastrophe, no such plea could be urged by the
Emperor, who, says a German chronicler, sat idly at home planting his garden
and catching birds. Yet Frederick III wept to hear the news, and wrote to the
Pope urging him to rouse Europe to a crusade. Everywhere a wail of sorrow was
raised. Not only was the sentiment of Europe outraged by the fall of Constantinople
and the forcible entrance of a new religion into the domains of Christendom,
but commercial communications with the East were checked, and there was an
uneasy feeling of dread how far the Turkish power might push its borders in
Europe. Moreover, the blow affected not only the political, but also the
literary sentiment of Europe. Greece, which was the home of Thucydides and
Aristotle—Greece, to whose literature men were turning with growing delight and
admiration, was abandoned in her last hour by those who owed her so deep a debt
of gratitude. The literary treasures of Constantinople were dispersed, and no
man could say how great had been the loss. “How many names of mighty men will
perish”, exclaims Aeneas Sylvius in a letter to the Pope. “It is a second death
to Homer and to Plato. The fount of the Muses is stopped”.
In the same letter Aeneas goes on to depict truly
enough the change which the fall of Constantinople had wrought in the
historical portion of the Papacy of Nicolas V : “Historians of the Roman
Pontiffs, when they reach your time, will write: ‘Nicolas V, a Tuscan, was Pope
for so many years. He recovered the patrimony of the Church from the hands of
tyrants; he gave union to the divided Church he canonized Bernardino of Siena;
he built the Vatican and splendidly restored S. Peter’s; he celebrated the
Jubilee, and crowned Frederick III’. All this will be glorious to your fame,
but will be obscured by the doleful addition: ‘In his time Constantinople was
taken and plundered (or, it may be, burnt and razed) by the Turks’. So your
fame will suffer without any fault of yours. For, though you labored with all
your might to aid the unhappy city, yet you could not persuade the princes of
Christendom to join in a common enterprise in defense of the faith. They said
that the danger was not so great as was reported, that the Greeks exaggerated
and trumped up stories to help them in begging for money. Your Holiness did
what you could, and no blame can justly attach to you. Yet the ignorance of
posterity will blame you when it hears that in your time Constantinople was
lost”.
Nor was Aeneas solitary in his utterances. Isidore of
Russia, Bessarion, the Archbishop of Mitylene, and many others wrote in the
same strain. There was no lack of writing either then or for many years later.
But even without admonition from others the course of the Pope was clear. He
must make amends for the past by putting himself at the head of Europe; and it
was lucky for the Papacy to have a cry which might once more gather Christendom
around it. On September 29 Nicolas issued a summons to a crusade, in which,
after denouncing Mahomet II as the dragon of the Apocalypse, he called on all
Christian princes, in virtue of their baptismal vow, to take up arms against
the Turks. He declared remission of sins to all who, for six months from the
1st of February next, persevered in the work of the crusade or sent a soldier
in their stead; he dedicated to the service of the crusade all the revenues
which came to the Apostolic See, or to the Curia, from benefices of any kind;
he exacted from all the clergy a tithe of their ecclesiastical revenues, and
proclaimed universal peace, that all might devote themselves to this holy
purpose.
The Pope’s words and promises were weighty enough; but
there were grave difficulties in giving them any practical effect. The state of
Europe was by no means peaceful, nor were men’s minds turned in the
direction of a crusade. The old ideal of Christendom had grown antiquated; the
Emperor was a poor representative of united Europe. The Holy Roman Empire had
been the symbol of a central organization which was to keep in order the
anarchic tendencies of feudalism. But feudalism, which was founded upon actual
facts, had prevailed over a system which rested only upon an idea; and the
anarchy caused by feudalism had made national monarchies a necessity. The
fifteenth century was the period when national monarchies were engaged in
making good their position against feudalism. In France Charles VII was
asserting the power of the restored monarchy against the mighty Duke of
Burgundy. England was intent on the desperate struggle of parties which ended
in the Wars of the Roses. The Spanish kingdoms, zealous of one another, could
urge their crusade against the Mussulman at home as a reason for not going
abroad. In Germany each prince was engaged in consolidating his own dominions,
and the feebleness of the Emperor made him more keen to use the opportunity
offered. Poland was at enmity with the Teutonic Knights. Hungary and Bohemia were
bent on maintaining their nationality against their German king. It was
difficult to combine for united action this chaos of contending interests.
It was natural for the Pope to begin at home, and
first to pacify Italy, an object which at his accession he had generally
professed, but which on reflection he deferred till a more convenient season.
He was anxious, above all things, to be at peace himself, to maintain
tranquility in the States of the Church, and to gratify his passion for
restoring the buildings of Rome. He saw that he would be most powerful when the
rest of Italy was weak, and that the States of the Church would be most secure
when there were other objects for the ambition of the Italian powers. Even now
the same motives weighed with him, and he was only half-hearted in his attempts
to heal the breaches of Italy, where Alfonso of Naples, in alliance with
Venice, still contested the duchy of Milan with Sforza, who was helped by
Florence. He summoned ambassadors of these States to Rome, but in the
discussions that arose was so careful to please everybody, and commit himself
to nothing, that his sincerity was suspected, and after some months of
conference the ambassadors left Rome without arriving at any conclusions. To
the shame of Nicolas V, the work which he had been too half-hearted to
undertake was accomplished by an Augustinian monk, Fra Simonetto of Camerino,
who secretly negotiated peace between Sforza and Venice. The peace was
published at Lodi on April 9, 1454, and in the following August Florence also
accepted it. When matters had gone so far the Pope sent Cardinal Capranica to
exhort Alfonso of Naples to join it also. After some difficulty Alfonso, on
January 26, 1455, agreed to the pacification of Lodi, excepting only Genoa from
its provisions, and a solemn peace for twenty-five years was established
amongst all the Italian powers.
Meanwhile efforts were being made under the auspices
of the feeble Frederick III for a demonstration of unanimity on the part of the
powers of Europe. At the end of December, 1453, the Bishop of Pavia, as Papal
legate, arrived at Neustadt, and the Emperor issued invitations for a European
Congress to be held at Regensburg on April 23, 1454. He promised to be present
in person unless hindered by some serious business.
But as the time drew nigh Frederick discovered that
there were hindrances enough to keep him at home. He had no money; he was
afraid lest Austria or Hungary might attack his domains if he left them
unprotected; he did not wish to face the Electors, lest under the cover of
reforms in the Empire they should still more diminish the Imperial power. “It
is hard”, he said to his counselors, who urged him to go, “it is hard to
take care of the common good at one's own cost. I do not see any one who will study
the benefit of others more than his own”. So Frederick resolved to stay at
home, and send in his stead an embassy, of which Aeneas Sylvius was a member.
He nominated also as his representatives such of the Electors and princes as he
thought friendly to himself, amongst others Lewis of Bavaria, whom Aeneas on
his way met at Burghausen on the Inn. When Aeneas gave him the Emperor's
commission, Lewis answered that, though sensible of the compliment, he feared
that his own youth and inexperience rendered him unfit for the task; he would
probably send representatives to Regensburg. While he spoke the dogs were
barking, and a band of huntsmen were impatiently waiting for the Duke, and
cursing the Imperial envoys for causing a delay. Lewis graciously invited the
envoys to follow the hunt, and when they declined rode off with his friends.
This was not the spirit of a crusader, and it was but a sample of the attitude
of the German princes towards the great question which they professed to
consider seriously.
At the period fixed for the Congress only the Imperial
presidents and the Papal legate had arrived. Cardinal Cusa, one of those who
had been appointed by Frederick III, advanced to the neighborhood of
Regensburg, and then wrote to his colleagues to know if he should come any
farther, and to ask who would pay his expenses. When this was the zeal
displayed by a prince of the Church, we cannot wonder that the secular princes
did not bestir themselves more eagerly. From Italy no one came except the Papal
legate, the Bishop of Pavia. Venice sent ambassadors, but they only entered
Germany after the Congress was over. Florence and Lucca excused themselves as
being engaged with other matters. Borso, the newly made Duke of Modena, was not
sure enough of the peace of Lodi to think of anything save Italian
complications. Siena did not receive the summons in time to attend to it. The
letter to Lodovico of Mantua had been by mistake addressed to his brother
Carlo. The other Italian States sent neither excuses nor representatives. The
summons addressed to the Kings of France, England, Scotland, Hungary, Poland,
and Denmark had been of the nature of a brotherly invitation; but none of them
were inclined to show complaisance to the feeble Emperor. Charles VII of France
did not wish to seem to act in concert with Frederick. He wrote to the Pope,
and said that he was willing to take up arms if the German princes on their
part agreed to do so. Christian of Denmark wrote to express his sorrow that the
shortness of notice and an expedition in which he was engaged against Norway
prevented him from sending ambassadors, but he was willing to do what he could
when the time for action arrived. The Kings of England and Scotland paid no
heed. Ladislas of Hungary and Bohemia was expected, but never came. Casimir of
Poland alone sent representatives; but they came to complain of the Teutonic
Knights.
It was no wonder that the foreign powers showed little
zeal when Frederick himself stayed at home, and only three of the Electors sent
ambassadors. Everyone was suspicious, and there was no real union. Frederick
had urged the Pope to join with him in issuing a summons to the German princes;
but Nicolas V was afraid to give any countenance to the Congress, lest it
night be turned into a Council. The remembrance of Basel was still too vivid
for the Pope to run any risk of its revival.
As the presidents sat at Regensburg, somewhat
embarrassed how to proceed, a rumor reached them, which at first seemed like a
dream, that the Duke of Burgundy was on his way and had reached Constance. When
it was known that he had actually arrived at Ulm, they wrote to Frederick
begging him to come in person and welcome one who was as powerful as a king. In
truth, Philip of Burgundy, who, besides Burgundy and Franche Comté, ruled over
the rich lands between the Somme and the Meuse, was one of the most powerful
princes in Christendom, and was a thorn in the side of the French King. He was
by birth connected with the crusading movement; for his father was taken
prisoner by the Turks at the battle of Nicopolis where Sigismund was defeated.
He was now the heir of his father’s policy, and had just succeeded in
reducing under his sway the independence of the Flemish cities. Rich and
magnificent, he put the French King to shame, and was the ideal of European
chivalry. It was a gross and fantastic chivalry, much given to tournaments and
festivals of every sort, yet not without its culture, as the paintings of
Jan van Eyck still Witness. Philip’s proceedings in defense of Christendom
are characteristic of the man and of the time. When he received the Pope’s
letter proclaiming a crusade, he held high festival at Lille—a festival adorned
with all the sumptuous grandeur of Flemish pageantry. After a banquet, in which
figured a party containing twenty-eight men playing on musical instruments, an
elephant was led into the hall by a Saracen giant. On its back was a tower, in
which sat a captive nun, representing the Church, who wept and implored succor.
Two lovely maidens advanced with a live pheasant, and the Duke, laying his hand
upon it, swore on the pheasant that he would drive out the Turk from Europe.
His guests followed his example, and a splendid ball was the appropriate
exploit which immediately followed.
The news of Philip’s approach to Regensburg caused the
utmost excitement. Everywhere he was received with honor, and rumor was rife
with the causes of his coming. Some said that he washed to win over the
Germans, and was ambitious of the Imperial crown; others that he hoped to
prevail on the Emperor to erect Brabant, Holland, and Zeeland into a kingdom,
that he might bear a royal title. Anyhow, his coming brought prestige to the
Congress. It impelled the Cardinal of S Peter’s to hasten to Regensburg without
waiting to have the question of his expenses further settled. Lewis of Bavaria
left his hunting, and went to meet Philip; he sent also four envoys to
Regensburg, but declined to act personally as one of the Emperor's
representatives.
The presidents now thought that it was time to open the
Congress. The Bishop of Gurk excused the Emperor’s absence, and inveighed
against the Turks. Then Cardinal Cusa pointed out that the Greeks had drawn
their ruin upon their own heads by their stubbornness in rejecting union with
the Holy See. The Papal legate spoke a few words. Next the ambassadors of the
Teutonic Knights inveighed against the King of Poland, and the session ended in
a wrangle. The next session was spent in a strife about precedence between
the Polish envoys and those of the Electors.
On May 9 Philip of Burgundy and Lewis of Bavaria
entered Regensburg with pomp. The Imperial presidents offered to hold
their sessions in Philip’s house if that would suit his convenience. Philip
modestly declined; and it was agreed that the Congress should sit in the Town
Hall. Indeed the proposal would hardly have suited the Duke’s habits: for
Aeneas tells us that he rose at noon, did a little business, dined, had a nap,
took some athletic exercise, supped till late at night, and finished his day
with music and dancing. Such a man was not likely to sit very long over tedious
deliberations. But before the business of the crusade was undertaken, the
German princes declared their intentions. John of Lysura, the confidential
adviser of the Archbishop of Trier, suggested that the Germans should meet
separately at the house of Lewis of Bavaria. There he proposed that they should
consider what strength they had to lead against the Turks. The Imperial
representatives saw in this a means of exposing the poverty of the Emperor, and
refused to enter upon the subject. Then Lysura spoke warmly of the distracted
state of Germany, and its need of internal reform before it embarked on
enterprises abroad; he insisted that the Emperor ought to meet the Electors,
and deliberate on German affairs before he put forward a scheme for a crusade.
The Imperial envoys admitted the truth of Lysura’s complaints, but urged the primary
importance of the crusade: if it were to be deferred till Germany was
reorganized, it would have long to wait.
The arrival of the Markgraf of Brandenburg increased
the number of princes, but brought an ally of the Teutonic Knights against
Poland, and threatened to divert the Congress from the question of the crusade.
At length, however, the public proceedings were resumed. Aeneas Sylvius spoke
against the Turks, and urged immediate action. Silence followed his speech,
which, being in Latin, was probably understood by few, and was translated into
German by the Bishop of Gurk. Then Cardinal Cusa gave an account of Constantinople,
and of the Turks, from his personal knowledge; his speech was similarly
translated into German by John of Lysura. The Bishop of Pavia spoke also, and
the assembled princes separated to deliberate. Next day the Imperial envoys
were asked to state the Emperor's proposals. This they did in writing, and
demanded that by April, 1455, an army sufficient to overwhelm the Turks should
be in readiness to serve for three years. They suggested that throughout
Germany every sixty men should furnish one horseman and two foot duly equipped
for the field; in this way an army of 200,000 men would be raised. Besides
this, the cities were to provide all necessary ammunition and means of
transport. The Pope, Naples, Venice, and the other maritime cities of Italy
should prepare a fleet, while the land army, joined by the Bohemians and
Hungarians, was to cross the Danube. A peace for five years was to be
proclaimed throughout Germany, beginning from next Christmas; whoever violated
it should be under the ban of the Empire. To make further arrangements, another
Diet was to meet on September 29 at Nurnberg, if the Emperor could come
there; if he could not, at Frankfort.
It was a splendid scheme; but schemes on paper are not
costly, and Frederick III was willing to be magnificent where no expense was
involved. The Germans listened, but urged their own business. John of Lysura
clung to his scheme of a reformation of the Empire. Albert of Brandenburg was
busy with his quarrel against Poland. The Congress might have sat long had not
the Duke of Burgundy grown impatient: his health suffered at Regensburg, and he
was anxious to get away. Accordingly it was agreed that an answer should be
given to the Emperor’s proposals. Albert of Brandenburg spoke on behalf of the
Germans. He faintly praised the Emperor's zeal, but deferred all criticism of
his scheme till the forthcoming Diet, when there would be a fuller assembly and
fuller information. Nothing, however, could be done till Germany was at peace,
and for this purpose the Emperor must meet the princes and fully discuss with
them the state of affairs. After this lukewarm speech, which dealt rather with
the affairs of Germany than the affairs of Christendom, the Bishop of Toul, in
the name of the Duke of Burgundy, declared his master’s zeal for the crusade,
and his willingness to take part in any expedition which might be agreed upon
by the Emperor or any other Christian princes. Then Aeneas Sylvius, and
afterwards the Bishop of Pavia, thanked the Duke of Burgundy and Albert of Brandenburg
for their zeal, and the Congress separated at the end of May, with every
outward appearance of satisfaction and hope.
Yet this empty talk deceived no one. Aeneas Sylvius
wrote to a friend in Italy on June 5 the following strain: “My wishes differ
from my hopes: I cannot persuade myself of any good result. You ask why? I
answer, Why should I hope? Christendom has no head whom all will obey. Neither
Pope nor Emperor receives what is his due. There is no reverence, no obedience.
We look on Pope and Emperor alike as names in a story or heads in a picture.
Each state has its own king; there are as many princes as there are houses. How
will you persuade this multitude of rulers to take up arms? Suppose they do,
who is to be leader? How is discipline to be maintained? How is the army to be
fed? Who can understand the different tongues? Who will reconcile the English
with the French, Genoa with Naples, the Germans with the Bohemians and
Hungarians? If you lead a small army against the Turks, you will be defeated;
if you lead a large one there will be confusion. Thus there are difficulties on
every side”.
Having such opinions, Aeneas was desirous to escape
further disappointment and leave the uncongenial Germany for his native
country. He had gained all that he could from his sojourn at the Imperial
court. Frederick’s position had now sunk so low as to be desperate, and
important affairs no longer centered round him. Frederick, however, refused to
part with Aeneas just then; he was determined not to go in person to the Diet,
but to send again Aeneas and the Bishop of Gurk. Among the princes he nominated
as his representatives the Markgrafs of Brandenburg and Baden. The Pope
contented himself with again nominating as his legate the Bishop of Pavia. The
Diet of Frankfort filled the month of October, 1454, and in its outward forms
resembled that of Regensburg. Aeneas showed more than his wonted eloquence, and
spoke for two hours; the Bishop of Toul asserted the zeal of the Duke of
Burgundy, and the Bishop of Pavia, in the name of the Pope, tried to inflame
the ardor of Christendom. The demand for a crusade had already become more
serious, as was seen by the presence of ambassadors from Hungary, who loudly
called for help, and declared that if it were not given they would be driven to
make peace with the Turks to protect their own frontier. With a view to awaken
more enthusiasm, Fra Capistrano came and preached at Frankfort. The people
heard him gladly; but the diplomats of the Congress were unmoved. Of the German
princes there were present the Markgrafs of Brandenburg and Baden, and the
Archbishops of Trier and Mainz. But they were all bent on their own schemes.
Albert of Brandenburg, who was regarded as friendly to the Emperor, was the
most conspicuous man among the German princes, and urged the reform of the
Empire as a means of obtaining a wider sphere for his energy. Against him was
secretly formed a party, at the head of which was the Pfalzgraf Frederick,
but its moving spirit was Jacob of Trier. This party won over Albert of
Austria, the Emperor’s brother, by holding out hopes of the deposition of
Frederick and his own election in his stead. On the deposition of the Emperor
would follow the summons of a new Council and the revival of the cry for
ecclesiastical reform. Thus in Germany the princes were agreed that internal
reform must precede any undertaking abroad; but they were not united in their
conception of reform, and under the name of reform were pursuing private ends
and separate intrigues.
In this state of things the Emperor’s ambassadors had
to listen to nothing save complaints. When the time came for a definite
promise, they were told that the crusade was merely a pretext used by the Pope
and the Emperor to extort money; they would find that Germany would give them
neither money nor soldiers. The zeal of the Burgundians was turned into
ridicule; the Hungarians were bidden to defend their own kingdom, and not try
to involve Germany in their calamities. It required all the diplomacy of the
Imperial and Papal party to avert an absolute refusal of supplies for a
crusade. It was only through the influence of Albert of Brandenburg that a
decent semblance of zeal for the cause of Europe was expressed. It was agreed
that an army of 10,000 horse and 30,000 foot be sent by Germany to the aid of
the Hungarians, on condition that the Pope equip in Italy a fleet of
twenty-five galleys to attack the Turks in Greece. This undertaking was made
the more readily because of the belief that the conditions would never be fulfilled.
“The princes say”, writes Capistrano to the Pope, “Why should we spend our
zeal, our goods, the bread of our children, when the Pope consumes in building
towers the revenues of S. Peter, which ought to be devoted to the defense of
the Christian faith?”
The Diet might arrive at its own conclusions; but
Jacob Trier was secretly pursuing his course. As it was clear that the Emperor
would not come to meet the princes, it was resolved that the princes should go
to him. Another Diet was proclaimed to be held at Neustadt on February 2, 1455,
ostensibly for the purpose of arranging for the levy of the German forces,
really for the purpose of bringing pressure to bear on the Emperor so as to
strengthen the power of the princes. Jacob of Trier had skillfully drafted a
scheme for the reform of the Empire, which was accepted by the Archbishops
of Koln and Mainz.
It proposed that the Emperor should confer with the
Electors about the pacification of the Empire, for which was needed a
reorganization of judicature and finance. Moreover, the Emperor should be
required to urge on the Pope the summons of a new Council, in accordance with
the provisions of the decrees of Constance, and the Papal undertaking at the
time of the restoration of the German obedience. It was a fair sounding scheme;
but even while he penned it Jacob of Trier let it be seen that it was only meant
to be a pretense. He recommended his proposal on the ground that “when the Pope
sees us anxious to have a Council, he will be more willing to please us, and
will pay more heed to the requests made by us to the Curia in matters which he
now refuses. Likewise the Emperor, when he sees that we wish to stir him up,
will be more willing to please us, and follow our advice in all matters”. The
plan was to bring pressure to bear both on the Emperor and the Pope, so as to
establish still more surely the independence of the German princes, and win
from both sides all the concessions which they wished to make their plan
stronger, Albert of Austria was to be used as a rival to Frederick; and the
threat of a Council was to be a means of separating the interests of the Pope
from those of the Emperor.
Such were the schemes of Jacob of Trier, when, in
February, 1455, he arrived at Neustadt. He was the only Elector present; but
four others sent representatives, who were under Jacob’s orders. Ladislas of
Hungary came to Vienna; but refused to advance to Neustadt, as he had no desire
to meet his former guardian. Aeneas Sylvius invited Fra Capistrano to bring his
eloquence to Neustadt. He promised him good sport. “Our amphitheater will be
established, and there will be Circensian games grander than those of Julius
Caesar or Pompeius. I do not know whether there will be foreign beasts or only
those of Germany: but Germany has wild beasts of many kinds, and perhaps
Bohemia will send the Beast of the Apocalypse. If our sport be only moderate,
you will have a bag well filled with every kind of game, slain by the sword
that proceeds from your mouth. If your valor comes victorious out of the
amphitheater, we will have an army against our foes abroad, when our enemies at
home have been dispersed”. Aeneas could jest even on the most serious matters,
and Fra Capistrano was not so Simple a devotee that he could not understand the
subtleties of the higher politics.
Albert of Brandenburg and Charles of Baden were the
only other German princes who appeared. The Bishop of Toul again came from
Burgundy, and the Bishop of Pavia again represented the Pope. The only foreign
power who sent an envoy was the King of Naples. On February 26 the proceedings
began with a wrangle about precedence of seats between Jacob of Trier and the
Neapolitan ambassadors. Then Aeneas and the Bishop of Pavia spoke about the
crusade: but neither of them had any assurance to offer of the Pope's
activity. The Bishop of Pavia had not visited Rome during the interval between
the Diets, and had no fresh instructions to communicate. The Neapolitan envoys
declared that their King would be ready in May to sail against the Turks, if
Germany sent its army for a land expedition at the same time. The Bishop of
Toul again asserted the zeal of the Duke of Burgundy. Jacob of Trier declared
that the Electors were ready to do all that befitted good Christians.
After these empty words Jacob of Trier pressed upon
the Emperor his scheme of reform. He spoke in the name of all the Electors; and
the representatives of the princes and Imperial cities were all on his
side. Moreover, Jacob was in constant communication with Ladislas of Bohemia
and Hungary, whose presence at Vienna was a perpetual threat to the Emperor.
The Hungarian envoys pleaded for help from Germany; and the luckless Emperor
sat helpless to answer. It seemed almost impossible for him to extricate
himself with decency from the difficulties that beset him on every side. If he
gave way to the Electors, the scanty remnants of his power were gone; if he
refused, the Diet would not vote troops for the crusade, and the Emperor would
be rendered ludicrous in the eyes of Christendom. From this perplexity he and
his counselors were delivered by the news of the death of Nicolas V, which
reached Neustadt on April 12. As this news threw into uncertainty the
possibility of an expedition from Italy, it was useless to determine on a
German expedition. The Pope’s death also opened up other plans to Jacob of
Trier and his confederates. It was agreed to put off till next spring the levy
of troops for the aid of Hungary, and meanwhile to proclaim throughout the
Empire peace for two years. With this lame conclusion the Diet came to an
end, to the Emperor’s great relief.
Nicolas V had been greatly affected by the capture of
Constantinople, and by the new responsibilities which were consequently thrown
upon his shoulders. The character of a statesman and a warrior, summoning
Europe to a mighty enterprise, was not within the conceptions which Nicolas had
set before himself. He regarded it as a cruel misfortune to his future fame
that he should have to undertake a position for which he had in no way fitted
himself. He had not the energy to reconstruct his plans; he was half-hearted in
the conduct of the crusading movement, yet he keenly felt the ignoble position
in which he was actually placed. He had dreamed of leaving a great reputation
as the restorer of Rome, the patron of men of letters, the inaugurator of a new
era, in which the Papacy at the head of European culture quietly reasserted its
old prestige over the minds of men. This was not yet to be; and Nicolas,
disappointed and enfeebled by the gout, grew daily more infirm. When he felt
that his end was approaching he wished to justify his policy, and claim due
recognition of his merits before he quitted the stage of life. He gathered the
Cardinals round his bedside the day before his death, and addressed to them his
last testament. First he spoke of the mercies of God as shown in the
sacraments, and of his hope of a heavenly kingdom. Then he proceeded to defend
himself for his expenditure of money in buildings in Rome, on which point the
Cardinals listened with the most profound interest. Only the learned, he said,
could understand the grounds of the Papal authority: the unlearned needed the
testimony of their eyes, the sight of the magnificent memorials which embodied
the history of Papal greatness. The buildings of Rome were the means of
securing the devotion of Christendom, on which the Papal power rested. They
were also the means of procuring for the Pope safety and peace at home. The
records of the past, even the events of the pontificate of Eugenius IV, showed
how needful were precautions for the personal safety of the Pope. “Wherefore”,
said the dying Pope, “I have built fortresses at Gualdo, Fabriano, Assisi,
Castellana, Narni, Orvieto, Spoleto, Viterbo, and other places : I have
repaired and fortified the walls of Rome; I have restored the forty stations of
the Cross, and the Basilicas founded by Gregory the Great: I have made this
palace of the Vatican, and the adjacent Basilica of S. Peter, with the streets
leading to it, fit for the use and dignity of the Holy See and the Curia”. He
recalled the glories of his pontificate —the ending of the schism, the
celebration of the Jubilee, the coronation of Frederick, his efforts for a
crusade, the pacification of Italy. “The towns in the States of the Church”, he
continued, “that were in ruins and in debt, I have restored to prosperity,
and have adorned with pearls and precious stones, with buildings, books,
tapestries, gold and silver vessels for the use of the churches. All this I
have done, not by simony, by avarice, nor by parsimony— for I have been most
liberal in gifts to learned men, in buying and transcribing manuscripts—but by
God’s blessing of peace and tranquility in my days. The Roman Church, thus
wealthy and thus peaceful, I leave to you, beseeching you to pray for God's
grace that you may preserve and extend it”. When he had ended his exhortation he
dismissed the Cardinals with his benediction, and next day, March 24, he died.
The last words of Nicolas V sufficiently show the
character of his pontificate. Himself a scholar and a man of letters, he strove
to mould the Papacy into the shape of his own individual predilections, which
indeed fitted well enough with the aspirations of Italy in his day. Thoroughly
Italian, he aimed at adapting the Papacy to the best ideal of Italy. He
did not try to become powerful by arms or statesmanship, but rather withdrew
from the current of Italian politics. In the midst of storm and strife, which
raged in North and South Italy, the States of the Church were to be the abodes
of peace, in which was to be realized the splendor of taste and learning which
was the dream of Italian princes. Rome was to sum up all that was best in
Italian life, and was to transmit it to the rest of Christendom. Revered in
Italy as the capital of Italian thought, Rome was to be a missionary of culture
to Europe, and so was to disarm suspicion and regain prestige. It was not
exactly a Christian ideal that Nicolas V set before himself. But the more
religious aspirations of the time ran in the direction of ecclesiastical
reform; and after the proceedings at Basel it was not judicious for a Pope to interfere
with that matter at the present. Nicolas V saw that reform was needed; but
reform was too dangerous. If the Papacy could not venture on reform, the next
best thing was to identify itself with art and learning. To the demand of
Germany for reformation Nicolas V answered by offering culture. His policy was
so far wise that it enabled the Papacy to exist for sixty years before the
antagonism broke out into open rebellion.
In personal character Nicolas V was a student, with a
student's irritability and vanity as well as a student's high-mindedness. He
loved magnificence and outward splendor, and demanded the utmost decorum from
those around him. To his household he was a kind master, but impatient, hard to
satisfy, and of a sharp tongue. He was easily angered, but soon repented. He
was straightforward and outspoken, and required that everyone else should be
the same; he was remorseless to anyone who equivocated or expressed himself
clumsily. He was staunch to his friends, though they all had to bear his anger.
He did not pay attention to his health, but studied at all hours of the day and
night, was irregular in his meals, and was too much given to the use of Wine as
a stimulant to his energies. Aeneas Sylvius puts down as his greatest fault, he
trusted too much in himself, and wished to do everything by himself; he thought
that nothing was done well unless he were engaged in it.
CHAPTER IV.
NICOLAS V AND THE REVIVAL OF LEARNING
The great glory of Nicolas V was the splendor of the artistic
revival, which he knew how to foster and direct. The restoration of the city of
Rome had already occupied the attention of Martin V and Eugenius IV. But Martin
V had to discharge the inglorious though useful work of arresting the decay of
the buildings of Rome and making necessary repairs; Eugenius IV had neither
opportunity nor money to proceed far with architectural works. Still they did
so much that Nicolas V found the way prepared for great schemes of embellishing
the city, and with unerring taste and judgment entered zealously upon the task.
His successors, Julius II and Leo X, have left their mark more decidedly in the
form of great monumental works; Nicolas V left his impress on the city as a
whole. He wished not to associate his name with some particular work, but to
transform the whole city according to a connected plan. He represents the
simplicity, the simplicity, the freshness of the early Renaissance, when it was
an impulse and not a study.
So Nicolas V was not content with one task only. His
keen eye glanced over the whole field, his taste penetrated to the smallest
details, and his practical sagacity kept pace with his architectural zeal.
Besides building the Vatican palace and the basilica of S. Peter’s, he
restored the walls of Rome, and erected fortresses throughout the Papal States.
Besides adapting the Borgo to be the residence of the Cuna, he proposed to make
straight the crooked streets of Rome, to widen the entrances to the piazzas,
and connect them with one another by colonnades such as made civic life more
commodious in Bologna or Padua. Nor was his care confined to the adornment of
Rome only; he built at Civita Castellana, at Orvieto, and other places in the
Papal States palaces fit for the residence of the Pope or his vicar. Whatever
he did he did thoroughly; if he built a chapel, he provided for every kind of
ornament down to the illumination of the missal for the altar.
The schemes of Nicolas V seem beyond the power of one
man to achieve; but if his pontificate, instead of lasting eight years, had
lasted for sixteen, his restless energy might have seen his plans far advanced
towards completion. As it was, he began great works to which his successors
gave a final shape. To carry out his designs he gathered round him a band of noble
artists. Chief amongst his architects were the Florentines Bernardo Gamberelli,
known as Rosellino, Antonio di Francesco, and the famous Leo Battista Alberti.
As painters he had Fra Angelico, whose frescoes of the lives of S. Stephen and
S. Laurance still adorn the Capella di S. Lorenzo in the Vatican, Benozzo
Gozzoli and Andrea Castegno, from Florence; and from Perugia, Benedetto
Bonfiglio, the master of Pietro Perugino. There were decorators, jewelers,
workers in painted glass, in intarsia, and in embroidery. The city swarmed with
an army of artisans, employed by the magnificent Pope to convert Rome into a
strong and splendid city, of which the crowning glory was to be the Papal
quarter beyond the Tiber, with its mighty palace and church, which were to be
the wonder of the world. Blocks of travertine were quarried at Trivoli and
brought by water down the Anio, or dragged by oxen to the city. Nor did Nicolas
V spare the antiquities of Rome to minister to his new glories. The Colosseum
was used as a quarry, and some of the smaller temples disappeared The
Renaissance was to Nicolas V a new birth, sprung from his own magnificence and
identified with his glory. Rome was to be the city of the Popes, not of the
Emperors.
When Nicolas V died he had rebuilt the walls of Rome,
strengthened, from Alberti’s plans, the Castle of S. Angelo, fortified the
chief towns in the papal States, restored the churches of SS. Apostoli, S.
Celso, S. Stefano Rotondo, and S. Maria Maggiore, rebuilt a great part of the
Capitol, reorganized the water supply of Rome, and begun the fountain of Trevi.
Besides all this, he had commenced from the foundation the rebuilding of the
basilica of S. Peter's, and had begun the choir. In the Vatican palace he had
finished the chapel of S. Lorenzo and had built and splendidly decorated many
chambers round the Cortile del Belvedere, where he began the library. He might
sigh that he could not finish all that he had undertaken; but he succeeded in
marking out a plan which his successors carried out, the plan of erecting a
mighty symbol of the Papal power, which should to all time appeal to the
imagination, and kindle the enthusiastic admiration of Christendom.
This architectural revival of Nicolas V rested upon a
new conception which had gradually been changing the thought of Europe.
Literature can only be concerned with expressing and arranging the ideas which
are actually moving the minds of men. At the downfall of the Roman Empire the
old classical culture had to give way before the necessities of the struggle
against the barbarians, and Christianity formed the common ground on which
Roman and barbarian ideas could be assimilated in a new form. Christian
literature was first engaged with the expression of Christian truth and the
task of ecclesiastical organization. The work that occupied thinking men in the
early Middle Ages was the reconstruction of society on a Christ an basis. Their
labor found its expression in the conception of the Empire and the Papacy, a
conception which the genius of Gregory VII impressed upon the imagination of
Europe, and the Crusades gave a practical exhibition of its force. It was
natural that during a period of reconstruction there was little thought of
style; the builder, not the artist, was needed for an edifice in which strength,
not ornament, was required. To this the literature of classical antiquity could
contribute nothing; it was known by some, perhaps by many, but there was no
place for it in the world's work.
As soon, however, as Christendom was organized there
was a possibility for the individual to find his own place in the new
structure; there was room for the organization of individual thought, for
expression of individual feeling. While society was struggling to assert itself
against anarchy, the individual had no place. When the lines of social
organization had once been traced the individual, having gained a foothold,
could survey his lodging. Classical literature, which had been hitherto of
little value, became precious as a model, both of individual feeling and of the
means of giving it expression. Italy was naturally the first country to lead
the way to this new literature. She was conscious of her antiquity while other
European nations were only awakening to the consciousness of their youth. While
the Teutons turned for literary inspiration to nature and to the legendary
heroes of the early days, Italy turned to classical antiquity, to the memorials
that surrounded her on every side. Her early literature was reflective, and
displayed the workings of the individual soul. Teutonic literature was
national, and aimed at expressing the rude aspirations of the present
in the forms of a legendary past.
So it was that Dante summed up the first period of
Italian literature, and gave an artistic form to the aspirations of Christian
culture. To him classical antiquity and Christianity went hand in hand. Virgil
led him in his soul's pilgrimage to a spiritual emancipation which was the
combined result of philosophic thought, the experience of life, and the
guidance of heavenly illumination. To the large spirit of Christian culture, in
which faith and reason were combined, and to which the mediaeval ideal of a
cosmopolitan Christendom was still a reality, Dante gave an ultimate
expression. It was the ideal of Gregory VII transformed by all the knowledge,
all the sentiment, and all the reflection which the individual could acquire
for himself.
But this ideal of Christendom was not to be realized.
Dante, though he knew it not, lived through the period of the fall of Empire
and Papacy alike. With the Pope at Avignon and the Empire in anarchy, it was no
longer possible for the individual life to attach its aspirations to what was
manifestly powerless. The individual was more and more driven to consider
himself and the workings of his own mind. Dante had used his own personality as
a symbol of universal man. Petrarch did not advance beyond the expression of
phases of feeling. But the study of phases of feeling led to a larger
conception of the variety of individual life, a conception which animates with
reality the pages of Boccaccio. This distinctly human and individual literature
brought with it a quickened sense of beauty, an appreciation of form, a desire
for a more perfect style. When once this feeling was awakened the study of classical
antiquity assumed a new importance: only through it could men attain to clear
ideas, accurate expressions, beautiful forms. To discover these the Italian
mind devoted itself with passionate enthusiasm to the revival of classical
antiquity, the study of its records, the imitation of its modes of thought.
Instead of striving to reconstruct the decaying ideal of a united Christendom,
Italy devoted itself to the development of the individual life; instead of
laboring for the reform of the Church, Italy was busy with the acquisition of
literary and artistic style.
Hence it was that Italy played so small a part in the
great movement of the fifteenth century for the reformation of the Church.
France and Germany labored at Constance and Basel for the ending of the schism
and the reorganization of Christendom in accordance with the consciences of
men. Italy had passed beyond the sphere of the scholastic formulae which were
in the mouths of conciliar theologians. She was inventing a new method, and had
little interest in questions which concerned merely external organization.
While the Fathers of Constance looked upon Huss as a rebel who would rend
asunder the unity of Christendom, the cultivated Italian, Poggio, admired his
originality and compared him with the great men of old time. While theologians
were engaged in determining by appeals to Christian antiquity the authority of
General Councils, Poggio was ransacking the adjacent monasteries in search of
manuscripts of classical authors. The breach had begun between the Italian and
the Teutonic spirit. The Italians were bent upon securing for the individual
emancipation from outward systems by means of culture; the Teutons wished to
adapt the system of Christendom to the requirements of the awakening individual.
The Renaissance and the Reformation began to pursue different courses.
The Papacy, as having its seat in Italy, could not
remain unaffected by the national impulse. Though Florence was the center of
the early Renaissance, its influence quickly spread, and students of classical
antiquity were rapidly attached to every Italian court. Manuscripts were
collected, academies were formed, and public business was transacted with
strict attention to the best models. The Papacy could not lag behind the
prevailing fashion. Already, under Innocent VII, Leonardo Bruni and Poggio
Bracciolini were attached to the Papal Curia as secretaries. The Greek scholar,
Emmanuel Chrysoloras, was employed by John XXIII, and followed him to
Constance, where he died. Martin V was too busy with other matters to pay much
heed to literature; but under Eugenius IV the Italian humanists found that
their own interests were closely bound up with the Papacy. The struggle between
the Pope and the Council of Basel brought into prominence the growing
antagonism between the Italian and the Teutonic spirit, between the Renaissance
and the Reformation. The opposition of the Council to the Pope was resented as
an attempt to rob Italy of part of its old prestige. The new learning was
animated on its side by a missionary spirit; its mission was to carry
throughout Europe a new culture, and the Papacy was one of its means. Though
Eugenius IV was in no way associated in character with the Italian spirit of
culture, yet the humanists gathered round him, and Poggio, Aurispa, Vegio,
Biondo, and Perotti were numbered amongst his secretaries.
Nicolas V was genuinely Italian, and was himself
thoroughly penetrated with the spirit of the new learning. Before he became
Pope he had been a great collector of manuscripts, which he delighted to
transcribe with his own hand. He had arranged the Library of S. Marco for
Cosimo de' Medici, and was eager to eclipse it at Rome. If the Papacy by its
magnificence were to assert its power over Christendom, it must stand at the head
of the mission of Italian culture. So Nicolas V declared himself the patron of
all men of learning, and they were not slow in gathering round him. Rome had
produced few scholars of its own; but Nicolas V was bent on making it a home of
learning. He eagerly gathered manuscripts from every side, and employed a whole
host of transcribers and translators within the Vatican, while his agents
traversed Greece, Germany, and even Britain in search of hidden treasures. Even
the fall of Constantinople could not be regarded as entirely a misfortune, for
it brought to Italy the literary wealth of Greece. “Greece has not
fallen”, said Filelfo, “but seems to have migrated to Italy, which in old
days bore the name of Magna Graecia”. When Nicolas V died he left behind him a
library of five thousand volumes, an enormous collection for the days before
printing. When in 1450 the Jubilee brought with it a pestilence, occasioned by
the crowded state of the city, and Nicolas fled before the plague to Fabiano,
he took with him his host of transcribers, of whom he demanded as much zeal as
he himself displayed. “You were the slave of Nicolas”, says Aeneas Sylvius to
his friend Piero da Noceto, “and had no fixed time for eating or sleeping;
you could not converse with your friends or go into the light of day, but were
hidden in murky air, in dust, in heat, and in unpleasant smells”. The Pope’s
passion was well known, and the world’s tribute flowed to Rome in the shape of
manuscripts. For these literary treasures Nicolas V rebuilt the Vatican
library, and appointed as its librarian Giovanni Tortelli, of Arezzo, theauthor
of a grammatical work, “De Orthographia Dictionum a Graecis tractarum”.
Chief among the Pope’s assistants in his formation of
a library was the good Florentine bookseller, Vespasi da Bisticci, whose love
and respect for his patron may be read in his own simple language. From
Florence also Nicolas V invited his more famous biographer, Gianozzo Manetti,
whom he made a Papal secretary, and also conferred on him a pension of six
hundred ducats. Manetti, a small man with a large head, who enjoyed robust
health, was a rigorous student, and had generally spent five hours in reading
before the greater part of his fellow-men had risen from bed. He was of great
repute in his native city of Florence, and was a leading statesman, employed in
many important embassies, where his eloquence always gained him a ready
hearing. He obtained leave from the Florentines to transfer himself to the
Pope's service, and was engaged by Nicolas V, with characteristic impetuosity,
on the two mighty works of writing an Apology for Christianity against Jews and
Heathens, and translating into Lain the Old and New Testaments. Manetti had so
far advanced in his task at the death of Nicolas V that he had written ten
books against the Jews, and had translated the Psalms, the four Gospels, the
Epistles, and the Revelation. Manetti’s life of his patron is the chief record
of the greatness of the schemes of Nicolas V, which Manetti chronicled with
enthusiasm, though his style is pompous and his panegyric labored.
Nicolas V found in the Curia an old acquaintance, the
literary veteran Poggio Bracciolini, who in the days of Boniface IX took
service in the Papal Chancery, and soon associated with himself his friend Leonardo
Bruni. He went to Constance with John XXIII, and on his fall betook himself to
the occupation of searching for manuscripts in the neighboring monasteries,
while he surveyed the proceedings of the Council with quiet contempt. Poggio
was a true explorer and warmed with his task; he rescued from the dust and dirt
of oblivion Quintilian, several orations of Cicero, Ammianus Marcelinus,
Lucretius, and many other works. His zeal carried him to Langres, Koln, and
ultimately to England, where, however, he found scanty patronage in the
turbulent times of Henry VI. Many were his endeavors to send explorers to
Sweden in search of the lost books of Livy. Long were his negotiations to
obtain from the Monastery of Fulda the complete manuscript of the Annals of Tacitus,
which he edited in 1429. Under Eugenius IV he did not find himself and
congenial surroundings; and he hailed with delight the accession to the Papacy
of his friend Tommaso of Sarzana, to whom he had dedicated in 1449 a Dialogue
on the Unhappiness of Princes. It was a species of composition
then much in vogue, consisting of moral reflections illustrated by historical
examples, founded on the model of Cicero’sDialogues.
Following upon the same lines, Poggio went on to
write and dedicate “to the same man, though not under the same name”, his most
interesting work, a Dialogue on the Vicissitudes of Fortune. Poggio
represents himself as reposing with a friend on the Capitol after an inspection
of the ruins of Rome. He moralizes on the scanty remnants of her ancient
grandeur, and in so doing gives the completest description we possess of the
appearance of the city at that time. From this he goes on to quote great
instances of the instability of fortune, which leads him to survey the changes
of Europe from 1377 to the end of Martin V. The Pontificate of Eugenius IV
illustrates his theme so pointedly, that a whole book is devoted to it. Then
the writer takes a sudden leap, and tells us the travels of a Venetian, Niccolò
Conti, who had told him the story of his adventures during a residence of
twenty-five years in Persia and India. The whole work is a store of curious and
interesting information, given with much sprightliness of style and keenness of
observation. Poggio hailed Nicolas V as a second Maecenas, and expressed his
joy at the downfall of the monkish favorites of Eugenius IV by a stinging Dialogue
against Hypocrisy, in which he held up to ridicule the affected piety of
self-seeking monks, and gathered a number of scandalous stories of the frauds
and tricks practiced in the name of religion. Poggio himself made no pretense
at the concealment of his own life and character, but published soon after
his Facetiae, or jest-book, a collection of good stories which
he and his friends in the Papal Chancery used to tell for one another’s
amusement in their leisure moments. We are not surprised that men who indulged
in such frankness as these stories betoken, found even the restraint of
the neighborhood of a monk’s frock burdensome to their overflowing and unseemly
wit. Poggio’s pen, like that of many of his contemporaries, was ready not only
to copy the finer forms of classical expression, but also the licentiousness of
paganism and the fertility of vituperation which marked the decadence of
classical literature. To please Nicolas V, Poggio composed a philippic against
Amadeus of Savoy, and called to his aid all the wealth of Ciceronian invective
to overwhelm the anti-Pope and the Council of Basel. He was, however, employed
on more serious works of scholarship, and translated Xenophon’s Cyropedia,
and at the request of Nicolas V, the History of Diodorus Siculus.
These scholars of the Papal Court were by no means
free from literary jealousies and rivalries. Factions and disputes were rife
amongst them, as was natural when each had to preserve a reputation for
preeminence in his own subject. Chief amongst the Greek scholars whom Nicolas V
welcomed in Rome was George of Trapezus, who translated for him many of the
works of the Greek fathers, Eusebius of Caesarea, Chrysostom, Gregory of
Nazianzum, and Basil. But the revival of Greek literature led to a deep
interest in Greek philosophy, and Gemistos Plethon established at Florence a
school of devoted students of Plato, who was almost a new discovery to the
thought of the time. The doctrines of Aristotle and Plato were eagerly
discussed; and Cardinal Bessarion, at the request of Nicolas V, translated
Aristotle’s Metaphysics, while Theodore Gaza translated the History
of Animals, and Theophrastus’s History of Plants. George of Trapezus
thought it due to his own importance to attack a work of Bessarion, which
maintained the Platonic view that nature acts with design, which is the stamp
of the Divine Intelligence. Bessarion answered him, and the controversy created
great interest. George of Trapezus, in an evil moment, undertook to translate
Plato’s Laws, which he did with great rapidity. Bessarion
criticized his translation, a task of some moment, as George professed to give
a specimen of Plato’s teaching; he convicted him of 259 errors, and concluded
that his translation had almost as many mistakes as it had words. George
certainly cannot have been an accurate translator, as Aeneas Sylvius says, that
in one of his translations from Aristotle he found Cicero mentioned. Nicolas V felt
his belief shattered; he withdrew his patronage from George, who in 1453
retired to Naples, where he was received by King Alfonso. He was an irritable
man and took his revenge by general railing. Amongst other things he
asserted that Poggio’s translations had been made by his assistance; that the
merits were his, and the mistakes were Poggio’s.
No doubt Poggio would have answered this aspersion on
scholarship; but probably it never came to his ears, as in 1453 he was
appointed to the honorable office of Chancellor of his native city of Florence,
where he took up his abode after spending fifty years in the Papal service.
Moreover, he was engaged in a literary controversy with an opponent more
formidable than George of Trapezus —the learned Lorenzo Valla. If Poggio is the
most celebrated literary man of the Early Renaissance, Valla is undoubtedly the
man of the keenest mind. Poggio might boast of a more limpid style, but Valla
was the sounder scholar. Poggio founded himself on Cicero, Valla preferred
Quintilian. Valla’s Elegantiae is a comprehensive attempt to
deal with Latin grammar in a scientific spirit, and it was this that gave him a
preeminence over men like Poggio, who were merely literary Latinists. Valla was
born in Piacenza, but was educated in Rome under the care of Leonardo Bruni
till he reached the age of twenty-four. Then he taught at Piacenza and Pavia,
till he betook himself to Alfonso of Naples, at the time when he was bitterly
opposed to Eugenius IV. The hate of a Roman against priestly domination joined
with a desire to strike a blow in his patron's behalf. Valla turned his keen
critical spirit, which had been trained in the methods of scientific inquiry,
to an examination of the grounds on which rested the story of the donation of
Constantine of the patrimony of S. Peter to Pope Sylvester.
In his work, On the Donation of Constantine,
he set forth vividly the historical aspect of such an event; he imagined
Constantine wishing to make such an alienation of the territory of the Empire;
he pictured the remonstrance of the Senate, the humble deprecation of the Pope.
He examined the nature of the evidence for this donation, and mocked at the
claims of tradition to be credited when contemporary records were silent. “If
any one among the Greeks, the Hebrews, or the Barbarians were to say that such
a thing were handed down by tradition, would you not ask for the author's name
or the production of a record?”. He criticized the wording of the forged
decree (no difficult task), and showed its gross inconsistency with the facts
and forms of the time at which it professed to be framed. He ended with a
savage attack on the iniquities of the Papal Government, and exhorted all
Christian princes to deprive the Pope of his usurped power, and so take away
his means of disturbing the peace of Europe by interference in temporal
affairs.
Nor was this Valla’s only onslaught upon orthodox
belief; he ventured to call in question the tradition that the
Apostles’ Creed was the joint composition of the Twelve, who met in solemn
conference and each contributed a clause. This brought him into collision with
the friars, and he was threatened with the Inquisition; but Alfonso
interposed on his behalf, and Alfonso's reconciliation with Eugenius IV
carried Valla’s reconciliation with it. Valla had no fanatical hatred to the
Papacy, and was willing to own that his attack had been of the nature of a
literary exercise. He wrote an apology to Eugenius IV, who did not, however,
admit him to his favor; but Nicolas V cared little for monastic orthodoxy, and
was not prevented by Valla's free thinking from summoning to his court so
eminent a scholar. For him Valla translated Thucydides; and so pleased was the
Pope with his translation that he presented him with five hundred ducats, and
begged him to translate Herodotus also, a task which Valla began but did not
finish.
The keen critical spirit of Valla made him haughty and
supercilious to his literary compeers; and meekness was in no sense their
crowning virtue. As ill-luck would have it, one of Valla’s pupils at Rome had a
copy of Poggio’s Letters, in the margin of which he had written criticisms on
the style, pointing out and amending what he conceived to be barbarisms. The
book fell into the hands of Poggio, who was filled with wrath at this attempt
to improve perfection. He at once concluded that the criticisms proceeded from
Valla, and adopted his usual mode of chastising the offender. He wrote, in the
most approved Ciceronian style, a violent invective against Valla, in which
he defended himself against Valla’s supposed witicism, scourged his
arrogance and vanity, and impeached his orthodoxy. Valla replied by an Antidote
to Poggio, which he addressed to Nicolas V. Not content with repelling
Poggio’s attacks or discussing his literary character, he cast aspersions upon
his private life. Poggio retorted by opening the flood gates of abuse on Valla.
Every scandalous story was raked up, every possible villainy was laid to his
charge; nay, even a picture was drawn of the final judgment of the Great Day,
and Valla was remorselessly condemned to perdition. Replies and counter-replies
followed, and the contest between these two eminent scholars was carried on by
clothing the lowest scurrility with classical language. The actual question in
dispute disappeared: the wrath alone remained. Rhetorical exercises in
declamatory abuse were poured forth in rapid succession. What fills us with
surprise is the fact that Nicolas V did not use his influence to stop this
unseemly exhibition. He received the dedication of Valla’s Antidote;
and though other men of letters, who were by no means squeamish, remonstrated
with the angry combatants, Nicolas V did not interfere. It would seem that an
interest in style had already overpowered, even in the head of Christendom,
any feeling of decorum, not to say morality, as regarded the subject-matter.
Love for the forms of classical antiquity was already strong enough to override
the spirit of Christianity. The criticisms of Valla on popular religion
awakened no anxiety in the heart of Nicolas V for the stability of
ecclesiastical tradition; the low scurrility of Poggio excited no care for
Christian morality. An antagonism had begun which was to widen hereafter and
produce disastrous results on the future of the Papacy.
FRANCESCO FILELFO.
The man who interposed his good offices to stop this
fray between Poggio and Valla was Francesco Filelfo, the most adventurous and
most reprobate of the literary men of the time. A native of Tolentino in the
March of Ancona, Filelfo sought his fortune on every side. First he taught in
Venice; then in 1420 went as secretary to an embassy to Constantinople. There
he studied Greek under John Chrysolaras, whose daughter he married. He won the
favor of the Greek Emperor, went as envoy to Murad II, and afterwards to
Hungary, and returned to Venice in 1427 with a treasure of Greek manuscripts.
As Venice would not pay him enough, he went to Bologna, and thence to Florence.
He was a savage literary gladiator, openly seeking his fortune and restrained
by no moral principles. His overweening vanity offended his literary
contemporaries, whom he attacked in shameless satires. He and Poggio had a
fierce war of words, and he raised up enemies on every side. At last he
attacked even Cosimo de' Medici, and found it necessary to flee to Siena,
thence to Bologna, and afterwards to Milan. In 1453 he passed through Rome on
his way to Naples; Nicolas V summoned him to his presence, presented him with
five hundred ducats, and made him one of his secretaries. He read with pleasure
Filelfo’s satires, and urged him to undertake a translation of the Iliad and
Odyssey; for this task he offered to give him a house in Rome; an estate in the
country, and to pay him ten thousand golden ducats. The death of Nicolas V
prevented the bargain from being completed.
Many other scholars of less fame worked for Nicolas V.
Niccolo Perotti translated Polybius; Guarino of Verona the geography of Strabo;
Piero Candido Decembrio, who had been the chief scholar in the service of
Giovanni Maria Visconti, took refuge in Rome from the disturbances that
followed his patron's death, and translated Appian for the Pope. Nor was it
only in the sphere of Latin and Greek scholarship that Rome became the capital
of literature. The sight of the monuments of Rome aroused an interest in an
exact study of its past topography. Poggio looked on the ruins of Rome with the
eye of a literary man who found in them food for his imagination. His
contemporary, Fiavio Biondo, a native of Foni, who was made a Papal secretary
by Eugenius IV, may be regarded as the founder of serious archaeology. His
work, Roma Instaurata, which was finished just before the death of
Eugenius IV, is a careful topographical description of the city of Rome
and an attempt to restore its ancient monuments. When we consider the materials
which Biondo had at his command, we are struck with the sense of order and
accuracy which was growing up among the Italian scholars. The work of Biondo
may be formless—it cannot be said that archaeology has yet advanced very far in
style—but it is a careful and scholarly piece of work, such as had never been
attempted before. His concluding words are an expression of the deal of Nicolas
V. After surveying the classical monuments of Rome he pauses. “Not”, he says, “that
we despise the Rome of our own day, or think that its glories came to an end
with its legions, consuls, and senate. Rome still exercises her sway over the
world, not by arms and bloodshed, but by the power of religion. The Pope is
still a perpetual dictator, the Cardinals a senate; the world still brings its
tribute to Rome, still flocks to see its holy relics and its sacred places”.
Though Biondo himself did not proceed to describe the Christian antiquities of
Rome, he warmly appreciated them; and his contemporary, Maffeo Vegio of Lodi,
also a Papal secretary, wrote a careful account of the antiquities of the
basilica of S. Peter’s.
Such were a few of the scholars whom Nicolas V
gathered round him. Their names are now almost forgotten, though in their own
day they received a respect which has rarely fallen to the lot of literary men.
Their works repose undisturbed in libraries; their fame, of which they were so
careful, has vanished; they are remembered merely as literary curiosities. Yet
we owe some debt of gratitude to those who cleared the way for European
culture. They were not men of creative genius; their merits are scientific
rather than literary. They rescued from destruction the treasures of antiquity,
and prepared a way for a proper understanding of them. Their method was crude;
their knowledge was imperfect; their attention to rhetorical forms ludicrously
exaggerated. Yet they laid the foundation of classical philology, of the
science of grammar, of intelligent criticism, of clear expression. They stood
at the opening of a new era, and their labors only furnished the foundation for
the labors of others. One generation of scholars succeeds another, and the past
are soon forgotten, however great may have been their services to a better
understanding of the classical spirit, however great may have been the impulse
which that heightened knowledge gave to the thought of Europe.
We have spoken only of a few of the most famous
scholars who gathered round Nicolas V. They are but samples of their kind, as
the court of Nicolas V was but a brilliant sample of the literary and artistic
movement that was pervading the whole of Italy. Of this movement Florence was
its home; and Cosimo de Medici had seen the wisdom of identifying his power
with all that was most eminently Florentine in the aspirations of his native
city. He set the example of a literary patronage, which was splendidly followed
by Nicolas V, and scarcely less so by Alfonso of Naples, who made himself more
Italian than the Italians, and became the ideal of a cultivated prince. He was
never tired of reading classical authors, and had them lead to him even at his
meals. He was cured of an illness by hearing Quintus Curtius’ Life of
Alexander the Great and received from the Venetians a bone of Livy
with all the reverence due to the relic of a saint. He and Nicolas V carried on
an honorable rivalry, which should do most for learning; and their example
spread rapidly throughout the congenial soil of Italy. Almost every court had
its literary circle, and literary interests held a prominent place in
Italian politics of the ensuing time.
Amid these now forgotten scholars stood Nicolas V.
Though not himself a man of letters, he was for that very reason better fitted
to play the part of patron. He was not merely a collector of books, but was
also an intelligent director of the studies of others. When we consider all
that he did, we may well be amazed at the greatness of his plans and the energy
with which he prosecuted them. The transformation of Rome into the undisputed
capital of Europe, the attainment for the Papacy of an overpowering
prestige which was to enthrall men’s minds—these apparently chimerical
objects were pursued with unerring precision and untiring labor. Nothing was
overlooked in the great plan of Nicolas V : every part of the work was pressed
on at the same time, and every part of the work was regulated by the personal
judgment of the Pope. Fortresses and libraries, churches and palaces, were
alike rising under the Pope’s supervision; the fine arts, the literature and
science of the time, all were welcomed to Rome, and found by the Pope’s
care a congenial sphere. We cannot render too much praise to the thoroughness
with which Nicolas V conceived and executed the plan which he had formed. But the
plan was in itself a dream of almost superhuman magnificence, and Nicolas V
expected too much when he hoped that the world’s commotions would stand still
and respect the charming leisure of the Papacy. The fall of Constantinople
dispelled the pacific vision of the Renaissance, and brought back the mediaeval
dream of a crusade. Before Christendom could be rearranged under the peaceful
sway of literature and theology going hand in hand, the enemies of her faith
and of her civilization had stormed the bulwark that had stood for twelve
centuries, and were threatening her with a new invasion.
CHAPTER V.
CALIXTUS III. 14455—1458
After the funeral of Nicolas V fifteen of the twenty
Cardinals entered the Conclave. They were greatly divided in opinion, and, in
fact, had no clear policy to which they were desirous to commit themselves. The
first scrutinies led to no result, and the Cardinals conferred privately with
one another. At first Capranica seemed to be the favorite, being commended by
his learning, his high character, and his political ability. But Capranica
was a Roman and a friend of the Colonna; as such he was opposed by the party of
the Orsini. He was therefore passed by in favor of Bessarion, who had no enemies
and enjoyed a high reputation for learning. His election would have given a
worthy successor to the policy of Nicolas V, and would also have shown the zeal
of the Cardinals for the crusade. In Bessarion they would have chosen a Pope
sprung from the Greek nation and keenly sympathizing with his conquered
countrymen. For a night it seemed that Bessarion would be elected; but the
morning brought reflection. He was an alien and a neophyte, a stranger to Italy
and to the traditions of the Papacy. “Shall we go to Greece”, said Alain
of Avignon, “for a head of the Latin Church? Bessarion has not yet shaved his
beard, and shall we set him over us?”. There was a sudden revulsion of feeling.
The Cardinals, weary with the debate, suddenly made a compromise, and an old Spanish
Cardinal, Alfonso Borgia, was elected by accession on April 8. Borgia was
seventy-seven years old, and owed his election to his age. As the Cardinals
could not agree, they made a colorless election of one who by his speedy death
would soon create another vacancy.
Alfonso Borgia was a native of Xativa in Valencia, who
had distinguished himself in his youth at the University of Lerida. There he
attracted the attention of his countryman, Benedict XIII, who conferred on him
a canonry, and Alfonso of Aragon took him as his secretary. He did good service
to the Papacy in winning for Martin V the allegiance of Spain, and in
negotiating the renunciation of the Spanish anti-Pope, Clement VIII. In
recognition of these services Martin V conferred on him the bishopric of
Valentia. When the Council of Basel began its sessions Alfonso chose Borgia as
his representative. Borgia refused the office, but visited Eugenius IV at
Florence, and showed great skill in negotiating peace between Alfonso and the
Pope. In return Eugenius IV in 1444 raised him to the Cardinalate, and by his
wisdom and moderation Cardinal Borgia deservedly held a high place in the
Curia. When the Conclave could not agree on a successor to Nicolas V, Borgia
was an excellent person for the purposes of a compromise. His learning was
profound, his character blameless, his political capacity stood high. His
election was gratifying to Alfonso of Naples. As a Spaniard, he bore an
hereditary hatred to the Turks, which would make him a fitting representative of
the crusading movement.
On April 20 Alfonso Borgia was crowned Pope, and took
the title of Calixtus III. The solemnity was disturbed by a riot arising from a
quarrel between one of the followers of Count Averso of Anguillara and one of
the Orsini. Napoleone Orsini raised his war-cry; 3000 men-at-arms gathered
round him, prepared to storm the Lateran and drag the Count of Anguillara from
the Pope’s presence. Only the intervention of Cardinal Latino Orsini could
appease his brother’s wrath and persuade him not to mar the festivities with
bloodshed. The turbulent Roman barons began at once to reckon on the feebleness
of the aged Pope.
In spite of his years Calixtus soon showed that he was
filled with a devouring zeal for prosecuting the war against the Turks. He
solemnly committed to writing his inflexible determination. “I, Pope
Calixtus, vow to Almighty God and the Holy Trinity that by war, maledictions,
interdicts, excommunications, and all other means in my power, I will pursue
the Turks, the most cruel foes of the Christian name”. With this object in view
Calixtus III sent legates to every country to quicken the zeal of Christendom.
The buildings which Nicolas V had begun were neglected; his swarms of workmen
were dismissed; men of letters found themselves little regarded in the new
court where severe simplicity reigned, and the old Pope rarely left his
chamber. The revenues of the Papacy were no longer devoted to the erection of
splendid buildings and the encouragement of letters; they were used for the equipment
of the Papal fleet, and the peaceful city was full of warlike preparation.
The hopes of a European crusade were fixed on Germany;
but the proceedings of the Diet of Neustadt were scarcely such as to inspire
much confidence. The death of Nicolas V and the election of a new Pope gave an
opportunity to the Electors to urge upon the Emperor their grievances against
the Papacy. Jacob of Trier exclaimed that now was the time to vindicate the
liberty of the German Church, which was treated as the Pope’s handmaid; before
Calixtus III was recognized the observance of the Concordat made by Eugenius IV
should be rigorously exacted, and the grievances of the German church should be
reformed. Aeneas Sylvius confirmed the troubled Emperor, who had his own
grievances, because the private agreement made by Eugenius IV had not been more
strictly observed than the published Concordat. It was vain, said Aeneas, for a
prince to please the people, seeing that the multitude was always inconstant,
and it was dangerous to give it the rein. On the other hand, the interests of
the Pope and Emperor were identical, and a new Pope only gave a new opportunity
for receiving favors. After a little hesitation Aeneas prevailed, and he, with
the jurist John Hagenbach, was sent to Rome to offer to Calixtus III the
obedience of Germany, and to lay before him the Emperor’s demands.
Aeneas and his colleague did not reach Rome till
August 10, when they asked for a private audience to lay Frederick’s requests
before the Pope. Calixtus III stood in a more independent position towards the
Emperor than his two predecessors. Eugenius IV had bought back the obedience of
Germany by secret concessions and a promise of money. Nicolas V had been privy
to this transaction, and felt himself bound by it; he had paid his share of the
money promised to Frederick, but 25,000 ducats were still due. Calixtus had had
no part in the negotiations with Frederick, and knew how hopeless it was to
satisfy the feeble and needy Emperor. He refused to consider his requests until
he had received the obedience of Germany. Aeneas Sylvius, who was anxious to
reach the Cardinalate, had no objection to use his position of Imperial envoy
as a means of showing his readiness to please the Pope. He professed to be
confounded at this demand of the Pope; but to avoid scandal he gave way to it.
He proffered the obedience of Germany in a public consistory, and made a
speech, in which was no mention of the Emperor's demands, or of the stricter
observance of the Concordat. This speech was merely a string of compliments to
the Pope and the Emperor and declamation about war against the Turk. When,
after this, the ambassadors returned, in several private audiences, to the
matters entrusted to them by the Emperor, they could only appear as petitioners,
not as negotiators. Calixtus roundly declared that he had no money to pay the
25,000 ducats which Frederick claimed; his other requests for a share in the
tenths to be raised for the crusade, and for the right of nomination to vacant
bishoprics, were deferred for further consideration. Cardinal Carvajal should
be sent to satisfy the Emperor so far as was consistent with the rights of the
Church. Frederick III was no longer the necessary ally of the Pope : his cause
was now so far identified with that of the Pope that he could not desert the
Papacy, and he was too unimportant in Germany to be of much service. Aeneas
Sylvius felt that he had now done all he could for the Papacy in Germany; his
connection with the Emperor could be of no further profit to him. He had
brought to Rome letters from Frederick III, and also from Ladislas of Hungary,
recommending him for the Cardinalate. This honor had been long in coming.
Nicolas V had almost promised it; but the outspoken and fiery Nicolas had never
liked the subtle, shifty Sienese, and Aeneas had been passed over. He now
stayed in Rome in the hopes that Calixtus, as everyone expected, would create
him Cardinal in the coming Advent.
But the expectations of Aeneas were for a time doomed
to disappointment. A consistory was held for the creation of Cardinals, and
congratulations were brought to Aeneas, who lay bedridden with the gout. The
congratulations, however, were premature. The sitting of the consistory was
long and stormy; when it broke up the Cardinals were pledged to secrecy.
Calixtus III went back to the policy of Martin V, and wished to elevate his
family at the expense of the Church. He proposed as the new Cardinals two of
his nephews, Rodrigo Lançol y Borgia and Luis Juan de Mila, both young men
little over twenty years of age, remarkable for nothing except thee personal
strength and vigor. Together with them he nominated a third youth, Don Jayme,
son of the Infante Pedro of Portugal. The Cardinals protested loudly against
this creation of two nephews; they pointed out the scandal that was likely to
arise. For a time the Pope paused; he did not venture to publish the creation
till September, when most of the Cardinals had left Rome to avoid the heat. The
Cardinals murmured, but were helpless against the stubborn old man.
The desire to aggrandize his nephews was the only
object which shared with the war against the Turks the interest of Calixtus
III. Legates and preaching friars swarmed throughout Europe. Calixtus had no
belief in Congresses; he issued himself a proclamation of war, imposed a tax on
all the clergy throughout Christendom, and fixed March 1, 1456, as the day on
which a combined fleet and army was to set forth against the Turks. He
appointed special priests to say mass daily in behalf of the holy war; he
ordered processions to be made for its success; at midday each church bell was
to be rung to summon the faithful to prayer, and they who said three Aves and
Paternosters for victory against the Turk earned an indulgence for three years.
All that was possible was done to kindle the zeal and gather
the contributions of Christendom.
The princes, however, did not show the same zeal as
the Pope. They made high-sounding promises and professions, and were ready
enough to receive the money collected in their realms; but this was all.
Alfonso of Naples equipped a fleet, but sent it against Genoa instead of the
Turks. The Duke of Burgundy was content with the renown he had already won as a
crusader, and was busy in watching the French King. Charles VII of France at
first refused to allow the Pope's Bulls to be published; he was too busily
engaged in watching England and Burgundy to have any care for foreign
enterprises. At length Cardinal Alain of Avignon prevailed upon him to sanction
the collection of tenths from the French clergy; but the money was spent in
building galleys at Avignon, which were afterwards used against Naples.
Germany, England, and the Spanish kingdoms did nothing; the Italian powers were
too cautious to take any decided steps. Nowhere did the Papal summons meet with
any real response.
In spite of the lukewarmness of Europe the Pope was
not disheartened. From his sick chamber he urged the building of his galleys
along the Ripa Grande. To obtain money he took the treasures of art which Nicolas
V had lavished on the Roman churches; he even stripped the splendid bindings
off the books which Nicolas V had stored in the Vatican Library. One day his
eye fell on a salt-cellar of richly-chased gold work upon his table: “Take it
away” he cried, “take it for the Turkish war; an earthenware
salt-cellar is enough for me”. The result of these efforts was that in May,
1456, a fleet of some sixteen galleys was anchored at Ostia. Calixtus appointed
as his admiral Cardinal Scarampo, and bade him sail at once against the Turks.
Sorely against his will, Scarampo was driven to undertake this hopeless task.
His position was indeed pitiable. Under Eugenius IV he had been the general of
the Papal forces, and had ruled Rome at his will; under Nicolas V his power came
to an end, and he indulged himself in ease and luxury. With a new Pope a new
field was opened for his ambition, and he had been foremost in promoting the
election of Calixtus III, believing that the old man would be a flexible
instrument in his hands. But Calixtus fell under the power of his stalwart
nephews, who looked with suspicion on Scarampo, and so poisoned the Pope’s mind
against him that he was forbidden to approach the Vatican. In this strait
Scarampo made a bid for a renewal of favor by professing the greatest zeal for
the Turkish war. Calixtus was mollified, and hoped that Scarampo would devote
his own wealth to this purpose; the nephews were not sorry for an excuse for
removing him from Rome, and he was appointed admiral of the fleet. In vain Scarampo
tried to evade this unpleasant duty; in vain he urged that thirty galleys at
least were needful before anything could be done. The obstinate and fiery Pope
ordered him to set out at once, and threatened him with a judicial inquiry into
his past conduct if he refused. Scarampo set sail and won back a few
unimportant islands in the Aegean which had been captured by the Turks. He
carried succors to the knights of Rhodes, and might pride himself on a few
trivial successes. But his forces were inadequate to any serious undertaking,
and Scarampo was neither a hero nor an enthusiast who cared to risk his life in
a rash attempt. His only desire was to cruise about and make a decent show of
activity. So far as he gave the islands a notion that they were being aided, he
filled them with false security and unfounded hopes, which only tended to make
them less self-reliant.
The only country which urged war successfully against
the Turks was Hungary, which was bravely fighting for its national existence.
There Fra Capistrano showed the power of religious zeal to stir a nation to a
deep consciousness of the principles at stake. There also Cardinal Carvajal, as
Papal legate, brought wisdom as well as devotion to aid the cause of
patriotism. Carvajal had gone in 1455 to aid the crusading movement, and to
reconcile the Emperor with his former ward, Ladislas. The reconciliation
Carvajal soon found to be hopeless; he turned his attention to the more
important business of national defense, and helped the brave Governor of Hungary,
John Hunyadi, who was resolved to withstand the Turkish onslaught. In April,
1456, came the news that the Sultan with a host of 150,000 was advancing along
the Danube valley to the siege of Belgrad. Hunyadi gathered such troops as he
could and hastened to the relief of the threatened city. He besought Carvajal
to remain in Buda, and gather forces to send to his support. King Ladislas, who
was in Buda, went out hunting one morning with the Count of Cilly, but thought
it more prudent not to return to such dangerous quarters, and made off to
Vienna, The nobles and the King were alike afraid; the two churchmen, Carvajal
and Capistrano, alone assisted the national hero.
When Hunyadi arrived the siege of Belgrad had already
been carried on for some fourteen days, and the walls of the city were terribly
shaken; but the sight of Hunyadi and Capistrano with their forces gave the
defenders new courage. On the evening of July 21 Mahomet II gave the signal for
a storm. All the night and all the next day the battle raged desperately.
Hunyadi and Capistrano stood on the top of a tower and surveyed the fight.
Capistrano, with uplifted hands, bore the banner of the cross and a picture of
S. Bernardino; from time to time shouted aloud the name of ‘Jesus’. Hunyadi,
with a soldier's eye, saw where help was needed, and rushed to aid the waverers
till the fight was restored. More than once the infidels forced their way into
the town, and were repelled by the valour of Hunyadi. At last an unexpected
sally was made by a troop of Capistrano's crusaders; the janissaries were
preparing to attack them in the flank, when Hunyadi charged furiously to their
aid, and the voice of Capistrano succeeded in rallying them. The janissaries
amazed at the onslaught fled to their tents; the Sultan, who had been slightly
wounded by an arrow, gave the signal for retreat, and Belgrad was saved.
There was a cry of triumph throughout Europe at the
news, and Calixtus naturally expected that this success would rouse men’s
minds, and fire the lagging princes of Europe for the holy cause. But after the
first glow of enthusiasm no one was moved to any decided action. In Hungary
itself the heroes of Belgrad passed away, and it was doubtful who would take
their place. A month after his victory, on August 11, John Hunyadi died of the
plague. When he felt that death was approaching and preparations were being
made to administer to him the Eucharist, he exclaimed, “It is not fitting
that the Lord should be brought to visit the servant”. He rose from his bed and
prepared to seek the nearest church; his strength failed him, and he had to be
carried. He confessed his sins, received the Eucharist, and died in the hands
of the priests. Capistrano was not long in following him; he died of fever
on October 23, 1456.
The death of Hunyadi might fill the Hungarians with
woe, but it was a source of relief to King Ladislas, and more especially to his
guardian the Count of Cilly. Now that the mighty Vaivod was removed, the Count
of Cilly hoped that he would be supreme over the young King and would assert
over Hungary the royal power, freed from the trammels which Hunyacy had
imposed. Ladislas and the Count of Cilly returned to Hungary, and even went to
Belgrad to see the battlefield whose glory they had so basely refusal to share.
There one morning while the King was at mass the Hungarian nobles, led by
Ladislas Corvinus, Hunyady’s son, fell upon the Count of Cilly and slew him.
The King for some time dissembled his wrath, and the sons of Hunyadi
accompanied him unsuspiciously to Buda, where they were seized, and Ladislas
Corvinus was publicly beheaded as a traitor. The King himself did not long
enjoy his triumph; on November 23, 1457, he died suddenly in Prague, whither he
had gone to prepare for his marriage with Margaret of France.
The question of the Hungarian succession added to the
confusion in Germany, where things were already sufficiently confounded. The
Electoral party was still aiming at its own objects as against the feeble
Emperor, and the death of Jacob, Archbishop of Trier, in May, 1456, altered the
state of parties and introduced a new subject of discord. The Pfalzgraf now
stood at the head of the opposition, and both parties struggled to obtain the
vacant archbishopric. John of Baden and Rupert of the Pfalz were the
candidates; but the power of the Pope was sufficiently strong to secure the
victory for John of Baden, son of the Markgraf Jacob, who was the Emperor’s
friend. The opposition now consisted of the Pfalzgraf and the Archbishops of
Mainz and Koln. The collection of the tenths imposed by the Pope gave an
occasion to raise again the old grievances of the German Church and to recur to
the old policy of reform. The victory of Belgrad gave an opportunity of
attacking the indolence of the Emperor, and the Electors sent Frederick III an
invitation to be present at a Diet to be held in Nurnberg on November 30, 1456,
to consider the war against the Turk; if he did not come, the Electors would
take such steps as they thought best.
It was noticeable that this Diet, which was forbidden
by the Emperor, was attended by a Papal legate. It would seem that the
Electoral opposition counted on having the Pope on their side, if only they
joined in war against the Turk and laid aside their anti-Papal measures.
However that might be, the question of the private interests of the Electors
overrode both the Turkish war and the reform of the Church. The discussions
were purely political, and the Diet adjourned till March, 1457, when it again
met at Frankfort, and again adjourned. Meanwhile, Albert of Brandenburg
succeeded in forming a strong party in the Emperor's favor, and the opposition
was driven to fall back. When baffled in its political objects it bethought
itself of the question of Church reform. The Papacy was threatened with what it
dreaded even more than a General Council—the establishment of a Pragmatic
Sanction for Germany.
Proceedings were begun in secrecy by the Electors;
but, as usual, information early reached the Curia, and preparations were made
to resist the attempt. To Aeneas Sylvius was left the organization of the
defense. Aeneas had at length attained to the goal of his ambition. On December
18, 1456, the Pope had created him Cardinal with five others. It would seem
that the College, steadfast in its opposition to the Pope and his nephews,
resisted as long as it could this new creation. “No Cardinals”, writes
Aeneas to one of the newly-elected dignataries, “ever entered the College
with greater difficulty than we; for rust had so spread over the hinges
(cardines) that the door could not turn and open. Calixtus used battering rams
and every kind of instrument to force it”. Aeneas wrote at once to Frederick
III to thank him for his good offices. “All men shall know”, he
said, “that I am a German rather than an Italian Cardinal”. He soon
proceeded to show the sense in which he meant that promise, by using all his
skill to baffle the aspirations of Germany for freedom from ecclesiastical
oppression.
About the grievances of Germany there was no doubt;
but there was little earnestness in the means taken to have them redressed. The
cry for reform was raised by the Electors when they had something to gain from
the Pope: it gradually died away when a sop was thrown to the personal
interests of the leaders of the movement. The proceedings were insincere even
on the part of those who saw most forcibly the evils. The present leader of the
movement was the Archbishop of Mainz; and his Chancellor, Martin Mayr, sounded
the note of war in a letter to Aeneas Sylvius, in which, after congratulating
him on his Cardinalate, he put forth a powerful indictment of the Papal
dealings with Germany. The Pope, he said, observed neither the decrees of
Constance nor Basel, nor the agreements of his predecessors, but set
at nought the German nation. Elections to bishoprics were arbitrarily
annulled, and reservations of every kind were made in favor of Cardinals and
Papal secretaries. “You yourself”, proceeded Mayr, “have a general
reservation of benefices to the value of 2000 ducats yearly in the provinces of
Mainz, Trier, and Koln, an unprecedented and unheard-of grant”. Grants of
expectancies were habitually given, annates were rigorously exacted, nor was
the Pope content simply with the sum that was due. Bishoprics were given not to
the most worthy, but to the man who offered most. Indulgences were granted;
Turkish tenths were imposed without the consent of the bishops, and the money
went to the Pope. Cases that ought to be decided by the bishops were
transferred to the Papal Court. In every way the German nation, once so
glorious, was treated as a handmaid by the Pope. For years she had groaned over
her slavery; her nobles thought that the time was come for her to assert
her freedom.
The letter reads as though it were genuinely meant;
but Aeneas in his answer shows that he, at all events, he read between the
lines. In answering Mayr he asserted the Papal supremacy, reacted the decrees
of Basel, agreed that the Concordat should be observed, and suggested that if
the Electors had any grievances on this point, they should at once send envoys
to the Pope, who would be willing to grant redress. As regarded the Papal
interference with elections, it was exercised in the way of judicial
intervention, the need for which was caused by the ambition and greed of
contending claimants, not by Papal rapacity. If money were paid to officers of
the Curia, that was not the Pope’s doing, but was caused by the ambition of the
claimants, who were willing to do anything which might further their cause. Men
were not all angels at Rome any more than in Germany; they took money when it
was offered, but the Pope in his chamber decided according to justice. The
Pope's officials might be extortionate, and the Pope greatly wished to check
them; but he himself received nothing save what was due. Everyone makes a
grievance of parting with money, and always will do so. The complaint of the
Bohemians against the Germans was the same as that of the Germans against the
Papacy—that their money is taken out of the land. Yet Germany, from its
connection with the Papacy, had steadily grown in wealth and importance, and,
in spite of its complaints, was richer than at any previous time. Aeneas found
it hard that Mayr complained of the provision made in his favor; he had lived
and labored in Germany so long that he did not think he was regarded as a
stranger. However, he thanked Mayr for his personal offer to help him in
realizing his provision, and would be glad to know of any eligible benefices
that might fall vacant. From the last sentence we see that Mayr in another
letter had drawn a distinction between the German grievances and his own
personal feelings; though theoretically he might regard his friend as an abuse,
he was practically ready to help him.
Aeneas showed that he interpreted this letter of
Martin Mayr to mean that the Archbishop of Mainz had some conditions to propose
to the Pope. He was not wrong in his conjecture, for early in September came a
secretary of the Archbishop, who was empowered to negotiate, through Aeneas
Sylvius, for an alliance with Calixtus III; the Archbishop of Mainz was ready
to desert to the Pope's side if he received the right of confirmation of
episcopal elections throughout Germany. Aeneas answered in a letter to Mayr
with a decided refusal, cleverly couched in courteous yet stinging language. He
was glad to hear that the Archbishop no longer joined with the malignants
against the Pope, but regretted to hear that he had been ill advised to ask for
a right inherent in the Papacy, which none of his predecessors had enjoyed. No
understanding was necessary between Christ's vicegerent and his subjects—all
were bound to obey. He was sure that the modesty of the Archbishop had been
improperly represented by this request, which he, for his part, could not
venture to lay before a Pope so blameless, so wise, and so upright as was
Calixtus III.
Aeneas might answer Mayr conclusively; yet the danger
was threatening, and all the diplomatic power of Aeneas was set to work to
avert it. He assured the Archbishop of Mainz that the Pope was ready to grant
all his smaller requests; he assured Mayr of his strong personal friendship,
and of his desire to serve him in all ways. He wrote to Frederick III in the
name of Calixtus III to supply him with an answer to the murmurs against the
Papacy. He wrote to the King of Hungary, to the German Archbishops, to remind
them of their duties to the Papacy. He stirred up the Cardinals Cusa and
Carvajal to exert all their influence in Germany. Above all he wrote most
confidentially to his former friends, the jurists and secretaries who occupied
important posts at the different German Courts; Peter Knorr, the councilor of
Albert of Brandenburg; Heinrich Leubing, Procopius of Rabstein, Heinrich
Senftleben, and John Lysura, to whom he sent a cipher that communications might
be carried on with greater secrecy. Moreover, a new envoy was sent into
Germany, a skillful theologian and diplomatist, Lorenzo Rovarella, who was
laden with Bulls to the Emperor and the Electors. Aeneas gave him instructions
to warn the Archbishops of Magdeburg, Trier, Riga and Salzburg to abstain from
joining in any measures against the Pope. He was to urge the Duke of Bavaria to
use his influence with the Pfalzgraf in the same direction; and as soon
as possible was to proceed from the Emperor's Court to the Rhenish
provinces, which were the seat of the anti-Papal movement. The princes were
reminded that capitular elections were rarely in favor of junior members of
princely families, and that only through the Papal intervention could these
meet with their due rewards. The bishops were asked to consider that any blow
aimed at the Papal dignity would eventually be disastrous to all episcopal
authority as well. It was frankly admitted that there were abuses in the Papal
Curia which the Pope desired to remedy. The German princes were asked to send
their complaints to Rome, and trust to the Pope's judgment. A judicious mixture
of cajolery and fair promises was applied to soothe the discontent of Germany.
Moreover, Aeneas Sylvius took up his pen in defense of
the Papacy, and expanded his letter to Mayr into a tractate 'On the Condition
of Germany'. He represented the Concordat as depending on the goodwill of the
Pope, and expressed the Pope's desire for a reform of all abuses which could be
shown to attach to the proceedings of the Curia. He discussed the complaints of
the Germans with sophistical skill. He condemned generally the abuses
complained of, denied their existence, and then plausibly accounted for a few
exceptional cases. Grants in expectancy, he said, had never been made by the
Pope, except at the earnest request of princes, and solely for the purpose of
raising money for war against the Turk. Capitular elections have never been
annulled except on legal grounds, though he admitted that some legal ground had
been discovered to annul every election brought before the Curia during the
past two years. As to the complaints about indulgences, he said, pertinently
enough, that the Papacy only offered indulgences to the faithful who showed their
zeal for their religion by contributing to the expenses of the Turkish war. It
was a free gift on their part; why should it be laid as an exaction to the
Pope's charge? Germany had received from Rome more than she had given. Her
complaint that money went from her to Rome was an old grievance, as old as
human nature itself, and was never likely to disappear.
The pleadings of Aeneas and the diplomacy of Rovarella
had the effect in Germany of staying any definite proceedings for a time; and
in German politics to pause was to lose the day. If for a brief space a strong
party of the princes was united for a common object, it needed only a few
months for some change to occur in the position of affairs which led to a new
combination. The death of Ladislas of Hungary in November, 1457, caused great
excitement in Germany. The dominions of Austria, Hungary, and Bohemia were left
in dispute, and most of the German princes were interested in the settlement.
It is true that a Diet met at Frankfort in June, 1458, and agreed to send an
embassy to the Pope; but this was felt to be a mere empty form. The Papacy
gained its object of putting off the enactment of a Pragmatic Sanction for
Germany, and the death of Calixtus III in September removed him from further
threats.
All these disturbances in Germany promised little for
the favorite design of Calixtus III—a great expedition against the Turks.
Nothing was done for this object. Scarampo still cruised about the Aegean
islands with the Papal fleet, and Scanderbeg in Albania showed how strong
national feeling could supply courage to a handful of men contending against an
invading host; but Europe did nothing. Calixtus III grew daily more indignant
at the remissness of Alfonso of Naples, his former friend, in whose service he had
entered Italy. His friendship rapidly turned to hostility when Alfonso sent his
fleet against Genoa instead of joining with Scarampo. He opposed Alfonso’s
Italian policy, and strove to prevent the alliance with Milan by which Alfonso
wished to secure the succession of his son to the Neapolitan kingdom. Alfonso
had no child born in lawful wedlock; but his illegitimate son, Ferrante, had
been legitimatized and recognized as successor to the Neapolitan kingdom by
Eugenius IV and Nicolas V. In spite of this, on Alfonso's death, on June 27,
1458, the impetuous Pope threatened to plunge Italy into war by refusing to
acknowledge Ferrante, and claiming Naples as a fief of the Holy See.
It was not only anger at Alfonso's remissness to help
in the Turkish war that prompted Calixtus III to this step. The only object,
which shared with crusading zeal the Pope’s interest, was the enrichment of his
nephews; and for this the vacancy of the Neapolitan throne gave an opening
which he hastened to use. Besides the two nephews who had been elevated to the
Cardinalate was a third, Don Pedro Luis de Borgia, on whom Calixtus III was
desirous to heap every worldly distinction. He made him Gonfalonier of the
Church and Prefect of Rome; he committed to his hands all the castles in the
neighborhood of the city. He conferred on him also the Duchy of Spoleto, in
spite of the protest of Capranica, who made himself the mouthpiece of the
discontent of the Cardinals. Calixtus tried to rid himself of Capranica by
sending him on distant embassies; when this failed he threatened to imprison
him.
There was nothing that Calixtus would not do for his
nephews, whom he identified still further with himself by bestowing on them his
own family name and arms of Borgia. These three vigorous young men were
all-powerful with the Pope, and the Cardinals who maintained an independent
footing were either sent on distant embassies or compelled to leave the
city. Carvajal and Cusa were at a safe distance in Germany; Scarampo, against
his will, was sent to sea; Cardinal Orsini in vain tried to resist, and was
driven to quit Rome. The other Cardinals of any importance, Estouteville, head
of the French party, Piero Barbo, the nephew of Eugenius IV, even Prospero
Colonna, thought it wise to be on good terms with the Borgia. Aeneas Sylvius
was too much accustomed to be on the winning side to find any difficulty in
making friends with the powerful. With his wonted amiability he was ready to
help Cardinal Borgia in his desire to enrich himself with Church preferment. He
acted as his agent, and informed him of eligible vacancies during his
absence. “I keep an eye on benefices”, he writes on April 1, 1457, “and
will take care of you and myself. But we are deceived by false rumors. He whose
death was reported from Nurnberg was here a few days ago, and dined with me.
The Bishop of Toul, also, who was said to have died at Neustadt, has returned
safe and sound to Burgundy. I will, however, be watchful tor any vacancy; but
you have the best proctor in his Holiness”.
Thus watchful and thus supported, the Borgia ruled
Rome and filled the city with their creatures. Dependents of their house
flocked from Spain to share the booty, and their party was known by the name
of “the Catalans”. All the offices of the city were put in the hands of
these strangers, who connived at robbery and murder by the members of their own
faction. One day Capranica was asked for alms on the bridge of S. Angelo by a
beggar, who pleaded that he had escaped from the Catalans. “You are better
off than I am”, answered the Cardinal, “for you have escaped, while I am
still in their hands”.
The death of Alfonso offered Calixtus III an
opportunity of exalting his nephew Pedro still higher. By claiming the kingdom
of Naples he might at least get hold of some portion which might be made into a
fief for Pedro's benefit. On July 31 he conferred on him the Vicariate of
Benevento and Terracina.
It was not, however, to be expected that Ferrante
would flee before the Papal threats. He summoned a meeting of the Neapolitan
nobles, who accepted him as their king; he appealed from the Pope to a future
Council, and prepared to defend himself against an attack. He claimed only the
kingdom of Naples; on Alfonso’s death without lawful issue Aragon and Sicily
passed to his brother John of Navarre. Even without the Pope’s
interference there were other claimants to the throne of Naples. John of Anjou
revived the claims of his house; and Charles of Biana, son of John Navarre, was
prepared to maintain his right of legitimate succession to Alfonso. Calixtus
III might disturb the peace of Southern Italy; but he was by no means strong
enough to secure his own success. His policy could only lead to the
introduction of foreign invaders, and was in consequence strongly opposed by
the far-seeing Duke of Milan, whom Calixtus III vainly tried to win over to his
side. Sforza answered, that the settlement made under the auspices of Nicolas V
had met with the approval of all the Italian Powers, and he for his part would
fight in defence of Ferrante, rather than see the concord of Italy disturbed.
This answer of Sforza was a bitter disappointment to
the old Pope. But the end of his plans was approaching. He was seized with a
lever, and it was clear that his end was drawing near. The Orsini began to take
up arms against the hated Catalans. The nephew Pedro grew more fearful for
himself as he saw his uncle on his deathbed. He judged it better to beat a
prudent retreat while there was yet time. He sold the castle of S. Angelo to
the Cardinals for 20,000 ducats, and on August 5 left the city with his Catalan
friends. The Orsini occupied the gates and watched the roads to prevent his
escape; only by the friendly aid of Cardinal Barbo did he manage to flee, in
the darkness of the night. Barbo led him to the Tiber, where he took boat and
made his way to Civita Vecchia. Next day, August 6, Calixtus III died. The
Orsini at once plundered the houses of the Catalans and all that bore the arms
of the Borgia. Calixtus was buried with little respect in the vault of S. Peter's,
and was followed to the grave only by four priests.
The pontificate of Calixtus III was a violent reaction
against the policy of Nicolas V. The energy of Nicolas V and the greatness of
his schemes had naturally caused some dismay among the Cardinals, who heard the
murmurs of Germany and feared the results of localizing the Papacy too
exclusively in Rome. Under the influence of this feeling they elected a
stranger, whose advanced age was a guarantee that his pontificate would only be
a temporary breathing space, in which they might recover from the impetuosity
of Nicolas V. But the reaction of Calixtus III was too violent and too
complete. He not only checked the works of his predecessor; he allowed them to
fall into decay. Had he continued in any degree the buildings of his
predecessor, the schemes of Nicolas V might have been slowly realized in the
future side by side with other objects of Papal interest. But the entire
suspension of the works by Calixtus III was fatal. The scheme of the
Renaissance, instead of advancing to gradual completion, was laid aside to be
superseded by the more splendid, though less thorough, plan of a later age.
Rome, that might have borne the impress of the calm strength and simplicity of
Nicolas V and Alberti, is stamped with the more passionate magnificence of
Julius II and Bramante. No institution, least of all an institution like the
Papacy, admits of a sudden change of policy, or can without loss direct its
energies entirely into a different channel. While we may admire the zeal of
Calixtus III for a crusade against the Turks, we must regret that it was so
exclusive as to sacrifice with impatience all the labors of Nicolas V.
Even Calixtus III did not entirely abandon some care
for the architecture of Rome; but his willfulness is shown in the works which
he did, no less than in those which he left undone. He restored the Church and
the palace of SS. Quattro Coronati, because from the Church he took his title
as Cardinal, and the palace had served as his residence. He restored also the
Church of S. Calixtus, in honor of his Papal name; and the Church of S.
Sebastiano Fuori, because it was situated over the Catacombs of S. Calixtus.
Besides these, he did some repairs to the Church of S. Prisca, and began a new
ceiling in S. Maria Maggiore. The few painters who remained in Rome in the days
of Calixtus III were employed for the purpose of painting standards to be
borne against the Turks.
If Calixtus III was thus inconsiderate and
narrow-minded in despising the work of his predecessor, the same qualities
stood in the way of his success in the object which was foremost to himself. It
must always be an honor to the Papacy that, in a great crisis of European
affairs, it asserted the importance of a policy which was for the interest of
Europe as a whole. Calixtus III and his successor deserve, as statesmen, credit
which can be given to no others of the politicians of the time. The Papacy, by
summoning Christendom to defend the ancient limits of Christian civilization
against the assaults of heathenism, was worthily discharging the chief secular
duty of its office. Of the zeal and earnestness of Calixtus III there was no
question; but the lethargy of Europe prevented him accomplishing much.
Moreover, the zeal of Calixtus was displayed by passionate impetuosity which
disregarded the means in its desire to reach the end. All that Bulls,
exhortations, and indulgences could do, Calixtus did; but he, trusted merely to
words, and took no means to remedy the evils which kept Europe suspicious and
divided and prevented the possibility of combination for a common object. He
did not try to win the confidence of Germany by wise measures of ecclesiastical
reform, which might have formed the beginning of a political reorganization. He
did not even in Italy strive to maintain the pacific spirit which he found.
Under the influence of his greedy nephews the Papacy again threatened to be a
centre of territorial aggression.
The impetuosity of youth has passed into a common
phrase. The history of the Papacy gives many examples of the no less dangerous
impetuosity of old age. Men of decided opinions, who come to power late in
life, expend on accomplishing their cherished desires the accumulated passion
of a lifetime. Inflexible, overbearing, inconsiderate, Calixtus III pursued his
own plans, and seemed to form no part of the life around him. He brooked no
contradiction; he saw no one who was not prepared to re-echo his opinions; he
had no care of anything outside the circle which he had marked for himself. The
vow which he made on his election was one of the ornaments of his chamber; it
was ever before his eyes and ever in his thoughts. He left at his death 150,000
ducats, which he had stored up for the Turkish war.
Personally Calixtus III was a man of rigid piety and
of simple life. He was largely charitable and attentive to all religious
duties. Little could be said against him save that he was obstinate and
irritable; yet he inspired little affection and accomplished little. His
weakness left more permanent results than did his strength. The ardor of his
zeal for Christendom is forgotten; the evil deeds of his nephew Rodrigo and his
race have made the name of Borgia a byword, and Calixtus III is remembered as
the founder of a race whose actions marked the Papacy with irretrievable
disgrace.
CHAPTER VI.
PIUS II AND THE CONGRESS OF MANTUA.
1458-1460.
On August 10 the eighteen Cardinals who were in Rome
entered the Conclave in the Vatican Palace. The first day was spent in preliminaries.
The next day was devoted to framing the solemn agreement, which since the death
of Martin V had been subscribed by all the Cardinals before a Papal election.
It contained the chief points to which the College wished to bind the future
Pope, and so expressed the desire of the electors to limit, while there was yet
time, the absolute power of the infallible ruler whom they were about to set
over the Church. On the present occasion the points insisted on were the
prosecution of the Turkish war, respect for the wishes of the Cardinals in new
creations, proper provision for the Cardinals, due consultation of the College
in all important matters, care for the States of the Church, and such like
matters. On the third day the first scrutiny was taken, and it was found that
Cardinals Piccolomini and Calandrini had each received five votes, while no
other candidate received more than three. The first scrutiny, however, was
generally of little consequence, and merely served as a means of opening
private discussions among the Cardinals. It soon appeared that the French
Cardinal Estouteville, by his wealth and magnificence, had gained a
considerable following, and could count with certainty on six votes. A little
private consultation showed that the real issue was the election of
Estouteville or an Italian. Estouteville had many arguments to use in his own
favor. “Will you take Aeneas”, he said, “who is both gouty and poor? How
can one who is poor and infirm govern the Church? Perhaps he will transfer the
Papacy to his beloved Germany, or introduce his heathenish poetry into the
statutes of the Church. Calandrini is incapable even of governing himself. I am
an older Cardinal than they; of the royal race of France, rich, and with many
friends; my election will vacate many benefices which will be divided among
you”. The adherents of Estouteville met in secrecy and bound themselves to
secure his election. They counted on eleven votes, and regarded the election as
won; already Estouteville had promised them the due rewards of their zeal in
his cause.
But at midnight Calandrini visited the cell of
Piccolomini. “Tomorrow”, he said, “Estouteville will be elected. I counsel
you to rise and offer him your vote so as to win his favor. I know from my
experience of Calixtus III how ill it is to have the Pope for one's enemy”.
Aeneas answered that it was against his conscience to do so; he could not vote
for one whom he considered unworthy. But Aeneas was disturbed in his mind, and
early in the morning visited Cardinal Borgia to see if he was pledged. Borgia
said that he did not wish to be on the losing side, and had received from
Estouteville a document promising to confirm him in the office of
Vice-Chancellor, which he had held under Calixtus III.
“Are you not rash in trusting to the promise of an
enemy to your nation?”, said Aeneas. “Do you not know that the Chancery is
also promised to the Cardinal of Avignon? Which promise is the new Pope most
likely to keep?”.
Next Aeneas sought Cardinal Castiglione and asked him
if he had promised his vote to Estouteville. Castiglione made a like answer; he
did not wish to stand alone, since the affair was as good as settled. Aeneas
recalled the miseries of the Schism, the dangers of a French Papacy, and the
disgrace which it would bring on Italy: had they escaped the Catalans only to
fall before the French? Aeneas next met Cardinal Barbo, who was equally anxious
that some decisive step should be taken to defeat the schemes of Estouteville’s
party. Barbo was one of those who had entertained hopes of his own election; he
determined to lay them aside, and try to gain a majority for the best candidate
of an Italian party. He invited the Italian Cardinals to assemble in the cell
of the Cardinal of Genoa, and six answered his summons. He laid before them the
condition of affairs, appealed to their national sentiment, exhorted them to
lay aside all personal feelings, and proposed Piccolomini as their candidate.
All agreed except Aeneas, who modestly declared himself unworthy of the
honor.
Soon after this the public proceedings of the Conclave
began with the mass, which was followed by a scrutiny. Estouteville, pale with
excitement, was one of the three Cardinals whose office it was to guard the
chalice, while the rest advanced in order and dropped into it their votes. As
Aeneas approached the altar Estouteville whispered, “Aeneas, I commend
myself to you”. “Do you commend yourself to a poor creature like me?”,
answered Aeneas, as he dropped his vote. Then the chalice was emptied on a table,
and the scrutinizers read out the votes: when this had been done Estouteville
announced that Aeneas had eight votes. “Count again”, said Aeneas,
and Estouteville was obliged to confess that he had made a mistake; and Aeneas
had nine votes, and he himself had six. It was clear that, with nine votes out
of eighteen, Aeneas had won the day; only three votes were wanting, and the
Cardinals remained seated to try the method of accession. “All sat”, says
Aeneas, “pale and silent, as though rapt by the Holy Ghost. No one spoke
or opened his mouth, or moved any part of his body save his eyes, which rolled
from place to place. The silence was wonderful as all waited, the inferiors
expecting their superiors to begin”. At last Borgia arose and said, “I
accede to the Cardinal of Siena”. The conversation of Aeneas about the
Vice-Chancellorship had no doubt shown Borgia which way his interest lay.
Aeneas had now ten votes, and in a desperate attempt to prevent the election
being made that day Isidore of Russia and Torquemada rose and left the
Conclave. No one followed, and they soon returned. Then Cardinal Tebaldo rose
and said, “I also accede to the Cardinal of Siena”. One vote only was wanting,
which Prospero Colonna rose to give. Estouteville and Bessarion upbraided him
for his desertion of their cause, and seizing his arms tried to lead him from
the Conclave; but Colonna loudly called out, “I also accede to the
Cardinal of Siena, and make him Pope”. The deed was done; the intrigues were at
an end. In a moment the Cardinals were prostrate at the feet of the new Pope.
Then they resumed their seats, and formally confirmed the election.
Bessarion, in the name of the adherents of
Estouteville, addressed Aeneas. “We are pleased with your election, which we
doubt not comes from God; we think you worthy of the office, and always held
you so. Our only reason for not voting for you was your bodily infirmity: we
thought that your gouty feet might be a hindrance to that activity which the
perils from the Turks might require. It was this that led us to prefer the
Cardinal of Rouen. Had you been strong in body there was no one whom we would
have chosen before you. But the will of God is now our will”. “You have a
better opinion of us”, answered Aeneas, “than we have of ourselves; for you
only find us defective in the feet, we feel our imperfections to be more widely
spread. We are conscious of innumerable failings which might have excluded us
from this office; we are conscious of no merits to justify our election. We
would judge ourselves entirely unworthy, did we not know that the voice of
two-thirds of the Sacred College is the voice of God, which we may not disobey.
We approve your conduct in following your conscience and judging us
insufficient. You will all be equally acceptable to us; for we ascribe our
election, not to one or another, but to the whole College, and so to God
Himself, from whom comes every good and perfect gift”.
Aeneas then put off his robes, and assumed the white
tunic of the Pope. He was asked what name he would bear, and with a Virgilian
reminiscence of Pius Aeneas, answered “Pius”. Then he swore to observe the
agreement entered into by the Cardinals at the beginning of the Conclave. He
was led to the altar, and there received the reverence of the Cardinals. Then the
election was announced to the people from a window. The attendants of the
Conclave plundered the cell of the newly-elected Pope, and the mob outside
rushed to pillage his house, which they did with such completeness that they
tore even the marble from the walls. Unfortunately, he was one of the poorest
Cardinals; but part of the mob professed to mistake the cry of “Il
Sianese” for “Il Genovese”, and plundered the house of Cardinal
Flisco as well.
The election of Cardinal Piccolomini was popular with
the Romans : the citizens laid aside their arms, with which they were provided
in case of a tumult, and went to S. Peter's. Pius II was placed on the high
altar, and received the adoration of the Cardinals, the clergy, and the people.
At nightfall the magistrates of the city came on horseback, bearing blading
torches, to pay their respects to the new Pope. On September 3, he was crowned
in S. Peter's, and rode in solemn procession to the Lateran, where he
experienced the unruliness of the Roman mob, who, according to old custom,
seized the horse and trappings of the Pope. So eager were they for their booty
that they made a rush too soon. Swords were drawn in the fight for the plunder,
and the crippled Pope was in danger of his life in the confusion. He was,
however, happily saved from hurt, and entertained the Cardinals, the foreign
ambassadors, and chief citizens at a banquet.
The election of Pius II gave general satisfaction in
Italy, where the new Pope was well known to most of the princes and republics.
His reputation for learning and his diplomatic ability made every one look upon
him with respect. The French, however, felt aggrieved at the rejection of
Estouteville, and the opponents of the Emperor in Germany looked with suspicion
on one whose cleverness they knew too well. To Pius II himself his elevation
was a source of mingled joy and fear. True, he was ambitious, vain, desirous of
glory; true, he had schemed and plotted for his own advancement, and had made
success the great object of his life. But, when success came at last, he shrank
from the responsibilities of which he well knew the extent. He was no
inexperienced enthusiast who might dream that he had the future in his hands.
Though only fifty-three years old, Pius II was already old in body, racked by
the gout, suffering from gravel, afflicted by the beginnings of asthma. He knew
full well how useless it was in the existing condition of Europe to hope
for any great opportunities which he might use to leave his mark upon the
world. He had reached the height of his ambition, and saw nothing but
difficulties before him. When in the first moments after his election his
friends thronged round him with joyful congratulations, he burst into tears.
“You may rejoice”, he said, “because you think not of the toils and the
dangers. Now must I show to others what I have so often demanded from them”.
During all the festivities of his accession his face was careworn and
melancholy.
When Pius II reviewed the condition of Europe he had
no hesitation in deciding that the chief object of his policy must be the same
as that of his predecessor, the prosecution of war against the Turk. What
Calixtus III had urged with the unreflecting fanaticism of a recluse, Pius II
would press with the wisdom of a statesman. Already Pius II had identified
himself with the cause of the crusade; his speeches, his writings, had
advocated it; his knowledge of European politics convinced him of its absolute
necessity. But he saw that, to ensure success, the crusade must be undertaken
by the whole of Christendom, and Christendom must be united for this purpose by
wise management on the part of the Pope. Accordingly, Pius II determined to
proceed with stately deliberation, and put the project on its proper footing.
He lost no time in laying before the Cardinals a plan for a general conference
of the princes of Europe, to be held under the Pope's presidency. But the
Cardinals were half-hearted; the majority of them were content to stay in Rome
and enjoy themselves, and shrank from the trouble of a serious undertaking.
They raised difficulties about the place of the proposed conference; the
princes of Europe could not well be summoned to Rome; there was a danger, if an
assembly were held in France or Germany, that it might turn into a Council,
whose very name was hateful. Pius II pointed out that the state of his health
gave him an excuse for refusing to cross the Alps, while he was ready to show
his zeal by going to some place in North Italy, so as to meet the European
representatives half way : he proposed Udine or Mantua as suitable places for
the Congress. The Cardinals reluctantly consented; and Pius II hastened to
publish his resolution to an assembly of ambassadors and prelates in S.
Peter's. There were present eleven Cardinals, three archbishops, twenty-nine
bishops, and the ambassadors of Castile, Denmark, Portugal, Naples, Burgundy,
Milan, Modena, Venice, Florence, Siena, and Lucca. To them Pius II announced
his plan; though an old man and infirm, he would brave the dangers of crossing
the Apennines to confer with the princes of Europe on the step to be taken to
avert the ruin of Christendom : he asked for their opinion and advice. For a
time there was silence. Then Bessarion begged the ambassadors to speak. One
after another they praised the zeal of the Pope, and asserted the good
intentions of their several states. Pius II was pleased with these expressions
of assent, and invited all to a public consistory to be held in three days'
time, on October 13. There a solemn summons to a Congress to be held on June 1,
1459, was read to the assembly, and a few days afterwards Pius II sent letters
to the various kings of Christendom, urging their presence at this great
undertaking.
But before he could proceed to a Congress, Pius II had
a political question to settle nearer home. Calixtus III had refused to
recognize the succession of Ferrante in Naples, and had claimed the kingdom as
a fief of the Holy See. He had not conferred it on any claimant, and any scheme
that he might have had of establishing his nephew in Naples was at once
overthrown by his death. An envoy of Ferrante had been sent to the Cardinals
during the vacancy; Pius II found the Neapolitan question pressing for his
decision. Nor was the question one which could be decided easily on general
grounds. The condottiere general, Jacopo Piccinino, had occupied in Ferrante’s
name Assisi, Gualdo, and Nocera. The States of the Church were in confusion,
and in many cities Pius II had to buy off the Catalan governors, and assert his
rule with difficulty, the presence of Piccinino was a continual menace.
Moreover, the general lines of the Papal policy
towards Naples had been somewhat obscured by the predecessors of Pius II. The
Papacy had, on the whole, favored the Angevin party. Eugenius IV had been the
constant opponent of Alfonso, and Nicolas V had only recognized him for the
sake of peace. The question which Calixtus III had opened was full of
difficulty. Pius II might well doubt the wisdom of supporting in Naples the
line of Anjou, and introducing into the neighborhood of the Papacy the
influence of the country of the Pragmatic Sanction. Pius II himself had known
and liked the scholarly Alfonso, and his own sympathies were probably on the
side of Ferrante. But the French party was strong among the Cardinals, and the
envoys of the French King laid before the Pope the impolicy of offending a
prince so powerful as their master. As the Archbishop of Marseilles pleaded in
this strain, Pius II suddenly asked him if René of Anjou were ready to drive
out Piccinino from the States of the Church. The Archbishop was driven to
answer “No”. “Then what are we to expect from one who cannot help us in
our straits?”, said the Pope. “We need a king in Naples who
can protect both himself and us”.
So Pius II proceeded to make the best bargain he could
with Ferrante. When Ferrante wished to negotiate, the Pope roundly answered
that he was no merchant to barter with. On October 17 an agreement was made
that Pius II should free Ferrante from all ecclesiastical censures, and invest
him with the kingdom of Naples, without prejudice to another’s right. The
Pope did not venture to decide entirely against the Angevin claims, but merely
recognized Ferrante as the actual king. Ferrante undertook to pay the Pope a
yearly tribute, and recall Piccinino from the States of the Church within a
month. Benevento, which had been granted as a personal fief to Alfonso, was
restored to the Church; but Terracina, which was held in the same way, was to
be retained by Ferrante for ten years. The French Cardinals still opposed the
agreement, and refused to sign the Bull in which it was embodied. Piccinino was
driven to leave the States of the Church, and Pius II sent Cardinal Orsini to
crown Ferrante in Naples.
When peace had thus been restored to some extent at
home, Pius II proceeded with the preparations for his departure to the
Congress. The Romans were ill pleased to see the Pope leave his city. Some
exclaimed that he was going to take the Papacy to Germany; others declared that
he would go no farther than Siena, and there would devote himself to the
adornment of his native land. All joined in lamenting the loss which the city
would sustain from the departure of the Curia. They deprecated the danger to
which the Pope was about to expose his life, and foretold that his departure
would be the signal for disturbances in the Papal States. To allay their
anxiety Pius II left some Cardinals and officials of the Curia behind him, that
Rome might not be entirely deprived of its glory; he appointed the Cardinal
Nicolas of Cusa Vicar during his absence. He decreed that if he died away from
Rome the election of his successor should still take place in that city after a
due delay for the return of the absent Cardinals. He granted their ancient
privileges to the cities in the Papal States, and remitted their tribute for
three years. Finally, he summoned the Roman barons, and administered to them an
oath that they would keep the peace during his absence. As a token of his zeal
for the crusading cause, he founded a new military order, the order of S. Mary
of Bethlehem. But the day for military orders was gone, and this revival
existed only in name. After these precautions he set out from Rome on January
22, 1459, accompanied by six Cardinals—Calandrini, Borgia, Alain, Estouteville,
Barbo, and Colonna.
The journey of Pius II was like a triumphal progress.
It was long since a Pope had been seen by any of the dwellers in the Papal
States. Throngs of people welcomed him wherever he went with shouts of
rejoicing and expressions of goodwill, which afforded sincere enjoyment to Pius
II, who fully appreciated the dignity of his office.
At Narni the crowd thronged round his horse, and
strove to carry off the baldachino held over his head. Swords were drawn in the
struggle, and Pius II thought it wiser in the future to be carried in a litter,
so as to avoid such unseemly brawls. At Spoleto he was entertained for four
days by his sister Catarina. Thence he passed through Assisi to Perugia, where
he stayed three weeks. He was loth to pass by his native place, and leave Siena
unvisited; but there was a conflict between the Pope and the government of
Siena, where the popular party were in the ascendant, and had driven out the
nobles. They had tried to pacify the Pope by admitting the Piccolomin to
office, but Pius II demanded the restitution of the nobles. The popular party
gave way a little at the Pope’s pressure, and relaxed the rigor of their
proscription, but they regarded the Papal visit with undisguised suspicion.
From Perugia Pius II crossed the lake Trasimene, and entered the Sienese
territory at Chiusi. He turned aside to visit his native place, Corsignano, a
little town perched among the hills, which he had left as a poor boy, and now
entered as the head of Christendom. He experienced the same sad feelings that
attend everyone who revisits the haunts of his youth. His father and mother
were dead; those whom he had known were mostly confined to bed through
sickness; faces which he remembered flushed with the pride of youth were
unrecognizable in the deformity of old age. Here, in the little church, the
Pope celebrated mass on February 22, the festival of S. Peter's installation.
He resolved to honor his native place by elevating it to a bishopric under the
name of Pienza. He ordered workmen to be collected to build there a cathedral
and a bishop’s palace.
After a sojourn of three days Pius II left Corsignano
for Siena. There he stayed nearly two months, and strove to propitiate the
people by presenting the city with the golden rose on Palm Sunday. At last he
brought before the magistrates his political object, and urged on them the
restoration of the excluded nobles. After some opposition they agreed to admit
them to a quarter of some offices and an eighth of others. Pius II was not
satisfied with such a small concession, but thanked them for what they had
done, and said that he hoped on his way back to hear that they had granted
more. At Siena Pius II received the first ambassadors from the powers beyond
Italy, who sent to offer their obedience to the new Pope. There came
representatives of the Kings of Castile, Aragon, Portugal, and Matthias
Corvinus, the new King of Hungary. All were received with due state, and were
answered by Pius with his wonted eloquence. The Imperial ambassadors were at
Florence, and when they heard that the envoys of Matthias Corvinus had been
received by the Pope, raised difficulties about presenting themselves, as
Frederick III still urged his own claims on Hungary and refused to recognize
Matthias. But Pius II had himself given the Imperial envoys an example not to
be too careful about their master's dignity in dealing with the Papacy. They
were readily mollified by the assurance of the Pope that in such formal matters
he only dealt with the existing state of things, and treated as king him who
held the kingdom. They came to Siena, and gave to Pius II the obedience of the
Emperor. Pius II, on his part, could not do less than confirm to the Emperor
the provisions of the secret agreement which he himself had negotiated, and for
which the German obedience had been sold to Eugenius IV.
To Siena came also the envoys of George Podiebrad, who
had been elected King of Bohemia, and their coming brought before Pius II the
chief difficulty which he had to face. Podiebrad, as governor of Bohemia under
Ladislas, had pursued with firmness and sagacity a successful policy in uniting
Bohemia and bringing back order into the distracted country. He was, above all
things, a statesman who appreciated the exact bearings of the situation. He saw
that Bohemia must be united on a basis which would allow the various factions
to live peaceably together, and would also free the country from its isolation
from the rest of Christendom. He aimed at bringing about this union on the
basis of moderate utraquism. He overthrew the fanatical Taborites, and reduced
their stronghold. He wished to be on good terms with the Papacy; but he knew
that Bohemia would not be content with less than a faithful observance of the
Compacts made with the Council of Basel, and the recognition of Rokycana as
Archbishop of Prague. But the Compacts had been wrung out of the Council by
necessity, and the restored Papacy had no idea of frankly accepting them. They
were in its eyes a temporary compromise to be withdrawn as soon as possible. If
Podiebrad hoped to draw the Papacy to toleration, the Papacy hoped to bring
back Bohemia to submission. Cusa, Carvajal, Capistrano, and Aeneas Sylvius had
tried all that diplomatic skill and religious enthusiasm could do, and all had
failed against the resolute determination of the Bohemians. Rokycana was still
unrecognised, the Compacts were still treated as temporary provisions, while
Bohemia under Podiebrad was again organizing itself into the strongest kingdom
in Eastern Europe.
So long as Ladislas lived the Papacy had hopes that
his influence might grow with years. But on his death the election of Podiebrad
to the Bohemian crown made the Bohemian question important both to the Papacy
and to Germany. To Germany it meant the destruction of German influence in
Bohemia, and the rise of a power which might become the arbiter in the affairs
of Germany itself. Podiebrad, conscious of the difficulties in his way, desired
a legitimate position as King of Bohemia, accepted by Utraquists and Catholics
alike. Hence he shrank from receiving the crown at the hands of Rokycana, and
wished for recognition by the Pope. Calixtus III, in his crusading zeal, was
willing to put great confidence in one who could put an army in the field to
war against the Turk. Podiebrad led the Pope to suppose that he would make
greater concessions than he intended. He applied to Carvajal, the Papal legate
in Hungary, to send two bishops for his coronation. The request could not well
be refused; nor could Carvajal expect from Podiebrad an open abjuration, which
would have alienated his people. He charged the bishops, however, not to crown
him before he had sworn to root out heresy and establish the Catholic faith in
Bohemia. King George managed to have the oath couched in general terms, without
any direct mention of the Compacts or of the utraquist faith. He swore secretly
before the bishops to bring back his people from their errors to the faith and
worship of the Catholic Church. Then he was crowned on May 7, 1458.
Carvajal and Calixtus III recognized in George a true,
though secret, friend of the Church, and believed in his sincerity and good
intentions. George wrote to Calixtus proffering his aid against the Turks, and
Calixtus in reply addressed him not only as king, but as his dear son. The
letter of Calixtus was spread far and wide by George, and cut away the ground
from those who would have opposed him as a heretic. The German and Catholic
provinces of Silesia, Lusatia, and Moravia, which were ready to rebel, returned
to their obedience. When it was too late the eyes of Calixtus III were opened,
and he died with the knowledge that he had been deceived.
In this condition Pius II found the Bohemian question.
He was not, like Calixtus III, without experience of Bohemia or of George. He
knew that the King's oath was not meant by him to signify a withdrawal
from the Compacts; but he knew that an open quarrel with Bohemia would hinder
his plan of a Congress, and he hoped through the Congress to put the Papacy in
a position which would enable it to deal with Bohemia in the future. He judged
it best to affect to look on George’s oath as a promise of complete submission.
He sent him a summons to the Congress, and gave him the title of king; but sent
the summons through the Emperor, saying that Bohemia was a fief of the Empire,
and that the Pope recognized as king whoever the Emperor recognized. Frederick
III, embarrassed by Hungary and Austria, began to look on George as a
possible ally. He admitted him to a conference near Vienna in September, 1458,
and so gave him moral support. As Pius had intended, the Emperor sent on the
summons to George, who at once published it. The Silesian League, which still
opposed George's accession, began slowly to melt away before this proof of his
success. Breslau, animated by Catholic zeal, still held out, and sent envoys to
Pius II at Siena, complaining of his recognition of George, as harmful to
Catholicism. Thither came also the ambassadors of George, professing the
obedience of their master to the Pope. Pius II was sorely embarrassed. He could
not receive the obedience of a King who had not yet disavowed his heresy : he
could not refuse his support to those who were resisting him in the name of the
Catholic faith. Accordingly, he attempted a compromise. In a secret consistory
he received the personal obedience of George, but declined to give him the rank
of a king till he had made public profession of Catholicism. The envoys of
Breslau he praised for their zeal, and promised to find a remedy for their
grievances; he hoped that George would show himself true to his oath to the
Papacy, and prove himself a Christian king; otherwise he would have to take
other measures. For a time the Pope's answer satisfied both parties. George
used this period of truce to increase his prestige in Germany. In April he held
a conference at Eger, to settle territorial disputes about the possessions of Bohemia,
Brandenburg, and Saxony; by his conciliatory policy he gained recognition at
the hands of his German neighbors, and also entered into a perpetual peace and
alliance with Saxony and Brandenburg. On July 30 Frederick III met George, and
in return for promises of help against Matthias of Hungary, conferred on him
the Imperial investiture of the Bohemian kingdom. The policy of George had so
far succeeded in establishing his power on a legitimate basis. It remained for
Pius II to see if his Congress could exercise any influence on the restoration
of Catholicism in Bohemia.
After a stay of nearly two months in Siena Pius II set
out on April 23 for Florence, whither he was escorted by the young Galeazzo,
son of Francesco Sforza, of Milan, as well as by several vassals of the Church.
In Florence, where he stayed for eight days in the cloister of S. Maria
Novella, the Pope received all honor and magnificent tokens of respect. But
Cosimo de' Medici kept his bed on the plea of sickness, and the visit had no
political fruit. From Florence he passed to Bologna, the rebellious vassal city
of the Church. It is true Bologna was not in open rebellion: she admitted a
Papal legate, but allowed him no authority, for the power was exercised by
Xanto de' Bentivogli, supported by a council of sixteen. The rulers of Bologna
doubted whether to admit the Pope within their walls. On the one hand, if he
passed by the city such a mark of displeasure might encourage the Bolognese
exiles to renew their attempts at revolution; on the other hand, the presence
of the Pope within the walls might encourage a rising of the popular party. At
last it was decided to invite the Pope to Bologna, but to summon a large body
of cavalry from Milan to keep the city in order during his stay. Pius II was
obliged to accept these conditions; but the Milanese leaders took an oath of
fidelity to the Pope, and the whole body was put under the command of Galeazzo
Sforza. The entry of Pius II into Bologna through lines of armed men was
different from the peaceful procession which he had hitherto enjoyed. Bologna
was sullen and suspicious. The orator who welcomed the Pope gave offence to the
rulers by the way in which he spoke of the condition of the city. He was exiled
for his outspokenness, and was restored only on the entreaties of Pius II.
Pius II was glad to leave the uncongenial city for
Ferrara, where Borso of Este received him with open arms. Borso had many
demands to make from the Pope; he wished for the title of Duke of Ferrara and
the remission of his yearly tribute to the Papacy for the fief which he held.
Though Pius II refused to go so far, yet he gave Borso many proofs of his
friendliness, and his stay in Ferrara was one unceasing festivity.
When Pius II first announced his Congress, he
mentioned as the place for its assembling Udine or Mantua. Udine was in the
Venetian territory; and the Venetians, who had made a treaty with the Turks for
commercial purposes, did not think it wise to lend their cities for a hostile
demonstration against their ally. It had been, therefore, settled that the
Congress was to meet at Mantua. Thither Pius II travelled by boat up the Po; he
was welcomed by the Marquis Ludovico Gonzaga, and entered the city, on May 27,
in solemn procession. First came his attendants and three of the Cardinals;
then twelve white horses without riders, with gold reins and saddles. After
these were borne, by three mounted nobles, the three banners of the Cross, the
Church, and the Piccolomini. Then followed a rich baldachino, behind which
walked the clergy of Mantua in their robes. Next were the royal ambassadors,
then the officials of the Curia, preceded by a golden cross, and followed by a
white horse bearing the Eucharist in a gold box, under a silken canopy,
surrounded by lighted candles. Then came Galeazzo Sforza and Ludovico Gonzaga,
followed by the Cardinals. After them the Pope, clad in full pontifical attire,
and blazing with jewels, was borne in his litter by nobles, and was followed by
a crowd of prelates. At the entry of the gate Gonzaga dismounted, and presented
to the Pope the keys of the city.
Then the procession moved over carpets strewn with
flowers to the cathedral. Next day Bianca, the wife of Sforza, with her four
sons and her daughter Ippolita, visited the Pope. It is characteristic of the
education of the age that the youthful Ippolita addressed the Pope in a Latin
speech, which excited general admiration, and received from him an appropriate
answer.
So far all things had smiled on Pius II. He had
enjoyed to the full the pleasures of pomp and pageantry, and had received all
the satisfaction that fair Mantua, speeches and ready promises could give. He
was now anxious to reap the fruits of his journey in the results of the
Congress. With laudable punctuality he arrived in Mantua three days before the
appointed time, June 1; but he found no one there to meet him. The ambassadors
who had been sent to him at Siena were not empowered to represent their masters
at the Congress. On June 1 a service was held in the cathedral, after which the
Pope addressed the prelates. He lamented the lukewarmness of Christendom, and
his own disappointment. He asked them to pray that God would give men greater
zeal for His cause. He would stay in Mantua till he had found what were the
intentions of the princes: if they came, the Congress would proceed; if not, he
would go back home, and bear the lot which Heaven assigned. They were brave
words; and those who had heard them thought that they befitted the occasion.
But as Pius II remained in Mantua week after week, the patience of the
Cardinals became exhausted, and they longed to return to the pleasures of Rome.
Mantua, they murmured, was marshy and unhealthy; did the Pope mean to destroy
them by pestilence in that stifling spot, where the wine was poor, the food
scarce, and nothing could be heard save the croaking of the frogs? “You
have satisfied your honor”, they pleaded to Pius. “No one imagines that
you alone can conquer the Turks. The princes of Europe pay no heed to us: let
us go home”. Bessarion and Torquemada were the only Cardinals who held by the
Pope. Scarampo, who had left his fleet to come to Mantua, withdrew to Venice,
where he openly ridiculed the Congress.
But Pius II hoped too much from the Congress to give
it up so readily. Not only was he in earnest about the crusade, but he wished
the Congress to give a practical overthrow to the Conciliar movement. At
Constance the hierarchy under the presidency of the Emperor had decided the
affairs of the Church; Pius II desired to establish a precedent of the primices
of Europe, under the presidency of the Pope, deciding the affairs of
Christendom. If even partial success should follow such an attempt it would be
the completion of the Papal restoration, the assertion of the Papal supremacy
over the nationalities of Europe. Pius II hoped that the Papacy would show its
superiority over the fruitless Diets of Germany, and would establish authority
high above the Empire as the undisputed centre of the state system of
Christendom.
The first envoys who came to Mantua were sent by
Thomas, the despot of the Morea, a brother of the last Greek Emperor,
Constantine Paleaologus. Thomas and his brother Demetrus had maintained
themselves in the Morea on condition of paying tribute to the Sultan. But they
quarrelled with one another; the Turks advanced against them; they were
incapable either of fighting or paying tribute. The envoys of Thomas brought as
a present to the Pope sixteen turkish captives, and with the boastfulness of
his race, represented himself as victorious; he did not want much help; with a
handful of Italians he would clear the Morea of Turks. His request was
discussed by the Cardinals, and at the earnest instance of Bessarion, against
the better judgment of the Pope, it was resolved to send him three hundred men.
They were rapidly equipped, and received the Pope's benediction before they
departed for Ancona. Of course their services were of no real use, and they
were little better than freebooters.
There was no lack of envoys clamoring for aid, though
those who could offer aid were wanting. From Bosnia, Albania, Epirus, Illyria,
Cyprus, Rhodes, and Lesbos, came messengers demanding help. At last came three
ambassadors from the Emperor—the Bishop of Trieste, Heinrich Senftleben, and
Johann Haderbach, who had been fellow-secretaries with Aeneas in the Emperor’s
Chancery: they were men of no standing to represent the Emperor in a matter
concerning the interests of Christendom. Pius II sent them back with a severe
letter of remonstrance; he did not recognize them as ambassadors, and urged the
Emperor to come himself, or send men of rank and position. Letter followed upon
letter; but the Emperor tarried and the other German princes followed his
example. At last, at the end of August, the envoys of the Duke of Burgundy—his
nephew, John of Cleves, and Jean de Croy—drew near, the Pope wished that they
should be received outside the walls by the Cardinals; but the Cardinals
answered that they were the equals of kings, and ought not to pay honor to a
duke. Pius II urged that all appearance of arrogance should be avoided, and
finally the Cardinals Orsini and Colonna offered to go as a deputation from the
Sacred College. The Burgundians were honorably received, and on the day after
their arrival were welcomed by the Pope in a public consistory. The Bishop of
Arras made a speech excusing the Duke of Burgundy’s absence on the ground of
age. Pius II replied in praise of the Duke’s zeal. But when these ceremonies
were over, and the Pope wished to turn to business, the Duke of Cleves brought
forward a private question of his own. He had taken under his protection
the town of Soest, which had rebelled against the Archbishop of Koln. The case
had long been before the Papacy, and Pius II had issued an admonition to Soest
to return to its rightful allegiance. The Duke of Cleves demanded that this
admonition should be recalled, and refused to treat of the business of the
Congress till the Pope had complied with his request. Pius II was in a strait:
he could not abandon the possessions of the Church; he did not wish to draw
down failure on the Congress. He adopted a dubious policy of delay. “The Roman
Pontiffs”, he says, “have been accustomed, where justice cannot be done
without public scandal, to dissemble till a convenient season. Nor do the
lawgivers forbid such a course; for the greater evil must always be obviated”.
So Pius II withdrew his admonition to Soest, to satisfy the Duke of Cleves, and
promised the representatives of the Archbishop of Koln that he would renew it
as soon as affairs allowed.
After this the Pope tried to bring the Burgundian
envoys to business; but it soon became evident that the crusading zeal of their
master had cooled. Their instructions simply empowered them to hear the Pope’s
views and report them to the Duke of Burgundy. They added that the Duke
considered an expedition against the Turks to be a matter that would tax the
energies of united Christendom; in its present discordant state a crusade was
hopeless. Pius II in reply pointed out the peril to Europe if the Turks were to
become masters of Hungary. The pacification of Europe was no doubt desirable;
but it would take some time to wipe out the hostilities of years. Meanwhile
Hungary was in extremities. Though Europe was troubled, yet if every nation
contributed equally to the crusade, the balance of power would be left
unaltered. No vast expedition was needed; 50,000 or 60,000 men would be as many
as could be fed and maintained in the field, and would be enough to keep the
Turk in check. Surely that was not much to ask from Europe. So pleaded the
Pope. Many conferences and many arguments were needed before the Burgundian
envoys at length promised that the Duke would send into Hungary 2000 knights
and 4000 foot, and would maintain them so long as the Christian army remained
in the field. When this was settled the Duke of Cleves prepared to go. In vain
Pius II strove to keep him at Mantua. He and his colleague departed, leaving a
few of the humbler members of the embassy behind. Again Pius II and his
Cardinals were left alone; again the murmurs of the Curia waxed loud
against the useless sojourn in Mantua.
In the middle of September came Francesco Sforza, Duke
of Milan, who again was welcomed by the Cardinals. Again was held a public
consistory, and Francesco Filelfo, the celebrated scholar, delivered a long and
eloquent speech in behalf of Sforza. The change of human affairs had brought
about that the young Sienese lad, who had once scraped together money to go to
Florence and attend the lectures of the famous Filelfo, now sat on the Papal
throne and received the elegant adulation of his former teacher. Pius II
listened and applauded; in his reply he called Filelfo the ‘Attic Muse’, and
extolled Sforza as a model of Christendom. But Sforza had his own political ends
to serve. He wished to agree with the Pope on an Italian policy which for the
next thirty years gave Italy peace such as she had not enjoyed for centuries.
He proposed to the Pope a league in defense of the throne of Ferrante in
Naples. Sforza saw clearly enough that the success of the House of Anjou in
Naples would make French interest predominant in Italy, and would bring upon
Milan the claims of the House of Orleans. If Naples, Milan, and the Papacy were
united, the danger of French intervention might be averted. Moreover, Sforza
wanted the aid of the Pope to procure for him from the Emperor the investiture
of the Duchy of Milan.
The coming of Sforza had, at least, the effect that it
induced most of the Italian powers to send their envoys to Mantua; if the
Congress did not become of great importance to Europe, it was, at least, a
great conference of the Powers of Italy. It is true that Borso of Modena would
not forgive the Pope for his refusal to make him Duke of Ferrara; he preferred
his own amusements to the dull work of the Congress. But Florence, Siena,
Lucca, Bologna, and Genoa sent envoys, as did Ferrante of Naples. An embassy
came also from Casimir, King of Poland, and tardily from the Duke of Savoy.
Even Venice, which had refused to give offence to the Turks, sent two envoys
when the news of Sforza's arrival was received.
At last Pius II might claim that something which might
called a Congress was assembled at Mantua. There was no time to wait any
longer, as Sforza was already anxious to depart. So on September 26, the
Congress was opened by a solemn service in the cathedral, after which the
Cardinals and envoys assembled before the Pope. Then Pius II delivered a
speech, which was regarded as a masterpiece of oratory. Copies were circulated
throughout Europe; and if an appreciation of eloquence had borne any practical
fruit the Turk would soon have been driven back into Asia. For three hours the
rounded periods of Pius II rolled on: and, though he was affected by a cough,
his excitement freed him during his speech from that troublesome enemy of
rhetorical effect. After an invocation of divine assistance Pius II put forth
the causes of war, the losses which Islam had inflicted on Christendom, both in
the remote past and in more recent days. Even though the present might be
endured, the worst had not yet been reached. The Turks were still pressing
on, and if Hungary fell before them there was no further barrier for Europe.
“But alas, Christians prefer to war against one another rather than against the
Turks. The beating of a bailiff, even of a slave, is enough to draw kings into
war; against the Turks, who blaspheme our God, destroy our churches, and strive
to destroy the whole Christian name, no one dares take up arms”. Then he turned
to his second point, the chances of success. The Turks had conquered only
degenerate peoples, and were themselves an easy prey to the superior strength
of Europeans, as the exploits of Hunyadi and Scanderbeg might show. Moreover,
God was on the Christian side, for Islam denied the divinity of Christ. Here
Pius II lowered the level of his rhetoric by turning aside to display his
learning; he gave a summary of the arguments by which Christ's divinity was
maintained. But he skillfully used this as the ground for an impassioned appeal
to his hearers; he besought them to show the sincerity of their faith, the
depth of their reverence for their divine Redeemer, by driving from Christendom
the Turks who blasphemed His name. Then Pius II proceeded to his third point,
the rewards which the war would bring. First there were kingdoms, booty, glory,
all in abundance that usually stirred men to war. Besides this was the sure
promise of the heavenly kingdom, and the plenary indulgence of sins which he
had granted to all crusaders. “How short was life in comparison with
eternity! How full were the joys of Paradise, where they would see God, and His
angels, and all the company of the blessed, and would understand all things!
Our soul freed from the chain of the body will, not as Plato says, recover,
but, as Aristotle and our own doctors teach, attain to the knowledge of all
things. It is a prospect which once stirred men to martyrdom. But we do not ask
you to undergo the martyr’s tortures; heaven is promised you at a lesser price.
Fight bravely for the law of God, and you will gain what eye never saw nor ear
heard. O fools and slow to believe the promises of Scripture! Would that there
were here today Godfrey or Baldwin, Eustace, Hugh the Great, Bohemund, Tancred,
and the rest who in days gone by won back Jerusalem! They would not have
suffered us to speak so long, but rising from their seats, as once they did
before our predecessor Urban II, they would have cried with ready voice, Deus lo vult, Deus lo vult!
“You silently await the end of our speech, nor seem to
be moved by our exhortations. Perhaps there are among you those who think :
This Pope says much, why we should go to war and expose ourselves to the
enemy's swords. Such is the way of priests; they bind on others heavy burdens
which themselves will not touch with their finger.
“Think not so of us. No one was ever more ready than
ourselves. We came here, weak as you see, risking our life, and the States of
the Church. Our expenses have greatly increased, our revenues diminished. We do
not speak boastfully, we only regret that it is not in our power to do
more. Oh, if our youthful strength still remained, you should not go to
the field without us. We would go before your standard, bearing the cross;
we would hurl Christ’s banner amidst the foe, and would count ourselves happy
to die for Jesus’ sake. Even now, if you think fit, we will not hesitate
to vow to the war our pining body and our weary soul. We shall deem it noble to
be borne in our litter through the camp, the battle, the midst of the foe.
Decide as you think best. Our person, our resources, we place at your disposal;
whatever weight you lay upon our shoulders we will bear”.
When the Pope had ended, Bessarion spoke on behalf of
the Cardinals. Not to be outdone by Pius II , he also addressed the assembly
for three hours. If Pius II showed his learning by a defense of the divinity of
Christ, Bessarion made a display of scholarship by citing historical instances
of those who had died for their country. He was at first tedious, but when he
described the capture of Constantinople he grew eloquent, and when he spoke of
the actual condition of the Turkish resources, which he estimated at 70,000
men, he was listened to with more attention. When he had ended, the envoys
present praised the Pope’s speech and extolled his zeal. Sforza spoke
in Italian, with a soldier’s eloquence says the Pope. Last of all the Hungarian
envoys addressed the assembly, and loudly complained of the Emperor’s
interference in Hungarian affairs, thus adding to their trouble when the Turk
was at their gates. The Imperial envoy, the Bishop of Trieste, had not a word
to say. Pius II himself had to defend his former master by saying that this was
not the place for general political discussion; he knew that both the Emperor
and the King of Hungary were just and upright, and he had sent a legate to heal
their quarrels.
The Congress contented itself with decreeing war
against the Turks in general terms, and Pius II saw that this was all that he
could expect the Congress to do. Next day he summoned the envoys to a
conference in his palace for the discussion of ways and means. He put before
them the questions—Were the Turks to be attacked by land, or sea, or both? What
soldiers were necessary, and how were they to be obtained? Sforza rose and gave
his opinion as a soldier. The Turks should be attacked by land and sea;
soldiers should be furnished by Hungary and the neighboring lands, as being
best acquainted with the tactics to be employed in fighting the Turks; Italy
and the rest of Christendom should furnish money. The Venetians agreed,
and added that thirty galleys and eight barks would suffice to cause a
diversion on the shores of Greece and the Hellespont, while 40,000 horsemen and
20,000 foot would be enough for war by land. Gismondo Malatesta, Lord of
Rimini, seeing an opportunity of booty for himself, advocated that the war
should be can led on by Italian forces. Pius II observed significantly, that
Italian generals did not care to fight outside Italy, and in this war there was
little to gain except for their souls. Other countries offered troops, but
would not offer money; their offer must be accepted or nothing would be got
from them. The Turkish troops numbered about 200,000, of whom the only real
soldiers, the Janissaries, were 40,000: to face them 50,000 European troops
would suffice, and thirty galleys would also be required. To raise money he
proposed that the clergy should pay a tenth, the laity a thirtieth of their
revenues for three years, and the Jews a twentieth of all their possessions.
The assembly approved the decree in general; but when the Pope proposed that
all should sign it, there was much hesitation. Florence and Venice especially
hung back. The Venetians at length declared that they would sign it if double the
number of ships were provided, and they were paid for supplying them, and
received all the conquests made by the crusaders. Matters began to wear a
doubtful aspect when Pius II attempted to turn general promises into definite
undertakings. Sforza had done his duty by joining the Congress, and left Mantua
for Milan.
Pius II professed himself satisfied with the results
which he obtained, and strove in public to maintain a semblance of contentment.
His real feelings, however, are expressed in a letter to Carvajal, written on
November 5. “We do not find, to confess the truth, such zeal in the minds of
Christians as we hoped. We find few who have a greater care for public matters
than for their own interests. Yet we have shown how false is that calumny so
long cast against the Holy See; we have proved that no one is to be accused
except themselves. We seem, however, to have disposed affairs in Italy for
God’s service, since the princes and potentates have entered into obligations
confirmed by their own signatures. But we hear that Genoa is sending a fleet to
urge the French claims in Naples, and we fear that we shall lose not only help
from those engaged in war, but that all the rest will be drawn into the
struggle. Unless God help us, the first fruits of our labor will be lost in the
calamities of Christian people”.
In truth everything depended for Pius II on the
attitude assumed by France, whose ambassadors were announced as on their way to
Mantua. They had halted at Lyons on receiving the news of the reception given
to the Burgundians, and doubted whether it became the national dignity that
they should advance farther. One of their number, the Bishop of Chartres, went
on beforehand. He had a private end to serve; for having been appointed Bishop
according to the Pragmatic Sanction, he had not been confirmed by the Pope.
Pius II readily gave him his confirmation, and the Bishop returned to his
colleagues, but never went back to Mantua. The French embassy was joined by the
envoys of René of Anjou, and of the Duke of Brittany. At last on November 16
they entered Mantua. France was represented by the Archbishop of Tours and the
Bishop of Paris; René by the Bishop of Marseilles; and the Duke of Brittany by
the Bishop of S. Malo. Genoa also sent an embassy, and soon after arrived from
the Emperor envoys more worthy to represent him—Charles of Baden and the
Bishops of Eichstadt and Trent.
It was the general expectation that the French envoys
would at the outset challenge the Pope’s proceedings in regard to the
Neapolitan kingdom, and would refuse obedience or threaten a General Council.
Some anxiety was felt when they were admitted before the consistory on November
21. The Bishop of Paris spoke for two hours in praise of the French King and
his anxiety about the Neapolitan question. He said little about the Turks, less
about any aid in a crusade. Finally, he offered to the Pope the obedience of
the French Church as that of a son to a father; he said this pointedly to
exclude any notion of dependence as on a master. The obedience of Rene and of
Genoa was afterwards tendered by their envoys. Pius II in his answer dwelt on
the dignity of the Apostolic See, established by God, and not by councils or
decrees, above all kingdoms and peoples. Twice he repeated this, with increased
emphasis, and then passed on to say that he wished to receive with all favor
“his dear son in Christ, René, the illustrious King of Sicily”, but would
answer more privately his demands. Both sides were satisfied with the result of
their first interview. The Pope was content that, after all their threats, the
French had at least submitted formally to his obedience. The French flattered
themselves that the Pope had recognized the power of the French King,
and was willing to obey his will.
But these proceedings were merely formal; the real
struggle began when the French envoys came to lay before the Pope their
complaints about his Neapolitan policy. They were resolved to show no
diplomatic reserve, and brought with them to the audience all the envoys who
were present at Mantua. The Bailly of Rouen spoke in praise of France, “the
nation of the Lilies”, as he persisted in calling it. He dwelt on the services
rendered by France to the Papacy and on its connection with Naples; he
complained that Alfonso had seized Naples by force, not by right; that Pius had
acted wrongly in recognizing Ferrante, his bastard son, which even
Calixtus III, though an Aragonese, had not ventured to do. He demanded that
Pius should recall all that he had done for Ferrante, should invest King René,
and help his forces to gain the kingdom; should recognize the French party in
Genoa, and revoke all ecclesiastical censures against the city. The friends of
France listened to the trenchant orator, and raised their crests in triumph:
they thought the Pope would not venture to reply. Pius answered, that what he
had done regarding Naples had been done with the advice of the Cardinals, whom
he must consult before saying more. So saying he dismissed the assembly.
Next day Pius II was attacked by a cramp in the
stomach, and a violent cough which confined him for some days to his bed. The
French declared that this was a pretence to cover his confusion and escape from
answering their attack. Perhaps the Pope made the most of his illness to gain
time to prepare his answer, and render its delivery more effective. “Though I
should die in the middle of my speech, I will answer them”, he said, and
summoned all the ambassadors to a public audience. He dragged himself from his
sick bed, and, with pale face and trembling limbs, seated himself on his
throne. At first he could scarcely speak for weakness and excitement; soon
gathering strength, he spoke for three hours, and his effort had such a
beneficial effect that it entirely freed him from his cramp. In his speech the
Pope complained of the charges brought against him by the French. He spoke of
the glories of their nation in language which outdid even the
renowned orator. He set forth their services to the Holy See and the
benefits which they had in turn received. Then he traced the history of the
Neapolitan succession under his immediate predecessors. “We did not exclude the
French, we found them excluded”, he said; “we found Ferrante in possession
of the kingdom, and recognized the actual state of things. If the French had
been nearer we would have preferred them. We could not disturb the peace of
Italy for those who were at a distance. In recognizing Ferrante we reserved the
rights of the House of Anjou. The case is still open for our decision”. He
urged the need of peace n Christendom and war against the Turks. Finally, as
the French had spoken of the gratitude due to France from the Holy See, the
Pope turned to the Pragmatic Sanction by which the power of the Pope in France
had been reduced to such limits as pleased the Parlement of Paris. He admitted
the good intentions of the French Kin but warned him that by its present course
he was imperiling the souls of his people. The French ambassadors expressed
their wish to answer some things that the Pope had said, as being contrary to
the honor of their King. Pius II replied that he was willing to hear them when,
and as often as, they chose, and so retired. The Curia thronged round him with
joy. “Never”, said they, “within the memory of our fathers have words been
spoken so worthy of a Pope as those about the Pragmatic Sanction”. Pius II had
won an oratorical triumph, and had given another proof that it was impossible
to get the better of him in discussion. Next day the French appeared before him
in private, in the presence only of eight Cardinals. The time for public
displays, they felt, was past. There was some more discussion about the
Pragmatic Sanction, and the envoys in their private capacity made their peace
with the Pope. But this political wrangle had driven into the background the
question of the crusade. When Pius II asked them what help he might expect from
France, he was answered that France could do nothing till she was at peace with
England. The Pope proposed that France and England should contribute an equal
number of soldiers, so as to leave the balance unaltered: if they could not
send troops, they might give money. The French said that they had no powers for
any such undertaking, but assented to the Pope’s proposal for a
conference to arrange peace with England.
England was too much involved in internal conflicts to
pay much heed to the request of Pius that it should send envoys to Mantua.
Henry VI had nominated an embassy, at the head of which was the Earl of
Worcester, but it never set out for Mantua. Two priests arrived on the
King’s behalf, proffering the Pope the obedience of England and bringing his
excuses. Their credentials bore the usual endorsement, '”teste Rege”; and we
are surprised to find Pius II so ignorant of the forms used in England that he
thought that the King, bereft of all officials, had been compelled to act as
his own witness in default of others. To England, however, was sent as Papal
legate, to make peace, the bishop of Terni, who fell into the hands of the Earl
of Warwick, identified himself with the cause of the House of York,
excommunicated the Lancastians, and gathered for himself large sums of money
from the English Church. When the Pope heard of this he recalled his legate,
degraded him from his priestly office, and confined him in a monastery for the
rest of his life. However, no efforts of a Papal legate could have given peace
to England or obtained from her aid for a crusade. France was offended by the
Pope's dealings with Naples, and was more anxious to assert the claims of René
than to attack the Turks. England and France alike were useless for any help to
the Pope in his great endeavor.
It only remained for Pius II to see what promises he
could get from Germany. There were in Mantua the ambassadors of the Emperor and
of many German princes; chief amongst them was the old opponent of Aeneas
Sylvius, Gregory Heimburg, who represented Albert of Austria. Pius II called
them together, and wished to obtain a common understanding. The Imperial envoys
were ready to accept his proposals; but those of the princes, led by Heimburg,
refused. Heimburg was convinced that the Pope's proposal of levying a tenth and
granting indulgences was merely a scheme for enriching himself and his Imperial
ally. He would agree to no general proposal; and Pius II had to deal with each
embassy separately. By means of private negotiations the Pope at length
contrived to obtain a renewal of the promise made at the Diets of Frankfort and
Neustadt to equip 10,000 horse and 32,000 foot. To arrange for general peace,
and settle all preliminaries, a Diet was to be held at Nurnberg, and another in
the Emperor’s dominions, to make peace between him and Matthias of Hungary. The
Pope was to send a legate to both. Pius II was compelled to accept the sterile
procedure of a Diet, the futility of which he knew so well, and which Calixtus
III had endeavored to escape without success. He appointed as his legate
Bessarion, probably because he was the only Cardinal whose zeal would induce
him to undertake the thankless office. Moreover, Pius II attempted to give the
agreement greater definiteness by appointing Frederick general of the crusading
army, and empowering him, if he could not lead it himself, to nominate a prince
in his stead.
While these negotiations were in progress Sigismund of
Austria arrived in Mantua, on November 10, with a brilliant train of 400
knights. He was honorably received, and Heimburg, in a public audience, spoke
in Sigismund’s behalf. He recounted the glories of the House of Austria and the
virtues of Sigismund: he dwelt on the acquaintance that had existed in earlier
days between Sigismund when a boy and Aeneas Sylvius, the Imperial secretary.
Aeneas had indeed written for Sigismund love-letters, which were not edifying:
and Heimburg, embittered by resentment against the Pope, mockingly recalled the
past, which Pius II would fain have forgotten. The culture of Sigismund, he
said, had been greatly formed by the delightful love-letters which his Holiness
had transplanted from Italy to Germany. Pius II had to sit with a conviction
that he was being laughed at, unable with any dignity to reply.
In truth neither Sigismund nor his orator Heimburg was
friendly disposed towards the Papacy. Sigismund had on his hands an
ecclesiastical quarrel which was destined to give a great deal of trouble, and
which dated ten years back. In 1450 Nicolas V conferred on Nicolas of Cusa,
whom he had just made Cardinal, the Bishopric of Brixen. Cusa was a poor man
and needed the means of supporting his new dignity; but the provision of
Nicolas V, made without waiting for a capitular election, was in direct
contravention to the Concordat, and was also an infringement of the agreement
made with Frederick III, as Brixen was one of the bishoprics to which the
Emperor was allowed to appoint during his lifetime. The Chapter of Brixen made
their election, and turned to Sigismund, as Count of the Tyrol, to help them to
maintain their rights; but the Pope and the Emperor were too strong for them.
Sigismund did not judge it expedient to prolong the contest, and Cusa was
unwillingly admitted as Bishop of Brixen in 1451. Cusa was for a time employed
as Papal legate, in selling to the Germans the benefits of the year of Jubilee
without giving them the trouble of going to Rome, and in stirring up the
crusading spirit. He was not in earnest with either of these tasks, and
returned as soon as he could to his own diocese, which he proposed to make
a model to the rest of Germany.
Cusa was a man of learning—not the learning of the
Renaissance, but the technical theology of the schoolroom. Of humble
extraction, he had nothing save his talents on which to rely. He had been a
follower of Cesarini at Basel, he had abandoned with the other moderates
the Council’s cause, and had made his reputation by his learned writings in
favor of the Papacy. He was an able but narrow-minded man, whose bent was to
abstractions and technical ties rather than to zeal or states-manship. He did
not abandon the reforming ideas he had held at Basel, but transferred them from
one field to another. He had striven to reform the Church in its head; he was
equally bent on reforming it in some of its members. A movement such as that
expressed at Basel could not entirely die out; but it was easily diverted to
trivialities. If the entire Church system could not be reformed, there was at
least one part of it to which a mechanical rule might be applied. If the
ecclesiastical organization was not to be revised, it might at least be more
tightly strung and reduced to greater uniformity. There was a decided feeling
that the monastic orders ought to be brought back to a straiter observance of
their original rule. It was a cry which afforded some satisfaction to the
technical mind of a man like Cusa, who could point to success in this sphere as
the proper beginning of a conservative reformation within the Church itself.
So Cusa began a strict visitation of the monasteries
in his diocese. If i s visitation had only aimed at restoring neglected
observances and ceremonies in the cloisters, it would at least have been
harmless. But a rigid visitation of monasteries, in the face of a strong
opposition, raised many legal questions concerning the Bishop’s visitatorial
power. It was hard to define the limits of the spiritual ties and the
temporalities of the monasteries. It was difficult to determine what were the
powers of the Bishop as visitor, and what were the rights of the Count of
the Tyrol as protector of the temporalities of foundations within his
dominions. The Benedictine nuns of Sonnenburg in the Pusterthal resisted the
Bishop and appealed to Sigismund as protector of their monastery. Sigismund was
loth to quarrel with Cusa, who laid the nuns under an interdict. He mediated
with the Cardinal; but the Sonnenburg difficulty embittered the feelings of
both parties and broadened into other and more important issues. Cusa turned
the formal acuteness of his mind to determine the exact rights of the Bishopric
of Brixen. He established to his own satisfaction that the protectorship over
monastic foundations, exercised by the Counts of the Tyrol, was granted to them
by the Bishop of Brixen, together with lands, for which they were vassals to
the see. The Bishop of Brixen was a prince of the Empire, and the Emperor was
in things temporal the protector of the see; the rights of the Counts of the
Tyrol depended only on a grant from their Bishop. Sigismund naturally asserted
that the Bishopric of Brixen was under the Counts of the Tyrol, to whom
belonged the protectorate with all its rights, however much the formal
investiture had been conferred on the Counts by the Bishops. The angry feelings
on both sides waxed high; but Cusa had only the weapons of interdict and
excommunication. As he was extremely unpopular through his harshness, the
national sentiment was all on the side of Sigismund, and the excommunications
were little heeded.
Attempts were made to bring about a peace, and
Sigismund invited Cusa to an interview at Wilten in 1457. Whether Cusa lost his
nerve, or whether he deliberately chose to set up a plea for further
proceedings, cannot be determined. But he fled from Wilten, declaring that his
life was in danger, though the evidence which he could afterwards produce for
his terror was very slight. Still Cusa had the ear of the Curia, and Calixtus
III laid Sigismund under an interdict till he had satisfied Cusa of his freedom
and personal security. Sigismund, prompted by Gregory Heimburg, appealed to a
better-informed Pope, but offered full security to Cusa, and declared himself
ready to withdraw his appeal if friendly overtures were made. Cusa was
inflexible, proceeded with the interdict, and showed his willingness to use
forcible means. He forbade the peasants who held under the Sonnenburg nuns to
pay their dues to the rebellious abbess. The convent employed a band of forty
men to collect them; whereupon a captain in Cusa’s pay fell upon this luckless
band and cut it to pieces.
Thus matters stood when Calixtus III died, and both
the combatants turned with expectation to his successor. Cusa had been an old friend
of Aeneas, and hastened to Rome to lay his case before him. Sigismund had been
a pupil of Aeneas when he was at Frederick's Court. Pius II was in all things
desirous of peace, and would fain have mediated in the quarrel. On setting out
for Mantua he left Cardinal Cusa as his representative in Rome; but Cusa was
afterwards summoned to Mantua, that the Pope might try to settle matters
between him and Sigismund. It was for this purpose that Sigismund had come.
Pius II offered his services as a mediator; he did not decide as a judge. In
the presence of the Cardinals and of the Imperial ambassadors, he listened to
the complaints of both parties. He had no desire to favor one rather than the
other, and at last patched up a temporary reconciliation, on the understanding
that the legal question of the relations between the Bishop and the Count was
to be decided by a process within two years, and the other points in dispute
were to be arranged between the two parties at a Diet to be held in Trent. Thus
nothing was definitely decided, and Sigismund departed from Mantua in
indignation on November 29. Pius II had no feeling against Sigismund as to the
points in dispute; but he had seen enough to know that, under Heimburg’s
advice, Sigismund was ready to prosecute his cause in a manner most offensive
to the Papacy. The appeal to a future Council was a relic of the state of
things which Pius II hoped to obliterate forever; it was a revolutionary memory
which must never be again awakened in Germany. Pius II was ready to wait for a
while and see if Sigismund would pursue a more respectful course; if not, he
must at least cut the ground from under his feet before he pressed him further.
THE BULL “EXECRABILIS”
If one object of Pius II was to wage war against the
Turk, the other was to wipe out of the ecclesiastical system all traces of the
conciliar movement. The two objects were, moreover, closely connected. The
Neapolitan question threatened to bring the Papacy into collision with France,
and France might use its old engine of a Council. If Germany were to be useful
for the crusade, if the Papal decrees for taming Germany were to be effective,
the Diets must be prevented from throwing hindrances in the way by raising
untoward questions of the rights of the German Church, clamoring for further
reform and appealing to future Councils. The example of Sigismund, the
machinations of Heimburg, must be checked from doing further mischief; the
power of the restored Papacy must be fully asserted in the person of one who
had devoted the best energies of his life to the cause of that restoration. It
was pardonable that Pius II should wish to put the crown to his life's work. If
the Congress of Mantua had not been successful in raising the prestige of the
Papacy, and showing Europe the unwonted sight of a Pope directing the
activity of Christendom, it might at least be made memorable as the
occasion of a firm assertion of the Papal authority. Pius II, after Sigismund's
departure, unfolded his scheme to the Cardinals and prelates assembled in
Mantua, who all gave their cordial assent. A Papal Constitution was accordingly
drawn up and published on January 18, 1460, known, from its first words,
as Execrabilis et priscis inauditus temporibus. In it the Pope
condemns, as an “execrable abuse, unheard of in former times, any appeal to a
future Council”. It is ridiculous to appeal to what does not exist and whose
future existence is indeterminate. Such a custom is only a means of escaping
just judgment, a cloak for iniquity, and a destruction of all discipline. All
such appeals are declared invalid; anyone who makes them is declared ipso facto
excommunicated, together with all who frame or witness any document containing
them. The Bull was a masterstroke on the part of one who well knew the dangers
against which he had to contend. If Bulls could have established the Papal
authority, Pius II would have known how to frame them. His precaution was wise;
but it failed of effect. Both René of Anjou and Sigismund of the Tyrol
lodged appeals in spite of the Papal denunciation. Yet the Bull of Pius II,
though not immediately successful, worked its way into the ecclesiastical
system and became one of the pillars on which the Papal authority rested.
Only one other prince visited Mantua, Albert of
Brandenburg, whom Pius II greeted warmly as “the German Achilles”. He made
the usual protestations of zeal against the Turks, and received from the Pope,
on the Festival of the Epiphany, a consecrated sword. But Albert had his own
ends to serve; it suited his position in Germany to be on good terms with the
Emperor and Pope. When Albert had gone there was nothing more to do at Mantua.
On January 14 Pius II declared war against the Turks, and promised indulgences
to all who took part in it. He issued, also, decrees imposing a subsidy of a
tenth on the clergy and a thirtieth on the laity, especially in Italy. Then on
January 19, after a speech in which he magnified the offers of help which had
been made, Pius II enumerated his expectations. It was not all that he had hoped
for, yet it was a fair show. The ambassadors present solemnly renewed their
promises. Then Pius II knelt before the altar and chanted some appropriate
psalms. The Congress was over, and next day the Pope left Mantua after a
sojourn of eight months.
The Congress of Mantua could not be called a success,
yet Pius II could urge, with some show of truth, that it could not be called an
entire failure. It was true that the Papacy had not gathered round itself the
enthusiasm of Christendom, and had not drawn the powers of Europe from their
national jealousies to common action for the common weal. But at least the
Congress had shown the sincerity of the Pope’s intentions, and had freed
him from blame. Pius II had not disguised from himself the difficulties which
beset the politics of Europe; he had hoped that a little enthusiasm might sweep
some of them away. He had forgotten that the restored Papacy was scarcely in a
position to appeal to the enthusiasm of Europe. He had forgotten his own
antecedents, but others had not. He had been too closely connected with the
questionable intrigues which brought about the Papal restoration to stand high
in the estimation of Europe. The shifty diplomat was not likely to be trusted
however cleverly he talked about common interests. The appeal of Pius II
awoke no general response.
Yet the Congress of Mantua had its results. If it had
not succeeded in raising Europe above its particular interests, it at least
brought those interests clearly to light. Pius II was able to gauge the attitude
of France towards Naples; he saw that Germany centred round the new power of
Bohemia, and was able to consider how far he could cope with the Bohemian king;
he saw in Sigismund of the Tyrol the strength of the remnants of the German
neutrality. Above all things, the Congress of Mantua established the system of
Italian politics, and gave the Pope a commanding influence. Pius II saw that
his interests lay in opposite directions. As an Italian power he could not
satisfy France; as head of the Church he could not satisfy Bohemia or pacify
Sigismund. With the greatest desire for peace at home and war against the Turk,
he saw the probability of the failure of his crusade before the threats of war
at home. To pacify Europe he was asked to sacrifice Italy and the Church. It
would need all his cleverness to avoid this dilemma. In preparation for the
difficulties which he foresaw, he strengthened the Papal armoury by the
Bull Execrabilis.
CHAPTER VII.
PIUS II AND THE AFFAISRS OF NAPLES AND GERMANY
1460—1461.
Before Pius II left Mantua war had broken out in
Naples, and events soon made it necessary for the Pope to decide what part he
was prepared to play. Alfonso had won the kingdom of Naples by his own sword,
and ruled it with magnificence. His strong hand and statesmanlike wisdom had
kept in subjection the barons, who had grown in power and turbulence during the
long period of conflict to which the kingdom had become habituated. They had
accepted Ferrante at first, but soon raised their heads in conspiracy against
him; for civil war increased their power and suited their interests. They had
been so long accustomed to play off one claimant against another that they
hastened to seize the opportunity which was now offered to their spirit of
lawlessness. The withdrawal of Piccinino from the States of the Church had
alienated from Ferrante’s side that powerful condottiere general. Headed by the
Prince of Taranto, the Neapolitan barons plotted against Ferrante, and invited
René to prosecute his claims on Naples.
René himself had had enough of Neapolitan warfare, and
preferred to lead an artist's life in Provence. But his son Jean assumed the
title of Duke of Calabria, and received promises of help from the King of
France, and from Genoa, which was then under French influence. Moreover, Jean
took possession of twenty-four galleys, which had been built out of the
proceeds of the Turkish tithe levied on France by Calixtus III, and which then
lay at Marseilles. On October 4, 1459, Jean set sail from Genoa, and appeared
before Naples. He landed at Castellamare, and the barons of Naples one by one
flocked to his standard. Ferrante was confounded at this almost universal
treachery, and scarcely knew where to turn. Only the coming of the winter saved
him from disaster; he shut himself up in Naples, and summoned Pius II
and Sforza to his aid. The first object of their endeavor was to prevent
the Angevin party from receiving the aid of Jacopo Piccinino, who on
withdrawing sulkily from the States of the Church had sought to enrich himself
at the expense of Gismondo Malatesta, Lord of Rimini. Gismondo was a strange
mixture of an unscrupulous condottiere and a munificent patron of art and
letters. He adorned Rimini, held a splendid court, and cast longing eyes on the
dominions of his neighbor Federigo da Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino. Federigo and
Piccinino made common cause against him, and at Mantua he had called on the
Pope to mediate. Pius II was in too great need of soldiers to refuse his favor
even to one who, like Gismondo, openly avowed his contempt for all religion and
lived in defiance of all law. Pius mediated between Gismondo and his enemies,
but sold his mediation at a good price. He took into his hands, as security for
a payment of 60,000 ducats due from Gismondo to the King of Naples, Sinigaglia
and Fano, which he afterwards conferred on his favorite nephew. Piccinino, by
this mediation of the Pope, saw himself a second time robbed of his prey and
was more indignant than before against Pius II and Ferrante. The first object
of Pius II and Sforza was to prevent Piccinino from making his way from Cesena,
where he was posted, to Naples. They trusted to Federigo of Urbino; while
Piccinino was aided by Malatesta, and secretly by Borso of Este.
When Pius II left Mantua he retraced his steps to
Ferrara, where Borso perfidiously offered to treat with Piccinino in his
behalf; but Pius II was not deluded by this offer. He pursued his way to
Florence, where he conferred with Cosimo de' Medici about the condition of
Italy, and urged on him the prudence of supporting Ferrante for the purpose of
excluding the French from Italy. Florence had always been on the Angevin side
in Naples, and Cosimo was not convinced. Nor did Pius II succeed in inducing
the wary Florentines to accept his decree of a tax for the crusade; he might
perhaps be permitted to tax the clergy, but the laity demurred. On January 31
Pius II entered Siena, where he took up his abode for some time. The
archbishopric of the city had just become vacant, and Pius II conferred it on
his nephew Francesco de' Todeschini, a youth of the age of twenty-three.
When the period in the Lenten season arrived at which
creations of Cardinals were usually made, Pius II announced his intention of
exercising his power. On March 5 he summoned the Cardinals to a consistory;
they agreed to the creation of five new Cardinals, on condition that only one
should be a nephew. “You will not”, said Pius II, “refuse a sixth whom I will
name as above all controversy”. The Cardinals pressed that he should be named
before they consented. Pius refused, and ultimately had his own way. He named
Alessandro Oliva, General of the Augustinian Order, a man renowned for piety
and theological learning. The others were the Bishops of Reati and Spoleto, men
whom Pius II needed for the government of the States of the Church; the nephew
Francesco, Archbishop of Siena; Niccolo di Fortiguerra, a relation of Pius II’s
mother, and Burchard, Provost of Salzburg, whose nominat on was not announced
till other Transalpine Cardinals were created. Pius II was of opinion that he
had deserved well of Italy for creating five Italian Cardinals. He was also
proud of the fact of having created two of his own relatives in the same
consistory. It must be admitted that his two relatives both proved themselves
worthy men. Fortiguerra was the chief adviser of the Pope in military matters
and the nephew Francesco was himself raised to a brief tenure of the
Papacy in 1503.
The ecclesiastical festivities consequent on this
creation were disturbed by the news that Piccimno had succeeded in eluding
Federigo of Urbino and the Papal Legate, who were watching him, and by forced
marches had made his way along the coast into the Abruzzi. Men said that both
Federigo and the Pope had connived at his escape, being glad to see their own
territories free from the risk of a protracted war. The arrival of Piccinino
was a new terror to Ferrante; but Pius II sent him reinforcements under his
condottiere general Simonetto.
While awaiting news from Naples Pius II lingered in
Siena, which he loved so well, under pretext of his health. It would seem that,
after his long life of wandering and exile, Pius returned with deep
satisfaction to the scenes of his youth, where only he could be genuinely happy
and content with the simple enjoyments of country life, which are always dear
to a man of real culture. Pius feasted his eyes on the lovely landscape which
from the hills of Siena lay open to his view in all the freshness of fine
spring weather. He made his health a reason for indulging his taste for country
life by expeditions to Macereto and Petrioli in the neighborhood. The language
of Pius II is interesting as showing his many-sidedness, his keen
susceptibility to the pleasures of the eye.
“The pleasant springtime had begun; and round Siena
all the valleys smiled n their dress of leafage and of flowers, and the crops
were rising luxuriant in the fields. The view from Siena was inexpressibly
charming; hills of a merciful height, planted with fruit trees and vines, or ploughed
for corn, overhang pleasant valleys, green with crops and grass, or
watered with a constant stream. There are, moreover, many woods, resonant with
the sweet song of birds, and every height is crowned by magnificent country
houses of the citizens. On one side are splendid monasteries peopled with holy
men, on the other the castellated houses of the burghers”.
The Pope passed with joy through this country, and
found the baths equally delightful, lying in a valley about ten miles from the
city. The land is watered by the river Mersa, which is full of eels, sweet in
flavor though small. The valley at its entrance is cultivated, and full of
castles and villas, but grows wilder as it approaches the baths, where it is
shut in by a stone bridge of massive workmanship, and by cliffs covered thick
with trees. The hills which circle the valley on the right are clad with evergreen
ilex, on the left by oak and ash trees. Round the baths are small
lodging-houses. Here the Pope stayed a month, and though he bathed twice a day,
never neglected public business. Two hours before sunset he would go out into
the meadows by the riverside, and in the greenest spot received embassies and
petitions. The countrywomen came daily, bringing flowers, and strewing them in
the way by which the Pope went to the bath, content with the reward of kissing
his foot.
While leading this simple life at Petrioli the Pope
was scandalized by hearing of the dissolute life of Cardinal Borgia, who
already showed the qualities which were to render him infamous as Alexander VI.
A story reached the Pope that an entertainment given by Borgia was the talk of
Siena. The Cardinal had invited some Sienese ladies to a garden, from which
their fathers, husbands, and brothers were carefully excluded; for five hours
the Cardinal and his attendants had engaged in dances of questionable decorum.
Pius II wrote him a letter of severe yet friendly remonstrance:
“If we were to say only that this conduct displeases
us, we should be wrong. It displeases us more than we can say; for the clerical
order and our ministry is brought into disrepute, and we seem to have been
enriched and magnified, not for righteousness of life, but for an occasion to
licentiousness. Hence the contempt of kings, hence the daily scoffs of the laity,
hence blame on our own life when we wish to blame others. The Vicar of Christ,
who is believed to permit such things, falls into the same contempt. Remember
your various offices and dignities. We leave it for yourself to judge if it
befits your station to toy with girls, to pelt them with fruits, to hand to her
you favor the cup which you have sipped, to look with delight on every kind of
pleasure, and to shut out husbands that you may do this with greater freedom.
Think of the scandal you bring on us and on your uncle, Calixtus III. If you
excuse yourself on the ground of youth, you are old enough (Borgia was
twenty-nine) to understand the responsibility of your position. A Cardinal
ought to be irreproachable, an example of conduct, good not only for the souls
but for the eyes of all men. We are indignant if princes do not obey us; but we
bring their blows upon ourselves by making vile the authority of the Church.
Let your prudence, therefore, check this vain conduct; if it occurs again we
shall be driven to show that it is against our will, and our rebuke must needs
put you to open shame. We have always loved you, and regarded you as a model of
gravity and decorum: it is for you to reestablish our good opinion. Your age,
which gives hopes of reformation, is the cause why we admonish you as a
father”.
On his return to Siena in June Pius II soon had graver
matter of disquietude than the delinquencies of Cardinal Borgia. News reached
him that on July 7 Ferrante of Naples had been repulsed in an attempt to storm
the city of Sarno, into which Jean of Anjou and the Prince of Tarantohad
retired; the Pope’s general, Simonetto, had been killed, and many horses and men
had fallen into the enemies’ hands. Stirred to activity by the news, Piccinino,
in the Abruzzo, attacked and defeated, after a stubborn battle, Alessandro
Sforza and Federigo of Urbino. These battles, according to the custom of
Italian warfare, were neither bloody nor decisive. The Prince of Taranto would
not let Jean of Anjou pursue his victory by an attack on Naples, but led him
into Campania, where he spent the summer in sieges of insignificant places.
Still, the loss of these battles required additional men and money from Sforza
and the Pope, and for a moment Pius II began to waver. The French party in the
Curia did not hesitate to show its joy at the Angevin successes; it even went
so far as to light bonfires in Siena and insult members of the Pope's
household. But Sforza was well versed in Italian warfare, and knew that the
ultimate success lay with him who held out longest. He was more than ever
convinced that his own security lay in keeping the French out of Italy, and he
managed to inspire the Pope with greater confidence. So Pius II put on a bold
front to the Angevin envoys, who requested him to recognize René, or, at least,
declare himself neutral. He took his stand on the peace of Lodi, declared that
he was only recognizing the existing state of affairs, expressed his
willingness to decide the question of right if René submitted it to his legal
cognizance, and complained of René for disturbing by violence the peace which
was so necessary for a crusade. Finally, he warned René against persisting in
an appeal to a future Council, lest he incurred the penalties of the decree
recently issued at Mantua. Pius II, however, used Ferrante’s distress as a
means of obtaining grants for his own family. The town of Castiglione
della Pescaia and the island of Giglio were given to Andrea, the Pope's
nephew—not, as the Pope explains, for his own good, but for the good of the
country, whose coast could now be made secure.
The pleasant sojourn of Pius II at Siena was brought
to an end by bad news from Rome, where the Pope's absence was the signal for
disorder. Cardinal Cusa, who had been left in charge of the city, soon left
Rome for Mantua, and thence went to Brixen. The Sienese senator, whom Pius had
put in office, was not strong enough to rule the turbulent city. The spirit
which had been kindled by Stefano Porcaro still burned in the hearts of some of
the Roman youth, but showed itself in a desire for licence rather than for
liberty. A band of three hundred youths, many of respectable families, enrolled
themselves under Tiburzio and Valeriano, the two sons of Angelo de Maso, who
had been executed for his share in Porcaro’s plot. They levied blackmail on the
citizens, committed outrages with impunity, and filled the city with alarm. The
governor, afraid of a rebellion if he called the citizens to arms, judged it
prudent to withdraw from his palace in the Campo dei Fiori to the more secure
shelter of the Vatican. This open show of incompetence emboldened the rioters,
till at last one of them, who went by the appropriate nickname of Inamorato,
seized and carried off a girl on her way to her wedding. The magistrates,
driven to action, imprisoned Inamorato; his comrades captured one of the
senator's household in return, and entrenched themselves in the Pantheon, where
they obtained supplies by raids on the neighboring houses, till at last, after
nine days, the magistrates, fearing the end of such confusion, negotiated an
exchange of prisoners, and Inamorato went free. The rioters in the city were
supported by the barons of the Campagna, the Colonna, the Savelli, and Everso
of Anguillara. The governor was afraid that, if he took strong measures against
Roman citizens, he would not be supported by the citizens themselves, and might
give occasion to an invasion from without.
The Pope’s nephew, Antonio, on his way to Naples, made
an attempt to capture some of the rioters, but they retreated into the palace
of Cardinal Capranica, and Antonio was afraid to commence a siege.
Tiburzio ruled Rome as a king, and did as he chose in
all things. At last the chief citizens warned him that they could no longer
endure this anarchy, and begged him to depart peaceably from the city. Tiburzio
graciously consented, knowing that he could return when he pleased. He was
escorted to the gates by the magistrates, as though he were some mighty prince,
and the people thronged to witness his departure. Soon after this a band of
rioters broke into the nunnery of S. Agnese, violated the nuns, and plundered
the sacred vessels.
Pius II was not to be moved from his pleasant quarters
in Siena by these disorders so long as they only affected the citizens of Rome.
It became a different thing when they threatened to imperil the States of the
Church. Piccinino thought the opportunity favorable for an inroad into the
Roman territory, and marched to Rieti; he was joined by the Colonna and
Savelli, and plundered far and wide. At the same time a messenger between the
Colonna and the Prince of Taranto was seized in Rome, and confessed that he was
negotiating a scheme for seizing Rome in the interests of Jean of Anjou, the
Roman barons, and Tiburzio. Pius II wrote for help in great agitation to
Francesco Sforza, who testily exclaimed that his alliance with the Pope gave
him more trouble than all his enemies. However, he wrote to the Pope exhorting
him to return to Rome, and all would still be well.
On September 10 Pius II left Siena with tears at the
thought that he might never revisit it. He journeyed over Orvieto to Viterbo,
where envoys from Rome greeted him. The Pope, in his reply, dwelt on his
unwillingness to leave Rome, and his regret that his health had prevented him
from returning sooner; he grieved over the disturbances during his absence, and
praised the Romans for their loyalty. “What city”, he continued, “is freer
than Rome? You pay no taxes, you sell your wine and corn at what price you
choose, you fill the most honorable magistracies, and your houses bring you in
good rents. Who also is your ruler? Is it count or marquis, duke, king, or
emperor? Greater still is he whom you obey—the Roman Pontiff, successor of S.
Peter, Vicar of Jesus Christ, whose feet all men desire to kiss. You show your
wisdom in reverencing such a lord; for he enriches you and brings you the
world’s wealth; you feed the Roman Curia, and it feeds you and brings you gold
from every land”. They were fine words, but poor comfort for the absence of
government from which Rome during the last year had been suffering.
As Piccinino was threatening Rome, many of the
Cardinals counseled that they should go no farther; but Pius II proceeded,
though he found scanty preparations made for his entertainment, and could only
get rustic fare. When the governor and senator advanced to meet him, they found
the Pope reclining beside a well, and trying by an early dinner to eke out the
scanty supper of the previous night. Six miles from Rome he was greeted by the
Conservators with a band of Roman youths, who had come to carry
his litter. Many advised him to beware of these youths, who had belonged
to the Tiburtian band. “I will walk on the asp and the basilisk”, said Pius II.
with a smile, “and will trample on the lion and dragon”. The rebels carried bun
safely, and on October 7 Pius II entered his capital.
The conspirators still continued their plots; but
their rashness proved their ruin. One of them, Bonanno Specchio, entered the
city secretly, and was there joined by Valeriano and others. An informer warned
the Pope, and an ambush was laid for them in the Colosseum, where Bonanno was
taken prisoner, though Valeriano and the others escaped. Tiburzio heard of this
at Palombaria, a castle of the Savelli, near Tivoli, where he had his
head-quarters. Thinking that his brother also was a prisoner, he hurried to
Rome to the rescue with a band of only fourteen men. He raised the cry of
'Liberty', and called on the citizens to rise. “It is too late”, was the
general answer. The Papal body-guard advanced against the rebels, who fled
outside the city and hid in the brushwood. They were hunted by dogs, and were
trapped like pheasants among the grass. Tiburzio, with his hands tied behind
his back, was led into the city, surrounded by a crowd, who mocked the king,
the tribune, the restorer of ancient liberty. Tiburzio only asked for speedy
death, and the Pope interfered to prevent him from being tortured. On October
31 Tiburzio, Bonanno, and six others were hanged in the Capitol. In the
following March eleven others of his confederates shared the same fate.
The Roman plot thus ended in entire failure; but Pius
II was helpless to reduce the rebellious barons or free himself from Piccinino
at Rieti. He had brought with him to Rome only a small band of horsemen, and
had no troops save those in Naples. He wrote in distress to Sforza, even to
Florence, for aid; but Florence saw no reason to interfere, and Sforza was not
sorry to give his troublesome ally a lesson, as Pius II had just given another
instance of his readiness to take advantage of Ferrante. Terracina, which Pius
II had granted to Ferrante for ten years, had been taken by the Angevins; but
the people unwillingly endured the French yoke, and called for the protection of
the Papal troops. The Pope’s nephew Antonio became master of the city; and the
Pope, instead of restoring it to Ferrante, conferred it on Antonio, to the
great wrath of Ferrante and the Duke of Molan. Still they could not entirely
abandon their ally; and during the winter the troops of Sforza and Federigo of
Urbino, feebly aided by Antorno Piccolomini, forced Piccinino to quit the Papal
States, and reduced the Savelli to submit. Pius II, like most of his
successors, trusted not so much to any definite organization or government to
keep peace and order in his own dominions, as to foreign help rendered on
grounds of political necessity. He spent the winter ill restoring order in
Rome, haranguing the Romans on the advantage of the Papal Government, and
receiving complaints against Gismondo Malatesta, which he appointed Cardinal
Cusa as his commissioner to investigate.
In the spring of 1461 Ferrante showed great activity
in recovering the castles near Naples, and some of the barons who had joined
the Angevin side began to return to his allegiance. These signs of a reaction
in his favor made him more anxious to hold his party together. He promised the
Pope to confer on the nephew Antonio the hand of his illegitimate daughter
Maria and the Duchy of Amalfi. Antonio at the head of the Papal forces went to
justify these promises in the field, but was not very successful. The decision
of the Neapolitan war was suddenly transferred from Naples to Genoa, where an
attack of the exiled party of the Adorn and Fregosi on March 10 succeeded in
raising the city on their side and drove the French into the citadel. Charles
VII of France at once sent reinforcements to their succor, and René of Anjou
set out himself for Genoa. But the Genoese, supported by Sforza, fell upon the
French troops and nearly annihilated them. René, unfortunate as ever, had to
withdraw hastily to Marseilles. The French garrison in the castle was driven to
surrender. Genoa was again free from French influence; the Angevin party in
Naples saw itself cut off from supplies, and deprived of its chief support. In
Naples itself nothing of moment was done, save that the brave Albanian leader,
Scanderbeg, brought to the aid of Ferrante a troop of 800 horse, who
distinguished themselves by a few plundering raids, and then departed to the
worthier task of defending their own land against the Turk.
Pius II meanwhile saw his home troubles disappearing.
Rome was quiet; Piccinino had gone: the rebellious barons were reduced : his
nephew Anton was prospering in Naples. In June, 1461, the Pope gratified his
love for Siena and his desire to exercise his oratory by canonizing Catherine
of Siena, the Bull of whose canonization he tells us that he dictated himself.
Anxious to escape the summer heat in Rome, he departed early in July for
Tivoli, under the escort of Federigo of Urbino, with ten squadrons of horse.
The Pope was pleased with the flash of arms, the trappings of men and horses,
as the sun gleamed on shields, breast-plates, nodding plumes, and forests of
lances. The youths galloped on all sides, and made their horses move in
circles; they brandished their swords, levelled their spears, and engaged in
mimic contests. Federigo, who was a well-read man, asked the Pope if the great
heroes of antiquity had been armed like men of our day. The Pope answered that
in Homer and Virgil mention was made of every arm now in use, and many
that were used no longer. So they fell talking about the Trojan war, which
Federigo wished to make little of; while the Pope asserted that it must have been
great to leave such a memory behind. Then they talked about Asia Minor, and
were not quite agreed about its boundaries. So the Pope afterwards used a
little leisure at Tivoli to write a description of Asia Minor from Ptolemy,
Strabo, Pliny, Q. Curtius, Solinus, and Pomponius Mela, and other ancient
writers. So ready was Pius II to receive pleasure from outward impressions, so
active was his mind to turn with unabated freshness to a new topic of interest.
In Tivoli Pius II began the rebuilding of the citadel, so as to have a strong
fortress of defence for the Papal territory, and busied himself in the
reorganization of the monastery, from which he ejected the Conventuals and
established Observants in their stead.
Eighteen months had now passed since the end of the
Congress of Mantua, and nothing had been done in the matter of a crusade. The
Neapolitan war had absorbed all the forces of the Pope and all the military
resources of Italy; nor was Germany more free from political complications.
Bessarion, in spite of the infirmities of age, hastened from Mantua in the
winter storms to be present at the Diet of Nurnberg on March 2, 1460. Few
princes appeared, and they paid no heed to Bessarion; for attention was all
directed to the war which was imminent between Albert of Brandenburg, the
friend of the Pope and Emperor, and Lewis of Bavaria, the leader of the
opposition to the Emperor. Soon the war broke out and ended in the rapid
discomfiture of Albert, who was obliged to surrender all that his opponent
claimed. The Emperor suffered by this defeat of his chief partisan, and became
more powerless than ever. Bessarion sorrowfully went to Vienna to hold there
the second Diet, which had been resolved at Mantua. Not till the middle of
September did the Diet meet; and then none of the princes appeared in person.
In vain Bessarion reminded their representatives of the promises made at
Mantua; in vain he asked them to agree to the levying of a tenth in Germany.
They answered with many protestations of zeal, but said that they had no powers
to do anything definite. The Germans were lukewarm, and Bessarion was not the
man to conciliate them. In vain he employed his eloquence; his words seemed
only to be twice-told tales. The only means that Pius II could devise for
kindling the zeal of Germany was to offer the title of general of the crusading
army to the Pfalzgraf Frederick, the military leader of the dominant party.
Frederick refused the proffered honor, and Bessarion, early in 1461,
left Germany, vexed and dispirited.
Yet the Pope was not entirely free from blame for the
dissensions of Germany. There, as in Italy, the requirements of ecclesiastical
politics were a disturbing cause. Pius II could not unreservedly put himself at
the head of a united Christendom, because the needs of the papal policy led him
to take a part in creating internal dissensions. The quarrel between Cardinal
Cusa and Sigismund of the Tyrol had only been patched up at Mantua, and broke
out afresh immediately upon Cusa’s departure to his bishopric. Neither party
had any confidence in the legal termination of their disputes. Hostilities were
carried on by both alike. At length Sigismund determined on making a bold
stroke. In April, 1460, Cusa was at Bruneck negotiating with Sigismund,
displaying his usual obstinacy, and threatening to betake himself again to the
Pope. Sigismund sent him a formal defiance, as did also most of the vassals of
the Church of Brixen. Gathering his forces, Sigismund closed round Bruneck, and
Cusa found himself a prisoner in his hands. He granted all that Sigismund
demanded, with the intent on of protesting that it was extorted by violence. As
soon as he could escape he fled to the Pope at Siena and clamored for aid. Pius
II would willingly have escaped a conflict; but he could not overlook violence
offered to a Cardinal, and behind Sigismund stood the hated Gregory Heimburg,
the representative of the German opposition to the Papacy. The Pope issued an
admonition to Sigismund, in which he declared that his criminality was proved by
its notoriety, and had involved him in the penalty of excommunication: he was
willing, however, to hear him personally, and summoned him to a consistory to
be held on August 4. Sigismund in reply assumed that the Pope was ignorant of
Cusa’s encroachments on the rights of the Count of the Tyrol, which had made
his capture at Bruneck a necessary step. He detailed his grievances, and
appealed to a better instructed Pope. Sigismund's attitude was conciliatory,
but decided; he stood on the ground of the conciliar movement against the
arbitrary action of an individual Pope, and by so doing interposed a technical
objection against the validity of the coming sentence, while he still left the
dispute open to friendly settlement.
But Cusa would be satisfied with nothing but
unconditional submission to his demands, and the Pope was determined to do away
with every trace of the conciliar heresy. The Emperor also was glad to see
Sigismund in trouble, as he had shown himself a dangerous neighbor.
Accordingly, when August 4 arrived, and Dr. Blumenau, as Sigismund’s
proctor, handed in the appeal, the Pope’s wrath broke out against him. He
was seized and imprisoned as a heretic for drawing up and presenting an appeal
contrary to the Bull Execrabilis. Blumenau escaped, and fled in
terror across the Alps to his master. On August 8 the Pope declared that the
penalty of excommunication had been incurred by Sigismund, all who had joined
with him in defying Cusa, all who had been hostile to Cusa, and especially
the inhabitants of Bruneck. He followed this by declaring the dominions of
Sigismund under an interdict and took the see of Brixen under the Papal
protection till its bishop could return.
Sigismund was prepared for this, and knew that
excommunication and interdict had little force when directed against an entire
people. The men of the Tyrol gathered round their Count, and so long they stood
by him he had little to fear. On August 13 Heimburg drew up for Sigismund a
second appeal, in which he said that, as all human judgment might err, the
remedy of appeals had been devised by our forefathers as a help for the
oppressed. As the Pope’s conduct showed that his ears were closed to justice,
it was useless to appeal to him when better instructed: “We appeal, therefore,
to a future Pope, who may revise the doings of his predecessor; further, to a
General Council, to be held in accordance with the decrees of Constance and
Basel. Nor is this appeal a subterfuge, as we do not wish to avoid the course
of natural justice. As the Pope has rendered himself notoriously suspected, we
will accept any impartial judge whom he may name; we do not refuse his sentence
as president of a General Council. If this be denied us, we appeal further to
the whole people of our Saviour Jesus Christ; we appeal to all who love justice
and favor innocency. If this be denied us, we call God to witness that it is
not our fault that justice is not done, and that we are oppressed”. This
spirited document was meant for general publication; it was addressed directly
to the public opinion of Christendom, and was fixed on the church doors even of
Florence and Siena.
A war of writings now began. Pius justified himself
and denounced Sigismund in letters addressed to all the Christian people. Cusa
attacked the life and character of Sigismund. Heimburg, in moderate language,
but with many cutting references to the early life of the Pope, detailed the
grievances of his master. So indignant was the Pope against Heimburg that he
did not scruple to write to the magistrates of Nurnberg and Wurzburg, ordering
them to seize Heimburg’s goods which were in their cities, and bidding them no
longer harbor one whom he called a “child of the devil, the father of lies”.
Not content with this, the Pope called on all the powers of Germany to seize
Heimburg, wherever he might be, and hand him over to the judgment of the
Church.
Heimburg’s reply breathed the scornful honesty which
characterized his entire life. He is a noticeable figure in the history of
these times as the representative of German as opposed to Italian culture, as
the determined opponent of the subtlety by which Aeneas Sylvius had won back
Germany for the Papacy, as the resolute supporter of ecclesiastical reform for
his country. The personal antipathy of the two men lent a zest to the struggle
between Heimburg and the Pope; and Heimburg never forgot in the Vicar of Christ
the shifty secretary of Frederick III. The dignity of the Pope would not allow
him to answer Heimburg’s personal thrusts; but he keenly felt that the laugh
was turned against him by Heimburg’s dexterous references to his past career.
The answer of Heimburg to the Pope's proceedings against himself is the most
powerful statement of the position of the German reformers in that day.
He begins by complaining that the Pope has condemned
him unheard, unsummoned, by his own arbitrary power. He has given no grounds,
except that Christ set S. Peter as ruler over His Church, and therefore that
rebellion against the successor of S. Peter is heresy. But Christ gave
commandment to all the Apostles to teach all nations; and the successors of the
Apostles as a body are General Councils which ought, from time to time, to
revise the actions of the Pope and correct his errors. The superstition which
Pius II is trying to set up, that the Pope is greater than a Council, must be
overthrown. The Pope appeals to the Congress of Mantua in support of his
decree; but that Congress was not a Council, but an assembly of ambassadors.
The decree was made by the Pope and Cardinals simply that they might pillage
Germany under the pretext of a crusade, and might not be hindered by any threat
of a Council. A Council, the fostering mother of liberty, the Pope shudders at
as though it were an offspring of unlawful passion; by a monstrous decree he
condemned it before its birth, and by his condemnation justified. His
prohibition showed his fear; his condemnation has given life to what was almost
obscured by long silence. He would have been more prudent if he had imitated
Solon, who, when asked why he had enacted no special penalty against parricide,
answered, "Lest by forbidding I might suggest". Wherefore, prelates
of Germany, hold to this point of the Council as the strongest fortress of your
freedom. If the Pope succeed in carrying it, he will tax you at his pleasure,
will take your money for a crusade, and send it to Ferrante of Naples. For the
Pope is fond of bastards; for that reason he calls Heimburg “a child of the
devil”, because he was born in lawful wedlock. He calls Heimburg also greedy,
turbulent, lying. If he strove with blessings, he would be answered; as he
strives with curses, he must find another to reply. I am not such a one. My
goods are less than my deserts; I have done more work than I have received pay;
I have always loved liberty more than flattery. These are no signs of greed.
Let the Pope consider his own past and the life he once led.
“I leave these personal matters and go back to the
Pope’s decree. If the whole body of the Apostles was above Peter, a Council is
above the Pope. If an appeal can be made to the Pope during a vacancy, it can
be made to a Council which is not summoned; for the power of the Church, like
the Church itself, never dies. By forbidding such an appeal the Pope treats us
like slaves, and wishes to take for his own pleasures all that we and our
ancestors have gained by our honest labor. The Pope calls me a chatterer—the
Pope, who is himself more talkative than a magpie. I own I have given some
attention to the windiness of words, but I have never for that neglected the
study of civil and canon law; the Pope has never even smelt at them, but has
contented himself with sheer verbosity. I profess myself a member of the lawyer
tribe; the Pope is one of those who think that everything can be managed by the
force and artifice of a rhetorician. If the Pope excommunicates me for talking,
who deserves the penalty more than himself, who has no merit save wordiness?
The Pope declares me guilty of treason; he is using a fly net to catch an
eagle. He calls me a heretic because I say a Council is above the Pope; I call
him a heretic because he says that the Pope is above a Council. He orders my
goods to be confiscated; I trust that I live amongst those who count my
services as of more value than any gain they could expect from my possessions.
He says that they who seize my goods will do a service to the Catholic Church;
such a statement would be ridiculous if we had not seen at Mantua the Pope's
folly when he, with a flow of words, praised adultery and illegitimacy”.
“So much for the Pope’s charges. Yet all men may
appeal from an inferior to a superior tribunal. Like the woman who appealed
from Philip drunk to Philip sober, I appeal from the Pope angry to the Pope
appeased, from the tropical orator to the same man when his fit of wind is
over, when he has sent away the Muses and has turned to the canon law. In the
second place, I appeal to him, if he will bind himself to judge according to
the decision of a good man. In the third place, I appeal to any man above
suspicion to whom the Pope may choose to delegate the matter. In the fourth
place, I submit myself to the judgment of the Pope, if he will remove all cause
for suspicion. Finally, if the Pope contemn all these, nothing remains save to
appeal to the Universal Church, as men of old appealed from the Senate to the
Roman people. Let not the Pope object that the Church is not assembled; that is
not my fault, but his”.
This answer of Heimburg’s was largely circulated
throughout Europe, and Pius II keenly felt its bitter sarcasm. By his attack on
Heimburg the Pope had made a serious mistake: he had given a private person an
opportunity of making an onslaught on personal grounds upon the Papacy. So long
as Heimburg was writing in Sigismund’s name, he could only speak on general
grounds of ecclesiastical grievances. By attempting to crush a private person,
Pius II exposed himself to the indignity of a private attack, which it was
beneath his lofty position to answer or even to recognize. One of his friends
in the Curia, Teodoro de Lelli, Bishop of Feltre, answered in the Pope's
behalf, and asserted in the strongest terms the principles of the restored
Papacy—the necessity of a Papal monarchy over the Church, the divine
institution of the rights of S. Peter and his successors. He paid back the sneers
of Heimburg with the contemptuous vituperation which the language of
ecclesiastical controversy has always bestowed on one who can be branded with
the name of heretic. This only gave Heimburg an opportunity of returning to the
charge.
“Like a Molossian hound”, he said, “I will track my
prey even through the snow". He scoffed at Lelli as the Pope's
stalking-horse, content to put his vanities into shape and bear blows on his
behalf. The Pope himself will do nothing. "If you were to put before him
the library of Ptolemy you would not call him away from his care for Corsignano
and the Piccolomini. But if your other follies, Lelli, turn out as well as this
you will get your reward, and your crown will soon be red with a
Cardinal's hat".
He hit Cusa, calling him a hard and rigid man, stern,
ungenial, inexorable, vehement in stirring up others, keen in discovering those
who can help him or hurt his adversary, with no wisdom to help himself, and no
restraint over his passion. He next considered the proceedings of the Congress
of Mantua, whither he went himself to test the Pope’s sincerity. “I laid before
him and the Cardinals obvious considerations of the difficulties in the way of
a crusade. I urged that it must be a decided success, or it would do more harm
than good. I showed that agreement amongst the soldiers was necessary for
success, and pleaded that the establishment of peace between the Emperor and
the King of Hungary was the first step to be taken. I spoke to the dead; I told
my story to the deaf. All the juice of the Jubilee was exhausted, and the Pope
and Cardinals were seeking something on which to fasten like leeches. You,
Cardinal Cusa, answered my arguments for prudence by saying, : Let us lay all
this aside, and put our trust only in God,—which was the same as saying that
rashness and not wisdom ought to direct affairs. This is the heresy of Gregory
Heimburg,—his constancy in resisting the Pope’s avarice, his persistency in
giving wise advice. This is his sacrilege,—his plea for liberty, his support of
the oppressed, his defence of General Councils, which the Mantuan decree aimed
at overthrowing. This is his treason: he disturbed the Papal plot for
taming Germany”. The defense of Lelli had only given Heimburg a chance of
going further in his attack upon the whole policy of the Pope.
Pius II no doubt had been led by Cusa to think that a
little determination on his part would raise the Tyrol in rebellion against
Sigismund, and would bring upon him many foreign foes. The Pope was careful in
his interdicts to save all the rights of the House of Austria: neither the
Emperor nor his brother Albert was to be murder, and might, if they chose,
seize the Tyrol for themselves. But no one stirred against Sigismund. The Pope
vainly tried to incite the Swiss; but they preferred to use the opportunity to
make a peace which satisfied their own interests. The Pope appealed on all
sides for someone to punish Sigismund; but even his ally the Duke of Milan
refused to move, and would not allow the excommunication to be published in his
dominions. In this state of things Pius II felt himself bound, at least, to do
something; and, by way of opening up a new stage in the proceedings, which
might possibly lead to new negotiations, he issued on January 23, 1461, a citation
to Sigismund and his associates to appear within sixty days and answer to a
charge of heresy. The citation called Sigismund “a principal limb of Satan”,
declared him suspected of the heresy which is above all other heresies, of not
believing the article of the Creed, “I believe in one Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church”, seeing that he refused to heed the censures of the Pope, who
was the head of that Church. Probably the Pope thought that by transferring the
matter to a doctrinal ground he might open a way to reconciliation.
But Sigismund and Heimburg remained true to their
policy of appeal, and answered by renewing it. Pope summoned Sigismund for
despising his censures—he did not recognize the validity of those censures. The
Pope summoned Sigismund's adherents to Rome, more than 100,000 men; who was to
nurse the children and look after the country in their absence? Did he wish to
drive a whole people into banishment? What had rustics to do with disputes
about the Creed, which was the business of theologians? Sigismund believed in
the Church of the Apostles' Creed and of the Nicene Creed; but the Creed did
not ask him to believe in the Church in the same way as he believed in the
persons of the Trinity. He could not say anything about the obedience required
by the Pope and Cusa, lest he should be called to worship a creature instead of
the Creator. He renewed his appeal to a future Council, which the Pope,
contrary to the decrees of Constance, was striving to bind and fetter. The Pope
took no notice of this appeal, but in the greater excommunication, issued on
Maundy Thursday, Sigismund and Heimburg appeared in the same class as
Wyclifites, Pirates, and Saracens.
As the next step in the controversy, Cardinal Cusa
wrote an anonymous pamphlet, with the object of separating Sigismund from
Heimburg. He besought Sigismund to return to the Christian faith and shake off
the man who had so long misled him. Heimburg retorted, and at once exposed his
anonymous foe. “Crab, Cusa, Nicolas”, he began, playing on Cusa’s family
name of Krebs, “who call yourself Cardinal of Brixen, why do you not come
openly into the lists?”. In this strain he answered Cusa’s statements one by
one, and repeated his own arguments. It was clear that Heimburg was a dangerous
controversialist, and that he and Sigismund stood firm in their position.
Nor was the quarrel with Sigismund the only one in
which Pius II was engaged in Germany. In 1459 the Archbishop of Mainz died, and
there were two candidates for the vacant office, Diether of Isenburg and Adolf
of Nassau; each had three votes in the Chapter, and the seventh vote, which
decided the election, was said to have been secured by bribery in favor of
Diether. When the representative of Diether sought the pallium from the Pope in
Mantua, Pius II wished to use the opportunity. First he required that Diether
should assent to the levy of a Turkish tithe in Germany; then he summoned him
to appear at Mantua. Diether sent his excuses and a proctor to arrange about
the payment of annates, which were negotiated by bonds drawn on the bankers of
the Curia. These obligations he afterwards repudiated, alleging that his
proctor had been induced to promise more than the ordinary payment. He refused
to go to Rome when summoned, brought his complaints before the Diet, spoke of a
future Council, and welcomed Heimburg at his court. His object clearly was to
frighten the Curia and escape the payment of the money which had been promised
on his behalf. The judges of the Papal Camera pronounced an excommunication
against Diether for not paying his debts. Diether replied that he had offered
to pay all that his predecessors had paid; if that was refused,
he appealed to a future Council.
The differences with Sigismund of the Tyrol and with
the Archbishop of Mainz were troublesome enough scheme in themselves; but they
began to wear a more serious aspect in the light of the movement in German
politics, which agitated the end of the year 1460. It became clear that King
George of Bohemia was scheming to depose Frederick and obtain the Imperial
crown. Already the plan of setting aside the feeble Frederick had often been
mooted; the defeat of Frederick's chief ally, the Markgraf of
Brandenburg, and the power of the Bohemian king, gave a new impulse to the
wish to have a reorganization of Germany under a competent head. In Church
matters George of Bohemia purposed to work for the summons of a Council, and
sent Heimburg to secure the co-operation of Charles VII of France. Secretly a
scheme was formed between George of Bohemia and the Pfalzgraf: the Archbishop
of Mainz was only too willing to join in anything that would overthrow the
Emperor and the Pope. The Archbishop of Trier and the Elector of Saxony were
both related to the Emperor, and could hardly be won over, unless the Markgraf
of Brandenburg set them an example. A Diet at Nurnberg, March, 1461, called on
the Emperor to reform the empire and war against the Turk; it invited him to
appear personally at a Diet in Frankfort in June, when the conspirators
hoped to proceed to a new election.
The Emperor and the Pope were now genuinely alarmed.
Pius II wrote letters to all the German princes, defending his action in the
matter of the Turkish tithe. The Emperor began to negotiate peace with Hungary,
and forbade the meeting of the Diet at Frankfort. The citizens of Frankfort
sided with the Emperor and closed their gates against the princes. Instead of a
Diet in Frankfort an assembly was held in Mainz, at which the only Electors
present were the Pfalzgraf and Diether of Mainz. The Pope sent representatives,
and Heimburg came to plead the wrongs of Sigismund of the Tyrol. The
discussions turned almost entirely on ecclesiastical matters; but Diether was
only seeking his own interest, and was easily won over to withdraw his appeal
to a Council and submit himself to the Pope's indulgence. Still he did not
trust the Pope, nor could the Pope trust him. Pius II was secretly engaged in
taking measures to overthrow Diether, and his emissaries were busy at Mainz.
The assembly separated without any definite conclusion. Matters in Germany
advanced into a new stage by the outbreak of a war between the Emperor and his
brother Albert of Austria, who, in August, 1461, advanced with his forces
against Vienna.
It was of great importance to cause a diversion
in Germany, and Pius II was ready to do so by attacking Diether of Mainz. He
had sent John of Flassland, Dean of Basel, as a confidential agent to Mainz,
and John had succeeded in raising a party against Diether. It was agreed that
the Pope should depose Diether, and set up in his stead Adolf of Nassau, whom
the Archbishop of Trier, the Markgraf of Baden, the Count of Wurtemberg, and
others, promised to support. Secretly John collected evidence against Diether
and bore it back to Pius II in his summer retreat at Tivoli. There, with equal
secrecy, Pius II laid the evidence before the five Cardinals who were with him.
They agreed that the charges against Diether were matters of notoriety, and
that a regular process against him was unnecessary. On August 21, Pius II issued
a Bull deposing Diether; at the same time Adolf was appointed, by a Papal
provision, archbishop in his stead. Armed with these documents, John of
Flassland hurried back to Mainz. Adolf gathered his friends around him, took
Diether by surprise, and was enthroned on October 2. Diether made his escape,
called on the Pfalzgraf for help, and renewed his appeal to a future Council.
Both sides gathered their forces round them and prepared for war.
Thus, in the middle of 1461 Pius II saw in Germany
also his crusading policy rendered useless by the conflict between a large
policy of European interest and a policy of small expediency. The Pope might
preach a crusade, might exhort Europe to peace, but the question was, Where was
peace to begin? The Pope did not see his way to set an example of patience. He
could not afford to let himself be smitten on one cheek without resistance, for
he was afraid lest he should be smitten also on the other. So far from
pacifying Germany, he was a cause of dissension : in Mainz and in the Tyrol
alike there was warfare in the name of the Holy See. We cannot wonder that the
princes of Germany were equally jealous of their own rights, and were more
eager to use every opportunity of asserting their own interests than to promote
the well-being of Christendom. Germany was distracted by intrigues and divided
into parties. The war of Albert of Austria against the Emperor attracted all
its attention.
CHAPTER VIII.
PIUS II AND HIS RELATIONS TO FRANCE AND BOHEMIA.
1461—1464.
If Pius II found nothing but disappointment and
trouble in Germany, he had more cheering prospects in France. Charles VII died
on July 22, 1461, and from his successor, Louis XI, the Papacy expected great
things. The Dauphin Louis had been on bad terms with his father, had fled from
France, and, for the last five years of his father's life, had been a refugee
in the Court of the Duke of Burgundy. As an outcast and a dependent Louis
thought it wise to make friends where he could. He had entered into friendly
relations with the Pope, whose aid might stand him in good stead if any attempt
were made to set him aside from the succession. On the death of Charles VII
Louis returned in haste to France, and was surprised to find that he met with
no opposition. But Pius II did not forget the promises made by the exile, and
on August 20 sent Jean Geoffroy, Bishop of Arras, as his legate to France to
urge the abolition of the Pragmatic Sanction.
It was natural that the Papacy should hate the Pragmatic
Sanction with a bitter hatred. It was the standing memorial of the conciliar
movement, and kept alive in Europe its principles and its endeavors. Moreover,
it was a memorial of national opposition to the theory of the Universal Church:
it expressed the claim of a temporal ruler to arrange at his pleasure the
affairs of the Church within his realms. So long as France retained the
Pragmatic Sanction she gave an example to which other countries might appeal,
and was a standing threat to the Papal power. So long as the Pragmatic Sanction
remained unrepealed, the restored Papacy could not claim to have entirely
re-established its authority. The position of France was founded on the decrees
of Constance and Basel, and France was bound to sympathize with any movement
which had for its object the assertion of the supremacy of a Council over the
Pope.
Not only was the theory of the Pragmatic Sanction
opposed to the principles of the Papal monarchy, but its working was still more
prejudicial to the Papal interests. Grants of benefices in expectancy were
entirely lost to the Pope, and reservations were only allowed to the smaller
posts. Annates were not paid, and appeals to Rome were only made in important
matters. The power of raising money in France was largely forbidden to the
Pope, and the Curia saw an important source of revenue removed from its grasp.
It was not to be expected that the Papacy should endure without a struggle this
diminution of its authority. Eugenius IV protested against the Pragmatic
Sanction, and refused to recognize it. Nicolas V trusted to the growth of the
Papal prestige to overcome the opposition of France. Calixtus III raised the
question more decidedly by sending Cardinal Alain of Avignon as legatus a
Latere to raise Turkish tithes in France. Charles VII, however, would
not let him exercise his functions except by his permission, and made him
execute a document that he would do nothing contrary to the royal pleasure, or
against the liberties of the Gallican Church as secured by the Pragmatic
Sanction. The King granted leave to collect tithes from the clergy, on the
condition that the money was spent on building galleys at Avignon. He was true
to the national principle that French gold was not to be taken to Rome, and he
probably had even then formed the plan of using the galleys against Genoa or
Naples when occasion suited. Yet many of the French clergy, headed by the
University of Par s, protested against this Papal taxation and appealed to a
future Council. Calixtus III angrily bade his legate proceed to Paris, rebuke
the insolence of the University, and demand the revocation of the appeal. The
King had to interpose and settle the difference by a declaration that he had
granted the Pope a tithe from reasons of public expediency; though this had
been done without the formal assent of the clergy, the King did not thereby
intend to derogate from the liberties of the Gallican Church. Charles VII was
firm in his adhesion to the Pragmatic Sanction; and the attack upon it made by
Pius II at Mantua awakened the determined resistance of the French, who
regarded it as a political maneuver of the Pope to justify his support of
Ferrante of Naples. When Pius II issued his Bull Execrabilis France
at once accepted the challenge. A Master of the University, Jean Dauvet, as
proctor for the King, registered a formal protest that nothing in the Bull
should deprive the King of his right to press for the summoning of a Council
according to the Constance decrees; if the Pope were to inflict any
ecclesiastical censures in France, the King would call on a future Council to
judge between him and the Pope; if the Pope refused to summon a Council, the
King would instigate the princes of Europe to summon it themselves. Pius II
judged it prudent to take no notice of this protest; but he did not cease in
his letters to Charles VII to urge upon him gently and persuasively the
abolition of the Pragmatic Sanction.
It must not be supposed that the Pragmatic Sanction
was an unmixed good to the Gallican Church. The Papal supremacy had been
accepted by the Church throughout Europe because it set up a barrier against
royal and aristocratic oppression. As the Papal sovereignty grew more and
more exacting, churchmen were willing to rid themselves of its taxation, which
seemed to outweigh the advantages of its protection. The Pragmatic Sanction of
Bourges adopted so much of the reforming decrees of Basel as seemed to suit the
national needs, and gave them validity for France by a royal decree. Thus the
French Church was exempt from the technicalities of the canon law: the decree
itself could be explained by royal judges, and left no loophole for Papal
interference. Its provisions sounded fair; but they did not in practice come up
to all they promised. It enacted that elections to ecclesiastical benefices
should be free according to the canons: but this was subject to many exceptions
in practice. First, there was the royal right of the regale, by which the King
enjoyed the revenues of vacant benefices and the disposal of them during
vacancies. If disputes arose about the election, as only too often happened,
the King had as great an interest in prolonging the vacancy so as to enjoy the
revenues, as had the Curia in protracting the appeal that it might receive larger
fees. Besides, the nobles used the rights of nomination in such a way as to
override the Chapters. Moreover, the Pragmatic Sanction assigned to graduates
of the Universities a third of all vacancies, on the ground of encouraging
learning. The Universities were not slow to claim their privilege, and were
skillful in extending its limits. The jurisdiction in ecclesiastical matters
was exercised by the Parliament and the University of Paris; and these bodies
did not show themselves more disinterested or more expeditious than the Curia
had been. It is doubtful whether the Gallican Church was more free from
practical abuses under the Pragmatic Sanction than it had been under the Papal
rule; but it made all the difference that at least the oppressors were men of
the same nation as the oppressed, that French gold stayed in the kingdom, and
did not flow to Rome, where it might be used against the interests of France.
There was no murmuring within France itself; the French clergy were all willing
to stand by the Pragmatic, and the Pope had no opportunity afforded from within
to justify his interference.
Still the position of France was anomalous, and there
was some excuse for the view taken of it by Pius II. “The prelates of France”,
he says, "who Pius II thought that they would be made free by the
Pragmatic Pragmatic Sanction, were reduced to the most entire slavery and
became the creatures of the laity. They were compelled to answer in all causes
before the Parlement, to confer benefices at the will of the King, or other
princes or nobles, and to ordain unfit persons. They were bidden to pardon men
whom they condemned for their misdeeds, and to absolve excommunicated persons
without satisfaction. No power was left them of inflicting ecclesiastical
censures. Whoever brought into France letters from the Pope which were adverse
to the Pragmatic, was liable to the punishment of death. Cognizance of
episcopal causes, of metropolitan churches, of marriages, of heresy, was taken
by the Parlement. Such was the presumption of the laity that even the most holy
body of Christ, borne in procession for the veneration of the people, or being
carried to the sick, was bidden to stand still by the mighty hand of the King.
Bishops and other prelates, venerable priests, were hurried to the public
prisons; estates belonging to the Church, and the goods of clergy, were seized
on slight grounds by a decree of a secular judge. The Pragmatic Sanction gave
rise to much impiety, sacrilege, heresy, and indecorum, which were either
ordered or permitted by the ungrateful King”.
The accession of Louis XI opened up an alluring
prospect to Pius II, who had already negotiated with him for the abolition of
the Pragmatic. So bitterly was Louis XI opposed to his father, that the
reversal of his father0s policy had in itself a charm for his mind. On his
visit to his father’s grave he allowed the Bishop of Terni, who had so grossly
misconducted himself as Papal legate in England, to pronounce an absolution
over his father's ashes, as though he had died excommunicated for his adhesion
to the Pragmatic. The Bishop of Arras was sent by Pius II to take advantage of
this favorable state of mind of the King; and his zeal was spurred by the
understanding that a Cardinal's hat was to be the reward of his success. Louis
XI dismissed his father’s ministers, and looked coldly on the Parlement and the
University by whose aid the Pragmatic Sanction had so long been maintained. His
policy was to maintain the royal power in its existing privileges, by the help
of the Pope, rather than by the help of the constitution of the realm. It was
the task of the Bishop of Arras to negotiate skillfully the details of such an
arrangement.
While awaiting the results of this negotiation Pius II
spent the autumn in making an excursion from Tivoli to Subiaco, to visit the
mighty monasteries that clustered round the cave of the great S. Benedict. As
usual, he enjoyed a leisurely journey by the side of the Anio, and was pleased
with the simple homage of the rustic. He would dine by a spring of water, with
a crowd of peasants at a respectful distance. When he resumed his journey the
peasants plunged into the water to fish, following the Pope in his course. When
a fish was caught a loud shout called the Pope’s attention to the fact, and the
trout were given as a friendly offering to the Pope’s attendants. From
Subiaco Pius II paid a visit to Palestrina, and on October 6 returned to Rome.
Soon after his return Pius II was reminded of his
crusading scheme, which the current of events had thrust into the background.
The luckless Queen Charlotte of Cyprus came to demand help against the Turks.
Cyprus had been handed over by Richard I of England to the House of Lusignan,
under whose feeble and profligate rule it had been a medley of Greek and Latin
civilization. It was further distracted by being a field for the commercial
rivalry of Venice and Genoa, and was a helpless prey to Egyptian pirates. Queen
Charlotte in 1459 had married Louis, son of the Duke of Savoy; but her bastard
brother, John, fled to Egypt, offered his homage to the Sultan, and, with the
help of an Egyptian fleet, overran Cyprus, shut up Louis in the castle of
Cerina, and drove Charlotte to seek for help in Western Europe. She was
received at Ostia with royal honors. The Pope was favorably impressed with the
Queen, a handsome woman of twenty, with merry eyes, a pleasant address, and
stately carriage, who spoke in Greek manner like a torrent, but dressed in
French fashion. She poured out her griefs to the Pope, who magnanimously promised
that he would never desert her, but pointed out that her misfortunes were due
to the lukewarmness of Savoy at the Congress of Mantua. All that he could do
was to provide her with means to go to Savoy and plead with her father-in-law.
She went to Savoy, but with no result; she could only return to Venice, and
thence make her way back to Rhodes.
Meanwhile the Bishop of Arras was rapidly advancing
the Pope's interests in France. Pius II knew well how the national opposition
in Germany had been overcome by a secret understanding to the mutual advantage
of the King and the Pope, and he practiced the same plan in France. The Bishop
of Arras promised Louis XI that the Pope would send a legate to France, who
would dispose of benefices at the King’s pleasure. Pius II himself wrote to the
king, commending his independent spirit, and urging him to abolish the
Pragmatic without taking counsel with any. “You are wise”, he said, “and
show yourself a great king, who are not ruled, but rule; for he is the best
prince who knows and does what is right by himself, as we trust is the case
with you”. He adds significantly, “If your prelates and the University
desire anything from us let them use your mediation, for if any Pope was ever
well disposed to France, we certainly will be found the chief to honor and love
your race and nation, nor will we ever oppose your honorable requests”. Pius II
meant to imply that the King would find a close alliance with the Papacy to be
the best way of making the French clergy dependent on himself. Louis XI kissed
the Pope's letter, and ordered it to be placed in a gold box amongst his
treasures. On November 27, 1461, he wrote to the Pope announcing the abolition
of the Pragmatic Sanction, and sent the letter to the Parlement to be registered
as a royal ordinance.
Thus Louis XI, by the plenitude of the royal power,
swept away the bulwark of the liberties of the Gallican Church, and Pius II
wept with joy to receive the news. Louis XI had abolished the obnoxious decree
without making any conditions; but he expected his reward, and it was a
question for the Pope how he could best meet his views. With characteristic
astuteness Pius II used the opportunity first of all for his own advantage. He
longed to use his power in the creation of Cardinals, and now laid before the
College the necessity of pleasing the French King by creating some French
Cardinals; the Ultramontanes had been omitted in the last creation, and their
claims ought to be considered. The Cardinals, who were reluctant to see the College
increased, were driven unwillingly to consent. Pius II seized his opportunity,
and having secured a majority by private interviews, proposed six creations in
a consistory on December 18. The Cardinals sat in silence, and looked at one
another. Pius II at once declared his creations, and the publication was made
on the same day, though the Pope was suffering so severely from an attack of
the gout that he had to entrust the ceremony to Cardinal Bessarion. The
Cardinals created at the request of the French King were the Bishop of Arras
and Louis d'Albret, a prince of the blood royal. Besides these were Don Jayme
de Cardona, a relative of the King of Aragon; Francesco Gonzaga, son of the
Marquis of Mantua, a youth of seventeen; Bartolomineo Rovarella, Bishop of
Ravenna, an old official, of great experience in the affairs of the Curia; and
jacopo Ammannati, Bishop of Pavia, the special favorite of Pius II, the only
one of the new creations who was a scholar and a man of culture.
Pius II could now plume himself that he had done great
things for Louis XI, “who had obtained two Cardinals from one litter”, as the
Pope put it. He also sent him, on Christmas Day, a consecrated sword, with an
inscription: “Let your right hand, Louis, draw me against the furious Turks,
and I will be the avenger of the blood of the Greeks. The Empire of Mahomet
will fall, and again will the renowned velour of the French, with you for
leader, reach to heaven”. This was very pretty, no doubt; but Louis XI wished
for something more substantial. He had been led to suppose that the Pope, in
return for the abolition of the Pragmatic, would withdraw from his alliance
with Ferrante of Naples, and would even espouse the Angevin side. Pius II
had behaved as though he were wavering in this matter. His ally, Francesco
Sforza, had been seriously ill of a fever during the summer, and Sforza’s death
would have entirely changed the aspect of affairs. Pius II held himself ready
for any contingency; he intimated to Louis XI that he was weary of the trouble of
the Neapolitan war, and thought it better to rule the States of the Church in
quietness. But when the abolition of the Pragmatic Sanction was completed, when
Sforza’s recovery was assured, and above all the marriage of his nephew Antonio
to Maria, the illegitimate daughter of Ferrante, solemnized, Pius II began to
be more resolute, and bethought himself that his honor would not allow him to
abandon Ferrante.
Pius II was disappointed to find that the new Cardinal
of Arras, so soon as he had gained all that the Pope had to give, transferred
his services to the King’s side, and became an ardent negotiator in favour of
the Angevin claims. He besought the Pope to ensure the favour of Louis XI by
withdrawing from the Neapolitan war. He offered, on the King’s behalf, that
Ferrante should have Sardinia with the title of king, and the lands of the
Prince of Taranto, and that the Pope's nephew, Antonio, should have a portion
of Calabria; otherwise Louis XI would ally with Venice and pour his troops into
Milan, so that the Pope would be left single-handed.
On March 13, 1462, a French embassy, headed by the
Cardinals of Arras and Coutances, entered Rome to announce the abolition of the
Pragmatic, and to receive the Pope's answer about Naples. In a public
consistory the Cardinal of Arras presented the royal letters abolishing the
Pragmatic, spoke much in praise of Louis, and said that so soon as Naples was
secured for the Angevin dynasty, and Genoa had again submitted to France, Louis
was ready to send 40,000 horse and 30,000 foot against the Turks, drive them
from Europe, penetrate into Syria, and recover the Holy Sepulchre. Pius II was
wearied with the pompous and mendacious speech, and anxiously awaited its end.
He answered with equally high-sounding praises of Louis XI and of his
predecessors on the French throne; about Naples he briefly said that he would
speak privately. He placed the red hat on the Cardinal’s head, and proclaimed a
general holiday for three days. Rome blazed with bonfires for joy at the Papal
triumph in winning back the unconditional allegiance of France.
When the festivities were over the French ambassadors
returned to the Pope, who offered to negotiate a truce, or to withdraw his
troops, provided the Neapolitan question were referred to a judicial decision
of the Curia. This was all that the Pope would promise: and the embassy
returned with loud complaints of the Papal ingratitude. If, in France, the
abolition of the Pragmatic had been hateful at first, it now seemed a positive
indignity. The story was current that Pius II, on receiving the news, had waved
his cap and cried out, “Guerra, Guerra” (war, war), meaning that the
increased revenues now secured to him would enable him to carry on more
vigorously the Neapolitan war. Pius wrote to Louis XI to contradict this story,
and it was even judged wise that Cardinal Ammannati should write in the name of
the College and disclaim it. Louis XI wrote angrily to the Pope to this
purport: “I thought to win your kindness by benefits. I abolished the Pragmatic
Sanction; I gave you my free obedience; I promised help against the Turks; I
gave a stern answer to innovators who talked about a Council; I could be
persuaded to nothing that was contrary to your dignity. Who would not have
thought that this would have softened your harshness? But the reverse has
happened. You seek to drive from his kingdom my own flesh and blood. What am I
to do if kindness will not win your unquiet spirit? Shall I try the opposite
way? No, it is not my will to persecute the Vicar of Christ. I will pursue the
way I have begun, though there is none of my counselors who does not advise me
otherwise. Perhaps someday you will repent”.
This letter was followed by the Seneschal of Toulouse
a man who knew neither Latin nor Italian, and delivered through an interpreter
a message that if the Pope did not change his ways, he had orders from the King
to bid the French prelates leave the Curia. At first this caused some alarm;
but Pius II was shrewd enough to know that it was a mere threat. He answered
that the French prelates might go if they chose; they made a pretense, but did
not go. Louis XI felt that he had been outmaneuvered by the Pope; embassies
passed between them fruitlessly, and the national feeling in France only grew
more strong against the Papacy.
If Pius II could flatter himself that he had succeeded
in sweeping away from France the memorials of the Council of Basel, he was
obliged to confess that he had been deceived in his hopes of obtaining a like
result in Bohemia. George Podiebrad had lulled the Pope into a false security
while he needed time to secure himself on the Bohemian throne, and by the
Pope's help had made a truce for three years with the Catholics of Breslau. But
the men of Breslau were not so confiding as the Pope, and watched George with
suspicion. When at last George began to intrigue for the Imperial crown, Pius
II was driven to admit that his policy was opposed to the Papacy. As a
claimant for the empire George was the leader of the anti-papal party, the
upholder of a Council, the ally of Diether of Mainz. The failure of George’s
scheme weakened his position: he had abandoned his attitude as mediator in the
disputes of Germany; he had thrown off the mask, and had shown himself to be
opposed to Pope and Emperor; he had alienated somewhat his Bohemian subjects,
who suspected that in these schemes of higher policy their national interests
might be betrayed. Pius II began to listen more heedfully to the reports that
came from Breslau. He pressed for the embassy which was to declare at Rome the
obedience of Bohemia, according to the promise which George, before his
coronation, had made to the Pope. At length the embassy, which had been so long
delayed, arrived in Rome on March 10, two days before the arrival of the French
embassy which was to announce the abrogation of the Pragmatic Sanction.
The coincidence seemed auspicious for the Papal
success; but Pius II was soon driven to admit that Bohemia was different from
France. The Bohemian embassy was headed by Procopius of Rabstein, a Catholic,
an old friend of Pius II, who had been his colleague in the chancery of
Frederick III, and Sdenek Kostka of Postupic, an Utraquist baron who stood high
in the King’s confidence; with them was Wenzel Coranda, burgomaster of Prague.
Pius II adopted his usual plan of endeavoring to discover in a private
interview the commission of the envoys, before he admitted them to a public
audience. On March 13 he summoned Procopius and Kostka, who said that they were
sent to offer to the Pope the obedience of the Bohemian King as was customary
and as his predecessors had offered it. The Pope answered that the realm of
Bohemia did not stand like other realms in the unity of the Church: the King
had promised at his coronation to bring back his people from the error of their
ways; before his obedience could be accepted he must take oath to do so. The
envoys answered that they could only do what they were commissioned to do. The
question was referred to a committee of Cardinals, chief of whom were Carvajal,
Cusa, and Bessarion. There were many conferences and a repetition of the
arguments that had been used at Basel; but the Bohemians remained firm to their
position, that by accepting the Compacts they remained in the unity and
obedience of the Church, and that they stood by the Compacts. On March 21 a
public audience was given. Kostka, after making excuses for the delay of the
embassy in appearing at Rome, professed the obedience of his King.
“You only offer the obedience of the King”, said the
Pope, “not of the kingdom”.
Procopius whispered to Kostka, “What shall we do? I
will offer the obedience of my party, of which I am sure; do you the same
on behalf of yours”.
“Speak in the name of all”, answered
Kostka;”what the King does all will accept”
Then Procopius repeated the declaration of obedience
in the name of the King and the realm. “If you have anything else to say”, said
the Pope, “say on”. Then Wenzel Coranda, with the loud voice and rapid speech
which the Pope had so often heard from the Bohemians at Basel, set forth the
origin of the Hussite movement, the troubles in Bohemia, the peace negotiations
at Basel, and the Compacts; by holding fast to them King George had given peace
to Bohemia; that peace was endangered by the open and secret attempts made in
Bohemia and outside it, to do away with the Compacts; the Bohemians were called
heretics and schismatics. He besought the Pope to free Bohemia from all
suspicion, to give peace and enable it to turn its energies against the Turks,
by confirming the Compacts so that there should be no misunderstanding in the
future. The Pope answered in a long speech which gave a history of Bohemia,
showed how prosperous it had been while it remained Catholic, complained that
the Compacts, which were a conditional indulgence granted by the Council of
Basel, had been so violated in every way by the Bohemians, that they had ceased
to be binding. Finally he declared that the demand made of him was impossible,
for it was contrary to the unity of the Church; yet he would consult further
with the Cardinals.
More conferences were held and more arguments were
advanced on both sides. Carvajal pointed out the weakness of the Bohemian
position. They declared that only the recognition of the Compacts could give
Bohemia peace; yet peace was impossible so long as there were two different
rituals. The aim of the Utraquists was the abolition of the Catholic ritual and
the union of Bohemia under their own views. As the Compacts would never bring
peace, he urged that it was better to drop them. Kostka was not a disputant;
but he was for that reason all the better fitted for his office. He answered
that, the King were to attempt anything against the Compacts, the Hussites
would rise and a more bloody war than had been seen before would devastate Bohemia;
he trusted that the Pope would listen to the request that had been made; if
not, Bohemia must maintain itself in the future as it had done in the past. It
was clear that nothing could come of controversy, and on March 31 the Pope gave
his answer to the envoys. He spoke words of warning about the obedience which
had been offered on the King's behalf: “We praise the King, who seeks the
door of the Lord, which is the Apostolic seat, to which are entrusted the
keys of the kingdom of heaven. The King is wise in seeking the true door, the
true pasture, the true shepherd; ourselves, though undeserving, he honors as
the Vicar of Christ. In virtue of that obedience just offered we bid him remove
all novelties from his kingdom; obedience is shown not in words but in deeds”.
Then the Pope turned to the request that he would confirm the Compacts. He
repeated the familiar arguments used at Basel against the Communion under both
kinds. The Compacts gave an indulgence in Bohemia and Moravia to those who
united with the Church; they promised that the Council would give power to
certain priests to administer the rite under both kinds to those who desired it
in Bohemia. It did not appear that the Council had ever empowered any priest to
do so, nor that Bohemia had returned to the unity of the Church. No argument in
favor of their request could be founded on the Compacts themselves. If he was
asked to grant them by his apostolic power, it would be impossible for him to
grant what his predecessors had refused, what would scandalize Christendom,
give offence to other nations and be harmful to themselves. As Christ said to
the sons of Zebedee, so say I to you, “Ye know not what ye ask. We are the
stewards of the mysteries of God; it is for us to feed the sheep and guide the
flock of the Lord in the way of safety. Not all understand what is for their
good”.
When the Pope had ended, his Procurator-fiscal rose
and read a public protestation, “that our most holy Lord the Pope has
extinguished and destroyed the Compacts granted by the Council of Basel to the
Bohemians, and has said that the Communion under both kinds is nowise necessary
to salvation, nor will he hold the obedience made to be real obedience, until
the King, uprooting and extirpating all errors, has brought the kingdom of
Bohemia to union with the Roman Church, and has conformed himself and his
kingdom in all things and through all things to the Roman Church”.
There was now no doubt of the Pope’s meaning. Next day
the Bohemian envoys took leave of the Pope, who received them in his garden and
gave them his blessing. He bade them tell the king that he was willing to do
all he could for Bohemia consistently with his honor and that of his office.
Let the King himself communicate under one kind only, and the people would follow
the example of a prince whom they loved. If he remained obstinate the Church
would have to try other methods; it was better to have the glory of restoring
his land to the union of the Church than to suffer compulsion. The Bohemians
asked that someone should accompany them to carry the Pope’s instructions to
the King. The Pope commissioned for this purpose Fantinus, a Dalmatian priest
who had for two years acted as King George’s proctor at Rome. He was a
Catholic who had discharged his mission with good faith in the King’s
intentions. The Pope, who had been suspicious of him at first, was now secure
of his integrity; and the nomination of the King's own proctor seemed a
conciliatory measure. On April 3 the Bohemians left Rome. Pius II had taken a
decided step, and had forced George to declare himself. The Bohemian king had
to consider whether he would face the difficulties of a breach with the Pope
and with his Catholic subjects and neighbors, or whether he would abandon the
Utraquists. Pius II awaited his opportunity in either case.
From the troublesome task of receiving refractory
embassies Pius II turned gladly to the more congenial occupation of organizing
an impressive display of ecclesiastical ceremonial. A holy relic, the head of
the Apostle S. Andrew, had been carried away from Patras by the despot Thomas
Palaeologus that it might be saved from the Turks; and Pius II offered it a
secure refuge in Rome. It was received at Ancona by Cardinal Oliva and safely
conveyed to Narni. Now that times were peaceable, Pius II prepared for its
reception at Rome. Three Cardinals were sent to bring it from Narni, and on
Palm Sunday, April 11, carried their precious burden to Ponte Molle, where on
the following day the Pope went out to meet it. The weather was wet and stormy,
but Pius II tells us with great satisfaction that the rain ceased during the
time of the procession. A lofty stage was erected in the meadows by the Ponte
Molle, large enough to contain all the clergy in Rome, and in the middle was an
altar. The Pope and prelates advanced carrying palms in their hands. As the
Pope mounted the platform on one side Bessarion and two Cardinals advanced on
the other side bearing the reliquary. The Pope received it with reverence,
placed it on the altar, and kneeling, with pale face and tremulous voice broken
by tears, poured forth a prayer of welcome. The people who thronged around wept
tears of devout joy, and when the Pope, rising, exposed the relic to their
gaze, the Te Deum burst from their lips. Then was sung a hymn in
Sapphic verse specially composed by the Bishop of Ancona. Then the Pope bore
the relic to the city and deposited it on the altar of S. Maria del Popolo,
where he himself passed the night.
The ceremony of the next day seemed likely to be
spoiled by the rain, which fell with violence during the night; but the prayers
of the sightseers prevailed, and in the morning the sun shone again. Still the
streets were covered with mud, and the Cardinals expressed a desire to take
part in the procession on horseback. The Pope would not allow the effect to be
marred by this incongruity; he ordered all who could to walk; those who
were too old or feeble might go to S Peter's and there welcome the procession
on its arrival. “It was a great sight”, he tells us, “full of devotion,
to see old men going on foot through the slippery streets, carrying palms in
their hands, with mitres on their hoary heads, their eyes fixed on the ground,
intent on prayer: many nurtured in luxury, who could scarce endure to go a
hundred yards on horseback, on that day easily accomplished two miles on foot,
through the mud and wet, carrying the weight of their priestly attire”. The
Pope’s eye was keen to see how many of the more corpulent managed to carry the
burden of their flesh. “It was love”, he exclaims, “that bore the weight;
nothing is difficult to one who loves”. Pius II was delighted wall the
devotional effect produced upon the people; he estimated that more than 30,000
wax candles were burned during the procession. The whole city was decorated,
and boys dressed as angels sang hymns along the way. At last the Pope
reached S. Peter’s. Bessarion delivered an address, and Pius II followed with a
few words: he gave his benediction, and indulgences were announced in his name.
So pleased was the Pope with the success of his festival, that he gave notice
that on Easter Sunday he would celebrate mass in S. Peter’s, and would
again display the head of S. Andrew. It was four years since the Romans had
seen a Pope say mass. So crippled was Pius II with the gout that means had to
be devised by which he might perform the office half-seated.
But ecclesiastical ceremonies could not satisfy the
restlessness of the Pope. He longed for the delights of country life and for
greater freedom; and on the pretext that his health required him to take baths,
he set out in May for Viterbo. There he was carried into the fields in the
fresh hours of early morning to catch the breeze and admire the green crops,
and the flax in flower which imitated the hues of heaven, and filled
beholders with delight.
In Viterbo also Pius II resolved to try the effect of
a splendid ecclesiastical ceremonial in celebration of Corpus Christi Day. He
caused to be erected a tent adorned with splendid hangings and tapestries; from
this tent to the cathedral each Cardinal undertook the decoration of a portion
of the way. The Arras tapestries of the French Cardinals provoked great
admiration. The Cardinal of S. Sisto contributed a representation of the Last
Supper. Carvajal set forth a dragon surrounded by a herd of horrible demons; as
the Pope passed by, S. Michael descended and cut off the dragon’s head, and all
the demons fell headlong, barking as they fell. Bessarion had a hand of
querying angels. But Cardinal Borgia outdid all others in splendor. He erected
a large tent covering the road with purple trappings; as the Pope approached,
two angels advanced and knelt in reverence to the Host which the Pope carried;
then turning towards the tent they sang, “Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and
King Pius, Lord of the world, will come in”. Five kings and a band of armed men
tried to prevent the entrance, Crying out, “Who is the King Pius?”. “The
lord strong and mighty”, replied the angels; the curtain fell, the kings and
their troops knelt before the Pope and sang songs in his honor, to the
accompaniment of a band of musicians. A wild man of the woods led in chains a
lion, and strove with him from time to time, as a symbol of the Pope’s might.
Next Cardinal Forteguerra showed his taste in the decoration of the chief
piazza, which he roofed in with star-spangled cloth; on twelve columns sat
twelve angels, who sang in alternate verses; in the middle of the piazza was a
representation of the Holy Sepulchre, with the sleeping soldiers and the angels
keeping watch around. An angel descended by a rope and sang in honor of the
Resurrection. A gun was fired; the soldiers woke and rubbed their eyes; the
tomb opened, one bearing the banner of the Resurrection stepped out, and in
Italian verse announced to the crowd that their salvation had been won. In the
piazza before the cathedral, Cardinal Milo had fitted up a representation of
heaven; on the housetops were stars and angels and God in glory, while below
was the tomb of the Virgin. Mass was said in the cathedral, and the Pope
blessed the people. As he left the Church, the tomb of the Virgin opened, and a
lady stepped out who was borne by angels to the housetops, dropping her girdle
on the way. Then she was received into heaven amid the joy and songs of the
angels. The Pope was so satisfied with all he saw that day, that he says,
“Those who beheld these wonders thought that they had doubtless entered the
realms above, and said that they had seen while alive in, the flesh the
presentation of their heavenly country”.
The restless spirit of Pius II was not long content to
remain at Viterbo. Taking occasion of an alarm of plague, he withdrew to
Bolsena, and thence gradually made his way towards his native Corsignano, which
had probably been his destination when he first left Rome. He wished to see the
buildings with which he had adorned the little town. He strove still further to
convert it into a memorial of himself by changing its name Corsignano into
Pienza, and elevating it to the dignity of a bishopric. From Pienza Pius II
went to the baths of Petrioli and thence to Todi : he did not return to Rome
till December 18.
Meanwhile success attended the Papal policy in Italy.
On August 18, Ferrante of Naples won a decided victory over Piccinino and Jean
of Anjou at Troja. The effect of his success was to shake the confidence of the
Angevin barons and incline them to sue privately for peace. In September the
powerful Prince of Taranto abandoned the cause of Jean; and in October a
French embassy came to propose a truce to the Pope. Pius II objected to include
in it Gismondo Malatesta, an excommunicated heretic; and the negotiations were
broken off. The Pope had no wish to make peace with Malatesta, who now seemed
entirely in his hands. He had in the summer invaded the lands of the Pope's
nephew, Antonio Piccolomini, but had been surprised by Federigo of Urbino,
while attempting to withdraw from Sinigaglia which he had seized, and had been
entirely defeated on August 12. His troops were scattered; his castles fell
before Federigo; he was driven to seek the good offices of Venice to escape
entire destruction. In October, 1463, he had to accept the Pope’s terms.
His proctors publicly abjured in his name the heresies with which he was
charged, and the Pope freed him from the ban on condition that he fasted every
Friday on bread and water. He was left only in possession of Rimini and the
territory a few miles round. The power of the Malatesta was humbled, and Pius
II could plume himself on having won a signal success. But it was a small thing
that a Pope who wished to hurl Europe against the Infidel should triumph in
overthrowing, after four years of warfare, one Italian baron.
In Germany Pius II was not so successful. Since 1461
that unhappy country had been plunged in war and confusion. Frederick III was
attacked by his brother Albert of Austria, and peace was only made by the
interposition of the Bohemian King. The opposing parties in the Empire had
broken out into open war. On one side was the Pfalzgraf and Lewis of Bavaria,
on the other Albert of Brandenburg and Charles of Baden, the Emperors friends.
With this the struggle about the Archbishopric of Mainz was naturally
connected, and the claims of Diether were supported by the party opposed to the
Emperor. On July 2, 1462, the Emperor's friends were entirely defeated.
Frederick III was afraid of an attack from his brother Albert, and was
helpless; nor could the Pope do more than utter mild expostulations in behalf
of peace.
This state of affairs in Germany reacted speedily on
Bohemia, where Pius II had hoped by his resolute demeanor to strike terror into
George, compel him to abandon the Compacts and reduce Bohemia to obedience to
Rome. George was not in Prague on the arrival of the Pope’s envoys. When he
received from Fantinus the Pope’s demands that he should publish through
Bohemia the Papal sentence, should himself and his family receive the Communion
under one kind only, and should dismiss all heretical priests, he did not give
an immediate answer, but referred the matter to a Diet which was to meet in
Prague on August 9. No doubt the part which the King then resolved to play was
largely determined by the weakness of the Pope’s friends in Germany.
The Diet met on August 12 in large numbers. Catholics
and Utraquists alike were doubtful about the King’s attitude; there was great
uneasiness and great 1462. excitement. The King took his seat, with the Queen
on his right hand, and briefly opened the proceedings. By their advice, he
said, he had sent an embassy to Rome in confident expectation of securing
thereby the peace of the realm: what obstacles had hindered this result he knew
not. He asked the envoys to give their own account of what had befallen them,
that common counsel might be taken about the future. Procopius and Kostka gave
a plain and truthful statement of the facts. Then George rose and said, “We
wonder what the Pope means: perhaps he wishes to plunge again into discord this
kingdom which was united by the Compacts. How can he annul and take away what
the Holy Council of Basel, which is more than he, and what his predecessor
Eugenius, granted us? If every Pope is to abolish what his predecessor granted,
who will feel justice secure? We are accused by the Pope of not fulfilling the
oath made at our coronation. We will read the oath”. Then he read it in
Bohemian, and continued: “You hear that we swore to do away with all heresy
from our realm. Assuredly we have no love for heretics. But to do as the Pope
wishes and make the reception of the Communion under both kinds a heresy was never
our intention; for it is founded on Christ’s gospels, and on the institute on
of the primitive Church, and, moreover, was granted to us by the Council of
Basel as a privilege for our devotion and virtue. The Pope says we swore to put
this away. By no means; but know for certain that as we were born and bred in
this Communion, and in it were raised to the royal dignity, we promise to
uphold it and live and die in its defense. So too our queen, our children and
all who wish to do us pleasure, will live as we do in this matter. Nor do we
think that there is any other way for the salvation of our souls than to die in
this faith, and use the Communion under both kinds according to the
Savior’s institution”.
The King hoped to produce an impression by this unexpected
firmness, and he succeeded. The majority of the Diet burst into tears. George
determined to use his opportunity: he ordered the confirmations of the Compacts
of Sigismund, Albert and Ladislas to be read, and finally the Compacts
themselves. Then he arose: “I ask you all severally”, he said, “if any
one, whoever he be, wishes to defy and defame us and our kingdom on account of
the Compacts, will you lend us your aid?”. The Utraquists, after a brief
conference, deputed Kostka to answer. “Sire”, he said, “we hear with
pleasure that you, your queen, and your children, are with us in the
faith, and we give you thanks without measure; we promise severally to aid you
with our goods and with our persons in upholding the Compacts”. The King turned
to the Catholics, who were in a minority in the Diet: “Say openly what you
will do”. The Bishops of Breslau and Olmutz were present amongst others. After
a short conference amongst themselves, Sdenek of Sternberg answered
: “Sire, you know that hitherto we have had nothing to do with the
Compacts; but as we were born and have lived in the union and obedience of the
Roman Church, so we wish to live and die. As you say that you must hold to the
faith in which you were born, we argue that we must equally hold to ours. As to
your request for help, you never asked our counsel, as is customary; as you
have decided to maintain the Compacts, you will have the help of those by whose
counsel you made your decision. We promise to do all that is according to
justice for your honor and that of the kingdom”. The King, who had apparently
expected that the Catholics would have been impressed by the scene which they
had witnessed, was dissatisfied with this answer, and pressed for something
more explicit. It was, however, now late; and the Catholics demanded an
adjournment, which the King at last granted, saying that next day they would
hear Fantinus as the Pope’s nuncio; “as my proctor”, he added, “I
have some complaints against him” .
Fantinus was warned that the King was much displeased
at him for his conduct as royal proctor at Rome; but he was resolved to
discharge faithfully his mission from the Pope. When he appeared before the
Diet he seemed to the Catholics like a lamb among wolves; and it was noticed
that he had no special place assigned to him, but stood among the rest. He
spoke in Latin, and his words were translated into Bohemian by an interpreter.
He began by demanding the rights of an ambassador to speak freely according to
the law of nations. When this was granted, he proceeded to attack the Compacts,
denounced as heretical the Communion under both kinds, asserted the Papal power
and defended the Pope's act on in annulling the Compacts. He insisted that the
interpretation of George's oath was a matter for the superior, not the
inferior; for him who received, not for him who gave the promise; for the Pope,
not for the King. George angrily interrupted him. “In all and everything we
have kept our oath as our conscience teaches us. If the Pope or any one wished
us to interpret it against our conscience we would give him full satisfaction
and support ourselves as best we could. We doubt not that we keep our oath as
truly as the Pope or anyone else”.
Fantinus resumed his speech undaunted. He went on to
say that, if he had believed that the King wished to act as protector of the
Compacts and of the Communion under both kinds, he would never have acted as
his proctor; he publicly renounced that office, and in the Pope's name declared
the suspension from the priesthood of all clergy who upheld the Compacts; he
warned the King that he ran great risks in opposing the Pope's will. The
King briefly said: “My lords, you have elected me your King and protector; you
have the power of electing a lord, and you must stand by him”. In private his anger
blazed forth; he bitterly complained of the indignities which Fantinus and the
Pope heaped on him, and declared that he would be avenged. “You know”, he
added, “that on the Apostolic seat have sat many renegades and wicked men;
it is not the seat of holiness, but of pestilence. The holy seat is the union
of all faithful people, and that is not Rome”.
If King George had hoped by his sudden display of
firmness to kindle the enthusiasm of the Hussites, so that it should carry away
the Catholics or fill them with terror, the boldness of Fantinus upset his
plans. The grandeur of the King on the first day was overshadowed by the
determined bravery of Fantinus on the second. The Catholic party at once
plucked up courage and prepared for the contest, which began next day, when the
King ordered Fantinus to be imprisoned for treacherous dealings as royal
proctor, and also deprived Procopius of Rabstein of his office as Chancellor.
The Bishops of Breslau and Olmutz at once fled from Prague, and it was clear
that George’s hopes of a peaceable settlement of Bohemia had failed. Fantinus
was kept in prison for a short time, and Pius II tells us that George visited
him and said, “I can scarce restrain myself from strangling you with my
own hands”. “I expected a common executioner”, said Fantinus, “but if a
king puts his hands to the work I shall die more honorably; but you will grudge
me the glory”. The mediation of Lewis of Bavaria persuaded George at length
that it was unwise to imprison the Papal nuncio. In October Fantinus was
released and returned to Rome, where Pius II rewarded his services with a
bishopric.
If George had not succeeded in winning all the nobles
to his side, he hoped that he might be more fortunate with the clergy. He
ordered the administrator of the Archbishopric of Prague to summon all the
clergy to an assembly on September 16, to hear what he intended for the good of
peace. There came 714 clergy, of whom about 200 were Catholics. The Catholics
assembled by themselves, and agreed who was to be their spokesman and what
he should answer. Then they formed in procession, three abreast, and advanced
to the royal presence, where the Utraquists under Rokycana were already
assembled. The King spoke:
“We always seek the peace of our kingdom; but you
priests quarrel amongst yourselves, accuse one another of heresy, refuse
sepulture to the dead, exclude the living from the Churches; you pollute your
priesthood by consorting with light women, play at dice, and commit many other
disorders. Unless you change your manners we will proceed against you, as you
have no spiritual judge. We bid you, however, observe faithfully the Compacts
granted for the peace of the realm by the Council of Basel to our predecessors.
If any one does otherwise he will provoke our anger”.
The Catholics listened in silence: after a
short deliberation they made answer:
“We thank your Majesty for the peace which we enjoy,
and pray that it may long continue. We do not deny that ill deeds are done by
the clergy; in such a multitude there must be some who are evil. Yet we do not
know who they are: if you would point them out they should be punished, for we
still have authority among ourselves. As to the Compacts, we answer as did your
nobles. We never wanted them; we do not want them; the Roman See never granted
them, but the Council of Basel gave them as an indulgence. Whether or no those
to whom the indulgence was given use it as it was granted, God must judge. The
peace which you say the Compacts have brought we gladly accept: that they bring
any aid in gaining our salvation we do not see. We feel sure that your Majesty
will not hinder the Church of Prague in her ceremonies, and will not impose on
us any other ritual than that handed down to our ancestors by the Apostolic
See— which is the gate of heaven”.
King George angrily declared that he was no heretic:
he had never resisted the Apostolic See, but he would not abandon the Communion
under both kinds: he must obey God rather than the Pope. He produced an
intercepted letter from a Catholic priest, in which he was denounced as a
heretic: he bitterly complained of such conduct. Next day the assembly met
again; but George did not succeed in obtaining from the Catholic clergy more
than he had obtained from the Catholic nobles. Yet he still strove to keep his
position as a mediator. Rokycana brought before him a complaint against one of
the clergy. “You wish that everyone should obey you”, was the King's
answer, “while you obey no one”. The assembly was dismissed in peace.
George did not attempt to interfere with the Catholic services. In spite of the
breach with the Papacy, men said that the peace of Bohemia had never been more
secure.
Pius II was ready to proceed to extremities: on
October 8 he issued a letter to the men of Breslau, releasing them from their
allegiance to George, as he had not returned to the bosom of the Church, but
held in his kingdom doctrines that had been condemned. The Pope was ready to
plunge Bohemia into another civil war; George trusted that events might still
be too powerful for Pius II, and might drive him to leave the Bohemian question
alone, if not formally to ratify the Compacts.
The Bohemian King was soon able to claim the mediation
of the Emperor. Austria was a prey to plundering bands of soldiers, whom
Frederick III was helpless to repress. The people of Vienna rose in rebellion
against their incompetent prince. They solemnly defied him on October 5, called
in his brother Albert, and besieged Frederick in the citadel. George of Bohemia
went to the Emperor’s aid. “As an Elector of the Empire”, he said, “he
felt himself bound to support his lord”. By his means peace was made between
the two brothers. Albert was to govern Austria for eight years, and Frederick
was to be allowed to depart in safety. He left Vienna ignominiously and
withdrew to Neustadt; but it was understood that he was to repay his Bohemian
ally by interceding on his behalf with the Pope. Though Pius II was determined
to continue his policy of opposition to the Compacts in Bohemia, he judged it
wise to hold his hand for a time. He could not attack the King who held in his
hands the peace of Germany.
Other struggles and other heresies claimed the
Pope’s attention. It was as difficult to keep the peace between the monastic
orders as between the Catholics and Utraquists in Bohemia. Contests as fierce
raged within the bosom of the Church as those which distracted it from without;
and the heresies of Bohemia were not the only ones which the Pope was called
upon to decide. The reaction that produced the Papal restoration intensified
also a movement within the Franciscan Order for the revival of the old rule of
S. Francis in all its pristine simplicity. The Minorites of the Observance, as
they called themselves, denounced as renegades their brethren who were content
to dwell in settled abodes and hold the property which the piety of their
predecessors had won. The strife waxed bitter between the Observantists and
Conventuals; and each party strove to gain the favor of the Pope. Eugenius IV,
whose highest deal was a monastic reformation, naturally favored the
Observantists, and hoped to make of them a bulwark of the Papal power. He
gave them the privilege of electing a Vicar of their own, exempt from the
authority of the General of the Order, and conferred on them other favors,
which put them in a position of superiority over the Conventuals.
Nicolas V had no interest in these disputes, and to
promote peace withdrew some of the special favors which had most irritated the
Conventuals. This brought upon him the remonstrances—even the wrath—of the
great leader of the Observantists, Fra Giovanni Capistrano; but Nicolas V was
not the man to be moved from his determination by clamour. It was now the turn
of the Conventuals to act on the aggressive. They demanded that the Observantists
should either renounce their separate Vicar, or should leave the Franciscan
Order altogether, and call themselves Brethren of the Bull, or The
Privileged.
Calixtus III in vain strove to make peace. Peace was
impossible; but as Calixtus saw that the Observantists were useful for his
purpose by preaching a crusade and gathering Turkish tithes, he resolved to
support them. Yet his Bull wore the appearance of a compromise. All Franciscans
were to obey the General of the Order, and the Vicars of the Observantists were
to attend the chapters; they were to submit to the General three names, from
whom he should choose one to be Chief Vicar of the Observantists; the Vicar was
to have over the Observantists all the authority of the General. The compromise
only awoke new questions about the right of the Observantists to vote at the
election of a General, to whom they did not owe obedience. Pius II revoked the
Bull of Calixtus III, and restored that of Eugenius IV. The alternations of the
Papal policy were admirably adapted to keep alive the spirit of
rivalry which they professed to heal.
Under Pius II the conflict entered upon a new stage.
Pius II favored the Observantists, because he needed them for his crusading
projects; and they no doubt thought that the opportunity was favorable for
gaining still higher privileges for themselves. One of their oldest and most
respected members, Fra Giacomo della Marca, took occasion, in preaching at
Brescia on Easter Sunday, 1462, to assert that “the Blood of Christ shed on the
ground during the Passion was not an object of worship, since it was separated
from the Divine Person”. It was an old question of dispute whether the Blood of
Christ so shed had lost or not the hypostatic union of the Logos. By raising
the question at Brescia, the seat of the Dominican Inquisitor, Fra Giacomo
threw down the gauntlet, and showed his wish to provoke a trial of strength.
The Inquisitor accepted the challenge, condemned the opinion as heretical, and
ordered Fra Giacomo to recant. But Giacomo appeared in the pulpit, and after
recounting his long services to the Church during his career of forty years as
a preacher, proceeded to confirm his opinion by citing authorities.
This was the beginning of a furious strife; the people
were divided between the two parties, and the hatred of rival theologians was
let loose in all its fanaticism. The Bishop of Brescia in vain interposed. The
matter was referred to the Pope, who proclaimed a truce, and summoned both
sides to a disputation at Rome. Three eminent theologians appeared for either
party; and the dispute began before the Pope and Cardinals on Christmas Day,
1462. For three whole days they argued, the Dominicans maintaining that the
Blood of Christ, inasmuch as it returned to His body, never lost the hypostatic
union: while the Minorites asserted that during the three days of the Passion
this union ceased. Pius II has preserved in his 'Commentaries' a long record of
the arguments; but he felt little real interest in the matter, and regarded the
disputants with amusement. To him theological disputation seemed a form of
athletic exercise, not merely mentally but physically.
“It was a pleasant and agreeable thing”, he
says, “to hear the fine intellects of learned men contend with one
another, and to see now one, now another, shoot ahead. They strove, as was
fitting before the Pope's majesty, with modesty and fear; but so sharp was the
contest that, though it was the middle of winter and the world was stiff with
frost, the disputants were bathed with sweat; such was their zeal for victory”.
When all had been heard, the Pope conferred with the
Cardinals for several days. The majority were on the side of the Dominicans;
and Pius II agreed with the majority. But he determined not to publish his
decision, lest the crowd of Minorites, whose help was necessary in preaching
against the Turks, should be offended. He contented himself with accepting from
the Dominicans, and entering in the Papal archives, a copy of a decision in
their favor on this subject given by Pope Clement VI. In 1351 the Friars were
contented not to have their doctrine condemned; and this momentous discussion
was allowed to rest for a few years in peace.
Pius II had now established the custom of taking
excursions for pleasure from Rome, and in May, 1463, accepted an invitation
from Cardinal Estouteville to pay him a visit at Ostia. Pius II went, as a
modern traveller would do, to inspect the antiquities and enjoy the natural
beauties of the place. His enjoyment was slightly marred by a terrible storm of
wind and rain, which rose suddenly in the night and wrought considerable havoc.
As the Bishop's palace was not large enough to accommodate all the Cardinals
and their attendants who had accompanied the Pope, many of them were sleeping
in tents. The tents were blown away, and the occupants, in their attempts to
gain shelter in the darkness of the night, suffered many misadventures. Even in
the palace the Pope was afraid that the roof might fall, and was being wrapped
up that he might sit outside in the rain rather than run the risk indoors,
when the wind ceased, “as though fearing to incommode the Pope”, Pius
complacently observes.
After his return from Ostia Pius II did not stay long
in Rome. He again set out for an excursion to Albano; thence he went to Castle
Gandolfo, rejoicing in the beauties of the Alban Lake; and finally to Rocca di
Papa. As he journeyed along the Appian Road he was grieved to see the tombs
being used as quarries for neighboring buildings, and gave orders that they
should be taken under the protection of the Pope. He returned to Rome for Whit
Sunday, but at the end of June, complaining of the heat, departed to Tivoli,
where he remained till the middle of September.
The summer of 1463 saw the end of several of the Pope’s
little contests. It was decisive for the Neapolitan war, which, since the
battle of Troja, had lingered on while the Angevin barons were avowedly seeking
to find what were the best terms they could make for themselves. Jean of Anjou
discovered that he had been from the beginning the tool of the Neapolitan
barons, headed by the Prince of Taranto. When the Prince of Taranto found that
he was no longer profitable, he did not scruple to abandon his cause.
The condottiere Piccinino was Jean’s only support, and Piccinino was also
preparing to desert him. In August, 1463, Alessandro Sforza offered battle to
Piccinino, which Piccinino did not find it convenient to accept. He came
instead into Sforza's camp to talk matters over. His arguments, as given by
Pius II, are extremely characteristic of the general condition of Italian
politics.
“Why”, said he, “do you wish to conquer me? It is
I who bring you glory, riches, pleasure—all that you enjoy. Because I took up
arms and overthrew the peace of Italy, you, who were lying idle at home, were
called to the field. Will you do any good by taking me prisoner? Who wants
peace? No one, save priests and merchants, the Roman Curia, and the traders of
Venice and Florence. Peace in Italy brings them all they want, and leaves us
nothing to scrape together. In peace we are despised, and sent to the plough;
in war we become mighty, and may follow the example of Francesco Sforza, who
has raised himself to a dukedom. Our policy is to refuse to conquer, and
prolong the war, the end of which is the end of our gains”.
Many of the captains agreed with Piccinino; but
Alessandro Sforza answered: “Do not fear. Italy will never be free from war
till she is under one rule, and that is a far distant prospect. Let us finish
this war and betake ourselves to a greater. You need not boast, Piccinino, as
if you only kept war on foot. Had not the Pope and the Duke of Milan sent us
against you, you would have finished this war long ago in favor of the French,
an unworthy undertaking for an Italian, for one who had borne arms for Aragon
and for the Church”.
Piccinino replied: “I was driven to fight for the
French because no one else wanted me. Bred in arms, I could not leave the
field. I would rather have declared war against my own father than have
disbanded my troops. I served the French because they gave me pay. Now I am
free, and willing to negotiate with you if you will give me worthy terms”.
It was agreed that Piccinino should be made Ferrante’s
commander-in-chief, with a salary of 90,000 ducats, and should keep his
conquests in the Abruzzi. Ferrante and Pius II in vain protested against these
terms; the military leaders were agreed, and all others had to submit.
Piccinino changed sides, and Jean of Anjou retired to Ischia, awaiting ships
and men from France, which never came. In April, 1464, he left Ischia and
returned to France. Ferrante was now undisputed master of Naples; but he had
learned how little confidence he could place in his barons, and waited quietly
his opportunity to reduce their power.
To the very last Pius II kept his hold on Naples, and
tried still further to enrich his nephews. The county of Celano, whose young
Count had joined the Angevin party, was overrun by the Pope's troops in the
name of the Church; Pius II succeeded in handing it over to Antonio
Piccolomini. The Neapolitan policy of Pius II, no doubt, was sound as regarded
Italian affairs: the success of Ferrante secured the peace of Italy so long as
he lived. But the part which the Pope played had been a perpetual hindrance to
his good understanding with France, and its most immediate result had been to
make a good provision for two of the Pope’s nephews.
This turn of affairs in Naples filled up the measure
of the French King's wrath against the Pope. He had abolished the Pragmatic Sanction
partly out of caprice, partly with an expectation of receiving an adequate
reward. He was now conscious that he had acted contrary to his own interests,
and that he had been beguiled by the Pope. He wrote to Pius II a letter,
“unworthy of his dignity”, as Pius II plaintively remarks, “and as though
he were the Pope’s superior, condemned his doings and gave him rules of life”.
Unfortunately we have only the Pope's account of the contents of this letter:
but that describes them as sufficiently severe.
The Pope’s policy was submitted to a damaging
criticism: he had disturbed Naples, had ruined the Church of Mainz, had
excommunicated the Pfalzgraf and Sigismund of Austria, had accused the Bohemian
King of heresy — in short, would allow no one to live in peace; it would be
much better if he would turn his attention to the Turks. At the same time Louis
XI wrote also to the Cardinals asking if they could inform him what the
Pope’s intentions really were. Pius II has not told us what the French party said
in the consistory when these letters were laid before them; but he felt that he
was put on his trial before the College, and found it necessary to justify
himself. The Cardinals affected to wonder at the tone of the letters and to
doubt that they were really what the King had intended. Pius II did not answer
in writing, but proposed that he should send one envoy and the Cardinals
another, with instructions to excuse the Pope, to appease the King, and urge on
him, as the supreme remedy for all differences of opinion, that he should wage
war against the Turk.
The envoys were, however, unable either to stem the
torrent of the royal displeasure or to gain from France any help for the
crusade. Louis XI showed that he did not intend to leave the Pope much room for
interference in France. A strife had been for some time raging between the
Bishop of Nantes and the Duke of Brittany, in which the Bishop had called on
the Pope for aid. Louis XI suddenly interfered in the matter, declared that
Duke and Bishop were alike vassals of the crown of France, took prisoner the
Pope's legate who was on his way to Brittany, and deprived him of his letters
on the ground that in a dispute concerning a fief of the French crown he and
not the Pope was the judge. Pius II calls this “a tyrannical and lying
statement”. It was indeed an assertion of feudal rights for which Duke and
Bishop were as little prepared as was the Pope. Not content with this,
Louis XI deprived Cardinal Alain of Avignon of his temporalities for
having advised the sending of the nuncio; he treated similarly two bishops,
nephews of Alain, and even threatened Cardinal Estouteville. In vain the
Pope expostulated. “Who”, he bitterly exclaims, “could persuade a king who
takes his greed for law and listens only to those who tickle his ears?”
As soon as it was seen that Louis XI was willing to
oppose the Pope the Galilean party at once revived. The Parlement and the
University laid their grievances before the King, and the clergy who had felt
the weight of the exactions of the Curia were ready to accept relief at the
King’s hands. A series of royal ordinances were issued which took back almost
all that had been granted to the Papacy by the abolition of the Pragmatic.
“The King”, says Pius II sadly, “did not show
himself so religious by the abolition of the Pragmatic Sanction as he showed
himself sacrilegious by issuing such decrees”.
The first of these ordinances, dated February 17,
1463, set aside a Constitution of the Pope which took into the Papal Camera the
goods of deceased prelates, together with half the benefices which they
held in commendam. When the Papal officials tried to avoid this
edict by threats of excommunication against those who refused to pay, a second
edict was issued in June, 1464, forbidding all such exactions and punishing by
confiscation of goods and banishment from the kingdom all collectors who strove
to levy them.
Another edict (May, 1463) maintained the royal right
of disposing of benefices during vacancies, as against those who came provided
with Papal reservations and the like. All cases concerning such matters were
declared to be under the Cognizance of the Parlement; in case of Papal censures
being directed against this ordinance the Proctor-General was ordered to
appeal to a future Council.
In June, 1464, another ordinance declared the sole
right of the royal courts to determine causes concerning the claims of the
crown; those who appealed to the Curia against them were banished from the
kingdom; ecclesiastics who aided in such appeals were declared incapable of
holding benefices in France. To protect the Parlement against Papal
interference it was declared that its officials were responsible to no court
outside the boundaries of Paris.
When Pius II regarded all these edicts he might well
feel that if he had deluded Louis XI into the abolition of the Pragmatic
Sanction by false hopes, Loins XI showed himself capable of retaliating. The extinction
of the Pragmatic proved illusory in its turn, and the place of the legislation
which had been abolished was rapidly filled up by a new series of laws still
more markedly anti-papal in their spirit.
Germany in 1463 seemed tending towards peace. After
the rescue of Frederick by George of Bohemia, Adolf of Nassau had surprised
Mainz by night, had driven out Diether and his adherents, set parts of the town
in flames, and ruined for his own quarrel the prosperity of his cathedral city.
It was a happy stroke and did much to restore the balance of parties m Germany.
Negotiation was again possible; the Pfalzgraf became reconciled with Albert of
Brandenburg. Diether, after many conferences, agreed to renounce the
Archbishopric of Mainz in return for a portion of its lands, over which he was
to exercise ecclesiastical jurisdiction; Adolf succeeded to the title, the debts
and the ruins of the greatest see in Germany. The death of Albert of Austria in
December, 1463, paved the way also for a reconciliation between Frederick and
Sigismund of the Tyrol, who renounced his claims in Austria, on the
understanding that Frederick was to reconcile him with the Pope. Pius II and
Cusa were weary of their long struggle; Sigismund made submission and was
absolved in the beginning of 1464. The Pope might claim that he had vindicated
the dignity of the Papacy; but assuredly he had lost more than he had gained in
the long duel with Heimburg. Before the final agreement about the disputes
concerning Brixen was made, Pius II and Cusa were both dead, and Heimburg had
sought a refuge in the Court of the Bohemian King.
Pius II was a skillful diplomat, and no doubt expected
great results from the energy which he had displayed on so many sides. Yet,
after all, the general aspect of affairs remained much the same as it had been
at the end of the Congress of Mantua. France was still hostile to the Papacy;
Bohemia was still unsubdued. It is true that Naples had been won for Ferrante,
Gismondo Malatesta had been overthrown, Pienza had been beautified, and the
Pope's nephews had been well provided for. On the other hand, Mainz had been
well-nigh ruined, Heimburg had dealt many crushing blows at the Pope’s
prestige, the Papacy had become more closely involved in the party struggles of
Germany, and the German opposition had become more purely political.
CHAPTER IX.
CRUSADE AND DEATH OF PIUS II.
1464.
Since the end of the Congress of Mantua little has
been said about the war against the Turks; yet we should wrong Pius II if we
did not admit the sincerity of his desire for a crusade. But he had not the
fanaticism of Calixtus III to drive him to do something, however inadequate it
might be, nor had he the resoluteness of a great statesman to pursue constantly
one supreme end. His early training had made him ready to catch at advantages
as they offered themselves. He did not try to mold European affairs into
accordance with his own plans; but he strove to make the Papal power prevail
along the whole line of its pretensions, and trusted in the long run to have
his way. While animated by a desire for the general interests of Christendom, he
could not rise above the particular interests of the Papacy. He failed to
impress his contemporaries with his sincerity; even had he done so, he seems to
have felt it doubtful whether he could win them to united action.
Pius II must have felt that the action of his
predecessors had not been such as to inspire Europe with much confidence.
Nicolas V had gathered Turkish tithes, which he had spent on the adornment of
Rome. Calixtus III had squandered his treasure in insignificant expeditions,
which showed no sense of the work in which he was engaged. Pius II might have
expected that his protestations at Mantua would be subjected to the calm
criticism of observers. His leisurely and magnificent progress to the Congress
seemed a needless waste of money: his share in the Neapolitan war was opposed
to his expressed desire for universal peace. Italy hesitated to grant him the
supplies which he demanded. Europe saw in the Congress of Mantua a series of
negotiations on matters which concerned the Papal interests. When Pius
sojourned at ease in his beloved Siena, men said that the whole matter was
merely an excuse to enable the Pope to leave Rome and enjoy a visit to his
native place. Few thought that the Pope was in earnest, or that his future
action would go beyond eloquent protestations from time to time.
We have seen enough of the Pope's activity to feel
that there was some justification for those who judged that he not the cause of
a crusade so deeply at heart as to forego for its sake any advantage to
himself. He did not even interfere decidedly in such matters as might have
furthered it. Hungary had long been the bulwark of Christendom against the
Turk, and bravely had John Hunyad defended it. On John's death the Hungarian
nobles took as their king his young son Matthias Corvinus, in the hopes that
they would find him a powerless ruler under whom they might pursue their own
interests. When the young Matthias displayed the same resolute disposition as
his father, they began to pay more heed to the claims on Hungary of the Emperor
Frederick, whom in February, 1459, the discontented party solemnly elected as
their king. Here was a matter which clearly demanded the Pope's intervention as
a mediator. The internal peace of Hungary was of vital importance to
Christendom, was of prime necessity if the Turk was to be held at bay. But Pius
II saw the political difficulties in the way of quarrelling with the Emperor;
the interests of Christendom could not outweigh in his mind the advantages to
be gained by the Curia through its Imperial ally. Pius II could not bring
himself to act with decision: he received the obedience of Matthias and called
him king on the principle, which he wished to be allowed to apply to Naples, of
recognizing things as they were. Beyond this he assumed an attitude of
impartial neutrality, and kindly offered to judge the rival claims if they were
submitted to his decision. Whatever other steps might be taken with advantage,
there could be no doubt of the need of supplying Matthias with money to enable
him to war against the Turks. Pius II had much good advice to give and many
expressions of sympathy; but all the urgency of Carvajal, who was legate in
Hungary, could not obtain supplies that were of any purpose.
Still Pius II had undertaken the cause of the crusade,
and however much he might pursue more immediate objects, he did not entirely
forget it. Some of the things that befell him as advocate for the Christian
cause are ludicrous enough. A Franciscan Friar, Ludovico of Bologna, had gone
to the East in the days of Calixtus III and brought back reports of Christians
in Persia who were ready to submit to the Pope, and join an alliance against
the Sultan. Soon after the return of Pius II to Rome from the Congress of
Mantua, Fra Ludovico appeared, bringing with him envoys from potentates of the
East, the Emperor of Trapezus, the King of Persia, the King of Mesopotamia, the
Duke of Greater Iberia, and the Lord of Armenia Minor. They had come through
Scythia over the Don and the Danube, through Hungary to Germany, where they had
been welcomed by the Emperor; thence they had passed through Venice to Rome.
They were received with honor as royal ambassadors, and had quarters and food
assigned to them—which was indeed necessary, as some could eat as much as
twenty pounds of meat a day. When admitted to an audience they set forth,
through Fra Ludovico as interpreter, that their kings had heard from him of the
Congress of Mantua, and were willing to attack the Turks in Asia, while the Christians
attacked them in Europe: for this purpose they would raise an army of 120,000
men; they begged the Pope to make Ludovico Patriarch of the Eastern Christians.
The Pope assented to their request, and offered to pay
the expenses of their journey to the Courts of France and Burgundy, on whose
cooperation the proceedings in Europe mainly depended. They were coldly
listened to in France and Burgundy; but no doubt they passed the time
pleasantly. Meanwhile the Pope began to suspect Fra Ludovico, and on his return
to Rome threatened to imprison him for having styled himself Patriarch on his
travels, without having received consecration. He was, however, allowed to
depart for his companions' sake. At Venice he prevailed on some unwary bishops
to ordain him priest and patriarch. When Pius II heard this, he wrote to the
Patriarch of Venice to imprison the impostor; but Ludovico was warned by the
Doge, and made his escape. It was a cruel imposture, and was by no means the
only one of which the Pope had to complain.
Still more extraordinary than this pretended embassy
is the fact that Pius II actually attempted to convert the Sultan by his
eloquence. As rhetoric was the only contribution to a crusade which the Pope
saw his way towards making, he seems to have resolved to try its effects to the
uttermost. It is a strong testimony to the tolerant spirit of the Turks that
stories were rife of the Sultan's willingness to listen to Christian teaching.
It is no less characteristic of the temper of the early Renaissance that Pius
II should have thought that all subjects admitted of reasonable discussion. He
wrote a long letter to the Sultan pointing out the advantages that would follow
from his acceptance of Christianity. Already the spread of the Turkish arms had
led Cardinal Cusa to write an elaborate examination of the Koran, from which
Pius II borrowed many of his theological arguments. His letter dwelt first upon
the horrors of war, and his desire to avert them; he does not hate the Sultan,
though his foe, but rather wishes him well. The conquest of Europe is not
like that of Asia; it is impossible to the Turkish forces; yet Mahomet may
obtain all the glory that he wishes without bloodshed by means simply of the
little water needed for baptism. If he accepted that the Pope would recognize
him as Emperor of Asia and of Greece; what he now possessed by violence would
become lawfully his: by this means, and by this only, might the golden age be
brought back to the world. The Sultan might object that the Turks would refuse
to follow him if he abandoned his religion. The Pope reassured him by the
examples of Clovis and Constantine. How great is the glory that he might so
attain! All literature, Latin, Greek, and Barbarian alike, would extol his
name. More than this, he would gain the heavenly promise, and would be able to
add to the virtues of a philosopher the three theological virtues of faith,
hope, and charity, without which no man can be perfect. The Pope then unfolded
to him the Christian scheme, and discussed the points in which it differs from
the Koran; he expatiated on the superiority of the law of Christ over that of
Mahomet, and again exhorted the Sultan to consult his own interests, both here
and hereafter, by accepting Christian baptism.
The letter forms a bulky pamphlet, and is written with
great spirit and clearness: it abounds in historical allusions and quotations
from classical poets and philosophers. It is to be regretted that we have no
answer from the Sultan, nor do we read that any was returned. Still the Pope's
letter was widely read in Europe, and produced a great effect on the
imagination of Christendom. From this time forward forgeries of a similar
correspondence formed part of the vast store of literature which gathered round
the Turkish war.
While Europe was engaged in quarrelling, and the Pope
was busy writing, the Turks pursued their conquests. The Morea fell into their
hands, as did Rhodes, Cyprus, Lesbos, and the chief islands of the Aegean;
Scanderbeg, in Albania, was driven to make peace, and Bosnia fell before the
Turks’ arms. Pius II was stirred to action, and in March, 1462, he summoned six
Cardinals to a private meeting, and to them unfolded his schemes.
“You think, perhaps, my brothers”, he said, “as
all the world does, that we think nought of the general interest, because since
our departure from Mantua we have made no preparations, and uttered no words
about the crusade, though day by day the foe presses nearer. We have, indeed,
been silent, and have done nothing; but it was through lack of power, not
through lack of will. We have often thought what could be done for Christendom.
We have passed many sleepless nights, tossing from side to side, and were
ashamed of our inaction. Our bosom swelled, our old blood boiled. To proclaim
war by ourselves is useless, for the Holy See cannot, with its own resources,
wage a war against the Turk; we need the help of the princes of Christendom. We
considered all possible means to obtain this, but none seemed fitting. If we
think of a congress, the experience of Mantua shows that it is vain. If we send
legates, they are mocked. If we impose tithes on the clergy, an appeal is made
to a future Council. If we promulgate indulgences, we are accused of avarice;
everyone thinks that it is done to scrape up money; no one believes our words.
Like bankrupt merchants, we have lost all credit. Whatever we do is construed
for the worse; every one measures our character by his own. We turn our mind’s
eye everywhere, and find nothing firm. Meditating day and night, we have hit
upon one remedy, perhaps the only one, certainly the most efficacious”.
Then the Pope went on to unfold his scheme. Philip of
Burgundy had vowed to go on the crusade if some other prince did so; he was
bound by a solemn oath, which he would not venture to set aside. Old as he was,
the Pope would offer to set out himself; Philip could not refuse to accompany
one who was both Pope and King,—one who was greater than King or Emperor. If
Burgundy set out, France would, for very shame, send some forces, and so would
the other powers of Europe. It was, however, useless to propose this till
Venice would provide a fleet. Venice must first be sounded, then France and
Burgundy. When they agreed the Pope would proclaim a European truce for five
years, call on the clergy for subsidies, under pain of excommunication, and by
indulgences raise money from the laity.
“The noise of our plan”, he added, “will come
like a crash of thunder, and rouse the minds of the faithful to the defense of
their religion”.
The Cardinals heard the Pope’s plan with amazement, and
asked for some days to deliberate. All the difficulties that they could raise
were foreseen and answered by the Pope. They at length pronounced the scheme
worthy of the Vicar of Christ, and Pius II wrote at once to the Doge of Venice
binding him to secrecy for the present. The Bishop of Ferrara was at the same
time sent to Louis XI of France. But Louis was not on such terms with the Pope
as to look on his proposals with a friendly eye He regarded them as a blind to
draw his attention from the affairs of Naples; and the only answer that he
would vouchsafe was, that he purposed sending an envoy to the Pope who would
treat about Naples and the crusade together. Meanwhile, he added, he had
on hand the business of restoring to his throne Henry VI of England, which he
hoped to do within a year. “I will give you four years more for that”, said the
legate as he took his leave.
On arriving at Brussels the Bishop of Ferrara found
Philip of Burgundy dangerously ill of a fever. Philip had shown great
lukewarmness at Mantua, and had been busied since then in attempting to
consolidate the Burgundian dominions by obtaining from the Emperor the title of
King, and so reviving the old middle kingdom of Lotharingia. But illness
awoke again the old man’s zeal for the holy cause. The Bishop of Ferrara was
admitted to an audience of the Duke, who was in bed. When he heard the Pope’s
letter he exclaimed, “I thought that the fever would conquer and would carry me
off; but you have brought me health by your message. Death seemed to me hard,
because I would leave my father's captivity unavenged on the Turks. Now I will
live to avenge my father and benefit Christendom”. He began at once to arrange
details with his counsellors, and promised to send an envoy to the Pope in
October. Difficulties, however, arose with France. Louis XI summoned the Duke
of Burgundy as his vassal to aid in an expedition against England, and a
rebellion of the Liegois against their Bishop occupied the Duke's attention. As
he recovered his health, the crusade was again forgotten, and a Papal nuncio,
sent in the spring of 1463, to remind the Duke of his promises, found him
engaged in festivals, dances, and sports. His counselors were all opposed to
the crusade as both chimerical and dangerous, and they threw all possible
hindrances in the way of its accomplishment. Suddenly the Duke took ill and
became unconscious; his life was for a time despaired of; but he recovered, and
with his recovery his good intentions returned. The Papal envoy was dismissed
with a new promise that representatives of Burgundy would be at Rome on
August 15.
Perhaps an additional stimulus was given to the
determination of Pius II by a discovery which materially increased the Papal
revenues. An Italian merchant who had been driven from Constantinople by the
Turks, and who had experience of the alum works of Asia Minor, discovered alum
in the barren lulls of Tolfa, not far from Civita Vecchia. At first Pius II was
incredulous; but the discoverer brought workmen from Genoa and established the
truth of his surmise. The alum was speedily worked, and proved to be of
excellent quality. In April, 1463, Pius II informed all the faithful of the
compassion of Heaven in depriving the unbelievers of the revenues which they
obtained from Christians by the sale of alum, which the Holy See was now
prepared to supply; he warned them no longer to buy from the Turks. The
alummines of Tolfa were, indeed, as profitable to the Pope as was the year of
jubilee, and are said to have yielded a revenue of 100,000 ducats.
The first practical step towards opposing the Turks
was the establishment of peace between Frederick III and Matthias of Hungary, a
task which the Pope took earnestly in hand in the spring of 1463. It required
two Papal legates to arrange the terms; but at last peace was made in July.
Matthias was recognized as king, on condition of paying the Emperor 80,000
ducats and submitting to a rectification of frontier; in case Matthias died
childless, Hungary was to go to the Emperor’s second son. When Hungary was thus
freed from internal troubles, Matthias found no further difficulty in making an
alliance with Venice, which had always shown more readiness to help Hungary
than had the Pope. Venice was by this time thoroughly alarmed at the losses
which the progress of the Turk was inflicting on her commerce, and on September
12 signed an alliance with Hungary for war against the Turks. Meanwhile the
Burgundian envoys found Pius II at Tivoli, and brought him the assurance of
their master’s zeal. The Pope set out for Rome, where he arrived on September
9, ready to welcome the Italian envoys whom he had summoned to consultation.
The Congress at Rome was not so full as had been the Congress of Mantua; but it
was more in earnest. The Bishop of Tournay, on the part of the Duke of
Burgundy, promised 6000 men in the spring; the Duke himself would lead them if
his health allowed. Pius II then asked the Italian envoys for money, according
to the Mantuan decree; but all, save Venice, declared that they had no powers
for the purpose, and must consult their States. The Florentine envoy privately
approached the Pope and warned him that this war would be for the sole benefit
of Venice, which, if the Turks were overcome, would turn its hand to the
subjugation of Italy; it would be wise to leave the Venetians and the Turks to
weaken one another. Pius II rejected this policy as shortsighted and unworthy
of a Christian people, and the envoy referred the Pope's opinion to the
Florentine Government.
While awaiting the return of the Italian envoys, Pius
II judged it well to arrange matters with the Cardinals. He knew that his plan
was opposed by the French party in the College, and was not popular with those
who preferred a quiet life at Rome to a dangerous expedition abroad. Calling a
consistory, the Pope addressed the Cardinals. For six years, he said, he had
sat on the Papal seat, and the policy which by the advice of the Cardinals he
had initiated at Mantua was yet unfulfilled: he had been most desirous to carry
it out, but troubles at home prevented him. “We were bound either to give up
Rome or fight against the French, who, despising our commands, contrary to
all law occupied the kingdom of Naples and attacked our vassals. We fought for
Christ when we defended Ferrante; we warred against the Turks when we smote the
lands of Malatesta. At last victory has crowned the Papal arms, and Italy is at
peace; at last the time has come for action. But what, it will be asked, can
you do in war: an old man, a priest, a martyr to a thousand ailments? What use
are the Cardinals in a camp? They spent their youth in pleasure; will you
starve their old age with war? Better stay at home with your Cardinals, and
send your fleet and your money to the Hungarians. It would be sound advice if
we had any money; but our treasury is exhausted. Our revenues never exceed
300,000 ducats, and half of that sum is required for the necessary expenses of
the Papal rule. The Turkish war would need 1,000,000 ducats yearly for three 3
years at least. You will say: If so much is required for the war, what hopes
have you of obtaining it before you start? We answer: The war is necessary: if
we do not undertake it we should be undeservedly infamous. Money is hard to
raise, for the people do not trust us. They say that we live in pleasure, amass
money, follow our ambition, have fatter mules and better horses than other
folk, make broad the hems of our garments, walk through the city with cheeks
puffed out beneath a red hat, keep dogs for hunting, give much to actors and
parasites, nothing for the defense of the faith. These charges are not
altogether false; there are many among the Cardinals and other members of the
Curia of whom this is true. There is too much pride and luxury in the Curia; so
that when we speak the truth to the people we are so hated that we are not
heard. What, then, is to be done? Abstinence, chastity, zeal for the faith,
religious fervor, the desire for martyrdom, these made the Roman Church
preeminent over the world. We must imitate our predecessors, and show that we
are willing to sacrifice our lives for the preservation of the flock committed
to our charge. Our purpose is to go to war against the Turks, and invite the
princes of Christendom to follow. Perchance, when they see their master, the
Vicar of Jesus Christ, though old and Sick, advancing to the war, they will
feel ashamed to stay at home. If this way does not rouse Christians to arms, we
know no other. We know that we are going to meet certain death, but that does
not deter us. We commit all to God, and will die happy if we end our days in
His service. You, too, who advised us to begin the war against the Turks,
cannot remain at home at ease. The members must follow their head; and what we
do is done of necessity. We do not go to fight; but will imitate Moses, who,
when Israel fought against Amalek, prayed on the mountain. We will stand on our
ship’s prow, or on some hilltop, and having before our eyes the holy Eucharist,
will ask from Jesus Christ safety and victory for our soldiers in the battle.
God will not despise a contrite heart. You will be with us, and will join your
prayers with ours; the old only will be left behind”.
Then the Pope explained that he would leave in Rome
two legates, one for temporal and the other for spiritual affairs, and would make
provisions for the discharge of the ordinary business of the Curia. The nephew
Antonio, with 3000 horse and 2000 foot, would provide for the safety of the
States of the Church.
The Pope’s voice was often broken by tears, in which
the Cardinals also joined. When called upon to give their opinions, no one save
the Cardinal of Arras spoke very decidedly against the scheme. Though the
French party was opposed to it, even Estouteville did not raise any insuperable
objections. Cardinal Erolo, though he was one of the six whom the Pope had
first consulted, raised some objections, “to show himself cleverer than anyone
else”, says the Pope. The objections were, however, overcome, except in the
case of the Cardinal of Arras, who left Rome and returned to France.
The Italian envoy’s soon returned with their
answers to the Pope’s request for money. Ferrante of Naples, the Duke of Milan,
the Marquis of Modena, the Marquis of Mantua, the cities of Bologna and Lucca,
all assented. Some states, however, held aloof. Genoa was too busy with her own
factions to pay any heed to general matters; the Duke of Savoy and the Marquis
of Monteferrate also sent no representatives. The Florentines refused to take
any part till they had had time to withdraw their merchants from Constantinople.
The Sienese, to the indignation of the Pope, pleaded poverty, and offered the
paltry sum of 3000 ducats, which they afterwards increased to 10,000.
Pius II wrote most pressingly to the Duke of Milan,
urging him to come in person and assume the command of the Papal forces. The
letter of the Pope was a masterpiece of persuasive eloquence; the answer of the
Duke was similarly a masterpiece of courteous prevarication. He deplored the
woes of Christendom, professed his firm resolve to war against the Turk, his
confidence in the Pope, and his desire to do everything that he required; but
he added that his health was not yet restored, that the time allowed for
preparation was not quite adequate, that the undertaking was difficult, and
needed careful measures. The Pope understood that he was not coming in person,
and soon learned that 3000 men was all the contingent which he proposed to
send.
On October 22 was held a public consistory, in which
was read the Pope's Bull proclaiming a crusade. Pius II recounted all his
efforts for the holy cause, proclaimed his zeal, combated objections, called on
all to help, and promised indulgences to those who either came in person or
contributed their substance. The Bull took two hours to read, and the Pope was
gratified with the effect which it produced. The sweetness of the composition,
the novelty of the thing itself, and the readiness of the Pope offering his
life for his sheep, drew tears from many bystanders. The Bishop of Tournay, on
behalf of the Burgundians, warmly thanked the Pope for his zeal. But the Romans
were touched by no sentimental enthusiasm for the weal of Christendom; they
only saw that the Pope was going to leave Rome, and they feared that the hope
of their gains was gone. Pius II answered their loud murmurs by the assurance
that the officials of the Curia would be left behind. Then, racked with gout,
till he could scarce restrain himself from showing his anguish, he was carried
to his bed.
A few days before Pius II had signed an alliance with
Venice and Hungary, by which they bound themselves to carry on the war for
three years if necessary, and no one of the contracting powers was to withdraw
without the rest. The Pope promised that, on the arrival of Philip of Burgundy
in Italy, he would set out with him for Greece. Hungary and Venice were already
engaged in warring against the Turk. Matthias invaded Bosnia with some success,
and the Venetians sent a fleet to the Morea which rose against the Turkish
yoke: Lemnos and several islands fell into the hands of the Venetians. Cardinal
Bessarion was sent by the Pope to Venice, and enjoyed a success such as had
never yet befallen him. He was received in state by the Doge on the Bucentaur,
and preached the crusade to a people already convinced. A box was placed in the
Piazza to receive the contributions of the faithful, and was soon found to
contain 700,000 ducats. Pius II wrote to the Doge, Cristoforo Moro, urging him
to come in person to the war, and join the Pope and Philip of Burgundy; if he
appeared in ducal array on board the Bucentaur, not Greece only but Asia and
all the East would be terrified.
“We shall be three old men”, he says, “and God
rejoices in trinity. Our trinity will be aided by the Trinity of Heaven, and
our foes will be trampled under our feet”.
The Great Council of Venice voted almost unanimously
that the Doge should go; when the Doge, a few days afterwards, tried to excuse
himself on the ground of age and incapacity before the Collegio, he was told by
one of the Council, “If your highness will not go of goodwill, we will make you
go by force, since the honor and welfare of this land is dearer to us than your
person”. The Doge answered that if the land wished it he was content.
Before the end of the year news came that the Turks
had forced the wall which guarded the entrance to the Peloponnesus, and had
driven out the Venetians. This news did not affect the zeal of Venice, which
prepared at once to send out reinforcements; and it gave Philip of Burgundy an
opportunity to write to the Pope and urge a delay in the expedition to enable
Venice to recover her strength. Pius II refused to accede to this request; he
had written, he said, throughout Europe, and must not now delay. In truth, the
Pope's legates were busy in almost every land : everywhere they were received
with enthusiasm by the people, everywhere they received from the princes fair
words enough, but no definite promises of help.
It soon became obvious that the political intrigues of
Europe were throwing hindrances in the way even of the accomplishment of such
promises as the Pope had received. First of all, Italy received a shock which
deeply stirred men's minds, by the news that Louis XI of France had made an
alliance with the Duke of Milan, and had invested him with Genoa and Savona. We
have seen that Florence looked with jealous eyes on the crusading project as
likely to increase the power of Venice; she entered into a close alliance with
Milan for their mutual protection, and did her utmost to reconcile Francesco
Sforza with Louis’s XI of France. Louis XI was embarrassed with the possession
of Savona, in which the French garrison was entirely useless since the loss of
Genoa to the French. He was not indisposed to rid himself of an encumbrance,
and in doing so to gain an ally in North Italy. The Neapolitan war had taught
him the power of Sforza, and Louis XI had a genuine admiration for a man whose
success had been so brilliant. In February, 1464, Savona was given up to the
Milanese, and the Italian Powers were astonished by a notification from Louis
XI that he had made over to the Duke of Milan his rights over Genoa.
This news filled Italy with alarm. It was clearly a
blow aimed by Florence and Milan against Venice. The Duke of Modena feared this
increase of the power of Milan; Lucca and Siena were afraid of the designs of
Florence; Ferrante of Naples thought himself betrayed to the French by his
former ally. Sforza tried to restore confidence by protesting that he had
entered into no engagements which could disturb the peace of Italy; by taking
Genoa into his power he had removed the only ground for French interference in
Italian affairs. The Archbishop of Genoa, Paolo Fregoso, who was at the head of
the government of the city, clamored for help against Sforza; but Pus II
advised him to submit rather than hinder the war against the Turks. The
archbishop fled, and Sforza advanced against the city. It was at all events
clear that neither Milan nor Genoa would send any forces to the crusade.
From Burgundy also the Pope received doubtful news. Duke
Philip was not on good terms with his son Charles, who had left his court and
gone to Holland. If Philip went to the Turkish war, Charles would naturally be
regent during his absence, and this prospect was very distasteful to a strong
party headed by the powerful family of the Croy. They strove to increase the
feud between the Duke and his son so as to keep Philip at home. Philip,
however, was resolute. Charles returned, and was reconciled to his father. Next
the Croy represented to the Duke the dangers which might befall his land if he
departed before the war between France and England was at an end; they besought
him to remain, at least till a truce was arranged. Louis XI joined his
entreaties to the same purpose; if a truce were made with England, France could
join in the crusade with Burgundy. The Duke wavered, and asked the Pope to
defer the expedition for the purpose of this pacification. Pius II knew that
delay meant entire failure, and refused. Then the Croy managed to bring about
an interview between Louis XI and the Duke at Lille in February, 1464. Louis XI
repeated his desire that the Duke should stay till France was at peace with
England: neither Venice nor the Pope was ready; in a year's time he would send
10,000 men to the Turkish war. When the Duke pleaded his promise, Louis XI
ordered him as his vassal to remain at home, and handed him a written
injunction to obey. The Duke gave way, and announced to his people the King's
commands: next year he would himself go against the Turk; meanwhile, not to
disappoint the Pope, he would send his illegitimate son, the Bastard of
Burgundy, With 2000 men. The tower, says Pius II, fell at last before the
repeated strokes of the battering-ram, and the Croy triumphed.
Pius II had left Rome in February to recruit his
health at the baths of Petrioli, and stayed at Siena during the month of March.
On Thursday in Holy Week, the day on which excommunications were published, the
Pope anathematized all heretics, and all, even kings, who strove to hinder the
crusade. The anathema was aimed at those who were shaking the constancy of the
Duke of Burgundy; but Pius II soon found that it had been delivered too late.
On Good Friday, March 30, he received the letter of the Duke of Burgundy,
“worthy”, he says, “of being read on the day of the Lord’s Passion”. Yet
Pius II was not entirely unprepared for the blow; he had already consulted with
eight Cardinals, who were present, what course he should adopt in case Philip
refused to go. They were unanimous in their opinion that, though the Pope was
in that case released from his engagement, he should solemnly renew it. This
was also his opinion; and he communicated his resolution as a decree to the
absent Cardinals, who murmured at his obstinacy.
Pius II was resolute in his determination in spite of
all hindrances. Yet we cannot assign this resolution solely to zeal for the
good of Christendom; there was mixed with it also a motive of utility for the
interests of the Papacy. There was still a power in Europe which stood opposed
to the Pope, and whose activity threatened danger. George of Bohemia was a
formidable foe, and had devised a scheme which might lead to serious results if
it were not baffled. Pius II had brought to an issue the question of the
relations between Bohemia and the Holy See. George must either alienate the
majority of his people by submitting to the Pope’s demands, or must expose
himself, by refusing, to the hostility of a determined minority who looked for
help outside Bohemia. The aim of George was to pacify Bohemia on the basis of
toleration offered by the Compacts, and weld it into a powerful kingdom. The
Pope was keenly alive to the danger which might ensue if a power at variance
with the authority of the Church became predominant in Germany. Pius II and George
were equally convinced of the magnitude of the issue at stake. Each was equally
resolute and equally far-seeing; but the Pope had the advantage of being able
to choose his time for the attack. George met it by attempting to inaugurate a
new policy in European affairs. He had first hoped to cope with the Papacy by
possessing himself of the Empire; when that failed, he stayed the Pope’s
hand by binding the Emperor to his cause by conferring benefits upon him. This
could only be a temporary check; he tried to find a permanent one in the
establishment of a confederation of European States against the Papal
aggression. According to his scheme the States of Christendom were to take back
again into their hands the supremacy in matters temporal and spiritual which
they had been content to delegate to the Emperor and the Pope; a Council of
European States was to regulate the international relations of Christendom.
The agent of George in this matter was Anton Marini, a
knight of Grenoble, who in August, 1462, proposed to Venice a league between
France, Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, Burgundy and Saxony, for war against the
Turk. Venice replied that notwithstanding Marini’s arguments the Pope’s
cooperation was necessary; for the presence of the head of Christendom was of
great weight in such a plan. Louis XI, in his anger against the Pope, listened
to Marini’s proposals, and sent him back to Venice with an expression
of his readiness to join such a league. Venice, now engaged in war against
the Turks, was ready to accept help from any side; and the league of the Pope
with Venice and Hungary was no doubt hastened by a desire to cut away the
ground from Marini’s feet. The crusade of the Pope was in part an appeal to the
sympathies of Europe to defeat the machinations of the Bohemian King. He could
not shrink from it without giving a dangerous handle to his foe. In March,
1464, Marini was at the Court of Hungary, offering Matthias a league against
the Turks and a Council of European Powers to promote the peace and welfare of
Christendom; in June he was at the Court of Louis XI.
Pius II, however, though determined to proceed on his
expedition, had neither the physical vigor nor the qualities requisite for the
organization of such a scheme. Money came in slowly from Italy, and the Burgundian
envoys at Rome saw little to impress them with a sense of military stir; they
reported that it was the poorest preparation they had ever seen, and that two
galleys only were ready. The Pope vaguely trusted that soldiers would flock
from different parts of Europe, prepared to serve for at least six months at
their own expense, and that the Venetians would give them convoys. The crusade
was preached with zeal throughout Europe by the friars; but they were scarcely
to be trusted to arrange in an intelligible shape definite instructions to the
crusaders. Many flocked to Venice before the time, and met only with scoffs
when they had not money to pay their passage. The clear-sighted Venetians did
not want enthusiasm but capacity on the part of those engaged in the
enterprise. Their cruelty was published throughout Europe; but wiser heads
thought that they had exercised a justifiable discretion. Many crusaders
returned with disappointed hopes; many died of hunger and pestilence; many came
to Rome or Ancona, and found no signs of preparation.
Pius II returned to Rome early in May to prepare for
his departure. Before going he aimed a blow at George of Bohemia, whom, in a
consistory on June 6, he cited to appear in Rome within 180 days to answer to
the many charges against him. Pacific as he might now feel towards other
Powers, Pius II could make no truce with Bohemia. The beginning of his crusade
was to him an earnest of his triumph over the heretical king. The time had come
to lay the axe to the root of the tree that had threatened to overshadow the
Holy See with its branches.
On June 18 he took the cross in S. Peter's, and after
repeating his conviction of the necessity of his undertaking and deploring the
hindrances which it had suffered, he prayed before the high altar and then set
out in his litter accompanied by all the prelates. At Ponte Molle he took leave
of them, and attended by the Cardinal of Pavia, the Bishop of Torcello,
Tiferno, and Camertino, his secretary Goro Lolli, and his nephew Andrea, embarked
on a barge on the Tiber. This method of conveyance was chosen to spare the Pope
the fatigue of a land journey; he was already suffering from a slight fever,
but forbade his physicians to mention it. The first night was spent by the Pope
on the barge, as he was too weary to quit it. Navigation was difficult up the
stream, and on the second night he had only advanced to Fiano. On the third day
the Pope was grievously distressed by an accident which befell one of the
rowers, who fell into the river and was drowned before his eyes. Pius II lay
silent and with tears prayed for his soul. Cardinal Carvajal came to him from
Rome with the news that a crowd of crusaders were assembled at Ancona vainly
seeking for means of transport; the authorities of the city were afraid of a
tumult and besought the Pope to take means to prevent it. Pius II besought
Carvajal in spite of his seventy years to undertake this difficult task, and
the brave old man, already broken by his many labors, answered, 'My motto is,
Go and I go: I cannot refuse to Christ's service the end of my life'. Next morning
he set off for Ancona.
The Pope proceeded up the Tiber as far as Otricoli,
whence he was carried in a litter by easy stages to Spoleto. There the Cardinal
of Pavia was seized with a fever and had to be left behind. Already the Pope
was distressed by the sight of crusaders returning from Ancona; to hide from
his eyes this melancholy sight, the physicians pretended that the wind was
injurious to him and closed the curtains of his litter. Slowly he proceeded
under the blazing heat of an Italian summer through Foligno, Assssi, and
Fahriano, across the Apennines to Loreto; there he offered a golden cup and
bowl to the Virgin, whose cottage had been borne by angels from Bethlehem to
its resting place on a hill by the Adriatic. Finally on July 18 he entered
Ancona and took up his abode n the Bishop's palace, on the hill by the Church
of S. Ciriaco.
The first question was how to deal with the crowd of
crusaders who disturbed the peace of the citizens of Ancona. Pius II had only
asked for such as would and the serve for six months at their own cost; he
found a miserable herd expecting him to supply them with pay and food. As this
was impossible, the Pope rewarded their zeal by a plenary indulgence; and they
sold their arms as a means of obtaining money to take them to their homes.
Those who could afford to do so remained in expectation of the Venetian
ships which were to give them transport. Day by day they waited; but the ships
delayed. At last the crusaders gradually dispersed, so that when the ships came
in sight there were no soldiers to embark. The Pope meanwhile lay helpless and
saw his hopes fade away. Messengers moreover arrived from Ragusa that the
Turkish army had advanced to the siege and demanded the immediate surrender of
its vessels. Pius II called Carvajal to counsel.
“What must be done”, he asked, “if Ragusa is
besieged?”
“I will go tonight”, answered the intrepid old
man, “with the two galleys that are in the harbor and will either break
the siege or give spirit to the disconsolate citizens”
“What hinders me from sailing with you?” said the
Pope, “the knowledge of my presence will either drive away the Turks or
will incite Christendom to follow with help”
Cardinal Ammannati, who had recovered from his fever
and had followed the Pope, cried out against this plan. “I, miserable”, he
says, “savouring of the flesh rather than of the spirit, dissuaded him,
not because I did not think that what he proposed would succeed, but because I saw
that to his body wasted with fever the voyage would bring the end”.
Yet the Pope remained firm in his intentions; and
preparations were being made, when in four days the news was brought that
the Turks had retired from Ragusa.
Pius II was rapidly sinking; the fever raged fiercely
and the burning heat of the weather denied him any relief. The physicians said
that he had but a few 1days to live, when at last on the morning of August 12
the Venetian fleet was seen in the offing. The Pope roused himself and ordered
his galleys to advance to meet them. He was carried with difficulty to the
window of his chamber whence he could see the stately entry of the fleet into
the harbor. Next day he was too ill to receive a visit from the Doge. The day
after was the eve of the Assumption of the Virgin, when it was customary for
the Pope to appear at Vespers. He could not go, but sent the Cardinals and
afterwards summoned them to his bed. He told them that his last hour was at
hand; he died in the faith of Christ and committed to their hands the work
which he had begun. He admonished them to behave worthily of their high
calling, and asked forgiveness if he had offended them in aught. Finally he
commended to their good offices his household and his relatives. The Cardinals
wept, and Bessarion as the spokesman said a few farewell words and begged for
his blessing. All kissed his hand in tears, and he blessed them saying: “May
the God of pity pardon you and confirm a right spirit within you!”. Then he
received the sacrament, and arranged to receive it again next morning from the
hands of Cardinal Ammannati in special honor of the Virgin. But as the sun went
down Pius II also began to sink. He received extreme unction and was left alone
with Cardinal Ammannati, Goro Lolli, and his nephew, Andrea. He talked a little
with Ammannati and again commended his nephews to his care. Ammannati asked him
if he wished to be buried at Rome. “Who will take care of that?”, he
answered with tears. When Ammannati undertook to do so he seemed relieved.
Again he beckoned Ammannati to his bedside. “Pray for me, my son”, he
said, “for I am a sinner”. Then after a pause he added, “Bid my
brethren continue this holy expedition, and help it all you can; woe to you if
you desert God’s work”. Ammannati could not speak for tears; the Pope put
hisarm round his neck, and said, “Do good, my son, and pray to God for me”.
They were the last words he spoke. He listened to the prayers that were being
read till his spirit passed away.
Next day the corpse of Pius II was borne into the
cathedral, and the funeral mass was said. When the Cardinals assembled in the
palace, and the Doge of Venice, in a long speech, bewailed the Pope’s
death, praised his zeal and besought the Cardinals to elect a worthy successor.
The Cardinals decided to show their good intentions by giving over to the Doge
the Papal galleys which lay in the harbor, on condition that they should be
restored to the new Pope if he purposed undertaking the expedition in person.
The money which Pius II left behind, 48,000 ducats,
was sent by them to Matthias of Hungary. Next day, August 16, the Doge sailed
back to Venice, and the crusade of Pius II was at an end. The body of the Pope
was taken to Rome, and buried in S. Peter's, in the chapel of S. Andrea; thence
it was transferred, when S. Peter’s was restored by Paul V, in 1614, to the
Church of S. Andrea della Valle, where a monument was erected in his honor.
Pius II was lucky in the moment of his death. He left
behind him the touching memory of an old man who died in the attempt to do his
duty. When the princes of Europe were heedless of the welfare of Christendom,
the dying Pope painfully dragged his feeble body to martyrdom for the common
weal. It was well that he died when he did; for his expedition had no elements
of success, and was already doomed to failure. He died before its failure
had become too manifest, before an inevitable retreat exposed to ridicule the
Papal prestige. He died in time to bequeath to Christendom the memory of the
greatness of his undertaking, unblurred by any feeling of its hopelessness. The
feeling of his contemporaries is shown by a corn struck in his honor, which
bore the impress of a pelican feeding its young with its own blood; underneath
was the inscription—
“Like this bird I feed my children with my heart’s blood”.
Yet even at the last there were many who were
incredulous of the Pope's intentions. It was the doom of Pius II, even on his
deathbed, to be distrusted by those who could not forget his previous career,
who sought in all he did for some motive of self-interest or vain display. The
Venetians did not think that he was in earnest. The Doge, on his arrival at
Ancona, regarded the Pope's illness as a feint, and sent his own physician to
see if it was real. He was of opinion that his arrival was a disappointment to
the Pope, who never intended to go on the expedition, and hoped to escape by
throwing the blame on Venice. Philip was still more ill-natured. He declared
that Pius II had gone to Ancona to seize the citadel, and hand over the town to
his nephew Andrea; then he intended to sail to Ragusa and await quietly the
result of the Hungarian arms; if they were defeated he would at once retreat,
if they succeeded he would go to Constantinople and seize it for a Piccolomini.
The Milanese envoy did not credit the Pope with any loftier pretensions; he
reported to Sforza that, if Pius II had lived, he meant to sail to Brindisi and
stay there during the winter, return to Rome in the spring, and throw the blame
of failure on the lukewarmness of the princes of Christendom. A Brescian
chronicler imputes to him another design: he went to Ancona without any
intention of proceeding farther, simply in consequence of a secret
understanding with Florence and Milan for the purpose of seizing Ancona, and
handing it over to the Florentine republic. Italy was so accustomed to look
upon Pius II as an astute diplomatist that she could not credit him with purely
disinterested motives.
It is the fate of a character like Pius II to lend
itself to different interpretations, and to remain enigmatical. One who has
changed his opinions is always liable to the charge of insincerity, which comes
with double force when a policy of easy pliancy raises him to a lofty position.
Such a judgment, however, is generally crude, and misses the real elements of
character. The distinguishing feature of Pius II was his readiness to learn
from events. He equipped himself with the panoply of the new learning, and went
forth as a knight errant in quest of adventures. He had no prepossessions, no
prejudices, no definite opinions. His object was to make the most of life, to
learn from its experience, to win what it had to give, to reap its successes,
to adapt himself to its requirements. Aeneas Sylvius was not an adventurer in
the sense that he intended to prey upon the world; he was an explorer who set
out bravely upon the stormy sea of life, resolved to make his voyage as
prosperous as might be. He was ready to run before the wind, to make for any
haven which he could reach with sails flying. His skill consisted in seeing how
the wind was likely to blow, and steering his course accordingly. He cannot
claim the praise of high resolve, of steady purpose, of great design, or
laborious achievement. He was not a man to mold the world; but he frankly
offered himself for the world to mold. He was not heroic; but he was not base.
He cannot fairly be accused of self-seeking, for self was in him the product of
the exigencies amongst which his lot was cast. He was content to do the thing
which needed to be done, and to reap the fruits of his foresight in being the
first to perceive its necessity.
Many, we might say the majority, of politicians have
little better claims to respect than Pius II; but no man who rose to such
distinction has left behind him so complete a record of his career. It is hard
that Pius II should be treated with contempt because he was a man of letters as
well as a man of action, because he has frankly told us his impressions of
events as they arose. We know his inconsistencies chiefly from his own
confessions, while for those who have been more reserved about themselves we
are at liberty to frame an imaginary consistency. The very frankness of Pius II
is a proof of his sincerity: he did not wish to make himself out to be nobler
than he was. The record of his soul's progress might contain pages which he
wished to forget; but he left all to the judgment of posterity, with the
consciousness that in the end the verdict formed on the fullest knowledge would
be the truest and most lenient. He who fixes his attention upon a few passages
of the life of Pius II tends to judge him with severity; he who follows him
through his whole career forgives him much, and recognizes a steady growth in
greatness and nobility. Weakness and strength are strangely blended; vanity and
littleness mix with high purpose and far-reaching plans; but before the eyes of
Pius II there floated fitfully a loftier ideal of Christendom than was visible
to any of his contemporaries, and juster views than he was enabled to express
in action.
It was the fate of Pius II to reap the fruit of
his early inconsistencies. In 1440, while secretary of Felix V, he wrote some
dialogues in favor of the conciliar system, which he sent to the University of
Koln. During his Pontificate, a quarrel arose between the burghers of Liege and
their bishop; the bishop was upheld by the Pope, the burghers applied to the
University of Koln, which used the authority of Aeneas Sylvius for an appeal to
a better-instructed Pope. This drew from Pius II a Bull addressed to the
University, dated April 26, 1463, in which he gives his own defense of
his early life. He erred, he says, “but what mortal does not err? Who is
wise save the good; who is good save God alone? We walked in darkness; we erred
not to ourselves alone but drew others with us; as blind leaders of the blind,
we fell with them into the ditch. Our writings may have deceived many, whose
blood of God require at our hands, we can only answer that as men we sinned,
and our hope is placed in God’s mercy only. Some would rather die than
confess their error. Some go on in their error, that they may keep the
reputation of constancy, and act with pride, wishing to seem gods rather than
men, as did Hus and Jerome, who were burned at Constance. We are men, and
confess that as men we sinned; not, however, like Arius and Nestorius, who
deliberately chose the way that was condemned; we sinned like Paul, and
ignorantly persecuted the Church and the Holy See. We are ashamed of our error,
we repent of our writings and our deeds; but we did more hurt by writing than
by deeds. What are we to do? The word once written and sent forth speeds on
irrevocable; our writings are not now in our power, they have fallen into many
hands and are generally read. Would that they were in obscurity, lest they
cause scandal in the future, lest men say, He who wrote this sat at length
in S. Peter’s seat. We fear lest the words of Aeneas be counted those of Pius”.
To avoid this, the Pope goes on to say, he will
imitate the example of S. Augustine, and make full confession of his
short-comings. He professes his belief in the commission given by Christ
to S. Peter, in the supremacy of S. Peter's successors over the Universal
Church. “If you find anything contrary to this doctrine either in our
Dialogues, or in our Letters, or in our other works (for we wrote much in our
youth), cast it forth and contemn it. Follow what we now say: believe the old
man rather than the youth; esteem not the layman higher than the Pope; reject
Aeneas, accept Pius; the Gentile name was given us by our parents at our birth,
the Christian name we took on our Pontificate. Perhaps some may say that our
opinion came to us with the Papacy, that our views were changed by our dignity.
It was not so; far otherwise”.
Pius II goes on to plead his youth and inexperience
when first he went to Basel. Great names supported the Council, and he heard
nothing save abuse of Eugenius IV. The Pope himself at last recognized the
Council, and when he attempted to transfer it the claims of the Council were
zealously put forward. “We taught, therefore, what we heard, and after some
years, thinking we were somebody, we exclaimed with Juvenal—
“Still shall I hear and never quit the score?”
We were ashamed always to be a pupil; we began to
talk, and occupy the teacher's place; we wrote letters and pamphlets, and, like
all poets, loved our own children and were pleased with the applause they won.
When Cesarini and others left Basel, we believed that they acted through fear
of losing their temporalities; as we had none to lose, we boldly stayed, and on
the deposition of Eugenius IV accepted Felix as the true Vicar of Christ. But
when Frederick, the future Emperor, came to Basel and refused to treat Felix as
Pope, then first we began to think it possible that we were in error. As we
would not willingly err, we accepted his invitation to join his household, and
went over to the neutral side that we might learn the truth. At the Court of
Frederick we discovered the falsity of much that had been said against
Eugenius. In the Diets of Germany we heard both sides, and the darkness at last
fell from our eyes; we recognized our error, we went to Rome, cast off the
doctrines of Basel, submitted to Eugenius, and were reconciled to the Roman
Church. Not till after that did we assume the priesthood. Such was our
conversion, in which Thomas of Sarzana, afterwards Pope Nicolas V, had the
chief share”.
Pius II is frank enough in his confession, and
probably believed that he was actually frank. He might phrase it as he chose,
but men credited him solely with a capacity for floating with the stream. His
keen susceptibility to outward circumstances and impressions was the secret of
his greatness, and was at the same time the source of his weakness. It brought
him to the highest earthly dignity; but it robbed him of the strength to secure
the lasting fame that his great gifts might otherwise have deserved. He aspired
as Pope to be the leader of Christendom; but he had not the moral position to
inspire the confidence necessary for this task. His equivocal past rose up
against him at every turn, and the mental habits of his early life prevented
him from rising to the greatness after which he longed. He could not resist the
temptation of grasping the advantage which he saw to be immediately attainable.
Though he saw clearly and declared resolutely that the expulsion of the
Turks from Europe was the first duty of Christendom, he had not sufficient
self-restraint to devote himself with singleness of purpose to the task which
he recognized as supreme.
The conquest of the States of the Church, the
aggrandizement of the Piccolomini, the restoration of the Papal prestige, the
abolition of the last spark of the conciliar spirit—these he pursued when a
tempting opportunity offered, and did not trust that if he was faithful to his
first great duty all else would follow unsought. To him and to Nicolas V alike
culture gave largeness of mind, and set a lofty imaginative ideal. But in Nicolas
V the ideal subordinated to itself the strong practical sense which he
possessed: he swept away all obstacles from his path, and devoted himself with
unceasing energy to the one object that he had in view. In Pius II practical
capacity was led away into any field which offered a tempting opportunity for
its display; the imaginative ideal remained imaginative to the last. Pius II's
energies were expended on a number of small matters in which success was
possible at the time but little result remained for the future. He grew
conscious that fame was slipping away from his grasp, and rallied his dying
force to give a faint expression to the aspirations which he really felt, but
was not strong enough to turn to shape.
Those who saw Pius II close at hand were impressed by
his geniality, his mental quickness, and his unceasing energy in spite of
bodily infirmities. Platina has left us a finished picture of the master whom
he respected above all others whom he served.
“Pius II”, he says, “was a man of undoubted
courage and remarkable foresight, born not for ease and idleness, but for
conversance with great affairs. He so apportioned his time that he could not be
accused of slothfulness. He rose with the dawn, and after divine service at
once engaged in public business, then he was carried through the gardens for a
little relaxation before breakfast. He was moderate in his use of food, and did
not care for delicacies: he was very sparing of wine, which he drank greatly
diluted. After breakfast he would talk for half an hour with his attendants,
then enter his chamber for rest and devotion: after that he would read or write
as long as his public duties permitted. After dinner he did the same, and read
or dictated till late at night, lying in his bed; he never slept more than five
or six hours. In appearance he was below middle height, slender in his youth,
but gaining flesh in old age. His eyes were cheerful, but kindled easily with
anger; his head was prematurely bald. His face was pallid, and fell with the
slightest sign of illness. He was attacked almost every month by stone; he
suffered from gout, so that he had almost lost the use of his legs; he was also
troubled by a cough. So severe were his sufferings that often there seemed
nothing but his voice to tell you that he was alive. He had such command over
himself that, while racked with stone, he would continue a speech without
giving any sign of his pain except by biting his lips. He could endure toil,
hunger, thirst, and heat. He was always easy of access, sparing of words, and
unwilling to refuse a petition. He was quick to anger, but quick to repress it.
He readily pardoned insolence unless it injured the Apostolic seat, whose
dignity he steadfastly upheld. Towards his household he was kind and genial:
those who erred through ignorance or sloth he admonished with fatherly
affection. He never put down those who spoke against him, for he wished all to
speak freely in a free state. When someone complained one day of being
maligned, ‘You will find plenty who abuse me, too’, said the Pope, ‘if you
go into the Campo dei Fiori’. He had no love for luxury, saying that books were
his sapphires and chrysolites. He did not care for grandeur at table, but
preferred to picnic by a fountain or in a wood. When he was in the country he
never dined indoors, save in winter, or when the weather was wet. One day a
shepherd gave him a wooden cup full of milk, and his attendants smiled to see
how dirty it was. ‘It is cleaner’, he said, ‘than the cup of
Artaxerxes: he who is thirsty does not need a glass’. He loved the
country, and inquired about everything he saw, connecting the history with the
place, and expounding it to them around him.
“He was a man true, upright, open, without deceit or
simulation. He was a devout and sincere Christian, frequent in confession and
communion. He despised dreams, portents, and prodigies, and showed no sign of
timidity. He was neither elated in prosperity nor depressed by adversity. ‘Misfortune’, he
used to say, ‘could be cured by wisdom, if it were applied in time’. He
was a master of proverbs, of which the following may be quoted :—
The nature of God can be better grasped by believing
than by disputing.
Christianity, even if it were not approved by
miracles, ought to be received for its own worth.
A miser cannot be satisfied with money, nor a
wise man with knowledge.
He who knows most is most persecuted by doubt.
Serious matters are settled by arms, not by laws.
A cultivated man submits his own house to his city,
his city to his country, his country to the world, and the world to God.
As rivers flow to the sea, so vices flow to
courts.
A king who trusts no one is useless, and he is no
better who believes all.
He who rules many ought to be ruled by many.
Fit men should be given to dignities, not dignities to
men.
Bad physicians kill the body, unskillful priests the
soul.
Their virtues enrich the clergy, their vices make them
poor.
For weighty causes marriage was taken from the
priests, for weighter it ought to be restored.
He who spoils his son nourishes an enemy.
A miser pleases men in nothing save his death.
These appreciative remarks of Platina show us
that the personality of Pius II was deeply attractive to his associates. But
the character which Platina has sketched is that of a cultivated man of letters,
not of a statesman or a theologian. It indeed, as a man of letters that Pius II
has the deepest claims on our attention. He is one of the earliest
representatives of the man of letters pure and simple; he is, perhaps, the only
man of letters who has been equally eminent in literature and in statesmanship.
His capacity for affairs developed out of his literary instinct; the keen eye
and the ready apprehension, which he gained from the study of the world around
him, were the means by which he won his way to high position. When first he
came to Basel, fresh from his university career, he had a young man's gift for
writing verses, which he exercised in Ovidean love poems and Horatian epistles.
He wrote a long poem, which he called 'Nymphiplexis,' in honor of the mistress
of his Sienese friend Mariano de Sozini, and rejoiced that it was more than two
thousand lines in length. It has not come down to us; but Campano pronounced it
to be flowing rather than correct in versification. Aeneas prided himself on his
poetry, and gladly received from Frederick III the laureate’s crown. But
he soon had the practical sense to see that Latin verse would not do much for
him, and his attendance at the Council stimulated him to seek the reputation of
an orator. The example of Cesarini fired his emulation. Night after night he
spent in study, while his comrade, Piero da Noceto, who shared his room,
would laugh and say, “Why thus exhaust yourself, Aeneas? fortune favors
the unlearned as much as the learned”. Still Aeneas studied, and seized the
first opportunity to air his eloquence; but it is noticeable that he spoke in
behalf of a hopeless proposal to transfer the Council to Pavia. He spoke merely
to win the applause of the Fathers and to gain the good graces of the Duke of
Milan. His oratory was artificial, and lacked depth of purpose and sincerity.
Aeneas was never sufficiently in earnest to be a great speaker, nor was he a
sufficiently polished master of words to satisfy the cultivated taste of the
Italians. But the Fathers of Basel were wearied with the formless utterances of
scholastic disputants, which might be logical in reasoning but were wearisome
to hear. The neat, flowing, and ornate style of Aeneas pleased them, and he
established his reputation as an orator.
The chief quality of the mind of Aeneas was a ready
receptivity of outward impressions, which prompted him to narrative writing. He
seems to have designed a history of the Council of Basel, and wrote a
description of the city, which was to serve as an introduction. If his work had
been carried out, he would have given us a precious memorial of the actual life
at Basel, and of the intrigues n the Council; what knowledge we have on these
points comes from his letters. Probably, however, Aeneas felt that such a work
would lead him into questions of controversy, in which he had no keen personal
interest. He did not, therefore, write the history of the Council as a whole;
but in 1440, when he was secretary of Felix V, he wrote three books of
Commentaries on the Council of Basel, which dealt only with the circumstances
leading to the deposition of Eugenius IV and the election of Felix V. The work
was really a pamphlet in defense of his master Felix; only here and there do we
find the vivid touches of personal interest attaching to its pages, which
otherwise merely cast the cover of an historical narrative over the learned
arguments adduced by theologians in the Council's favor. The preface is
ingeniously adapted to beguile the reader, unawares, into a controversial pamphlet,
and with an affected artlessness to beg promotion for the writer. “It is
my misfortune”, says Aeneas, “to waste my energies on writing history when
I ought to spend them in providing for my old age. My friends say to me, What
are you doing, Aeneas? Are you not ashamed, at your age, of having no money? Do
you not know that a man should be stalwart at twenty, cautious at thirty,
rich at forty? He who has passed that limit will try in vain. I
acknowledge the truth of this; time after time I have put aside poets and
historians, but like a moth round a candle I flutter back to my ruin. Since
fate wills it, so let it be. The poor as well as the rich can live till death
calls him. Poverty is wretched in old age, but it is the more wretched to those
who have no taste for literature. I will enjoy what heaven sends, content, in
the words of Horace—
Nec turpem senectam
Degere nec cithara carentem”.
In this graceful way Aeneas announced that he was
serving Felix in hopes of preferment; nor was the form of historical writing
the only one which he was prepared to use for this purpose. He followed the
example of Poggio in reviving the Ciceronian dialogue. The occasion of this
production was a decision given by the University of Koln to some questions
submitted to them by their Archbishop concerning the controversy between
Eugenius and Felix. The University set forth their views in three propositions,
which asserted the supremacy of general councils, condemned the German
neutrality, and said that the Church was synodically assembled at Basel, if the
Council had not been lawfully translated. The saving clause was, as Aeneas
calls it, "the sting at the end of the serpent's tail"; and Aeneas
generously offered the University of Koln to remove its venom. His interest
really lay in stating the common-place arguments in favor of the Council with
taste and grace. For this purpose he wrote his pamphlet in a series of
dialogues.
He and his co-secretary, Martin Lefranc, a Frenchman,
are returning from a day's ramble outside Basel, delighted with their holiday,
expatiating on the blessings of a country life, and expanding the Virgilian
idylls into very tolerable Latin prose. Another couple draws near them, Nicolas
of Cusa and a Novarese legist, Stefano da Caccia, also in earnest converse.
Aeneas and his friend retire behind the bushes and listen to their disputation.
The literary skill of the dialogue consists in the alternation of the two pairs
of interlocutors. When the scholastic arguments of Cusa and his friend may be
supposed to have wearied the reader, Aeneas gives a little relief by
discussions on classical archaeology, literature, history. When quotations from
Fathers and decrees of Councils have palled, quotations from Virgil and Latin
historians succeed. This reaches a climax when Cusa and Caccia pause at vespers
to say their hours. Aeneas and Martin agree that literary discussion is more
profitable than the repetition of canonical hours, which may be a useful solace
in the cloister, but is a weariness to men of learning. The two pairs at length
show themselves to one another. Cusa, who had maintained the cause of Eugenius,
confesses himself vanquished, and goes back to Basel to sup with Lefranc.
Aeneas also invites himself on the ground that he is so poor he has nothing in
his house.
We are tempted to think that the dialogues of Aeneas,
like the propositions which he combats, were meant to carry their point in
their tail. At Vienna Aeneas had increased reason to use his pen for the
purpose of gaining fame. He turned again to frivolous subjects, wrote love
poems, epigrams, epitaphs, whatever he thought would be read and admired. He
wrote a Latin comedy in the style of Terence, called Chrisis, and
a Latin novel in the style of Boccaccio, Lucretia and Euryalus, which
was the most famous of his works, and had still greater circulation after its
author became Pope. It was not a book which the Pope, could read without shame,
and Pius II apologized for having written it. It contained, he said, two
things—an indelicate story and an edifying moral; all read the first, but few
heeded the last. They might indeed be forgiven for overlooking it, as it is by
no means obvious: Aeneas wrote his tale without any desire for edification,
merely to please Kaspar Schlick, whose amours it most probably describes.
In matters ecclesiastical he signalized his position
as a neutral by writing a treatise, the Pentalogus, in which he put
the arguments for neutrality as cogently as before he had advocated the cause
of the Council. He wrote treatises on all subjects—on the favorite theme
of The Miseries of a Court Life, on Education for
the young Ladislas of Hungary, on The Nature and Care of Horses.
Nothing came amiss to the pen of Aeneas; but the subjects in which he was most
interested were history and geography, and it is his great merit that he saw
the close connection between these two studies. To him curiosity supplied the
spur as well as the method; to observe and to inquire were the first steps, and
he was then content to arrange his knowledge as he obtained it. He is the
Herodotus of the fifteenth century, without the simplicity and dignity of his
forerunner; too much concerned himself in what he relates to be entirely
trusted, yet with the same quickness of apprehension, the same vividness, and
the same profound belief in the mighty movement of human affairs. His first
account of the events at Basel was rather a polemical pamphlet than an
historical work. But when the fate of the Council was decided, Aeneas in a
second book set forth his new opinions, displayed the mischievous activity of
the conciliar movement, and traced with precise brevity the steps of its rise
and fall
He followed this by a collection of short biographical
sketches of illustrious contemporaries. In 1452 he began a history of Frederick
III, which he continued up to the time when he left Germany. On his return to
Italy he undertook to write for Alfonso of Naples a history of Bohemia, which
he carried to the death of Ladislas. The picturesqueness of the Hussite wars
attracted the fancy of Aeneas, and he describes them in his best Livian style.
In 1458, while suffering from an attack of the gout, he was asked by a
bookseller to revise a sketch of universal history and carry it down to his own
times. This led Aeneas to put together the contents of his commonplace book in
the form of a book about the condition of Europe, which is a mixture of
geography and history, with little attention to style and no proportion in the
events related. This was the beginning of a Universal History and
Geography which he projected, and of which when Pope he found time to
write the part dealing with Asia. He redacted also for popular use the Decades of
Flavius Blondus, so far as the accession to the Papal throne of John XXIII.
In the preface to the Asia Pius II
apologizes for the fact that a Pope should have any time to devote to
literature. “There will be malign interpreters of our work who will say that we
rob Christendom of our time and devote ourselves to what is useless. We answer
that our writings ought to be read before they are blamed. If elegance of style
has no charms for the reader, he will still find much useful information. Our
time has not been taken from our duties; but we have robbed our old age of its
rest that we might hand down to posterity all that we know to be memorable. We
have given to writing the hours due to sleep. Some will say that we might have
spent our vigils better. We know that many of our predecessors made better use
of their leisure; but ours is not unfruitfully employed, for knowledge begets
prudence, and prudence is the leader of life”.
The Pope’s critics might have been strengthened in
their opinion, had they known that he was also engaged in writing a history of
his own pontificate. The Commentaries of Pius II is his most important literary
work, and contains a full account of all the events in which he
was engaged. Platina in his Life of Pius II mentioned the existence of
these Commentaries; but they were not published till 1584, by Francesco Bandini
de' Piccolomini, Archbishop of Siena, who possessed a manuscript which had been
copied by a German priest, Johannes Gobellinus. Archbishop Piccolomini assigned
to the copyist the honor of being the author. The Commentaries of Pius II were
published under the name of Gobellinus, and have continued to be quoted by his
name. Campano, however, in a letter to Cardinal Piccolomini, tells us that Pius
II wrote Commentaries, and handed over to him for correction the results of his
hurried dictation; he pronounces that they need no other hand to increase their
dignity, and are the despair of those who would wish to imitate them. Campano,
however, divided them into twelve books, and probably made a few additions and
alterations. Platina mentions the beginning of a thirteenth book which
Gobellinus did not include in his manuscript.
In his Commentaries we have the best literary work of
Aeneas. The study of history was to him the source of instruction in life, the
basis for the format on of his character. He looked upon events with reference
to their results in the future, and his actions were regulated by a strong
sense of historical proportion. Similarly, the present was to him always the
product of the past, and he shaped his motive by reference to historical
antecedents. It was probably this historical point of view which made him
engage in so many schemes, because he felt that, when once affairs were in
movement, the skillful statesman might be able to reap some permanent
advantage. He was not willing to let slip any opportunity which might afford an
opening for his political dexterity. Had he been less of a student, had his
mind been less fertile, he might have concentrated his energies more
successfully on one supreme object.
We have made sufficient use of the writings of Pious
II to illustrate his vividness of pictorial power, his insight into character,
his statesmanlike analysis of political motives. But Pius II is not content
only to record matters in which he was himself engaged. His Commentaries are
full of digressions about European affairs generally. He never mentions
anything without fully investigating its causes; he never sees a town which he
does not describe with reference to its past. Pius II is the first writer who
attempted to represent the present as it would look to posterity; who
consciously applied a scientific conception of history to the explanation
and arrangement of passing events.
In illustration of this genuine historical insight the
judgment of Pius II on the life of Jeanne D’Arc may be quoted. Pius II tells
the story with commendable accuracy, and then sums up :
“Thus died Joan, a wondrous and stupendous maid, who
restored the fallen and almost ruined kingdom of France, and inflicted many
serious disasters on the English. Making herself a leader of men, she preserved
her modesty unharmed amid troops of soldiers, and nothing unseemly was ever
heard about her. Whether her work were of God or of man I should find it
difficult to affirm. Some think that when the French nobles were at
variance, and one could not endure the leadership of another, the successes of
the English drove one, who was wiser than the rest, to devise a scheme by which
they might be induced to submit to the leadership of a maid who asserted that
she was sent by Heaven; in this way the conduct of the war was entrusted to
her, and a supreme command was assured. This, at all events, is most certain,
that it was a maid by whose leadership the siege of Orleans was raised, by
whose arms the territory between Bourges and Paris was conquered, by whose advice
Rheims was recovered and the coronation there performed, by whose onslaught
Talbot was routed and his army slain, by whose boldness the gate of Paris was
burned, by whose care and zeal the fortunes of France were secured. It is a
worthy matter to hand down to memory, although posterity may lend at admiration
rather than belief”.
We seem to be reading the words of a modern critic who
stands on a basis of assured fact, and though suggesting a rationalistic
explanation of what is almost incredible, still prefers to keep a
suspended judgment.
In spite of his literary gifts, Aeneas Sylvius did not
enjoy a great reputation in Italy; nor was he famous before his elevation to
the Cardinalate. Italian men of letters were very exclusive, and reigned within
their own circles, absorbed in their own labors and their own jealousies: one
who lived in Germany was regarded as outside the pale of culture. When Aeneas
became Cardinal many were ready to flatter him; but Aeneas knew the trick of
flattery too well to be deceived. In truth he had left Italy too young to be a
finished scholar; he knew scarcely anything of Greek, and he was by nature a
man of action rather than a student. He could not in respect of knowledge
compete with the professed scholars of Italy, Guarino, Filelfo, and the like.
Moreover, as a stylist he was imperfect and lacking in finish. His residence in
Germany had infected his Latinity with barbarisms, and in Italy Latinity was
nothing if it was not strictly classical.
Thus Pius II, though the most eminent man of letters
of his age, and one who deserves a high position amongst literary men of all
times, was not regarded as a member of the literary clique which prevailed in
Italy. He was not a profound scholar, he was not an elegant stylist; his
penetration, his ready sympathies, his knowledge of human nature, his largeness
of view, were qualities which the literature of his time regarded as of little
moment. Pius II, on his side, was not concerned to gain the applause of the
famous scholars of his own day. No doubt he would have welcomed it, if it had
been genuinely given; but he did not choose to beg the homage of a crowd of
literary sycophants. He had too great a sense of his personal worth to accept
flattery which was prompted only by an expectation of future favors. He had too
keen a knowledge of men to confound genuine merit with a capacity for writing
eulogy. He was too confident in himself to trust to the praises of others
rather than his own record of his own actions, to commend him to the consideration
of posterity. Hence the great Literary Pope proved to be but a poor patron. The
hopes of the humanists, which had risen high on the accession of Pius II to the
pontificate, were rudely dashed. An army of copyists was not reestablished
in Rome; there was no zeal for the collection of manuscripts, no orders for
translations or compilations, no glad acceptance of dedications or of
complimentary verses. Not that Pius II was heedless of such things; but he
could do all that he wanted for himself, or with the assistance of a few
trusted friends. He did not wish, like Nicolas V, to found his fame on the
patronage of literature and art; he did not wish to narrow the sphere of his
activity. The reputation of a man of letters he was sure to gain by his own
writings; it was necessary for him to emphasize his practical energy rather
than his care for literature, if his fame was to acquire its due
proportion.
Great was the disappointment of the humanists when the
sad truth dawned upon them. For a time they hoped by perseverance to overcome
the pope and convince him of their usefulness. The older generation—Poggio,
Guarino, Manetti, Valla—had almost died out when Pius II ascended the Papal
throne. Filello was the one literary veteran who remained, and he resolutely
pursued the siege of the Pope’s goodwill. Pius II treated him with courtesy
rather than with honor, received his letters and compositions, listened to his
speeches with good humor rather than with gratitude, and made him presents
which were marks of recognition rather than of favor. It soon became known that
the Pope behaved as a critic and not as a patron, that he pulled to pieces the
poems presented to him, and that his motto was, “poets and orators ought to be
supreme, or they are nothing”. He professed his contempt for mediocrity, and
cared only for such compositions as were really excellent. He did not value the
fashionable style of oratory in Italy, but declared that a needless use of
words showed the indolence of the speaker. Sentiments more shocking to the
views of the humanists of the fifteenth century could not have been expressed.
We are not surprised that his biographer adds to his account of Pius II,
“he incurred great odium”.
An epigram of the Pope’s, which he made during his
sojourn at Mantua, was rapidly spread through literary circles, and excited the
wildest wrath. Ammannati, who was then the Pope’s secretary, tells us how the
epigram arose, and gives us a faithful picture of the Pope's amusements. One
day at Mantua, while weary with affairs, Pius II took his usual relaxation of a
ramble in the country. With Ammannati, and three other of his friends, he took
boat on the Mincio to visit a monastery about three miles distant. To beguile
the journey, his secretary read aloud some of the congratulatory poems which
had been addressed to the new Pope at his accession, and had been laid aside
till a convenient season offered when they might be read. The sound of verses
soon kindled the poetic flame, and impromptus began to fly about the company.
Presently was read a poem by Campano, which said that gifts ought not to be
given to those who asked, but to those who did not ask, and then insinuated
that, as he had not asked, he ought to receive. On this the Pope produced the
following repartee:—
To your request you've made our duty plain,
Since he who asks ought nothing to obtain.
As all the poems asked for something, the Pope at last
said with a smile, I will give you something for your poets, and then made the
epigram :—
Take, poets, for your verses, verse again ;
My purpose is to mend, not buy your strain.
Ammannati capped this by another :—
Learn, poets, to turn from your verses to gain,
From the bounty of Pius you nought will obtain.
But Pius II had had his joke, and altered
Ammannati’s epigram into :—
Hope, poets, hope on, from your verses for gain,
From the bounty of Pius you much will obtain.
At the same time he granted the petitions of the
needy bards.
This is Ammannati’s account of the jocular way in
which the epigram of Pius II was thrown off; but was passed on from mouth to
mouth in literary circles, and awoke the profoundest wrath. A stinging repartee
was also current, which was attributed to Filelfo, but which Filelfo himself
assigned to Angelo Pontano. It ran :—
Verse for your verse if fate had given to you,
The Papal crown had never decked your brow.
Pius II was decidedly unpopular amongst the humanists.
Filelfo, after long hoping against hope, at last attacked the Pope in an
anonymous invective, which assigned to him the practice of every classic vice.
After the death of Pius II the tongue of Filelfo was still more loosened. He
wrote a poem of triumph on the death of Pius II, and set to work to blacken his
memory. At first the friends of Pius were indignant at such scurrility, and
used their influence to keep Filelfo from the good graces of the new Pope; but
Filelfo managed to play upon the vanity of Cardinal Ammannati by offering him
his literary homage. Ammannati demanded a faint retractation of the calumnies
against Pius, and then extended the hand of friendship to Filelfo. So venal was
the praise of the humanists, so interested the judgments which they offered to
hand down to posterity. It was an additional testimony of the penetration and
profound practical sense of Pius II that he disregarded their windy homage, and
estimated at its due value their influence over posterity.
No man could be more desirous of glory than Pius II;
but he was shrewd enough to see that glory would be won by his own acts and by
his own writings more surely than by the inflated eulogies of hired pedants. As
was natural for a man of wide culture, Pius II had a keen sense of reality, and
was not deceived by a display of the apparatus of learning, and by the false
glitter of laborious style. He was a foe to pedantry and ostentation; he knew
that mere verbiage had no genuine vitality. In this, as in most other points of
his character, Pius II stands a little way outside the common current of his
age. Himself a humanist, he saw the shallowness of many of the prevalent literary
tricks. He strove to estimate at its real value everything by which he was
surrounded. He was a critic of his own life as well as that of others;
he knew the worth of the fashions which he followed, of the opinions which
he heard and expressed; he could use all things, but would not surrender
himself to any.
But though Pius II refused to form a literary court
and surround himself with humanists, dependent on his bounty, he had a small
circle of scholars whom he chose as his intimates. The private life of Pius II
was singularly simple. When occasion offered, his sense of decorum and his
cultivated taste led him to display a becoming magnificence. He was careful to
do all that beseemed a Pope; but he was not prepared to sink his personality
entirely in his office. His Papal duties were thoroughly performed : but he
reserved to himself the right of using his leisure in literary pursuits. He
gave audience daily, and read and signed all documents presented to him; but he
would not bind himself to do it always at Rome in the Vatican. If his taste so
chose, those who needed him might find him beneath the chestnut trees of
Petrioli, or by the side of a fountain at Tivoli. A magnificent court, the
constant presence of a band of literary flatterers—such things would have been
intolerable to him. Pius II was a genuine man, and would not lay aside his
natural tastes. He needed a few trusty friends with whom he could unbend
freely. Warmhearted and affectionate, he wished to feel the contact of a few
congenial minds, chosen not because they were distinguished or might be useful,
but because they were personally attractive to his character and tastes.
It was this strong personality that led him to seek
the promotion of his nephews, and made him feel such a strong interest in men
of Sienese extraction. Has two secretaries, to whom he dictated his writings,
Goro Lolli and Agostino de' Patrizzi, were both Sienese. Francesco de' Patrizzi
also, who was chancellor of the Sienese republic, and was obliged for political
reasons to quit his country, received from Pius II the rich bishopric of Gaeta.
The chief friend, however, of Pius II was Jacopo Ammannati, a man of lowly
origin, born near Peschia, in the Lucchese territory, who had gone to Rome to
seek his fortune as a scholar in the palmy days of Nicolas V. Calixtus III made
him one of his secretaries, and Pius II found in him a literary nursling. He
made him Bishop of Pavia and Cardinal; he adopted him into the family of the
Piccolomini, and procured for him the citizenship of Siena. Ammannati took the
Pope as his model both in character and in literary composition. He continued
the Commentaries of Pius II for the five years following his death, and adopted
the same style and method. During all the pontificate of Pius II Ammannat enjoyed
his full confidence, and at the last closed his eyes in death. He was a true
friend, and did not abuse the Pope’s confidence to enrich himself. He was acute
rather than profound, a man of letters of the same type as Pius II, without his
practical capacity or his loftiness of aim. He did not aspire to be a
statesman, and his attempts at ambition did not rise higher than vanity. He had
the same delight in life as Pius II; but in him it took the shape of an
excessive devotion to the pleasures of the chase. He was an excellent and
amiable man, but not a strong one, a sympathetic companion rather than a
counselor to Pius II.
The other distinguished literary friend of Pius II was
Gianantonio Campano. He was the son of a peasant n Campania, and his surname is
merely taken from the province in which he was born. At the age of three he
lost his father, and soon afterwards his mother; under the guardianship of his
aunt he was sent into the fields as a shepherd boy. His precocious intelligence
induced a neighboring priest to take him as a domestic servant, and give him
some instruction in his leisure hours. Soon he advanced far enough to act as
tutor to the sons of a noble in Naples. Here he attended the lectures of
Lorenzo Valla, and in six years of persistent study gained a large fund of
knowledge. From Naples he betook himself to Perugia, where at the age of twenty
he began to soon acquired a considerable reputation. In Perugia he stayed for
some time, wrote love poems of a questionable sort, and made speeches when
speeches were needed. On the accession of Pius II he went with the Perugian
embassy to congratulate the new Pope. He seems to have felt that the Curia was
his sphere, for he followed Pius II to Mantua, ingratiated himself with
Ammannati, then with the Pope, and was soon rewarded by the Bishopric of
Croton, which was afterwards exchanged for the richer see of Teramo.
Campano was a sort of buffoon whose sallies amused the
Pope. He was a genuine peasant and carried his character in his appearance.
Short, thick-set, and clumsy, with an enormous paunch, he had a large face with
a turned up nose and broad spreading nostrils. His small, keen, twinkling eyes
were deep set under a bushy and projecting brow. He was, as he tells us
himself, covered all over with hair like a wild boar. It was clear that Pius II
was not considering abstract decorum when he bestowed on such a man a
bishopric. He needed Campano to amuse him with his ready geniality and his
power of good-humored satire; moreover, the pen of Campano was always at
the Pope’s command for an epigram, an Inscription, or whatever was needed. He
was a master of a clear, flowing, incisive style, who won reputation as a
historian by his Life of Bracchio, and as an essayist by a composition against
ingratitude. When Pius II wished to unbend himself in private, the
refinement of Ammannati and the sturdy joviality of Campano gave him the social
elements whish he required
As in literature, so also in art, Pius II possessed
too genuine a taste to indulge in indiscriminate patronage, and his strong
individuality impelled him to seek a field where he might leave a record
entirely his own. Pius II was catholic in his taste, and did not merely follow
the prevailing fashion. Though a lover of antique art, he did not shut his eyes
to the great artistic revival which was going on in Italy. He saw that art and
literature went hand in hand. “After Petrarch”, he
writes, “literature emerged. After Giotto rose a band of painters, and now
we see both arts at their height”. He did not, like most of his contemporaries,
draw all his artistic ideas from classical antiquity; but he admired the
paintings of Giotto at Assisi, and boldly declared that the sculptors of the
facade of the Cathedral at Orvieto were no way inferior to Phidias and Praxiteles.
Nor was his admiration confined to Italian work only; he could appreciate the
beauties of London, the splendor of York Minster, and the magnificence
of the Sebalduskirche Nurnnerg.
With these wide sympathies Pius II was as little
likely to make his pontificate an epoch of architectural splendor as of
literary activity. He collected manuscripts, but with discretion; he built, but
it was in moderation. He respected the great schemes of Nicolas, without being
carried away by them, and was content to contribute his share towards the
projected splendors of the Vatican and S. Peter’s. He built a tower at the
entrance of the Vatican palace and adorned several of its rooms. He restored
the terrace winch led to S. Peter’s and ornamented it with colossal statues of
S. Peter and S. Paul, while inside he erected a chapel of S. Andrew. But it was
not Rome which stood first in the affections of Pius II; in the ‘loggia
del Papa’ and the Piccolomini palace at Siena we find more enduring
records of his architectural taste.
The abiding memorial, however, of Pius II is his birthplace,
Corsignano, which he indissolubly associated with himself by giving it his name
and elevating it to the seat of a bishopric under the title of Pienza. The
little town lies high upon a spur of the volcanic hills that form the Sienese
territory. It looks upon the old Etruscan seat of Radicofani and the lofty
heights of Monte Cetona and Monte Amiata. There Pius II erected the full
equipment of buildings necessary to give grandeur to an Italian city. On one
side of a spacious piazza lies the cathedral; over against it the Palazzo
Pubblico, a younger sister of the statety Palazzo dei Signori at Florence; the
other sides of the piazza are enclosed by the Archbishop's palace and the
palace of the Piccolomini. The architect of these buildings was Bernardo of
Florence, most probably Bernardo Rosellino. Yet in the building of the
cathedral Pius II would not place himself entirely at the disposal of an
Italian architect. He remembered some features that had struck him in the
churches of Germany, and ordered that the aisles should be of the same height
as the nave, while in the arrangement of the five chapels into which the apse
is divided we trace still further the influence of the German Gothic. The building
is impressive through its simplicity and elegance, but, unfortunately, has
suffered through the crumbling of the tufa on which it is built, which offered
from the first great difficulties in the way of laying a foundation.
The façade is divided into three equal parts, with
three square-headed doorways, separated from one another by massive pilasters,
flanked by pillars, which are continued to the second tier of the building, and
there are symmetrically formed into an arcade. Above this rises a triangular
architrave, in the centre of which is a lunette, containing the Papal arms,
with the crossed keys above. The Piccolomini palace is an exquisite specimen of
the domestic architecture of which Siena contains so many example; but its
great feature is the second courtyard, which leads into a garden, descending
with terraces along the precipitous hill-side. Here the Pope has emphasized his
love of nature as part of the accompaniments of cultivated life—the two lower
storeys of the house on this side are broken by arcades of delicate and
graceful architecture, which extend along the whole length of the building, and
afford a glorious prospect over the Etruscan hills.
The care of Pius II extended also to the details of
his building. Two massive fountains still adorn his palace, and the cathedral
is full of records of his taste. The choir books are enriched by illuminations;
the sacristy contains a cope, which is a marvel of embroidery, adorned with the
history of David and Solomon, on a ground wrought with birds and flowers. He
also gave a series of tapestries to hang round the piazza on days of great
festivals, a pastoral staff, a pax, a
chalice, a mitre set with enamels, and a head of S. Andrew in gold. Nowhere can
more characteristic specimens of the varied works of the early Renaissance be
seen than at Pienza, which, from its remote situation, has many times escaped
the spoiler’s hand.
Pius II hoped to make Pienza a considerable town; it
still remains a village with about nine hundred inhabitants, the cathedral is
sinking in its foundations; the Piccolomini palace is scarce better than
a desolate ruin. The Pope’s scheme to give importance to his birthplace
has proved a failure; the individuality that resolved to leave its mark upon
the world has been baffled by the laws that regulate man's affairs. This is but
a symbol of all that Pius II did. He coped successfully with the world in his
own day, but his plans were founded on his individual powers or caprices, not
on a large sympathy with the needs and aspirations of mankind. Yet still Pius
II has the reward that ever attaches to the strong work of a genuine man. At
Rome one building superseded another, and the traces of each man's energy have
to be reconstructed in detail. Few may visit Pienza; but those who do so are at
once brought into close communication with the mind of Pius II, which there
speaks without contradiction from others. So with the rest of the achievements
of Pius II. They did not leave any decisive mark upon the world's history; but
they were founded on a higher and nobler conception of Christendom and of the
Papal mission than prevailed for the next century.
We have lingered over Pius II partly because the
records of his pontificate are so full that they serve to illustrate much that
was common to all Popes, partly because Pius II is a character most
illustrative of the changes that were slowly passing over Europe in his day. In
him the modern and the mediaeval spirit meet and mingle. His life covers a
great epoch in the history of the Church, the epoch in which reformation from
within was pronounced impossible. His skill did much to sweep away from the
ecclesiastical system all traces of the abortive attempt, and to make good the
position of the Papal monarchy against the threatened revolution. He further
strove to set the Papacy once more in the forefront of European politics, and
although he was not entirely successful, yet he did not entirely fail. He left
the question still open, and it depended on his successors to determine the
future direction of the Papal policy.
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