ENGLAND UNDER THE TUDORS.
KING HENRY VII
(1485-1509).
BY
DR. WILHELM BUSCH,
TRANSLATED BY ALICE M. TODD.
Author’s Introduction
CHAPTERS
I. Early History of Henry VII
II. Foreign Complications : France, Brittany, Spain
Commercial Policy
III. Perkin Warbeck
IV. Relations with Foreign Powers, 1495-1503; the
Spanish and the Scotch Marriages. Commerce and Discoveries
V. The Earl of Suffolk
VI. Henry’s Matrimonial Schemes. Relations with Rome,
Scotland, and Ireland
VII. Monarchical Policy. Commerce, Industry,
Agriculture, Labour Laws. Judicial Reforms. Administration of Finance.
Establishment of an Enlightened Absolutism—Henry’s Personal Character and Death
.
INTRODUCTION.
The whole development of the English State throughout
the last six centuries has been indissolubly bound up with the growth of its
Parliamentary Constitution: both advanced together. Like an island in the midst
of this stream of steady and uninterrupted progress, stands out the epoch of
personal government under the House of Tudor. The Parliament had but a small
share in the great onward movement and mighty revolutions of that remarkable
century; rather it lost much of the position which it had won for itself in the
English State before the close of the Middle Ages.
Her Parliamentary Constitution had been England’s
chief creation during the Middle Ages, and was peculiar to herself. Her
isolated position, surrounded by the sea, had afforded a possibility of
development, undisturbed by outside influences, such as had been granted to no
other country. The sea, however, had *not served always as a bulwark to
England, for, in the first centuries of historic times, one foreign race after
another poured as conquerors into the country, and a long struggle ensued
between various nations for the lordship and possession of the land. These
struggles became the more wild and bloody, because it was difficult, if not
impossible, for the vanquished to be dislodged; or for the invaders to draw
back from the island.
The Keltic Britons, whom Caesar encountered as the
aboriginal inhabitants of the country, did not exercise any appreciable
influence on its future development, and even of the Roman rule, which gave to
the Britons culture, political order, and Christianity, only fragmentary relics
remain. The history of the English nation begins, in fact, in the fifth
century, with the occupation of the country by the North German tribes, who,
under the collective name of the Anglo-Saxons, after a war of conquest lasting
for two hundred years, made themselves masters of the land. But the political
institutions, which they originated, were not destined to endure. In the year
1066, the Anglo-Saxon kingdom, already falling to pieces under a degenerate
monarchy, was overthrown by a new conqueror, the Norman duke, William.
With this powerful founder of a kingdom the history of
the English State begins. The long war of races was drawing to a close. The
vanquished Anglo-Saxons still, indeed, confronted the Franco-Norman invaders,
but, instead of one race seeking to supplant and destroy the other, a period of
national fusion set in. The result was that the conquered race remained almost
intact in its national peculiarities, and absorbed the more pliable conqueror,
whilst, on the other hand, the Anglo-Norman State became a perfectly new
creation, into which were engrafted only those institutions of the ruined
Anglo-Saxon polity, that were suitable to it.
Over these nationalities, standing side by side, but
at first in hostility, arose the autocratic monarchy of William and his
successors, dominating and holding them together. It was the beginning of a
united State under a monarchy, without a homogeneous people, and without a
national king. And whilst, favoured by the ruler, national unity soon began,
the hope that the monarchy itself might become a national one seemed to recede
still further into the background. When Henry II, in 1154, began the glorious
line of princes of the House of Anjou-Plantagenet, England formed only one part
of the great Angevin kingdom on both sides of the Channel, the continental
possessions of which comprised more than half of France. England was threatened
with the fate of being compelled to expend her powers on a task contrary to her
national interests, that of supporting the imperial policy of her kings against
the not unreasonable claims of the French Crown. But this dangerous imperialism
lasted only a short time; the rule of such a miserable monarch as Henry’s
younger son John was destined to confer upon the country a blessing which
cannot be too highly valued. Under him the greater part of these continental
possessions fell into the hands of France, and the kingdom, till then half
French, confined more and more to England alone, began to become entirely
English.
The short period during which the Angevin kingdom
lasted was also of the highest importance from another point of view: to it
belongs the internal development of the Constitution, which throughout the
whole Middle Ages was being defined by the struggle between two powers in the
State—the monarchy and the aristocracy. In the place of the Germanic monarchy
of the Anglo-Saxons, ruling in conjunction with a national assembly, the Norman
conquerors, with their own peculiar form of the feudal system, had substituted
a completely autocratic feudal monarchy, which made every effort to keep in
check ambitious vassals. We are reminded of the struggle of the German
sovereigns with the aristocratic constitutional party in the Empire. It was to
the quarrel which had broken out between the Crown and the Hierarchy that the
English magnates also owed the great change which took place in their own
position. In the struggle between Henry IV and Gregory VII the German monarchy
received its death blow; a century later King Henry II of England called his vassals
to his assistance in his struggle with the Church, and in return found himself
obliged to give them a joint participation in the government.
In Germany the success of the nobility had involved an
increase of power for individual territorial lords, and at the same time the
inevitable disruption of the empire as a whole; whereas it was the incomparable
good fortune of England that, from the very beginning of the new movement, the
increase of power benefited not the individual, but the whole body of vassals
together. In the old Anglo-Saxon kingdom, whenever the monarchy was weak,
disruption and disintegration were at once imminent—never more so than on the
eve of the Conquest; now, after the amalgamation of the two races had been
accomplished, the new aristocratic revolution, which began in England, offered
in conjunction with the monarchy, not disruption, but a fresh guarantee for the
unity of the kingdom; the destructive power of individualism was here no longer
known.
Again, John’s unhappy reign was rendered memorable by
that confirmation of their new position, which the vassals, in coalition with
the ecclesiastical lords, wrested from their tyrannical ruler in the Great
Charter of 1215. This important document marks the first stage in the early
development of the English Constitution.
No peace, however, was brought about by this means;
the great struggle went on without interruption, and occupied the whole reign
of John’s weak son, Henry III. The contending parties endeavoured to enlist
allies, and sought them far and wide in the various ranks of the nation. After
some imperfect assemblies had already been called, it was Simon de Montfort,
the leader of the nobles, who, in 1264, formed a precedent by summoning,
together with the barons, knights from each shire and burgesses from various
towns, an example which later was followed by Edward I in 1295.
The reign of this monarch marks a memorable epoch. In
it the legal system of the England of today and England’s present Constitution
had their origin. His distinguished predecessors, the Norman William I, the
Frenchman, Henry II, were foreigners; Edward was the first great English king.
Henry II had led the way to the conquest of Ireland; but far more important
were the new advances made by Edward, in subduing Wales and establishing
England’s feudal supremacy over Scotland. The unity of Great Britain could not
be accomplished without a struggle of many centuries; the same also was needed
for completing the structure, and establishing the constitutional position of
the Parliament founded under Edward I.
Henceforth it was recognised that the Estates of the
realm assembled in Parliament—the prelates and barons as a body, the borough
and county constituencies through representatives drawn from the propertied
classes—should, by their constitutional rights to a share in the government,
limit the power of the Crown. The union of the lower vassals, the knights of
the shire, to the burgesses representing the towns, and the fact that, to
enable any Act of Parliament to pass, the concurrence of all three Estates was
necessary, prevented the separation of those Estates, which might otherwise
easily have taken place. Though the Lords and Commons sat in two separate
Houses, the common voice of the State was nowhere so clearly heard as in the
Parliament representing the nation.
Parliament still continued to be the representative of
the national interests, when the Crown once more indulged in the imperialistic
ideas of the Angevins, when Edward III put forward his claim to the French
throne, and that unhappy hundred years’ war against France began. No doubt in
this war of conquest was displayed the power of the kingdom, which, under a
national monarchy, had been gathering strength and unity both in constitution
and nationality. No doubt it was a time of outward splendour and warlike glory
for the Crown, but the enduring benefits remained with the Parliament; the
sacrifices made by the country for this policy of war, which only served the
personal ambition of the king, had to be paid for ; royal prerogatives were
given up one by one to the Parliament in exchange for grants of money.
When, in 1399, the usurper Henry IV, belonging to the
collateral branch of Lancaster, had, with the assent of Parliament, succeeded
in deposing the elder Plantagenet, Richard II, the period of a purely
parliamentary rule began. The conflicts with Scotland, Wales, and France, the
arduous task of preserving his usurped throne against serious revolts of the
nobles, consumed the power of this gifted monarch, and at the same time kept
him in dependence upon the assistance of the Parliaments he was forced to
summon. Thus they were enabled to make conditions as to the employment of the
money granted, and with regard to the appointments of the great offices of
State. Henry found himself compelled to yield with prudent submissiveness to
the demands of the Estates; to the Church, which had also helped him to gain
his throne, he was obliged to surrender the heretic Lollards, and under his
rule blazed the first fires at Smithfield.
His son, Henry V, preserved the same attitude towards
Parliament and Church. He had not, like his father, to defend a usurped throne;
but he needed the generous support of his subjects when he carried on to its
fullest development that policy of imperialism which Edward III had revived,
and obtained the formal recognition of his right of succession to the French
throne. The utter collapse under John of the empire Henry II had created, and
the failure of the policy of conquest of Edward III during the last years of
that prince and under Richard II, were evidences of the fate which always
attends such efforts after imperialism. How would it have affected England’s
future if Henry V. had reached the very summit of his ambition? For his
kingdom’s sake, his early death (in 1422) was perhaps not too much to be
lamented.
But at once disruption set in under his young son,
Henry VI who, even after he had reached manhood, never laid aside the
helplessness of the child. The result, so disastrous for kingdom and throne,
was, not that the untenable continental possessions were lost, but that a
period of fearful anarchy in England began.
That England could be great without a great monarch
was not yet conceivable; the decay of the monarchy would inevitably involve the
ruin of the State. But what in this fifteenth century had become of the
monarchy, which William the Conqueror had grounded so firmly, and with which
the glorious times of Henry II, Edward I, Edward III, and Henry V were so
closely bound up? The usurpation of the Lancastrian prince, and the deposition
of the lawful king, had set an ominous precedent; the murder of Richard II was
to be avenged in blood on Henry VI and his son. With the security of the
throne, respect for its dignity also vanished. Each man, who was conscious that
some drops of royal blood were in his veins, could aspire to possess the
throne, if only he had strength enough to struggle for it and to keep it.
England was then to learn to her cost that a crown which sinks into a mere
prize for personal ambition, is no longer a blessing to the country, but a
curse.
With Richard II the old line of the Plantagenets had
come to an end; with the House of Lancaster a younger branch ascended the
throne, sprung from John of Gaunt, the fourth son of Edward III. But Duke
Richard of York, the grandson of Gaunt’s next youngest brother Edmund, had,
through his mother, inherited also the rights of the third branch of Edward’s
children. As the Lancastrian prince had raised the claims of the younger branch
to the throne against the Plantagenet Richard II, so now this Duke of York
raised the claims of the elder branch against the House of Lancaster.
Scarcely more than a quarter of a century after the
death of Henry V nothing was left of the great continental conquests except one
poor remnant, the town of Calais. Personal squabbles among the leading men were
occupying the reign of the feeble Henry VI, when the ambition of Richard of
York let loose civil war upon the country: the thirty years’ war of the Two
Roses—the white rose of York and the red rose of Lancaster. The war devoured
its originator, and it was Richard’s son, who, having succeeded to his father’s
claims, assumed the crown as Edward IV. But the throne thus usurped stood on
shaky foundations. Edward had temporarily to give way before his rival, and it
was not till 1471 that he definitely made his power secure by the victories of Barnet
and Tewkesbury. Henry VI, whose son had already fallen, came to a mysterious
end in the Tower.
But where was the Parliament all this time? Might it
not have been expected that the Commons, who under Edward III and Henry IV had
stepped forward so firmly, would now offer their support to the State, when the
Crown no longer performed its duty, when the party conflicts of the nobles, and
the struggle of the powerful for the throne had brought disorder and confusion
into the country? Yet nothing of the kind happened. The outward structure of
the Parliamentary Constitution was indeed completed, but its powers had not yet
gathered strength enough for independent action. However contradictory it may
sound, it was the great epochs of the monarchy that had also been the chief
epochs for the development of the Constitution, especially of the House of
Commons. The powerful nobility, once the old rival of the Crown, became also
the most dangerous opponent of the Commons. Only when the monarchy was
victorious in its great conflict with the aristocracy did the Commons step
forward, and succeed in making use of the king’s need of money to augment their
own power. But no sooner, under a weak monarch, had the nobility gained the
upper hand, than the Commons relapsed into silence; and this had been especially
the case in the unhappy times of the Wars of the Roses. If the party in the
ascendant called a Parliament, the Upper House, with the assembled peers,
represented the party itself; the Commons always bent before the storm, for the
Lower House, which in its composition had already been subject to the strongest
possible influences, followed obediently almost every command, recognised each
successful competitor as king, proscribed each vanquished foe, and was ready to
reverse every previous attainder just as the victor desired.
Neither the constitutional government of the realm,
nor the courts of justice asserted themselves in this time of personal feuds;
law and justice alike became instruments in the hand of the powerful. Possibly
because the Constitution showed itself so pliant to everyone, no one at such a
time thought of threatening its existence; it was enough merely to suppress its
independent utterances. One thing the years of disorder showed very plainly;
that in spite of all that had been achieved in the construction of the English
constitutional system, nowhere, and least of all in the Constitution itself,
did a force exist, which could take the place of a strong monarchy. The
monarchy had brought ruin; on it alone depended the hope of a revival.
It seemed as if this hope were about to be fulfilled
in Edward IV. For a while England was able to breathe again under the
leadership of this strong and masterful king; some accordingly see in Edward
the founder of the new despotic form of monarchy in the English State, but have
thereby attributed to him an achievement which does not properly belong to him.
We find in his reign, felicitous and promising ideas and new departures; the
first Tudor in after years in many of his laws and in many a feature of his
financial and parliamentary policy could do no better than revert to measures
of Edward, but Edward did not understand how to construct; he was able to bring
about a truce in the struggles, but not a lasting peace.
The cause lay in the existing circumstances, it lay
also, however, in Edward’s own character, for in spite of his ability, he was
not the man to create a new and stable condition of society out of the chaos in
England. He possessed, no doubt, the power to will and to do, but work was
always to him a distasteful interruption to the enjoyments of life; excesses
and pleasures occupied his thoughts more than all else, and brought him to an
early grave. He was able to win the love of his subjects by his handsome person
and attractive manners; but all the sharper is the contrast presented by that
cruelty with which he climbed through streams of blood to the throne, and
ruthlessly destroyed everything which might be to him a danger, sparing none,
not even his own brother.
How can Edward be regarded as the founder of the new
monarchy, when he was not even able to make his dynasty endure? Even after his
coronation, a ten years’ struggle was necessary to establish his throne, and
then he only made it firm for his own lifetime ; the boy whom he left behind
him was not able to carry on a sovereignty thus won. Edward’s youthful sons
fell victims to the same cruel selfishness which had been his own guiding
motive. As if the evil deeds of this wicked century were finally to be summed
up in one person, the monster Richard III appears on the scene at its close.
In his choice of a wife Edward IV had acted, as he
often did, from sudden caprice. In September, 1464, the world learnt that the
king had married Elizabeth, the youthful widow of Sir John Grey, and daughter
of the Earl Rivers, one of the Woodville family. The rise of this family was
viewed with disfavour, and when after Edward IV’s death on April 9, 1483,
Elizabeth and her partisans, in opposition to the views of the Privy Council,
laid claim to the guardianship of Edward V, a boy of twelve, the dispute became
publicly known. Richard, Duke of Gloucester, the younger brother of the late
king, and one of his ablest and most successful supporters, was then on the
Scottish border. He came south, and in conjunction with the Duke of Buckingham,
by a clever stroke snatched his nephew from the hands of Earl Rivers, and took
prisoner the Earl and his principal adherents. Queen Elizabeth fled for protection into a sanctuary.
Richard did not stop here; one hideous crime after
another paved for him the way from a Protectorate over the young king to the
fulfilment of his own designs on the throne. Lord Hastings, who had opposed
him, was seized after a sitting of the Council and beheaded without trial; the
Archbishop of Canterbury and John Morton, Bishop of Ely, were thrown into
prison; Lord Rivers and three adherents perished on the scaffold. On the 25th
of June, 1483, Parliament met, without a very exact observance of forms, and on
the 26th of June, Richard accepted the crown offered him by the Lords and
Commons, the youthful Edward and Duke Richard of York were declared bastards,
the pretext of a previous betrothal of their father serving to make his union
with Elizabeth appear invalid ; and on the 6th of July followed the coronation.
The blackest stain which indelibly clings to Richard’s
memory is the murder of his two nephews, who stood between him and the throne.
He had induced Elizabeth to give Prince Richard also into his hands, and kept
both brothers in the Tower, where they eventually disappeared. At the time, and
also subsequently, attempts were made to dissipate the horrible suspicion which
was at once cast upon the king, a pretender even rose up against Henry VII in
the character of Richard of York, but all attempts to clear Richard III have
been in vain.
A formidable danger soon threatened the usurper.
Already a movement had been set on foot in the south, in favour of the captive
princes, and the widespread rumour of their murder gave special vigour to a great
insurrection which broke out in October, 1483, at the head of which was none
other than Richard’s former colleague and abettor, the Duke of Buckingham. The
duke, in spite of the rich reward he had received, is said to have been
bitterly annoyed that all his demands were not satisfied. It is clear that his
assistance had never been given in loyal earnest, but that he had sought
thereby to acquire power and riches for himself, and for the same end was quite
ready to abandon the cause he had once espoused. Though, as being nearly allied
to the House of Lancaster, he may possibly for a time have entertained an idea
of putting in a claim for the Crown, he soon perceived that another descendant
of the Lancastrian branch stood nearer to the throne than he did; and the ample
reward which he might expect in return for participation in his enterprise
seemed a more sure gain than the doubtful prospect of acquiring the throne for
himself. This other descendant was Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond.
CHAPTER I.
EARLY HISTORY OF HENRY VII.
John of Gaunt, the ancestor of the House of Lancaster,
had a son, John Beaufort, born out of wedlock; his mother was Katharine Swynford. As Katharine was afterwards raised to the
position of lawful wife, a later Act of Parliament, under Richard II,
recognised the legitimacy of the Beaufort family; but Henry IV, with obvious
intention, caused to be inserted into this Act a clause, not legally valid,
excluding the Beauforts from any claim on the throne.
The daughter of the younger son of John Beaufort was Buckingham’s mother, while
the daughter of the elder was Margaret, the mother of Henry Tudor.
Henry was at this time living as a fugitive in
Brittany. He was born on the 28th of January, 1457, in Wales, at Pembroke
Castle, the property of Jasper, Earl of Pembroke, his uncle on the father’s
side. His father, Edmund, whom Henry VI had created Earl of Richmond, had died
three months before. The uncle provided for Henry’s education. Andreas Scotus,
and Haseley, Dean of Warwick, are mentioned as his tutors, and Scotus is said
to have spoken in high terms of his pupil. Jasper also introduced the boy to Henry
VI. To escape the persecutions of Edward IV, he fled with him to France; but,
being driven on shore in Brittany, they were hospitably received by Duke
Francis II. The duke, after some hesitation, refused Edward’s summons to give
Henry up, as well as a like demand on the part of Louis XI of France, who was
anxious to hold in his own hands a valuable hostage against England. He kept,
however, his protégés under strict supervision till Edward’s death.
Buckingham entered into communications with Henry. Evidently
Henry had no knowledge of the formal legitimation of his House, and Buckingham,
who knew of it, kept his knowledge to himself, not wishing to play out for
Richmond’s benefit all the trumps he held in his hand, when about to start the
conspiracy in his favour. It was quite overlooked that, not Henry himself, but
his mother Margaret, who had married as her third husband Thomas, Lord Stanley,
was the nearest heir to the throne.
The whole scheme, especially the idea of bringing over
Richmond, was due, not to Buckingham, but to John Morton, Bishop of Ely, then
under his patronage. Before this, Henry’s mother had applied to the duke to
intercede for her with the king, and, as a means of drawing closer to the House
of York, had proposed Henry’s marriage with a daughter of King Edward.
Buckingham now took up this idea in his interviews with John Morton, in order
to strengthen Henry’s claims as opposed to Richard, by a union of the rival
royal Houses. Meanwhile Margaret, on her own account, had, through her physician,
communicated the proposed marriage to Queen Elizabeth, then in sanctuary at
Westminster. On gaining Elizabeth’s consent, she was about to send word to her
son in Brittany, by Christopher Urswick, when her
servant, Reginald Bray, summoned by Morton, brought her news of Buckingham’s
intentions. Provided with money, Hugh Conway now went to Richmond, in order to
arrange a simultaneous move. Other messengers followed. On the 24th of
September, 1483, Buckingham wrote himself to the earl that on the 18th of
October operations should begin.
At that time the exile enjoyed greater liberty, and
while Duke Francis of Brittany sought to stand well with Richard, who had made
overtures to him, he yet gave support to Henry. There were even rumours of a
plan for the marriage of Henry with Anne, the duke’s eldest daughter and
heiress. Thus the undertaking seemed to be in good train, when Fortune again
showed herself on Richard III’s side. In Kent the rising broke out too early.
The king soon learnt who was the leader of the conspiracy, and a proclamation
of October 23, 1483, placed a high price on the head of Buckingham and of his
supporters, Strange to say, Richmond’s name was not mentioned. The elements,
too, came to Richard’s assistance; a violent thunderstorm prevented Buckingham
from advancing at the right moment. He turned to fly, but was captured and
beheaded on the 2nd of November, on the market-place at Salisbury.
Henry’s fleet, which on the 12th of October had put to
sea with fifteen vessels and five thousand men, was dispersed by the storm, and
when he arrived off the English coast, near Plymouth, in Devonshire, he had
only two vessels with him. In vain the royal troops tried to entice him to
land. When no friendly ship was to be seen, he put about, and landed in
Normandy. Thence, with the permission of the French Government, he betook
himself, before October was over, through France into Brittany.
There he learnt the fate of the whole conspiracy. Many
of the participators had happily escaped, Bishop Morton was in Flanders, and
now a considerable number of fugitives gathered round Henry, on whom Duke
Francis bestowed a new mark of favour in the shape of a subsidy of ten thousand
crowns. The idea of a matrimonial alliance, however, was dropped, and on Christmas
Day, 1483, Henry took a solemn oath in church, in the presence of his confederates,
to marry King Edward’s daughter Elizabeth as soon as he had attained to the
throne, whereupon they tendered him an oath of faithful allegiance. Henry led
them to Duke Francis, who renewed his promise of helping him to return to his
native land.
After his victory Richard acted without delay. The
Parliament, which met in January, 1484, pronounced sentence of outlawry on
Henry and a great number of his adherents. Margaret also was attainted, but,
out of consideration for Thomas, Lord Stanley, she was not hardly treated; her
property was adjudged to her husband, who was also ordered to keep a strict
watch over her. These sentences were followed by many striking acts of clemency,
such as the pardon of Bishop Morton.
Above all, the king tried to upset his opponent’s
matrimonial designs. The Princess Elizabeth was with her mother safe in the
Sanctuary of Westminster. Richard swore by his royal word, and on the sacred
Gospels, before the Lords spiritual and temporal, before the mayor and aldermen
of London to protect the Queen and her daughters. Elizabeth trusted the
murderer of her sons, deserted Henry’s cause, after the failure of his first
attempt, and, to escape from an unbearable position in which she was little
better than a captive, gave herself up to the king, who was plotting nothing
less against Richmond than to win his chosen bride for himself. The only
obstacle to this was removed by the sudden death of Richard’s consort, Anne.
Nevertheless Richard hesitated to carry out this well-considered plan, and
meantime the end of his reign was approaching.
Henry’s anxieties, however, still continued, and new
difficulties were also pressing on him. Richard, after his first unsuccessful
overtures to Duke Francis, in the summer of 1483, had not relaxed his
endeavours to induce him to deliver up the rebels. The duke himself continued
friendly to Henry; but he was in failing health, and often lapsed for a time
into a state of complete mental incapacity, while in his favourite, the
Treasurer Peter Landois, Richard’s emissaries found a more willing listener.
Fortunately for Henry, Morton heard from England of these intrigues, and was
able to give him, through Christopher Urswick, timely
warning of the new danger.
A new place of refuge had already been found, and a
new friend, who promised the exile more lasting assistance than the Duke of
Brittany. This powerful ally was France. The Pretender became thus mixed up in
the quarrels of these two countries, a circumstance which was hereafter to
involve him, as king, in the first serious foreign complications of his reign.
Ever since the time of Louis XI, French policy had striven to break down the
independence of this last great feudatory province, which stood in the way of a
homogeneous state under the crown of France. If Duke Francis and his advisers
had assisted Henry and Buckingham, it was in the hope that, should they be
successful, the new king of England would prove a grateful friend, and aid
Brittany in frustrating such designs. With a similar motive Landois turned to
Richard III again, when the latter had been successful in maintaining his
power. A truce was even brought about, and as early as June, 1484, a detachment
of English troops was sent to oppose possible French attacks.
It was therefore quite intelligible that France should
willingly extend a hand to Henry when he was deserted by the rulers of
Brittany. The relations of France with the royal House of York had been somewhat
strained, even as far back as under Louis XI, and so they had remained after
his death in 1483, under the regency, during the minority of Charles VIII.
Henry therefore was allowed to travel unmolested through France in October,
1483; indeed, at that time Duke Francis even received a promise of help against
any powerful enemies, an evident allusion to a possible act of revenge on the
part of Richard. The French Government, however, kept its hand free, and a
general proposition of alliance from Richard in March, 1484, was answered in
August by an offer of sending envoys to negotiate peace and friendship. In
spite of this the regency still kept in touch with the English exile in
Brittany, and all thought of an alliance with Richard fell to the ground when the
change in Brittany’s policy drove Henry entirely over to the side of France.
Henry, who had received through Christopher Urswick the assurance of French support, together with more
detailed instructions, made preparations secretly to escape from Brittany. But
few friends were taken into his confidence, so that the others were greatly surprised
when they heard that he had secretly fled in disguise to France. It is related
that he only escaped with the greatest difficulty from the troopers sent in
pursuit by Peter Landois. This took place towards the end of September, 1484.
The French regency had given orders that he should be
hospitably received, and conducted to Chartres; Duke Francis too, who was again
recovering, did not approve of Landois’ proceedings against Henry, He sent
after him his friends who had remained behind, well provided with money, and in
France also, Henry received for them a considerable sum and materials for their
equipment. New fugitives joined them; the Earl of Oxford, one of the most
faithful adherents of the House of Lancaster, who had been detained by Edward
IV at Hammes, near Calais, gained over the commander of the castle; they made
the fortress capable of defence and hastened to join Henry, who at once sent
Oxford back again with reinforcements. They failed, indeed, to hold Hammes,
against the attacks of the Calais garrison, but were allowed to pass out free.
In spite of the increase in his adherents, and in
spite of French protection, Henry’s condition was a precarious one, as his fate
was affected by the difficulties which beset the Regent’s government in France.
The Regency was in the hands of the still youthful but clever and energetic
Anne, elder sister of King Charles VIII, who had been given in marriage by her
father Louis XI to Peter of Beaujeu, brother and heir-presumptive to the
powerful Duke of Bourbon. The leaders of the opposition were the queen-mother,
and more particularly Duke Louis of Orleans, the husband of Anne’s younger
sister, who himself stood near to the throne, which he ascended subsequently,
as Louis XII. These rivalries at home became mixed up with complications
abroad; if the Regent helped the Tudor leader, the Orleans party took part with
Richard, and the possibility of an English attack on France was even
contemplated; if the Orleans party allied with the rulers of Brittany, Anne
granted protection to Breton nobles. These, under the command of the Marshal de
Rieux, sought her assistance after an unsuccessful attempt against Landois, but
the high price they had to pay for this was the formal recognition, at Montargis, October, 1484, of Charles VIII as successor to
their duke, should the latter die without heirs male. Finally, to the
negotiations of Orleans with the Archduke Maximilian, Anne retorted by an
alliance with the Flemish towns, then in revolt against the Hapsburger.
In spite of the remarkable skill with which Anne
managed to keep in power, Henry’s future remained uncertain, and before long he
had to cope with the open desertion of many of his friends. Queen Elizabeth,
faithless herself, induced the Marquis of Dorset, her son by her first
marriage, then in company with Henry, to take flight secretly, and Cheney, who
hastened after him, had some difficulty in persuading him to return. Such
incidents as this, together with the general position of affairs, urged the
conspirators to prompt action; it was better to risk something by boldness,
rather than to spoil all by hesitation. It was then probably that a
notification was sent by Henry to his friends in England, to the effect that
his action would depend on their readiness to support him. A small subsidy was
supplied by the French Government, and in return for this advance, Henry had to
leave behind as hostages, John Bourchier and the
still wavering Dorset. Whilst he remained at Rouen, a squadron was assembling
in the mouth of the Seine, far smaller than the fleet with which he had set out
the year before.
His eyes were now turned to Wales, the home of his
race. When the disquieting intelligence reached him that Richard had definitely
resolved on marrying Elizabeth of York himself, Henry made use of the freedom
this seemed to give him to offer his hand to a sister of Walter Herbert, a
Welshman of good position. By this offer he hoped to gain the Welsh, whose
attitude throughout had caused him some anxiety, and continued to do so after
he had landed. But as his messengers did not even succeed in getting into the
country, no more thought was given to this plan, which could hardly ever have
been seriously contemplated. With about two thousand men, amongst whom was a
company of Frenchmen, Henry put to sea from Harfleur on August 1, 1485, and
after a seven days’ voyage, landed without opposition at Milford Haven, near
the place of his birth.
Richard had long been prepared for a forward movement
on the part of his adversary. Whilst safe in France with “the king’s old enemy”
Charles, Henry was beyond the reach of his power, and Richard had to content
himself with an angry proclamation, in which he appealed to the national pride
of England to oppose a pretender who had bought the help of the hereditary foe
against his native country. But this appeal fell flat. Henry landed on English
soil and marched forwards. Serious resistance he met with nowhere; he even
received some not inconsiderable reinforcements. Still, as was natural, the
attitude of most men was doubtful and hesitating; they were anxious before they
joined him to have some security as to the turn affairs were likely to take.
This was obvious at once in a certain section of the Welsh; one of the most
powerful of them, however, Rice ap Thomas, about whom at first disquieting
rumours had been received, joined Henry in Shrewsbury with a considerable
number of men; thither too came good news from the messengers sent to his
mother, the Stanleys, and other friends.
Above all, the attitude assumed at that time by his
stepfather, Thomas, Lord Stanley, with his brother, Sir William, was of
importance. Lord Stanley had always been a favourite with Richard; now,
however, on account of the family connection between Stanley and Henry, he
considered it prudent to keep in his hands a surety in the person of George,
Lord Strange, Stanley’s son. While Sir William Stanley had a short conference
in Stafford with Henry, who had advanced thither by way of Newport, Lord
Stanley, who had remained at Lichfield with a considerable body of troops,
withdrew as soon as he heard of Richmond’s approach to Atherstone. There,
apparently, Richmond had a secret interview with the brothers, which is said to
have been very friendly, though it remains uncertain how far he secured their
support. He was reassured, however, in some degree by other more numerous
accessions. Gilbert Talbot joined him in Newport, Walter Hungerford and Thomas Bourchier on the march to Tamworth; many others followed.
With every mile that Henry advanced, Richard’s
partisans fell away. This was a circumstance which, with all his anxiety,
Richard had not foreseen. It must have filled him with rage to see men whom he
had specially trusted open a free passage to his rival. As soon as he had collected
sufficient troops, he started for Leicester, and prepared to do battle with
Henry, then in the neighbourhood, at Tamworth. The moment for a decisive
engagement had arrived.
Near the market town of Bosworth Richard fixed his
camp, a stream separating him from Henry. On the 22nd of August,1485, a Monday,
the king led his troops to battle. In numbers he was far superior to his
adversary, whose fighting force was estimated at about five thousand men. To
the last the Stanleys maintained a suspiciously neutral attitude. Lord Stanley,
when called upon by both parties, responded to neither, and even his brother
William, who had been outlawed by Richard, remained with his men in a state of
inaction, in the rear of the king’s position to the north. Not till the battle
was raging furiously, and when Henry himself was in danger and his troops were
losing courage, did William Stanley rush in with his three thousand men. His
onslaught was successful, and this decided the fortune of the day. Despairing
of victory, Richard plunged into the mellée, and was
slain, fighting heroically. Of his faithful followers, the Duke of Norfolk,
leader of the advanced guard, Walter, Lord Ferrers, Sir Robert Brackenbury, Sir
Richard Ratcliff, had fallen with him; Norfolk’s son, the Earl of Surrey, and
the Earl of Northumberland, were taken prisoners. Lord Lovell and the two Staffords sought refuge in a sanctuary. They met their fate
soon afterwards in a rising against the new monarch.
The regal circlet of gold which Richard had worn on
his helmet, was found in the midst of the slain, and placed by Lord Stanley on
Henry’s head, while the bystanders joyfully hailed him as king. Men saw the
body of his fallen rival thrown naked by a trooper across the back of his
horse, with head and legs hanging down on either side, and borne away. Thus
carried to Leicester, it was exposed to view for two days in the church of the
Franciscans, and then buried by the friars. The Tudor prince was now king of
England.
Henry was in his twenty-ninth year when he gained for
himself throne and kingdom at Bosworth. A task awaited him, which might well
have daunted a more experienced man; but from the first he showed himself equal
to it; from the first he displayed a faculty for seizing with clear judgment and
firm grasp on that which lay nearest to his hand, and never made the mistake of
taking what should be the second step before the first. After what England had
but just passed through, everything depended on whether Henry would succeed in
fixing firmly on his head the crown he had gained, in preparing the ground for
a new dynasty, and thus securing for the still tottering throne a position of
power and dignity in the State.
Henry’s ideas and those of his partisans did not now
quite coincide; The latter wished to conciliate and gain over the House of York
by uniting the claims of both parties through Henry’s marriage with Elizabeth
of York. This, too, had once been Henry’s idea; but the oath to marry the
princess, which he had taken long before in Brittany, had been a concession
wrung from him by necessity; for, before all things, he desired to acquire and
retain his kingdom by his own right alone.
Definite constitutional views on the order of the
succession to the crown did not then exist in England. An attentive Italian
observer says that an hereditary monarchy was indeed recognised in England, but
if no immediate offspring were forthcoming, or the succession to the throne
happened to be controverted, then the question was settled by force of arms,
and “who lost the day lost the kingdom.” It was the destructive war waged by
Edward IV and Richard III against other members of their royal House which
really prepared the way for the Tudor king. The flourishing race of the
Plantagenets had been almost exterminated. In spite of this, Henry’s claim was
certainly doubtful; especially must it have appeared so to himself, as he
probably was still unaware of the legitimation of the Beaufort family. In fact
were succession in the female line once admitted, the younger branch of York
would come before the older Lancastrian branch as heir to the line from John of
Gaunt’s elder brother, Lionel, the male issue in which had early become
extinct. One male representative of the male line of York was still
living—Edward, Earl of Warwick, son of George, Duke of Clarence, who had fallen
a victim to his brother, Edward IV. Richard III had provisionally chosen the
earl as heir, after the death of his son, but subsequently had set him aside
for a sister’s son, John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln. Warwick, too, belonged to
a branch of the family, which had lost its rights by attainder.
It was only in this prevailing uncertainty as to what
constituted a right to succession, that Henry was able to come forward with his
independent hereditary claim in the face of other existing claims, and for his
still doubtful partisans, his union with a daughter of Edward IV sufficed as a
compromise for setting aside Warwick’s right. But to carry out his personal
claim as the real Lancastrian heir was only made possible for Henry by the
recognised right of war. So, even at Bosworth, he regarded himself as rightful
king, and at once exercised his royal prerogative by knighting eleven of his
faithful followers on the battlefield. He passed over the Earl of Warwick, as
Richard had done, caused the young prince, a boy of fifteen, to be brought from
Sheriff Hutton, where he had been kept in confinement, to London, and shut up
in the Tower. The Princess Elizabeth, too, was removed from Sheriff Hutton to
London, and there handed over to her mother. Of the promised marriage, there
was for the present no mention.
Henry himself proceeded from Bosworth to the capital.
On the 27th of August, five days after his victory, he was received in London
with great pomp, escorted by the Lord Mayor and aldermen, and joyfully greeted
by a closely packed crowd of citizens. He rode through the town to St. Paul’s
Church, where he hung up the three banners under which he had gained his
victory, and for several days processions were formed to the various churches
in the town to offer up thanksgiving.
On the 15th of September, 1485, he summoned a Parliament
for the 7th of November, “to discuss pressing and weighty measures for the
government and defence of the kingdom and Church of England.” He rewarded his
partisans—amongst them the Stanleys, Rice ap Thomas, Sir Richard Edgecombe,
Hugh Conway, Christopher Urswick, and especially the
Earl of Oxford—with dignities, offices, and pensions. The revenues of the
“rebels,” Richard’s adherents, were handed over by Henry to his own friends;
important offices, such as those of the judges, and the attorney-general, were
filled with new men, and a number of enactments were made. In order to give a
feeling of security after the recent revolution, a general, and, with but few
exceptions, unlimited pardon was issued on the 24th of September, 1485, and was
widely circulated through the counties.
At this moment a grievous misfortune befell England,
full of gloomy foreboding for the new ruler. Towards the end of September a
hitherto unknown disease broke out in London, spread through and ravaged the
country, scattering fear and horror far and wide. Over the bodies of those
attacked by this disease, there broke out a copious sweat, emitting an
unpleasant odour; tortured by fever, most of them threw off their clothes and
swallowed cold drinks, but they succumbed to the malady just as soon as those
who by warmer covering increased heat and perspiration; not till a later return
of the epidemic was it discovered that to let it run its course without
interference was the wisest treatment. Being extremely infectious, it spread
rapidly, to disappear again after a short but virulent career.
On this its first appearance, according to one
account, doubtless exaggerated, but nevertheless significant, only one in a
hundred of those attacked recovered. Further, it was remarkable that the
disease at that time was entirely confined to England, and spared even Ireland
and Scotland; hence it received the name of the “English sweating sickness.”
Towards the middle of October the disease died out in London; two mayors and
many aldermen had fallen victims to it; in the country it lasted on into the
next month.
Meanwhile, before Parliament had even assembled, Henry
made arrangements for his coronation—the solemn act by which he should be
publicly recognised as king. It was fixed for the 30th of October. On the three
preceding days, the king dined at Lambeth as the guest of the Archbishop of
Canterbury; then rode with a splendid escort over London Bridge to the Tower,
and was welcomed again by the Lord Mayor with the aldermen and city guilds. On
this occasion it was remarked that his escort rode, after the French fashion,
two together on one horse. The next day he distributed some fresh honours to
his followers; his uncle Pembroke was raised to the rank of Duke of Bedford,
Lord Stanley was made Earl of Derby, and Sir Edward Courtenay, Earl of
Devonshire. The king summoned to his Council, amongst others, his uncle,
Bedford, the Earls of Oxford and Derby, and his principal political counsellors
throughout his reign, Bishop John Morton, Reginald Bray, and Richard Fox.
Special attention was excited by a measure, which was quite in opposition to
all English tradition and bore witness early to Henry’s views on the position
of the monarch: for the greater exclusiveness and dignity of his royal person,
he surrounded himself with a small body-guard, the model of which he had seen
in France.
On the 7th day of November, after the king’s
coronation had taken place with great pomp and ceremony, the Estates of the
realm assembled round him. Parliament was opened at Westminster in presence of
the king, who, sitting on the royal throne, listened to an ornate speech from
the Lord Chancellor Thomas Alcock, Bishop of Worcester. Two days afterwards the
Commons presented as their speaker, Thomas Lovell, a member of the King’s Privy
Council. He was accepted by Henry, who then expounded in a few words the views
he held and had long since made known by his deeds, that his right to the crown
rested on hereditary succession, and the decision of God by the sword. He once
again announced to all his subjects, excepting for those who had “offended his
sovereign majesty,” protection for their possessions and rights.
The Commons responded to this promise of protection on
the part of the king by a very important grant: the duties comprised under the
name of tonnage and poundage were promised to the king at fixed rates “during
his lifetime, for the defence of the realm and especially the safeguard and
keeping of the sea.” To these first really important words of the Commons to
the king, after the presentation of the speaker, the following equally important
supplementary clause was added, “that these be not taken in ensample to the
kings of England in time to come.” Parliament also enacted that the revenues of
the Crown should be brought into the same condition in which they were in 1455,
and, as the property of the outlawed enemies of Henry now fell in to the Crown,
the king had been so generously treated by his first Parliament that no need
remained for further demands for money.
These last-named enactments had been preceded by the
important decision by which Parliament took up its position with regard to the
rights of the dynasty. In this confirmatory Act of Parliament no mention was
made of the legal rehabilitation of the Beauforts,
nor yet of any proof or grounds of Henry’s claims, the existing state of things
was simply accepted and recognised: “To the pleasure of Almighty God, the
wealth, prosperity, and surety of this realm of England, to the singular
comfort of all the king’s subjects of the same, and in avoiding of all
ambiguities and questions, be it ordained, stablished and enacted, by the
authority of this present Parliament, that the inheritance of the crowns of the
realms of England and of France, ... be, rest, remain and abide in the most
royal person of our now sovereign lord King Harry the VII, and in the heirs of
his body lawfully coming, perpetually with the grace of God so to endure, and
in none other.” This declaration was made with the following formalities: the
Commons brought forward the motion, to which the Lords gave their assent, then
followed the declaration: “Le Roy le voet en toutz pointz.”
Those sentences of outlawry which had been pronounced
under Richard III, “in fact but not of right King of England,” were revoked
with the proviso that the persons concerned, amongst whom were Henry’s mother
Margaret, the son of the Duke of Buckingham who had been executed, and the Duke
of Bedford, should not enter upon the enjoyment of their reacquired rights
until after the expiration of the parliamentary session. The difficulty had already
arisen that many of the persons summoned to Parliament, even Henry himself,
were under sentence of outlawry; so it was decided by the judges that the
proscribed persons should not take part in the sittings till after the sentence
of the outlawry had been annulled ; the king. alone was at once to be
considered as freed “by reason of the fact that he has taken upon him the
supreme authority, and is king.”
By the side of conciliatory mercy stood revengeful
retribution upon those nearest adherents of his fallen opponent, who had
already been excepted from the general pardon. In order to be able with legal
formality to pass sentence on these, Henry’s reign was supposed to begin on the
21st of August, so that all who on the 22nd had borne arms against him at
Bosworth, had offended against the king’s majesty, and were found guilty of
high treason; their property naturally fell to the Crown. Besides Richard
himself, the following were attainted: the Duke of Norfolk, his son Thomas,
Earl of Surrey, the Lords Lovell, Ferrers, and Zouche, and some twenty knights
and squires. Henry only succeeded in passing this penal Act in the face of much
opposition; “there was many gentlemen against it, but it would not be, for it
was the king’s pleasure.”
But having promised peace and security to his
subjects, he exacted a like promise to keep the peace from the Estates of his
realm. Every man on his part was to put a stop to those causes which were
likely to bring back the lawless condition of recent times; no one should keep
followers wearing the special badge of their master, nor, as a rule, take any
man into his service by indenture or oath; no one should favour unlawful
assemblies, nor interfere by bribery or force with the regular course of
justice, nor hinder those charged with the office from carrying out the king’s
command, nor grant protection to fugitive criminals. On the 19th of November
the knights and esquires of the Royal Household and of the Lower House had to
swear to these articles; after they had been dismissed, the assembled
lords—thirty spiritual and eighteen temporal—took the same oath, after a solemn
address from the Chancellor. It was certain that all this was not directed
against the Commons, but against the great lords, who favoured illegal conduct,
exercised club law with their armed followers, oppressed the weak, and impeded
the action of law and justice. They had to swear to respect the despised law
before a higher power, that is, the king, and no doubt they acquiesced none too
willingly in the changed order of things which this implied. We find in a
private letter, written shortly before the prorogation of Parliament: “There is
much runyng (murmuring) amongst the Lords, but no man
wot what it is ; it is said it is not well amongst them.” It was the beginning
of the destruction of the splendour of the nobility under the Tudor monarchy.
Many other important laws, dealing with trade, foreign
commerce, and navigation, were passed in the course of a two-months’ session by
this first Parliament of Henry’s; above all, the ratification of his right to
the throne had been clearly and definitely pronounced. It was now simply an act
of prudence on the part of the king not to lay aside altogether the question of
his promised marriage with the Yorkist heiress. When, on the 10th of December,
1485, both Houses met together for a solemn final sitting in the presence of
the king, the Commons of England appealed “to his royal highness in a humble
petition by their Speaker,” that, whereas by the resolve of Parliament the
crowns of England and France were settled on Henry and his heirs, he would now
take to wife Elizabeth of York. The Lords joined in this desire of the Commons,
but there was no reference to Henry’s original promise. Henry answered shortly,
that he was already prepared to act according to their wish. With a caution to
remember their oath, and to preserve peace and quietness, the Lord Chancellor
announced the prorogation of Parliament till the 23rd of January, 1486.
When the new year began, the tendency of the king’s
policy became clearly evident; the opinion of Parliament had indeed been asked
on all important measures, and these, being issued as Acts of Parliament,
carried with them the weight of its consent; but the new dynasty was to stand
in its own strength, and the preservation of peace, of justice, and of law had
been announced as its supreme aim and object. For this very reason, murmurs and
discontent were rife in the ranks of the Lords, but we possess an opposite and
trustworthy opinion from a more impartial quarter. John de Giglis,
collector of the Papal dues, called “Peter's pence,” wrote, a few days before
the prorogation of Parliament, to the Pope Innocent VIII: “The king shows
himself very prudent and clement; all things appear disposed towards peace, if
only the minds of men would remain constant. Nothing has done this realm so
much harm as ambition and covetous desire, and if God will only deliver us from
these, then the kingdom will be at peace.”
One thing still was expected of Henry, and had not
been carried out—his marriage with Elizabeth. No reason for further delay
existed, and perhaps it was to meet the last wish expressed by Parliament that,
before it reassembled, he hurried on the matter, and did not even wait for the
dispensation from the Pope necessary for this marriage between two persons, who
were relatives, though certainly somewhat distant. A dispensation from the
papal legate, James, Bishop of Imola, was made to suffice for the time being.
On the 18th of January, 1486, the wedding took place with great pomp, and,
according to the report of Bernard Andre, Henry’s historiographer royal, amid
general rejoicing. The papal bull was dated the 6th of March; in it, at Henry’s
express desire, the previous action of the legate in granting the dispensation
was specially commended. Soon afterwards, Innocent also gave the formal papal
recognition of Henry’s sovereign rights. The bull of the 27th of March, 1486,
which threatened with excommunication any who should rebel against Henry, asserts
it was issued by the Pope spontaneously and without prompting from the king;
but it is at once obvious from its wording who must have suggested it to the
Pope. It also reflects clearly the king’s own point of view—that in order to
set aside any still-existing scruples as to the rights of his dynasty, the
acknowledgment by the people through Parliament had been added to the right of
war, and to an undoubted hereditary claim; nevertheless, with a view to
settling the old dispute between York and Lancaster, Henry had resolved on a
marriage with Elizabeth, with the proviso that, on Elizabeth’s death, his
children from any other marriage should still possess unrestricted hereditary
right to the crown. It is just these points, so essential for Henry, which were
specially emphasized in that version, of the bull which was distributed
throughout the country. The great importance of this marriage for the security
of his throne was no secret to Henry, and he never contemplated abandoning it;
but in the manner of its final settlement he kept most unmistakably to his own
point of view.
No one could expect that with the new reign peace and
order would at once be restored all over England. Already in the autumn the
king had been threatened with an attack from Scotland, the old border enemy in
the north, and this danger was not to be underrated, because the enemy from
without was able to unite himself with foes within. But as a prompt summons to
arms from Henry showed him to be prepared for defence, the Scottish king, James
III, desisted from his undertaking, and after a few negotiations a suspension
of hostilities was agreed to on the 30th of January, 1486, and peace soon
followed. It was in the north especially that the feeling of the population was
unsafe, and full of menace for Henry. An evidence of this was given him by the
conduct of York, the northern capital of England, which, in the case of
official elections, acted expressly in direct contradiction to the king’s
wishes. Henry was anxious, therefore, after the close of the parliamentary
session, to look into the matter himself; a loan from the city of London,
which, however, did not reach the amount of his demands, had to furnish him the
means of appearing with an armed escort.
It was soon evident that cause for apprehension
existed. In Lincoln, at Easter, Henry learnt that some fugitive partisans of
King Richard—Francis, Viscount against Lovell, with the brothers Thomas and
Humphrey Stafford, had left the sanctuary at Colchester, and Lovell and that no
one knew where they were in hiding. It was not till he had proceeded further
that the news came that Lovell was waylaying him with a body of armed men, and
that the Staffords were trying to incite the population
of Worcester to insurrection. Whilst Henry’s uncle, Bedford, with a few
thousand men, who had been hastily collected, advanced to meet the rebels, the
king devised the clever plan of promising, in a public proclamation, exemption
from punishment to those who should at once tender their submission. These two things
worked together; the confederates of the insurgents gave themselves up to the
king, the leaders fled. Lovell remained in hiding in Lancashire. In May he
turned towards Ely, either with the idea of escaping to the sea, or of seeking
safety in a sanctuary. What he exactly did we do not know; anyhow, he succeeded
in joining a fresh conspiracy against Henry in England, before he fled from the
country in January, 1487. The Stafford brothers had again sought a sanctuary at
Abingdon, but were taken out and brought to the Tower. When Humphrey, before
the Court of King’s Bench, appealed to the ancient right of asylum granted to
the place by a king of Mercia, this right itself, and especially its validity
in such a case of high treason, was disputed by the judges. Humphrey died the
death by torture of a traitor; the younger brother Thomas was pardoned, because
he was considered to have been led astray by the elder.
The threatening cloud had been quickly dispersed.
Again a victor, Henry entered York on the 22nd of April, 1486, where a
triumphal welcome had this time been prepared for him. After staying there some
weeks, he returned through Worcester, Hereford, Gloucester, and Bristol, to
London, where he arrived in June. This year, which had threatened to be so
unquiet, was now to be a joyful one to the king. Eight months after her
marriage, Elizabeth gave birth at Winchester to a son, who received the name of
Arthur, after the hero of tradition. The first offspring of the united houses
of York and Lancaster! The blind poet André celebrated the happy event in
verse and prose, and tells us he sang of it in a hundred poems. In truth, the
birth of an heir was the greatest happiness which could befall the founder of
a rising dynasty. But at the same time a new danger, more threatening than the
last, was gathering over Henry’s head.
The year 1486 had not closed before sinister rumours
were afloat. In a private letter written towards the end of November, it is
stated that people had not been saying much about the imprisoned Earl of
Warwick, but that there would be more talk of him presently; and towards the
beginning of 1487 Henry heard that in Ireland a rival had risen up against him,
who gave himself out to be Warwick. At the same time the king knew that the
impulse to this new movement came from two centres, Ireland and the Flemish
Court of Margaret, widow of Charles the Bold of Burgundy, and sister of Edward
IV. This lady of the house of York was destined to cause the Tudor king many an
anxious hour. Every Yorkist rising found in her a devoted ally. Her widow’s
court afforded a safe place of refuge for fugitive insurgents from England.
The soul of the new conspiracy was her sister’s son,
John, de La Pole, Earl of Lincoln, the same who had been chosen as heir to the
throne by Richard III. He, as well as his father, the Duke of Suffolk, who was
still living, had experienced no ill-treatment from Henry, but rather, had been
entrusted with posts of confidence. It is possible that the prospect he had
once had of the crown may have kept alive the ambition of the earl, About the
end of the year 1486 he devised with friends in England some treasonable plans,
in which his chief confederate was Francis, Viscount Lovell, who had been
fortunate enough to escape the snares prepared for him. Made wiser by the
failure of the last enterprise, they resolved not to take England itself as
their centre of action, but to carry on their preparations for the attempt in
safe quarters outside the country. Lincoln still considered himself secure, but
Lovell fled away to Margaret in January, 1487. Though the plans were laid in
England and the preparations made in Flanders, the decisive attack was to be
carried out from another quarter, and by special means—by setting up a Yorkist
pretender in Ireland.
In Henry’s time the English kings had for three
hundred years borne the title of “Lord of Ireland.” But since the first attempt
at a conquest of Ireland under Henry II, this lordship had been not much more
than a name. It comprehended still in the reign of Henry VII only the so-called
Pale, the English boundary—the counties of Louth, Meath, Kildare, and
Dublin—not really much more than the strip of coast from Dublin to Dundalk,
stretching thirty English miles inland. Within this territory, which was
protected by fortresses against “wild Ireland,” a miniature copy of English
political institutions had been created; outside this, the Anglo-Irish barons,
descendants of the Norman invaders, who in name and character had become
Irishmen, continued to live among the Keltic aborigines, a rough undisciplined
life of robbery and strife. Here the great chiefs were the veritable lords of
the land, and the most important quarrel among them, the race enmity between
the Butlers and Geraldines, had in these latter times been associated with the
quarrel between the Yorkists and Lancastrians in England. The Yorkists had, on
account of their landed property, some influence in Ireland; the head of the
Geraldines, the Earl of Kildare, held, under Edward IV, the office of Lord
Deputy, and on his death it was handed down to his son, who retained it also
under Richard III. The titular dignity of Lord Lieutenant proper was borne
under Edward and Richard by the Duke of Clarence and the Earl of Lincoln, but
the power remained in the hands of the chieftain of the most prominent Irish
party, with the title of Lord Deputy, and he was a partisan of the Yorkists.
Henry, who had come forward as a Lancastrian, had a
difficult position with regard to him. If at the beginning of his reign he had
attempted to change the existing condition of things by force, he might have
destroyed the slender hold which the English rule at that time kept in Ireland.
So he wisely remained in the background, and only, as was reasonable, restored
to their rights the outlawed Butlers, who had been loyal to the Lancastrian
cause. He also appointed their chief, Thomas, Earl of Ormond, then living in
England, to be chamberlain to the queen, with a fixed yearly salary, and
received him into his Privy Council. At the same time he left Kildare
unmolested; setting up his uncle Bedford as lord-lieutenant, he confirmed the
earl in his dignities, and wisely waited a few years before interfering in the
affairs of Ireland. This the Irish themselves made necessary, when they took
part as confederates and allies in the new Yorkist conspiracy.
About the turn of the year 1486-87 there appeared amongst
them a young priest of eight and twenty, named Richard Simons, who brought with
him a handsome youth of Lambert of humble origin, Lambert Simnel, the son of an
organ-builder. This boy was to undertake the part of the Yorkist pretender,
only who he should impersonate was not yet decided. Rumour, ever ready, hinted
that the unhappy sons of Edward IV had not been murdered, and so Lambert was at
first chosen for one of them. Then, however reports were spread about young
Warwick; finally, it was said that he had been killed, or that his murder had
been planned. Possibly, for this reason, the leaders of the under taking were
induced to give out that Simnel was the imprisoned earl. But as Lincoln must
have been accurately informed 0f the real circumstances, this plan appears
almost incredible in its folly; for Henry could at any moment bring forward the
true Warwick and unmask the deception; unless, indeed, the conspirators
meditated using Simnel merely as a puppet, ant substituting the true Yorkist
prince for him, if things turned out successfully. There is no hint as to how
far such at intention could fall in with Lincoln’s private ambition designs.
Ireland, the scene of action, was sufficiently remote from London, and it was
thought something might be expected from the credulity of the warm-blooded
Kelts. The project succeeded. How Simons acted with regard to individual
leaders we do not know; the Geraldines wert gained over, Thomas Fitzgerald,
Chancellor of Ireland brother of the Earl of Kildare, and the earl himself,
joined the conspiracy, and easily drew after them the credulous populace.
Simnel was acknowledged as the true heir to the throne. Though some important
towns, such as Waterford, kept aloof, in spite of all Kildare’s threats, still
this affair of the pretender grew in a short time into a popular rising among
the Irish, which was full of danger for Henry.
The king continued to bide his time; he is said indeed
to have been informed of Lovell and his new intrigues, even while he was still
in England. Towards the beginning of February single rebels were proclaimed,
but not till Candlemas (February 2nd) did the Privy Council meet at Sheen, the
modern Richmond, in order to decide what definite steps to take. The Earl of
Lincoln was present at these sittings. Again a timely proclamation of pardon,
as in the last insurrection, was to lead back to the king those who repented at
once. It was ordered that the captive Warwick should be publicly shown to the
people. But what excited the most attention were the sharp measures taken
against Henry’s mother-in-law, the widowed Queen Elizabeth. Her widow’s
jointure was withdrawn from her “for various considerations,” and she herself
was removed to the convent at Bermondsey, and a yearly income of 400
marks assigned to her, which was subsequently raised.
There must have been some well-grounded reason for
these harsh and severe measures, and although none is mentioned, we are
naturally led to seek one in the Yorkist rising, concerning which, especially,
the council had met together. Once already had Elizabeth changed sides, when
she gave Henry up for the murderer of her sons. Why should not the new prospect
for her husband’s House fill her with new hopes, though she would thereby be
working for her nephew and not for her own daughter? Elizabeth had never shown
herself a woman of firm and clear resolve. It is peculiar, certainly, that
nowhere should there be any explanation as to the reason for this sentence; the
mistaken idea that it was a case of mere arbitrary harshness against an
innocent member of the House of York was contradicted by Henry, when he handed
over the whole property to her daughter, his wife. Nor could it be a
deep-seated grudge on account of that first desertion to Richard, for Henry had
before expressly reinstated the queen in all her rights by an Act of
Parliament, and had endowed her with an ample income. The cause was a
repetition of her former defection. All the threads were not yet in Henry’s
hand, otherwise the head of the conspiracy, the Earl of Lincoln, could hardly
have taken part as a spy in the sittings of the council and remained to the
end, before he followed his friend Lovell to Flanders.
The king betook himself to London, and caused the true
Warwick to be shown through the streets of the city, without, however, any
effect penetrating to Ireland. The conspirators were arming in the Low
Countries—mainly with the money granted by Margaret—two thousand German
mercenaries under an experienced captain, Martin Schwarz, with whom they landed
in Ireland on the 5th of May, 1487. On the 24th Lambert was borne through the
streets of Dublin, amidst great general rejoicing, and crowned king of Ireland
with a crown taken from an image of the Virgin. Then he started to take
possession of his own special kingdom of England, accompanied, besides the
mercenaries, by crowds of poorly clothed and badly armed Irish, under Thomas
Fitzgerald.
In consequence of Lincoln’s escape, Henry ordered the
east coast to be closely watched, since a descent would surely be made on that
side from the Netherlands. At the end of March he left Sheen, went by way of
Colchester to Norwich, where he kept the Easter festival, and made a pilgrimage
to Walsingham. Through Lord Howth he received news of the events in Ireland;
and at the end of April he moved westwards from Cambridge to Coventry, and
marched, apparently undecidedly, hither and thither, till he fixed his headquarters,
on the 8th of May, at Kenilworth. The nobles from the neighbouring counties
assembled at his summons in great numbers, with their dependents; the Duke of
Bedford and the Earl of Oxford were given the chief command. When the troops of
horse sent out to reconnoitre announced that the enemy had landed on the 4th of
June on the coast of Lancashire, Henry set out. More reinforcements fell in on
the way. Both parties seemed disposed to vie with each other in trying to gain
the favour of the people, for when Henry issued severe regulations for the
protection of the inhabitants, Lincoln sought on his side to prevent all
plundering. Hoping for reinforcements, Lincoln advanced slowly; but his hopes
were in vain ; still he did not lose courage, but marched southwards on Newark,
and encountered the troops of the king at Stoke on the 16th of June, 1487.
The Germans and the half-naked Irish fought with
infuriated bravery, but after three hours, the victory declared for Henry. The
leaders, Lincoln, Schwarz, Fitzgerald, were slain; Lord Lovell disappeared
after the battle; Simnel and his teacher, Simons, were taken prisoners, and the
latter, whom rumour designated as the real originator of the insurrection, was
condemned to imprisonment for life, whilst Simnel was treated with great
indulgence. Henry considered his whole participation in the affair as a joke,
and assigned to the mock king a place in his kitchen as scullion. When he
showed himself skilful, he was promoted and given a post among the king’s
falconers. Henry abode for a while in Kenilworth, then travelled slowly through
the northern part of his kingdom, where many suspected persons suffered
punishment. The citizens in the loyal town of Waterford received in the autumn
authority to seize Kildare and his companions where they could, and to
confiscate their property. The Pope, too, again lent his aid to Henry; a bull
limited the much-abused right of asylum in England, especially in the case of
those guilty of high treason. Those who had been excommunicated on account of
the insurrection might be absolved by the Archbishop of Canterbury; a special
inquiry was instituted against many Irish bishops by the Pope, and he insisted
especially that even ecclesiastics should conform to the obligation of loyalty
to the king. Alexander VI. renewed, later on, the power of absolution for the
Primate, and extended it to all bishops, adding, as a condition, that they
should act in the matter exclusively according to the king’s wish.
Henry did not return to London till the 4th of
November, where a rumour of his defeat had been maliciously circulated. It was
just at this time, after the youthful Tudor monarchy had held out firmly
against two Yorkist insurrections, that Henry conceded to his Yorkist wife the
supreme dignity which till then had been withheld from her. On the 25th of
November, 1487, her solemn coronation took place.
The Estates of the realm had already been called
together on the 9th of November for the second Parliament under Henry VII. They
had to ratify the Bill of Attainder against those who had taken part in the
last conspiracy, by which twenty-eight persons were affected; strange to say,
Lovell was not mentioned. For another reason also this Parliament was an
important one for Henry’s reign. At the opening of it John Morton appears for
the first time as Lord Chancellor, the principal official in the kingdom; he
had already been promoted to this new dignity, and to be Archbishop of
Canterbury in Bourchier’s place the year before,
whilst Ely had been given to Alcock, who had to resign the Chancellorship in
Morton’s favour. Morton was thus raised to the public position which befitted
his importance for Henry’s reign, and he remained till his death the first
counsellor of the king.
It was this Parliament which placed in Henry’s hand a
most effective weapon for his struggle with the aristocracy, and, at the same
time, one of the most important means of furthering his monarchical policy.
This was the institution of the Star Chamber, whereby the judicial powers of
the King’s Privy Council were legally confirmed, and a court of justice
established, which was immediately under the control of the Crown, and always
at its disposal.
Henry now made a demand of his second Parliament, to
which it consented, and thereby signified its acquiescence in a new departure
in the royal policy—Henry’s first appearance in the conflict between the
foreign Powers on the Continent. At the very beginning of the session,
Parliament granted two fifteenths and tenths of the movable property of the lay
population of the kingdom, and a graduated poll-tax on foreign traders in
England “ for the immediate and necessary defence of the realm.” Scarcely had
the new king conquered his position and maintained it against repeated hostile
attacks within his kingdom, when the further necessity was laid upon him of
defending himself outside it. Henry was drawn into that struggle which had
already affected him when a refugee—the struggle for the independence of
Brittany.
CHAPTER II.
FOREIGN COMPLICATIONS: FRANCE, BRITTANY, AND SPAIN.
When Henry VII ascended the throne, England had lost
that magnificent position in Europe which had been acquired for her by Henry V.
As piece by piece the continental conquests fell back again to France,
England’s prestige disappeared, and the long and destructive civil war caused
the influence of the kingdom to lie completely fallow, so far as foreign
affairs were concerned. To dream of regaining the former powerful position was
out of the question; the new ruler had to be content, if he could regain for
England that measure of respect which she could not dispense with in her
intercourse with her neighbours.
It was in France that Henry had last found shelter and
help to enable him to come home; therefore, on his return from exile, a
definite connection existed between him and France, not at all in keeping with
the national tradition, founded on a century of enmity. Thus he appeared from
the first destined to put an end to the old quarrel between the two countries;
as early as the 12th of October, 1485, even before his coronation, he announced
a one year’s truce with France, which promised for his subjects safe commercial
intercourse, and this after some negotiations was extended to two years, and
again on the 17th of January, i486, replaced by a new three years’ treaty.
Besides the French ambassador, others also had soon
appeared, from the Archduke Maximilian of Austria and the Duke of Brittany;
all, it was believed, with peaceful intentions. But to keep up such friendly
relations on all sides for any length of time was obviously impossible; for
Anne de Beaujeu still continued to strive with ever-increasing energy for the
final incorporation of the duchy. The neighbouring States, such as Burgundy,
Spain, and England, had an interest in its preservation; they could not fail to
regard the extension of the power of France with dislike; England, especially,
after the disappearance of an independent Brittany, would find herself exposed
to a long line of unbroken French coast. It remained to be seen whether this
interest would so far outweigh the desire for peace and internal stability for
England and his new monarchy, that Henry would, for the sake of it, risk the
danger of difficult foreign entanglements, and the rupture of relations lately
established with France.
In Brittany the enemies of Landois had contrived in
July, 1485, to get the hated favourite into their power, and to have him
executed, whereupon De Rieux and his companions again returned from France. The
victory of her friends was also a gain for Anne de Beaujeu, especially as in
France itself the overthrow of the Duke of Orleans took place at the same time,
and an advance of Maximilian’s into Artois was checked. Of no less importance
for Anne was Henry’s victory over Richard, which would withdraw England from
the ranks of her enemies; she intended now to spend all her energies on
Brittany.
How could Duke Francis resist such a foe without
allies? As a reward for help, he offered the hand of his eldest daughter Anne,
still a child, whom the Breton Estates had acknowledged by an oath of fealty to
be his heiress and successor.
The indefatigable Maximilian was the first in the
field. Since the death of his wife, Mary (March 26, 1482), he had laid claim to
the government of her greatly diminished Burgundian inheritance, in the place
of his son Philip, still a minor ; but it was not till the summer of 1485,
after a long dispute, that he was recognised as guardian by the Flemish
Estates, who were constantly being stirred up and helped against him by France.
On the 16th of February, 1486, took place at Frankfort his election as king of
the Romans and successor to his father, the old Emperor Frederick III. Eager to
requite his enemies for the support afforded to his Flemish foes, he concluded
on the 15th of March, 1486, a treaty which was to secure independence to
Brittany, and which promised to him the hand of the Princess Anne, and to his
son Philip that of her younger sister Isabeau.
This did not prevent Duke Francis from making the same
offer of his daughter’s hand to the powerful Lord d’Albret in the south of
France, in order to gain his support for Brittany. France, however, arrived
more quickly on the scene of action, and made the attack with three armies at
once. Meanwhile a sharp contention was going on in the Breton Government
between the native nobles and the fugitive French, amongst whom was Louis of
Orleans. A series of fortified places fell, and D’Albret, who was advancing
with a few thousand men, was driven back. But the siege of the strongly fortified
town of Nantes had to be raised in August, 1487, and thus the campaign, which
had begun successfully for the French, ended with a disaster; and still more
serious was Rieux’s defection from the treaty concluded with Anne de Beaujeu.
Maximilian’s offer to send forces for the purpose of protecting Brittany caused
her less anxiety, for he was soon entirely taken up with his quarrel with the
rebellious Flemish towns.
Notwithstanding the conclusion of a treaty of peace,
Anne de Beaujeu deemed it advisable, in consequence of recent events, to secure
for herself the neutrality of Henry. Perhaps she was not very sorry that
Simnel’s insurrection should keep a check on the king, but the victory at
Stoke, in June, 1487, had quickly brought it to an end. When, after a long stay
in the north of England, Henry was returning slowly to London, there met him in
Leicester, at the beginning of September, a French embassage which was to
justify the action of France, and, if possible, to beg for Henry’s aid. No one
had more cause to draw back from foreign complications than Henry, who had but
just passed through dangers at home; still, prudence bade him assume, at least
outwardly, an independent attitude, that he might thereby not appear
indifferent in an affair which concerned English interests. He seized on the
convenient plan of offering to both parties his mediation, through Christopher Urswick, in May, 1488, and the French Government, hoping
thus to gain time, agreed. But in Brittany, where Louis of Orleans was the ruling
spirit, Urswick was dismissed, and a demand made for
help from England, whilst France made use of the delay thus given to again
beleaguer Nantes.
Henry had reserved for himself a free hand: Brittany
had not been mentioned in the French treaty, nor indeed had France, in a
similar commercial treaty with Duke Francis. He endeavoured to inspire a
certain amount of respect for his office of mediator by equipping a fleet, for
which Parliament had granted the necessary funds, but much to his annoyance, and
against his express command, his wife’s uncle, Edward, Lord Woodville, sailed
over secretly from Southampton in a Breton ship, with two hundred warlike
adventurers, to take part in the war against France. On the way too they
captured a French vessel, and so arrived in Brittany with war booty. Henry
immediately made his apologies to France, where the occurrence had caused such
bitterness of feeling that the English ambassador, Urswick,
was even exposed to personal danger. Henry’s best apology was the renewal, at
Windsor, on the 14th of July, 1488, of the treaty which would have expired in
the coming January, and was now extended for a year longer, to January, 1490.
Breton affairs entered shortly afterwards upon a new
phase. On the 28th of July, 1488, at St. Aubin du Cormier, a decisive battle
was fought between the victoriously advancing French, under the youthful La Tremouille, and the Bretons, on whose side were fighting
Orleans, D’Albret, and Woodville. It ended in a complete victory for the
French. Orleans was taken prisoner, Woodville fell, and with him nearly all the
Englishmen. After some further small engagements, Duke Francis was forced to
beg for peace in a humble epistle to his “sovereign lord,” Charles VIII, and to
promise, in the treaty of Sablé (August 20, 1488), to
send the enemies of France out of his country, and, above all, not to marry his
daughter without the permission of the French king. On the 31st of August he
signed the treaty, and on the 9th of September he died, to be succeeded by his
daughter Anne, a child of twelve.
Anne de Beaujeu, whose husband had, at the beginning
of 1488, inherited the power and dignity of the Dukes of Bourbon, now at once
raised a claim for the wardship, in opposition to the Marshal de Rieux. She
disputed the right of the youthful Anne to bear the ducal title, and the
consequence was that the war of devastation in Brittany went on. The young
duchess Anne could expect but little help in this juncture from her suitor
Maximilian, for he had been taken prisoner at Bruges in February, 1488, by the
rebellious Flemings, and although, at the price of certain concessions, he had
regained his freedom in May, he subsequently took part in the war of
retaliation undertaken by his father against the Netherlands. The most important
places remained in the hands of the French, who had marched to the assistance
of the Flemings. In the following year Maximilian betook himself to the Empire
to beg for help against the French, and was there for a time detained. On the
other hand, Henry of England had made good his peaceful intentions by renewing
the treaty with France, and, in spite of some scruples, he would certainly
rather have seen Brittany become French than throw himself between France and
the duchy, while he was not yet firmly established in England. But now a change
began.
In the autumn of 1488 Henry again entered into
friendly relations with the government of the regency in Brittany. He offered
his help, even to come himself, and proposed that Anne should be united in marriage
with the son of his cousin, the Duke of Buckingham who had been executed. Not
long after, in December, embassies were despatched to the various powers—to
France, Brittany, Spain, Portugal, to Maximilian, Philip, and the Flemish
Estates, all with instructions to conclude friendly treaties of peace. The
great almoner, Urswick, was to renew in France
Henry’s offer of mediation for peace, whilst Edgecombe, on the other hand, in
Brittany was to make an offer of English help for the war, and demand portions
of the land as security, and also the pledge that the marriage of the Duchess
Anne should be made to depend on Henry’s consent. Thus the offers in Brittany
and France stood in marked opposition the one to the other. The proposal of
mediation in France appears to be only a first attempt to secure for himself in
case of necessity, as dignified a retreat as possible from the existing
covenant. Henry said also to the Pope’s collector, De Giglis,
that he was plotting nothing against the French king. The gratitude he owed to
the late Duke Francis obliged him to protect the interests of Brittany, which,
owing to the close connection between the two countries, were also those of
England; for, should the duchy be broken up, his own kingdom would be in
danger. If he succeeded in his efforts at mediation, all would then be well; if
not, he would defend Brittany and her duchess with all his might.
As early as December, 1488, orders to muster had been
sent out to the counties, as the king, “with the agreement of his council,
wished to send an armed force to the assistance of Brittany.” Six hundred men
were to be raised at once, and embarked; fresh orders followed in January, and
the manufacture of war material was proceeded with. On the 13th of January,
1489, a new Parliament met, from which Henry demanded £100,000 for the
maintenance of ten thousand archers for the war. After a long discussion an agreement
was entered into with the convocations of Canterbury and York, then also
sitting, that the clergy should undertake one quarter, and the lay population
raise the remaining £75,000 by the levy of a tenth on all incomes. On the 23rd
of February the consent of the Commons was given by the mouth of the Speaker,
and Parliament, which besides this had prepared no noteworthy measure, was
prorogued till the 14th of October.
At the same time, the emissaries sent out in December
had concluded treaties, which were really the very opposite of peaceful. In
Portugal there had simply been a resumption of friendly relations by the
conferring of the Order of the Garter, and the renewal of an old friendly
treaty concluded under Richard II, in 1387. The treaty made by the plenipotentiaries
of Maximilian and Philip was of greater importance.
Henry’s relations with Burgundy had been shortly
before rather strained. The first overtures were of a more friendly nature; the
treaty with Burgundy, concluded by Edward IV in 1478, was first of all renewed
for a year on the 2nd of January, 1487, and Henry declared himself ready for
further negotiations, but at the same time made complaints about the annoyance
caused to Englishmen by Flemish pirates. He was especially vexed because
Margaret’s dower court in Burgundy had become the centre of Yorkist intrigues.
We find accordingly, in the beginning of 1488, a partial restriction of trade
placed on the dominions of the King of the Romans, whilst Henry met fresh
piracies with special counter measures. He expressed himself, in July, 1488,
with much irritation, before the Spanish ambassador Puebla, on the subject of
Maximilian, with whom he refused to enter into any alliance. Nevertheless even
in this we find him subsequently turning round again, for in December an
embassage of peace was sent to Maximilian as well as to the other monarchs, and
on the 14th of February, 1489, a friendly alliance for mutual defence was
concluded.
But far closer than this alliance was the covenant
with the Breton Government. The ambassador, Edgecombe, who, on his landing, had
scarcely escaped imprisonment, concluded, on the 10th of February, a treaty
which completely fulfilled the wishes of England. Henry promised to the duchess
protection for her dominions at his own cost, but against securities in
Brittany until repayment of the same; Anne’s marriage and every treaty of
alliance, except with Maximilian or the Spaniards, were to be subject to his
approval.
Only the direst necessity could force the Bretons to
such concessions; Henry had gained the consent of Parliament for war expenses,
and besides had stipulated for compensation and securities from Brittany. The
most important thing, however, was this, that England was drifting fast into
open war with France.
What could induce Henry to make such a venture? We
feel from his behaviour that he was only driven against his will to take such
decided steps. His rule in England, still by no means secure, ran great danger
thereby; there was no sign, either, of any warlike disposition in the nation.
That Woodville should have been able so soon after the long civil war to get
together a few hundred adventurous spirits means nothing ; the length of the
discussion in Parliament, before consent was at last given, points rather to
disapproval and opposition, and, worst of all, the levy of a war contribution
called forth a fresh and serious rebellion. The north of England was not yet
pacified; in February, 1489, there were disturbances in York at the time of the
election of a mayor. But far worse was to- follow. The royal tax-collectors
encountered opposition in York and Durham. The Earl of Northumberland,
Richard’s companion at Bosworth, but raised by Henry to be Warden-General of
the East and Middle Marches against Scotland, and later, Sheriff of
Northumberland, tried in person to quell the threatening storm, but he was
slain on the 28th of April, 1489, by the rebels who had collected at Topcliff under a certain John a Chambre. The signal thus
given, John Egremond, a restless knight, took the
lead. The town of York even was attacked, but Henry at once went to the rescue.
Again a former partisan of Richard’s, the Earl of Surrey, who had lately been
released from captivity, was given the chief command; the king himself followed
him to meet the insurgents, who were repulsed. John a Chambre was executed at
York, and Egremont fled to that refuge for all the Tudor’s enemies, Margaret of
Burgundy. Surrey’s reward was his appointment, soon afterwards, as the
successor of Northumberland.
The consequences of a war policy in England being so
bad, why was it pursued? Various views are possible, but this at least is
certain—public opinion did not incline to war. Nor is the motive for this
change of policy to be sought in Henry’s relations with France, to which
country he was bound by a heavy debt of gratitude, nor in Brittany, nor in
England itself, least of all in Henry’s personal inclination; this change was
really the first important result of a new alliance, now just beginning, between
England and Spain and their royal Houses, the maintenance of which was to be
the central point of Henry’s whole policy throughout a decade and a half.
One thing was especially needful for Henry, as a means
of consolidating his power—to get his youthful dynasty recognised as of equal
standing by the older ruling Houses of Europe. For this it was not enough to
conclude a political alliance binding the States together; a connection by
marriage was also necessary, which should mark the recognition by the kings
themselves of his perfect right to be held their equal. Therefore a future wife
should be chosen as early as possible for his first-born, Arthur, still an
infant in the cradle; and this was specially in Henry’s thoughts when he turned
his eyes towards Spain. Friendly relations had indeed existed between England
and the Spanish kingdoms, but of late they had relaxed somewhat, and the
existing commercial intercourse had but little effect in drawing the two
countries together. Was it accident, or was it the far-sightedness of the
English king, which led him to seek a union with those prominent rulers, who
had raised Spain to the important position she was destined to hold in Europe
throughout the following century?
Spain, too, was then at the beginning of a new and
important development; a certain likeness prevailed between the constitutional
problems set before the two kings, Ferdinand and Henry, in their respective
countries. The tendency towards disruption, which had long since disappeared in
England, was especially strong in Spain. No united Spanish kingdom really yet
existed, and it was only through the union by marriage of their rulers that the
kingdoms of Castile and Aragon held together. King Ferdinand of Aragon owed it
to a long struggle between his father, Henry II, and the insurgent Catalonians,
that the undivided authority of the Aragonese throne,
to which Sardinia and Sicily belonged, had passed to him. His wife, Isabella of
Castile, found herself, after the death of the king, her brother, face to face
with a strong party wishing to raise to the throne his daughter, whose
legitimacy was much called in question. As this princess was betrothed to
Alfonso V of Portugal, the triumph of Isabella and her husband decided the
great question of the future—whether the dominating kingdom in the Pyrenean
peninsula should be formed into a homogeneous State with Portugal or with
Aragon. In a hard but successful struggle, this royal couple had maintained the
dignity of their throne as representatives of the State in the face of an
independent and turbulent nobility, and their new centralising monarchy was now
to exercise complete authority over the separative forces of the old feudal
State. By raising the government and the administration of justice, by a prudent
if unscrupulous financial policy, by the use in politics of the Inquisition and
of the authority of the Church, combined with a firm and unrelenting
consistency of purpose, but also by harsh and even foul means, Ferdinand and
Isabella advanced step by step towards their goal. Though completely separate
in their internal government, the two kingdoms appeared in their external
action as one, far outweighing those kingdoms which still remained independent
in the peninsula—Portugal in the west, the little kingdom of Navarre in the
north, and Granada, the last remnant of Moorish power, in the south.
The leading mind in this joint rule was Ferdinand’s,
and it is an evidence of Henry’s insight, that he spared no pains and no
sacrifice to secure as an ally this prince, the greatest statesman of his day.
These two sovereigns were somewhat kindred spirits, not so much in the
outwardly prominent hardness and the darker side of their nature, as in the
lofty aims of their monarchical policy.
It was an important moment for England’s future, when
Henry made the first step towards an understanding with Spain by issuing powers
for an embassage on the 10th of March, 1488. He proposed a treaty of mutual
peace and commerce, but the main point in the English demands was the
matrimonial alliance between Arthur, Prince of Wales, and Katharine, the
youngest child of the Spanish monarch, born on the 5th of December, 1485. The
powers in reply from the Spaniards are dated the 30th of April, and were
brought to England by a special envoy called Sepulveda. In them they agreed to
all Henry’s proposals for a friendly and matrimonial alliance. The
plenipotentiaries in London were able to meet at once for the first preliminaries,
and on the 7th of July, 1488, a provisional settlement was prepared. Agreed as
to first principles, they reserved the more detailed conditions for future
arrangement. Henry had received with unaffected pleasure the intelligence of
the favourable reception of his proposals by the Spaniards, whose ambassador, Puebla,
reports that he showed his satisfaction by the joyful exclamation, “Te Deum laudamus!”
There was a good reason for this prompt agreement.
When Henry made his overtures to Ferdinand and Isabella, they were in the midst
of that ten years’ war, which they had been carrying on since 1482, to the
complete destruction of the Moorish power, a war which gave to the Spaniards
their great military school, fanned the last flicker of crusading enthusiasm,
and called together combatants from foreign lands, from Germany, France, and
England, which was the chief object at that time of the whole Spanish policy,
and in which all their strength was employed. Even before the struggle for
Brittany began, the Spaniards had achieved a brilliant success by the capture
and fearful punishment of Malaga in the summer of 1487, a foretaste of what
would be the fate of Granada. In the middle of this great struggle they were
but little inclined to split up their strength over the affairs of Brittany. On
the other hand, this complication aroused their own not unimportant claims
against France, Ferdinand’s father had been obliged to give in pledge to Louis
XI the two border countries—Cerdagne and the county
of Roussillon—in return for his powerful aid against the Catalonians (1462).
During the ten years between 1470 and 1480, the French monarchy had held out
victoriously against a revolt of the inhabitants, supported by Aragon. Spanish
policy, however, continued to aim at regaining the lost provinces, and for this
purpose the Breton complication afforded the most favourable opportunity,
exciting as it did enmity from all sides against the greed of France.
In no case should this opportunity be allowed to pass
unused; the Moorish war, however, obliged them to reduce as much as possible
the forces for this additional task, and the English offer of friendship came
to them as the most welcome solution of the dilemma. The price which Henry had
to pay for the matrimonial alliance was fixed by them at the outset. Roussillon
and Cerdagne were to be conquered for Spain, in
Brittany.
This reason for their prompt acquiescence came out
undisguisedly in the stipulation that Henry, if Spain declared war on France,
should immediately join in the war, and that without Spain he must not conclude
any peace or truce with France. Ferdinand and Isabella only promised to include
England in any peace of their own with France. The English plenipotentiaries
naturally refused thus to sacrifice England to Spanish interests; it was
“against right, against God and their conscience.” They were then reminded of
the painful truth, that Spain’s powerful alliance was valuable to Henry “in
order to make that impossible which has so often happened to English kings, and
still happens.” The hollow show of an equality of conditions was given by the
subsequent proposal that Henry should have the right to retreat alone from the
war, if France gave him back the English possessions, Guienne and Normandy;
Spain retaining the same right in the event of the two counties, Roussillon and
Cerdagne, being ceded. One glance at the map will
make us perceive the cleverness of the tactics which made England’s withdrawal
from the war depend upon a price such as France would never pay until she was
at the last extremity, whilst for Spain it was merely a question of a corner of
territory, and that a possession held only in forfeit by France. In return for
this, Henry received very doubtful promises that in the event of an English
attack the Spaniards would also support Brittany, while all the time they were
even raising objections against his project of a marriage between the Duchess
Anne and young Buckingham.
The aim of Spanish policy was expressed in the treaty
of alliance in such plain words, that to mistake that aim was altogether impossible;
nevertheless, to Henry, the Spanish alliance seemed worth such a heavy price.
How resigned his words sounded—that he felt himself in duty bound to Charles of
France, that to break with him would cost him many friends, but that he was
ready to give them up in order to come to an understanding with Spain.1
Ferdinand and Isabella not only demanded the breaking up of this old friendship,
but Henry was also obliged, simply that he might please them, to forget his
grudge against Maximilian. In accordance with their wishes, in December, 1488,
he prepared the draft on which the subsequent treaty with Maximilian, directed
solely against France, was based.
On the same day, as we know, on the 11th of December,
1488, he despatched an embassy to Spain. It was conducted by Thomas Savage and
Richard Nanfan, and its duty was to conclude a treaty
of friendship, commerce, and marriage, on the lines laid down, and agreed upon
in London. The same ambassadors had then to take the Order of the Garter to
Portugal; Puebla and Sepulveda accompanied the Englishmen. The outward course
of the journey is described in detail to us by Richmond herald, who was of the
party; of the negotiations themselves we learn next to nothing. On the 19th of
January, 1489, the ambassadors took ship, but contrary winds drove them back,
and detained them in England for a month. On the 16th of February they landed
in Laredo, on the north coast of Spain. They passed through all sorts of petty
travelling adventures during their journey through the country. One scene was
amusing, when the Englishmen, trying to make themselves agreeable, were almost
turned out of doors by a rough and cross-grained hostess. On the 12th of March
they entered the royal camp at Medina del Campo, to the south of Valladolid.
Two days after, they were received in solemn audience; the Bishop of Ciudad
Rodrigo answered Savage’s speech of greeting, “but the good bishop was very old,
and had lost all his teeth, so that only with great trouble could we understand
what he said.” Receptions and tournaments alternated for the next few days. Not
till the 26th of March, as the herald relates, were the envoys sent for “in
order to bring to an end the settlement of that business which they had to
perform”; on one article alone they could not agree until the following day,
when the Spanish king swore to the treaty, the ratification of which bears the
date of the 28th of March.
The work had indeed been quickly accomplished. This
treaty of the 27th of March, 1489, marks the first important alliance which the
Tudor monarch concluded with a foreign power. Friendship and alliance, mutual
protection for their present and future possessions, free intercourse between
their subjects—these were the leading provisions; each one promised, and this
was the principal point for Henry, neither to harbour nor support any rebels
against the other, and the war with France was determined on, according to the
Spanish demand. It was indeed settled that neither party should make peace
without the other; but then, either was bound to begin the war against France
at the wish of the other. The Spaniards were indeed safe against such a wish on
the part of Henry. They even saw how to turn the affair sophistically, in such
wise that, with a show of regard for the Anglo-French truce, which was still to
last till the 17th of January, 1490, they might leave the conduct of the war in
1489 to the English king, and wait till the next year to take part in it
themselves. And so accordingly they did. The fact that owing to circumstances
one clause, contrary, no doubt, to the intentions of the Spaniards, still put
into Henry’s hands a right by treaty to decide for himself when to begin the
war, could be of no practical use to him, under the actual relations which
existed between them. Of course there remained as a condition for breaking off
the war, the acquisition of Guienne and Normandy on the one part, or Cerdagne and Roussillon on the other. As the price for this
very one-sided preservation of Spanish interests, Henry was granted his
marriage treaty: the marriage was to be concluded as soon as the royal children
were of suitable age, the dowry was to amount to two hundred thousand scudi, at
the rate of four shilling and two pence, the half of it payable on Katharine’s
arrival in England, the other half two years later; the right of succession to
the thrones of Castile and Aragon was to remain to Katharine.
Thus in one year—a time certainly not very long when
we remember the pace at which business matters were carried on in those
days—the close alliance had been concluded, the Tudor dynasty acknowledged as
of equal standing by its family connection with the royal Houses of Spain, and
a certain guarantee thus secured for their assistance, in particular against
the hostility of Yorkist rivals and their friends from abroad. But the
sacrifice Henry had to pay was great, it was the breach with his old ally, the
French Government. Henry had given a proof of the honesty of his intentions,
for even while negotiations were still in progress, he began arming for war,
and at once made the first advance. It was a kind of payment beforehand, to
make the settlement still more secure for him.
Hostilities had already begun. France regarded with
some uneasiness the threatening preparations of her former friend; an English
attack on St. Omer was expected there, while in England, in the autumn of 1488,
there was talk of an unsuccessful attempt by the French on Calais. Once again
the French made an effort to send envoys to negotiate peace, but just as these
were returning home without success, the English troops crossed over, and on
landing in April, 1489, took Guingamp, which had
shortly before been vacated by their adversaries; otherwise they did not do
much harm. It was only on Flemish soil that any English passage of arms worthy
of mention took place: there the covenant with Maximilian really led to some
action in common.
The rebellious Flemings still continued to hold out,
with the help of France, whose troops, under D’Esquerdes,
were besieging Dixmuiden, a little fortress not far
from the border. A company under Lord Morley, reinforced by the English
garrison of the Calais district under Lord Daubeney and by a few hundred
Germans, first relieved the place—where in the struggle Lord Morley fell—and
afterwards brought assistance to hard-pressed Nieuport.
This was indeed a slight success; but as a whole the
deeds of arms by no means fulfilled the expectations which had been called
forth by the preparations, and were quite inadequate, if it was really desired
to give Brittany the aid that had been promised. Another cause of hindrance was
the divided condition of the Breton Government, and the English plenipotentiary
Edgecombe had much trouble, owing to the personal quarrels between the leading
men. Henry, however, was not at all in earnest with his help, he did only what
was necessary in order to carry out his desire for a treaty with Spain, besides
seeking to keep some advantage for himself by the rich grants from Parliament,
and the money for Breton fortresses held in pledge. His position with regard to
France was strange enough; war was not even declared, and yet English and
French troops were fighting in various places in Flanders and Brittany.
Henry became soon enough aware of the faithlessness of
his allies, and the first who disregarded the covenant was the friend imposed
on him by Spain, Maximilian, king of the Romans. The idea of the Spanish monarchs
had been to put pressure on France by annoyance from all sides, but none of her
adversaries had shown themselves very formidable. It was not till the beginning
of 1490 that the Spaniards themselves sent a thousand men into Brittany, who
besieged Redon, and with inconsiderable forces undertook an advance on
Roussillon. Still France, hemmed in by a circle of hostile alliances, was
obliged to look about for a way of escape, and tried to do so by gaining over
Maximilian, to whom she promised her help as arbitrator in his dispute with the
Flemings. In the Frankfort treaty of the 22nd of July, 1489, they wisely
postponed a decision on questions of territory to a later time; the French
Government promised, besides their help in Flanders, to give up the places they
held in Brittany to the duchess, if she would have all Englishmen sent out of
the country and pledge herself not to allow them to settle in it again.
Treaties at that time were seldom concluded on a basis
of really common interests, which would have guaranteed joint action. The art
of diplomacy consisted solely in the endeavour of each power, in its own
interests, to overreach the other, and it was considered quite justifiable to
pass over to the enemy at any moment, for more favourable offers. The bewildering
number and variety of the treaties entered into by each State are the sign of
their complete untrustworthiness; the standard of political morality was very
low, and that this lack of principle should have been so universal is the
excuse for individual monarchs. So France and Maximilian combined together,
without hesitation, abandoning their former allies, the Flemish towns and Henry
of England.
With Spain, too, France sought, in the summer of 1489,
an independent alliance. A meeting between Anne of Beaujeu and Isabella was
already spoken of for the next year, to settle the question of Roussillon. The
Spanish monarchs, upon the whole, had the same ends in view. For them the
Frankfort treaty was naturally inopportune, and the hopes they had entertained
from the alliance with England seemed likely to be realised. In all the
difficulties that beset the French government there was no talk of the
Spaniards, so that after the Frankfort treaty Henry seemed the only remaining
obstacle to a settlement.
Henry’s situation had thus become anything but
pleasant. Once entangled in this business, so disagreeable to himself, he could
not well draw back again without having achieved some success, and without
recouping himself for the expense he had incurred. The Spanish and English
troops in the duchy did not pull very well together; there were disagreements
too between the English captains and the Breton Government. The French Orleanist party, which had the control of the duchess,
suspected the Englishmen of treating with Marshal de Rieux, who was again
working vigorously for an agreement with the French government. However, there
was less danger for the English king in the prosecution of this war, which was
simply devastating unhappy Brittany, than there would have been to his
authority and to the position of his dynasty in England, if he had broken it
off without accomplishing anything. His negotiations with France, however, did
not cease. Whilst the troops, without indeed doing each other much injury, were
standing face to face in Brittany, the diplomatists were discussing a renewal
of the armistice, which would expire in January, 1490. Henry, with much
astuteness, made his envoys give the Parliament, which had just met together
for a new session on the 14th of October, 1489, some insight into these
negotiations. He would thus be able to meet the demands of the French by a
reference to the adverse attitude of his Parliament. Then he prorogued
Parliament, from the 4th of December to the 24th of January, 1490, and when the
negotiations still did not advance one step, the Estates had to agree to a new
grant for the war on the 27th of February, the last day of this third session.
This grant was at the same time to indemnify the king, because the last had
been almost two-thirds below the estimate. The usual form of taxation of a
fifteenth and tenth was now again chosen, amounting, with the expenses
deducted, to about .£32,000, which were distributed over two years.
Thus Henry had secured for himself the means of carrying
on the war, the sole aim of which was to keep hold on the Breton towns pledged
to him, until they were redeemed. In the spring of 1490, Pope Innocent VIII
had, very much to Spain’s annoyance, sent a message of peace to Henry’s court
by Lionel Chieregato, Bishop of Concordia. This had
failed, indeed, but the bishop renewed his efforts in the summer of 1490, at a
peace congress at Boulogne and Calais, where, besides the English and French
plenipotentiaries, envoys had also come from the Emperor Frederick, from
Maximilian, and Brittany. But as England demanded compensation for her expenses
even from France, and France the evacuation of the fortresses, and the Bretons
at least a respite, the negotiations were broken off in August, and French,
Spaniards, and English remained in the country.
Whilst these unsuccessful attempts at making peace
were going on, Henry, with greater success, had negotiated again on his own
account with the Breton Government. He fitted out new forces by land and sea,
and managed to obtain, as a further security, the seaport of Morlaix, the revenues of which were to bring him in six
thousand crowns a year. During the progress of these settlements, the English
garrison quartered in the town had to suppress an insurrection of Breton
peasants, who, driven to despair by the never-ending misery of war, revolted
against their own government. Elsewhere, too, similar outbreaks took place
among the unhappy inhabitants.
Henry himself tried to gain new confederates for the
war, and to retain his old ones. It was just then, on the 27th of July,1490,
that a treaty of peace and commerce, which had already been mooted, was
concluded with Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan; even a matrimonial alliance
between their Houses was thought of. Besides this, Henry made a league again
with his faithless ally of the year before, the King of the Romans. As the
English would not give up the places they held, and the French, on that
account, would not vacate the duchy, one condition of the Frankfort treaty remained
unfulfilled. Maximilian had attained his principal end in this treaty, when, by
means of French help, he accomplished the subjection of the Flemings, on the
30th of October, 1489, and was recognised as guardian of his son. He therefore
made use of the continued presence in Brittany of the French troops as a
pretext to declare the Frankfort treaty, now become useless to him, broken off,
and to make friends again with England. On the nth of September, 1490, a treaty
for mutual defence was drawn up, the special intention of which was the joint
protection of Brittany against France. As a special mark of friendship, Henry
sent to the King of the Romans the Order of the Garter. On the 17th of
September the treaty was publicly announced in England, and with it the treaty
of alliance long before concluded with Spain.
The latter had had a peculiar history. Henry had
striven for it with all the means in his power, but when his envoys came home
after the treaty of Medina del Campo, with the Spanish ratification, Henry
hesitated to confirm it. He took advantage of the Spanish project of a marriage
between Anne of Brittany and the Infant Don Juan to make his consent depend
upon the condition that the treaty should be altered, that Katharine should be
sent to him earlier and the dowry paid sooner. Perhaps he thought, on the
whole, that he would wait to see whether the fortune of war would put him in a
favourable position for altering the treaty according to his wishes; but all
these expectations were disappointed, and on the 23rd of September, 1490, Henry
himself also signed the treaty on the terms settled at Medina del Campo. Still
he held to his proposal of alterations; certain undefined points in the
marriage treaty were to be settled. The manner and time of mutual help in war
were to be fixed more definitely, and according to a second proposal, the
articles favouring Spain alone about the war with France were to be set aside.
He had both proposals drafted in the form of supplementary treaties already
ratified by him.
The situation had changed; Henry appears as the one
who wished to keep to the great coalition against France, and he was rightly
anxious lest his unreliable allies should leave him in the lurch. He had good
cause for these fears, for Maximilian, as well as the Spaniards, were withdrawn
from Brittany by more important tasks. Henry could hope for but little
advantage from a covenant with Maximilian, who had undertaken to fight with
France, whilst in the summer of 1490, he was really engaged in driving out the
Hungarians from Lower Austria, and pursuing after them as far as Stuhlweissenburg. His prospects with Ferdinand and Isabella
were not much better; in the eighth year of the Moorish war, 1489, they made
unusual efforts, and conquered Baza, after an unfortunate campaign, whereupon
Almeria and the whole district of El Zagals in the
east of Granada fell into their hands. They then armed themselves for a great
and decisive attack on the town of Granada in the year 1491.
Maximilian had special reasons for an alliance with
England. It did not suit him to give up a project so easily; the prospect of
the once-promised hand of Anne of Brittany had disappeared, as long as her
counsellors inclined to France, but when France refused Rieux’s attempt at an
agreement in the summer of 1490, and prepared a new attack, Maximilian could
hope again. Accordingly, believing England to be occupied in Brittany, he
urged on the arrangements for the marriage, and in December, 1490, his marriage
with the duchess, then scarcely fourteen years of age, took place by proxy, and
with the usual ceremonial. Anne assumed the title of “Queen of the Romans.”
Nobody could expect that France would remain silent
after this, and that this fresh provocation should be given her must have been
very unwelcome to Henry. Maximilian, who could not hope to defend alone the
claims raised by his marriage, looked to Brittany and her other allies to do
his work for him. But the Spaniards, who were just now gathering all their
forces for a decisive struggle with Granada, behaved as might have been
expected; they agreed with France upon an armistice for half a year, and, at
the beginning of the winter, withdrew their troops from Brittany on account, as
they afterwards said, of the insurmountable difficulties of their maintenance;
only in Redon, which they held in pledge, did they leave a small garrison. In
the spring the troops were to return, but instead of them, came a summons from
Isabella to Henry that he should send sufficient troops to Brittany while hers were
occupied in the south of Spain. Thus, whilst they themselves, contrary to the
precise terms of the treaty, suspended hostilities against France, they
required from their ally that he should conform to it exactly.
In spite therefore of the ratification of the Spanish
treaty, in spite of the new covenant with Maximilian, Henry stood alone,
exposed to the danger of a war with France. For France, at the same time, the
position had become particularly favourable. Rieux’s defection and the reunion
of the two parties in the Breton Government was indeed painful to her, but in
return she succeeded in gaining that old suitor for Anne’s hand, the Lord of
Albret, till then protected by Rieux. For the sake of money and other
advantages he delivered up Nantes, which still held out, to the enemy, and on
the 4th of April, 1491, Charles VIII made his entry. In France itself, the
unfortunate quarrel between the two parties had been made up, and Louis of
Orleans was set free from captivity by the king who just now came of age. On
the 4th of September the formal reconciliation with the Bourbons took place. By
this means, the Orleanist party, which before had
been working against them in Brittany, was won over.
The Duchess Anne was now in the most difficult
position. Her contract of marriage with Maximilian only hastened the advance of
France, whilst her still unknown husband was vacillating between the duties
which called him imperatively alike to the east and to the west. He had
contemplated seriously a war with France, but at last the fighting in Hungary
became as much more important to him than Brittany, as the struggle in Granada
was to the Spanish monarchs. Henry remained Anne’s last hope. Whilst he was
only thinking of the damages he could claim, a new appeal for help came to him
in May, 1491, from Anne in her own and her husband’s name; but could Henry
venture on a great war with France, the burden of which would fall on him
alone? This almost seemed to be his intention, for he made exceptionally great
war preparations. In order to get more substantial assistance, he followed an
example set by Edward IV, and turned to private individuals of property with
demands for money. On a resolution of the Council, commissioners were sent out
in July, 1491, to appeal to his faithful subjects “to support him according to
their means, and to grant him aid either personally or in any other way as
seemed best,” against the danger that was threatening him from France; the
commissioners treated with private individuals, who then, “willing or no” had
to contribute considerable sums. This not very popular way of exacting money
was called a “benevolence.”
But this was not enough. Even before the expiration of
the second term of payment for the grant of the preceding year, the fourth Parliament
met on the 14th of October, 1491, and Morton, in his opening speech, drew out
the points of similarity between the Jugurthian
campaign of Sallust, and the English one now before them. Two fifteenths and
tenths were granted to the king, who wished to take the field in person, and,
if the war should last eight months, the half again of that sum. On the 4th of
November the sittings were prorogued till the following January.
Henry displayed remarkable ardour in this cause, which
he had espoused only under pressure from Spain, and it was he who now urged on
his loitering allies. The proposals he had made in September, 1490, for the
alteration of the treaty of Medina del Campo appear to have met with opposition
in Spain. On the 22nd of November, 1491, he had two new propositions drawn up
on the model of the old ones, and the warlike energy he at the same time
displayed was the best advocate for his wishes. This time he divided the treaty
of marriage and the treaty of alliance into two separate documents, and, with
remarkable moderation, he only demanded that the necessary supplements to the
old treaty of marriage should be made on those points which had remained either
not clearly defined or open to question; the war with France he proposed they
should both declare on the 15th of April, 1492, and begin it at any time before
the 15th of June. In everything else, and we know what that meant for Henry,
those clauses of the treaty of Medina del Campo, which were advantageous to
Spain, remained unchanged.
Henry showed great earnestness in his demands for
money from his subjects; he went to the very limit of their capacity for
giving, although he, whose crown was anything but secure, had to risk all by so
doing.
Even if his allies had been able at once to respond to
his appeal, it was already too late. France seized her opportunity when
Maximilian was detained in the East, and the Spaniards in the South, and gave
the king of the Romans the answer that was to be expected. Nantes was in
Charles’s hand; his troops, who had marched in during the summer, took from the
Spaniards Redon, from the English Concarneau, and
besieged Anne in Rennes; only in Morlaix did the
English garrison hold out. Even though Henry was making great preparations for
war, his mere written assurances of aid from Maximilian and his own promise not
to fail her, could no longer help the duchess in her extremity. She yielded to
the strongest. After a preliminary treaty of the 15th of November, there
followed at Langeais in Touraine, on the 6th of December,
1491, the final agreement which united Anne with Charles VIII, and her duchy
with the kingdom of France.
It was a grand success, this that the policy of Anne
of Beaujeu had so long striven to obtain, and a humiliating defeat for the
three kings leagued together to defend Brittany. Henry, with all his
preparations for war, was the least interested of the three. He was neither
concerned in Spanish designs on Roussillon and Cerdagne,
nor in Maximilian’s desire to win Anne, who had been betrothed to him. It was
Maximilian who suffered the most. By the earlier treaty of Arras (December 23,
1482), he had bestowed on Louis XI. the Duchy of Burgundy, together with the
hand of his little daughter Margaret, for Charles, the heir to the throne. King
Charles VIII, however, by his treaty at Langeais, contemptuously
set aside the daughter of the king of the Romans, who had been brought up in
France, but kept the duchy, and at the same time robbed Maximilian of his
affianced wife.
But though exasperated at this twofold humiliation,
Maximilian and his father could do nothing. Maximilian, indeed, towards the end
of 1491, spoke of marching once more into “Britani or Burgundi,” when he should
have finished his work in the east of Europe; but he could not bring matters to
a close there and all his efforts to obtain help from the Empire were in vain.
If power was wanting to him, so was good will to the Spaniards. The news that
Granada had fallen at last, in January, 1492, was hailed with befitting
ceremony in England, and, in the following April, Ferdinand and Isabella
appointed plenipotentiaries in order to discuss the changes in the treaty,
which had been proposed by Henry; otherwise a profound silence was observed on
the affair of the league; just once a hint of war was given, but no more.
Henry was thus thrown back on his own resources. He
tried to make other alliances, appealed to the Pope, warned his newly won
friend of Milan, Ludovico Sforza, of the danger that threatened him from
Charles VIII, and summoned him to take part in the war, but without success. In
January, 1492, he made a plan for getting Brest into his hands by combining
with treacherous Bretons, and at the same time negotiated with the disaffected
nobles in the country. During the new session (from January 24 to March 5,
1492), Parliament issued regulations for war, for the levying and payment of
troops; and the convocation of the clergy added a tenth to the grants made by
the laymen. Ships and war material were provided, contracts for levying soldiers
were concluded with the great lords. The troops were to assemble at Portsmouth
in June, and the king had three great breweries erected there, in order to
provide them with beer. The fleet then actually crossed the Channel, but
without accomplishing much. The French Government also discovered the Breton
conspiracy, and entertained the idea of anticipating Henry by an attack on
England. An order was accordingly issued at the beginning of August to the
inhabitants of the southeastern counties of Kent and Sussex to hold themselves
in readiness to respond at any time to a hasty summons.
Winter, spring, and summer passed away in these
preparations; a really great war seemed in prospect. Henry himself announced as
his aim the reconquest of his French possessions—of “his kingdom of serious
France.” It remained, however, inexplicable, that he did not make use of the
fine season of the year, that autumn came, and a fresh winter was at the doors,
before he made ready to cross the Channel. Meanwhile a few skirmishes by land
and sea took place; the small forces which Maximilian had left behind in the
Low Countries under Albert of Saxony took Sluys, supported from the sea by the
English under Sir Edward Poynings. A partisan of the
rebellious towns, the Lord of Ravenstein, had, with
the help of France, held Sluys, and made it a centre from whence he carried on
a privateering war,2 causing damage even to the trade of England. Arras also
was taken by German troops, but the bulk of the English army remained quietly
in their own land.
The king hoped by noisy threats of war to avoid war
himself, and to exercise some effect on the peace negotiations which were being
carried on without interruption from the end of spring right through the
summer, at first by two plenipotentiaries, and later by a regular congress of
ambassadors at Calais and Etaples. The result was
unsatisfactory; sorely against his will and with a heavy heart, Henry had to
pass from threats to deeds. He requisitioned Venetian merchant galleys for the
transport of his troops, and after he had formally invested the young Prince of
Wales at Sandwich on the 2nd of October, 1492, with the dignity of viceroy
during his absence, he crossed over to France on the same day in the Swan.
Minstrels played before him during the passage, and his Spanish fool
entertained him with jokes, till he landed at Calais at eleven o’clock. There
he lingered for nearly two weeks. At last, on the 18th of October, he appeared
before Boulogne and besieged the town.
Now at last Henry achieved his end; on the 27th of
October, he was able to lay before his counsellors and chief officers the
scheme of a treaty sent by him to Etaples. In
high-sounding words he had summoned his people to war, and now that all hopes
of glory and of great conquests were frustrated, he managed matters so cleverly
that he made it appear as if his chief captains had forced him to this
inglorious peace. He himself had never thought of conquest, for him the war
was, after all, only a money affair, which he was anxious to finish without
loss. It was also a clever idea on his part to point to the similar treaty of Picquigny, between Edward IV and Louis XI (August 29, 1475)
as the model to which he had closely adhered. The opinion of his generals
naturally agreed with his own, they put forward the difficulty of the season,
the strength of Boulogne, the success at Sluys, the disloyal conduct of the
allies, the rich offer of money from France. On the 30th of October, Henry sent
a new power to his representatives, who, at Etaples, on
the 3rd of November, 1492, agreed upon a treaty of peace, which they sent to
the kings to be ratified.
Peace, friendship, and liberty of trading, the same as
the former treaties had determined, were to exist between the two kings and
their people; each side promised not to support the enemies of the other,
Henry, especially, was not to help Maximilian, should the latter continue the
war with France. Charles undertook to pay 745,000 gold crowns in half-yearly
instalments of 25,000 francs, he promised also in a special document, that he
would not harbour any rebels against Henry. The Estates of both realms were to
agree to the treaty.
On the 4th of November the peace was announced before
Boulogne; at once the camp was broken up and the troops began to make their way
back by Calais. On the 9th of November the Lord Mayor of London read out at
Guildhall the royal message of peace, and the Chancellor ordered a “ Te Deum” to be sung in St. Paul’s.
On the 22nd of December, Henry visited the capital;
the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and citizens went to greet him on Blackheath, and
accompanied him through the city to Westminster. The announcement of peace must
have sounded pleasanter in the ears of the commercial and tax-paying citizens
than it did to the war-loving barons, whose hopes of fame and booty were dashed
to pieces by this mercenary peace.
Henry himself had gained by it all he could wish for.
The Spanish alliance, to him the first prize of the war, was not indeed
regarded as such in the eyes of the world; but he had brought the war, which
had been forced upon him, to a conclusion with some considerable gain, and this
meant so much the more for him, since he had to aim at establishing a
well-ordered and prosperous system of finance. Henry had, on the whole, nothing
to demand from France, for he no longer held to the medieval policy of
conquest, and what he had let fall on the subject in public was uttered with a
purpose. It was just on the preservation of her isolated position as an island
that, for the future, England’s greatness depended, and this insular policy,
clearly pronounced before the world in the peace of Etaples,
was pursued by Henry throughout the rest of his reign.
In fact, there was no reason for him to be vexed that
his allies, without the same effort, had outwardly arrived at greater results
than he. Spain gained by the treaty of Barcelona (January 19, 1493), the
two border countries without having to give anything in return; Ferdinand and
Isabella did not hesitate to promise Charles that they would lend him their
help, especially against his “old enemies” the English, and against the king of
the Romans, and that they would not marry their own children with them or with
their children. Thus the king of the Romans was left in the lurch by both his
allies; still he did not lay down his arms; his commander-in-chief, Kappeller, gained on the 19th of January a decisive victory
at Dournon in Franche Comté, and in spite of his
unfortunate position, Maximilian kept his hold on that country as well as on
Artois. Both were confirmed to him in the peace of Senlis on the 23rd of May,
1493, and his daughter, who had been brought up in France, was conducted home
to him with much ceremony.
What had especially contributed to the advantageous,
terms that Maximilian as well as the Spaniards and Henry had secured, was the
ambitious policy of the French king, who with each sacrifice purchased for
himself freedom of action, that he might be able to hasten on towards his great
aim, the conquest of Naples; thus sacrificing a secure possession on his border
for a phantom. But Maximilian still pursued the English king with bitter hatred
for his. defection, without reflecting that Henry at Etaples
had only been retaliating on him for his conduct at Frankfort. The dislike
these two monarchs had early conceived for each other, though vigorously
combated by Spain, was now stronger than ever; after the peace of Etaples, Henry could' not help seeing in Maximilian an
embittered enemy, who was soon to have an opportunity of wreaking his
vengeance.
The treaty of Etaples had
enabled Henry again to relapse into that inaction out of which he had only
allowed himself to be forced by weighty considerations, and which he was
henceforth to observe in all questions of general policy. Nowhere else but in
the British isles did he again take up arms. The liberty and accumulation of
strength which he gained from this inaction, he spent by entering boldly and
energetically on a fresh field in politics, that of trade, in which he was to
promote to a remarkable degree the future development of England. The
commercial efforts of the English, and the guiding, enterprising, or else
restrictive commercial policy of the king, stood not only in the closest
connection with his State policy in general—the one acting upon the other—but
more particularly with the relations he endeavoured to establish with foreign
powers.
Commerce was the pulse of the whole economic life of
the nation; on it depended the breeding of sheep, which supplied foreign
countries with wool; on it the prosperity of the youthful industry, seeking a
foreign market; it threw, as it were, a bridge across the sea, and connected
the island of England with the states of the Continent. Already in the Middle
Ages, English trade had reached a flourishing condition; afterwards, in consequence
of the civil wars and of reverses on the Continent, it had lost both in vigour
within the country, and in the area of its predominance abroad. Ever since the'
thirteenth century, England had been working towards her future destiny, that
of a mercantile nation; the reigns of the great Edwards, the first and third,
were periods of progressive development. Under Edward III, who had induced
Flemish weavers to settle in England, the English cloth industry made rapid
progress, and was able gradually to enter into competition with that of the Low
Countries, which till then had been far superior. The cloth industry now became
the petted child of royal care, the object of which was to enable English wool
to be made up in the country itself, so that manufactured goods might gradually
take the place of the raw material as an export.
Still, however, raw material predominated among the
exports; it formed the connecting link between England and the Netherlands,
which were through it inseparably England and united in their economic
relations; the Netherlands, though the most advanced in industry, were really
the most dependent, for if the English wool export stopped, the looms there
would stand still. As befitted its importance, the Anglo-Flemish commerce was
the first to assume definite forms; English merchants met together in companies
in the Staple, which, after some changes, took as its fixed abode the English
continental seaport of Calais. The Staple of Calais represented the
conservative tendency in commerce, and was based on the privileges granted by
monarchs to that rich and secure monopoly, the export trade in raw material
with the neighbouring continent. To support this Staple was extremely important
to the Government, from financial considerations, because of the heavy export
duties on wool, and also from the ease with which a compact might be made with
such a firmly united and exclusive association.
But the power of making further progress was taken
away from the Staple. The pioneers of the expanding commerce were the Merchant
Adventurers, who, since the beginning of the fifteenth century, had entered
into more decided competition with the Staplers. They formed at first no close
body, but included all who were not men of the Staple; being far more free in their
movements than these, who were kept bound down to Calais, they attracted to
themselves the trade with the Low Countries, and with other places over sea,
and as the basis of the Staple was wool, which was confined more closely to its
local markets, 'so the basis of the trade of the merchant adventurers was
English cloth, for which new outlets were required. The Flemings knew how to
protect themselves from this competition in their own country, but in the
interior of Germany it had already become serious for them. Vexatious friction
ensued, and the consequent transference of the English mart in the Low
Countries from Bruges to Antwerp. The charter of Henry IV. (February 5, 1407)
bestowed on the merchant adventurers rights of corporation and self-government;
Englishmen on the Continent were by this means to be given a local centre, and
an organised governing body. Henry VII. very soon felt how great the power of
these merchant princes was, when they raised objections to the levying of
4onnage and poundage before the parliamentary grant, and the king had to make
an abatement for them.1 They had been favoured also from another quarter, when
their position with regard to native traders was fixed by the charter of Duke
Philip of Burgundy (August 6, 1446). The trade of the English with Antwerp
increased extraordinarily, they brought there almost all their cloth goods,
also skins and hides, mineral products, and other articles, for which they
exchanged the numerous commodities flowing in to that great market of the
world.
Next in importance to the Netherlands for English
commerce were the German Hansa towns in the north, and Italy, especially
Venice, in the south of Europe. The competition of the trade carried on by the
league of the Hansa and the Venetians with England, was more directly felt, as
the enterprising foreigner, still far superior to the Englishmen in cleverness
and mercantile experience, appeared in their own land, where, however, they
could more easily protect themselves against him. Men had not yet abandoned the
view held throughout antiquity and the Middle Ages, that the foreigner was
simply an enemy; nations did not yet stand in close enough relation to one
another; and the more limited their knowledge of foreigners was, the narrower
was their view, and the more rude and prejudiced their self-satisfied
arrogance. Each one who went abroad was conscious of this fault in others,
without being aware of it in himself. English ambassadors wrote in the year
1505 from Spain to their king: “Many noblemen and gentlemen of this country
have no knowledge of your grace nor of your kingdoms, they imagine there is no
other country but Spain.” Such an opinion, however, is much more true about the
English themselves, of whom an observant Italian spoke in almost the same
words: “They have great affection for themselves and for all that they have.
They fancy there are no other men but themselves, and no other world but
England”; their highest praise for a stranger is that he looks like an
Englishman. “They have a dislike to foreigners, who they imagine only come into
the country to take possession of it, and to appropriate their goods.”
This innate hatred for strangers was increased in the
case of the merchants of the German Hanseatic League, by reason of their
extraordinary privileges, which, after all sorts of persecutions, they had
managed cleverly to revive, by taking advantage of the internal condition of
England during the wars of the Roses. It was at that time that they drove the
English out of their old commercial position in the Scandinavian kingdoms; only
in Iceland, which belonged to the Crown of Norway, did the English keep their
hold, by a flourishing contraband trade, which almost degenerated into piracy;
otherwise the Hansa enjoyed almost exclusive monopoly. By way of thanks for
their generous support against Henry VI, Edward IV gave them a quite exceptional
commercial position in England, by the Utrecht treaty of the 28th of February,
1474. By this they were granted less heavy taxes than the English themselves
had to pay, besides full liberty of trade, even in jealous London itself, and
the right of judgment by special judges. Their home in London, the renowned
Steelyard, on the left bank of the Thames, not far above London Bridge, was
recognised as their free property, as well as the house in Boston; and at Lynn
they received permission to acquire land. Further, the damages suffered by them
in recent times were to be compensated for by ,£10,000, which they were allowed
to deduct from the dues to be paid in the course of the following year,
These privileges were very one-sided, for the security
granted in return to Englishmen in the territory of the Hansa was so vague,
that they were exposed to much arbitrary treatment. The Prussian trade was not
unimportant, in consequence of the export of cloth, and the commodities brought
in exchange from thence to England; and in the chief town, Dantzic,
the English had formerly possessed privileges of forming a guild, and a house
of their own. This last had been taken from them in 1414, and their trade—especially
the direct interchange with merchants coming from the East to Dantzic—had been impeded. The only concession to them in
the covenant of Utrecht consisted in renewed permission to stay in the Hanse
towns, and “to buy and sell with anybody.” In spite of this arrangement, the
English found themselves pushed out from the markets of the Baltic, whilst the
men of the Hansa played a not unimportant part in England’s own foreign trade.
This was the state of things Henry found, and he did
not dare at once to irritate the powerful league of the towns, who might
support his enemies, as before they had supported the Yorkist prince, Edward
IV. In the grant of tonnage and poundage by his first Parliament, “the Merchaunts of the Hanze in Almayne,
haveing a house in the cittè
of London,” were exempted from the higher rates fixed for foreigners. A royal
charter of the 9th of March, 1486, confirmed the Utrecht treaty, a second, of
the 29th of June, specially ratified the grant of compensation to be deducted
from the dues up to £10.000. Placed in a difficult position between the two
parties, Henry had been obliged to grant these privileges, but how could he
seriously hope that they would be exactly carried out, when in England these
advantages to foreigners were most unpopular, where the complaint was that
their’ trade, “an intolerable burden,” was driving out Englishmen in every
place, and where towns like London, Hull, York, and Lynn took the matter into
their own hands, and in opposition to the treaty, resorted to all sorts of
vexatious measures against the Hanse merchants. It seemed as if Henry were only
waiting for an opportunity and a pretext to act contrary to his promise. As
early as the spring of i486 he began with complaints of Hanseatic piracies, the
following year it was stated more plainly that the rights of the Hanse
merchants would be observed if they would do the same. A restrictive export law
of Richard III was also made use of against them. The Hanse traders complained
of annoyances, that they were only allowed to export cloth which was completely
finished, in order that the benefit from shearing to finish might fall to the
English operative. With much craftiness the privilege of the Hanse trader with
regard to “his own commodities” was restricted to the products of the Hanseatic
towns alone. Henry seized with pleasure on the proposal of the Hanse merchants
established in London to adjust grievances at a commercial diet, but Cologne,
and, later on, the Diet of the Hansa at Lubeck (February, 1488) refused it; for
it was clear that the English would only make use of such a diet to gain for themselves
fresh privileges, whilst for the Hanse merchants it was simply a question of
securing the recognition and observance of their declared rights. They
complained that they were made to bear the burden of Danish piracies, and that
the whole body of traders in general was held responsible for the offences of
individuals.
His first victories in England itself, and his success
in Spain, had encouraged Henry to more decisive measures; accordingly, while
the Breton complication and the preparations for the French war were going on,
he opened an attack, though certainly with other weapons, on the mercantile
supremacy of the Hanseatic league. Instead of abandoning his original views, he
caused the new regulations to be carried out with greater severity than ever,
and if before, in a complaint, the English merchants had said it would be
better to change such a state of things for open war, cost what it might, now
they were not far from a state of actual warfare.
The Hanse merchants were attacked quite openly on the
sea. A Dantzic trading-vessel was captured by the
royal guardships and taken off to Calais; the Hanse merchants were advised not
to send ships to Hull, where there might be fighting and murder; the German
merchant was no longer sure of his life in the London streets. Henry was trying
to force on the diet; he hinted that it was no longer possible for him to shut
his ears to the complaints of his subjects, and the Hanse merchants were even
threatened with expulsion.
Meanwhile the king had been preparing for more
vigorous action. On the 6th of August, 1489, he sent off Dr.
James Hutton, accompanied by several others, charged to conclude a treaty with
Denmark, with whom at that time England was engaged in a regular privateering
warfare, and he gave his ambassador, as was his custom in the first years of
his reign, the instrument of a treaty already fully executed on his part.
But the subsequent agreement entered into in Denmark
on the 20th of January, 1490, far exceeded these proposals. King John of
Denmark caught joyfully at the proffered alliance as a means of resisting the
powers of the Hanseatic league. He gave to the English most favourable terms,
conceding to them all the rights which they had ever enjoyed in Denmark:
fullest liberty of trading in Iceland, rights of corporation, a court of
justice of their own, permission to purchase land in various places. Whilst
Henry in England was oppressing the men of the Hansa, he was trying by this
treaty to gain a footing in the very region where they had a monopoly of trade.
It was, however, no fresh conquest, but only the reclaiming of an old
possession, from which the English had been obliged to retreat, as also from
Bergen and Iceland, in the periods of their own weakness.
A herald brought the complaints and demands of the
English king to the Hanseatic Diet, then sitting at Lubeck. The pressure from
him, possibly also the danger that might accrue from an Anglo-Danish
combination, took effect, and the towns gave in. They declared themselves
willing to have the diet, and after a few further negotiations, Antwerp was
selected as the place of meeting. Thither went, in the first days of May, 1491,
the burgomasters of the leading towns, accompanied by capable assistants.
But the English envoys, who had already received their
power on the 20th of April, did not appear. Henry had wished to humble the
league less by an open breach of privilege than by petty vexations. He
continued this policy by the contempt he openly displayed for the town
republics, and he made it even worse by his utterances and by the scant
apologies of his plenipotentiaries, who arrived on the scene a whole month too
late. Besides, at the instigation of King John, Henry had entered upon fresh
negotiations with Denmark, with an idea of a combined movement against the
towns, and the towns’ deputies, hearing of this, suspected that the cause of
the delay was Henry’s desire to wait first for an answer from Denmark.
The diet now had to hear claim against claim,
complaint against complaint. In point of fact, right was on the side of the men
of the Hansa, although they had paid but little heed to the limited trade
privileges allowed to the English; but it was not possible that a great State
could long be content to waive for itself claims which it had been obliged to
grant to others. Henry was really only claiming for his subjects in the
Hanseatic territory a part of the privileges allowed to Hanseatic traders in
England. First of dill the ancient position of Englishmen in Dantzic had to be regained, but Dantzic
held out firmly, even against the pressure put on her by her fellow towns. Only
a few concessions, and these restricted, were wrung from her—permission to
frequent the Dantzic “Artushof,”
and for the English to traffic with other foreign merchants without the
intermediary of the Dantzic citizens, during the
Dominikus fair in August. The Utrecht treaty, if correctly carried out, would
have conceded this last right without any limitation as to time. The agreement,
signed at Antwerp on the 28th of June, 1491, gave to the Hanse merchants a
confirmation of their established rights, whilst Henry had made one opening,
though that a small one, in the exclusive system of Prussian trade ; a modest
gain, certainly, but one which in connection with his new relations with
Denmark was of some value, as representing the first definite success of his
commercial policy towards the north. All this took place at the same time that
continental affairs seemed to be entirely engaging his attention, and this no
doubt accounts for his desire to keep his hands free a little longer, and the
consequent postponement of negotiations with the Hanse towns till May, 1493.
The conflict about privileges with the Hanseatic
league was only one portion of a scheme of commercial policy embracing the
whole north and south of Europe. As the Hanse towns had the ascendancy in the
north, so had Venice in the south. The Italian who traded in England was,
however, far less advantageously situated than the Hanse merchant, for he had
to pay the heavy customs levied on foreigners, and was especially affected by
the laws against aliens passed under Henry VI and Richard III. It was not,
therefore, any privileged position which was the cause of the unpopularity of
the Italian, but rather his superior acuteness in commercial matters, and that
greater unscrupulousness which usually accompanies it. Richard tried to gain
favour with his people by a hostile attitude towards these strangers, and their
position at that time became so trying that the Venetians began to talk of
reviving an ancient regulation, and giving up trade with England altogether.
But England would not allow matters to go as far as
that. Was it not the Venetians who brought her the commodities of the East, as
well as those of their own country—fine stuffs, glass wares, books, the wood
that was indispensable for the bows of the English archers, and, above all, the
wines of the South, for a country so unproductive of vines, and yet so in want
of wine as England? In exchange they exported English cloth, and, like the Low
Countries, were dependent on England for her excellent wool, which commanded
the market. They made use at once of the change of dynasty to effect an
improvement in their position. Cautiously modest in their demands, they did not
beg that the legal restrictions on them should be set aside, but only that the
heavy penalties should be removed, and even agreed that the king should be free
to reimpose them at will. Henry complied with this reasonable request. Yet the
Venetians could no more found expectations on this favourable policy of the new
king with regard to strangers, than could the Hanse merchants on the
ratification of their privileges. The heavy customs levied on foreigners
remained as before, and when many tried to evade them by becoming naturalised
English citizens, Henry’s first Parliament enacted that such naturalised
Englishmen must pay the foreigner’s dues, in spite of the exemption already
granted to them by Edward IV, while English-born subjects of the king were
alone considered as natives by the tax-collectors. Naturalised foreigners were
also accused of having been the means of smuggling in at cheaper rates the
merchandise of strangers.
England was still only looked upon by the Venetians as
a kind of midway station for Flemish trade. The ships going to the East bore
the name of the Flanders galleys. These galleys were let out to merchant
speculators, but belonged to the State, shipping in general being a government
monopoly in Venice. In August, 1485, French pirates captured the four Flanders
galleys, and the consequences were at once felt in Venice, from the non-arrival
of the return cargo of English wool. The weavers appeared before the Senate,
and begged that something might be done, as their trade was at a standstill,
and the operatives would starve. The government decreed a diminution in customs
duties, in order to attract importation from other parts.
This state of affairs was evidently not unfavourable
to England, and Henry hastened to make use of it. In the case of the Hanse
merchants, it had been a question of ousting them from their privileged
position in England herself, and opening up the hitherto closed North to
foreign trade. In the case of Venice, things were more simple, the republic
being itself dependent on English exports; so here the move was made
exclusively for the advantage of the new navigation policy now inaugurated by
Henry.
If the carrying trade of England still remained in the
hands of foreigners, the main reason lay in the fact that the English merchant
shipping was by no means adequate to demands made upon it. The fleet, like
everything else in England, was at the conclusion of the Middle Ages, in a
complete state of decay. An attempt made by Edward IV. to direct English merchants
as much as possible to use English ships had been abandoned. Henry followed on
the same lines, but more cautiously. His first Parliament resolved that, on
account of “the grete mynishyng
and decaye that hathe ben
now of late tyme of the navie
within this Realme of England and ydelnesse
of the Mariners within the same, by the whiche this
noble Realme within short processe
of tyme withoute reformacion be had therein shall not be of habilite and power to defend itself,” wines from Guienne
and Gascony were to be imported into England only in English, Irish, or Welsh
bottoms, manned by sailors of the same countries. This law was to hold good
till the next Parliament. The king reserved for himself the right of granting
exemptions but, excepting for the limitations in time, wares, and place,
the same legislative idea is expressed in it, in a small way, which, nearly two
centuries later, was expressed in a more comprehensive way in the great
Navigation Act of the Commonwealth.
The same desire—to make the shipping of his country
able to compete with that of others, and to make this competition
easier—animated the king with regard to Venice. Under the name of malmsey—a
wine much in demand in England—was understood, not only the growth of the
Venetian Malvasia, but southern wines in general, and especially that from
Candia, likewise belonging to Venice. The Flanders galleys exported it; but
they were much interfered with by the English, who far underbid their rate of
freight by charging four ducats the butt, instead of seven. The Venetian
Senate, by a resolution, on the 18th of November, 1488, tried to regulate this
by imposing an additional duty of four ducats the butt on every foreign ship.
By this the English wine trade would have been made well-nigh impossible. Henry
resolved on countermeasures, and endeavoured to frighten Venice, as he had the
Hansa when he made the league with Denmark, by opening a trade with the
Florentine seaport town of Pisa, where an English consul already resided.
There, as at Calais for the neighbouring continent, a wool staple was to be
established for the countries of the Mediterranean. By this the king sought to
bully Venice, English wool being a necessity to her.
In vain Venice essayed to avert the blow, by
entreaties and threats. On the 15th of April, 1490, in London, a treaty was
concluded with Florence, which conceded to the English every advantage, even
that wool should be conveyed exclusively in English ships, only obliging them
to deliver the amount required by Italy. Venice alone was excepted. With regard
to her, Henry reserved for himself freedom of action. This and the limitation
of the treaty to the 15th of April, 1496, show that its purpose was hostile,
that it was not intended to last, and that Henry scarcely believed in its being
carried out. But for Florence, the hoped-for gain from an alliance with England
was sufficient to make her accede to all the conditions, so that in this treaty
also England came off with the lion’s share.
It is remarkable that the Navigation Act, which had
not been renewed in the second Parliament, was, during the parliamentary
session of January to February, 1490, again decreed to come into operation as a
permanent law from the following 24th of June ; that it was extended to the
Toulouse woad-dye, and further enlarged by the regulation that Englishmen
should only freight foreign ships when noEnglish
ones lay in the harbour. This extension of the Act with increased severity,
shows us that the king now felt himself secure in the line of navigation policy
on which he at first ventured so cautiously.
He held firmly and obstinately to his plan regarding
Venice. When his demands for a diminution in the duties were refused, and when
the Florentine treaty did not exercise the desired pressure, Parliament, at the
beginning of the war year, 1492, resolved on a like high additional duty on
every butt of malmsey wine imported into England by foreigners, and, in order
to provide against an increase in the price of wine, fixed the rather low
figure of £4 as the maximum price, and the rather high quantity of 126 gallons
as the minimum measure of the butt. The Venetians, in alarm, threatened to stop
the supply of wine. As, however, the continuance of the English duty was bound up
with that of the Venetian duty, and the English were even then in a more
favourable position than the Venetians, Henry let the republic do as it liked,
and the duty was not taken off. For years this uncomfortable war of tariffs
went on, with its constant friction; but at last the Venetians gave in, and
justified the calculations of the king.
Thus Henry’s enterprising commercial policy soon
embraced all Europe. In it were brought into play those powers of the State
which had been fostered by a cautious home policy. Even in his intercourse with
other powers, Henry always kept commercial interests in view: the first
treaties with France were essentially commercial, his Navigation Act did not
seem to be regarded there as a serious annoyance, until the war at last
dissolved all connection between the two countries. The strained relations with
Maximilian appeared doubly serious on account of the close mercantile
connection with the Netherlands, and the damage to English commerce had been
the principal reason for the first quarrel which was settled through the
intervention of Spain.
Henry forgot his anxiety to be circumspect even with
Spain, when it was a question of commercial interests. The treaty of Medina del
Campo had arranged that for the future the duties which had been customary
thirty years before should be paid, but in this matter the Spaniards did not
remember that since then their merchants in England had been granted peculiar
privileges. Hence the unforeseen consequence was a rise in duties. Ferdinand
and Isabella at first demanded that the treaty should be carried out according
to the spirit of the treaty, not according to the letter of the unsatisfactory
clause, and finally that the clause should be altered. Owing to the unsafe
condition of affairs, the Spanish merchants begged for royal licences in
greater numbers, though in truth these had now become superfluous, in
consequence of the treaty. Henry, however, troubled himself but little about
such wishes on the part of his allies, he allowed the situation which suited
him to remain the same for years; for it was to his advantage financially, and
afforded at the same time a useful diplomatic weapon.
A monarch with clear insight and firm will stood at
the head of the English Government. The first years of his reign show us his
political character; temperate, disinclined to a policy of adventure, and with
a remarkably clear comprehension of the special interests of his island
kingdom. The new dynasty had consolidated itself, and was already inaugurating
a new state of things for England. In July, 1490, the Milanese ambassador wrote
that he had little to report on the condition of the kingdom, it being good.
Henry, however, was not long to enjoy any rest; when he concluded the treaty of
Etaples, a storm was brewing which would soon vent
its fury on his head.
CHAPTER III.
PERKIN WARBECK.
MUCH against his will Henry’s attention had been
directed to Ireland at the time when the false Warwick rebelled against him
there. But nothing could prevail upon the king to abandon his prudent and
watchful attitude with regard to this, the most insecure part of his dominions.
After the victory of Stoke, he left it to the Pope to proceed against the
prelates, who were implicated in the affair; while he himself made no move till
after his spiritual ally had done so, and then with every precaution. Not till
May, 1488, a year after, did he send Sir Richard Edgecombe to Ireland, in order
to receive into the king’s favour those Irishmen who were ready to make submission,
and to administer a new oath of allegiance; at the same time he was to proceed
against rebels and traitors, as Maurice Earl of Desmond had already been
commissioned to do in the southern counties. Edgecombe first visited the loyal
town of Waterford; in Kinsale, Dublin, Drogheda, and Trim, the authorities took
the required oath; but it was only after long negotiations, and after having
been obliged to consent to a modification of the form of oath, that he induced
the Earl of Kildare with his confederates to take it on the 21st of June, 1488.
Henry’s special desire to persuade the Earl to come to England, by the promise
of a safe conduct, remained unfulfilled; the king was compelled to be satisfied
with what he had already achieved.
Not till July, 1490, two years later, was this attempt
with Kildare repeated. John Estrete, the receiver of
taxes in Dublin, was told to promise him the same favour which he had received
from King Edward, and to offer him the dignity of Deputy for another ten years,
if he would come to England in the course of the following year, to discuss the
affairs of Ireland; he was also promised a safe conduct and pardon for any
possible offence. The earl’s reply was silence; not till just before the
expiration of the given time did he condescend to make excuses for his
non-appearance. Many lords, spiritual and temporal, wrote with the same
intention, saying that as Kildare’s presence was indispensable, they also had
persuaded him not to go; and they assured the king of the earl’s loyalty. Time
was shortly to throw light on the questionable nature of this assurance.
The victory at Stoke had certainly put an end to an
attempted Yorkist rising, but not to the Yorkist party, which still continued
to work unremittingly against the Tudor usurper. In December, 1489, was
discovered a new plot to set the Earl of Warwick free by force, in which two of
Lincoln’s companions, who had been fortunate enough to escape, the Abbot of
Abingdon, and a certain John Maine, took part; they died on the gallows at Tyburn. In the spring of 1491, there were troubles again in
Yorkshire, always more or less disturbed, and the Earl of Surrey had to put
down the insurgents by force at Ackworth, near Pontefract.
We find in the same year, 1491, the first indication
of a new and wide-spreading conspiracy, which also inscribed the name of
Warwick on its banner. Faithful adherents of the House of York, both English
and Irish, met together and entered into league with the French Government,
then on the eve of war. A certain John Taylor, formerly a merchant in Exeter,
had been a court official and surveyor of the customs in many of the seaport
towns under Edward IV and Richard III, and had received a pardon from Henry
only in June, 1489. This man was residing in France. It was necessary, for the
plan of an attack on England, to gain over persons of standing in the southern
ports, and Taylor therefore addressed himself by letter, from Rouen, on the
15th of September, 1491, to an acquaintance of his, and a former servant of
Warwick’s father Clarence, John Hayes, to whom Henry had assigned many
influential posts of confidence in the seaport towns of Exeter and Dartmouth.
Taylor spoke of the help they expected from the French and from other
confederates; they would find support, he said, in “three different places
outside the kingdom.” Hayes was to speak to his friends, and he gave as the
object for which they were to contend in England, with the connivance of
France, the elevation to the throne of the “son of your lord.” This, again, was
none other than the Earl of Warwick. Unfortunately we are able but slightly to
raise the veil which covers these preliminary intrigues. It is clear, however,
that the name of the Earl of Warwick was once more used as a pretext for the
undertaking, and this second plan seems in its earlier development to have been
a mere repetition of the former; a false Warwick was again to be set up in
Ireland against Henry. The year was one of famine in the island, so much the
more, therefore, was there hope of stirring up the people to sedition and war.
Chance put into the hands of the ringleaders a suitable pretender, just at the
outset of the conspiracy. It was, perhaps, at the time when Taylor despatched
his letter, or perhaps rather later, that there landed in the town of Cork, in
the south of Ireland, a Breton merchant named Pregent Meno. He had in his
service a handsome youth of seventeen, who flaunted through the streets of the
town attired in silken garments, the property of his master, probably with the
idea of advertising them in this way, as a specimen of the stockin-trade,
and he attracted thereby the attention of the Yorkist partisans, who were
staying in Cork. They tried to persuade him to personate Warwick, but he is
said to have refused in the most decided manner, and to have sworn on the
gospels, before the mayor of the town, that he was neither the son of the Duke
of Clarence, nor one of his race. The plan was therefore allowed to drop, but
still the conspiracy was held to, and so was the person of the now chosen
pretender. John Walter, a well-known citizen of Cork, who had often held the
post of mayor, and Stephen Poytron, an Englishman,
tried to persuade him to come forward as a bastard son of Richard III; at last
they agreed he should personate the second son of Edward, Richard of York, who
had been murdered in the Tower, and whom Simnel at first was to have
represented. John Taylor, who had returned from France, and a Hubert Burgh were
selected as leaders, the help of the Earls of Kildare and of Desmond was
counted upon, in spite of the recent assurances given, to Henry of Kildare’s
loyalty. “And so, against my will,” as the pretender afterwards said, “they
made me to learne English, and taught me what I
should do and saye.”
In this way was set up the new opposition king, Perkin
Warbeck, who was to cause Henry more trouble and danger than any other, and
whose career was wrapped in all the charm of romance.
This Warbeck was born in 1474 or 1475 in the Flemish
town of Tournay, where his father John Werbeque or
Warbeck lived as a boatman on the Scheldt, and at the same time was a surveyor
of customs. His real Christian name was Peter, Perkin being a diminutive pet
name meaning “little Peter,”—“Peterkin.” From his very childhood he lived a
life of constant change and adventure; at Antwerp and Tournay, again at
Antwerp, at Middelburg and Lisbon, he had already served under five different
masters, when, still scarcely seventeen, he entered the service of Pregent Meno
and went with him to Ireland, where his historical career began.
The chief distinction between the new and the earlier
rising, was that this time no man of note appears at the head. John Walter and
John Taylor came forward as leaders, Perkin Warbeck was only an instrument in
their hands, but soon he stood in the foreground as head of the whole movement.
The undertaking was to.be placed on a broader basis than the earlier one led by
Lincoln; a league had already been made with English malcontents and with
France. Perkin himself applied to the Earls of Kildare and Desmond, and with
the latter, to England’s border enemy, the Scottish king, as early as the
beginning of 1492.
Charles VIII of France had jumped at the welcome
proposals against England; he invited the pretender to France, where Perkin
appeared and was received with honour. It is evident from Taylor’s letter that
serious plans were entertained for an attack, in conjunction with the
anticipated insurrection of the Yorkists, but, in consequence of the peace
negotiations, which occupied the whole of the year 1492, and of the treaty of Etaples, which followed after a short warlike
demonstration, no further move was made by Perkin. Henry was already on his
guard; the intrigues between Taylor and Hayes were discovered, and Charles VIII
was obliged to undertake, in a special agreement made at the same time as the
great treaty of peace, not to entertain or to support any rebels or traitors
against Henry. Perkin was dismissed from France and took refuge with Margaret
of York.
The danger which he had hitherto caused Henry in
Ireland and France had vanished as it came; now, received by Margaret as her
nephew, he came forward more openly with his claims. We cannot discover whether
the Dowager Duchess, who was so much to the front throughout the whole of this
business, acted in the service of Maximilian, or whether it was she who won
over the King of the Romans to make his policy serve the interests of her
house. In any case, his dislike to the Tudor monarch was nothing new; their
transient alliance gave place, after the peace of Etaples,
to the most bitter hatred on the part of Maximilian, so that he scarcely needed
any incentive to receive as a friend an opponent of Henry. Neither Maximilian
nor Margaret had any special interest in the person of the pretender. Perkin
asserted later on, on oath, that Margaret had known as well as himself that he
was not king Edward’s son. For them, as before for the Yorkist partisans, he
was only the instrument of their policy against Henry.
As soon as the king had received information as to
Perkin’s whereabouts and conduct, he began to take active measures. In July,
1493, Sir Edward Poynings and William Warham went
with a power to Maximilian, who had not been in the Netherlands since 1489, and
also to his son the Archduke Philip ; at the same time Henry issued orders to
his subjects to be ready for war, in order to protect England against
surprises. He was already accurately informed of the personality and former
history of his rival. When the council of the young archduke put the
ambassadors off with the excuse that Margaret could not be interfered with, as
she was sole mistress in her dower lands, Henry set to work in right earnest.
However much he had till now shown himself anxious to promote the interests of
commerce, the interests of the dynasty were of paramount importance to him, and
for these he demanded sacrifices even from commerce itself. He knew how
seriously it would affect the Netherlands when he forbade traffic with Philip’s
subjects, and when he removed the mart kept by the merchant adventurers in
Antwerp to Calais on the 21st of September, 1493. Flemings were ordered out of
England and their goods were seized. Not till half a year later (April 8,
1494), did the retaliation come, forbidding the importation of English cloths,
their purchase, sale, and shipment, and closing the Low Countries to the
English merchant.
It was a cheap war for the lord of the land, which was
carried on only with the purse of his subjects. As in the case of Venice, Henry
reckoned on the dependence of the Netherlands upon English wool, and on the
stoppage to trade, which the absence of the English must produce at Antwerp. We
hear, also, that this prohibition was evaded in various ways in the
Netherlands, and it had to be renewed with emphatic severity in January, 1495.
But in England, too, the consequences were being felt;
here it came at last to a wild outburst of the long smouldering hatred for
strangers, which was directed against the Hanse merchants, who were getting
some advantage from the situation, by attracting to themselves the whole of the
trade now forbidden between the English and the Flemings. As yet the effect of
the prohibition could scarcely have been felt to any great extent, nor had the
counter-measure of the Netherlanders yet been carried out, when that bitter
feeling against more fortunate rivals, which had only been waiting for a
favourable occasion, burst forth. The members of the Mercers’ Guild took the
lead, the others followed, and the citizens of the metropolis were ready. On
the 15th of October, 1493, took place a regular storming of the Hanseatic
Steelyard in London, and it was only with difficulty that the inmates could
defend themselves till the Lord Mayor brought an armed force to their
assistance.
Nothing could have been more foolish than such discord
between two countries so naturally connected as England and the Burgundian
Netherlands. No adequate motives are to be found for the Burgundian policy in
bringing about this rupture on the occasion of the Yorkist rising; the only
explanation lies in Maximilian’s personal influence, and in his newly awakened
grudge against Henry after the treaty of Etaples. As
the alliance with Henry had not quite answered his expectations with regard to
France, he possibly cherished the hope that a Yorkist king at the head of
English affairs, supported by himself, would be more likely to fall in with his
wishes.[2] It was imprudent enough on his part to break with England for the
sake of such extravagant plans, and from personal irritation, but this
antagonistic attitude appears still more serious in view of the political
situation in general.
Charles VIII of France made good use of the liberty he
had bought so dearly by the treaties of Etaples,
Barcelona, and Senlis. He represented in Naples the right of succession of the
house of Anjou to the throne of that kingdom, in opposition to the illegitimate
collateral branch of the house of Aragon, which had worn the crown since the
middle of the century. In September, 1494, he crossed the Alps with a splendid
army, advanced to Florence without encountering any resistance, and from there
to Rome; King Alfonso II abdicated the throne in favour of his son, Ferdinand
II, but on the 22nd of February, 1495, Charles was master of Naples, and
Ferdinand was obliged to fly. Seldom has conqueror found his work so easy; the
question now simply was, whether Charles had ability and power enough to keep
hold of the prize he had won. This would have implied an overwhelming position
for France; therefore the common interest of the other powers was aroused
against such a preponderance of one single nation. For Italy it was ominous
that the prize of the long ten years’ war, now about to begin, should be a
portion of Italian territory, and above all that Italy herself must be the
battlefield.
It was Spain, the ally of France in the league of
Barcelona, who now took the lead against her threatening ascendancy. Ferdinand
forthwith raised objections, not from any special affection for his
illegitimate cousins, but in the interests of his whole House, and also because
he might be annoyed in Sicily by the proximity of the French. The protection of
the Pope, Alexander VI, a Borgia, elected August, 1492, served as a pretext for
this proceeding on the part of the Spaniards; they even managed to find out a
justification for it from a clause in the treaty of Barcelona itself, and when
Charles, already standing on the soil of Naples, repudiated these objections,
the ambassador Fonseca, in a pre-arranged theatrical manner, tore up the
original document of the treaty before the eyes of the French king. Venice
first had taken the side of Spain in her policy against France; at Venice took
place in March, 1495, the final negotiations, which led to the conclusion of
the “Holy League” on the 31st of March. The Pope, Spain, the King of the
Romans, Milan, and Venice bound themselves together for the mutual defence of
their countries, and if no names were mentioned, the obvious wording of the
first article of the treaty could only point to the French conqueror.
With such enmity on all sides, the danger was far
greater for Charles than at the time of the Breton war. Spain especially, no
longer withheld by other enterprises, threatened him with the full force of her
great power. Charles would not wait to be attacked; he had himself crowned
solemnly at Naples on the 12th of May, 1495, and then began to turn homewards,
to fight his way through the troops of the league at Fornuovo.
The fugitive king, Ferdinand II, returned with some Spanish troops under
Gonsalvo de Cordova; unsuccessful at first, they became in the summer of 1496
masters of the French garrisons, who had been shamefully left in the lurch by
their country.
But as there was always a fear that the French might
repeat their invasion, the League was compelled to keep together and to
increase its strength. Ferdinand therefore desired, before all things, to draw
England into the coalition, especially as the vacillating Duke of Milan had
passed over to Charles VIII, and made with him the separate peace of Novara in
August, 1495. The manner in which Henry’s Spanish friend tried to force him
into the new league against France did not show much respect for him. What Henry
had to expect from Spanish good faith with regard to treaties was already
evident from the article in the treaty of Barcelona, in which the Spaniards had
promised the French king that they would help him against England, and avoid an
Anglo-Spanish alliance by marriage. It almost seemed as if this last arrangement
was to be literally fulfilled.
Ferdinand and Isabella had agreed in principle to a
definite drafting of the marriage treaty, which had been urged upon them, and
Henry now proposed a form, in March, 1493, which left the old treaty intact,
but with the addition of the supplements already demanded, and with the
alterations naturally required by the changes brought about by time, and
especially by the treaty with France. The answer was a long time coming,
external circumstances contributed to cause delay, and it did not appear till
the end of 1494 and beginning of 1495. In clearness it left nothing to be
desired. The treaty of Medina del Campo had lost its interest for the
Spaniards, after they had acquired Roussillon and Cerdagne.
We can hardly understand how they could inform Henry that they had been
justified in making peace with France because Henry had neither sworn to their
treaties nor sent them back, whilst all the time they themselves had previously
spoken of “ the concluded treaties.” With this audacious assertion, they had
but one end in view, to declare the treaty null and void. They showed
themselves, however, ready, if Henry wished it, to conclude a new covenant.
No easier way could they have found of throwing aside
a treaty now unnecessary and perhaps burdensome to them, and at the same time
of making English policy useful to themselves by the offer of a new treaty.
They could not also have shown the English king in a more insulting manner the
inequality of their positions, especially now when a new Yorkist rival had just
arisen. Henry, however, controlled his feelings, he again gave way to the
pressure of the stronger. On the agreement to this demand we have only one
report, that of the Spanish ambassador Puebla, who says that Henry spoke of the
marriage of Arthur and Katharine, and acknowledged that the earlier treaties
were no longer valid, but that nothing more was said on the subject.
Nevertheless Henry kept in mind the treatment he had received, and waited only
a convenient season for retaliation.
While endeavouring to draw Henry into the League in a
way to him so offensive, the Spaniards were especially annoyed by his
increasingly amicable relations with France, and his new quarrel with the King
of the Romans, a member of the League. After the peace of Etaples,
he had returned to his original policy of friendship with France. He was met in
a friendly spirit, the conditional payments, were made punctually, Charles gave
information about Perkin’s doings in the Netherlands, he offered Henry, in
spite of his Italian campaign, the help of his fleet in the event of war, and
all support of the pretender was forbidden in France under heavy penalty. The
Spanish ambassador drew the attention of his sovereigns to the effect such
friendly overtures would have in England, and Ferdinand and Isabella therefore
earnestly warned Henry against French untrustworthiness, which they declared
themselves to have experienced.
But the quarrel with Maximilian caused them even
greater anxiety, especially as they themselves were planning the closest union
with him by the double marriage of their children—their eldest son, Don Juan,
who, however, died early, with Margaret, formerly the affianced bride of
Charles VIII, and their second daughter, Joanna, with the young Archduke
Philip. They had, therefore, every reason to smooth down the quarrel between
two princes, who were in the future to be closely allied to them. They paid no
heed to an appeal for aid from Perkin, supported by the Duchess Dowager; they
even offered to Henry their mediation with Maximilian, and acknowledged the
justness of his point of view; they promised him their assistance against
Perkin, and declared that they were fully resolved to conclude the marriage
treaty on the basis of the old terms, but that Henry’s reconciliation with
Maximilian must absolutely first take place.
It lay completely in Maximilian’s hands to make this
reconciliation, but if the Spaniards insisted that he was ready to do so, and
declared he would not support the pretender, it was clear that he had no such
intentions himself. When Perkin found he could obtain no satisfactory help from
Flanders, he had applied to Maximilian himself, and was presented to the King of
the Romans by Albert of Saxony in the autumn of 1493 at Vienna, where he took
part in the funeral ceremony of the Emperor Frederick III. When Maximilian,
after an absence of five years, again entered the Netherlands, in August,1494,
Perkin was among his followers. He appeared at Antwerp with much pomp,
surrounded himself with a suite, and bore the white rose on his coat of arms,
which he also displayed on the house where he was residing. One day, however,
it was torn down and thrown into the mud of the street by a mob of angry
Englishmen; the perpetrators made their escape. Maximilian was still trying to
make inquiries about his protégé. It was asserted that he firmly believed in
Perkin ; at any rate he acted as if he did. Scotch ambassadors, too, appeared
at his court in June, 1495, to discuss a simultaneous movement. It is
uncertain, however, whether the Scottish king had any share in the equipment of
Perkin, which was principally undertaken by Maximilian. The King of the Romans
tried at the same time to place his own demands on a more secure footing.
Perkin had not only to promise large money payments and other benefits to the
Duchess Margaret, as soon as he should have conquered his kingdom, but he had
first and foremost to acknowledge Maximilian as his heir in all his dominions,
in the event of his dying without children. Nothing could show more clearly
than this condition that the participation of the king in the undertaking was a
mere senseless political adventure, and on this the most vital interests of the
Netherlands were with careless indifference to be staked.
In May the Duchess Margaret again applied to Pope
Alexander VI to take the side of the rightful heir of York against the usurper
Henry. She said it was mere talk when the Spaniards maintained that Perkin had
left Flanders because Maximilian wanted to be quit of him, for Maximilian
himself declared it had been at his instigation that Perkin, in June, 1495, had
put to sea with a fleet of fourteen vessels and some thousand men.
It was of great importance for the pretender that he
should get hold of a party in England ready for action. In February, 1493, he
had already from Flanders entered into relations with confederates at
Westminster, and there seems to have been some suspicion that on this occasion
the Hanse merchants were prepared to act the part of a go-between. Henry made
another move against Perkin when, on the 1st of November, 1494, he conferred on
his second son Henry, born at Greenwich on the 22nd of June, 1491, the title of
Duke of York, which the pretender had assumed. More important still was the
work which his spies did for him on both sides of the Channel. In November,
1494, and January, 1495, a number of men, both in high and low positions,
amongst them some ecclesiastics of note, as the Dean of St. Paul’s and the
Provincial of the Dominicans, were brought up for trial. The churchmen were
protected by their Order; among the others, Sir Simon Montford, Robert
Ratcliff, and William Daubeney were beheaded on Tower Hill on the 27th of
January, 1495. Two others concerned, Cressyner and
Astwood, were pardoned at the place of execution, “which gladded moche people, for they were both yong
men.”
On the 29th and 30th of January other executions
followed at Tyburn. John Ratcliff, Lord Fitzwater,
was kept in prison at Calais, where in November of the following year he paid
with his life for an attempt to escape. We find from a confession, made later
on, that many other guilty persons, especially from among the ranks of the
higher clergy, had escaped discovery. The king no doubt owed the accurate
knowledge he possessed of these intrigues to the circumstance that he found an
informer among the conspirators themselves. A certain Sir Robert Clifford had
been induced, by the promise of free pardon and high reward, to return from
Flanders at the end of 1494, and it was his revelation that led, shortly before
Christmas, to the much-talked-of arrest of Sir William Stanley.
Unfortunately we have no record that enables us to see
exactly the connection between these events. Stanley had been given the post of
chamberlain to the king; he was regarded as a man to whom Henry was Stanley,
under special obligations for his opportune assistance at Bosworth. But we must
remember that Stanley had remained in a most uncertain state up to the very
last moment in the battle; he could scarcely ever have been a reliable
partisan, and Henry had been watching him for a long time, without showing
outwardly any mistrust, till Clifford’s revelation enabled him to set Stanley
on his trial. On the 30th and 31st of January the trial took place before the
Court of King’s Bench in Westminster Hall, and Stanley was beheaded on Tower
Hill, the 16th of February, 1495. but without the extreme cruelty of the
judicial sentence. His very valuable property in land and money was
confiscated, and his body buried at the king’s expense.
Every dangerous movement inside the country was
suppressed with energy, and yet it is strange that Henry in December should
have sent word to France that he was better obeyed than any English king before
him. Anyhow he had taken good care, by preparing his small fleet to defend the
coast, that Perkin should not succeed in England, as he had himself on his
landing in Wales. On the 3rd of July, 1495, Perkin appeared with his squadron
before Deal in Kent, some six hundred of his men landed, but a rising of the
neighbourhood soon drove them back. About a hundred and seventy men were
captured alive and brought to London, where they were kept in the Tower and in Newgate,
and before July was over, all, Englishmen as well as foreigners, were sentenced
and hanged at various places on the coast of Kent, Essex, Sussex, and Norfolk.
At the beginning of September the leaders, amongst whom were a Spaniard and a
Frenchman, were executed in London, and their heads set up on London Bridge.
Some more sentences of death completed the work of vengeance, which was carried
out with more unsparing cruelty than Henry ever exercised before or after.
Possibly the whole attack was against the will of
Perkin, who could not yet reckon in the least on success in England, and had
himself remained in his ship. He had suffered heavy losses; his squadron had
been dispersed, one ship ran on to the coast of Normandy; but he himself made
his way to Ireland, the country which, at the outset, had been chosen as the
basis of his enterprise.
In Ireland things had altered much? Two aspirants for
the throne had first come forward there, and it was absolutely necessary for
Henry to take energetic measures attitude with against this centre of Yorkist
animosity. What had availed him his clemency to Kildare, who had at once taken
the side of Perkin? Henry’s patience was at an end; on the 11th of June, 1492,
he appointed the Archbishop of Dublin, Walter Fitzsimons, to be Lord Deputy;
Alexander Plunket to be chancellor; and Sir James Ormond, a half-brother of the
earl, to be lord treasurer in the place of Kildare’s father-in-law, who had
held that office for thirty-eight years. Kildare tried to exculpate himself,
but his envoys were dismissed by the angry king, and the earl even begged his
old rival Ormond to intercede on his behalf.
The family feud between the Butlers and Geraldines lay
dormant for a while; Kildare had not only at that time asked for help from the
chief of the hostile race, but he had even given his daughter Margaret in
marriage to Piers Butler, a member of that family. In a quarrel between Piers
Butler and that Sir James Ormond who had been singled out for Henry’s
confidence, Kildare espoused the cause of his brotherin-law,
and it came to a regular faction-fight in the streets of Dublin.
These events and the impression they created in
England, and the promise of pardon if he would give up his son as a hostage for
his good faith, induced Kildare at length, in May or June, 1493, to seek in
person his pardon from the king. Henry invited him, and the other Irish nobles
staying in London, to a banquet, and after he had mockingly assured them that
next time they would let an ape be crowned, he caused them to be waited upon at
table by their former king, Lambert Simnel. Lambert pledged them in a cup of
wine, but, overcome by shame, none responded, and the wish was uttered that the
devil had taken him before ever they saw his face. Only the jovial Lord Howth
cried out to him: “Bring me the cup if the wine be good, and I shall drink it
off for the wine’s sake and mine own sake also; and for thee, as thou art, so I
leave thee—a poor innocent.”
The visit ended with the full pardon of the earl, on
the 22nd of June, 1493, without, however, his being reinstated in his old
office. This was given in September to Robert Preston, Viscount Gormanston, who had also been in London. The Archbishop of
Dublin had been summoned to give more exact information to the king, and
possibly in consequence of this, Kildare considered it prudent to take a fresh
journey with a view to his justification, but he met with no further success,
either for himself or for the cause he represented.
Henry did not consider a mere change in individuals
sufficient, he resolved also on trying a change of system. The rule in Ireland
by natives under English control should be set aside, and in its place should
be adopted rule by Englishmen 'in closest union with the English Government; at
the same time the boundary of authority should be extended beyond the Pale to
the wild portions of Ireland. On the nth of September, 1494, the title of
Lord-Lieutenant, which had been resigned by the Duke of Bedford, was bestowed
on Henry, the second son of the king, while the trusty Sir Edward Poynings received the post of deputy, with ample powers
bound only by the laws of England; Henry Dean, the bishop-elect of Bangor,
became chancellor; Sir Hugh Conway, treasurer.
On the 13th of October, Poynings
landed at Howth with about a thousand men. The Earl of Kildare, who till then
had been detained in England, was among his followers. From Dublin Poynings advanced against Warbeck’s adherents in Ulster,
and passed through the O’Hanlon’s country, laying waste as he went. Then it was
that Kildare, embittered, perhaps, by the disappointment of his hopes, entered
into treasonable relations with O’Hanlon and other chieftains against the
deputy, and, together with the Earl of Desmond, proposed to the Scottish king a
joint attack on the English power in Ireland. It was also ascribed to his
instigation that his brother, James Fitzgerald, seized the castle of Carlow,
and planted there the banner of the Geraldines, till Poynings
compelled him to surrender, after a protracted siege. As winter was at hand, Poynings resolved to put an end to this campaign, which
consisted of constant skirmishes in an inhospitable country, and in which the
success his troops achieved was not at all commensurate with the money
expended. For the future he adopted the more successful plan of making terms
with the chieftains, by means of money payments.
On the 1st of December, 1494, he opened, in Drogheda,
an Irish Parliament, which was to frame and legally establish the new system of
government. The most important measures—the Statutes of Drogheda, or, Poynings Law—ordained that no Irish Parliament should be
summoned and no Act passed without the previous approval of the English king,
which was to be procured by the lieutenant or his council, and given under the
great seal; further, they extended to Ireland the operation of all laws already
enacted in England. Other measures granted the power to dismiss the officials
and judges hitherto appointed for life; the authority of the Viceroy, which had
been reduced as regarded the Crown, was strengthened still further in Ireland;
liveried and paid retinues were forbidden, as also the battle-cry of the
hostile families, the “Crom-abo” and “ Butler-abo,” and the right of coining
enjoyed by the great nobles. Kildare, too, in consequence of his last act of
high treason, was attainted by the Parliament, and when he appeared in Dublin, Poynings had him apprehended and brought to England.
It is remarkable that Poynings
by this legislation placed the government of Ireland on an entirely fresh
basis, which retained its validity as long as any Irish parliament was in
existence; while only just before, he had been compelled to acknowledge, in his
advance on Ulster, the insufficiency of his military powers to control the
country by force of arms. For that, however, the power of the king, of which so
much had been heard in France, sufficed, when Warbeck appeared again in the
country. In vain Henry had sought to win over the Earl of Desmond with his
followers, by offering him his pardon, and various customs dues. Desmond
forthwith joined Warbeck, and assaulted the town of Waterford from the land,
while the latter’s fleet was attacking it from the sea. Poynings
was supported by money and troops from England, ships had been fitted out, and
as Dublin also gave assistance, he was able to relieve the garrison; the siege
had to be raised after going on for eleven days, and Perkin was forced to sail
away again with the loss of three ships.
Thus this danger, which was certainly not small, had
been happily averted; still there was no relaxation in the work of providing
for the future security of the country. In England itself Henry took active
measures to this end, and, in September, 1495, caused a strict inquiry to be
made concerning all the Irish, with their wives and children, living in the
kingdom. As for Ireland itself, although its dependence had been in other ways
increased, it was his special desire to make the island as independent of
England, in matters of finance, as possible, so that the expenses of government
should be met by the revenues of the country itself. Accordingly, the undertreasurer, Hattcliffe, had
to send in an exact report on the extent and produce of the crown lands, on the
average amount of receipts from tolls, fines, and other dues; he had to verify
the accounts of officials, call in arrears, and ascertain the cause why the
returns were delayed. Hattcliffe kept most exact
accounts, but the first financial year showed, that Ireland could not produce
even the cost of troops for the garrison, and Henry had to send over large sums
for that purpose, and especially for Poynings’
compacts with the chieftains.
Even for so capable a man as Poynings,
it was not possible really to carry out the new system of government. In
January, 1496, he was recalled, the duties of his office were handed over to
the chancellor; it may be that his own report led Henry to make fresh projects.
Kildare too succeeded in regaining Henry’s confidence, which had been severely
shaken, and, ignorant of all court ways, the Irishman brought his cause himself
in somewhat rude fashion before the king. When the Bishop of Meath, who
appeared as his accuser, cried out that all Ireland could not rule this man.
Henry aptly rejoined, he then should rule all Ireland. The English parliament
removed the ban from the Earl, he received a present of money, and was
reinstated in his dignity as deputy on the 6th of August, 1496, which he
continued to hold into the reign of Henry VIII. Thus, though Henry kept to the
laws which had been proclaimed, he returned, so far as the question of persons
was concerned, to the old form of self-government, and from that time the Earl
of Kildare remained faithful. If Ireland did not quite become what the Statute
of Drogheda required of her, she did not, at least, offer any further refuge
and assistance to the Tudor’s enemies. That she should cease to play her former
part against Henry was enough for him.
Wherever Perkin Warbeck had appeared, in Ireland, in
France, or with Maximilian, he had called forth old and new animosities against
Henry, and he constituted a danger wherever his wandering life led him. When
driven from Ireland, he had taken refuge in Scotland, and his presence there at
once caused the semblance of peace, which till then existed between England and
her northern neighbour, to give way to open strife. In spite of truces and
treaties of peace constantly renewed, the predatory war on the English and
Scotch Border went on. A special subject of dispute was the Border fortress of
Berwick, which had been mostly in English hands since the times of Edward I and
III King James III had it in view when he began to take arms shortly after
Henry’s accession, but a three years’ peace, from the 3rd of July, 1486,
averted the danger; a matrimonial alliance was even in contemplation between
the two royal Houses. The treaty of peace required that the disputed question
of Berwick should be settled within a year; and as this was not done, the
treaty fell to the ground in July, 1487; new settlements were made to take its
place, but they led to nothing beyond the consoling prospect of a possible
final agreement.
The old state of things continued. The victory over
Simnel had protected England from immediate danger from the north; yet
subsequently Henry considered it necessary to be always ready armed in case of
attack. In spite of a provisional treaty of the 28th of November, 1487, the
Scotch parliament urged more strongly in the following January its claims on
Berwick, demanding that at least the fortifications should be demolished.
Preparations were again being made for fresh negotiations, when the decisive
catastrophe approached in Scotland itself. A party of rebel lords had managed
to attract to their side the young heir to the throne. James III was declared
deposed, and James IV was to be placed on the throne in his stead. Henry kept
up relations with both sides, he negotiated at the same time with the king and
with the rebels, before whom he even called the young prince by the name of
king. For the moment a settlement seemed possible in Scotland, but soon the two
armies stood again face to face, and in June, 1488, James III perished at Sauchieburn, not far from the renowned battlefield of
Bannockburn ; he was murdered in a peasant’s hut, while trying to make his
escape. Over the body of his father, James IV ascended the throne. He was only
sixteen years of age.
Henry was on his guard against surprises, for the
feeling in Scotland, even after the change of ruler, was anything but friendly.
When the Scotch parliament resolved in October, 1488, that a wife should be
sought for the young king in one of the courts of Europe, France, Brittany, and
Spain, were named, but not England, in spite of the previous agreement on the
subject; indeed, just at that time, when a war between England and France was
imminent, Scotland renewed her “holy league and covenant” with England’s enemy.
It was only a project, however, and the rumour which spoke of a treaty as
already concluded was an error. On the 5th of October, 1488, a three years’
truce was once more agreed to, but mistrust and strife did not cease; from the
Scotch side energetic measures on the border were insisted upon, while Henry,
in May, 1490, ordered that all Scots, who were at all to be suspected, should
be sent out of England.
Whilst James IV remained on good terms with Henry’s
old enemy, Margaret of Burgundy, Henry on his side tried to take advantage of
the perpetual quarrels between parties in Scotland. In January, 1489, the
Master of Huntly addressed himself to Henry in the name of those who had formed
the party of James III, to request his support and the punishment of the king’s
murderers, and on the 17th of April, 1491, Henry even made a compact with John
Ramsay, Lord Bothwell, and his friend Thomas Todd—who since the murder had been
living in England—that they, in league with Earl Buchan, should get possession
of the person of James IV, and also, if possible, of his brother the Duke of
Ross, and deliver them up in England. This intrigue came to nothing; it serves
only to illustrate the mutual relations of the two countries, for in spite of
it and in spite of the simultaneous resumption of a projected covenant of the
Scots with France, both sides, in the same month of April, resolved to treat
for an extension of the armistice which was drawing to its close in October,
1491. Thus matters went on; the relations of Scotland and France became still
more intimate towards the end of 1491 and beginning of 1492; Perkin Warbeck had
no sooner appeared in the political world, in March, 1492, than he was at once
regarded at the Scotch court as the son of King Edward IV, whilst, on the 16th
of November, 1491, Henry made a similar but more important treaty than that
with Lord Bothwell, with Archibald Douglas, the powerful Earl of Angus and his
son George; both promised to promote a peace policy in Scotland and to combat
those who were against it. The Earl of Angus belonged to the party that had
overthrown James III, but the young king had withdrawn his confidence from his
abettors in the insurrection. This compact of the earl with Henry shows how
they retaliated. Apparently it was discovered in Scotland, for a part of his
property was taken away from Angus and bestowed on Patrick, Lord Hailes, who
had already been given the lands of the attainted lord of Bothwell, with the
title Earl of Bothwell. Angus, however, was soon received into favour again by
the king.
In spite of these hostile covenants, a treaty was
again made on the 21st of December, 1491, which Henry, but not James,
confirmed; almost exactly the same settlement was then come to on the 3rd of
November, 1492, and on the 25th of June, 1493, the peace was extended to seven
years. Henry even acknowledged that the last treaty had been violated more
seriously by the English than by the Scotch; he promised to pay £1000 in
compensating. Nothing testifies more forcibly to the weakness and unreliability
of these treaties of peace than the great number of them, the necessary
negotiations which accompanied them, and the constant complaints of violation.
It was not to be imagined that the promised peace would really last till the
year 1501: some crisis only was needed to expose to the light of day the real
condition of affairs. This was supplied by Perkin Warbeck.
How far an agreement had existed between James and
Perkin since the first overtures in March, 1492, is not known; but in June,
1495, we find Scotch ambassadors taking part in the preparations for the
expedition from the Netherlands. Henry was kept fully informed of the plans of
the king of Scots in connection with Perkin, either through Clifford from the
Netherlands, or more probably through his Scotch friend Bothwell, who, why or
how we know not, had received permission to return home, but still continued to
draw his English allowance. Orders were issued in the northern counties to
arm and be ready; once again, indeed, an attempt was made at a peaceful
settlement, but without any hope of success.
In England, at first, no one knew where the
adventurer, when driven out of Ireland, had taken refuge. James, however, who
had demanded contributions from his subjects for the support of Perkin, was
making preparations at Stirling to give him a suitable reception, where, on the
27th of November, 1495, he appeared with his English followers. An attack on
England was shortly afterwards arranged; Perkin wrote to the Earl of Desmond
for aid; in Scotland preparations for war were begun, but in spite of the
hopeful reports circulated abroad, nothing at first was done. James showed
himself now and then in company with his guest, whom he entertained like a
prince, and to whom he even gave in marriage a kinswoman of his own, Katherine
Gordon, the daughter of the Earl of Huntley. In words of admiration, full of
poetic enthusiasm, Perkin Warbeck writes to the lady of his heart; “whose face,
bright and serene, gives splendour to the cloudy sky, whose eyes, brilliant as
the stars, make all pain to be forgotten, and turn despair into delight;
whosoever sees her cannot choose but admire her, admiring, cannot choose but
love her, loving, cannot choose but obey her.” Yet the beauty of the adored
fair lady did not make Perkin forget her riches and her rank, she seems to him
“not born in our days, but descended from heaven.” Such wooing found a hearing.
The fair Scotch lady remained the faithful companion of his wanderings, till he
was captured and his imposture completely unmasked.
Henry meant to attack James with the same weapons,
when he tried to get into his hands John Stuart, Duke of Albany, the king’s
cousin, then living in France. It was, of course, far more important for him to
get possession of the pretender himself; he turned therefore to his old friends
the Lords of Bothwell and Buchan; but in spite of their encouraging words,
nothing came of it, and the king could only console himself with the news of
the strong resistance which James’ projects were encountering from the Scotch
nobles and people. Perkin also had some reinforcements from England, besides a
small company which came to him from Flanders in two ships, so that in
September, 1496, he had gathered about fourteen hundred men around him. James,
however, would not give his help for nothing, and after some debate, they
agreed together that if Perkin were victorious, Berwick should be surrendered
and a payment of £50,000 be made.
With an unscrupulousness that was almost naive,
Bothwell reported to Henry all that went on, the strength of the troops, the
amount of artillery, and tried to stir him up to an energetic assault on his
own sovereign. He was not misrepresenting matters when he said that the Scotch
were setting about the enterprise with quite inadequate means; moreover,
amongst the men who on this occasion were giving their counsel were to be found
the very keenest partisans of the enemy, as Bothwell’s own example proves.
King James kept to his plans, in spite of all the
attempts to dissuade him. Herein it was especially to the interest of Spain, as
in the case of Maximilian, to ward off complications which should delay Henry’s
joining the League. In 1488, James IV had already to make terms with the
Spanish king and queen, and the year following they offered him a not very
honourable alliance, with a natural daughter of Ferdinand, but in 1495, another
marriage was talked of, when Scotch ambassadors sued for the hand of an Infanta
for their master. Ferdinand and Isabella pretended to agree to this, but they
required in return that Scotland should join the League., should give up the
pretender, and make peace with England. Pope Alexander exhorted James to
comply. All they gained was at the most promises of peace, which were not kept.
A genuine but somewhat feeble attempt at mediation,
made at the last moment by France, through the Lord of Concressault,
had no better success. The envoy, in accordance with Charles VIII’s promise to
Henry, declined to pledge his master to any actual interference, for he did not
mean to irritate Henry and drive him into the arms of the League. Instead,
however—and this was an idea the Spaniards at that time entertained for
themselves— Concressault tried to bring about the
surrender of Perkin to France, and offered 100,000 crowns. Henry knew of these
plans. Bothwell, indeed, did not quite trust the French ambassador, who was
often in secret company with Perkin, perhaps in the hope of inducing the latter
to escape to Charles of his own accord.
If Henry reminded the French king of the help promised
to him, he was not thinking of the literal fulfilment of this promise, he was
only hoping that such threats might frighten James; Concressault’s
mission was to satisfy his demands outwardly at least. However, the Frenchman
had as little success with the Scotch king as had the Spaniards.
But Henry did not rely upon the ever-doubtful help of
his good friends, he took care of himself. On the 14th of October, 1495, a new
parliament met, after an interval of three years, and its
very first measure promised protection to all who, in the event of a rebellion,
remained firm to their duty and supported the king de facto. Henry’s adherents
might very well say to each other that, in spite of this seeming security, a
victorious Yorkist prince would repeal the law, and thus the measure proved to
be in fact chiefly a conciliatory one to original Yorkist partisans; for from
the benefit of the statute only such were excluded who should afterwards desert
the king. Further, Parliament assigned by law a fixed income for keeping up the
fortifications of the border towns of Berwick and Carlisle. Henry did not claim
any special grant this time, it seemed to satisfy him that his parliament gave
him power to collect like taxes such contributions towards the last benevolence
as had remained unpaid, and that alienated crown lands, and above all, the
property of the numerous outlawed rebels, should be adjudged to him; besides
these, he received a tenth from the convocation of the clergy.
If Henry really considered the danger which was
threatening him from Scotland so trifling as he gave Charles of France to
understand, the sequel proved him right, for the long-planned enterprise was
after all but an ordinary raid, such as the border counties had often had to
endure. In the middle of September, 1496, the incursion took place, announced
by a wordy proclamation from Perkin, full of promises of good government and
full of hatred for Henry, for whose head he offered as a reward £1000 and a
large income from land. He even promised that his companions, the Scots, would
do no harm to his future subjects; but these companions did not trouble
themselves much about this, they burnt and laid waste to their heart’s content.
If he and James were reckoning on a rising for the Yorkist cause in the
uncertain north of England, this mode of warfare did not tend to attract men to
their party. The enterprise was badly prepared and badly conducted. The Scots
ventured on no encounter, and quite four days before the English forces
actually started from Carlisle, the mere intelligence of their approach made
the Scots retreat in the greatest haste. On the 2ist of September, Perkin stood
again on Scottish ground at Coldstream; and thus all ended in most pitiable
failure.
Still James did not give up his protégé; just as
before he had rejected the enticing offers of France, now also he kept true to
Warbeck, when the hopes founded upon him had been so bitterly disappointed. We
cannot help thinking that James really believed in the impostor, in any case
Perkin Warbeck’s personality charmed him. Judging from the astonishing
impression which Warbeck seems to have made on the people with whom he came in
contact, he must have possessed, besides his attractive outward appearance, a
particularly winning manner; that letter to his lady-love, if it was really his
own, is a composition which bears no bad testimony to the gifts of a wandering
youth of humble origin. His fearless, romantic, and adventurous audacity
charmed the Stuart king, and touched a responsive chord in him. The youthful
monarch was himself imbued with a chivalrous spirit, bold and straightforward,
of a character that won the highest esteem from Ayala, the Spanish ambassador,
but, like almost all the men of his house, he was deficient in the gifts of
statesmanship and forethought. The pretender’s adventure attracted him, though
the utter hopelessness of it was clear as day; he remained firmly and
honourably true to his protégé, and was even bound to him by ties of personal
affection. Thus Perkin and his followers remained in Scotland, and lived at the
king’s expense till the summer of the next year.
At this time a danger arose for Henry in England,
threatening to shake his very throne, and well calculated to inspire the two
friends with the most exultant hope. The English king had issued a proclamation
declaring James had broken the peace, and that henceforth war would prevail
between their two kingdoms. He prepared for the struggle in the most energetic
manner. In order to secure the money required, he did not summon a formal
Parliament, but, according to an ancient custom, a “great council,” to which he
invited, besides the Lords, “certain burgesses and merchants from all towns and
parishes in England.” They sat from the 24th of October till the 5th of
November, 1496, and voted the king a grant of £120,000 for the war.
This was not a legal grant, but rather the guarantee
of one from a kind of preliminary Parliament, intended to give Henry the credit
necessary for a loan, which he forthwith solicited throughout the country, and
which finally brought him in £58,000. The arming by land and sea had begun in
December, then on the 16th of January, 1497, the Estates assembled at
Westminster. The chancellor, Morton, at the opening ceremony, quoted examples
from the history of Rome of mustering subjects for the defence of the kingdom,
and warning them against rebellion and civil war. It was only, he said, on
account of the Scots’ breach of the peace that writs for a fresh election had
been so soon issued.
This Parliament did really pass a few measures, but
its main object was the confirmation of that grant, for which the very same men
who were now assembled in Parliament had given their voice. The Commons
enlarged both on the breach of the peace and on the violation of the allegiance
of the Scottish vassal—an antiquated claim which had been enforced in former
days; and they granted to the king two whole fifteenths and tenths payable on
the ensuing 31st of May and 8th of November, and, for the further prosecution
of the war, a second tax of like severity, without even the abatements made
from the first; but no one was to be assessed who possessed less than twenty
shillings rent from land, or less than twenty marks in personal property; the
clergy also voted specially heavy taxes. On the 13th of March Parliament was
dissolved.
A heavy demand had been made upon the country, and
though the poor had been exempted from it as much as possible, the
tax-collectors probably did not always act with the prescribed moderation. When
they came to Cornwall, they were met with open resistance. The rough
inhabitants of this extreme southwest portion of the kingdom lived far from
the Scottish Border and the dangers in the north; they were only conscious of
the burden laid upon them for a cause that was indifferent to them. Clever
agitators at once made use of the first indication of disturbance, and gave it
a definite aim. They asserted they were not drawing the sword against the king,
that their whole hatred was directed against his counsellors. A lawyer, Thomas Flammock, and a blacksmith, Michael Joseph, put themselves
at the head, and led the mob to London. At Wells they found a new captain, in
the person of a nobleman, James Touchet, Lord Audley, who, having lost his
patrimony, turned rebel from vexation. The town of Bristol refusing to grant
them admission, the insurgents passed on through Winchester and Salisbury to
Kent. The men of Kent stood in bad repute in consequence of the earlier popular
risings under Wat Tyler and Cade, but quite lately they had shown themselves
loyal, and held out against Perkin Warbeck’s followers. Now a body of men was
quickly collected together under the Earl of Kent and other nobles to oppose
the Cornishmen. The first reverse discouraged many of the insurgents; a portion
of them were already beginning to run away, when the ringleaders pressed on to
the capital for the decisive encounter.
Here the king was expecting them. The startling news
of the rising had reached him at the beginning of June, just as he was busily
arming against the Scots, when great sums for pay had been despatched to the
north, and Lord Daubeney was already on his way thither with the troops that
had been collected. He at once received the order to return, the whole fighting
force was brought to bear on the enemy at home, and the muster from the border
counties was to suffice against any possible attack from Scotland. The nobility
from the neighbourhood of London came with their followers into the capital.
Daubeney’s arrival on the 13th of June relieved the citizens from great
anxiety. On the following day a division of his troops encountered in a
skirmish the rebels who were approaching from the south-west by Guildford. A
secret message from someone among their ranks betrayed a distrust of their
leaders. Daubeney had been drawn up in St. George’s Fields since the 15th, a
Thursday. On the Friday he pushed forward to reconnoitre as far as Kingston,
and joined the king on his return, so that about twenty-five thousand men were
massed together against fifteen thousand rebels.
On the Friday afternoon the Cornishmen appeared, and
encamped on Blackheath, lying under the dark shadow of its elms to the
south-east of London, a spot where formerly rebel armies had also pitched their
tents. It was with difficulty that the leaders kept up the failing courage of
their men; they prepared to hold the bridge, which led westward from the foot
of the hill over the Deptford brook. On the morning of the Saturday, the 17th
of June, 1497, Henry ordered his troopers and archers, under the command of the
Earl of Oxford, to surround the enemy’s position on the right flank and the
rear, in order to cut off his retreat. Daubeney, with the bulk of the troops,
attacked the bridge ; the king brought up the rear-guard. The rebels fought
with desperate bravery. Even Daubeney was for the moment made prisoner; but
when they saw themselves taken in the rear and in flank they held out no
longer. About a thousand were left on the field; the rest, among them the three
leaders, surrendered.
After the battle, at about two o’clock in the
afternoon, the king rode into the town, where the mayor, John Tate, and the aldermen,
attired in scarlet, awaited him; after thanking them for the maintenance of the
troops, which had been undertaken by the town, Henry knighted on the spot the
mayor, one sheriff, and the recorder. He then betook himself to St. Paul’s to
offer up thanks, and from thence to the Tower, where on the Monday the three
rebel leaders were brought before the king and council.
Only these three suffered the penalty of the law; all
the rest received the king’s pardon. On Monday, the 26th, the blacksmith and Flammock were sentenced, and on the day following hanged at
Tyburn, their bodies quartered, and their heads cut
off; on the Wednesday, Lord Audley, attired in a paper coat, on which his arms
were painted, was led through the streets in a mock procession from Newgate to
Tower Hill, and there beheaded. The heads of the victims were stuck up on
London Bridge, and over the four gates of the city, the quarters of Flammock’s body ; the blacksmith’s remains were sent to
Cornwall and Devonshire.
The sedition had now been completely quelled, but the
effect it produced outside the country was bad. Henry felt conscious of this,
and did his best to counteract it. All thought of revenge on Scotland was
forgotten, in view of these serious disturbances in his own kingdom; he was
even prepared to make sacrifices to ensure peace. He had already, in the year
1493, offered the Scotch king marriage with a distant kinswoman of his mother,
but had treated the matter with indifference, when the offer was passed over in
silence. In June, 1495, he took a more decided step, by making the first
proposition of a marriage which was to be of great importance for Great
Britain’s future—the marriage of his daughter Margaret with King James; several
times, in May, June, and again on the 2nd of September, 1496, he issued powers
for these marriage negotiations, but they seem to have come to nothing.
James held back; his own proposals were such as Henry
could not accept. After the treaty of peace had been broken in September, 1496,
Henry was thinking seriously of a war of retaliation, when his mind was
diverted by the Cornish rising. Notwithstanding his victory, he dreaded another
war, and above all the necessity of renewed taxation, after his recent
experience. On the 4th of July, 1497, he sent Richard Fox, Bishop of Durham,
accompanied by William Warham and John Cartington, as
plenipotentiary, to Scotland. At the same time he assumed a threatening
attitude, and issued the order that all the Scots living in his kingdom should
be expelled or pay a heavy fine; and £12,000 out of the last subsidy went
towards arming for war in the north. Meanwhile Fox was to arrange that Perkin
should be given up and an embassage of peace despatched from Scotland, for it
was necessary that England, as the stronger, should keep up appearances, and
not make the first formal overtures of peace; a personal meeting between the
monarchs was also proposed. Henry was ready indeed to forego the surrender of
Warbeck, and to make still greater concessions ; only peace there must be now
at any price—all other matters might be settled later on. The motives,
however, which urged Henry to peace, tempted James to war. Possibly the danger
created by the rebel host marching to the very gates of London seemed greater
than it really was ; in any case the opportunity was favourable. The expense of
Warbeck’s maintenance also, and the constant opposition of his own nobles, may
have urged the king to venture on a decisive move. So Henry’s efforts for
peace, as well as those of the Spaniards, who tried to mediate between the
parties, were in vain.
In the summer of 1496, Ferdinand and Isabella had
again despatched Don Pedro de Ayala on a special mission to Scotland, but their
ambassador arrived too late to be able to prevent the invasion. They tried to
attract James by the pretended offer of a marriage, and in order again to free
themselves from this promise with a good grace, they proposed to Henry that he
should give his daughter to James, probably without knowing of the king’s own
plan. They offered Ayala’s services as mediator. They were honestly anxious for
peace, and when they heard of the warlike preparations of the English, they
warned them of the uncertain fortunes of war; still they had in the background
their own selfish ends, and their primary aim, as it had been before with the
French king, was to get Warbeck into their own hands.
Henry had already felt some suspicion of his Spanish
friends, on account of their relations with Warbeck, and events proved he was
not altogether mistaken. Their London ambassador, Puebla, had first suggested
the design with regard to the impostor, but in order to keep Henry in the dark
if possible, any intention of the kind was disclaimed even to Puebla himself.
In October, 1496, Warbeck begged a Yorkist partisan in Spain to do something
for him, especially to let him know the sentiments of the king and queen. The
answer was brought by Ayala, who was then anxious to prevail upon James to give
Warbeck up, and who offered him compensation for all the expense he had
incurred. Above all, he tried to gain Perkin himself; he put before him the
inevitable reconciliation between the English and Scotch, the fate which would
then await him, and offered him a safe refuge in Spain. He brought with him a
carefully prepared plan, that Perkin should sail to Ireland, where Spanish
fishing-boats would take him aboard; time and place were fixed upon.
But James would not be led astray, he held firmly to
his friend; Warbeck, however, acted less honourably, hoping to get help from
both sides and ready to deceive both when the time came. The King of Scots, who
was already sending the links of his gold chain to the mint to be turned into
coin to supply his failing funds, was arming for a double assault, —he was to
attack by land, Perkin by sea. As they might reckon on the insurgent Cornishmen
aiding Perkin, and as money was scarce, they only made ready one ship for him,
at Ayr, in the Firth of Clyde; but the two boldest pirates of that time, Andrew
and Robert Barton, joined him there in their own vessel, and the captain of a
Breton merchant ship was induced, either willingly or by force, to take part in
the expedition.
At the beginning of July, 1497, Warbeck set sail;
James waited for some weeks, and then in August, when he might hope that Perkin
was on the march, advanced on the Border fortress, Norham
on Tweed, devastating the plain with his scouring parties as he went.
Henry was better prepared than before. Whilst Norham made a successful resistance, the Earl of Surrey
advanced from Yorkshire with nearly twenty thousand men to its relief, and a
fleet under Lord Broke put to sea. James had scarcely expected this, and as
nothing was heard of Perkin’s advance, he turned back again. Before August was
over, Surrey, crossing the Scotch Border in pursuit, took various strongholds,
amongst them, after a sharp bombardment, Ayton, lying to the north of Berwick.
James did not venture to relieve it; in chivalrous fashion, he offered to fight
the earl in single combat for the possession of Berwick, but the earl, as the
servant of his king, refused this form of decision; bad weather, and
difficulties in provisioning his forces, obliged Surrey to turn homewards at
the end of a week, and to discharge his troops in Berwick.
The warlike King of Scots had received a sharp lesson
; and as Henry’s friendly overtures still went on, and Warbeck had shamefully
disappointed all the hopes set on him, negotiations were at once begun. Ayala
fulfilled his office of mediator ; the Spanish marriage still remained his bait
for James, and so at last, on the 30th of September, 1497, at Ayton, the place
lately so fiercely contested, they agreed to a seven years’ treaty, which,
however, was framed exactly on the model of the usual temporary English and
Scotch treaties, and in no way met the special wishes of the English. To Ayala,
who had been expressly appointed mediator, was entrusted the further settlement
of various disputed points, and he managed to arrange, in London, on the 5th of
December, an extension of the peace for the lifetime of the two sovereigns; the
public announcement was at once made in London.
The fate of the faithless Warbeck was also sealed.
When he reckoned on making use of both Scots and Spaniards for his own
advantage, he was completely mistaken. As Ayala had planned, Perkin,
accompanied by his courageous wife, sailed for Ireland; but against Ayala’s
wish, who could hardly have countenanced hostilities against England, he
allowed himself to be led astray by Sir James Ormond, then an enemy to Henry,
and set up his claim again in Ireland. A Spanish knight, Don Pedro de Guevara,
who with his two brothers had been in the service of Maximilian and of the
Archduke Philip, joined him. A simultaneous movement had been frustrated by
delay; for James began hostilities while Warbeck was still loitering in
Ireland.
But there could be no longer any hope of success in
that country ; for Kildare now held to the king, and Desmond, who two years
before had refused Perkin’s request for help, had also made his peace with
Henry, a fact of which Perkin must have been aware. On the 25th of July, 1497,
he landed at Cork, the same place where he had made his first appearance. There
he was received by his old friend, John Walter; even men of good position in
Cornwall, and also in Devonshire, now entered into communication with him, for
in spite of the victory at Blackheath and the leniency then shown, seditious
feeling in these counties was not yet subdued, and a prospect was held out to
him of a favourable reception and willing support.
For more than a month, Warbeck remained in Ireland.
Towards the end of July, the citizens of Waterford, getting news of his
presence and of his intentions with regard to Cornwall, sent word to the king;
yet, it was only after some hesitation that they endeavoured to obey his
command to get possession of Perkin. Whilst Kildare and Desmond were trying to
catch the pretender, the men of Waterford despatched four ships after him;
Walter, aware of the peril to his friend, conveyed him secretly in a boat to
Kinsale, where three Spanish merchant vessels, possibly those provided by
Ayala, awaited him. Warbeck induced the captain, a Spaniard from San Sebastian,
to take him over to Cornwall. His ship was seized by the king’s men, but the
crew hid Perkin in a cask in the ship’s hold, and in spite of the high reward
offered, denied that he was there. On the 7th of September, 1497, Warbeck
landed safely in Whitsand Bay, in the extreme
south-west of Cornwall.
The king, meanwhile, had had sufficient time to
prepare. Lord Daubeney was sent to the west by land, Lord Broke by sea. The
pretender quickly gathered a following among the disturbed population of
Cornwall and Devon; on the 17th of September, a Sunday, he appeared before
Exeter at the head of a force of six to eight thousand men. Refused admission,
he began to storm the town; he was repulsed, and failed in a renewed attack on
the following day. He turned towards Taunton, but hearing that Daubeney’s forces
were drawn up only a few miles to the north, near Glastonbury, his courage
failed him; he stole away secretly at midnight on the 21st of September, with a
few companions, and finally, finding the coast guarded, he fled to the
sanctuary of the convent church of Beaulieu, near Southampton. A thousand marks
were set upon his head. The pursuers, who had followed him on horseback,
tracked him thither, where, since there was no chance of escape and he was
assured of pardon from the king, after a short parley he surrendered with his
companions, Heron, Skelton, and Ashley.
On the 4th of October, Henry had come to Taunton ; on
the 5th, Perkin was brought before him, and made a full confession. He followed
the king to Exeter, whither his wife, whom he had left behind when he made his
way to the coast, was brought. She was treated in the most lenient manner;
Henry received her graciously, ordered £20 to be at once paid to her, and sent
her under safe escort to the queen at Sheen.
The betrayed Cornish people had dispersed after the
flight of their leader, and when the repentant inhabitants of Devon appeared
before the king, begging for mercy, he only reserved the ringleaders for
punishment, and allowed the bulk of the insurgents to go their way; his
commissioners did the same in Cornwall. But the guilty did not escape scot-free;
many of them had, the next year, to purchase their pardon with a large sum of
money; and even in the year 1500, many were sued for arrears, and some
thousands of pounds thus swept into the king’s coffers. The citizens of
Waterford were graciously rewarded by the grant of special privileges.
Henry did not honour the captive impostor with further
attention. Now at last, in his extremity, the pretended king’s son remembered
his old parents in Tournay, and wrote a melancholy letter to his mother, full
of anxiety as to his approaching fate. He did not, however, forget to beg for
money wherewith to dispose his gaolers more favourably towards him.
Journeying slowly homewards, Henry arrived at Westminster
on the 27th of November. Along the way the people ran together to stare at
Perkin; at Westminster he had again to repeat his confession before the town
authorities, then he was led through the city to the Tower. Behind him followed
a man in fetters, a servant of the king, who, having deserted with another
companion, was executed as a traitor at Tyburn on the
4th of December. Meanwhile for Warbeck, as a foreigner, and not guilty of
treason to his own lord, a mild captivity was reserved. Attendants were
appointed to keep constant guard over him. The following month a dwelling was
even assigned to him in the king’s palace, and a horse kept for him at Henry’s
expense.
His wife, the companion of his last adventurous
voyage, remained separated from him. Possibly the love of the highborn
Scotchwoman had received a severe shock, when she learnt that her husband was
an ordinary impostor of humble origin, who, besides, at the decisive moment had
fled, like a coward. She was honourably entertained at court; Henry often paid
small sums for her wardrobe. She subsequently married a Welshman, Sir Matthew
Cradock, and from her only daughter are descended the Earls of Pembroke. After
her death Lady Katharine was buried by the side of her second husband in the
church at Swansea on the south coast of Wales.
But the leniency that had been shown him did not tame
Warbeck’s restless spirit. On the 9th of June, 1498, he made a foolish attempt
at escape. He deceived his guards, and fled at midnight. The very next day the
king’s order came to watch the seaports, and a hundred pounds were offered for
his arrest. Warbeck, finding his escape was cut off on all sides, took refuge
from his pursuers in the monastery at Sheen, and begged the prior to intercede
for him with the king. Here also his personal charm must have had its effect,
for the prior complied, and the king again granted Warbeck his life. The
morning after the 15th of June he was publicly set in the stocks at
Westminster, exposed to the jeers of the populace. At the same time he had to
read out his confession, as he had made it at Taunton before Henry, and at
Westminster before the town authorities. Three days subsequently he had to
repeat this in London itself, in Cheapside. He was then kept in the Tower, “so
that he sees neither sun nor moon, in such fashion that he will never, with
God’s help, be able to play such another trick again.” Those who saw him in
this close confinement were struck by the alteration in his appearance.
Severity, however, restrained him as little as
kindness. In the Tower he managed to get into communication with other
prisoners, among them some of his former companions. But what was more
important, they got hold of the Earl of Warwick, who was still shut up there.
It was with his name that Warbeck was to have begun his imposture, now the name
and person of the royal prisoner were to give new stability to the shaky credit
of the adventurer. Warwick, whose mind had no doubt been weakened by long
confinement, was only a tool in the hands of the others; with no suspicion of
the importance of what he was doing, he said “Yes” to everything.
The plans of the conspirators, when discovered, seemed
but little dangerous to king and State; the only real danger for Henry lay in
Warwick, the most innocent of the party. He, the last male descendant of the
house of York, had seen his name made use of in nearly all the intrigues
against the Tudor; in his name Simnel’s rising took place, and the scheme of
the Abbot of Abingdon; with his name the plot was concocted in which Warbeck
took part; and now, to his misfortune, after Warbeck’s second capture, a fresh
impostor tried to misuse his name in the same way as Simnel had done. Under the
guidance of Patrick, an Augustinian friar, a young man named Ralph Wilford
began, in Kent, to confide to various individuals that he was the Earl of
Warwick; but before definite action could be taken, teacher and pupil were
caught, and the latter executed on the 12th of February, 1499, while Patrick,
being protected by his order, was condemned, like Simons, to imprisonment for
life.
It seemed as if Warwick’s existence was once more to
be brought before Henry’s eyes as a constantly threatening danger. This last
attempt, insignificant as it was, must have made a deep impression on him, for
rather more than a month after Wilford’s execution, the Spaniard Puebla reports
that Henry seemed in two weeks to have aged by twenty
years. It was then the resolve was probably taken that Warwick must be put to
death on the first opportunity. This occurred shortly afterwards, and probably
the farce of the new conspiracy was purposely allowed to be played a little
longer. A certain Cleymound, and Astwood who had been
spared in January, 1495, were the chief plotters; they wanted to get possession
of the Tower and set it on fire, in order, in the confusion, to escape
themselves with the treasure, and to collect troops with the money. But all
they really did was, that Cleymound procured a dagger
for the earl.
On the 2nd of August, 1499, the great plan was agreed
upon by Cleymound and Astwood with Warwick; they got
into communication with Warbeck, who was lodged underneath them, for they
wanted to “raise the said Peter to be king and lord, and rob the king of his
crown and dignity.” Possibly the traitor was Cleymound,
who accused Perkin himself of being the informer, and who, in spite of his very
decided share in the affair, was pardoned. On the 16th of November Perkin was
tried in Whitehall, together with his earliest confederates, Walter and Taylor,
who had likewise been taken, and they were condemned “to be drawn on hurdles
from the Tower to Tyburn, there to be hanged, and cut
down quickly, their bowels to be taken out and burnt, their heads cut off,
their bodies quartered, and the heads and quarters to be disposed of at the
king’s pleasure.” On the 23rd of November the sentence was carried out in a
milder form on Perkin and Walter. A low scaffold had been erected at Tyburn, from which Warbeck spoke once more to the numerous
crowd standing round. He said he was a foreigner born, “accordyng
unto his former confession, and took it upon his dethe
that he was never this persone that he was named, for
that is to say the second son of Kyng Edward the IVth.
And that he was forced to take upon hym by the meanes
of the said John a Water and other, wherefor he asked God and the Kyng of
forgiveness. After which confession he took his dethe
meekly, and was there upon the gallows hanged and with him the said John a
Water. And when they were dede tayken
downe, and their hede striken of and after their bodies brought to the friars Augustynes, and there buryed, and
their hedes fixed after upon London Brigge.” Perkin Warbeck ended his adventurous career at the
age of twenty-five.
Previous to Warbeck’s execution, the Earl of Warwick,
with Astwood and Cleymound, had been brought to
trial. The grand jury discharged a not very easy task when they extracted a
great plot from the evidence laid before them. The proceedings against the
other accomplices followed, but of the five commoners who were found guilty,
only two, one of them Astwood, were executed, on the 4th of December. The
finding of the jury against Warwick was sent to the Earl of Oxford, under whose
presidency had met the court of peers, consisting of one duke, five earls, and
sixteen barons. On the 21st of November, in Westminster Hall, they pronounced
sentence on the accused, who himself acknowledged his guilt, and on the 28th he
was beheaded on Tower Hill. Henry had him laid beside his forefathers in the
neighbourhood of Windsor. It was no doubt hard for the king to resolve on
carrying out the sentence; he preferred a conciliatory policy to a policy of
revenge, and would much rather pardon than condemn ; but it probably seemed to
him a bitter necessity for his own preservation, and he felt obliged to
disregard the murmurs and discontent among the people. That feeling, however,
was a right one which moved the minds of the populace— regret that Warwick, who
was so much to be pitied, should have had to die, an innocent victim to his
ancestry.
CHAPTER IV.
RELATIONS WITH FOREIGN POWERS 1495-1503 — THE SPANISH
AND THE SCOTCH MARRIAGES.
Misfortune had perpetually accompanied Perkin Warbeck
throughout his wanderings; not one single blow he aimed at his royal rival was
successful. Directly he tried to act alone, without the guidance of his
protectors, he showed himself to be without plan, without cleverness, and
without courage. His political importance lay quite apart from himself, and
depended on the fact that the various Powers made use of him, or simply of his
existence, for their own political ends. In every event that concerned England
from the year 1492, we find him mixed up—in the affairs of Ireland, in the
French war, in the rupture with Maximilian and Burgundy and the commercial
crisis arising therefrom, in the complication with Scotland and in its sequel,
the Cornish insurrection. Thus the relations of England with all the Powers
were for years influenced, and in part controlled, by this adventurer.
If, through Perkin Warbeck, difficulties beset Henry
in his foreign relations, the political situation in Europe, on the other hand,
was for him a fortunate one, for the ambitious grasping policy of France made
the friendship of England equally valuable to those monarchs who were trying to
keep the balance of power, and to France herself, who found herself threatened
by them. The ruler of the island kingdom, lying far away from the contest in
Italy, had only to take advantage of his geographical position to maintain his
importance between the two Powers, Spain and France, who were suing for his
friendship.
As the Spanish monarchs wanted to make Henry serve
their own ends and draw him into the Holy League against France, they viewed
with impatience all entanglements which were a hindrance to their object. For
this reason their ambassador, Ayala, made every effort to reconcile England and
Scotland; for this same reason they were the only rulers who always tried to
thwart Warbeck’s intrigues. This, however, did not prevent them from making use
of the pretender to further their own designs with regard to Henry. “If your
majesties keep the so-called Duke of York in your royal hands, then you can
carry out your will in all points and without hindrance in England”; so wrote
Puebla to his sovereigns, they having already sent Ayala to Scotland with his
secret instructions. And though Ayala did not attain his end, either with James
or Perkin, he had in fact—though decidedly against his own wish—materially
helped Perkin in his last enterprise against Henry. No doubt the Spanish rulers
would have liked to have Warbeck at their disposal, not only as an impostor who
might be sold to Henry for valuable concessions, but also as a pretender who
might be useful. It was certainly not by accident that Warbeck, who had always
been called by them “he,” or “he of York,” or “the so-called Duke of York,”
should in their first letter written after his capture, appear for the first
time under his own name Perkin.
To the English king they had naturally always declared
him to be an impostor, and even offered to give particulars as to his origin;
but as Henry still bore a grudge against many of their subjects for openly
taking the side of Perkin, they reserved for themselves at least the
possibility of veering round, as soon as it should serve their interests to
favour the pretended Yorkist prince. To this point, however, they never came,
and as it is highly improbable that they believed even for a short time in the
genuineness of the impostor’s claim, so they alone never took his part against
the Tudor.
Henry’s distrust was well founded, especially as he
discovered that those who were urging him on against France had entered
privately into communications with her, which,, in the spring and summer of
1496, were continued quite openly through the medium of ambassadors.1 Moreover,
the Spaniards had not been very fortunate in their assurance about Maximilian.
After the formation of the Holy League, Henry had
expressed a wish to join it, and this was certainly more than a mere polite
form of expression, for he desired a friendly alliance with the Powers united
in the League; but to enter a warlike coalition, one member of which,
Maximilian, was his bitter foe and moreover the patron of the pretender to his
throne, was not to be thought of. For the present, therefore, he prudently held
back. The danger to the Pope which had been alleged, could not be great, as he
himself had not even written to England on the subject.
At the same time Henry’s continued friendly relations
with France were a thorn in the side of the Spaniards. A regular and polite
intercourse by means of envoys was kept up between England and France, although
certain complaints of piracy and injury to commerce occasionally crept in. In
July, 1495, indeed, Henry declared to Ferdinand and Isabella that he was free
to enter into any league, and to engage in a war; but in the following spring
he pronounced himself in favour of a matrimonial alliance, proposed by Charles,
between their two Houses, and ready for a personal meeting. He granted a
reprieve of a year for the payment of sums due, and offered to mediate between
France and the Powers of the Holy League. Of course, all the time he had his
own objects in view—that Charles should deliver up the Duke of Albany and take
action against Scotland, who now was threatening war. Charles seemed inclined
to take advantage of this to quench the dawning influence of Spain, which
threatened to become dangerous to the long-established French ascendancy in
Scotland. He proposed to James a marriage with a French princess. Why should
Henry break with this friend? If he joined the League, it must assume a form
which would preclude this necessity. This was indeed to require much of a
coalition directed against France.
The King of the Romans continued to form the chief
obstacle to the designs of Spain. The Spaniards demanded the admission of Henry
into the League, Maximilian opposed it; he did so in hopes of Warbeck’s
success, who would prove a more amenable ally against France. At all events he
determined to wait the result of the contest, nor was he discouraged by
Warbeck’s defeat on the coast of Kent in the summer of 1495. The Pope and the
Duke of Milan, as well as the Spaniards, urged Maximilian to give up his
stubborn opposition; but the demands he made, whilst apparently yielding,
amounted almost to a refusal. Henry was to break openly with France, and to go
to war, whilst he undertook to send a force of two thousand men to Henry’s
assistance, and to negotiate in his behalf with Warbeck, as well as in Ireland
and Scotland. Instead of the required abandonment of Warbeck, these words
seemed to imply an open acknowledgment of his claims. Henry gave an evasive
answer. When his envoy, Egremont, appeared at Nordlingen,
Maximilian assembled all the envoys of the League who were present, under the
presidency of the Italian, Ludovico Bruno, his confidential Latin secretary,
who was well known to be a partisan of the pretender. He wished to insist on
the conditions he had imposed, but was warned especially by the Spanish envoy
not to irritate Henry by so doing, since it would undoubtedly drive him into
the arms of France. Though a hostile movement on the part of England was to be
desired, the chief object should be merely to prevent her alliance with France.
In the end Maximilian gave in so far that Egremont was despatched with the intimation
that the King of the Romans was willing to see Henry join the League. Not one
word was said about the principal difficulty—Warbeck.
As long as Maximilian entertained hopes for his
protégé, there was no depending upon him. In spite of papal and Venetian
influence, he and Bruno expressly insisted upon his obligations towards Perkin,
whilst Henry still demanded that the pretender should be given up. From the
answer given to Egremont, Henry thought he had already gained something, and at
the end of April, 1496, Sir Christopher Urswick
appeared at Augsburg and presented himself to the King of the Romans. The
ambassador saw little to encourage him. Maximilian, while insisting on war, had
himself made no preparations for arming, and the friends of Perkin still held
their heads high at court. Urswick was also informed
of the prevailing dislike of England, and of the compact with the pretender in
Scotland. In the face of such opposition, it was impossible for the moment to
come to any agreement, and, at the end of May, 1496, Urswick
was dismissed with a few friendly words, to the great vexation of the
Spaniards.
The difference between Maximilian’s fitful, sanguine
conduct, and Ferdinand’s steady policy, always bent on the same goal and moving
on the same lines, stood out in strong contrast in their conduct towards
England. As there were rumours afloat of a marriage between Prince Arthur and
the daughter of Anne de Beaujeu, it was doubly annoying to the Spaniards that
England should be unnecessarily irritated by the obstinacy of Maximilian; and
thinking that the promise to fulfil the marriage treaty would prove successful,
as it had once done before, not only in preventing Henry from uniting with
France, but even in dragging him into the war against her, they issued full
powers for concluding the negotiations on the 30th of January, 1496.
That Burgundy gave up the policy into which it had
been led by Maximilian’s influence was certainly a notable advantage. An
important commercial treaty between Henry and Duke Philip, which was concluded
in London, on the 24th of February, 1496, prohibited either side from giving
assistance to rebels against the other. It was specially stated that no rebel
should be permitted to remain in territories under Philip’s lordship belonging
to the Duchess Margaret, or any other person, but that they should be immediately
proceeded against. This was the exact contrary to the answer given to Poynings and Warham. The Spaniards had also contributed
towards bringing about this settlement. Urged by them, the Pope had bestirred
himself. He wrote to Henry, and empowered Puebla to conduct in his name the
negotiations for Henry’s admission into the League. They demanded the same of
Maximilian, as some slight protection against his shiftiness, and, even before Urswick arrived, he had given in, and signed the power on
the 18th of April, 1496. But in doing so, he had only repeated his acquiescence
in the admission of Henry to the League, nor did it occur to him to give up his
protégé on that account.
It was a question whether the situation at that time
would decide Henry, even without Maximilian’s last concession, to join the
League and thereby to secure the friendship of the other Powers, or, at least,
their neutrality. It was still open to him to choose. France would have
accepted his alliance as gladly as would the members of the League. For the
moment, therefore, he evaded the question ; in the negotiations about the
Spanish marriage also, his plenipotentiaries showed a cautious reticence. The
very urgency of the Spaniards gave him a feeling of security; indeed they
ordered their ambassador to conclude the marriage treaty, even if Henry did not
immediately declare war against France, and conceded to the demand of Henry
that if he joined the League, he should be free from any obligation to take
steps against France, or contribute money for the purpose. In return for this
concession, Henry overlooked Maximilian’s conduct, especially as he gave no
more assistance worth naming to Perkin. After all, there was as little sense in
the policy of the King of the Romans with regard to the pretender, as there was
danger from it to Henry.
The final negotiations did not take place in England,
but in Rome, whither, in April, Henry had sent his secretary, Robert
Sherbourne. On the 18th of July, 1496, the agreement was concluded there in the
presence of the Pope. The text of the new League was the same as the old one of
the 31st of March, 1495, only that the provisions concerning help in time of
war and the disposition of troops were omitted; the members of the older League
were, however, expressly bound by these earlier provisions. The announcement
and conclusion of the treaty followed immediately. Henry signed it on the 23rd
of September, 1496, two days after Perkin Warbeck had again beer obliged to
retreat over the Scottish border. The Pope sent Henry, in acknowledgment, a
consecrated hat and sword, which were received with much ceremony on All Saints
Day.
Though the old provisions for offence might be
retained for the other members of the coalition, yet the League, in the form in
which Henry was permitted to enter it, was completely stripped of its
aggressive character. It was not, indeed, the admission into the alliance of
this prince, with his pronounced desire for neutrality, that caused this
change, but his entrance made clear the change that had already taken place.
The peaceful turn in European politics, which broke up the League, originated
with Ferdinand himself, the author of it.
Cordova’s victories in Italy, accompanied by some
successes on the Pyrenean border, had practically destroyed French ascendancy
in Naples by the year 1496, and, as certain important places remained in the
hands of the Spaniards, the way was prepared for their occupation of the
country. The League having thus fulfilled its object with regard to Spain,
there was some hope of coming to a friendly settlement by means of the
negotiations actively carried on with France in 1496. Hostilities had not
ceased on the border until the 27th of February, 1497, when an armistice
between France and Spain was agreed upon at Lyons. The truce, which included
the other members of the League, was to begin for Spain on the 5th of March,
for the others on the 25th of April, and to last for the present till the 1st
of November, in order that the permanent peace might in the meanwhile be
settled. This armistice was extended, as the plenipotentiaries did not meet
till well on in the following year at Perpignan for the final negotiations.
No one could be more pleased with this turn of affairs
than Henry, for his friendship with France, as is shown most plainly by the
conclusion of a new commercial treaty between them in May, 1497, was in no way
shaken by his adhesion to the League. In other ways, also, pacific tendencies
were making themselves felt. It was certainly no sign of dissatisfaction that
Pope Alexander, even before the end of 1496, bestowed on Ferdinand and Isabella
the title of the “Catholic Kings.”1 The Burgundian government now began to free
itself from the influence of Maximilian, not only with regard to England, but
to France, and to make overtures of friendship. The King of the Romans alone
held out. But he was not to be reconciled, and when, on the 7th of April, 1498,
Charles VIII, at the age of twenty-seven, died unexpectedly and without issue,
Maximilian at once confronted the new ruler, Louis XII, with his claims on the
Duchy of Burgundy, and began to arm for an onslaught; he could not, however,
effect anything, unsupported as he was by the other members of the League. He
remained completely isolated.
By divorcing his wife and marrying Charles’ widow,
Anne, Louis prevented the separation of Brittany from France, and he openly
took up the traditional policy with regard to Italy, by assuming the title of
King of France and Duke of Milan. Elsewhere his aim was peace. He at once
despatched an embassage to London, where a solemn funeral service was held for
his predecessor in St. Paul’s. On the 14th of July, 1498, the Treaty of Etaples was renewed in Paris by Henry’s plenipotentiaries,
and the continued payment of the sum due was guaranteed. It was only the
article concerning rebels, which always played its part in all English
settlements, that underwent any material alteration, and this was worded with
more severity in consequence of recent experiences. Louis swore to the concluded
treaty on the Holy Gospels and on a fragment of the true Cross, promising
special punctuality in the payment of the money. Later, on the 1st of February,
1500, at the wish of the contracting parties, Pope Alexander bound them more
closely to their treaty with threats of the penalties of the Church.
Louis had not been long in making up his mind to purchase
for himself the lasting friendship of England by these rather unequal
concessions, even though he is said to have made great difficulties at first.
He strove to abide by the treaty, which he caused to be recognised by his
Estates, and the article concerning rebels came into force when in the summer
of 1499, John Taylor, the partisan of Warbeck, was seized in France and handed
over to Henry. Care was also taken, by means of ample pensions, to secure good
friends for Louis at the English court.
Maximilian had again made repeated attempts in the
years 1497 and 1498 to induce the English king, for whom he otherwise displayed
the most unequivocal enmity, to take the field in his interests against France,
he promised to give him his support in an attack on Guienne; there was even
some idea of investing him with Brittany. Designs such as these were not likely
to interfere with Henry’s peaceful projects, but it must have been a far
greater disappointment to the King of the Romans, when, in spite of all his
efforts to the contrary, his own son Philip made peace with France. By the
treaty of Paris of the 2nd of August, 1498, Philip, amongst other things, renounced
this very Duchy of Burgundy reclaimed by Maximilian, and did homage to the
French king for Flanders and Artois.
On the 5th of August, only a few days later, followed
Louis’ agreement with the Spaniards, at Marcoussis.
They were naturally mainly interested in discussing the arrangement about
Naples, and here the Spanish design of a partition of that kingdom formed the
basis of the understanding; but on these ulterior plans the treaty itself was
for the present silent, it only dealt with peace and friendship between the two
Powers. It was this contract which completely shattered the Holy League;
Maximilian alone struggled to escape from these trammels of a peace thus
imposed on the whole of Western Europe.
Never yet had the efforts of Henry and his Spanish
friends followed so completely on the same lines, as now in this time of a
universal agreement for the preservation of peace. The Spaniards would indeed
have preferred that Henry should have joined in the old war league, but this
merely with the object of bringing the English king into more direct opposition
to France. This time they were in the disagreeable position of being forced to
give in to English demands, for, what now seemed to stand like some menacing
spectre in the background was the dread of any influence from England that
might injuriously affect that diplomatic war just embarked on with France, and
also of the possibility of an increase of strength to that country by her
closer union with England. Thus it came about that Henry, in the very year that
saw the attack on him by the pretender in league with Scotland, managed, by a
clever use of the European situation, to achieve one success after another; the
defeat of Warbeck was also a defeat for Maximilian, who was reckoning on
Warbeck’s success.
Finally the Spaniards endeavoured, by the help of the
promised treaty of marriage, to make Henry assume a more hostile attitude
towards France, while their own efforts for peace made it more easy for them to
drop their original demands for war. In return, the marriage treaty was at all
events to be accompanied by a covenant binding England more closely to Spain,
and by the long-wished-for concessions with respect to trade. But here, too,
Spain had to yield; the treaty in London of the 1st of October, 1496, rested
only on the marriage conditions of the treaty of Medina del Campo, without
taking into consideration the special wishes of the Spaniards—no alliance to
bind England, no commercial conditions, only the marriage of Arthur and
Katharine, formed the contents. The questions as to the dowry and jointure
remained as before, except that some points hitherto uncertain were cleared up,
and while Katharine’s right of succession in Spain was again secured to Fer,
Henry on his part confirmed by a special document the right of succession of
Arthur and his descendants in England before his brothers and sisters.
On the 1st of January, 1497, the Catholic kings
executed the new treaty, and empowered their ambassador, Puebla, to arrange the
formal betrothal in England by proxy; at the same time they now pressed for the
conclusion, at least, of a closer alliance; they even spoke again of a war
against France. At this moment Ayala was beginning his work as intermediary in
Scotland, and they were still hoping to get Perkin into their hands as a useful
tool against Henry. The plan failed, and since their wishes for closer alliance
and facility for trade were reserved for future settlement, Henry had a pledge
for the punctual fulfilment of the marriage treaty. That he intended to keep
what he had got is shown by the promise to lessen the customs duties “ in
honour of the joyful arrival of the princess Katharine in England.” He even
hesitated about the execution of the marriage treaty, and did not sign it till
the 18th of July, 1497, when the Cornish insurrection rendered Spanish
intervention in Scotland absolutely necessary to him. A month later, in the
presence of the court, at Woodstock, the solemn betrothal took place, when
Puebla, as directed by his instructions, represented the princess. It is this
which probably explained the second ratification of the treaty by the Spanish
monarchs, on the 4th of February, 1498, at Alcala.1 The September of 1497 saw a
truce with Scotland, concluded for Henry with the help of Spain, and by October
the troublesome pretender was in his power. The new political schemes and
entanglements into which Maximilian had plunged, caused a temporary cessation
of hostilities even with his rival; though his feelings towards Henry had by no
means changed, and were only waiting fresh opportunity to burst forth with
renewed activity.
The English king and the Spanish monarchs were able on
the whole to congratulate themselves on their success. The Spaniards, the
acknowledged leaders of European politics, in whose name a new world had been
disclosed in the western hemisphere, had driven Charles VIII out of Italy, and
by the truce of Lyons had gained for the present a free hand in Naples;
moreover, they had kept possession of Cerdagne and
Roussillon, concluded an agreement for the projected double marriage with the
children of Maximilian, and finally had prevented the dreaded union of England
with France.
But Henry had maintained his position with peculiar
cleverness in the midst of a crowd of domestic and foreign difficulties, which
beset him on every side. Foreign observers agreed in saying, that England for
many years had not obeyed any monarch so well as the Tudor; his throne from
henceforth stood secure. His position with regard to foreign affairs was
completely changed; he who at first sued for friendship, now found his
friendship sought by all, and that this fact was recognised is proved by the
price which Spain paid for the renewal of the friendship with England.
The further settlement of the general question and the
completion of the marriage itself were, in due course, to follow the last
marriage treaty with Spain. That this treaty was so advantageous for Henry was
due, not only to the European situation being favourable to him, and to his own
cleverness or the lucky accident that Warbeck did not succumb to Spanish
blandishments, but in great part to the inadequate and undignified diplomatic
representative of Ferdinand and Isabella in England.
Among the plenipotentiaries of foreign powers
accredited to Henry’s court, Roderigo Gondesalvi de
Puebla, doctor of civil and canon law, who permanently resided there, played a
peculiar part. He was at first only temporarily in England, in 1488 and 1489,
then permanently, from 1494 till his death in 1509. In the year 1496 were heard
the first complaints of his indifferent despatches, his sovereigns heard
nothing from him about the great Cornish insurrection, and they suspected that
their ambassador represented English rather than Spanish interests. At the same
time Puebla was filled with the deepest jealousy of each one of his official
colleagues, who appeared in England. In this he was to a certain extent justified
when his monarchs left him in ignorance of a difficult task which Ayala had
fulfilled with regard to Perkin Warbeck ; it was just on this very Ayala, so
far superior to himself, that he poured forth the vials of his wrath, whilst he
blackened his rival’s character in every way with the hope of damaging his
reputation with the kings. They, however, caused inquiries to be made about
Puebla’s own behaviour by the two ambassadors, Londono and the sub-prior of
Santa Cruz, who passed through England to Flanders in the spring of 1498.
Their suspicions that Puebla was working more for
England than for Spain found special confirmation from his failure to take
advantage in his sovereigns’ interests of favourable moments, such as the great
rebellion of 1497, and from his careless handling of the customs question,
which had roused against himself the animosity of the Spanish merchants, who
complained that they could get nothing out of Henry by his means unless they
bribed him; no captain, no common sailor even could get what he wanted without
money. It was said he carried on the trade of an attorney, and was covetous and
usurious. Now, however, he got into evil case, as his salary was not paid him
in spite of all his complaints. In June, 1500, he begged for at least a third
of the arrears due to him, and this third alone he reckoned at eleven hundred
ducats.
This somewhat explains his scandalous mode of life.
For three years he lived in the house of a mason who harboured loose women, and
he dined daily for twopence at the same table with this company. He could take
his meals still more cheaply and comfortably at court; and a courtier, when
asked by the king what was the reason of Puebla’s coming, answered with a
sneer, “To eat.” He was certainly not looked upon with much respect by the
English, and still less by his own countrymen. One opinion of him may suffice.
This describes him as a liar, flatterer, calumniator, beggar, and doubtful
Christian. Henry is not likely to have had a much better opinion of him; he knew,
however, how to make clever use of him, and to attach him to himself by small
favours and the prospect of greater rewards. But with good reason his masters
were pointedly silent about the plan of giving him an English bishopric, or of
marrying him to a rich wife in England. They treated in the same way the wish
he expressed, when in financial difficulties, that they should hand over to him
the civil and criminal jurisdiction over the Spaniards residing in England;
although, when preferring this request, he enclosed the document granting him
the appointment, prepared for signature. It may be that they wished to keep him
in a state of dependence, for it was only Puebla’s satisfactory relations with
Henry which induced them, in spite of all the bad reports, and all their own
unfavourable experiences, to leave him at his post. In any negotiations of
importance they associated with him capable men like Ayala. However much
Puebla’s jealousy and vanity might rebel against this, all his boasting about
his own superiority and experience was of no avail. They signified their
dissatisfaction sometimes ironically and often plainly enough to the vain and
foolish man, whom they occasionally smoothed down again by fair words. But
still this most original and comical diplomatist continued to be kept at the
English court.
In all subsequent negotiations, Puebla did not belie
his nature. The next task for diplomacy to undertake was a closer alliance with
England, strongly insisted on by the Spaniards, as a supplement to the matrimonial
treaty. The position of affairs, however, was quite different from what it had
been in March, 1489, when Spain had compelled her ally to take part in her war
with France. Desirous of peace, she had sent Londono to England with an
official communication of her pacific intentions, while Henry, now that he was
sure of his affair, even began, at least in Puebla’s presence, to speak of
warlike plans against France. The Spanish draft of the treaty of alliance did
not please him; the wording of the clauses on rebels, so important for him,
offered in particular considerable difficulty, and Puebla calmly confessed that
in this matter he had exceeded his powers.
On the 10th of July, 1499, a settlement was effected
in London, in which the earlier treaty of Medina del Campo served again as a
general basis. Certain of the single clauses on friendship, help in war,
freedom of trade, and protection against rebels, were now drawn up more
precisely, and the treaty was to hold good for the present rulers and their
successors. England now stood, not only in appearance, but in fact, on a
footing of equality with her ally. Puebla tried to make the most, to his
somewhat dissatisfied sovereigns, of the difficulties overcome, the excellence
and great importance of this treaty, which, with evident self-satisfaction, he
characterised as “a master-stroke of diplomacy.”
On the subject of the marriage treaty also, the
fulfilment of which was to wait for some years, owing to the youth of the
betrothed pair, there were now various unnecessary delays, originating more in
a certain distrust justified by former experience, than perhaps in a wish on
either side to postpone the agreements. That both parties were in earnest was
shown by their efforts to secure the papal dispensation, in order that a formal
marriage by proxy might be concluded before the young couple had reached a
marriageable age. This marriage took place immediately after the arrival of the
dispensation in the summer of 1498, and in pursuance of a special power sent by
Katharine to Puebla, was repeated once more in due form on the 19th of May,
1499, at Bewdley, Arthur’s country seat. After vows exchanged, he and Puebla—who
represented the princess—laid their hand in each other’s, whereupon both
declared the marriage concluded, and that they regarded each other as man and
wife. The newly married children, who had not yet made each other’s
acquaintance, now exchanged their first affectionate letters, in which they
spoke of love and longing, and expressed the hope that they should often hear
from each other.
Some difficulties were raised on the question of
sending Katharine over to England, which was to be on the completion of
Arthur’s fourteenth year, and therefore in 1500. The English, on their side,
were for pressing on the date; the princess ought, they said, as soon as
possible to become accustomed to the new life and foreign tongue. The queen and
the queen-mother suggested that she should at least exercise herself in French,
for which she had opportunity, because English ladies did not understand Latin
or even Spanish; and it was pointed out to her that to accommodate herself to
the English customs and mode of life would not be easy. On the subject of a
suite which was to accompany Katharine, there were differences of opinion.
Henry and his queen begged that the ladies might be of good family and
handsome—at least, that none of them should be strikingly plain; and they
wished to reduce the number of Spanish servants, whilst Ferdinand and Isabella
wished to increase it, but expected the English king to pay the salaries.
In spite of the assurances of the Spaniards that they
would adhere to the appointed date, the preparations for the princess’s
departure were still delayed : having regard, therefore, to the approaching
stormy season of the year, Henry declared himself ready to agree to a further
postponement till June, 1501. Meanwhile, as Arthur had now reached an age when
he could be party to a treaty, the Spaniards insisted on a repetition of the
wedding ceremony, already twice performed. Apparently they were filled with
anxiety lest their ally should at the last moment leave them in the lurch.
After some additional delays, Henry gave in, and the ceremony was again
repeated on the 22nd of November, 1500. The tables were now turned. The cause
of the Spaniards’ anxiety was the friendly relations which were begun in the
year 1500 between Henry and the Archduke Philip, and which culminated in a
personal meeting between the two rulers. In June, 1500, Gomez de Fuensalida went to England, charged with a secret
commission, to be concealed even from Puebla, to inquire whether there was any
foundation for the report that Maximilian wished to frustrate the Spanish
marriage of the Prince of Wales, and to substitute another.
The real object of this embassage was hidden in
somewhat peculiar fashion under the pretext of a commission to assist Puebla in
introducing an alteration into the marriage treaty; and to Puebla himself this
pretended commission was made specially emphatic by the censure of his bad mode
of conducting business on this occasion. At the same time, after all the firm
and binding covenants, the proposed change was to be a feeler to discover
Henry’s true state of mind; so Fuensalida, to
Puebla’s annoyance, very soon brought forward the matter for discussion, but
without achieving any special result. The whole commission was now withdrawn by
fresh instructions from Spain, and Puebla was left to splutter forth his
suspicion, jealousy, and self-conceit on the subject of this new rival. It
must have been extremely annoying to him that even Henry requested King
Ferdinand to leave Ayala, who had already been recalled, in England, till the
arrival of Katharine, though Puebla had begged that this rival, who had become
a constant nightmare to him, might be removed. Nothing, therefore, was left him
but to indulge in fruitless anger and pathetic lamentations over his
unappreciated talents as a diplomatist.
These customary petty jealousies on the part of the
ambassador disturbed the progress of affairs as little as did the Spaniards’
temporary distrust of the honourable intentions of England. This feeling had
indeed been increased by Fuensalida’s first reports,
when he heard on his journey through France of the meeting between Henry and
the archduke near Calais, and of the consequent surmises of the French. Towards
the end of the journey, however, this distrust was removed. The best witness
for Henry’s good faith was afforded by the preparations for the wedding in
England, and by the distrust again exhibited by the English in Fuensalida’s own masters. The wedding ceremony had been
once more repeated, according to their express wish, and they now sent to beg
Henry to exercise some moderation in the festivities for which he was making
ready. The king was said to have spent in France £14,000 on jewels alone for
the wedding
Once more the departure was delayed, the reason given
being a rising of the Moors in Ronda. On the 21st of May, 1501, the princess
left her parents in Granada, but did not arrive at Corunna till the middle of
July. On the 25th of August the squadron set sail, but was driven back to
Laredo by a storm; it set out again on the 27th of September. A spell of fine
weather was followed by a strong south wind. The waves rose high, and, as if
the storms on her passage were a foreboding of all the sorrows of heart that
awaited the Spanish princess in her new home, foul weather accompanied them
throughout the voyage, till they landed in Plymouth on the 2nd of October.
Forthwith the English prepared a fitting welcome.
Henry greeted his future daughter in a French letter; many nobles hastened to
receive and escort her. But Henry did not set out ’to meet her till the
4th of November, and Prince Arthur joined him on the way. When the Spanish
prothonotary announced to him Ferdinand’s instructions that no one was to see
the princess at present, the king replied, after consulting his council, that
as soon as she set foot on English soil the Spaniards were relieved of their office
as her guardians, and that any further orders would be issued by the king of
England. He met Katharine at Dogmersfield, and soon
after him Prince Arthur greeted her. Then they separated. Katharine arrived at
Lambeth on the 9th of November, where she remained till the day of her state
entry into London. Henry went by another way to Richmond, then to Baynard’s
Castle, in London, whither his wife Elizabeth followed him.
On the 12th of November Katharine entered the capital.
When she arrived at London Bridge, women in the garb of the Saints Katharine
and Ursula welcomed her with a Latin distich and a longer poem in English, and
at Gracechurch Street, Cornhill, Soper Lane, and Cheapside, the procession was
greeted in the same way. The young Spanish princess could hardly have
understood the meaning of the lengthy verses, and as little of the speech of
the Recorder, delivered in the name of the citizens in Cheapside, where the
Lord Mayor with the aldermen on horseback awaited the future queen. But pomp
and splendour greeted her on all sides. The streets were richly decorated;
costly draperies hung from all the windows, and wine flowed out of conduit
pipes, to the delight of the crowd. Her procession stopped at the Bishop of
London’s palace, and here Henry appeared shortly after, with his wife and
mother.
On Sunday, the 14th of November, 1501, the marriage
ceremony took place, in presence of a crowd of spectators, at St. Paul’s, on a
great platform extending from of the west door to the choir. The Archbishop of Canterbury
celebrated mass, and then the bride, accompanied by the Spanish ambassador and
young Henry of York, returned to the bishop’s palace. Her jointure had been
solemnly adjudged to her in the church itself, and the half of the dowry that
was due had been brought thither and paid over to her.
Then followed a splendid banquet, and days of endless
festivity. At Westminster there were tournaments, and in the Hall again the
favourite allegorical representations. The royal party themselves led off the
dance before the assembled guests, and it delighted them all to see how young
Henry, throwing aside the state robe which hampered his movements, gaily went
on in his doublet Thus day after day they continued with dancing, feasting,
play, and tournament, bearing with astonishing endurance for two whole weeks
the monotony of this gay round of revelry. Henry himself informed Katharine’s
parents of all that had taken place. He vowed he would be a second father to
her, a promise he was to ignore for a long time.
With noisy rejoicings and the gorgeous display of his
immense wealth, the king had solemnized the union of the two princely Houses.
The goal was reached for which he had striven ever since his accession. An idle
rumour declared that it was not till the execution of the Earl of Warwick that
Ferdinand considered the throne of the Tudor to be firmly established, and gave
his consent to the marriage contract; but, in fact, that contract had been
decided on before Warwick’s death, and Henry had already given ample evidence
of the security of his throne.
If of late years English and Spanish policy had been
following the same course, it was not, as before, because England gave in
submissively to the wishes of her stronger ally; rather it was Spain who now
was the one to yield. The Spaniards rendered far more direct services to the
English king than the English king did to them, and while their own marriage
negotiations were still going on, Spanish policy gave its aid, as it had done
before, to English policy in Scotland. Out of the truce and treaty of peace
with that kingdom was to spring that matrimonial alliance, so full of
importance for the future, which, as well as the Spanish alliance, Henry was
able to regard as his peculiar work.
That Henry was genuinely in earnest in his peace
policy, and pursued it for its own sake, is nowhere more clearly shown than in
his dealings with Scotland. His inclination for peace impelled him to go to the
furthest limit at which he could allow a less powerful neighbour to meet him;
for had not his proposals of a marriage for James been totally disregarded by
the latter? When at last, in the year 1497, Henry was rousing himself to
serious retaliation on account of Scotch hostility, the Cornish insurrection
forced him back into his old pacific policy. In December, 1497, after the fresh
onslaught in the autumn had been repulsed, the final treaty was concluded, to
last the lifetime of the two monarchs. Henry helped to keep Scotland isolated,
for by maintaining friendly relations with France he withdrew from Scotland the
support which she had found hitherto in all her struggles with England. Besides
this, Henry’s other ally, Spain, was now working in the most decided way in
accordance with the king’s wishes; with Perkin’s capture the ostensible reason
for the continual fighting had at last been removed.
Henry showed himself, indeed, not quite satisfied with
the conditions of the December truce; the guarantee against future support
given to rebels seemed to him insufficient. But his attitude being on principle
'conciliatory, he was ready to make concessions, and James’s annoyance at his
demand would have been without importance, if an unfortunate occurrence on the
Border had not added fuel to the flame. Sometime in June, 1498, some young
Scotchmen appeared in a very suspicious way before Norham,
against which place James’s last attack had been directed. As they would not
answer any questions about their intentions, high words soon led to blows. The
Scotch, who were in the minority, were driven away, leaving some of their
number on the field; the English pursued, and some pillaging took place within
Scottish territory. James, who would gladly have again drawn the sword,
resolved on making a complaint to Henry, who thereupon sent to him his
experienced negotiator, Richard Fox, Bishop of Durham, while James begged
Ayala, then in London, to act as intermediary.
Ayala, who had received further instructions from home
through Londono, promised to do his best, although he almost despaired of being
able to persuade the hostile neighbours to agree to a lasting peace. Besides,
he now met with difficulties from Henry. It appears that during the
negotiations carried on at Melrose between James and Fox about the late
occurrence, the scheme of a marriage which had already been mooted was
seriously discussed, and that James at last gave his consent to it. As soon as
Henry felt tolerably sure of carrying his point, he held back and feigned
hesitation. Perhaps he was thinking less of the Scotch than of the Spaniards,
who had involved themselves pretty deeply in the pretended negotiations for
James’s Spanish marriage. They would have been placed in the greatest
embarrassment by Henry’s withdrawal, for James treated the question of his
Spanish marriage so much in earnest, that Ayala, in order not to vex him,
advised his sovereigns really to give him the hand of their third daughter, the
Infanta Maria, who, eventually, was married in Portugal.
Perhaps Henry knew of this, when by an unexpected
question about the Infanta, during an interview with Londono, he made himself
certain that he would risk nothing by now bringing forward his scruples on the
subject of the Scottish marriage. Margaret, who was born on the 29th of
November, 1490, was really much too young, and besides, weakly for her age ;
the time of waiting would therefore in any case be long. The king also spoke of
the opposition of his mother and wife, on account of the bad effect it was
likely to have on the health of the child. It was at that time believed that
Henry would rather marry her to the Crown Prince of Denmark, who was then also
a child, than to the king of Scots, who was so much her elder. Henry seems
especially to have striven to put pressure on the Spaniards ; he was then
particularly anxious to obtain their mediation on account of the Border
difficulties, and at the beginning of 1499, therefore, plenipotentiaries were
again actively at work settling the indemnities to be paid on both sides.
The marriage negotiations were still dragging on. It
was thought that Scotland’s relation with France had something to do with this;
Henry therefore considered it necessary to assure the Spanish monarch that the
Scotch affairs were not going so badly as they supposed. We do not know the
details, but anyhow Henry was successful in his tactics. On the 12th of July,
1499, a treaty of peace and political alliance was once more concluded at
Stirling, between the English and Scotch plenipotentiaries, which in every
particular fulfilled Henry’s wishes, and met the objections he had made to the
preceding treaty. The bond was drawn closer. Henry protected himself against
any help which James might perhaps give to his former friend Perkin and his
accomplices, then still living; for on that score he was not without misgivings.
In the never-ending series of English and Scotch
treaties, no sooner made than broken, a settlement had at last been arrived at,
which contained real guarantees of peace. This new covenant therefore marked
one stage in advance towards that last and strongest union after which Henry,
though he seemed to be evading it, was constantly striving. Preliminary
discussions seem to have gone on in London with the Scotch ambassadors. On the
nth of September, 1499, Henry again empowered Richard Fox to negotiate about
the marriage and dowry. How the Spaniards managed to withdraw their own
matrimonial offer we do not know. Some doubts still arose, because of James’s
possible intentions with regard to the hand of Maximilian’s daughter Margaret,
or of a French princess; but after some further proceedings, in October, 1501,
he despatched his plenipotentiaries, who appeared in London on the 20th of
November, just at the time of the festivities in honour of the Spanish
marriage. Their negotiations were still going on when the new year began; the
capital did not fail to honour the foreign dignitaries with a banquet, to which
they responded by a poem in praise of the city of London. On the 24th of
January, 1502, the treaty of marriage and alliance was finally drawn up in
three separate documents.
The marriage treaty determined that Margaret should be
handed over to her husband not later than the 1st of September, 1503; the rest
of the treaty mainly dealt with the financial settlements. With suspicious
caution, which led to the most minute details, English interests were
safeguarded as much as possible in the question of jointure and dowry. In
return for the £2000 jointure, a dowry of only 30,000 English nobles or £1o,ooo
was given. The payment was to be made in three yearly instalments, and to cease
at once if Margaret died childless within that time. James was expressly bound
to undertake the maintenance of the young queen’s court, of which twenty-four
English servants were to form part. The treaty of alliance made at the same
time widened and strengthened that of 1499. It was to hold good for ever ; each
party was to supply aid in time of war to his ally, if the other were attacked
by a king, prince, or any other person”; intercourse in commerce and on
the Border was regulated, as well as protection for the same and the punishment
of any deed of violence. The new treaty was to guarantee peace as securely as
possible, and this especially by means of the strong bond of matrimony. It
cannot therefore but strike us as strange and regrettable that Henry should
have insisted, in such an emphatic and obtrusive manner, on the preservation of
the smallest and pettiest money interests, when such great issues were
involved.
On the 25th of January, 1502, the very day after the
signing of the three documents, the marriage was celebrated at Richmond, when
Patrick, Earl of Bothwell, acted as proxy for his king. The court, the
ambassadors of Spain, France, Venice and the Pope, were present, together with
a large number of English notables. The Archbishop of Glasgow performed the
ceremony; a flourish of trumpets brought the solemn act to a conclusion. The
Scotch plenipotentiaries dined at the royal table, tourneys and more banquets
followed, whilst from St. Paul’s Cross in London the completion of the marriage
was announced to the people, and in the church Te
Deum was sung. Bonfires blazed, and beside each fire a hogshead of wine was
tapped for the benefit of the thirsty populace. Distribution of prizes, and
again banquets and tournaments went on for the next two days, after which the
Scotchmen were sent back to their homes with the customary presents.
In spite of all the obligations imposed by the treaty,
many a moment of doubt and insecurity was to follow. Cause for anxiety
continued to exist in consequence of the relations between the Scottish king,
who was an ardent lover of women, and the beautiful Lady Margaret Drummond,
till that hindrance was removed by her somewhat mysterious death, which
occurred in the same year as the conclusion of the treaty. A mistake on the
part of James called forth fresh correspondence. When swearing to the treaty,
he—the king of a country from the earliest times on friendly terms with
France—had given Henry the title claimed by him of King of France. On the 10th
of December, 1502, James renewed the oath in another form; and, on the 17th of
December, he ratified the treaties, as Henry had done before him on the 31st of
October. This led Henry to demand of James at the last minute the assurance
that he would not renew his “ old league and covenant with France.” Shortly
before Margaret crossed the border, James, indeed, undertook not to renew the
alliance for a time, but would not pledge himself to more than this.
It was the necessary postponement of the marriage in
consequence of Margaret’s tender age, which contributed to lengthen out the
proceedings. In the year 1503 Henry again made James specially promise that he
would not demand his bride before the date fixed, also, that he would have the
treaty ratified by the Scotch parliament, and Henry sent special envoys to
Scotland with a view to ascertaining exactly the value of the landed estates
assigned for Margaret’s jointure.
The bride was given over to her husband in conformity
with the conditions of the treaty. Henry himself superintended most carefully
the clothing and equipment of his daughter, in which he seemed to be
particularly desirous that, where possible, the red rose of the Lancastrians
should be introduced. He accompanied her from Richmond to Collyweston,
in Northamptonshire, the favourite residence of his mother, and there, on the
8th of July, 1503, Margaret took leave of her family.
Through Newark, York, Durham, and Newcastle, the
stately procession moved slowly towards Berwick. The young queen travelled in a
litter, but whenever the authorities of the counties and towns came forward to
greet her, she appeared richly attired, mounted on an ambling jennet. In the
towns through which she passed, especially in York and Newcastle, she was given
a brilliant reception; the bells pealed from the towers, a crowd of curious
spectators thronged the gaily decorated streets, whilst the bands which
accompanied her poured forth their melodies. A retinue of richly dressed,
well-mounted noblemen surrounded Margaret as, on the 1st of August, with her
escort of some two thousand horse, she approached the Border. There, at
Lamberton Kirk, the Archbishop of Glasgow greeted her in the name of the king.
Two days afterwards, near Dalkeith, her husband met her, approached her with
his head uncovered, kissed her, and, after greeting her escort, stepped aside
with her alone. After they had dined together, music struck up, and the queen
danced before James with Lady Surrey. She did the same on the following day,
when James surprised her playing cards with her ladies. He, in return,
displayed his proficiency on the clavichord and lute, and on bidding her
farewell, he sprang into the saddle without touching the stirrups, and galloped
away, let follow who would. On the 7th of August they entered Edinburgh,
Margaret sitting on horseback behind her husband. The marriage was celebrated
by the Archbishop of Glasgow with great pomp in the chapel of Holyrood Palace.
Days of festivity followed, with church services, knightly games, and banquetings; the ceremonies connected with his marriage had
cost the king a good round sum.
Thus was concluded the union, which, according to its
promoter’s wish, was to bring about a long and peaceful connection between two
neighbour countries, ever jealous of each other, and hitherto in a state of
perpetual and useless warfare. Be the story true or not, nothing shows more
clearly the sagacity of deed and thought in the wise Tudor than the answer
which he is reported to have given to the anxious question whether, by
hereditary succession, England might not at some future time fall to a Scotch
prince; and if it were so, he replied, he did not see how this would do harm to
England, for England would not fall to Scotland, but Scotland to England, since
the lesser was always drawn to the greater. Seldom has the course of history
more fully justified word and deed of political wisdom.
COMMERCE AND DISCOVERIES.
In the tangled web of English politics from the year
1490 to 1500, it is necessary to separate the individual threads which touch
and cross each other in every direction, if we would take a general survey of
the whole. During that period, Henry, in spite of all domestic and external
difficulties, pushed the commercial interests of his country in accordance with
the principles already adopted, not only in the same channels as heretofore,
but even ventured on new and as yet untried ground.
Perkin Warbeck’s intrigues had exercised a marked
influence on the trade between England and the Low Countries, for a serious
stoppage of trade had been the result of Henry’s interdiction, and the
Londoners’ hatred of the foreigner culminated in the attack on the Steelyard in
October, 1493. And yet, in spite of incessant hostility on the part of the
ever-restless Maximilian, it was during the quarrel with the Burgundian
Netherlands that the first step was taken towards an adjustment of
difficulties. Whilst Perkin was still in Scotland, and Spain was strenuously
urging Henry to join the Holy League, Burgundy concluded, in February, 1496,
commercial peace with England, although the King of the Romans still openly
showed his aversion to the English king. The constant state of war had become
extremely burdensome, and encounters on the sea were frequent between the
people of both countries. After a Burgundian embassage had opened, in London,
preliminary negotiations, the details of which are not known to us, Philip and
his council at Brussels, on the 14th of December, 1495, gave instructions to
the Lord of Beures and five companions, and sent them
to London, where they arrived on the 1st of February, 1496, and were quartered
in Crosby Hall. On the 24th of February they concluded a treaty as a basis for
future commercial relations, the general political conditions of which we have
already been able to touch on.
No further burdens than those that had been customary
for the last fifty years should be laid for the future on the merchants of
either country; the free interchange of all kinds of goods was only so far
restricted that, if occasion arose, the export of the necessaries of life might
be prohibited; not only trade, but the fisheries were made free. Traders should
enjoy every protection; piracy, as much as possible, be put a stop to; the
people, as well as their rulers, should cease from hostilities, and mutually
support each other; orderly and just dealing was promised.
If this treaty of peace contained the sum of all the
general regulations by which an unrestricted and successful commercial
intercourse was possible, the period immediately following it did not,
unfortunately, fulfil the hopes which such agreements justified. On the whole,
the preceding rupture must have been less felt by England than by her rival.
Henry, indeed, showed a favourable disposition towards Burgundy. He expressed
this also by his hospitable reception of the ambassadors; but in other
respects, odd as it may appear, the peace was not assented to with pleasure in
England. Only after much resistance did the Londoners, at Henry’s demand,
resolve on affixing the seal of their city to the document, and the Lord Mayor
considered it necessary to issue a special manifesto in order to justify this
compliance. The same command was sent to other towns, such as Canterbury and
Southampton.
But after all it was from the Low Countries that fresh
difficulties arose. As early as June, 1496, Henry protested emphatically
against a duty imposed in Antwerp on English cloth, contrary to the treaty; the
Spanish monarchs tried to smooth over these disagreements, but they lasted on
into the following year. Henry passed from threats to the actual removal of the
English mart from Antwerp to Calais, where a special duty was levied on
Burgundian merchants. It was not till the 7th of July, 1497, that an
understanding, arrived at in London, abolished the Antwerp duty. English cloth
was to have free admission into all Philip’s dominions except Flanders, and any
fresh violation of the treaty, on the part of Burgundy, was to give Henry the
right to-annul all other treaties; on the other hand, the question of the
corresponding English duty was to be settled at Bruges.
But the ill feeling once firmly rooted was not easily
removed by new treaties, nor can we quite determine how far outside influences,
perhaps again that of the King of the Romans, had to do with it. The conference
at Bruges in April, 1498, was without result; the proceedings, however, were
continued in London, where, at the end of July, the Bishop of Cambray appeared
with three colleagues. Henry did not issue his powers till the 25th of August,
and we do not hear of any treaty being concluded. We cannot attach much weight
to the Spaniard Puebla’s assertion that the result was a satisfactory one, for
he only made use of the occasion to sing his own praises with childish vanity,
and to pose as the friend in need, who had come to the assistance of the
helpless parties with a solution of the difficulty. Still, he was not
altogether wrong, for the ambassadors were respectfully dismissed, and the
English merchants received permission to return to Antwerp, where, having been
greatly missed, they were given a splendid reception, amid general rejoicing.
It is evident, however, that no distinct settlement was arrived at, for it was
necessary to call together a conference at Calais in March, 1499, with a view
to a fresh agreement.
If the treaty of 1496 determined the general
principles of commercial relations, the one concluded on the 18th of May, 1499,
regulated the numerous individual difficulties. Henry, in this, as in all
commercial questions, held with tenacity to the standpoint of English
interests, and managed step by step to gain his end. The merchants of the Low
Countries received a slight abatement of price on the English wool sold by the
Staplers at Calais, and also a guarantee of honest packing. Delegates from the
Staple merchants themselves were admitted to these negotiations, and signified
their approbation. In return for this, English cloth was relieved from the
still-existing customs duties; the whole trade was put on a freer footing, but
the retail sale of English cloth was not permitted in the Low Countries themselves.
The English, too, gained an important point in the permission to export coined,
or otherwise wrought, precious metal.
The settlement had been dragging on slowly enough for
many years, but nevertheless Henry had managed practically to secure the
advantage on his side ; the rivalry between Flanders and Brabant contributing
still further to improve the favourable position of the English. Other
political questions arose incidentally in connection with this question of
commerce, which largely affected the relations of England and Burgundy; thus
Henry showed himself dissatisfied with the securities to be provided for him by
the February treaty of 1496, against the intrigues of the Duchess Margaret, and
although the duchess herself, in the autumn of 1498, begged his forgiveness and
gave reassuring promises, the king demanded new and more severe measures
against her. If more friendly relations were the immediate result of the
commercial agreement, the last settlement had not long been made before
commerce was adversely affected by a new political dispute.
Henry having, with more and more astuteness, succeeded
in turning the political situation to his own advantage, had thereby made it
possible for himself to enter the Holy League without endangering his
friendship with France. This friendship of France was of great value to him
with regard to Scotland, as was also the increase to his revenue by the payment
of the French treaty debt; and he managed especially to make it useful for
English trade. The trade with France was by no means of the same vital
importance for England as was that with the Netherlands, still it was important
enough to play its part in the mutual relations of the two countries. In spite
of the Navigation Act which had sensibly affected France, the first treaty
concluded by Henry (on January 17, 1486), immediately after his accession, had
been extended, and perfectly free intercourse established, while all the
special burdens introduced within the last twenty-two years had been abolished;
perhaps, as a consequence of this, the Navigation Act was not renewed in the
second Parliament.
The state of war which followed naturally affected
commerce prejudicially, and even after war had ceased, new imposts, burdensome
to the English, remained, which Henry was able to point to as justification for
the Navigation Act, which was extended and came into force in June, 1490. In this
Brittany, after its annexation, was naturally included. The treaty which Henry,
on the 2nd of July, i486, had concluded with the Duke Francis—in its commercial
conditions only a repetition of a treaty of Edward IV (July 2, 1468)—had
already expired, at the death of the old duke. In December, 1494, Henry
complained emphatically of piracies committed by the inhabitants of Brittany
and Normandy, of the uselessness of all claims for damages, and of the treatment
of English merchants, especially in Bordeaux. He therefore made Charles VIII
pay him a heavy price for his neutrality during the Neapolitan war, for we find
that on the nth of April, 1495, Charles signed at Naples a decree which gave
back to the English their ancient trade privileges. A duty levied, in spite of
this, at Bordeaux, had to be taken off again, and the sums overcharged had to
be refunded.
Henry took good care not to disturb a state of affairs
so specially favourable to his own interests; a new settlement at Boulogne, on
the 24th of May, 1497, was made only for the purpose of meeting the heavy
damage done by the piracy which then prevailed everywhere. It was England who
reaped all the benefit; and bitterly did Bretons and Frenchmen complain of the
restrictions they had to suffer, both on imports and exports, of impediments to
traffic, and annoyances in the way of customs duties; how for every infraction
of the law they were threatened with the seizure of their goods, whilst the
English enjoyed in France privileges hitherto unknown. In their replies the
English brought forward fresh justifications and subterfuges for such
grievances, but of redress they said not a word.
Besides this, the English took advantage of the war
between France and Spain, to try and get into their hands the trade of the two
countries. It appears, indeed, that the Spanish government had to interfere in
the matter in the summer of 1496, and forbid English ships bound for France to
sail from Spanish ports. In France, on the contrary, things remained as before.
Louis XII’s later attempt (in the year 1504) to hinder exportation seems to
have resulted in nothing. We hear once again that, in March, 1508, French
emissaries were negotiating in England about commercial affairs, otherwise all
the authorities are silent on the subject. Nothing further ensued to ruffle
political friendly feeling, and Henry kept firm hold of the advantages he had
gained.
The same thing happened with the Hanse towns, except
that with them commerce alone, and not mere political relations, came into
question. The whole condition of affairs was uncomfortable, as Henry only put
matters off in order, by continual annoyances and persecutions, to compel them
to sacrifice their privileges, or at all events to concede more to the English.
After the Antwerp diet, the strained interpretation as to the wares of the
Hanse Merchants had indeed been allowed to drop; yet the Hanse merchants at
once renewed their old complaints of oppressions, and especially of the
obnoxious regulation, which compelled them to have the cloth intended for
export dressed in London. At the same time they were ever threatened with the
union between Henry and Denmark. In 1492, the Danish chancellor himself went to
London, and later, in 1495 and 1496, negotiations were carried on, the details
of which, however, we do not know. Henry took advantage of the outburst of
popular feeling at the time of the rupture with Burgundy and the consequent
attack on the Steelyard, in 1493, to exact caution money to the amount of
£20,000, that the Hanse merchants would not carry on any trade between England
and Burgundy. They even had to submit to the intrusion of customs officers into
the Steelyard and to the seizure of goods. The Hanse towns were already
thinking, as a countermeasure, of forbidding their merchants to frequent the
mart set up at Calais. Furthermore, they were dissatisfied with their merchants
in London, whom they reproached with dishonesty, bad methods of conducting
business, extravagance and luxury in dress, and with constantly frequenting
taverns and houses of ill-fame; saying they ought the rather to make sober use
of their privileges, and not do anything to prejudice the English against them.
Under various pretexts the proposed diet was
repeatedly postponed. The interdiction on trade with the Netherlands did not
end till the commercial peace of January, 1496. The newly imposed duty on
English cloth in the Netherlands pressed on the Hanse merchants also; and
Cologne, especially, complained of the embargo which then lay on the importation
of manufactured silk goods into England. Henry met these complaints with fresh
insult. Instead of a regular diet, he proposed at the beginning of 1497 a
conference between their ambassadors at Antwerp on the grievances alleged on
both sides since 1491; but when in June his representatives arrived at Antwerp,
they required from the Hanse commissioners formal and general authority from
all the towns, which in the given time could not have been procured, and from
the character of the meeting had not appeared necessary. As a substitute for
this, a full power was procured in all haste from the chief town, Lubeck; but
when it arrived the Englishmen had already taken their departure. All this
trouble had been without result, and Henry’s arbitrary conduct was only more
clearly shown than ever.
During the interval that elapsed before a diet was
really held at Bruges, in June, 1499, Henry had made a fresh attempt to open up
the Baltic trade. Dantzic having obstinately opposed
all the English demands, it is probable that Henry hoped to turn the trade with
the East away from Dantzic to some other centre; in
any case, to break through at one point, in the interests of Englishmen, the
exclusive Hanseatic trade system. He entered into an agreement with Riga, which
was not one of the contracting parties in the Utrecht treaty, and on the 26th
of November, 1498, a settlement was made at Westminster, accepting the English
interpretation of the Utrecht treaty, with the highest warrantable privileges.
Besides this, any existing English bonds were to be declared cancelled, and the
mutual ratifications of these conditions were to be exchanged at Calais within
five months.
At this juncture, in April, 1499, King John of Poland
wrote both to Henry and to Lubeck, with a view to mediating. He advised some
concessions, if privileges were guaranteed in return. When the negotiations
were opened in June at the Bruges diet, the English resorted to their old
tactics. They required full powers, and refused especially to agree to any
discussion on existing parliamentary statutes his majesty the king would nobly
fulfil all that was properly his duty to do. The Hanse deputies brought forward
their old accusation of the unsettled grievances of 1491, and they again cut
short any attempt to tamper with their privileges. They said they did not come
to that diet to give up one iota of their privileges; they would defend
themselves in that matter like men.
The Hanse deputies were beginning to think of breaking
off such idle negotiations, when the Englishmen once more consulted their king,
whose answer, dated the 9th of July, 1499, decided the. fate of the diet. Not a
word of concession was spoken. His own demand about Prussian trade was
persisted in, and a court of arbitration, proposed by the Hansa, was refused.
As Henry was only wishing to avoid an open rupture, everything else could
remain as before. After more disputing, a general outline of the final protocol
(July 20, 1493) was agreed to—that things were to remain as they were till the
1st of July, 1501. When the almost contemptuous suggestion was made to the
Hansa that they had better trust their cause to the mercy of the king, they
plainly answered that the towns well knew what they had had to endure in
England, “which they would fain have written with a pen of iron on a hard
flint-stone, that they might never more forget it.”
They were able to retaliate by frustrating Henry’s
hopes in the compact with Riga. If Riga had any desire to separate from the
Hanse league, it did not last long. An ,English bond of the year 1409,
specially mentioned in the treaty with Riga, lay in the Hanseatic
counting-house at Bruges, and the messenger who was to demand the payment of it
there, and probably also carried the ratification of the treaty with him, was
at the same time charged with special recommendations to the Lubeckers. The Hanse merchants of Bruges thought it
advisable not to hand over the bond, but rather to take away from the messenger
his other papers. They behaved as if it had only been a question between
England and Riga of the reception of the latter into the treaty of Utrecht, and
Lubeck, on the strength of her right as the chief town to announce this, took
the whole matter into her own hands. In July, 1500, Riga acquiesced. She acknowledged
Lubeck’s precedence, assented to the Utrecht treaty, and only added to it a
clause, no longer of much importance, in favour of the peace concluded with
England. Lubeck announced to Henry Riga’s readmission into the league, and
begged she might be entitled to the Hanseatic privileges; whereupon the king,
without mentioning the still unaccomplished ratification, declared that the
treaty with Riga should remain as before. The Hanse allowed the matter to rest
for the present. Riga, announced formally at a diet of Livonian towns, and also
in a special document, that she had never thought of separating from the Hanse
league.
Thus the upshot of the business was that it ended in
smoke. This renewed attempt on the part of Henry to encroach on the Hanse merchants
in the field of the Baltic trade had failed, and this time finally. Now a
somewhat more peaceful period was about to begin, even though both parties held
to their own views. The projected new diet was finally put off to 1504; but
before that time had arrived, an unexpected change had taken place in Henry’s
attitude. For the first time his relation to the commercial league was
connected with other political questions. We shall have to consider these
circumstances later.
Henry’s policy with regard to the Hanse merchants was
really a breach of treaty, thinly veiled by quibbles. His aim was ever the
same—to oust the Hansards from their English trade as much as possible, and to
break down their monopoly on the Baltic. The Hanse towns, when opposing the advance
of the English into Prussia, had laid down the rule that the burghers and
inhabitants of the towns ought always to have greater advantage than outsiders.
This dictum Henry turned against themselves. It was not possible that a
condition of affairs resting on such a one-sided advantage for the Hanse league
could continue; sooner or later the growing mercantile power of England must
burst the fetters of the Utrecht treaty.
We have already seen how the king followed out the
same clear idea in mercantile policy in the south, as well as in the north;
just at this time he held still more firmly to it with regard to Venice than to
the Hanse towns. His relations with Venice were peculiar, for, though a war of
tariffs was going on about the wine, in other respects perfectly friendly
relations prevailed. General politics had something to do with this, for Venice
was sparing no pains to induce Henry to join the Holy League, and for this
purpose endeavoured to mediate with the King of the Romans. After Henry’s
admission into the league, Andrea Trevisano was, in November, 1496, appointed
permanent ambassador in London; and in the following October, after his
arrival, Henry gave him a public reception into the town, granted him audience
with much ceremony, and, a few months later, conferred on him the honour of
knighthood, but he flatly refused the request that he would take off the
English duty on wine, and demanded that the Venetian customs dues should first
be remitted.
He gained the day, for in June, 1490, the Signory
abolished the extra payment imposed on foreigners, while Henry allowed his
customs law to remain, and only conceded by royal decree a reduction of one
noble. Even with this, his subjects reaped the greater benefit, and in spite of
all prayers and threats from the Venetians, Henry kept firmly to his point.
During this time, other commercial intercourse was
going on undisturbed; the Flanders galleys took their usual voyages; only some
natural excitement was created when French seamen were bold enough to seize a
captain and several respectable Venetians in the English port of Southampton,
and to extort from them a ransom. When, in 1497, the galleys did not come as
usual, Henry himself urged that they should be sent off, and Venice at once was
made to feel the deficiency in the supply of English wool. Later, on the 1st of
May, 1506, Henry granted to the Venetians special facilities over all
foreigners for the purchase and export of wool and tin.
As the Flanders galleys made successful voyages, and
often had not room in their holds for all the goods bought in England, there
was no cause for complaint about dullness of trade. The commanders of the
galleys reported on the excellent reception they continued to meet with; in
1506, the king once invited the captain to his table. If any damage had been
sustained by a ship, artisans and necessary material were at once placed at
their disposal, and when some Venetians were attacked and slain in England,
care was immediately taken to offer satisfaction, and to punish the murderers.
In fact, having gained what he wanted for English shipping, with respect to the
duty on wine, Henry tried to make up for the injury thus inflicted by friendly
advances in all other ways. When the League of Cambray, shortly before his
death, had agreed together to overthrow the Republic, he would not be a party
to it; in fact, he urged very strongly that Venetian ships, trading with
England, should not be interfered with.
Between England and Spain also, there was the same
double relation—political friendship existing alongside of a war of tariffs.
Here too, Henry, in spite of his earlier pliancy, and of the later closer bond
between them, held obstinately to the advantages in customs which he had wrung
from the Spaniards through a misunderstanding on their part in the treaty of
Medina del Campo. The Spaniards had constantly complained, during the treaty
negotiations, of the unfair burdens laid upon their merchants. Henry went so
far as to promise some concession, but afterwards had become more stiff again,
and had included no sort of commercial settlement in the marriage treaty of
1496; finally, he held out the prospect of a regulation of the customs as a
reward, should the Princess Katharine be really sent to England. In return, the
Spaniards revenged themselves by stopping the English carrying-trade between
their country and France; but though they demanded securities from every
outgoing ship that it would not run into any French port, and even detained
many, they conceded so far as to relinquish their demand for securities from
the traders, and contented themselves with a general authoritative promise from
the king. And yet, in September, 1496, before the conclusion of the marriage
treaty, they threatened to enact as a countermeasure, that the same heavy
duties should be levied on the Englishmen in Spain.
In the treaty of alliance of the 10th of July, 1499,
it was at last decided that, besides enjoying freedom of trade, the natives of
both countries should be treated by each contracting party as his own subjects,
but “with full preservation of the local rights, laws, and customs.” By this
means the article in the old treaty objected to by the Spaniards was set aside.
But from this clause concerning local rights and
customs, much friction arose, for Henry held to the Navigation Act, which
deprived the Spaniards of the right to import into England wine and woad, and
he, on his part, could complain that in Spanish ports the freighting of foreign
ships was as a rule more strictly forbidden than in England by his law.
Isabella, however, denied this (March, 1501), and asserted that Spanish ships
only had the right to be freighted first, and that in every country native
shipping enjoyed the same protection. In spite of the treaty, the struggle over
navigation policy continued, until, in this matter also, redress was obtained
by a change in the other relations of the two states.
Meanwhile the Spaniards had been for a time threatened
by English competition in a direction where they believed themselves supreme;
for from England some apparently promising attempts had been made to take part
in the discoveries and conquest of the western world.
The starting-point for all undertakings of the kind
was Bristol, on the estuary of the Severn, which opening into the ocean, sent
forth the dwellers on its banks not so much to the old continent as to the
unknown regions of the West. Early attempts were made by the daring mariners of
Bristol to draw aside the mystery which hung over the western ocean. The men of
Bristol were in constant communication with the great seamen of other nations;
Christopher Columbus is said to have started from Bristol, in February, 1477,
on his first, though somewhat apocryphal voyage to the north-west. Thomas Lloyd
sailed from there in July, 1480, for the “Island of Brazil to the east of
Hibernia,” till tempestuous weather compelled him to return. The desire still
prevailed to reach this mysterious Atlantic island of Brazil, with its seven
cities on the other side of Ireland, and thence to pass on to India; and in the
year 1498, Ayala informed his sovereigns that for the last seven years, the
people of Bristol had, every year, “sent out two, three, or four light ships in
search of the island of Brazil.” Ayala declares the moving spirit in the
enterprises to be “the citizen of Genoa.”
This man, John Cabot, was born in Genoa, and had, in
1476, been given rights of Venetian citizenship; it is not known when he came
to Bristol, with his three sons, Ludovico, Sebastiano, and Sanctus. He was the
leader in the Bristol voyages of discovery, but these first attempts did not
achieve any result, until Cabot succeeded in gaining Henry’s interest and
support for his cause.
It is said that Christopher Columbus had also applied
to the English king when, having been dismissed by Portugal in 1484, he had to
wait long years in Spain, before he received the means for his first voyage of
discovery in 1492. In the meantime he sent his brother Bartholomew to England,
but he was robbed by pirates, and arriving penniless, had to earn his bread by
drawing maps. With one of these he succeeded at last in gaining the attention
of Henry, but it is doubtful whether Henry, in the year 1493, acceded to
Bartholomew’s request, as he had already heard of Christopher Columbus’s first
success. Be this as it may, it was in any case too late, for when Bartholomew
returned home, his brother had already started on his second voyage, and
remained in the service of the Spaniards.
Possibly this helped Cabot, when, towards the end of
1495, he applied to Henry, and explained his plans by means of a map of the
world, which he had sketched. We know that Henry approved of Cabot’s proposals,
for, in January, 1496 we find Puebla writing home on the subject, and
Ferdinand and Isabella forthwith made haste to prevent such competition. They
offered timely words of warning, and represented the whole affair, as suggested
by the malice of France, and intended to draw off Henry from other and more
profitable things. Such enterprises, they urged, were very uncertain, and
pointed to the losses incurred by Spain and Portugal as a warning. But Henry
had already, on the 5th of March, 1496, signed the patent which empowered Cabot
and his sons to sail in search of all unknown lands, with five ships, and such
crews as they desired. They were to carry the king’s flag, to plant it in the
discovered territory, of which they were to take possession, and govern in the
king’s name. They were to exercise there an unrestricted monopoly of trade, and
only to pay a fifth part of the profits to the Crown. All English subjects were
invited to further the undertaking.
The chief point, however, was to secure Henry’s
pecuniary help, whereby others should be encouraged to contribute to the
enterprise. For this, unfortunately the time chosen was most inopportune, for
how could Henry, overwhelmed just then by other political tasks, think of such
novel, doubtful, and far-reaching undertakings! But after James IV, and Perkin
Warbeck’s invasion had been repulsed, after Henry had entered the Holy League,
and the new Spanish marriage bond had been concluded in the autumn of 1496, the
king not only had his hands more free, but also had ample means from loans and
taxes at his disposal. The patent, it is true, spoke of the enterprise being at
the cost of its promoters, but Henry was fully determined to fit out a ship
himself; it is possible that merchants both of London and Bristol helped also,
and laded the ship with some of their goods.
Cabot’s little fleet at last started, in May, 1497, at
the favourable season of the year. On the 24th of June he touched the mainland
of North America, probably on the coast of Labrador, and sailed along it
towards the north-west. “He saw no human being, but he brought to the king
certain snares which had been set to catch wild game, and a needle for making
nets; he also saw some felled trees, and therefore supposed there were
inhabitants.” He and his English companions spoke highly of the quantity of
fish in the waters they had visited, saying that with such a supply, Iceland
would no longer be necessary to England. Three months after he set sail, Cabot
was again at home, and laid before Henry a chart of his discoveries; the king
seemed pleased, and ordered ten pounds to be paid “ to hym
that founde the new Isle.”
Henry at once made plans for sending out a new fleet
the next year under Cabot; ten or more vessels were talked of, to be manned
with criminals ; the founding of a colony was kept in view, men dreamt of an
abundance of rich spices, and wonderful tales were told, how that the seven
cities and the land of the great Khan had been discovered. Cabot was the hero
of the day; he again took up his abode at Bristol, and received a yearly income
of £20. A Venetian reports that he was styled the Great Admiral, and that high
honour was paid him. “These English run after him like mad people, so that he
can enlist as many of them as he pleases, and a number of our own rogues
besides.”
Henry’s new patent of the 3rd of February, 1498, did
not show the same extravagant hopes as the first. Cabot was permitted to fit
out six vessels of as much as two hundred tons’ burden, without having to pay
more for them than the king himself, and to man them with any Englishmen who
might volunteer their services. Here again Henry seems to have gone beyond what
he promised, for he probably had the vessels equipped himself, showed himself
greatly interested in the matter, and often spoke of it to the Spanish
ambassador. Sometime in April or May, 1498, the second squadron, counting five
ships, provisioned for one year, set sail. One vessel was driven by a storm
into an Irish port, the rest continued their voyage; they were expected to be
back in September.
Apparently John Cabot died during the voyage. It is
altogether extraordinary that we have no reliable account of a voyage of
discovery undertaken with such great hopes; no doubt the success did not come
up to the extravagant expectations that had been formed. This specially
affected John’s successor, his son Sebastian, as the king did not place the
same confidence in him as in his father. For years the name even of the
seafarer remained forgotten.
But the merchants of Bristol took upon themselves his
father’s work, and were never tired of seeking for the northwest passage to
the coveted Indies. The king’s active participation was somewhat cooled by his
first disappointments, even though his interest long remained keen. On the 19th
of March, 1501, he granted a new patent to make voyages of discovery under the
royal flag to several citizens of Bristol, and to some Portuguese who were
living there and had come from the Azores ; in this patent a definite scheme of
colonization was put forward, with rights of trading and of jurisdiction for
the discoverers; of course the acquired territories were to be under English
supremacy. How far the new undertaking succeeded we do not know. In January,
1502, “the men of Bristoll that founde th’Isle” again received a small reward, and in the same
year, according to a report of the London Chronicle, three men were brought to
England “ out of an Hand founde by merchaunts of Bristoll farre
beyond Ireland, the which was clothed in Beests skynnes and ate raw flessh, and
were in their demeanour as Beests.” No one understood
their language, but the king had them provided for at Westminster, and after an
interval of two years, two of them who were still living there were
found—“clothed like Englishmen, and could not be discerned from Englishmen.”
It appears that a squabble had broken out in the
trading company to which Henry granted the last patent, for from a new one of
the 9th of December, 1502, we find three members excluded; in other respects it
was like the former, only that instead of the licences being for ten years,
they were granted for forty, and an article added to. the effect that if they
should discover countries for which others had already received patents, but
had not succeeded in discovering them, they could without scruple take
possession of them.
We hear nothing of any success this time, but in
September, 1503, a sum of £20 was again paid over to Bristol merchants, and
certainly voyages to the west continued, as is proved by payments in gratitude
for rare animals, some of which were brought from thence for the king. The
spread of Christianity was also not forgotten, for we twice hear of clergymen
going out in the ships.
The voyages of discovery under Henry VII were attempts
which had after all no lasting results. The cause of this is obvious. The
discoverer sailing from Spain was led in his voyages westward to the tropical
clime of Central and South America, while Cabot and his followers, who tried
for the north-west passage, arrived at the more inhospitable north, which did
not possess such evident riches as metals and spices. As these were the only
things sought after, it was but natural that Henry’s ardour, thus disappointed,
should soon cool. The history of discovery under, the first Tudor remains
therefore only an episode ; but it shows how Henry, whose mercantile policy
embraced the whole known field of commerce in Europe, also turned his eyes
towards the unknown regions ; and it was to his intelligent support that Cabot
owed the achievement of setting foot on the American continent, even before the
Spaniards. England especially ought not to forget those bold pioneers, the
merchants of Bristol, who with untiring energy and daring first led the way to
future greatness for their countrymen.
The Spaniards at least were freed from one cause for
anxiety: England still left to them the precedence in the New World, for Henry
still confined himself to the one field of conflict in Europe. Here, however,
he had gained for his new dynasty its position in this the most difficult and
yet most successful period of his whole reign, and nothing bears witness more
truly to the strength of this position as compared with that held in the
preceding decade, than the last effort of the Yorkist party against the Tudor
dynasty in the revolt of Edmund de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk.
CHAPTER V.
THE EARL OF SUFFOLK.
We have not forgotten John de la Pole, Earl of
Lincoln, who, as leader of the conspiracy against Henry in the year 1487, was
slain at Stoke. His father, Duke John of Suffolk, husband of a sister of King
Edward, survived his unfortunate son by many years. On his death, in 1491,
Lincoln’s brother, Edmund de la Pole, would have succeeded as heir to the
family title and property, but that both were regarded as escheated to the
Crown, in consequence of his brother’s attainder. It was only by a special
compact with the king, concluded on the 3rd of February, 1493, and confirmed by
the Parliament in 1495, that Edmund received back a portion of his property;
but he still had to produce a sum of £5000, to be paid in instalments, and, for
this, was obliged to put in pledge portions of his reacquired possessions. As
his reduced income no longer corresponded to the dignity of a duke, he had to
be content with the title of the Earl of Suffolk. He appeared, however,
publicly at court, took part with distinction in the tournaments which were
held in honour of Prince Henry’s elevation to the dignity of Duke of York, and
was present at the entry and reception of the foreign ambassadors; but the
sense of the injury done him by the confiscation of his inheritance was
fostered by the ambition of a prince sprung from the royal House, whose elder
brother had once been destined for the throne, and seems to have rankled in the
mind of the hot-headed young man.
A special event led to the crisis. In the year 1498,
he killed a man in a squabble, and, although he afterwards received the king’s
pardon, he felt his honour insulted because, although a peer, he had been
indicted for this crime Suffolk’s first before a common court of justice. He
escaped flight and from England in the summer of 1499, and betook return
himself to Flanders, but stayed awhile on English territory with Sir James
Tyrrel, the governor of Guines, near Calais. In August, Henry made inquiries
about him from his friends; whoever could give any information should be
detained ; the ports also were watched. In September, 1499, Sir Richard
Guildford and Richard Hatton went as envoys to the Archduke Philip, and were
specially commissioned to induce the earl to return.
Suffolk’s whereabouts had been discovered, and it
appears strange that Henry should have tried in a friendly way to persuade him
to return, when he might have seized him while still on English territory.
Possibly it was in consequence of the last conspiracy attempted just at this
time by Perkin Warbeck, in whose ruin the Earl of Warwick had been involved,
that Henry treated his less dangerous kinsman of the house of York with
remarkable lenity, and tried to attract him to his side by kindness. Henry was
even prepared to make terms, and only threatened that he would deprive Suffolk
of all foreign aid, especially from Philip. In order publicly to make known
their friendly agreement, Suffolk was to return alone, without Guildford, and
to bring Sir James Tyrrel with him. Probably the envoys did not even find him
on English territory; he had already escaped over the border to St. Omer, but
shortly returned, and resumed his old position at court.
At the same time Henry seems to have thought it
ominous that Suffolk should have tried to gain over Philip of Burgundy to his
side, although Philip had apparently intended to send away the earl at Henry’s
request. The king informed him minutely of what had taken place, for he wished
to avoid any danger to the newly secured commercial treaties, and to give to
their friendship the appearance of still greater firmness. The Spaniards at
that time were in some anxiety about this increasingly friendly relation, for
the two princes were preparing for a personal interview. On the 3rd of May,
1500, Henry landed at Calais with his wife and a splendid retinue, and, during
the month he stayed there, many more nobles arrived, amongst whom was the Earl
of Suffolk. Henry probably was desirous that he and his brothers William and
Richard should show themselves just then in the royal retinue.
For some time longer negotiations went on between
Calais and St. Omer, where Philip had appeared, about the ceremonial details of
the meeting, and about the political questions to be decided and which had to
be clearly defined beforehand. Besides the general covenant of friendship, a
double marriage was projected between Henry of York and his sister Mary with
Philip’s daughter and his infant son Charles, then only four months old. On the
9th of June, 1500, the king and archduke met on English ground, not in Calais
itself, but near the church of St. Peter, situated not far from the town. All
the festivities, reception, and banquet took place with every show of mutual
respect and friendship. Philip wanted to hold the king’s stirrup for him to
dismount, but this he would not allow. No doubt the terms of former treaties,
as well as the projected alliances, were discussed, but the matter did not
advance beyond words and promises. Henry stated emphatically before Puebla that
the meeting was only intended to show their friendship to the world, and the
anxious fears of the Spaniards, increased still more by what had transpired
about the marriage negotiations, were soon dissipated. On the same day that
they had met, Henry and Philip took leave of each other. Philip rode back to Gravelines, the king landed at Dover again on the 16th of
June.
This new friendly compact had no sooner been made than
misfortune befell the king. On the 22nd of June he buried, at Westminster, his
third son, Edmund, born in March, 1499, who had died on the 12th of June, even
before his father’s return, at Hatfield, the property of the bishops of Ely.
Somewhere about this time the sweating sickness broke out for the second time
in England, beginning mildly at first, but afterwards spreading rapidly and
claiming numerous victims, especially in London. It lasted through the summer
and autumn, and it was not till December that Puebla could report that it had
quite died out in the kingdom. The king’s country seat at Sheen was also burned
down, and the palace of Richmond erected in its stead ; it was, in fact, at
this time that Henry developed great activity in building.
This could be pointed to as an evidence of
tranquillity at home, in the same way as, after the death of Warwick, Suffolk’s
appearance with the king at the festivities at Calais was to bear witness to
the peace between Tudor and York. But the peace did not last long; Suffolk’s
restless spirit drove him again to venture on the enterprise he had before only
begun. The events that followed his first flight seem to have suggested to him
not to apply again to Philip, but to the old antagonist of the Tudor, the King
of the Romans. This time he did not set to work without a definite plan, but
waited till he thought himself sure of a good reception.
Sir Robert Curzon, the captain of Hammes, near Calais,
had, in August, 1499, been given leave of absence at his earnest request, that
he might fight against the Infidels. He entered the service of Maximilian, and
so distinguished himself that he was created a baron of the Empire. Before this
we find him incidentally mentioned at court festivities; at the tournament in
honour of Henry of York, he fought by Suffolk’s side, with whom he must have stood
before that time in friendly connection, as he is said to have owed to him his
elevation to the dignity of knighthood. When in a conversation with Maximilian
he alluded to Suffolk, Maximilian declared himself ready to lend substantial
aid to any man of King Edward’s blood to get back his rights, but, in view of
the political situation at the time, he recommended peaceful methods.
Well might the condition of affairs dispose Maximilian
to make such a reservation, for his vacillating policy had for the last few
years everywhere suffered shipwreck. While he was vainly trying, after Louis
XII’s accession, to carry out his plans with regard to Burgundy, French
interference increased his own difficulties; this was the case in his war with
Gueldres and in the war of the Swabian League with Switzerland, which both
ended disastrously for the Empire. In vain Maximilian tried to force his son
Philip to give up the treaty of Paris; Louis not only firmly kept his friends,
Spain, England, and Burgundy, but gained new ones as well. For, in February,
1499, he formed the league with Pope Alexander VI and Venice, Maximilian’s
enemy; by a treaty of the 15th of March, he secured to himself, at last, the
mercenaries of Switzerland, and even made covenants with German princes. Thus
he tried to hold a troublesome rival in check, and to make for himself allies
or secure neutrality, before he entered upon his great work of making the title
of duke, which he had already assumed, a reality, by his conquest of Milan.
Ludovico Sforza, the threatened duke, alone adhered to Maximilian, and the
latter seriously cherished the idea of making him a member of the Swabian
League. But with the same ease as Charles VIII had before conquered Naples,
Louis XII now overthrew Milan, and on the 6th of October, 1499, made his entry
into the conquered town. Sforza had been for a time reinstated, when he fell,
in April, 1500, into the hands of his powerful opponent, who kept him in strict
custody. Louis had now got into his hands this splendid prize, and for years it
was carefully guarded by France.
This victory was a severe blow for Maximilian, who
before had proposed a division of their claims in Italy, with the Po as the
line of demarcation; to this were added defeats in his Imperial policy at home,
the establishment of an Imperial Council of Regency, which, against his wish,
showed itself prepared to make friends with Louis, and even to agree to his
investiture with the Duchy of Milan, while soon after, the growth of the power
of France, so strenuously opposed by Maximilian, was still further increased by
a second conquest of Naples.
Louis XII had by no means given up the claims of his
predecessor, the only difference was that he went to work more systematically;
for while Charles VIII, by his expedition against Naples, had called forth
against himself the opposition of all Europe led by Ferdinand, Louis undertook
it in close combination with Spain. The idea of a partition of Naples had
originated with Ferdinand himself, and a secret treaty at Granada, on the 11th
of November, 1500, was the first step towards the realisation of this project.
Their joint conquest of Naples achieved, Apulia and Calabria were to fall to
Ferdinand, and at the same time his possession of Roussillon and Cerdagne was to be confirmed afresh. In June, 1501, the
French troops had already arrived in the neighbourhood of Rome, and Pope
Alexander ratified this iniquitous compact which aimed at dividing by sheer
force the possessions of a weaker power. It was then that Ferdinand’s own plans
with regard to Naples were divulged; the power of the false Aragonese
collapsed hopelessly, and the last king, Frederick, became the prisoner of
Louis, who kept him in honourable confinement.
While all this was going on, Maximilian was completely
thrust aside. All his hostile plans against France had failed, and it seemed as
if he were resigned to his fate, for, after a long resistance, he gave in at
last to the persuasions of his son, who, far from himself breaking with France,
pressed his father to a reconciliation with his enemy. On the 10th of August,
1501, a marriage was agreed upon between Louis’ daughter Claude and Charles,
who had already been promised to Mary of England; but it was not till October,
at Trent, that friendly overtures between Maximilian and France first vaguely
began. Maximilian had certainly some reason for holding aloof, for he was aware
of the plan then already existing of marrying Claude to Francis of Angouleme,
the presumptive heir to the throne; but in the end he was successfully drawn
into the league with France, even to the more close-binding settlements between
Louis and the Hapsburgs at Blois and Hagenau (24th September, 1504, 5th and 7th
April, 1505).
The unfortunate experiences of the last few years, and
the uncertainty of his political situation, might well discourage Maximilian
from making fresh ventures. His friendly relations with France had just begun;
yet he had not abandoned his older connection with Ferdinand. Meanwhile, after
the conquest of Naples, the alliance between Ferdinand and Louis was breaking
up. It was at this moment that the Earl of Suffolk appeared at the court of the
King of the Romans with a request for aid against Henry of England, the friend
of Ferdinand, Louis, and Philip.
Although Maximilian’s consent, probably communicated
to Curzon before the end of 1499, was given from the first under strict
reservation, although it could not but appear doubly questionable in view of
the subsequent change in the political situation, the unreflecting Suffolk was
satisfied. In August, or even in July, 1501, some months before the marriage of
Arthur and Katharine, he made his escape for the second time from England,
accompanied by his brother Richard, and hastened to the Tyrol. Provided with
letters of recommendation from Curzon, he at once announced his arrival to the
King of the Romans, and after some interchange of communications they met at
last at the end of September or beginning of October, at Imst,
in the valley of the Inn.
This time Maximilian might have had at his disposal,
not a probable impostor, but a man who could bring forward definite claims to
the throne. In the existing state of affairs, however, Suffolk had to be
satisfied with an evasive answer and the promise of a safe refuge in Maximilian’s
dominions. After waiting for six weeks at Imst, while
the king in the meantime had gone off to Botzen,
Suffolk at last received from Maximilian’s treasurer, Bontemps, the offer of a
few thousand men. Thus matters remained for the present; Suffolk, at
Maximilian’s wish, took up his abode at Aix la Chapelle, and there he was
forced to wait.
Suffolk met with nothing but ill-luck, for before he
had reached Maximilian, the latter was already on good terms again with Henry.
When the Anglo-Burgundian settlement was concluded in May, 1499, Henry also
endeavoured to restore more satisfactory relations with Philip’s father. But
although good results were reported in England, nothing transpired for a long
time, till at last, even in this quarter also, the newly confirmed friendship
with Burgundy bore fruit. Not only with regard to France, but also to England,
the peaceful tendency of the Burgundian policy succeeded with Maximilian; he
entrusted the management of the affair entirely to his son, who, in the summer
of 1501, made known to Henry his father’s desire to enter into a closer
relationship with England. The phrases employed between two such old
antagonists about renewing ancient friendship, strike us as rather strange, but
behind there was a very plainly expressed desire on the part of Maximilian to
seal this new friendship with an advance from England of fifty thousand crowns
for his Turkish war ; the two kings, besides, were to wear, as a sign of their
unity, their respective orders of the Garter and the Golden Fleece.
Nothing could be more opportune for Henry than this
reconciliation at the time of Suffolk’s second flight; for he might now hope
that not only in England itself, but also with the one uncertain foreign power,
successful measures might be at once taken against the rebel. In his own
kingdom he acted in the same way as at the time of Warbeck’s insurrection.
Measures for security against possible adherents were taken, and on the 7th of
November, 1501, Suffolk and Curzon, with five other confederates, were publicly
denounced and condemned as traitors at St. Paul’s Cross in London. Suffolk’s
nearest kinsmen were taken into custody; his brother, Lord William de la Pole,
his cousin by marriage, Lord William Courtenay, son of the Earl of Devonshire,
Sir James Tyrrel, who had helped him in his first flight, and Sir John Wyndham.
Tyrrel, Richard III's accessory in the murder of the sons of Edward, was,
according to Suffolk’s assertion, misled only by false pretences to surrender
Guines. The two lords were consigned to the Tower, and later, in October, 1508,
we hear that Courtenay and the Marquis of Dorset were taken over to Calais,
where they were kept in confinement till Henry’s death. Tyrrel and Wyndham
suffered the extreme penalty—their heads fell on Tower Hill on the 6th of May,
1502, many of their confederates were executed after them; accomplices were
discovered and captured at various places, and upon all of them Parliament
passed a Bill of Attainder in the year 1504.
At the same time Henry had made use of his friendly
relations with Maximilian to cut off from Suffolk any possible help from
abroad, and acquiescence in the desire of the King of the Romans for English
golden crowns promised him success. On the 28th of September, 1501, he gave
instructions to Sir Charles Somerset and William Warham, in which he was
careful to demand from Maximilian special assurances against the rebels, and
their immediate extradition. After the conclusion of the treaty, a money loan
should be paid to Maximilian for war against the Turks, and in fact fully
£10,000 or fifty thousand crowns were held out as a prospect to him, if he
accepted the article about the rebels in the binding form desired; in that case
Henry was prepared to give the money, not as a loan, but as a present. The project
of a marriage between Henry of York and Philip’s daughter Leonora was again
touched upon; for the rest the instructions of the ambassadors referred to the
clauses concerning rebels and the payment of money, the two questions of most
importance to the two princes.
The negotiations were carried on at Antwerp; and here
again Burgundian officials, Cornelius de Barges and Jodokus Praat,
acted as plenipotentiaries for Maximilian. The English ambassadors are said to
have been commissioned also to make use of the mediation of Ayala, then staying
in the Netherlands. But still Maximilian would not cordially adopt friendship
with England; his representatives were not sufficiently empowered, they had to
ask for fresh instructions, and till these arrived the patience of the
Englishmen was put to a severe test. As these negotiations dragged slowly on,
both parties reproached each other with wishing to procrastinate; when the
Burgundians refused the ratification of the treaty by the Pope, they had to
submit to being told that, after the experience of former treaties,
Maximilian’s signature alone would not be sufficient. With regard to the demand
that the rebels should be banished from the Empire, it was maintained that
Maximilian, in free towns of the Empire, like Aix la Chapelle, had not
sufficient authority for this; help should be refused to them, but in return
Henry should guarantee them security for their life and property; at the same
time the largest sum demanded, fifty thousand crowns, was insisted on.
The Englishmen, tired of waiting, were already
threatening to take their departure, when the messenger at last appeared with
the powers, dated the 24th of April, 1502. On the 19th of June a general
commercial treaty, comprised in a small number of articles, was agreed upon,
and also on the next day the payment of a sum of £100.000 for the Turkish war
was promised, in return for which Maximilian undertook not to countenance
rebels against Henry, but to oppose them in every way, and to prevent their
being supported in the Empire. In a treaty of alliance for the lifetime of the
contracting parties, he undertook furthermore to send out of his dominions all
such rebels, and should they prove refractory, to punish them like criminals.
The money was paid in London on the 1st of October, but the treaty was not
announced publicly till the 22nd of October, and not sent to the sheriffs to
publish in the counties till the 11th of November. A proclamation, identical
with that of the preceding year, was issued from St. Paul’s Cross against
Suffolk and his confederates, and this more. emphatically than before, on the
strength of a bull from the Pope, which shows that Alexander VI, like his
predecessor, took the side of the English king against his rebellious subjects.
Henry seems to have been in no hurry publicly to
announce the treaty, for it was not specially advantageous to himself. He had
been obliged to pay a very high price, and had only received, in the ambiguous
form of the double agreement, a very insecure return, considering the enmity so
often exhibited towards him by Maximilian. It was, however, of importance that
Maximilian had expressly promised this time to deny protection to English
rebels who had fled the country.
Suffolk had even less reason to be pleased than Henry.
Maximilian had pledged himself so deeply to the carl that he dared not entirely
desert him; hence probably the slow progress of the negotiations, and the
attempt to gain more lenient terms for the fugitive. Maximilian could always
regard him as a useful tool; it was owing to him that he had secured a
substantial sum of English money, and he therefore put him off with fresh
schemes and excuses. There was some talk of embassies to the King of Denmark,
to gain his alliance against Henry, and a prospect was held out to Suffolk of
money to enable him to travel to Denmark himself. But he received nothing ; it
was even hinted to him occasionally that the protection already afforded to
him ought to suffice, and that he should not make himself burdensome by further
demands.
Suffolk was therefore compelled to run into debt at
Aix la Chapelle for the necessaries of life. In May, 1502, he appealed for help
to Maximilian, both in person and through his faithful servant, Killingworth,
and the treasurer, Bontemps. Abundant promises had been made him, he urged, but
he had been put off and disappointed, while his property in England had been
confiscated, his friends seized and executed. He would hear nothing of an
amicable arrangement with Henry, which had been proposed to him, for he and the
king could not both live in England without harm coming to one or other of
them. Maximilian repeatedly urged on him this peaceful settlement, and yet let
fall certain remarks before Killingworth, as if there were a possibility that
at no distant date his friendly relations with the English king would cease;
but he refused absolutely to recognise any obligation to give the earl assistance,
alleging that he had never promised it.
Suffolk was even in fear of spies, whom Henry had sent
out, possibly with a commission to arrest the fugitive. The king also applied
to other Powers for their co-operation. The Spaniards informed him, in April,
1502, that they were demanding, through their ambassador, Don Juan Manuel, the
surrender of the fugitive; and they drew Maximilian’s attention to the fact,
that Henry might perhaps be won over to their side against France. But, as
before in the case of Perkin Warbeck, they desired to get the pretender into
their own power, and the unsatisfactory manner in which these instructions were
carried out was afterwards brought forward as the motive for Ferdinand’s
displeasure against Manuel. Louis of France had also been requested by Henry to
give him his support, and especially to use his influence with his German
friends. Henry declared himself ready to pay as a price for the rebel from ten
to twelve thousand gold crowns.
It was his special aim to induce Maximilian to see to
the proclamation of banishment in various large towns, as required by the
treaty. At first Norroy Herald was appointed to do
this, as well as to bring over the insignia of the Order of the Garter, but
after Henry had received Maximilian’s ratification of the treaty and had paid
the promised sum, he despatched Sir Thomas Brandon and Nicholas West, who were
at the same time to receive the oath of the King of the Romans to the treaty.
The departure of the ambassadors was delayed, and they
did not arrive in Cologne till the beginning of January, 1503; there Maximilian
kept them waiting, and finally appointed to meet them at Antwerp, where he
received them on the 1st of' February. After some further proceedings, he took
the oath on the 12th of February, in the church of St. Michael; a Te Deum was sung, and in the evening bonfires
were lighted in the streets and squares. Maximilian refused the investiture
with the Garter as unnecessary, because he had already received the Order, and
he preferred to wait till he could arrange for the performance of the ceremony
by proxy in England. In the same way the ambassadors received evasive answers
to their demand for a proclamation of banishment in the large towns, especially
in Aix ; the King of the Romans now and then treated these questions more
lightly than they liked, at all events he insisted on delay until his own
ambassadors should have spoken with Henry. From the lengthy account sent home
by the Englishmen of all their efforts and arguments, we gain the impression
that the cunning Maximilian had led them by the nose; he passed lightly over
awkward points, and with the most amiable geniality set aside the fulfilment of
the agreements he had only just sworn to; it was, in short, very evident that,
being now in possession of his £10,000, he thought no more of loyally executing
the treaty. We only hear that he condescended to inform the town of Aix that he
was bound by his treaty to give Suffolk no more assistance; nevertheless, he
sent at one time a thousand, and again, in July, 1503, two thousand gulden to
help pay the earl’s debts.
He now despatched an embassage for the purpose of
receiving Henry’s oath. Conducted by the Margrave of Brandenburg, this
embassage arrived in London at the end of March, 1503, and was quartered in
Crosby Hall. On the 30th of March the king received it at Baynard’s Castle.
After a solemn mass, and while a Te Deum
was being sung, Henry swore to the treaty in St. Paul’s Church, on the 2nd of
April. Bonfires were also lighted in London, and casks of wine were set out for
those who desired to drink. The reception of Maximilian into the Order of the
Garter took place in due form; the usual contribution of £20 to the Chapel of
the Order, St. George’s, at Windsor, Henry paid out of his own pocket. On the
5th of March he had already, for the third time, caused the rebels to be proclaimed
as traitors, and he required Maximilian to do the same. The form of the
proclamation throughout the empire was determined, and Norroy
Herald, who brought the insignia of the Order, which had been so earnestly
pressed on the King of the Romans, was to see that this proclamation was
issued.
It took Henry a very long time to gain his end with
Maximilian, and he could never feel safe from fresh counterinfluences.
Meanwhile the fugitive, scantily provided for, found an asylum, not an enviable
one certainly, but which afforded him protection in spite of Henry’s reiterated
demands. Henry behaved as if the capture of Suffolk were simply an affair in
which his honour were concerned. He was never in any danger of a direct attack
from Suffolk, as before from Perkin Warbeck, for no prince ever thought of
arming in favour of one who from the first was only a hunted fugitive. To get
hold of him was the difficulty, and Henry only partially succeeded in limiting
the number of hiding-places open to the rebel. Circumstances, however, arose
which caused his capture to appear to the king as something more than an affair
of honour.
Suffolk himself, of course, spoke of his favourable
prospects. He hinted at Henry’s somewhat uncertain health, and therein, no
doubt, hit upon a point of some importance; for should Henry die, the
dynasty would then depend only on Prince Henry, an early death having, on the
2nd of April, 1502, brought Arthur’s youthful married life to an abrupt
conclusion. Hardly a year had passed after this when, in the night of the 11th
of February, 1503, Queen Elizabeth died in childbed. But still severer blows
had been sustained by the king in two deaths outside his family. In October,
1500, his Chancellor, Morton, had been taken from him, and Reginald Bray soon
followed Elizabeth. Good and strong props to the Tudor throne were thus
removed, and there was more talk on the subject than the king liked. From all
this it is easy to understand that Henry could not treat the affair of Suffolk
lightly, however little it might threaten actual danger. He kept his eyes open.
In July, 1503, eight men had again to answer a charge of high treason, and four
of them were executed at Tyburn. It was this year,
however, which saw the fruit of long and difficult diplomacy in the Scotch
matrimonial contract. Possibly it was in consequence of the somewhat uncertain
situation of affairs that Henry, without any pressure of urgent necessity for
money, again summoned a Parliament after an interval of six years. The session
was opened on the 25th of January, 1504, by William Warham, Morton’s successor
in the chancellorship and archbishopric.
Many a law passed at that time bears directly on
recent events. The prohibition of unauthorised assemblages was renewed; the
careless guarding of prisoners was punished, many persons suspected of treason
having thereby made their escape; and many measures for reform were resolved
upon. The new Bill of Attainder affected directly the earl and his friends;
lands, offices, and dignities of those already executed, as well as of those
still living, were confiscated. It is remarkable that Curzon, who elsewhere was
always named with Suffolk, should be omitted here; Henry always reserved to
himself in all attainders the right to pardon. The Parliament, however, did
not escape having to make a grant, nor did the Convocation of York which sat in
the same year.
One enactment—the result also, as far as we can see,
of Suffolk’s revolt—affected to a serious extent England’s commercial
relations. Suffolk had found refuge in an important imperial town. Henry
therefore demanded that a proclamation should be issued against him, especially
in all the larger towns of the Empire. But as he felt very doubtful of
Maximilian in the matter, he addressed himself to the representative of the
power of the towns—to the Hansa. If he gained this, he might hope to close the
gates of the leading towns to the rebel, and to deprive him of any assistance
in money. The first really important political measure resulting from Suffolk’s
intrigues was the Act of Parliament of 1504. It protected the men of the Hansa
against any adverse ordinances then and in the future. Only one condition was
imposed, that these privileges must not clash with the freedom and privileges
of the town of London.
Such was the astonishing decree by which Henry broke
the line of policy which he had continuously pursued for more than a decade
with the men of the Hansa, and thereby gave up at one stroke everything he had
wrung from them during that period. He had been obliged to recognise in the
struggle with the Hanseatic league, especially after the failure of the treaty
with Riga, that his power did not yet extend far afield, and that he must
therefore grapple with his rivals in England itself. This he had never failed
to do, careless whether he was within his own rights or not; and now, by a
short enactment, he placed himself in the most striking contradiction to his
whole previous policy.
This step is almost incomprehensible; indeed, no other
reason can be found for it than that it had reference to Suffolk, and there the
gain that might be hoped for stood in startling disproportion to the price he
had to pay. It was a blunder—a blunder so much the greater that Henry never
really allowed the change intended by this law to be carried out. The decree
was the outcome of a momentary political situation, and Henry tried to free
himself from it as soon as the occasion had passed; but by this fresh breach of
faith he made his relations with the league of the towns more difficult than
ever, and, moreover, there was naturally no appearance of any effect being
produced in the desired direction.
His policy with regard to the Hanseatic merchants fell
back, in spite of the new Act of Parliament, into its old channels. One significant
clause in the Act had been that which gave preference to the privileges of the
Londoners, and Henry also secured a free hand for himself, when, on announcing
the decision of Parliament to the Hanse merchants, he declared that now their
privileges had been sufficiently cared for, the diet might be postponed until
he considered it to be necessary. He had not delivered up the sum of £20,000
already given in pledge, and when in 1504 a new quarrel arose with the
Netherlands, he demanded further security against the Hanseatic carrying trade.
Again there were the old complaints about overcharge in customs in England.
Then, as was to be expected, in July, 1508, a year after the conclusion of the
struggle with Burgundy, Henry declared the sum he held in pledge to be
forfeited, in consequence of illegal export of cloth. So much for the promised
protection of Hanseatic rights! This parliamentary measure had only, as a
matter of fact, interrupted, and not altered, Henry’s commercial policy with
regard to the Hansa, and thus this curious effect of Suffolk’s appearance on
the scene resolved itself into a mere transient and useless politico-commercial
episode.
Though the existence of Suffolk as a pretender was not
without importance for England, and occupied, to a great extent, Henry’s
thoughts, it did not, after all, present any real danger to the kingdom. As
regards the conduct of Maximilian, Suffolk had more just cause for complaint
than had Henry, notwithstanding that the latter had expended two sums of money;
for, though the exile was allowed to remain unmolested in Aix, he could,
indeed, hardly find safety there from his creditors, and the uncertainty of his
fate was such as to make him despair.
Apparently Maximilian did not desire that he should be
driven from Aix. He preferred to reserve him to be made use of against Henry,
should opportunity serve, or perhaps to hand him over for another considerable
sum. Suffolk himself longed to escape from this state of uncertainty. He had
thought of applying to the Count Palatine; but Henry, hearing of it, begged the
French king to interfere. Again fresh hopes were aroused in the exile by his
friendly connection with Duke George of Saxony, the Lord of Friesland.
In March, 1504, we find the duke’s plenipotentiary,
Wilhelm Truchsess zu Waldbiqrg, engaged in negotiations with both parties—with
Suffolk and with King Henry. Duke George had received from his father the newly
acquired Duchy of Friesland; but as yet had not succeeded in establishing his
full power in the country, for the town of Groningen offered him the most
obstinate resistance; and it was to overcome this that he hoped to gain Henry’s
help. If his ambassador at the same time was treating with the Earl of Suffolk
about assistance in troops and money for an attack on England, and about a
refuge in Friesland, his aim was evidently to lure the earl into his net, and
to make use of him for. his own ends with Henry. Suffolk was at this time with
the King of the Romans, making fresh attempts to get help. His brother Richard
therefore negotiated in his stead with Waldburg, and they discussed the
question of armed support, and of paying the earl’s heavy debts in Aix. How far
they came to any binding agreement we do not know, but Waldburg’s promises
satisfied the earl completely, while he probably received from Maximilian
nothing but his usual fair words. The hope that Suffolk’s debts would be paid
induced his creditors at Aix to let him depart, and only to detain Richard as a
hostage. Shortly after the negotiations with Waldburg, towards the middle of
April, Suffolk disappeared from Aix, evidently without Maximilian’s knowledge,
and against his wish.
The fugitive’s hopes, however, were destined to be
frustrated. He had procured for himself, for his journey through Gelderland to
Friesland, a safe conduct from Duke Charles of Gueldres, who equally with Duke
George might entertain hopes of making use of Suffolk for his own ends. Charles
disregarded the safe conduct, and caused him to be captured and kept in close
confinement in Hattem, on the Isel, close to the northern border of the duchy.
Thus Duke George was disappointed in his expectations.
The result of all this was that Suffolk got involved
in a new set of political quarrels. Charles the Bold had incorporated Gelderland
into his Burgundian possessions. Charles of Egmont, the descendant of the
dethroned ducal house, had, in 1492, been released from the captivity into
which he had fallen in France. He was a brave and shrewd man. France willingly
gave him help, and he was supported at the same time by the people of
Gelderland, eager for independence, and began a struggle with the Hapsburg
lords of Burgundy, which he obstinately maintained for several successive years
in a perpetual and devastating warfare. The alliance of the Hapsburgs with
Louis XII changed the situation to the disadvantage of the duke, and though
Maximilian, led by the Burgundian policy, allowed himself to be drawn into an
alliance with France, he succeeded in return in involving Philip in the war with
Gelderland up to August, 1504.
Suffolk was then already in the hands of the duke.
Henry VII himself declared that Charles claimed an exceptionally high ransom
for the earl. Later there was a rumour in Antwerp that Henry would even stir up
and support Charles against Philip. But of negotiations between the king and
the duke nothing has transpired. More intimate relations did not exist, or
Henry would not have been, in the summer of 1505, in complete ignorance of
plans in Gelderland with regard to Suffolk—whether Maximilian or Philip had a
hand in the game, whether Duke Charles was friendly to the earl, where he kept
him, and whether as a prisoner or not. The fugitive was, in fact, withdrawn for
a time from immediate contact with English politics, for he served the duke as
a hostage against Philip, and that such a hostage should have any value for
Philip showed that a change had taken place in Anglo-Burgundian relations.
In the autumn of 1504 these two countries were again
engaged in an open war of tariffs. All the treaties, even the personal meeting
between the rulers, had only been able to secure to their states for a few
short years that amicable intercourse which was so urgently necessary. Complete
information as to the exact cause for this condition of affairs is not to be
had. Probably Burgundy, as before, opened hostilities by imposing new customs
dues, which Henry vainly sought to resist by a special embassage in August,
1504. The Spaniard, Don Juan Manuel, seems to have been the moving spirit. Accredited
to Maximilian, he remained permanently in Brussels, at the Burgundian court,
and exerted his influence there in defiance of his own king’s wishes, and
finally even against his interests. He had already been trying to work upon
Maximilian in a spirit hostile to England, and, later, he induced Philip also
to carry out his wishes by decided action against Henry. For this Suffolk could
evidently serve them as an important tool, and the duke of Gueldres might very
well hope, while he held such a prize, to make a good bargain with Philip.
He may therefore have himself set the rumour afloat
that Henry was supporting him. Philip showed himself to be really anxious about
the matter. He made representations to Henry, tried to calm his fears about
Suffolk, and spoke of his own correct behaviour with regard to Richard de la
Pole; but it was said that he wanted all the time to make use of Richard, in
default of the elder brother, against the English king.
In one way, however, the capture of Suffolk was unfortunate
for Duke Charles—two Powers, who were friendly towards England, now turned
against him. Louis of France demanded the surrender of the earl into his hands,
promised his good services if his demand was complied with, and held out a
prospect of an equally welcome sum of money from Henry. James of Scotland,
however, who, earlier, had received a promise from Charles that he would
prevent Suffolk from passing through Gelderland, and who now, instead of the
fulfilment of this promise, was met with prevarications and even a request for
help, wrote to the duke a highly significant letter, telling him in plain words
what he thought of his conduct, and demanding the immediate dismissal of his
protégé.
It sounded from these communications as if Suffolk had
had a hospitable reception from his new protector; but this was not the case.
Suffolk tried to escape from his captivity in Hattem, and, having managed to
find friends outside, he received in December, 1504, mysterious hints of secret
plans progressing satisfactorily; but no result appeared, and he achieved no
more, when, in July, 1505, he tried to gain a hearing with Charles himself.
Then, however, help came from without. In the middle of July, a Burgundian
flying column, under the captain Von Lichtenstein, was called by the
inhabitants of Hattem into the place, occupied it, cut off the greater part of
the garrison, who happened to be absent, and, strengthened by reinforcements,
besieged the fortress, which was only feebly defended. Philip’s forces were at that
time having some success. The leading town of Zutphen,
situated in the heart of the country, had fallen into his hands, and shortly
afterwards, after the surrender of Hattem, Suffolk became his prisoner. On the
27th of July, 1505, Charles was obliged to sue for peace, to make submission,
to deliver up many fortified places, and to promise he would accompany Philip
on his intended journey to Castile.
From Antwerp the siege of Hattem had been watched with
the greatest interest, for the sake of the prisoner who lay there, and great
joy prevailed at the result, for now they hoped “to put a curb into the mouth
of the king of England.” The Netherlanders, indeed, had cause to rejoice over
better prospects, for the war of tariffs had till now not been very fortunate
for them. Henry had met the new imposts by a decree of the 15th of January,
1505, which opened in Calais a free market with quarterly fairs, for merchants
who formerly traded with Antwerp. Tolls on exports to the Burgundian provinces
were imposed, to which Philip replied by raising his own duties; both parties
prohibited entirely any imports from the opponent’s country.
These dissensions with the Netherlands were probably
in part the cause why Henry did not break off the negotiations with Duke George
of Saxony, which were still dragging slowly on. In the hope he had founded on
Suffolk, the duke was bitterly disappointed; with the pretender no longer in
his possession, he could offer but little in return for his own requests for
help, for his promise to give Henry the same support, should he ever need it,
could hardly have been considered an equivalent. Waldburg conducted the
negotiations in England in the summer of 1504, and at Calais, with Dr. West, in March, 1505. The Englishmen, as usual, spoke
of Suffolk with great contempt ; to them he was no more than a “scullion,” and
a “runaway youth”; notwithstanding, therefore, repeated earnest appeals, the
duke’s request for help was, under various pretexts, refused. West, who made
use of the opportunity to get the duke to present him with a good Frisian
horse, brought to Calais the draft of a treaty, already executed by Henry,
containing a covenant for mutual alliance and defence, couched in general
terms, but, according to Henry’s wish, formulating with special severity the
article on rebels. The king having added a promise to interpret these
provisions less severely, George executed the treaty in this form at Dresden on
the 30th of December, 1505.
This transaction was not of much importance ; George
gained from his alliance with England little or nothing, while Henry got a
certain amount of security as regarded Suffolk: he had seen, moreover, that he
could gain his ends in the Netherlands without foreign aid. Envoy after envoy
was despatched to England with a view to an accommodation of the dispute, but
their efforts were useless; Henry put forward demands, but offered nothing in
return. He was conscious of his advantage, for the removal of the market to
Calais had decidedly been productive of good results ; he could reckon on the
hostile feeling in his subjects towards Philip, and while the Burgundian
government had been already obliged to modify the prohibition of imports, we
hear of no damage to English trade, nor of losses to the king in customs.
As it was entirely to his advantage that the losses
should be keenly felt by his opponent, it is very astonishing to find that the
king should have most generously supported with his money this same opponent,
at the very time when he was making efforts to damage him commercially. We are
not acquainted with the details of the agreement, we only know that Henry
granted Philip a loan to a considerable amount which the greater part was
handed over to him on the 25th of April, and the rest on the 27th of September,
1505, “for his next voiage unto Spayne.”
Philip at that time stood in a double relation to
Henry, as Lord of the Netherlands and Burgundy, and as King of Castile. The
union between the Spanish kingdoms of Castile and Aragon had been severed on
the 26th of November, 1504, by the death of Isabella; her son John had died
before her, so had her daughter Isabella, married to the king of Portugal, and
also their young son Miguel; the Castilian throne, therefore, fell to Joanna
and her husband, Philip. As Joanna was already showing symptoms of that
condition of mental disease into which she was afterwards irrevocably to fall,
and therefore was incapable of governing, Isabella had appointed Ferdinand
regent. To this, however, Philip demurred. Disaffected nobles, who objected to
Ferdinand’s harsh government, entered into communication with him, and Don Juan
Manuel, in particular, gave him counsel in the matter. After issuing a
manifesto against Ferdinand’s regency, Philip made preparations to start for
Spain himself, but the Gelderland war, now more burdensome to him than ever,
together with the commercial dispute with England, detained him in the
Netherlands, and Ferdinand meanwhile contrived to damage him by gaining over
Louis of France, who, till then, had been a constant friend to Philip.
This dissension between Philip and Ferdinand was very
welcome to Henry; a change was setting in in his relation with Spain, which
made him view with satisfaction any difficulty for Ferdinand, such as that
involved in Philip’s journey to Spain. Henry hoped by his war of tariffs with
the Netherlands to effect an essential improvement in England’s position, and
therefore continued to carry on the struggle; but because he thereby interfered
with Philip’s revenues, and 'could not help feeling that this in addition to
the cost of the war in Gelderland might put a stop to Philip’s journey to
Spain, he gave back to the King of Castile for this journey, double and treble
of what he took from him as Duke of Burgundy.
It can scarcely be doubted that in making these
arrangements, Henry had had in his mind, in some form or other, the Earl of
Suffolk, in whom the Netherlanders hoped they possessed the price for the
removal of the interdiction on their trade. Philip, however, at once parted
with his valuable hostage. By the beginning of August he had already given
orders that Suffolk should be taken to Wageningen in Gelderland, and there
given up. It was alleged later that this was done out of regard for the
provisions of the treaty with England, and it is possible that this may have
been the case, for Henry’s second payment was still owing, which Philip was not
to receive till September. Philip did not wish to hand over to Henry a prisoner
of such importance to the Netherlands, and could find a pretext for
surrendering him to Charles of Gelderland in the claims which Charles still had
against the earl.
Charles had troubled himself very little about
providing for Suffolk’s support; after Hattem had been taken, the rescued
prisoner besieged his new protector and his counsellors for money, and even for
the most necessary articles of clothing. He tried to free himself by flight
from his new captivity in Wageningen, but was caught near Tiel, and from that
time kept in stricter confinement; only one servant had access to him, and the
garrison of the town was strengthened. In spite of this he kept up
communication with his friends, through whom he entreated Philip to release him
from “this man’s hand.” He said he was there by Philip’s orders, and would
always be ready to serve him. He foresaw with much anxiety the possibility of a
new breach between Philip and Duke Charles, in which case he should regard
himself as a lost man.
Mention had from time to time been made, though with
little justice, of the expenses incurred by the duke on behalf of his prisoner,
and now Suffolk, in order to escape from the power of the Duke of Gueldres, was
obliged to pledge himself to pay, as compensation for his own and his servant’s
keep, a sum of two thousand florins; after the payment of the first instalment
of five hundred florins his full freedom was assured to him. A Spanish merchant
residing in Antwerp was prepared to guarantee the payment of the money.
Could the whole transaction have been anything else
but a manoeuvre to take in Henry? What reasons could Philip have had for giving
back to the unreliable Duke of Gueldres, whom he had already defeated, a
hostage of such value as Suffolk, and how could a merchant have been so
foolhardy as to risk good money on a man who was over head and ears in debt,
unless this Spaniard had received good security, perhaps from the new Castilian
king himself? Suffolk’s liberation, that is, his surrender to a new gaoler—to
Philip, did not take place till Philip had received the last payment from
Henry. Thus it was Henry who found himself cheated; with his advances in aid of
Philip’s journey to Spain, he had probably himself paid the so-called ransom
for Suffolk, but without getting him into his hands in return.
For Philip now thought no more of surrendering
Suffolk, and no compliance was made with Henry’s often-repeated wish. He tried,
however, by other inducements to persuade the king to remove the customs dues.
Either he or his father offered him the hand of Margaret, who through the death
of her second husband, Duke Philibert of Savoy, had again become a widow. The
projected marriage of the Princess Mary with Charles and another personal
interview were again proposed. Manuel’s sister, Donna Elvira, a maid of honour
to the Princess of Wales—even the princess herself—were drawn in as
intermediaries; but Henry, who merely seized with more eagerness upon the
proposal for his own marriage, held obstinately to his demands—that the Flemish
customs dues should first be taken off, and that Suffolk should be surrendered.
Suffolk’s situation had once more changed for the
worse. In the middle of November, 1505, we find him again kept like a prisoner
in the castle of Namur. Not only his own hopes, but those of his creditors at
Aix, had been grievously disappointed by the course affairs had taken since his
flight from their town. They had applied in vain to Philip, and, since the
taking of Hattem, empty promises were the only consolation they could get from
Suffolk himself. His brother Richard, whom he had left behind as a hostage, was
assailed by impatient and angry creditors in the open street. Suffolk, they
cried, was a base deceiver, and they intended to accuse him publicly of
perjury. Richard felt bitterly the humiliation and also the danger of his
position ; he hardly dared to appear out of doors for fear of being either
given up to Henry or assassinated. At the same time he incurred Suffolk’s
displeasure by the mode in which he was conducting the negotiations they had
opened with Hungary about a new place of refuge. He was reproached with caring
more for himself than for his brother, and any hope of getting help from
Suffolk was quite taken away from him. In his distress he longed that God would
remove him out of this world, he had shown himself in many things a good
brother, and yet Suffolk was now treating him so cruelly.
In his conduct towards Richard, Suffolk seems to have
been ungrateful and unjust, but his situation might indeed excuse much. Hopes
were being constantly held out to him, while all the time nothing was done; for
instance, he was told that the ships collected together by Philip for his
Spanish expedition were destined for him. One friend, an unpaid creditor of
Perkin Warbeck’s, spoke of enlisting in his favour the King of Denmark and the
Duke of Pomerania. Meanwhile, hearing nothing definite about his fate, he lived
on such promises and on the money of his friends, and had very little freedom
to move about. In December, 1505, Killingworth, who had been sent to Philip’s
court, wrote to him that nothing was left for him but to patiently bide his
time.
The unhappy adventurer excites our compassion, begging
for alms at every princely door, and having, for the sake of a few miserable
crumbs, to submit to the most contemptuous treatment. Refused everywhere,
deprived of all hope of foreign aid; but yet retained as a possibly useful tool
for foreign policy, what remained to the banished man in his despair? He took
the only step left him, which made by hitherto he had despised. He appealed to
the English king, that rival who stood in calm security, watching his fruitless
hostile efforts.
But here too he was unlucky, and only made himself
ridiculous. For he, the fugitive, who was forced to beg for bread and
respectable clothing, sent off from Namur on the 24th of January, 1506, his
followers Killingworth and Griffith and empowered them in pompous phraseology,
as Duke of Suffolk, to treat with Henry’s representatives, asking from the king
full forgiveness and the restoration of all his dignities and lands, and the
release of his brother William and his friends, while in return he condescended
to promise that he would be a loyal subject to the king. But about this time
sinister rumours had reached Namur as to his future fate, and he alone still
remained hopeful. For Philip, by then, was in Henry’s kingdom, detained as an
unwilling guest, and it had already been decided that Suffolk was to return
there in somewhat less splendid style than he in his high-flown language had
seemed to imagine.
Philip and his wife had been waiting at Middelburg, in
Zealand, for a favourable wind, and on the 7th of January, 1506, they were able
to embark at Arnemuiden. Among their numerous suite
was the Venetian ambassador, Quirini; but the Duke of
Gueldres, contrary to his promise, was absent. On the 10th of January, at the
full moon, the fleet of forty sail put to sea, and amid thunder of cannon and
strains of music sailed past Calais. It was said that Philip had tried to come
to a previous agreement with Henry in order to ensure a safe passage to Spain,
should chance cast him ashore on the English coast. This foreboding was soon to
be realised.
A strong wind having got up in the night following the
second day of the voyage, the ships were driven rapidly towards the south, but
after a calm, the wind shifted and increased to a frightful gale. In London
even it caused considerable damage, the weathercock on St. Paul’s steeple being
blown down. The Burgundian fleet was scattered, and, on the 16th of January,
Philip, who had given himself up for lost, was driven on shore at Melcombe Regis, opposite Weymouth; eighteen ships put in at
Falmouth, and the rest, with the exception of a few that foundered, got to land
at various places.
Although his Spanish counsellors advised Philip to put
to sea again as soon as possible, he preferred to announce his arrival to Henry
and await an answer. He intended to visit the king and the Princess Katharine,
and then, as soon as possible, to depart. But things were to turn out
otherwise. He was detained hospitably on the coast, while Henry made ample
preparations to receive him with splendour at Windsor. The Prince of Wales came
to meet him at Winchester, and on the 31st of January, Henry, at the head of a
brilliant retinue, welcomed him a couple of miles outside Windsor. The two
monarchs vied with each other in civilities and outward expressions of
friendliness; and Henry did not shrink from the most lavish expenditure to do
honour to his guest. But the guest was afterwards to make him rich amends for
the expense incurred. Philip had announced his intention of soon joining his
followers who were awaiting him at Falmouth; they, however, waited on in vain
for their lord.
Henry did not allow such a favourable opportunity to
slip. We hear of private interviews between the kings, and also of others with
their counsellors. On the 9th of February, Philip was solemnly installed as a
Knight of the Order of the Garter, and on the same day, after hearing mass, he
signed and swore to a new treaty of alliance, drawn up in two separate
documents. The investiture of the Prince of Wales with the Order of the Golden
Fleece concluded the ceremony. By this treaty the contracting parties bound
themselves to mutual support against every aggressor, though this aggressor
were an ally of one of themselves one provision in it was of special importance
to Henry—that neither of them should suffer any rebels against the other to
remain in his dominions, but must deliver them up at once on the other’s
demand.
Thus Suffolk’s fate was sealed. Joanna also arrived
for a short visit the day following the signing of the treaty, and Philip then
moved on to Richmond to see the new buildings there, and on the 15th of
February, unasked, as a superficial observer supposed, he offered to surrender
Suffolk to the English king, a confidential counsellor being despatched to the
Netherlands to fetch the prisoner.
As we said, Philip had undertaken to deliver him up to
Henry before his own departure. It was not till the 2nd of March that he took
leave of Henry, and travelled by slow stages eastwards to Falmouth. Illness
also detained him on the way, so that he did not arrive at the seaport till the
26th of March. The provisional regency at Mecklin had
made difficulties at first about relinquishing the hostage, hitherto so
carefully guarded, before Philip should have at least left England in safety.
Fresh orders therefore had to be sent, and on the 16th of March, 1506, Suffolk
was handed over to the English at Calais, brought on the 24th under strong
convoy across the Channel, and conducted through London to the Tower. Henry had
promised his guest, not indeed by treaty, but in a solemn and binding form, to
spare the life of the prisoner.
Although the hopes which Suffolk had indulged in of
late were groundless enough, yet this turn of fortune was a sad one. That he,
though a man of high descent, not only failed to play a part as important as
did the impostor Perkin Warbeck, but was scarcely better than a hunted wild
beast, nowhere sure of his life, was chiefly due to the complete change that
had taken place in the position of the Tudor king at home and abroad. But the
foolhardy, hot-headed young man, prompt to take offence, and as easily deluded
by every empty promise, had without due reflection plunged into adventure, and
now was to reap the fruit of his own folly. Henry indeed kept his promise, and
it was left to his successor to bring the eager champion of Yorkist claims to
the scaffold.
In spite of his unjust behaviour to his brother
Richard, it speaks well of Suffolk’s character as a man, that he had in the
time of his misfortune faithful servants and friends, who to the last never
forsook him. Even after his surrender, the faithful Killingworth made every
effort to save his master, by reminding Maximilian of his former promises ; but
finally he had to beg for assistance to pay his own debts contracted in
Suffolk’s service. He tried if he could at least secure safety for Richard, who
was still at liberty, and asked Maximilian to appoint some place where he might
live in security. No one dreamt any longer of great undertakings. After his
brother’s capture Richard had made his escape from Aix, and in the autumn of
1506 he appeared in Hungary, where he had established friendly relations the
year before. Here Killingworth joined him, and from here he made his application
to the King of the Romans. Although his surrender also was insisted on, Richard
continued at liberty. He finally found a permanent refuge in France, and there
rose to high honour after the rupture with England, which occurred in the reign
of Henry VIII. His contemporaries knew him under the name of the “ White Rose.”
He distinguished himself in the service of France both on land and sea, till,
in 1525, he fell at Pavia, that battle so disastrous for Francis I.
Suffolk’s intrigues formed the last noteworthy attempt
made by the House of York against the Tudors; and Henry, by the treaty he had
extorted from Philip, had relieved himself of that difficulty. Instead of using
Suffolk as a hostage, Philip had been forced himself to serve as a hostage for
Suffolk’s surrender, and everything he had hoped to gain by means of the rebel
had been completely lost. Henry tried to turn Philip’s involuntary presence in
England to further purpose, on behalf of the commercial relations with the
Netherlands. Of the negotiations themselves we know nothing; Henry gave up the
idea of a definite settlement before Philip’s departure, and contented himself
with his authorisation. Before Philip parted with the English king at Windsor,
on the 1st of March, Philip alone, and then on the 14th of March, he and his
wife together, issued powers for the marriage treaty already proposed between
Henry and Margaret, the sister of Philip. This treaty, which we shall have to
consider in another connection, was brought about on the 20th of March. It must
have cost Philip a greater struggle before he brought himself, after long
hesitation, to sign, on the 4th of April, 1506, a power for the preliminaries
of a final settlement of the trade question.
Well might he long to get out of England, as he waited
at Falmouth for four tedious weeks from the 26th of March. There his fleet had
assembled, and some Spanish ships also had been sent by Ferdinand to make up
for the losses sustained. Till their arrival at the seaport town all the
expenses of Philip and his retinue had been generously provided for by Henry. Then,
however, Philip was left to himself, and found the prolonged visit a severe
strain on his purse. The Venetian, Quirini,
complained bitterly of the poor and yet costly living in the provincial town.
They must all have felt relieved when, on the 23rd of April, 1506, they quitted
the shores of England.
Shortly after, on the 30th of April, the new
commercial treaty was finally concluded in London. The contents of it might
already be surmised from Philip’s power, which had merely dealt with the
English complaints of violations of the former treaty and of the existing
usages in trade. It was determined therefore, that for the Netherlanders the
tolls agreed upon in 1496 should hold good, while the English should be exempt
from certain local tolls in Zealand, Brabant, and Antwerp, and that any
proposed increase of tolls should be announced a year beforehand. The
wholesale sale of English woollens was not only again permitted throughout
Burgundian territory, but, with the single exception of Flanders, sale by retail
was also allowed, as well as the dressing and finishing of the cloth. All
merchants trading in English woollens were to be subject to the same favourable
customs dues as the English. In return, the Netherlanders only received, beyond
the renewal of the treaty, protection against cheating in the sale of English
wool at Calais, by means of a precise system of marking the different sorts of
wool, and a previous examination of the goods. Philip’s kingdom of Castile was
expressly excluded from these provisions.
Philip had been compelled to pay dearly for his
previous obstinacy; at the end of the struggle he found himself beaten at all
points. For Henry, too, the only complete success lay in the surrender of
Suffolk; the treaty of commerce was after all a prize of doubtful value. The
king had committed the serious error of making use of the enforced situation of
his rival to press unreasonable demands, which, if literally carried out, would
have perpetually menaced the mercantile and industrial prosperity of the
Netherlanders, and even completely annihilated it by English competition. Hence
the concessions possible only on paper were impossible of fulfilment; indeed,
the extortion of such unreasonable concessions might very well endanger
privileges which had hitherto been assured.
The Netherlanders were not able quietly to accept this
treaty made by their duke; but apart from any pressure of public opinion,
Philip from the first was disinclined to execute the treaty concluded by his
plenipotentiaries. The ratifications were to take place within three months—the
English one is dated the 15th of May, 1506—but on the 31st of July Henry’s
ambassadors were still vainly waiting at Calais for the conclusion of the
marriage treaty, which had been due already for weeks. Of the commercial treaty
not a word had yet been said.
The general situation of affairs, however, seemed to
promise well for the fulfilment of Henry’s hopes. The quarrels with Ferdinand
brought Philip to the verge of a civil war in Castile. There were difficulties,
even with the Castilian nobles who had joined his party, and the Duke of
Gueldres, always ready to break treaties, seized on this opportunity for anew
insurrection, with the assistance of France. Louis XII at first denied that he
had sent aid, but at last confessed it plainly to Courteville,
Philip’s ambassador. Henry according to the treaty of alliance was under the
obligation to protect the Burgundian provinces; he went so far as to promise
assistance in troops to the stadtholder, William de Croy, Lord of Chièvres, on
the strength of an article in the treaty, and began as usual to make a show of
active preparations. But at first he confined himself to diplomatic overtures
with Duke Charles, whom he reproached in no measured terms for his breach of
treaty; and proceeded in the same manner with Louis of France and the
Netherlands.
The government of the stadtholder had to behave in a
conciliatory way; especially as the unstable commercial relations were causing
such damage to the trade of the Netherlanders that they were almost disposed to
regard the unfavourable treaty as the lesser evil. Chièvres counselled his
master to pretend acquiescence in the proposed negotiations with France, and
even to send to him in case of necessity the execution of the commercial
treaty. He found some consolation, however, in the stipulation that any
increase of the customs dues should still be announced a year beforehand.
In France, too, Henry was so far successful as to
prevent the reinforcements of troops to Gelderland, and to cause proposals of
intervention to be made to the duke, who tried to justify his behaviour to
Henry. Not content with the proffered truce, he even demanded a secure
settlement, and declared himself ready in return to submit to an Anglo-French
court of arbitration. Though Louis’s acquiescence in Henry’s policy of
mediation was not very sincere, outwardly this policy had been successful, and
Henry at once made use of this by inviting Philip also to submit to the court
of arbitration. He had, however, cause for displeasure, for he learnt that the
treaty had been executed and sent to Chièvres on the 2nd of September, without
his having himself managed to see anything of it.
At this moment an unexpected event occurred : Philip,
after a short illness, died at Burgos on the 25th of September, 1506. In his
letter of condolence to Maximilian, Henry at once expressed his willingness to
execute the still unconcluded treaty. Maximilian,
however, in reply, only spoke of the assistance he hoped Henry would render to
the children of his son, and took the opportunity of slipping in a request on
his own part for a loan of 100,000 crowns.
Margaret, who was placed at the head of the council of
Regency for her nephew Charles, herself urged the resumption of commercial
relations, but passed over in silence the last settlement in London, and
indicated the treaty of 1496 as the desired basis for commercial intercourse. Henry
gave vent unreservedly to his annoyance at the downfall of his hopes, but
behaved in a very conciliatory manner, and promised, out of special regard for
Margaret, to permit the resumption of trade with the Netherlands. He forwarded
at the same time the draft of a commercial agreement, with a view to obtaining
the necessary securities for Englishmen on the renewal of intercourse, and
insisted that it should be signed and returned within fourteen days.
This preliminary settlement, which was sent from England
in May, and was ratified by Margaret and her counsellors on the 5th of June,
1507, consisted of five articles; it regulated commercial intercourse according
to the earlier treaties, but conceded to the English, at least in the main, the
reductions on customs granted by the treaty of 1506; in return the claims for
English cloth were allowed to drop. On the 17th of June the merchant
adventurers received permission again to enter the provinces of the archduke
with their wares.
The two treaties agreed upon with Philip not having
yet been confirmed, Henry took advantage of this to declare himself freed from
the obligation of rendering assistance against Gelderland. For the rest he
insisted only on what was possible of attainment and by this means secured to
the English ample advantages in customs, though compelled to relinquish his
desires with regard to the English cloth industry. Thus the new agreement,
considered only at first as provisional, remained for years under Henry VII,
and his son the solid basis for commercial intercourse between the two
countries.
We cannot help wondering that after Philip’s death
Henry should so suddenly change his policy, and show himself prepared to give
way, for though the favourable circumstance of Philip’s simultaneous difficulties
in Castile and the Netherlands had ceased with his death, Henry still found
himself at the time in so advantageous a position with regard to Burgundy, both
commercially and politically, that his prospects of success appeared but
slightly affected; yet he gave up everything. Two treaties had not been
confirmed by Philip. Henry now abandoned the commercial treaty, hoping by that
means to secure the marriage treaty, which must necessarily afford him full
compensation, by the close connection he would thereby form with the
Netherlands, since his chosen bride, Margaret, was the Regent there during the
minority of her nephew Charles. This matrimonial design, however, forms one of
a long series of marriage projects for himself and his children, at which Henry
worked indefatigably during the latter years of his reign, and which lends to
that period its peculiar character.
CHAPTER VI.
MATRIMONIAL SCHEMES OF HENRY VII.’S LAST YEARS.
The age in which Henry VII lived was an age of
marriages; scarcely any alliance took place between two Powers without the plan
of a matrimonial union between the royal Houses being proposed, and seldom were
more important marriages concluded. Henry followed the custom of the times. The
safety of his own, and still more of his son’s dynasty, rested to a greater
degree than he was willing to admit on his own marriage with Elizabeth of York,
and the unions proposed and brought about by him with Spain and Scotland, were
to prove of the greatest importance for his country and his dynasty. The
matrimonial policy of his later years presents a different picture. He proposed
alliances now on this side, now on that; evolved the most extraordinary plans;
began much, yet effected little. The first impulse was given to these schemes
by the fact that on Arthur’s death, Henry, who was still unmarried, succeeded
as Prince of Wales, and that a year later the hand of the king himself became
free.
After the wedding, Arthur had retired into his principality
of Wales, where a council composed of capable men surrounded him. His tutor
Bernard André, who, courtier-like, was, however, inclined to exaggerate praises
in the warmest manner his ability and character; unfortunately Arthur was
delicate in health, and on the 2nd of April, 1502, died unexpectedly at his
castle of Ludlow. For the king this was a heavy blow. When his confessor
brought him the sad news, he sent for his wife, who tried to console the
afflicted father with words of comfort, only to break down so completely under
her sorrow after she had left him, that her attendants sent for the king, who
in his turn tried to comfort his wife, as she had him. The prince’s body was
brought from Ludlow to Worcester and there buried with great pomp before the
high altar of the cathedral. What was now to be the fate of that alliance
between the two dynasties, of which this marriage thus early dissolved had laid
the foundation? Once more the political situation served Henry in good stead.
As the treaty for the partition of Naples between France and Spain had not
indicated with sufficient precision the limits of their mutual claims, strife
broke Out almost immediately after their common victory, and the confederates
turned their weapons against each other.
This new war with France could not fail to make the
attitude of England appear of the highest importance to the Spanish monarchs,
especially since reports had early reached them of an enticing offer from the
French of a marriage between Henry, the new Prince of Wales, and Margaret,
afterwards the well-known queen of Navarre, sister to Francis of Angouleme, the
presumptive heir to the throne. The Spaniards must therefore lose no time if
the old compact were to be preserved in the same form after Arthur’s death. If
the first union had been sought by the Tudor king, to gain the friendship of
Spain, now it was the Spaniards, who in their desire for the friendship of
England, came forward with the new scheme of marriage.
No sooner had the messenger bringing the sad news been
received, than, in the beginning of May, 1502, Ferdinand, Duke of Estrada, was
despatched on a special mission to Henry. He had a power to conclude a marriage
between Katharine, now a widow, and her brother-in-law Henry. Ferdinand and
Isabella were anxious to renew, word for word, the old treaty of alliance,
which promised protection for all territories of which the parties were at the
moment in possession, in order that they might thereby include their recent
Italian acquisitions, Apulia and Calabria, which were threatened by France.
They even thought they could induce Henry to render them assistance in arms
against France by holding out to him the attractive prospect of regaining
Guienne and Normandy. Their instructions to their ambassador sound particularly
explicit; they set to work with the greatest eagerness, before even
ascertaining whether Katharine might not have hopes of a posthumous heir, who
would cut off Prince Henry from the succession. It was not till a month later
that the Spanish monarchs thought of obtaining definite information on the
subject from Estrada.
They were unwilling, however, that their own wishes
with regard to the new settlement should be brought too prominently forward,
and hence Estrada was instructed to urge that Katharine should at once be sent
home, that the hundred thousand crowns of the dowry should be paid back, and
her widow’s jointure assigned to her. The natural desire of affectionate parents
to see their child again was to be the ostensible reason for their demand; but
the real object was simply to drive Henry to make the first proposal of a new
scheme of betrothal, to which Estrada might then assent “without betraying that
he himself had any special desire in the matter.”
Again Puebla was not intrusted with this business of
more than usual importance, and it was left to Estrada to decide how far he
should be admitted into confidence. But it so happened that the question of the
new betrothal was mooted, possibly on Puebla’s suggestion, between him and
Henry, independently of the action of the Spanish monarchs, and they therefore
learnt through Puebla that the ground in England was favourable to their plans.
There was to be no further mention of any proposals to attack France, but the
new betrothal treaty was to be settled as soon as possible; they contented
themselves, as before, with drawing off Henry in this way from an alliance with
France. It must, therefore, have been very galling to Puebla to find himself
ordered to follow in everything the directions of Estrada. In the event of a
refusal, the demand was to be adhered to that Katharine should be sent back to
her home, and, above all, that the dowry already paid should be returned. They
endeavoured to enforce, by a judicial opinion, Henry’s obligation in the matter;
and they declared the king would be a monster of iniquity, should he keep the
money in defiance of all laws, human and divine.
Henry’s friendship, or at least his neutral attitude,
became more and more necessary to them, for their arms, during the year 1502,
had not been successful in Italy, and in the same year their disagreement with
Philip became more marked, when he appeared in Castile for the first time with
his wife, in order to receive homage as heir to the throne. The journey there
and back led them through France; the Spaniards had found themselves compelled
to intrust Philip, on his return home, with powers to negotiate for peace with
Louis, but to England they sent strict injunctions that no engagements entered
into in their name by their son-in-law should be considered binding without
their express approval. They refused to recognise the treaty concluded at Lyons
on the 6th of April, 1503, as it went beyond the instructions given.
Henry having from the outset shown himself prepared to
come to terms on the marriage treaty, the matter was quickly arranged; a draft
was ready prepared by the 24th of September, 1502, and on the 23rd of June,
1503, the ratification took place at Richmond. The dowry for the first
marriage was taken on for the second, and, on the part of the Spaniards, all
claims on the sum already paid were given up; the rest was to be paid on the
conclusion of the marriage, in London, for the date of which the end of Henry’s
fifteenth year was fixed.
The papal dispensation was necessary for this union
between Prince Henry and his brother’s widow, and, to obtain it, the question
arose, how far the marriage Arthur and Katharine, confirmed by the Church, had
been actually consummated by the married couple, who were then almost children.
After Arthur’s death, the customary month had been allowed to pass before the
title of Prince of Wales, with the revenues, were handed over to Henry. The
result of the inquiries instituted by desire of the Spaniards as to the actual
consummation of the marriage is to be found in Ferdinand’s communication to his
ambassador at Rome, wherein he stated that notwithstanding the marriage, no
such consummation had taken place, but that it was well known in England that
Katharine was still a maiden, as pure and untouched, as she herself asserted at
a subsequent date, as “when she left her mother’s womb.” It was only to protect
the new union against any possible objection such as Ferdinand feared might be
raised through the cunning of the English, that the treaty of the 23rd of June
asked for the papal dispensation, even in the event of the earlier marriage
having been consummated.
Two days after the treaty had been concluded, the
ceremony of betrothal took place in the house of the Bishop of Salisbury, in
Fleet Street, London. This time the business was not confined to the marriage
treaty. The quarrel between Spain and England over their navigation policy will
be remembered, when the import of wine and woad into England was restricted,
and in both countries a prohibition was laid on the freighting of foreign ships
with export goods, so long as native ships lay in the harbour. That the English
in this matter should be treated by the Spaniards as the Spaniards were by the
English, seems to have been regarded by Henry as a violation of the stipulation
in the treaty of 1499, that both nations should be placed on an equal footing,
and to have been met by him with an increase in the export tolls on woollen and
other goods for Spain. He had furthermore cause for complaint against the
Spanish seamen, who had seized a French vessel in an English port, and who, by
their piracies, were constantly molesting both Englishmen and foreigners.
In order to gain over Henry to the new marriage
treaty, the Spaniards promised to remove, in favour of the English, the
restriction on exports, and, accordingly, a treaty of commerce and amity on
these conditions, also dated the 23rd of June, 1503, accompanied the marriage
treaty. But much time was to elapse before the provisions in the treaty, either
concerning trade or the marriage, were carried out.
On the 24th and 30th of September, 1503, Ferdinand and
Isabella confirmed the treaty of marriage; on the 3rd of March, 1504, Henry did
the same. The Spaniards had taken special pains at once to obtain the papal
dispensation in the form agreed upon, but here the two Powers encountered their
first difficulties. On the 18th of August, 1503, Pope Alexander VI died; on the
18th of October following, his successor, Pius III, also died, and on the 1st
of November, was succeeded in the papal chair by Giuliano da Rovere, who
assumed the name of Julius II. Henry tried to ingratiate himself with the new
Pope; he was the first among the princes to notify his obedience. This he
coupled with a petition for the dispensation, promises of which Ferdinand had
already secured from Julius, both before and after his election.
It is not very easy to see why Pope Julius, in spite
of his friendly assurances, should have postponed the fulfilment of his
promises. The difficulties of the case, the necessity of a closer
investigation, even doubts as to his own power to grant the dispensation, were
put forward; finally, one of the cardinals, commissioned to make the inquiries,
fell ill. In July, 1504, the Pope assured Henry that he was prepared to grant
the dispensation. Robert Sherbourne, the dean of St. Paul’s, he said, should
bring it with him when he came home; yet Sherbourne came without the bull.
It was the English king whom Julius wished to keep in
suspense; the Spaniards attained their object more quickly. They had been far
more energetic about procuring the dispensation in Rome, and it was said that
Isabella desired to see it before her death, which was fast approaching. The
Pope was prevailed upon to issue a brief, which should correspond exactly to
the bull that was to be granted, and which should be sent as a consolation to
Isabella, in order that she “might depart out of this life with a quiet mind”;
it was ante-dated the 26th of December, 1503.
Shortly before Isabella’s death Ferdinand sent the
original of the brief itself to England, much to the annoyance of the Pope, who
declared that he had granted it to the Spaniards only under condition of the
strictest secrecy. Now he was bound also to England, and at the same time
deprived against his will of every pretext for withholding any longer the bull
itself. He therefore promised to send it off to England by Silvester de Giglis, Bishop of Worcester, accredited to Rome by Henry.
As nothing more is mentioned of the matter, we suppose Julius must have kept
his promise, and that the bishop brought the bull in the spring or summer of
1505 to England.
The bull was also ante-dated the 26th of December,
1503. It was worded more clearly and precisely than the brief, and as the
latter had done, granted the dispensation to include the case of the actual
consummation of Katharine’s former marriage. The bull was then considered fully
sufficient to enable the marriage contract to be concluded. It was not till
later, when, in the matter of the divorce of King Henry VIII, the marriage
itself was objected to as illegal, that defects and oversights were discovered
in the papal dispensation, on the authority of which the marriage had been
contracted.
Henry also had honestly bestirred himself in the
matter, and yet, when the execution of the treaty on both sides had long since
taken place, and after the dispensation had been granted, and probably also
after Katharine’s marriage ceremony had been performed by proxy in London, the
king suddenly drew back. On the 27th of June, 1505, the day before Prince Henry
entered his fifteenth year, the prince placed on record, in the presence of
Bishop Fox, that he did not recognise the marriage treaty contracted when
prince he was still under age. Although the prince maintained that he was
acting of his own free will, it is obvious that herein the boy was only
following the command of his father, and this was also the opinion of Bishop
Fox himself. This postponement of the marriage marks one of the most peculiar
moves in the very eccentric policy of the king’s later years. Once again,
indeed, in September, 1505, he declared that the wedding should be solemnized
in conformity with the treaty, and that Ferdinand till then ought to keep the
rest of the dowry in readiness; but neither one thing nor the other was done.
Commercial relations played a most important part in
this very uncomfortable state of affairs. The Spanish sovereigns had promised
in the treaty that the restrictions as to freightage should be taken off in
favour of the English; but it was not till after the exchange of ratifications,
and after the formal betrothal on the 16th of November, 1504, that their decree
was issued, by which the English in Spain were to be treated on the same
footing with their own subjects. English merchants from Seville and Cadiz first
brought home the joyful news. Henry responded on the 12th of March, 1505, with
a similar proclamation. He left the Spanish merchants free to transport their
goods at will in either Spanish or English ships. Other nations, however, were
excepted.
But when Englishmen appeared at Seville in the summer
of 1505 with their goods, and wanted to ship wine and oil as return cargo, they
were forbidden on the spot to do so, and had to make their return voyage with
empty vessels and at a heavy loss. Henry made the most severe reproaches to the
Spanish ambassador, who put forward various excuses, alleging that the reason
lay in the difficulties of Ferdinand’s position in Castile after the death of
his wife, although the proclamation had been issued in her name also at
Seville. The Castilian Cortes, on the other hand, decreed that English,
Flemish, or other foreign ships might not be freighted in Andalusia, so the
countermeasures exacted by Ferdinand could not help much in the matter. As was
understood afterwards in England, this was really the result of the fundamental
opposition on the part of an influential party to commercial intercourse with
England, which took money out of the country and brought nothing in return but
the English woollens, whereby the native industries were damaged.2 As far as we
know no more changes were introduced during Henry’s life; but if the trade with
Spain was not of sufficient importance to make these inconveniences especially
felt, they were enough to make the relations between the two kingdoms still
more unsatisfactory.
For the rest, the discussion between Ferdinand and
Henry turned only on the conclusion of the marriage and the payment of the
dowry, and the Princess Katharine, innocent in the matter as she was, found
herself in consequence of it in the most distressing position. Henry neither
gave her back her dowry, nor let her have, the use of her widow’s jointure,
while from Spain there arrived strict orders not to part with her gold and jewels;
only for political purposes might she occasionally raise money on them. In the
summer of 1504, Henry—at least according to his own assertion—ordered £300 to
be paid to her, but in the following March she appealed to Puebla for help, as
she had been obliged to contract debts in order to get food. She was, however,
always filled with the greatest mistrust for Puebla, for he did nothing for
her; in fact, she regarded him as the cause of all her misfortunes. Her
household must indeed have presented a sorry appearance, for none of them
received their salary, or knew how they could support or dress themselves. Fair
words, to one who also was often out of health, could be of little help, and
both Henry and Ferdinand behaved very shabbily to the unfortunate young
princess.
Katharine was, in short, the victim of a political
quarrel. She began early to taste that cup of sorrow which she was destined to
drink to the very dregs in England. Henry’s behaviour towards the princess went
so far that, in the year 1503, shortly after the death of his own wife, it was
rumoured that he, the elderly father-in-law, had designs on her hand. This was,
however, an unfounded rumour, and nowhere else do we hear that Henry really
made such a mistake as that.
In any case, on the death of Elizabeth, he at once
entertained the question of a second marriage, and during the last years of his
life he was actively occupied in various schemes to this end, although without
success. The news of his supposed designs with regard to Katharine had awakened
great apprehension in Spain, and Isabella rejected in the strongest way any
possibility of their accomplishment. She therefore seized the opportunity to
propose another plan to the king, which should set these first ideas entirely
aside, and bind Henry still more closely to Spain. She directed his attention
to her niece, the Queen of Naples.
This title was borne by two princesses, mother and
daughter, both called Joanna, who lived together in Spain. The elder, Ferdinand
the Catholic’s sister, was the widow of Ferdinand I; her daughter was the widow
of his nephew, Ferdinand II, of Naples; it was the younger Joanna who was
proposed as a bride for Henry. Henry at first made no response; but in January,
and again in June, 1504, Estrada was instructed to repeat the proposal, and
Puebla asserted that the king often spoke of it, and himself wished for the
marriage. Henry also asked for Joanna’s portrait, and for a statement of her
age. He really only expressed his acquiescence in the scheme by requests which
had for their object to delay the matter and to keep for himself a free hand
with Ferdinand ; yet they show that the king, who could scarcely be still
attractive to a young woman, was very fastidious on the point of feminine
charms, For all the treasures of the world he would not have this promised
bride, if she were ugly.
Things had changed very much. Once the Tudor king had
begged the favour of being admitted as a kinsman into the Spanish royal House,
now he was doubtful whether he would ally himself afresh with Ferdinand, who at
this time was forced to contend with Philip for the great central Spanish
kingdom of Castile. Henry openly held out hopes that he would treat with both
parties, as both were seeking his alliance.
In the autumn of the same year as the war of tariffs,
which began in 1504 between England and the Netherlands, the proposal of a
marriage between Henry and Margaret had been made by Philip, or rather by his
father Maximilian. The express reason for this proposal was to thwart the
Spanish schemes with regard to the widowed Queen of Naples. Thus Henry found
himself in a most favourable position between these rival competitors for
Castile; and in the same way he was able to take advantage of the disputes
which had arisen between Ferdinand and Louis of France.
As far back as July, 1502, immediately after Arthur’s
death, Isabella had been in some anxiety on account of the French proposals for
a marriage between Prince Henry and Margaret of Angouleme. The plan did not
meet with much approval in England. It appears to have been again mooted in the
autumn of 1504, and Henry fell in with the idea, but in a different way. In
June, 1505, French ambassadors again appeared at his court, and in August he
despatched his own plenipotentiaries; he proposed to Louis XII a personal
interview, and by the remark that if he thought of marrying again he would wish
most for a marriage with Margaret of Angoulême, he hinted that he might himself
come forward as a candidate in the place of his son. In France the idea of his
marrying a young girl of thirteen was actually accepted, whilst in England his
marriage with Margaret’s mother Louisa was spoken of; a close treaty of
alliance was to accompany this, and extend to their successors.
Henry had, however, no serious intentions in the
matter, no alteration being necessary in his relations with France ; and the
object to be gained by playing off this alliance against Ferdinand passed away,
owing to the Spaniard’s reconciliation with his former rival. Ferdinand had, in
fact, begun to work for a new and closer alliance with England, and Henry,
though he had no thought of enmity with France, tried to bind the Spanish king
under the same one-sided obligations as had been imposed in his own case some
time before in the offensive clauses of the treaty of Medina del Campo.
Ferdinand refused this, and a fresh proposal from England allowed to each party
almost entire freedom of action; meanwhile his own reconciliation with France
made any further hostile alliance against France quite superfluous.
After Isabella’s death renewed hostilities between
France and Spain seemed imminent on the Pyrenean border and in Naples, which by
that time had been quite taken out of the hands of the French; but Louis XII,
having obtained the investiture of Milan, the end he had in view when he made
friendly overtures to Maximilian, gave up all idea of further conquest in
Italy, and accepted willingly Ferdinand’s offers of alliance. The contest for
Naples was concluded by the treaty of Blois (October 12, 1505), when Ferdinand
received as a marriage portion with the hand of Germaine de Foix, the niece of
Louis XII, a girl of eighteen, all French claims on Naples, claims which were
to revert to France should there be no children of the marriage. Any further
concessions to which Ferdinand had to agree were counter-balanced by the fact
that Philip could no longer reckon on the support of France.
Ferdinand now tried to draw the English king as well
as the French to his side; but Henry guarded himself against any binding
concession, and retained the liberty of joining the party which should offer
him the greatest advantages. Francis Marsin, Thomas
Braybrooke and John Stile went to Spain as his ambassadors. In the course of
their journey to Ferdinand’s court they touched, on the 22nd of June, 1505, at
Valencia, in the neighbourhood of which the two queens of Naples resided. They
introduced themselves as the bearers of letters and commissions from the
Princess of Wales; but this pretext was only to afford them opportunity for
making those investigations as to the person, character, and mode of life of
the younger Joanna, with which their king had charged them. They had been given
a set form of questions, which they had simply to fill in with their answers
under each head, to satisfy, as far as was possible, the astonishingly
indiscreet curiosity of the king. The paper with these questions and answers is
the drollest amongst the political documents of the time of Henry VII with
which we are acquainted. The king desired information as to her household,
costume, speech, and manner. As an ample mantle concealed the figure of the
queen, he had to be satisfied with the information that she was not painted,
that she had a pleasant countenance, a clear complexion, brown hair, grey-brown
eyes, and a slightly hooked nose, round arms, with delicate hands, a graceful
neck and full bosom. Henry wished to be informed of the minutest details: whether
she had a tendency to a beard, whether her breath was sweet; and the
ambassadors even accomplished the somewhat difficult task of answering this
last inquiry. One piece of information proved less satisfactory. She was
certainly entitled to an income of thirty thousand ducats, but her property in
Naples had been confiscated, and Ferdinand paid her only a yearly pension of
some fifteen to sixteen thousand ducats. The Englishmen’s efforts to obtain a
portrait of her were not successful, and they heard, moreover, that Joanna’s
mother and a faction in Naples were desirous she should marry a far younger
man, the Duke of Calabria, son of the last king of Naples, who died in France.
Some would, indeed, have preferred this young man as a husband for Katharine,
rather than an Englishman.
In Spain, and also in Antwerp, it was rumoured that
the marriage was already decided on; it was only considered doubtful if the
young princess would accept an elderly husband. We do not know how far Joanna
was asked her opinion. In any case, notwithstanding the favourable report of
his ambassadors, Henry thought no more of a marriage with her. Other matters
had more influence with him than a pretty face and fine figure; the inquiries
of his ambassadors at the court of the queens were of quite secondary importance
to the real object of their mission. This was to inform himself of Ferdinand’s
position in Castile, the state of public feeling about the intended journey of
Philip to his kingdom, and the attitude of the nobles and of the neighbouring
kingdom of Portugal. The fact was that Henry had a large pecuniary interest in
the matter, from the advances he had paid to Philip, whereby he had done his
utmost to increase the difficulties of Ferdinand’s position. From Ferdinand himself
these objects of the ambassadors were concealed under pretext of negotiations
like those already carried on in London, concerning the dilatory execution of
the marriage treaty of the 23rd of June, 1503, and the treaty of alliance which
was now to be renewed.
Having continued their journey, the ambassadors
arrived, on the 14th of July, 1505, in the royal camp at Segovia, and on the
17th had their first audience. In a later interview they were assured by
Ferdinand’s confidential adviser, Almazan, that his king, in accordance with
Isabella’s will, was determined to keep in his own hands the government of
Castile, whilst, on the other hand, they heard that the king’s oppressive rule
was not much liked there, and that men were longing for Philip’s arrival in
hopes of a mitigation of the taxes, but that various factions existed, that
there were fears of future troubles, and that the king of Portugal was on the
side of Philip.
This was news which made the alliance with Ferdinand,
hitherto so much desired by Henry, seem less worth striving for, and prevented
him from regretting his own heavy contributions towards Philip’s expedition to
Spain. About the same time that he sent off Marsin
and his colleagues, he despatched Antony Savage to Maximilian and Philip, in
order to find out how matters stood with them, especially concerning Philip’s
plans with regard to Castile and Suffolk, and further, whether Maximilian was
in earnest in his offer of the hand of Margaret. He showed himself much less
curious in his inquiries about Margaret than about Queen Joanna; it was her
dowry that principally interested him. This time also he was more fortunate,
for he received two portraits of Margaret. Besides political considerations,
one point weighed strongly in her favour as compared with a Neapolitan princess
dependent on a Spanish pension, that she as widow of the former heir to the
Spanish throne and of the Duke of Savoy, possessed a double widow’s jointure.
Maximilian favoured the marriage, and issued his power on the 16th of November,
1505; but nothing had as yet resulted from it, when Philip on his voyage was
driven ashore in England. This matrimonial scheme, in fact, originated entirely
with Philip and his father; yet Henry did not fail to turn to account the
favourable opportunity afforded him.
We know that Philip drew up his power on the 1st of
March, 1506, and that the conclusion of the treaty took place on the 20th of
March, before he had reached the coast at Falmouth. The most important points
came first; the dowry of 300,000 crowns—each crown reckoned at four
shillings—and Philip’s obligation to pay yearly 18,850 crowns for his sister’s
Spanish jointure, and 12,000 crowns for her allowance as duchess-dowager of
Savoy. Henry was to have free control of these sums, and Philip was to be held
to punctual payment, under threat of papal excommunication. Margaret’s widow’s
jointure in England was fixed at 20,000 crowns. The same thing happened to
Henry with the treaty of marriage as with the commercial treaty : he had to
wait a long time for Philip’s ratification; but, at last, on the 16th of July,
1506, this was procured, together with a strict promise to pay with punctuality
the stipulated sums.
One important question, however, remained—whether
Margaret herself was agreeable to this disposal of her hand. Just once, in
November, 1505, it had been considered desirable to put the question to the
lady, who was residing on her widow’s estate in Savoy, and, according to the
report of the Venetian, Quirini, in December, her
answer was not favourable. But to overcome a weak woman’s will would not, it
was hoped, be difficult, seeing that her father and brother concurred in
bringing their influence to bear on her. Both, in accordance with the treaty of
the 20th of March, 1506, were to engage to do all in their power to gain
Margaret's written agreement before the 1st of August. The time passed by, and
in October Henry awoke to the distressing conviction that Philip and
Maximilian’s ambassadors could get no other answer from Margaret, but that,
after her sad experiences, she was afraid of another marriage.
At this moment Maximilian and Philip were unwilling to
put Henry out of humour; he might therefore look for a fulfilment of the
commercial treaty. The King of the Romans ascribed his daughter’s refusal to
the machinations of the French, but promised for his part not to relax his
efforts to bring about the match. In Burgundy also they imagined themselves
sure of Henry, “who is still hoping for a union with Madame of Savoy, whom he
desires to have more than anyone in the world.”
Contrary to all expectation, the suitor himself
threatened again to withdraw. After Philip’s death, in September, 1506, Joanna
of Castile had fallen into a melancholy condition of mental incapacity; yet,
insane as she was, a royal crown was the prize that would accompany the
bestowal of her hand. From the first it was evident that Ferdinand would do all
in his power to prevent a second rival like Philip from supplanting him in the
government of Castile. It is therefore inexplicable that Henry should have
applied to him, and still more so that in his calculations of political
advantage Henry should so far forget all human feeling as to seek in marriage a
woman who was known to be mad ; nay, he even compelled his daughter-in-law
Katharine, Joanna’s sister, to make the obnoxious proposal in his name. This
much of shame was, however, left him, that he kept his scheme as secret as
possible. A few members of his council and Puebla were alone admitted to his
confidence. Puebla seconded him loyally. He wrote that Joanna could find no
better husband, and, when united to King Henry, she would soon recover her
sound reason; that the English, too, did not seem to take much account of her
insanity, as she had already shown her malady would not prevent her from bearing
children! that Henry would not be likely to interfere with Ferdinand in the
administration of Castile, especially when Joanna was living in England; and a
fixed yearly sum would alone have to be paid to England out of the revenues.
Henry probably hoped by this means to recoup himself for his own expenses, the
large loan he had made to Philip having been irrevocably lost at his death.
Katharine was repeatedly made to write for Henry on the subject. He endeavoured
to work upon her and her father by declaring void the marriage compact between
her and his son, because the dowry had not been remitted, while she complained
of the humiliating contempt to which she was subjected on that account in
England.
Ferdinand was sagacious enough to put the English king
off with a semblance of agreement; he even did not hesitate to commission
Katharine to act as his representative in these marriage negotiations together
with Puebla, whom she hated. He made ample promises to do his utmost in the
matter, being desirous in any case to keep it in his own hands; he was,
moreover, convinced that the poor mad woman, who in her infatuation refused to
part from the body of her dead husband, would never be induced to contract a
new marriage. And if by this procrastination the union already decided on
between Henry and Margaret were broken off, Ferdinand would have achieved all
he could wish for. Accordingly all his answers were guarded by conditions. He
protected himself behind Joanna’s wishes, who, he said, if ever she married
again, should receive no other husband than the king of England, so
distinguished for his virtues. Meanwhile these delays placed Henry in the most
uncomfortable situation with regard to his suit for the hand of Margaret, and
Ferdinand, whose paternal heart was, in such matters, not easily affected, was
only too well pleased that his daughter, and not he, should bear the brunt of
Henry’s anger. Henry now pressed on his cause with more and more vigour. Puebla
was made to write that his love was marvellously great; Katharine was compelled
even to inform Joanna herself of the deep impression which she had made on the
king during her short visit to the English court in February, 1506, and of the
sorrow he had felt at her departure. Henry outdid himself in such evidences of
want of taste as this; he was incited to press his suit more strongly by a
rumour that Joanna was about to marry a French noble—the Lord of Foix.
Ferdinand expressly denied any such projects; at the
same time his account of Joanna was not very satisfactory. She was still
causing Philip’s corpse to be carried about wherever she went, and would
entertain no thoughts of another marriage. He reported her condition as
indescribable. She had to be treated with the greatest caution, and could not
be contradicted. And so the matter rested. Very strange it was that Henry
should not from the beginning have perceived the true state of affairs, and
that he should engage in a fruitless negotiation, which brought him neither
profit nor glory.
The only result of this interlude was that the
relations between the two kings became more strained than ever; Henry tried by
obstinately holding back in the affair of the marriage of their children to
make Ferdinand more inclined to yield. Other plans for Prince Henry were spoken
of, a match with Philip and Joanna’s daughter Eleonora, and again with Margaret
of Angouleme, but it was not till the end of 1508 that there was any mention of
Henry’s consent to the French proposals.
It would seem, however, that Henry had no serious
intention of carrying out these schemes, nor of really breaking off the
marriage already agreed to. In these divers projects his sole object was to put
pressure on Ferdinand with regard to his own marriage with Joanna, and the
payment of the hundred thousand crowns still due of Katharine’s dowry. But Ferdinand
was content to let him wait, while Katharine alone suffered. The poor princess
was spared no vexation. Her physician on one occasion announced that she had
recovered her bodily health, that her only suffering was from troubles of mind,
which lay outside the province of medical skill. She and her attendants
positively endured privations. No promise made at the time of her marriage was
kept. She was treated worse than any other woman in England; and she scarcely
ever received money from either Ferdinand or Henry to afford her even temporary
assistance. To Henry, Ferdinand insisted emphatically on the fact that the
marriage once concluded could not be dissolved; as for the dowry, after having
twice succeeded in obtaining a postponement of the date of payment, he at last
really held out hopes of paying. At the beginning of 1508, our old friend Fuensalida, now governor of Membrilla,
was sent over to England; but as soon as Henry was offered the payment in the
form agreed to by treaty, he demanded the whole sum in coin, whereas, according
to the treaty, a portion of it was to be covered by the valuables in
Katharine’s possession. Ferdinand, who had already once gone so far as to
threaten war, now showed himself intensely irritated with this and with the
treatment of Katharine, but notwithstanding his angry remonstrances, he gave
way on all points, and sent the necessary instructions to the Italian bankers,
Grimaldo and Vivaldo. He only impressed caution on his envoy, saying the
payment was not to be made if Henry did not permit the completion of the
marriage, “for when one has to deal with people of little faith and honour,
caution is necessary.” Finally he intimated that the English were even capable
of poisoning Katharine in order to keep her dowry.
Ferdinand had been obliged again and again to give
way, and his words convey his annoyance. On the other hand, Henry took a
certain pleasure in paying out his old ally for humiliations of the same sort,
which he had suffered at Spanish hands during the first years of his reign.
Scarcely had he extorted all the concessions, when he suddenly announced that,
as the payment had been delayed, the treaty was dissolved, and that the
marriage should therefore not take place. At the same time he began to intrigue
against Ferdinand with other foreign Powers. Finally he refused any longer to
admit the Spanish ambassador to audience, and when Fuensalida
rode to the palace he was denied admittance by the guard, who seized his mule
by the bridle and compelled him to turn back.
Thus the end was bitter enmity between the two
monarchs. They did not advance one step towards reconciliation, and Katharine
in a letter to her father poured forth despairing lamentations. She declared
she could no longer endure her position, that she only received the barest
necessaries of life, doled out to her like alms, that she had to sell her
household effects, and if Ferdinand did not soon send her assistance something
might happen, which neither he nor Henry would be able to prevent. The unhappy
princess, who had experienced trouble enough for her three and twenty years,
declared in what proved to be her last words before the death of the
hard-hearted English king, that she feared she could not survive the trials she
had had to endure.
Henry’s own matrimonial project does not afford a
sufficient explanation for his constant refusal to conclude the marriage of
Katharine and young Henry, and certainly not for his insulting withdrawal at
the last, when there could have been no more talk of his own hopes of Joanna.
The real aim of Henry’s policy with regard to Ferdinand was still to compel him
to give his consent to another marriage project, for not only had Henry, in
spite of his designs on Joanna, continued to try to move the cold heart of
Margaret, but at the same time and with better result, the marriage already
proposed between the Archduke Charles and the Princess Mary was being
negotiated. It was the hope of marrying his daughter with the heir presumptive
to the enormous dominions belonging to the Spanish and Hapsburg Houses, and of
extorting from Ferdinand his formal agreement to the match, that determined
Henry’s attitude with regard to the Catholic king.
As far back as the year 1499, the Duke of Milan had
talked to the king of a marriage for Mary with his eldest son. Then during the
meeting at Calais, Mary’s marriage with the Archduke Charles had been
discussed, but the plan was frustrated by the treaties of Lyons and Trent, on
the 5th of August and 13th of October, 1501, which bestowed on Charles the hand
of Louis XII’s daughter Claude. But the French king had never been in earnest
about this, and after his investiture with Milan and his treaty with Ferdinand
he made known without reserve the other wishes he entertained. Claude’s
marriage with Francis of Angouleme was announced formally in May, 1506, in
presence of the Estates assembled at Tours.
Upon this the hopes of the English revived. Already
during Philip’s involuntary sojourn in England, compacts, either by word of
mouth or by letter, had been made about Charles and Mary, the exact purport of
which, however, we do not know. Perhaps there was a desire to make up to Henry
for his disappointment with regard to Margaret; at any rate Maximilian, writing
on the 14th of September, 1506, to the English king, told him of Louis’s breach
of faith, and proposed, as from himself, the marriage of Charles with Mary;
Philip’s consent, he said, had been secured by him. In fact, in July, the
English envoy, Dr. West, had already spoken on the
matter to Philip at Valladolid.
At that time three subjects stood ready for
negotiation—the still undecided question of the commercial treaty, the marriage
of King Henry with Margaret, and of Charles with Mary. After Philip’s death the
agreement about trade was the first to be concluded, and the prospects for
Henry himself were the most gloomy. Notwithstanding his efforts to win the
insane Joanna, he had prosecuted with energy his suit to Margaret, with a view
to securing a bride in any case, and on account of these negotiations had urged
as strongly upon Ferdinand the necessity of coming to an agreement about the
marriage of Charles and Mary. It was his hopes with regard to Margaret which
led him to concede so much in the commercial treaty of May, 1507; in the
autumn, negotiations were carried on still more vigorously, and Henry tried to
make a favourable impression on the archduchess by a present of six horses and
several greyhounds. Margaret does not seem to have been averse to marrying
again, for she must have previously expressed some desire on the subject, when
her father wrote to her that in no case would Henry consent to her marriage
with the Prince of Wales. The son, apparently, would not have been displeasing
to her, but Maximilian sought in vain to win her for the father; he was anxious
that she should at least keep Henry in good humour in order to prevent him from
combining with France and Spain. He promised to stipulate in the marriage
contract that she should remain mistress of the Netherlands and live there four
months in the year. Puebla was told by Henry that she had written very amiably,
and the letter itself was read to him by the king, but all arguments of a
personal and political nature, even the suggestion that she would thereby
endanger the marriage of Charles and Mary, were of no avail. Margaret excused
herself on the grounds of her former ill-luck in marriage, of her fear that she
would not have any children, and therefore would be displeasing to Henry; she
also laid stress on the unsuitable dowry agreed upon with Philip. To this
answer once given, she held firm.
Though it appears from this that Henry himself was not
very successful in his efforts to obtain a bride, the other matrimonial
alliance between the two royal Houses was, after tedious negotiations, brought
to a successful issue in the year 1507. Henry’s plenipotentiary met those of
Maximilian and Margaret at Calais, and on the 21st of December concluded two
treaties of marriage and alliance; the betrothal was to take place at Easter,
1508, and within a fortnight after the completion of Charles’s fourteenth year
the marriage was to be solemnized by proxy in England, and in like manner at
the court of Charles; in default of the final conclusion of the marriage and
the payment of the first instalment of the dowry, fixed at two hundred and
fifty thousand crowns, heavy money penalties were to be incurred. The treaty of
alliance of the same date contained the usual obligations for mutual defence,
and for protection against rebels.
With much satisfaction Henry announced the conclusion
of this treaty to the city authorities. He laid great stress on the advantages
to be gained by this new alliance, especially with regard to the free and safe
commercial intercourse with all those countries over which Charles would one
day rule. The occasion was celebrated in the metropolis by popular rejoicings
and bonfires, and the nobles of the country began to exercise themselves in
knightly games, in view, it was reported, of the tournaments which would be
held in honour of the betrothal.
In July, 1505, the English ambassadors had been
received in Spain in a friendly and conciliatory spirit. Ferdinand appeared
willing to promote, to the best of his power, a marriage between his grandson
Charles and Mary. Now, the treaty having been concluded, the king seemed
somewhat put out; he regretted that Henry had not communicated with him
beforehand, as he had shown himself favourable to the compact. But his attitude
became more hostile when Henry urged upon him, together with the other claims
on his compliance, the express obligation to ratify this marriage. Henry was
able to adopt this firm attitude towards Ferdinand because of his close
alliance with Maximilian and Burgundy. As Katharine, too, somewhat later
suggested, Henry, after this matrimonial treaty, would no longer consider
Ferdinand necessary to him. Ferdinand expressed himself openly. From what his
ambassadors told him, this marriage, instead of increasing their friendship,
would, he believed, have a contrary effect. He wondered that so sagacious a king
as Henry should ask him to approve of a treaty of which not even a copy had
been sent him : for even the most ordinary men are not, as a rule, supposed to
sign documents without having studied them. He promised, indeed, to show
himself favourable to it, if in return the contract between Katharine and young
Henry should at last be concluded; but, in spite of these assurances, he was
really resolved not to concur in an alliance thus directed against himself.
That all the princes should seek the friendship of
Henry arose once more from the general political situation of the last few
years, for, while the attention of the great Powers was turned to Italy, Henry
remained in the advantageous position of a spectator not immediately concerned
in the affair.
After the renewed contest for Naples between Ferdinand
and Louis XII had been decided in Ferdinand’s favour, the enmity, which till
then had existed between these two monarchs, yielded to a peaceful
accommodation. Almost at the same time, the friendly understanding which had
been with difficulty arrived at between Maximilian and France gave place, in
consequence of the rupture of the marriage treaty, to a renewal of hostility.
In the year 1506 French assistance, hitherto always granted to the Duke of Gueldres,
had been withheld; but, in the following year, Louis made use to the full of
the opportunity afforded him by this pugnacious firebrand to harass the
Regent’s government in the Netherlands, and give them no time to breathe.
The King of the Romans saw with displeasure that Louis
had, by his campaign of 1507, re-established his ascendancy in North Italy, and
that Ferdinand, after remaining some time in Naples, was able to leave it a
secure possession for his crown. But Maximilian was especially angered by the
stand made by the other Powers interested in Italy against the scheme he had
formed of an armed expedition to Rome for the purpose of getting the imperial
crown, which had not yet been bestowed on him. At the same time the idea had
again arisen in his mind of regaining the old imperial ascendancy over the Pope
and the papal dominions. These extravagant schemes were shattered at the very
outset. He once more assumed at Trent, on the 4th of February, 1508, the title
of Roman emperor elect; but the campaign he opened with Venice ended in his
defeat, and he was forced, on the 6th of June, to conclude a three years’
truce.
He had tried to gain the friendship of England against
Spain and France, the two Powers which stood in his way; and it was in the
midst of these great political schemes that the negotiations with Henry had
been carried on, and the marriage treaty of December, 1507, concluded. Henry
showed himself quite ready for any move against Ferdinand. Naples, as well as
the whole of the Aragonese inheritance of
Maximilian’s grandson Charles, had, for a while at least, been imperilled by
Ferdinand’s second marriage. Maximilian constituted himself Philip’s heir, and
contested with Ferdinand the regency in Castile, in the interest of the insane
Joanna and her young son Charles. Henry himself had already expressed his
readiness to help in furthering any claims Maximilian might make on the
regency, when the emperor made on his part the same proposal to the English
king through Andrea de Burgo, who arrived in London on the 4th of July, 1508.
It is said that negotiations were entered into for a
personal meeting between Henry and Margaret and her father. The young Charles
was to be sent to England. Henry was, at his own expense, to secure for him the
possession of Castile, to marry Joanna, and, as stepfather, to undertake the
direction of affairs there, with the authorisation of the emperor, Charles’s de
facto guardian. In return, Maximilian was to receive a share of the
revenues, and, what he most desired, help from Henry against France. The king,
in part at least, fell in with these ideas. He characterised Ferdinand’s
administration of Castile as a usurpation, which was only made possible by
union with France; and, in order to sever this union, he was prepared to marry
the Prince of Wales to Margaret of Angouleme; he actually made plans for a
great European coalition to the exclusion of Aragon, which he expected would
soon put an end to Ferdinand’s power in Castile.
This friendly answer contained, however, the
unpleasant truth that Henry was averse to lending Maximilian aid against
France. This was vexatious, as it was France alone that enabled the Duke of
Gueldres to continue his resistance so long; but at that time Henry entertained
less than ever any idea of hostilities against Louis, from whom he was just
expecting another payment due to him by treaty. In response, therefore, to the
pressure put on him by Margaret’s envoys, he only showed himself prepared to
act as a mediator. He certainly could not plunge into war for an affair that
concerned him so little; but as he openly declared that it would never do for
Louis to permit the Duke of Gueldres to be annihilated, the old anxiety again
arose whether he might not definitely take the side of France, while in France
also they did not feel confident of his neutrality. The French, therefore were
glad to possess in Richard de la Pole a good ally in the event of any possible
hostilities on the part of Henry, and a plan was made, should these occur, of
sending a French body of troops to Cornwall under the command of Richard.
We can hardly suppose that Henry’s attitude had any
influence on the schemes of the various princes concerned. Maximilian was
chiefly affected by the shipwreck of his plans in North Italy; he agreed to
accommodation on pressure from his daughter, and empowered her, on the 23rd of
July, to conclude a truce for two months with Charles of Gueldres, pending
further negotiations, and to come to an understanding also on the subject with
France. But it was not till the following October that the duke, deserted by
France, was forced to make a truce, which was extended till the conclusion of
the negotiations going on between the emperor and France. These were held at
Cambray, and were to be conducted by Margaret in the interests of Maximilian,
and by the Cardinal d’Amboise as Louis’s representative.
The prospect of an understanding with France made
Maximilian alter at once his attitude towards Henry. Already there was much
that was unaccountable in the relations with England since the conclusion of
the treaties of marriage and amity in December, 1507. On the 22nd of February,
1508, Maximilian executed both treaties, and the treaty of alliance a second
time on the 26th of March, in conjunction with Charles; the required written
securities of important persons, towns, and corporations, were also in part
obtained; but Margaret’s ratification, and that of her own and her father’s
pecuniary obligations, which were specially to be fulfilled, were not
forthcoming; nor did her envoys appear, who were to hand in the ratifications
before Easter, 1508, and to perform the ceremony of betrothal. One excellent
excuse for postponement was afforded by a severe illness which attacked Henry
in February, 1508, and from which he only slowly recovered in the course of the
summer. Henry well knew how he could best gain over the needy emperor, and, on
the conclusion of the treaty, promised him, in return for satisfactory
securities, a loan of a hundred thousand crowns, for which Maximilian had
petitioned when their friendly overtures were beginning in December, 1506. In
return, Henry urged the immediate despatch of the embassy for the betrothal.
But Maximilian had not even yet renounced the hope
that the treaty of marriage, broken off by Louis, might still be renewed; and
in July, 1508, he stated quite openly in presence of his daughter, that his
main point in the conclusion of the treaty with England, had been the prospect
of receiving a large sum of money from Henry; he intended now to take no
further steps until he had ascertained that Henry was satisfied with the
securities offered for the loan. He was quite silent about a personal interview,
and Henry asked his ambassador, later, whether anything had been said on the
subject. In July, 1508, the king expressed more emphatically his old desire for
a marriage with Margaret, but Maximilian now showed himself indifferent to a
scheme which he had before so zealously urged.
In the month of August, Henry sent to the Netherlands
a special envoy to hasten on the matter, and this envoy was none other than his
chaplain, Thomas Wolsey, whom he had already, at the beginning of the year,
intrusted with a mission to Scotland, and who was afterwards to become the
great adviser of his son. We learn nothing as to the details of this first
journey of Wolsey’s to the Netherlands; probably his mission was then to set
aside the obstacles which still stood in the way of the marriage of Charles and
Mary. In this he succeeded, for on the 1st of October, 1508, Margaret executed
the marriage treaty, and, on the nth, followed engagements as to the fines
fixed by the treaty, should the marriage not take place.
Wolsey, who appeared for the second time in the Netherlands
at the beginning of October, announced the arrival of a solemn English embassy,
under the leadership of the Earl of Surrey, which had been prepared by Henry in
July. On the 11th of October, Maximilian sent out from Schonhoven
the Lord of Berghes, with several companions,
empowered to exchange ratifications in England, and to conclude the betrothal
there in the usual manner; another power, signed by Maximilian and Charles, but
for Berghes alone, followed on the 27th. It was not
till after the reception of the Englishmen at Antwerp on the 31st, that his
embassy set forth and was received at Greenwich on the 7th of December by
Henry, who did not conceal his displeasure at the protracted delay. The
solemnisation of the marriage took place on the 17th, in presence of the king
and numerous witnesses. Berghes, as proxy for
Charles, held Mary’s right hand in his, declared, in the French tongue, that he
took her for his wedded wife, and the princess having replied in the same
manner, he kissed her, and placed a gold ring on her middle finger, as a sign
that the union was accomplished.
The financial settlement, described by Maximilian as
the most important point, followed this ceremony. We have no exact information
on this subject. The emperor left in pawn, for fifty thousand crowns, a large
precious stone, called “la riche Fleur de Lys,” in a costly setting; a
considerably higher sum, however, was paid him.
Thus, as far as was possible at the time, the union of
Charles and Mary was completed; the only one of all the marriage projects of
Henry’s last years which might, in the future, promise a successful issue ; but
a fate seemed to hang over the work of the king’s later life, and this project
also in the end fell to the ground.
Meanwhile he had not forgotten to prosecute the scheme
for his own marriage, and this was Wolsey’s chief task on his second mission.
Henry wished to leave no stone unturned. The prospect of a substantial reward, should
the desired end be attained, was held out to the Bishop of Gurk, to whom Wolsey
was specially recommended, and who already held an English benefice. But this
last attempt on Henry’s part proved fruitless; his former ally, the emperor,
now made difficulties, and it was in vain, too, that Henry tried to move
Margaret by a letter addressed directly to herself. From this letter we learn
more in detail what his views were. He wanted, as the husband of Margaret, to
take into his own hands the administration of the Netherlands, and to the
Bishop of Gurk was held out the promise of the entire direction of affairs
under the king. It is possible that even this last effort was not made in
earnest, for we are told that Henry had already declared himself prepared to
renounce Margaret, if he could succeed in obtaining the hand of the insane
Joanna and the regency of Castile. Whatever further advantages Henry may have
expected from these two projects, whatever he may have imagined he could in
the end achieve, the one plan was just as unlikely to be realised as the other.
Now it was that Henry displayed his hostile feeling
towards Ferdinand more plainly than ever. At the express desire of the
archduchess, he had sent an emissary to the conferences, held at Cambray, by
Margaret and the Cardinal d’Amboise; and here, too, more even than in the
negotiations we know of with Maximilian, he endeavoured to work against the
interests of the Catholic king. Not only was the union between France and
Aragon to be severed, but the usurper Ferdinand was to be excluded from all
future alliances.
But no one gave heed to such propositions, the fruit
of mere personal animosity. England took but little share in the treaty at
Cambray of the 10th of December, 1508. Here the affair of Gelderland was the
only question settled in accordance with earlier proposals of Henry’s, the
kings of France, England, and Scotland being appointed arbitrators; for the
rest, the contract between Charles and Claude, the renewal of which Maximilian
had so long desired, remained unfulfilled, and Louis’s investiture with Milan
was again confirmed, on payment of a sum of money. The Pope, the kings of
England and Aragon, and the princes of the Empire were named protectors to
guarantee the execution of the treaty.
Still less was there any question of the exclusion of
Ferdinand from the secret treaty of alliance formed at the same time, and known
as the League of Cambray. This league was based on the same iniquitous
political morality as the earlier Franco-Spanish treaty for the partition of
Naples. The Powers whose interests were in conflict in Italy made common cause
against one victim, Venice, and to each confederate was apportioned, by way of
satisfying his claims, a share of the common spoil. At first the compact was
only made between the emperor and France, but the Pope and Ferdinand soon
joined it, and Henry, who was also free to enter it, alone kept aloof. He only
lived to see the first preparations for an attack on the Republic.
The admission of Ferdinand, which ran directly counter
to all Henry’s stipulations, would in any case have predisposed him against the
League. The feeling of dislike, nay, of hatred against the Aragonese
king was almost the main factor in his policy during the last half of the year
1508. In vain do we seek for any really substantial ground for this behaviour;
quite at the last, however, it seemed somewhat to change for the better. No
doubt the settlement of December, 1507, between Charles and Mary had been, to
say the least, unpleasing to Ferdinand, but the fact once accomplished, he
showed himself still more prepared to give in. In Spain there were many
complaints of contemptuous treatment by England, and also of damage done to
trade; but Ferdinand promised that he and Joanna would ratify the marriage
treaty as soon as Maximilian and Margaret should have done the same. He only
insisted that Katharine’s marriage should first be completed; he declared that
he had bound himself to this by oath. Henry’s attitude, too, gave hopes of a
change; by a special envoy he announced his wish for the accomplishment of the
marriage contract. But Henry VII never fulfilled these better intentions; that
was reserved for his son.
Henry’s relations with Spain had ended in a manner
which could hardly have been expected from the way they had begun. It was in
his dealings with that country that he made his first attempts in politics, and
grew to be a master, and nowhere can we trace, more clearly the decline of his
policy during the last period of his life. Quite apart from the fact that this
policy was from the outset obviously impracticable, his unworthy conduct
towards Katharine, and his wooing of the insane Joanna, are episodes which we
would willingly obliterate from the history of the first Tudor king.
RELATIONS WITH ROME, SCOTLAND, AND IRELAND.
As had been the case with the Holy League, so now with
the League of Cambray, a pretended danger to the Pope was made to serve as a
cloak for the political selfishness of the Powers. It was a mere pretext, but
for no one more so than for the English king. The conflicts in Italy concerned him
but little, the relations between him and the states of Italy being of slight
importance. This also was shown in Henry’s relations with the Roman Curia. The
prompt recognition of his sovereignty by Innocent VIII., whose bull was
expressly confirmed by Alexander VI (October 7, 1494), had been of value to
him; so had the intervention of the papal Curia against the rebels who had
defied that recognition. Hence his relations with the Pope were marked by a
courteous friendliness, which was never seriously affected by slight
differences of opinion.
All three Popes, Innocent VIII, Alexander VI, and
Julius II, had sent the consecrated cap and sword to Henry, and on each
occasion these had been received by him with befitting solemnity. Innocent,
however, showed himself somewhat disinclined to raise Morton to the dignity of
cardinal, and it was left for Alexander VI to comply with the royal wishes.
Julius II also hesitated for a while before he acquiesced in the request for a
dispensation for the marriage of Henry and Katharine. Henry in return showed himself
somewhat unyielding on the question of the alum trade, which materially
concerned the financial interests of the Curia. In defiance of the papal
monopoly protected by the Church’s ban, a Spanish ship carried alum from
Piombino V in Italy in the first year of Henry’s reign, and had been captured
by Englishmen. The Pope’s representatives declared the cargo forfeited, but the
English judges decided that the goods of a merchant travelling under the king’s
safe conduct were under English protection, and they proved by numerous
precedents that the Pope could not encroach on the king’s temporal prerogative.
When, at a later date, a similar case arose, Henry went so far as to promise to
protect the Pope’s v interests, but frequent complaints of a repetition of the
offence during the years 1505 and 1506, when the destruction or seizure of the
goods was demanded by the Pope, show that this promise was not kept by England.
With a view to giving a special dignity to his
dynasty, which he regarded as the lineal descendant of the House of Lancaster,
Henry ardently desired that this House should, by the canonization of the royal
martyr Henry VI, add a new saint to the Church of England. He therefore
addressed a request to all three Popes, Innocent, Alexander, and Julius, but
received from them all nothing beyond evasive answers, and instructions to the
Archbishop of Canterbury and others to collect the necessary information on the
life and acts of the proposed saint. Henry’s assertion that miracles had been
wrought at the tomb of the last of the House of Lancaster was not considered
sufficient, and Rome was careful not to raise to this high dignity a king well
known to be weak in intellect. All that Julius would grant, was permission for
the solemn removal of the bones of Henry VI from Windsor to Westminster.
It is evident that in determining the line of
demarcation between the prerogatives of Church and State, Henry acted with
caution, though at the same time with the distinct resolve in no way to
relinquish his kingly authority. He insisted from time to time that he had no
intention of interfering with the rights of the Church, and in matters
connected with Church reform he left to the ecclesiastical authorities a
perfectly free hand. Monastic discipline had suffered somewhat during the civil
wars, and there was need of drastic reform. To this end, in Henry’s first
parliament, the bishops were empowered to exceed their proper authority, and to
impose secular punishments for immorality on clerics under their jurisdiction.
At the beginning of the year 1486, the Convocation of Canterbury passed
resolutions condemning the disorderly conduct of the clergy, who spent whole
days in taverns, and did not even conform to the rules of dress and tonsure. In
March, Pope Innocent commissioned Morton to institute a strict visitation, and
to punish offenders. The archbishop forthwith opened proceedings against the
Benedictine monastery of St. Albans, where the abbot had squandered the
property of the monastery, had permitted laxity in discipline to increase, and
had set an adulteress over a nunnery under his authority. Morton himself made a
visitation throughout many dioceses, but we have a more detailed account of a
visitation undertaken by Bishop Goldwell in the
diocese of Norwich. He there discovered scandals of various kinds—lax monastic
discipline, intercourse with the world, and participation in its pleasures,
admission of women within the precincts, and gross mismanagement of the
property of the monasteries. We also know that Henry himself gave permission to
Lawrence Burelly, Vicar-general of the Carmelite
Order, to inspect the English religious houses.
Henry maintained his influence in ecclesiastical
matters by his appointments to bishoprics. These were generally only conferred
on Englishmen, except when Henry desired to reward or bribe a foreigner. In
this way, in 1497, John de Giglis obtained the
bishopric of Worcester, which on his death shortly after, in 1498, was given to
his brother Silvester, who had acted in Rome as Henry’s representative, with
Cardinal Hadrian of Castello, appointed in 1504 Bishop of Bath and Wells. The
election by the chapter, which took place after the royal permission had been
granted, was always in accordance with the king’s recommendation; and in the
case of Worcester the temporalities of the see had already been handed over by
the king to John de Giglis before the congé d’élire had been granted. The elevation of William
Warham to the see of Canterbury as second successor to Morton is noteworthy.
The king emphatically commended the choice of Warham to the prior and chapter
of the cathedral, and on the 24th of January, 1504, followed the bestowal of
the temporalities. The installation and the administration of the oath were
accompanied by much ceremonial; in a detailed description of the solemnities,
even the bill of fare for the various classes of guests is not forgotten.
Although Henry made concessions from time to time, he
was careful to maintain his kingly prerogatives. He was lord over his clergy,
and drew from their ranks his most able ministers, such as Morton, Fox, and
Warham. With him the , interests of the State were paramount, and this is
clearly seen in his dealings with the Curia on the very important question of
war against the Turk.
Ever since the crusades, war against the Infidel had
continued to be regarded by Christendom as the highest ideal; it was extolled,
ardently desired, and promised, but, as the political interests of the European
Powers pushed themselves to the front, the enterprise itself receded further
and further into the background, till at last the cry became a mere pretence
wherewith each might hide the real aim of his selfish policy. The Pope declared
that war with the Turks was the ultimate object of the Powers combined together
in the Holy League against France; but these Powers could not more strongly
have belied his words than they did by their League of Cambray, made some years
later against Venice, one of the strongest bulwarks of Christendom towards the
east—Venice, which towards the end of the century had for many years carried on
an exhausting war against the Turks.
The Turkish war, further, supplied the Pope with a
welcome pretext for imposing a crusade tax which should fill the papal coffers.
Henry was the prince least interested in these matters; yet, when he returned home
after the victory at Stoke in 1487, John de Giglis
was sent as papal nuncio to him, with a request for a crusade tax. The attempt
does not seem to have been very successful, and when, two years later, Malvezzi
appeared with fresh papal indulgences ready for sale, the situation was little
favourable for his purpose. Henry, indeed, permitted the papal bull to be
promulgated, and Morton himself communicated it to his suffragan bishops, but
the task of making the collection was left to the papal emissaries alone. They
imagined the bishops to be favourable, but their hearts sank when, on one
occasion, having opened their collecting-box after it had been passed round at
court, they found that the contributions of the royal family and the assembled
dukes, earls, and high officials, only amounted to eleven pounds and as many
shillings. Henry, however, at least renounced his claim to any share of the
moneys collected. An equally unfavourable moment was selected for a
proclamation of a sale of indulgences in the year 1497, just when Henry had
succeeded in suppressing the Cornish insurrection; he therefore strongly urged
upon Alexander to defer his scheme, at any rate, for the present.
On one occasion it was pointed out to the Pope as a
special merit of Henry’s that he, unlike other monarchs, had himself made over
to the Roman chair two subsidies for the crusade. Ferdinand and Isabella warned
him expressly not to trust such money to Alexander VI, as he was capable of
using it for other purposes.
The increasing danger threatened by the advance of the
Osmanli from Hungary on Carinthia and Carniola, more especially the serious
condition of Venice in the Mediterranean, and the fall of Lepanto, followed
shortly afterwards by that of Modon, awakened the
anxiety of the whole western world. Ferdinand and Louis XII sent assistance,
all turned also to Henry, and urgent requests for help were sent to England
during the years 1500 to 1503.
The king received these appeals with some coldness; he
went so far, indeed, as to empower Gigli and Cardinal Hadrian in February,
1500, to represent him at a congress in Rome. They were to take part in the
deliberations, but were not authorised to make any settlement. In the same way,
he had sent to the kings of Spain and France to express his sorrow at the
disastrous state of affairs, but regretted that the distance at which his
kingdom lay prevented him from giving any substantial help.
Pope Alexander at once tried to utilise the situation
in his own fashion. The jubilee year of 1500 had attracted crowds of pilgrims
to Rome ; but in order that the blessing of absolution might be extended to those
who were unable to visit the holy places, nuncio, Gaspar Pons, was despatched
to England at the end of 1501. The proceeds of the indulgences which he had to
sell were to be devoted to the Turkish war. Pons had been given the highest
powers of absolution, and was provided with a scale for the sale of
indulgences, graduated according to the income of each person. The tax of a
tenth, which was to have been imposed on the clergy, was by the Province of
Canterbury redeemed by a payment of £12,000, but York agreed to the tenth. Pons
reaped a golden harvest. Henry himself contributed £4000, but did not desire to
hear further about the crusade. It was a noble thing, he said, that the Pope
should wish to promote peace among the princes of Christendom, for this holy
purpose; he himself, God be thanked, had long been at peace with all of them ;
he could, however, offer no help, the claims upon France, Spain, as well as
Hungary and Poland, were greater.
As had been shown by his gift of money to the Pope,
Henry had not altogether held back from the common cause of Christendom, and
this he further proved when at the beginning of 1502 the envoys of the most
hard-pressed powers, Venice and Hungary, came over to England. It was reported
that he dismissed them in the roughest way, saying, whoever had not the means
to carry on war with the Turks ought to make peace; but in fact he promised
assistance in money to the Hungarian ambassador, and sent one Geoffrey Blyth to
King Ladislaus to treat in the matter. There was considerable delay before
payment, but it was finally made, though to what amount we do not know. Henry
showed himself much more active, however, when his own interests were involved,
and in June, 1502, he sent off 10,000 to Maximilian for his Turkish war, in
order to prevent him from supporting Suffolk any longer.
The sacrifices, however, which Henry made for the
great cause of Christendom were certainly not heavy, and he steadily refused to
give any assistance in men and ships; the ruler of the island kingdom of the
West left the defence of the East to those who felt themselves most in danger.
Some time after, when Louis XII, stirred up by Portugal, was negotiating with him
about a crusade, we hear him expressing quite different sentiments. Then Henry
spoke of a crusade as if it were the ardent desire of his heart, from the
fulfilment of which he had been hitherto withheld, but which he now hoped to
set on foot, to the praise of God, with the aid of France and Portugal, and
perhaps even to take part in it himself.
We might at first suppose this to be mere talk, but
many things seem to have weighed upon the king’s mind towards the end of his
life, concerning which he desired to make his peace with Heaven. In the year
1506 the knights of Rhodes had appointed him their patron, and in May, 1507, he
invited Pope Julius to summon the princes of Christendom to a war against the
Infidel. “He had always aimed at peace, and had never striven after conquests.
It was repugnant to him to shed Christian blood, but he would willingly shed
the blood of unbelievers.” The letter was read before the college of cardinals,
and a copy sent to various courts. The Pope declared he had been so much
overjoyed at it that he had read it through ten times, but added that for his
part he did not need such admonitions. When, however, the time for action
arrived, the Pope excused himself. He did no more than show his goodwill by an
invitation to Henry to join him in mediating between Maximilian and Louis XII,
and trying to turn their arms against the Turks. Yet Henry did not so easily
relinquish his idea; he tried to overcome the papal scruples, and spoke to
others of a crusade against Africa, and of an armed expedition he proposed to
make into Hungary; he also permitted the Pope to proclaim an indulgence to
raise funds for building St. Peter’s Church. Shortly before his death a
reminder came once more from Rome. The failing king commended the idea, but
said his bodily condition made it impossible for him to comply with the
summons.
Thus in the question of a crusade, his policy was as
uncertain as it was in other directions. Instead of quietly holding to the
standpoint of English interests, he indulged in far-reaching schemes and ideas,
perhaps he even went so far as to believe that he would be able to carry them
out. In any case this was never to be, for at that moment the Pope had joined
the League of Cambray, and was making preparations for the overthrow of Venice.
When announcing his willingness to take part in a
Turkish war, Henry made an assertion in which he was fully justified, namely,
that he was then at peace with the other Powers. However strained his relations
with Ferdinand might be, the sagacity habitually displayed by these two
monarchs would have prevented any definite rupture between them. The danger
that threatened the friendship with Scotland, founded upon the matrimonial
alliance, was also only transitory.
Here at first matters had gone on quietly and
peacefully. The modest English dowry had been paid with punctuality, and James,
going beyond the assurance which he had at first only given by word of mouth,
entered on the 12th of July, 1505, into a written agreement not to renew the
old alliance of Scotland with France. The very plain-spoken letter he wrote to
Charles of Gueldres with regard to Suffolk had been quite to Henry’s mind. He
now continued to behave with coldness to Duke Charles, and, following the
example set by England, merely responded to appeals for help by declaring
himself, in June, 1506, willing to act as a friendly intercessor. He had previously
entered into a correspondence with Charles’s antagonist Philip during Philip’s
residence in England.
But his conduct was now soon to undergo a change. It
was certainly not with the view of promoting Henry’s interests that James
interfered in Irish affairs. The elder O’Donnell, who had assumed the position
of a ruler in Ulster, was dependent on James, and his son even called him a
subject of the Scotch king. He did not, it is true, receive any armed help in
his perpetual feuds, but both father and son received from James the assurance
of his confidence and good-will.
The fact was that French influence was making itself
felt in Scotland ; and here came into play those doubts which had arisen in
France as to Henry’s possible attitude with regard to the war in Gelderland,
which, stirred up by France, had just broken out again. In January, 1507, James
had already written to Henry, this time clearly in the interest of Duke
Charles, threatening that if Henry took part with Charles’s enemies, his own
alliance with England must be dissolved, and the sword again decide between
them? It was a further source of annoyance to Henry that Scotchmen, among whom
were men of high rank, travelled through England in disguise and without
passports, and even took with them the envoys of foreign Powers. In this
manner, James Hamilton, Earl of Arran, and his brother, Sir Patrick Hamilton,
of Kincavill, went over to France in the year 1507.
In the following January, when they were about to return in the same way,
a gentleman, named Hugh Vaughan, went on the king’s bidding to meet them, and
conducted them up to London. Banquets, hospitably provided for them by the city
authorities, and a solemn reception by the king, could not disguise from them
the fact that they were prisoners.
Henry, in a letter of the 23rd of January, 1508,
written with his own hand, made complaints to James, and in March sent off
Thomas Wolsey to Scotland to adjust the matter. James spoke of the perpetual
warfare on the Border between their respective subjects, and Wolsey was forced
to confess to Henry that, according to the information he had gathered, the
offences of Englishmen were to those of Scotchmen as four to one. James was
especially indignant about the treatment of Arran. He allowed that this
nobleman had acted in contravention of treaties, but asserted that it had been
against his will, and that Henry had therefore no right to be dissatisfied
unless James, on receiving his complaint, had refused to punish the earl. He
firmly rejected the offer made by Henry that he would release Arran, if he
would promise on oath to return again to England, and declared that if Arran
acceded to such a condition, he would hang him when he came back to Scotland.
He insisted that Henry had no right to punish the offender, but should, in
accordance with the treaty, leave that to his ally.
James assured the ambassador in the most solemn manner
of his own loyalty to the treaty, and Wolsey, too, was of opinion that he, the
queen, and the Bishop of Murray did adhere to it; but that the Scottish nation,
nobles as well as commoners, were demanding a renewal of the league with
France. Wolsey proposed a personal meeting between the kings, and James seemed
inclined to the idea, though his councillors were against it.
Conflicting reports now reached his country of the
manner in which Arran was being treated in England. It is clear that Henry
surrounded him with guards and cut him off from intercourse with others. A
Scotch doctor, who had secretly gained access to his countryman, was turned out
with rough words and “almost with violence ” by Vaughan.
Of the final settlement of this affair we have no
exact information. In March, 1508, James had made a request for a safe conduct
for the Bishop of Murray. On the 16th of June the bishop came to London, and
there remained till the 20th of July, about which time the Scotch lords were
set at liberty. There exists an agreement to return to England, dated August
8th, made by Sir Patrick Hamilton in the same form which Henry had demanded
from Arran, and Arran, on the 13th of August, went security for his brother. Possibly
this middle course had been adopted that both parties might to a certain extent
get their own way, but Henry’s aim in imposing this obligation is not quite
clear; at any rate, thus the affair ended.
Henry had followed Wolsey’s wise counsel, and had not
insisted on a condition which James regarded as incompatible with honour, and
therefore would, in no case, have granted. It was obviously best, under the circumstances,
to cement the alliance by concession, for it was only thus that Henry could
succeed in obtaining fresh guarantees against a Franco-Scottish compact. The
attitude of Scotland shows very plainly the importance she attached at all
times to a policy of peace with France. That Henry was satisfied with the
manner in which Wolsey had conducted this affair is shown by the fact that the
king employed him immediately afterwards on a mission to the Netherlands. It
seems that James had considerable trouble in holding to the alliance with
England against the current of public opinion in his court. The picture of the
chivalrous king, as it stands out before us in Wolsey’s report, is drawn with
something of the same sympathetic feeling that we find in the earlier
description of him given by the Spanish Ayala. The friendship between England
and Scotland continued so long as Henry VII lived. It was not till the
political relations had completely altered, under the reign of his son, that
the old enmity between the neighbour countries again broke out.
Of Ireland, which had earlier been the centre of disorder,
there is not much to relate during these latter years of King Henry. The
country remained as before in a condition of primitive barbarism, distracted by
race feuds. Although Henry had left the government almost entirely in the hands
of the Lord Deputy Kildare, some few measures were taken, based on the
principle laid down by Poynings’ Act, that if all
Ireland could not be brought under control, at any rate the districts under
English rule should be made as English as possible. Thus an Irish parliament in
1498 was made to enact that English dress and arms should be worn, and that the
upper classes should ride “in a saddle, after the English fashion.” The
dwellers within the Pale were thereby compelled to adopt English manners, and
attempts were made to separate them as much as possible from uncivilized
Ireland. A subsequent parliament, in the year 1508, had to give a general order
forbidding commercial intercourse with the wild Irish; with England alone was
traffic in horses permitted. In spite of all the efforts at a closer union with
England, good care was taken to protect the English against bad Irish money.
Kildare kept himself in favour with the king. In the
year 1503 he remained for three months in England, and took back with him his
son, who had been held there as hostage, and who soon afterwards was raised to
the dignity of Lord Treasurer. The perpetual and endless internal struggles are
without general interest. The Lord Deputy himself often took up arms. In 1504
he gained a victory at Knockdoe over his son-in-law,
the Lord Clanricarde. He sent, through the Archbishop
of Dublin, a special report of this feud to the king, and Henry allowed him to
act in the matter as he willed. Not only these destructive combats, but
constant sufferings from failure of crops, cattle disease, and famine checked
the development of the uncultivated land, so that Henry might rest satisfied
when the parliament of the English Pale voted him from time to time grants of
money. He took a prudent middle course with regard to Ireland, and thus at
least made secure for himself the modest power which he possessed there. After
describing the year 1504, the Irish chronicler Ware remarks that he is now
coming to more peaceful times, which will therefore have fewer great deeds and
stirring events to offer, “for peace, golden peace, gives not to the historian
such material for description as does war.” Thus Ireland also was in the
enjoyment of peace when the days of Henry VII were drawing to a close.
With all the errors of his latter
years, Henry still remained true to the leading principles of his policy. His
later schemes were not, indeed, productive of good, but they were not able to spoil
what had already been accomplished. It seems as if Henry himself had desired to
sum up his work when, in making the announcement of the marriage treaty of
December, 1507, he wrote thus to the city: “This our realm is now environed,
and in manner, closed in every side with such mighty princes our good sons,
friends, confederates, and allies, that by the help of our Lord the same is and
shall be perpetually established in rest and peace and wealthy condition.”
It has been easy to form a mistaken idea of the
foreign policy of the king, unaccompanied as it was by the noise of war and
martial glory. What it did was to serve as a wall of defence round the kingdom.
Assured peace, an honoured position among the Powers, English trade pushed to
the front in the general competition, quiet and security at home under the
newly consolidated power of the Crown, rendering for the first time possible a
prosperous administration of internal affairs,—all this would have been impossible
without the prudent, clear-sighted, judicious, and far-seeing policy of Henry
VII.
CHAPTER VII.
MONARCHICAL POLICY.
We have been able to see how closely Henry’s state
policy, properly so called, had become bound up with his commercial policy.
Trade with the Netherlands still formed the central point of England’s
mercantile interests; next in importance to it stood that with the countries
bordering on the Mediterranean and the Baltic. Among the schemes projected by
Henry for the advance of England’s trade, some were not crowned with success.
The attack upon the men of the Hanse towns in their own field had completely
failed; nor, after the first attempts, had any further expeditions to the West
been undertaken; yet, with the increased stability of the Throne and State, the
English merchant could venture forth with more energy and boldness.
Closely connected with his commercial policy were
Henry’s efforts to encourage English shipping as a means of furthering trade.
The Parliament of 1490 had renewed the first Navigation Act, which had for a
while been in abeyance, had forbidden the importation by foreigners of Toulouse
woad-dye, as well as of French wines, and had laid certain restrictions on
freightage by foreign ships to English ports. Unfortunately direct information
as to the success of this law is not to be obtained; but that it was successful
is seen by its gradual extension, and especially by the fact that Henry
ventured to entrust the export of woollens for the Netherlands, which he was
particularly anxious to promote, to English merchant vessels exclusively. This
export of woollens, as also a considerable portion of the general trade between
England and the Netherlands, still continued to be forbidden to foreigners,
even after the removal of the last interdiction on trade during the years 1504
to 1507. Henry took away the sum deposited in pledge with the men of the Hansa,
on the ground that they had disregarded this interdiction, and all importation
of goods from the territories of the Archduke Charles was forbidden them when a
new ten years’ charter was granted to the Venetians for trade with England
(March 24, 1507). With the increasing efficiency of English merchant vessels,
the hitherto indispensable assistance of foreigners had become less necessary.
As these merchant vessels could at any time be requisitioned
by the king for the service of the State, to increase their number was of the
greatest importance for the protection of the country. Usually the vessels were
either hired or forcibly requisitioned for the king’s service from the proprietors,
whether foreigners or not; but Henry thought it well, instead of depending
entirely on vessels thus obtained, to secure supremacy for himself over the
neighbouring seas by creating the nucleus of a royal fleet. Perhaps it is
vessels of this fleet which are meant when, in the items of expenditure, “the
king’s ships” are mentioned amongst which the Sovereign is often named,
together with the Mary of Portsmouth, and the Swan. The Great
Harry acquired a certain celebrity, and was subsequently rechristened the Regent
by Henry’s son. It is true that, as far as we can learn, these beginnings were
small and modest; still the honour remains to Henry of having, in this matter
also, taken the first step, and shown the way to his successors.
The king’s example served to foster the spirit of
enterprise in his subjects, as was the case with the encouragement he gave to
Cabot. Towards the end of the century an Italian observer mentions fishery and
navigation as the principal occupations of the English people, and the intelligent
Polydore Vergil commends Henry especially for having made England rich by the
support he afforded to commerce, “in order to improve this art, which is at
once useful and excellent for all mortals.” In the first place, this policy of the
king’s affected the two great English trading companies—the Staplers and the
Merchant Adventurers.
It was the merchant adventurers who almost exclusively
reaped the benefit of a commercial policy, the object of which was to exclude
the foreigner, and to open up for the native trade new paths and fields of
commerce; for it was the export of woollen goods, their special commodity,
which Henry endeavoured to foster, rather than of wool, the commodity of the
staplers. The merchant adventurers formed a loose association extending over
the whole country, and a sign of their rising prosperity is shown in an attempt
made to form in their midst a closer, but also more stable and self-dependent
association. This attempt originated with the London merchants.
Once already very vigorous and successful efforts had
been made by the Londoners to obtain a monopoly, by keeping in their own hands
as much as possible the whole trade of England which passed through London. In
Henry’s third Parliament, 1487, there came up for discussion an ordinance of
the city authorities, which forbade the citizens to frequent other markets in
England outside the metropolis. They considered themselves possessed of
sufficient power in the metropolis of commerce to exercise this pressure; but
at once great lamentations arose over the ruin which threatened the other
markets, where the inhabitants of the neighbourhood, who would now be obliged
to come to London, had hitherto bought their goods. The Parliament reversed
this ordinance, and prohibited it from being re-enacted on penalty of a
substantial fine.
The new measure proceeded, not from the town itself,
but from the principal merchants, under the leadership of the Mercers’ Guild.
In certain places on the Continent, especially at Antwerp, the merchant adventurers,
in order to defray the expenses of management, levied a toll on their
merchants, amounting at first to half a noble, afterwards to a hundred
shillings Flemish. The Londoners, who were in the ascendant at Antwerp, carried
their point, and required that every merchant trading with the Netherlands
should pay an entrance fee of £20. This was certainly intended to be the first
step towards getting the trade with the Netherlands into the hands of the
richer merchants, who could easily pay such a duty. The rest of the trading
class would thereby be brought into a state of dependence on a ring of London
monopolists, and the wider association hitherto existing would be replaced by a
narrow and exclusive corporation.
The effect of this was seen at once; the other
merchant adventurers withdrew from Antwerp, but laid a complaint before the
Parliament of 1497, pointing out the injury thus threatened to the export trade
in woollens, and the rise which would ensue in price of imported commodities.
Ready as Henry was to further English trade at the expense of foreigners, he
entirely discountenanced such selfish action in England itself. An Act of
Parliament declared trade with the Netherlands free, and only permitted the
levy of a toll of ten marks. Any further taxation by English subjects for the
benefit of themselves or their company was forbidden on penalty of a fine of
£20, and the payment to the injured person of ten times the amount of the
impost.
This enactment for preserving freedom of competition
was not directed against the merchant adventurers in general, but against a
certain section of them, those, no doubt, the most powerful. Some consolation,
however, was afforded to the Londoners, for after having on one occasion
disregarded their complaints directed against retail dealing by foreigners in
their town, Henry was finally induced, on the 2ist of May, 1498, in return for
the payment of £5000 to the royal coffers, to confirm to the Londoners their
privileges, and to restrain foreigners from trading, except through the medium
of the citizens. Hence the privileges of the Hanse merchants, when subsequently
renewed, were still restricted as far as regarded the town of London.
Though Henry had discountenanced attempts at exclusiveness
within the circle of the merchant adventurers, he was nevertheless ready to
strengthen the position they already held as a company, and to give them a
stronger central administration. On the 4th of March, 1499, he granted
permission to the company to assume a coat-of-arms of their own, and on the
9th of November, 1500, he confirmed the ancient charter of Henry IV. His decree
of the 28th of September, 1505, however, went still further. The removal of the
market to Calais in January, 1505, during the course of the commercial quarrel
with Philip, had aroused in Henry himself a desire for a stricter organisation
of English merchants, which would facilitate the carrying out of such measures.
An elected governor and twenty-four assistants, likewise elected out of various
guilds, were to have the direction of affairs and the right of pronouncing
judgment within the company, and were to be allowed to punish resistance to
their decisions. By a supplementary decree of the 24th of January, 1506, they
obtained the right to call all their members together to a congress in London
or any other place. Their enactments were not, of course, to encroach on the
royal dignity and prerogative; with this proviso, all merchant adventurers were
to submit to them, and the king promised them his support on all occasions.
The head-quarters of this authority was at first
Calais, but, after the conclusion of the commercial conflict, it was removed to
the Netherlands; and thus it was not in London, but at the centre of the
merchant adventurers’ foreign commerce that this authoritative administration,
armed with such extraordinarily strong powers, was created, facilitating any
transaction between the king and the company, preventing any separate action
within the body itself, and yet not possessing the right to interfere beyond
its own sphere.
This was just the point against which it was necessary
to guard, for once already Henry had been obliged to take the ancient Company
of the Staplers under his protection against the Merchant Adventurers. While
the staplers held the monopoly of the rich export trade for the Continent in
raw materials, wool-fels, hides, lead, and tin, as well
as wool, many of them also traded individually in other articles, more
especially in cloth, outside the Staple. In November, 1504, the merchant
adventurers instituted a law-suit before the Star Chamber on this subject,
because these same staple merchants had, in such cases, objected to submit
themselves to the authority established by the merchant adventurers. The court
decided that any member of one corporation, who should take up the trade of
another, must become subject to the regulations of that other. The exact scope
of this decision had not been well thought out. The merchant adventurers, who
at that time had been transferred to Calais, the ancient head-quarters of the
staplers, at once demanded from the Staple merchants trading in cloth, a duty
of ten marks, and, in default of payment, confiscated the goods. Henry
immediately decided (June 25, 1505) that the sentence was to be understood thus:
no pressure was to be put on merchants to enter the company, and only the usual
duties might be levied on the goods, which were to be forthwith restored to the
owner.
Henry had no intention of sacrificing the Staple,
which had for long been the foster-child of the Crown; it was on the revenues
of the Staple that the extremely expensive maintenance and protection of the
English continental port of Calais depended. The Italian narrator remarks that
“the Castle of Rhodes itself could not be more strongly guarded from the Turks
than was Calais from the French.” The Parliament of 1487 resolved that the
whole proceeds of the duty levied on wool and skins should be handed over to
the staplers. Out of this they had to provide the yearly sum of £10,022 4s.
8d., for the garrison of Calais and of the border forts; and in the
event of their not receiving from the king a safe escort for their goods to
Calais, they were to keep back, out of the customs dues in excess of this sum,
the cost for protection on the sea. Besides this, they had also to contribute
towards the London custom-house officials and the judges. The law remained in
force sixteen years, and was renewed, with slight alterations, in 1504, for the
same number of years. Both times it was expressly enacted that the Staple
should not be removed from Calais.
Notwithstanding the increase in other kinds of
exports, the duty on wool amounted to 36 per cent, of the entire revenues
derived by the king from the customs; the staplers paid in customs dues nearly
33,1/3 per cent., and those who were not members of the Staple even as much as
70 per cent, on the value of their goods. The average duty on wool was quite
sufficient in Henry VIIth’s reign to cover the
required amount. Hence the export of wool continued to be most necessary to the
State ; nor must its political importance be underrated, since the need for
wool kept both the Netherlands and Venice to a certain extent economically
dependent on England—a circumstance of which Henry often enough took advantage.
This was the reason why Henry also protected the Staple against the younger and
more aggressive company of Merchant Adventurers. Few felt the importance of a
policy of peace with the Powers of the Continent more than the Staplers, whose
market lay beyond the sea; it was they who had felt most severely the stoppage
of trade during the wars of 1491 and 1492, the more so as they had also
suffered great losses from the ruin of their debtors, during the disturbances
in the Netherlands not long before, in the year 1488.
The merchants of the Staple were possessed of many
privileges and enjoyed in their business relations greater independence than
did others. This was especially the case with the freedom allowed them in the
exchange of money; for, as a rule, the business of money-changing could only be
carried on under a royal licence, and in 1508, this was farmed out for one year
to a Florentine, named Corsy, for a sum of £240.
Henry had a special dislike to the business of money-lending; for, concerning
usury he adhered to the view of the Middle Ages still supported by the Church,
according to which capital in money was unproductive, and interest on loans or
on money-lending in general was illegal. Hence a statute of the year 1487,
forbade the receiving of interest, “that is to say, if any one for £100, which
he receives in goods or in any other way has to pay £120 or to give security
for the amount.” A penalty of £100 was laid on every transgression, and as
these occurred mostly in towns which had privileges of jurisdiction, the duty
of inquiry and passing judgment against the offenders was not left to these
towns, but was undertaken by the Crown, and entrusted to the chancellor or to
the justice of the peace of a neighbouring county, except that to the Church
was reserved “the healing of souls, according to her laws.”
This measure apparently did not meet with much
success, for at the opening of the Parliament of 1495, the Chancellor Morton
expressly brought forward the subject of avaricious money-making and usurers;
and a new law declared, somewhat less bluntly than the former one, that by
usury was to be understood lending money on interest, taking advantage of the
necessitous condition of another, and buying back from him more cheaply within
three months goods which had been sold to him, the taking of land and other
things in pledge or drawing an income from them, until the sum lent had been
repaid; the penalty was to amount to half the value of the things held in
pledge.
To hold to such antiquated views, and to oppose for
any length of time necessary economic advance was, after all, useless trouble.
The intention of the legislator, however, was a good one, for he was anxious to
do away with a supposed danger to steadiness and fair dealing in commercial
intercourse. Measures such as these had their origin in the same solicitude
which Henry also displayed about the external instruments of commerce, and
which formed a not inconsiderable portion of his commercial and economic
policy. In the foreground, naturally, stood the most important medium of
commerce—money, both with regard to the quantity to be drawn into the country
for purposes of exchange, and to its quality. It was everywhere an evil that
the small supply of the precious metal was never equal to the amount required,
and England suffered from this as much as other countries. It was not therefore
from any theory of mercantile principles, but from the urgent claims of
necessity, that every means had to be adopted to preserve and increase the
invaluable store of precious metals. England’s own production could scarcely
count for anything, and yet Henry tried, in 1492, to meet in some measure the
difficulty by reviving the neglected mining industry, and gave to the merchants
of the Metal Staple of Southampton a comprehensive licence for working mines,
with special rights and privileges.
The importation of the precious metals was above all
deemed essential, and to promote this an effort had previously been made by the
decree that every merchant must bring home in return for his exported goods a
certain quantity of bullion; but this decree could not be enforced, and was
allowed to drop. In its place Henry VII pursued the more judicious and
ultimately successful course of increasing the exportation of English goods,
and by law forbidding the export of the money thus brought into the country.
Though for political purposes Henry paid out considerable sums, he compensated
for this by his successful financial treaties, but accomplished most by his
peaceful policy, whereby he put an end to the wars hitherto waged by the kings
of England on the Continent, which had drained the largest amount of money from
the country.
If the English merchant could no longer be compelled,
without imposing too great a restriction on commerce, to bring back with him
money in return for his exported goods, the foreign merchant might at all
events be prevented from taking money away with him in exchange for his goods.
In this Henry followed closely the example set by his predecessors on the
throne, except that he expanded their laws and made them more severe. The
original statute, which included all previous regulations, was issued in 1478
in the reign of Edward IV; it forbade the exportation of gold and silver,
without an express permission from the king ; an alien was compelled to expend
again on other commodities the money he had acquired by the sale of his goods,
and to take a receipt for it. Edward’s law had expired at the end of seven
years; in 1487, the last-named article in it was renewed for an indefinite
period, and extended to traders from Ireland and the Channel Islands. In the
year 1490, a new law prohibited the exportation of all coins and precious metal
for twenty years; no native was allowed, either by purchase or money exchange,
or in any other way, to give money or any precious metal to a foreigner, who
was only permitted to take ten crowns in cash out of the country. In 1504 it
was forbidden to take away more than six shillings and eightpence to Ireland.
These laws were strictly enforced, and attained their
object. Our Italian narrator speaks with enthusiasm of the wealth in silver
plate possessed by private persons in England, and particularly by the Church ;
he admires the great number of goldsmith’s shops. Polydore Vergil also lays
great stress on “the enormous quantity of gold and silver’’ which was brought
into England by traders during Henry’s reign.
The quality as well as the quantity of money was a
subject of constant anxiety, and Henry resorted to severe measures for the
purpose of preventing the serious increase in the amount of debased coin. The
greatest difficulties arose from technical imperfection in the stamping, from
the influx of foreign money of inferior value, and the fraudulent depreciation
of coins by clipping. Since, owing to the deficient supply of the coin of the
country, foreign money could not be excluded, its circulation was permitted
within certain limits. Henry’s third Parliament, however, considered it
necessary to enact that the forging of foreign coin as well as of that of the
country, should be punished as high treason. The bad Irish small coin caused
much annoyance, and its acceptance was repeatedly prohibited. Hitherto the
principle was strictly adhered to that current coin did not lose in value by
wear, although owing to the bad minting this wear was very great; pieces
therefore had to be accepted in payment “even when they were small and light.”
With regard to silver coins especially, there was general confusion and
uncertainty ; the difficulties here were great, owing to clipping, counterfeit
coin, and the importation of bad Irish pieces. Parliament therefore, in the year
1504, took seriously into consideration the whole question of the coinage.
A statute declared that gold coins were only to be
accepted when of full weight, but the silver coins stamped in England, the
groats (four pence), half groats, and penny pieces might be passed even when
imperfect, provided they bore the royal stamp; clipped pieces were to be
refused. For the future new coins were to be stamped with a circle round the
edge to prevent clipping. On the strength of this law, Henry proceeded with
real reforms, over which his panegyrist André goes into ecstacies,
without, unfortunately, in spite of all his flow of words, vouchsafing us
definite information. A royal proclamation of the 27th of April, 1505, made
death the penalty for clipping coin; the value of clipped coin was to be
determined by its weight, and it could be only exchanged at the Mint in
Leadenhall, London. It was about this time that a false coiner of the Tower was
hanged at Tyburn as a warning and example.
Concerning the gold and silver used for purposes other
than coinage, the law also laid down certain fixed regulations, for whenever
there was scarcity in money, many articles made in the precious metals had
often enough to find their way to the Mint. In order therefore to keep some
hold on workers in silver, they were made to conform to the regulations issued
from the Royal Mint. Henry no doubt, in framing these enactments, as also in
the matter of the exchange, tried to secure some advantages for himself; but
when, in May, 1499, Ayala reported of him that he kept all the good gold pieces
for himself, and paid only with bad coin, we suspect this usually favourable
witness had just been somewhat annoyed by Henry’s stubbornness over the
commercial negotiations. Ayala had, in fact, even spoken of a diminution in the
royal revenues, and a falling off in the trade of England. Had Henry been
guilty of such an attempt, it would soon have been put a stop to by his own
law, which required full weight for every coin in circulation. It is possible,
however, that Henry’s activity in accumulating treasure had had a perceptible
effect on the otherwise slender store of money in the country.
More serious than the question of the coinage was the
uncertainty in weights and measures, for when Henry came to the throne, their
condition was chaotic. A law passed by his fourth Parliament of 1491, repeated
the ordinance often issued since the Great Charter, that one standard of
measure and weight should be adhered to. The confusion was attributed to the
standard measures not being sufficiently known, and the Commons begged the king
to have these made in metal at his own cost, and sent to the larger towns in
order that the measures in use there might be altered in conformity with them.
But for some reason or other the Government retained these standard measures
until the Parliament of 1495 gave orders that they should be distributed by the
members of the lower House throughout their own electoral districts. It
happened, by some mistake, that for bushels and gallons, incorrect standard
measures had been made; but in 1497 these were called in by order of the
Commons, and replaced by correct ones. Thus the difficulty had been firmly
grappled with, and confusion and uncertainty removed by definite legislation.
But the chief gain lay in the better means of enforcing the laws, now that a
strong authority existed at the head of a better organised administration.
When speaking of the media of commerce, we must not
forget the roads by which commerce travelled, and these certainly at the
beginning of the reign were very insufficient. Henry’s attention was devoted
almost entirely to the great continental trade, and for it the sea, that
general road for intercourse, lay ready. England herself, moreover, possessed
her great estuaries, navigable for all large vessels for some distance up into
the country. The seafaring merchant was exposed, however, not only to the
dangers of the sea, but also to the piracy which was carried on on all sides, often in quite a recognised way. In all
complaints and grievances, injury inflicted by piracy always stood foremost.
Henry did his best to ensure safety in the Channel, and compelled the merchants
of the Staple to contribute to this purpose. No doubt the frequent calling out
of the little royal navy had the same object in view. We hear occasionally of
men being enlisted to ensure safety on the sea.
In his commercial treaties, Henry made agreements for
mutual obligations of protection and compensation, especially with France and
Spain. Of course he had only his own subjects’ safety in view, for they
themselves carried on the existing practice of piracy just as much as the
others; and possibly Henry often permitted, and even encouraged it in the
pursuit of political or politico-commercial interests, as he did for a while
against the Netherlands, the Hanse merchants, and Denmark, when at variance
with them.
That the care taken to foster trade within the country
was small, as compared with that bestowed on the foreign trade, is evidenced by
the condition of the roads. The maintenance of high-roads and bridges devolved
upon the parishes or else on the whole county. When the drying up of the arm of
the sea between the mainland and the Isle of Thanet had advanced so far that in
the marsh thus formed the ferry-boat had scarcely sufficient water to float it,
the king allowed the neighbouring inhabitants to build a bridge, but at their
own cost. The authorities of the towns had also to be looked after, to see that
they kept in good condition the principal streets used for the traffic which
passed through them. Winchester and Bristol received a reminder on the subject
from Parliament, and four years later the latter complied with the order.
Little care was taken about other roads, most of them
were very unsafe, and assaults, robberies, and murders were of daily
occurrence. This seems to have been the case especially in the south-west; for
in January, 1506, Quirini the Venetian, cast on shore
at Falmouth, preferred to wait there several months for Philip, rather than to
trust himself alone on the dangerous road to London. It was often necessary, when
the king was on his journeys, to make roads for him, and he even caused works
of the kind that were urgently needed to be undertaken at his own expense, but
this was generally not very serious. He also left in his last will a sum of
£2000 for the construction of good roads and bridges between Windsor, Richmond,
Southwark, and Canterbury; they were to be sufficiently wide for two waggons to
drive abreast.
The harbours and estuaries were used only for the
foreign trade. When the merchants of Southampton complained of the stopping up
of the harbour by bars and other arrangements for the fisheries, the right was
conceded to each person to remove such hindrances (1495), and to replace them
was forbidden under threat of punishment. A law also enacted that the
navigation of the Severn should be kept free.
The king seemed himself to put obstacles in the way of
the trade of the country, when he allowed such an extraordinarily high customs
duty to be imposed on an export commodity like wool. Financial considerations,
especially the importance of protecting Calais, could certainly not have been
the sole motive for this, for it is striking to note, that while 33,1/3- and
even 70 per cent, on the value of the goods were exacted as the duty on wool, a
duty of only 7 to 9 per cent, for foreigners, of 1 to 9 per cent, for natives,
and even for the Hanse merchants only 1 to 7 per cent, was levied on exported
woollen cloth. The Italian narrator explains shortly, and to the point, the
reason of this high duty on wool. “ Such a high duty was imposed in order that
wool might not be exported in an undressed state, but that cloth might be
manufactured in the kingdom.” A good part of Henry’s commercial policy, and
still more of his customs policy, was in the interests of English manufacturers.
We have already often noticed this, and especially the way in which Henry
fostered the cloth industry, and gave it his support in its competition with
foreign countries.
The protective measures Henry adopted for this purpose
were not the result of new ideas. We find them mostly to be the further
development of earlier measures, which, at first mere experiments, had often
been remodelled, and were now energetically and successfully carried out. But
Henry’s commercial policy, devoted also to the interests of English industry,
and destined to open up new fields of traffic for English woollen cloth, was
altogether his own. We must remember the bitter struggle carried on on this account with the Netherlands and with the Hanse
towns, especially with Dantzic.
It was Henry’s custom to make a move in several
quarters at the same moment. While trying to extend the area of trade, and to
lighten the conditions of the market, he endeavoured also to facilitate and
increase production.
Woollen cloth was always the special object of his
care. By extreme taxation he checked the exportation of the raw material, wool;
and furthermore kept in force a statute of Edward IV’s of the year 1467, which
restrained foreigners and naturalised aliens from exporting unwoven worsted,
and also cloths which had not been previously fulled
in England. This law he extended in 1487, enacting that the carding and
shearing of cloth must also take place in England. As he himself subsequently
declared, though he included Englishmen under this restriction, he was ready to
grant exceptions. The stipulation that the cloth must be sheared formed one of
the special grievances of the Hanse merchants, who alleged that the cloths were
spoiled by the English shearmen, and the price unduly raised ; also that cloths
were sheared which were not fit to stand it.
English spinners and weavers gained an important advantage
from the statute of 1489, as it reserved for them for a period of ten years,
from the 1st of March, 1490, the right to purchase unshorn wool, or the right
to purchase beforehand until the 15th of August wool growing for the following
year, and at the same time prohibited the foreign merchant from purchasing
shorn wool from the time of shearing till the following 2nd of February, so
that there should only remain for him what the English merchants had discarded.
This was simply an extension, with trifling alterations, of a law of Edward IV,
although the fact is nowhere stated in the statute. To the Venetians alone was
permission given, by the decree of the 1st of May, 1506, to purchase wool at
any time after the 15th of August
Attempts were made by special legislation to meet the
case of local cloth industries. The centre of the English cloth industry was
the county of Norfolk, and in order to check the decay of the worsted industry
in the chief town of Norwich, an exception was made in its favour to the
stringent law of Henry VI concerning apprentices, which had only allowed the
children of rather well-to-do parents with a yearly rental of one pound to
enter the trade. Parliament removed this restriction in 1495, so far as Norwich
was concerned, and in 1497 for the whole county. However, a heavy visitation
befell Norwich about ten years later, when in May and June, 1508, two
conflagrations reduced almost the entire town to ashes.
Silk weaving was a kindred industry possessing at that
time some importance, and was apparently sufficient to meet the requirements of
native consumers. As far back as 1455, in Henry VI’s time, silk weavers both
male and female, had made bitter complaints of the excessive competition in the
trade, especially from the Italians, and for a while the import of silk was
entirely forbidden. After a long interruption of this prohibition, a statute of
Edward IV again forbade the importation of silk goods for four years; Richard
III extended it to ten, and Henry, in his first Parliament, to twenty years. It
was expressly stated by the Parliament of 1504 that this enactment only
concerned certain definite fabrics already specified in the earlier statutes,
and that all other silk, manufactured or raw, should be free. The statute was
to hold good for an indefinite period. This restriction aroused bitter feeling?
among the merchants of the Hansa, especially at Cologne, which was the most
affected, but all complaints were in vain.
Meanwhile Henry was careful not to give in to the
wishes of his own subjects for heavier restrictions on the foreigner and on
foreign products. The extravagant regulations of Edward IV and Richard III,
which checked the importation of articles in which the English manufacture was
still far inferior to the foreign, were not adhered to by him, for in this
matter he protected the consumer, and allowed native industry to be stimulated
by foreign competition.
Henry was guided especially by a desire to protect the
consumer whenever the commercial and industrial classes displayed an inordinate
greed for gain, such as in the attempt at monopoly made by the Londoners, and
by the branch of the merchant adventurers in the metropolis. In the same way he
set himself against every effort for independence on the part of the guilds.
The position acquired by the guilds in England was by no means the same as that
they held in Germany; a statute of Henry VI (1437) interfered materially with
their rights of self-government, and required them to submit their charters and
every by-law to be issued by them in the future to the approval of the
authorities of their town and county. This law had expired, and the selfishness
of the guilds made its loss occasionally felt. Thus in the year 1501, in
consequence, it was said, of fraudulent dealings on the part of the bakers, a
great scarcity of bread arose, although there was a sufficient supply of wheat,
and the price of corn did not stand specially high. What the bakers exactly did
we do not know, but their action possibly recalled to men’s minds the forgotten
law, which was accordingly renewed in the Parliament of 1504, with a reference
to many guild by-laws issued in the interval, and with this noteworthy
alteration: that the control of the guilds and other companies should no longer
be entrusted to the authorities of the town, but to the Chancellor, the
Treasurer, and chief justices, or to the judges of assize when on circuit. By
this means all companies were placed under State inspection, and the by-laws
they issued had to receive the sanction of the Government. This was the first I
step towards depriving them of all independence, and making them mere
instruments of the king.
The inspection of industries by the State was not, however,
first introduced on this occasion, for Government had for a long time exercised
a control over wares and the prices of wares. With regard to the cloth
industry, in particular, Henry had merely to adhere to the statutes of his
predecessors, especially those of Edward IV and Richard III, which had
determined the size, weight, and quality of the cloth, and had regulated the
work of inspection. Henry only removed, at least for a time, the penalties
attached to Richard’s ordinances, which had been found to interfere too much
with the industry. When the entry of apprentices was made easier into the trade
of the worsted shearmen of Norwich, the same law provided that no one might
become a worsted shearman who had not served a seven years’ apprenticeship. The
control, at first confided to the masters, was afterwards taken away from them,
in 1504.
The mode of manufacture was also considered by the
law, as, for instance, when the simpler and much-used method of singeing off
was forbidden for fustians; and as early as Henry’s first Parliament,
regulations were made about the work of the tanners, and the division of labour
between them and the leather-dressers. Even the stuffing of beds attracted the
attention of king and Parliament. On the complaint of two London parishes in
the neighbourhood of St. Paul’s, of the poisoning of air and water by the
butchers close by, butchers in every town, with the exception of Berwick and
Carlisle, were forbidden to exercise their trade within the walls. The
cloth-workers and tailors were accused of claiming too large profits in the
retail trade; and for the hat and cap manufacturers the law set a limit on
prices, which was certainly far below their demands. On the other hand, protection
was afforded to stationary handicrafts against the hawker’s trade.
In many of these industrial Acts of Henry VII’s, the
express aim was to discourage sloth and idleness, and this was insisted on when
the licence for mining was granted on the 25th of June, 1492, and yet still
more strongly in his agrarian legislation.
In the reign of Henry VII that great agrarian
revolution first made itself really felt, which in the following century was to
culminate in a most serious crisis, notwithstanding all the efforts of
legislators to avert it. Of all the productions of English husbandry, wool was
the most important. The favourable conditions of the English climate for
grazing and the breeding of livestock, gave it an important advantage over all
other countries. We have seen already how English wool commanded the market.
From the “Italian Relation” we learn that agriculture was only carried on for
home consumption; “because were they to plough and sow all the land that was
capable of cultivation, they might sell a quantity of grain to the surrounding
countries”; but the deficiency was made up for, by the great abundance of
cattle, “especially they have an extraordinary number of sheep, which yield
them a quantity of the best wool.”
Besides the constant need for wool on the Continent,
it was also now in demand for the cloth industry at home, which was fostered in
every way by the State. The rapid rise of England as an industrial and
commercial State, based chiefly on the production and export of wool and cloth,
necessarily affected English agriculture. In a country with an open line of
coast, accessible on almost every side, with rivers navigable far inland, and
few natural hindrances to intercourse in the interior, the same change affected
larger districts with greater ease than was the case elsewhere.
Little wonder that all husbandry tended in that
direction which promised the highest profits, especially as another
circumstance contributed to the same change. In England the dues on the land
were already converted into money charges, and the landlord naturally preferred
to collect his rent from a few larger farmers than from many small ones. Much
land was now enclosed, by throwing together small pieces of ground into larger
farms, and this, coupled with the change to a style of agriculture, more suited
to the special circumstances of England, could only have been regarded as a
blessing, where the land was divided into a number of small holdings, if the
small copyholder had not been thereby pushed out. Unfortunately, in consequence
of the attractive profits to be obtained from breeding live-stock, the land
hitherto arable was at the same time converted into pasture. Land was thus
withdrawn from both plough and ploughman, the small owner was not only thrust
out of his former holding, but work and livelihood were taken away from the
agricultural labourer in general, since the keeping of stock only necessitated
a small amount of man’s labour.
In the first years of Henry’s reign, the evil
consequences of this change had already made themselves felt. From the Isle of
Wight came complaints that houses and villages were razed to the ground, fields
hedged round and converted into pasture, and that farms which formerly were divided
among several, now came into the hands of one man; that the island, so
important for the protection of England, was becoming depopulated, and
inhabited only by cattle. From all parts of the kingdom came reports of the
great evils produced by the demolition of dwellings and the conversion of
ploughland into pasture, “whereby idleness, the cause and root of all evil,
begins daily to grow.” In some places, where formerly two hundred men found
occupation, now there were only two or three herdsmen.
Henry’s third Parliament, during the session of
January and February, 1490, enacted that no one in the Isle of Wight should
occupy a farm at a rental of more than ten marks, that contracts not in
accordance with this should be annulled, and that throughout the kingdom the
owners of houses, which in the course of the last three years had been let with
twenty or more acres, should be compelled to keep up those houses.
Henry, in the interest of agriculture, made strenuous
efforts to restrain the keeping of live-stock; the heavy duties on wool were
designed for the same object, as were the restrictions on the purchase of wool.
His aim was to lower the price and to make its production less remunerative;
only where the English cloth industry was concerned was freedom permitted and development
encouraged. But this, as well as subsequent still more stringent enactments,
serve only to show how futile is the attempt to stem the tide of a great
economic movement, progressing by natural laws, by combating its consequences
without inquiring into its deeper causes. It was necessary that England should
pass through this crisis, with its mighty social convulsions.
The amount of production was gradually becoming
insufficient to meet the increasing demand for wool; keeping stock was,
besides, not only cheaper than growing corn, but also more lucrative, on
account of the lowness of the normal price of corn. This low standard of
prices, partly accounted for by improved methods of farming, shows that, in
spite of the enclosures and the newly converted pasture land, England still
produced a sufficient quantity of bread-stuffs for her own consumption.
Legislation did not concern itself about these economic causes, for the new
movement was not inspired by a desire to provide sustenance for the people, but
was actuated, as it expressly stated, by social and political considerations.
These, too, were the motive of Henry’s attempt to facilitate the entry of the
superfluous agricultural population of Norfolk into the wool industry.
As an export, corn was not an article of great
importance; as yet, under normal conditions, the countries of Europe had not
needed any importation of grain. Export from England was legally free; only
once did a royal edict forbid it, when, in 1491, war was imminent, and, owing
to a bad harvest, the price of corn rose high. Strange though the policy
appears on the part of a government which aimed at the encouragement of
agriculture, the export of corn seems sometimes to have been subject to
restrictions, otherwise it would not have been necessary for the Pope, in 1504,
when there was a dearth in the States of the Church, to beg for a special permission
that corn might be exported from England, which was granted readily enough. The
request was repeated in the following year. The export of horses was strictly
limited, that of mares entirely forbidden, as also, we are told, the export of
cattle.
The object was to retain in the country its own
material for breeding stock, a matter of special importance with regard to
English sheep. A statute of 1423 had interdicted their export without special
license from the king; but Edward IV abused this right to grant permission,
when he allowed his sister, the Duchess Margaret of Burgundy, to export
annually, without paying any duty, not only one thousand oxen, but also two
thousand rams. He was subsequently accused of having allowed the breed of
Spanish sheep to be improved by English sheep, so that their wool was able to
compete with the English wool. Henry was hardly likely to follow Edward’s
example in this, and the license to Margaret was in his reign withdrawn. But
one case has come under our notice, which occurred during the first years of
his reign, when he allowed a certain William Tyll to export to Picardy, in
English ships, a hundred oxen and six hundred sheep. At other times also sheep
were, as a matter of fact, exported.
True, the policy was often vacillating and
contradictory, the means employed frequently in opposition to the end in view;
but, in all these measures, certain leading ideas were always prominent. In all
the legislation, especially in that relating to agriculture, social and
political considerations were always recurring with peculiar significance;
besides the maintenance of a rural middle class, there was the desire to keep
the king’s subjects from idleness, and to take care that “the poor common
people might get work and occupation,” and that not so much for the support of
life, as on account of the demoralizing influence which idleness, the mother of
all vices, has on men.
Mendicity, vagabondage, and crime abounded in England.
In spite of all the severe penalties, there was no country in the world,
according to the “Italian Relation,” “in which there are so many thieves and
robbers as in England, so that few can venture out in the country except in the
middle of the day, and still fewer at night in the towns, especially in London.
People here are taken up every day by dozens, like birds in a covey, yet, for
all this, they never cease to rob and murder in the streets.” The struggle
against vagabondage was an attempt to close up one of the sources of crime. The
laws against vagrants were of old date, but the severe punishments which were
imposed by a statute of Richard II., in 1483, in re-enactment of an ordinance
of Edward III, were done away with by Henry in 1495. The vagrant who had been
taken up was to be set in the stocks for three days, and fed on bread and
water, and then to be released; if he returned, he would be punished by six
days of the stocks. Every beggar incapable of work was compelled to return to
the hundred “where he has last resided, or where he is best known or was born,”
and there to remain without begging out of the said hundred; scholars,
soldiers, and sailors were required to show a certificate from their
University, their superior officers, or other authorities. These regulations
were improved upon by the statute of 1504, which adjudged to the vagabond who
had been taken up, only a day and a night in the stocks, and also carried out
more definitely the idea of a house for relief. The vagrant was made to return
to his native place, or to the place in which he had lived for three years; the
relief, however, merely consisted in the permission to beg. The overseers were
threatened with punishment for any carelessness, and the crown officials and
the judges were given the supreme control.
This greater leniency towards vagrants, who were not
criminals, was in accordance with Henry’s endeavour to meet the evil not only
by prohibition and punishment, but by definite measures of reform. Various
statutes already mentioned were framed with the object of providing
opportunities for work—such as the Navigation Act, for sailors; the measures
for the protection of industry, for artisans ; the laws against enclosures, for
agricultural labourers. At the same time an attempt, though in strictly
dictatorial fashion, was made to promote the interests of the workman himself,
by regulations with regard to labour, hours, and wages.
On the whole, the condition of a workman in the
fifteenth century was not an unfavourable one when we remember the low price of
the necessaries of life, especially of corn. Wages remained almost stationary
for more than a century, at a fair “living” rate, which was nowhere exceeded
except in London. Attempts to restrict by law anywise in wages were not a
novelty. Similar attempts had been made, about the middle of the fourteenth
century, under Edward III, and had been frequently repeated, though without
success. A statute of Henry VI, which only aimed at adjusting wages to the
standard which prevailed outside London, exercised no visible influence. This
also regulated the relations between master and servant; no servant was allowed
to leave one situation without having first secured another. As a supplement to
this statute, the Parliament of 1495 undertook a fresh measure. The normal rate
of wages was somewhat raised ; though the summer wages, fixed at 6d.
daily for carpenters, masons, and brickmakers, tallied with the average of the
preceding three years. A male domestic servant was to receive annually, in
addition to money for clothes, 19s. 8d.; a female servant, 14s.;
a child under fourteen, 12s. 8d.; 2d. were deducted from a
labourer’s daily wages for his board.
These were the highest wages generally allowed. In
places where the usual wages were lower they had to remain so. Every workman
who was not distinctly otherwise occupied, was compelled to work for the legal
wage, and half-days were to be paid only as half, holidays not at all. Whoever
left unfinished any work he had engaged to do, was with exceptional severity
punished by one month’s imprisonment and a fine of one pound.
The law is especially interesting in its endeavour to
regulate work, and to punish those workmen who did not earn their wages, who
came too late and left too early, sat too long over meals, and spent too much
time in sleep. From the middle of March to the middle of November each workman
had to be at work at five o’clock in the morning, half an hour was allowed for
breakfast, an hour and a half for the midday meal, while work did not cease
till between seven and eight o’clock in the evening; in winter it lasted from
daybreak till dusk. A penalty was incurred not only by the workman who demanded
higher wages, but by the master who pay them. There was not much object in
regulating the rate of wages, when, without such regulations, they had for a
long time remained so extraordinarily steady, and Henry seems soon to have come
to this opinion. As early as the Parliament of 1497 the clauses on wages in the
earlier statute were repealed, although enactments about compulsory labour and
hours of labour remained in force.
Thus the workmen, and especially the domestic
servants, were kept in strict dependence and discipline. This was the case also
with the apprentices during their seven years’ apprenticeship. Moreover, the
law deprived them of most amusements. Games, such as cards, dice, and ball,
were only allowed them at Christmas under the supervision of the master and in
his own house; offenders were to be set in the stocks for a day. The
apprentices, servants, and day-labourers had by no means an enviable lot; they
were kept for the most part very closely to work by their employers. One result
of this severity and of the specially long period of dependence for the
apprentice, always struggling after liberty in his work, was that he burst
through this constraint as soon an opportunity offered. The storming of the
Steelyard in y 1493 is an instance of this, when the apprentices opened the '
attack, although we do not know how far their masters may have secretly aided
and abetted in the riot against the hated foreigner.
Existing relations were strained rather than improved
by this legislative interference, which bore the stamp of Henry’s policy with
regard to workmen, and was carried out consistently in all his enactments. The
aim of the legislator was to give as far as possible full opportunity for work,
and then to threaten idleness with punishment, while those incapable or
unwilling to work were to be despatched to the place where they were known and
could be watched. Diligence and X industry were to be awakened by increasing
the supply of work and compelling all to labour. This was not, however, to show
a care, for the workmen in the modern sense. The lower classes were to be kept
steady and obedient in their proper place in the State, and compelled to work
for the benefit of industry and agriculture, for which their services should be
obtainable at as cheap a rate as possible. Henry’s social policy was in its
nature distinctly educational. Besides aiming at the promotion of industry and
public order, he was careful to consider what was then regarded as the moral
welfare of the lower classes, and to these ends severe restrictions on their
exterior well-being were held to be necessary.
All the care bestowed by the State upon trade,
industry, and agriculture, upon the medium of exchange and the regulation of
industry, as well as upon the condition of the worker, started from one point
of view, and, except for occasional deviations, worked for one end. It is true
that this solicitude bears often a twofold aspect; it opens new paths, and at
the same time clings to traditional prejudice; as a whole, it constantly
endeavoured to hold to existing usage, and to construct by enlarging upon it. Into
all branches of labour this activity on the part of the State thrust itself,
now promoting, now restraining. The Government created for itself in those
matters where hitherto it had possessed no power—as in the case of the guilds
and the legislation on usury—a possibility of immediate legal interference: and
this idea may have had some influence in the organisation of the merchant
adventurers into a closer corporation. Everywhere, along with this increasing
activity of the Crown in all branches of economic life, their dependence upon
the Crown was made the more complete.
MONARCHICAL REFORMS IN JUDICIAL PROCEDURE.
The legislation of Henry VII, with regard to the
administration of justice, was one special outcome of his monarchical policy.
We must here refer to what has been already said. Even throughout the period of
the civil wars the laws and regulations of England had, it is true, been
preserved, though the strength to enforce them had been wanting. They had been
compelled to give way before the violence of a powerful nobility. War and
internal disorder had, in fact, constantly favoured the supremacy of the nobles;
individual lords kept in their pay bands of armed retainers, wearing their own
particular badge, with whose assistance they formed a most serious obstacle to
all orderly exercise of the law. In league with the sheriff, they had, by an
arbitrary packing of the juries, by the corruption, and still more by the
intimidation of the jurymen, overawed the county courts.
This disorder had now in a great measure ended in its
own destruction, for in the sanguinary battles of the Wars of the Roses, the
English nobility had been well-nigh exterminated. It was very important now to
gain security against a renewal of this state of things. As the laws of the
realm, and especially the courts entrusted with their preservation, had shown
themselves powerless, some reliable substitute must be found to supply this
deficiency in the law, and these shortcomings in the exercise of justice. Ah Act
passed by Henry’s second Parliament in 1487, which is generally considered to
be the origin of the Court of the Star Chamber, supplied this want, and became
the groundwork of all further reforms in justice.
Neither this court, nor its name, were new. For a long
time the Privy Council “in the Star Chamber” had exercised an extraordinary
jurisdiction, in addition to that possessed by the Chancellor. Their duty was
to intervene where the common law had failed. The Commons, however, repeatedly
raised objections to this judicial court, depending as it did upon the king
alone. They did not deny the general necessity of an extraordinary
jurisdiction, but merely demanded the co-operation of Parliament, and
especially the abolition of the abuse of bringing up before the Council cases
which fell under the common law. In the year 1483 a statute was passed
requiring that persons who, “on account of serious disturbances, extortions,
oppressions, and great crimes against the peace and the laws,” were summoned by
the king to answer for the same before the Council or the Chancellor, should be
compelled to appear, under heavy penalties; but this law was only in force
seven years, and “no case amenable to the laws of the land” was allowed to be
dealt with in this manner.
This royal jurisdiction, which had hitherto only
rested on custom, and had only once been confirmed, in an indefinite way and
for a limited period, by the Act of 1453, was now, by Henry’s statute of 1487,
placed upon a firm legal basis, and given a definite shape, within definite
limits. The new statute entrusted to a special committee alone, and not to the whole
Council in the Star Chamber, the hearing of judicial causes. The Chancellor,
Treasurer, and Keeper of the Privy Seal, or two of them at least, were to act
as judges in this new tribunal, and were to add as their colleagues a bishop
and one temporal peer from the Privy Council and the Chief Justices of the
Courts of King’s Bench and Common Pleas, or two other judges as substitutes.
They had the right to summon, examine, and punish in the same way as if the
accused “ had been convicted by the ordinary legal procedure.” Just those
abuses which had been felt in the past came within the cognizance of the court;
that is, the maintenance of retainers in livety, the
neglect of duty on the part of the sheriffs, as in the empanelling of the jury,
the bribing of jurymen, rioting, and illegal assemblies. Speaking generally,
they were the same crimes against which Henry had endeavoured to guard by the
oath he had compelled his Commons and barons to take in his first Parliament.
The new statute itself did not, it is true, make use
of the name of Star Chamber, yet it laid the foundations of the legal existence
of the later court of justice permanently called by that name. As it addressed
itself to the evils that were most severely felt, Henry could be certain that
the Commons would cheerfully acquiesce in it. The real importance of the Star
Chamber statute is not, after all, of a judicial, but of a political nature,
for beyond its immediate object—the subjection of the aristocracy—it became the
legal foundation-stone of the structure of monarchical supremacy in the State.
The Star Chamber Act had dealt with the untrustworthy
sheriffs, and the subsequent Parliaments went still further in this energetic
control of the officers of justice. For all royal suits the judges were to
examine the lists of jurymen drawn up by the sheriff, and to demand any
alterations that might be necessary. Sheriffs and their subordinate officers,
who made use of their authority in an unlawful way, for the purpose of
enriching themselves, were threatened with penalties ranging from £20 to £40.
In the same way penalties were attached to carelessness in the . execution of
the law of vagrants by the sheriff, or in the superintendence of prisons, which
was entrusted to him, and for breach of duty in the punishment of those
concerned in riots and conspiracies. In this last enactment the justices of the
peace were also included, against whom a stringent statute had been passed, in
case they should fail to carry out the laws, and thereby do harm to the
subjects of the king ; “for nothing is more agreeable to the king than to know
that his subjects live at peace under his laws, and increase in riches and
well-being.” Whoever had a complaint to make against a justice of the peace was
to address himself for satisfaction to the justice himself; and, failing him,
to the judges y of assize on circuit, or to the king and Chancellor; the offending
justice of the peace was to be dismissed from his office. The law was to be
announced publicly in the usual manner.
By these severe threats of punishment—which, however,
were not new—a more strict administration of justice was insisted upon, and the
official was thereby made to feel more strongly his dependence upon the Crown.
Improved discipline was thus secured, and at the same time the officers of
justice were brought more strictly under the control of the royal power. Not
only was the administration of justice to be more dependent on the Government,
especially on the court of the Star Chamber, as the representative of the king,
but the decisions of the courts themselves seemed likely to be brought under
the same control.
The Parliament of 1495 created a permanent final Court
of Appeal, from which each man, who believed himself injured in his rights by
the packing of the jury or by their verdict, could get justice. The mode varied
in civil and criminal cases. Hitherto, in a civil case, any appeal against the
verdict of a petty jury had been extremely lengthy and expensive; for the
future, in suits involving £40 and upwards, everyone was free to appeal from
the petty jury to another jury specially summoned for the purpose, which had
the right to reconsider the decision of the petty jury. If the special jury
reversed the verdict of the petty jury, each member of the latter was fined
£20, and could never again be sworn before a court. The law was renewed by the
subsequent parliaments, so that it still stood in force at the time of Henry’s
death.
In criminal cases the law, with regard to the jury,
was different. If, in a cause instituted in the interests, or in the name of
the king, or by private individuals, a party felt himself aggrieved by the
judgment pronounced, he should, within a period of six days, address himself
with his complaint to the presiding judge, who had to forward the complaint to
the Chancellor; the Chancellor summoned the accused before him, before the
Treasurer, the Chief Justice, and the Clerk of the Rolls for examination and
punishment. As a previous statute had already provided against a culpable delay
in the execution of a sentence caused by the demand for a fresh trial, so here
the complainant, if non-suited, was punished.
All these laws were only to hold good for a limited
period; the last was not even renewed in 1504. This statute had, in fact, been
a further step onwards in the same direction as the law of the Star Chamber,
which had already dealt with the bribing of jurymen; for, as in the case of the
control over sheriffs and justices of the peace, an appeal against the verdict
of the jury was referred to the Court of the Star Chamber. A vicious circle was
thus formed; in causes affecting the Crown, appeal was to be made to a court
entirely dependent upon the Crown; that is, to the Crown itself. Every question
concerning any interest of the king was, so long as this law was in force, from
the first referred to the Star Chamber for its final decision. In practice this
was carried still further, for quarrels, as, for instance, those between the
merchant adventurers and the staplers, as also civil causes, were brought
before this court. Finally, it was to the Star Chamber, including in itself also
the jurisdiction of the Chancellor, that the execution of the laws against
usury and the control of the guilds were committed.
The tendency of this judicial legislation was to
increase the prerogative of the Crown, but this was a blessing for the country;
after all the disorder in the kingdom, a firm power again existed which could
enforce the exercise of law and justice. Here, as with Henry’s legislation in
general, the question how far he adopted or altered existing laws is not
essential, but it is important to note that they were remodelled on a uniform
principle, and executed with energy.
Henry strove earnestly to do away with the evil of
insecurity in matters of law, and one of his most important and fair measures
for this object was the first statute of that Parliament which met in October,
1495, after Perkin Warbeck’s attempted landing. Not only were Henry’s
adherents, but far more the former adherents of the House of York, to be
secured against prosecution, if they remained loyal to the new government. And
it may be regarded as an assurance of his own conciliatory intentions that
Henry, about this same time, caused the tomb of his fallen rival, Richard, at
Leicester, to be erected, if not in a splendid, at least in a suitable style.
Henceforth the aristocracy, kept in check by the law
of the Star Chamber, could not easily disturb the peace and order established
by the king; but there still remained the Church, the one power in the State
which was able to interpose serious obstacles to the execution of his laws. We
have already seen that Henry’s relations with the Pope were satisfactory; at
the same time the old English desire for independence of Rome had been kept
alive, and was displayed from time to time in the judgments which the judges
delivered upon the complaints made by the Pope X on the subject of the trade in
alum. Otherwise Henry respected the rights of the clergy; his first Parliament
even strengthened the judicial power of the bishops over immoral clerks. Only
on two points was any objection raised—the so-called benefit of clergy, and the
right of asylum.
Benefit of clergy consisted in the privilege of being
handed over by the secular judge to the bishop, except in cases of treason. As
in the Middle Ages a knowledge of reading was for the most part limited to
Clerical the clergy, the ability to read was accepted as a proof that a
man was a cleric, and this still continued even when education was much more
widely diffused. Whoever could read asserted his claim to benefit of clergy. It
followed, therefore, that a serious obstacle was put in the way of the
execution of justice, and an Act of 1490 drew attention to the fact that people
who could read were encouraged to commit murder, robbery, and theft, because on
every repetition of the offence they were again admitted to the benefit of
clergy. The law accordingly provided that every man who did not directly belong
to the clerical order could only profit by clerical privileges once; but if he
were indicted for murder, he was to be branded with a letter M on the ball of
his left thumb, for other crimes he was to be marked with a T (thief). If, on a
repetition of the offence, a man branded in this manner could bring forward no
testimony from his superior that he belonged to the clerical order, he was to
lose the privilege.
In the same way the Parliament of 1491 disputed this
benefit of clergy for deserters during the preparations for war against France,
on the grounds that their offence was directed against the welfare of king and
realm; and a law of 1497 enacted the same in the case of any one who had
murdered his lord or master.
And yet, in spite of restrictions such as these, a
state of affairs was suffered to continue, in which an assurance of almost
complete immunity for the first offence positively encouraged a special class
of men to crime. If, notwithstanding the more strict administration of
justice, robbery and murder were still rife in England, the fault must in great
part be ascribed to this antiquated privilege. That some consciousness of this
existed in men’s minds may be seen in the first restrictions; and it is said
that the very first of these laws was suggested by Henry himself, and that he
had been moved thereto by what he had seen in France.
The right of asylum in ecclesiastical houses was just
as serious an abuse. Every church afforded to the fugitive its protection for
forty days, specially favoured places did so for his whole life. The ordinances
which Henry succeeded in obtaining from Popes Innocent VIII, Alexander VI, and
Julius II concerned solely the abuse of the right of sanctuary by criminals,
who made the sanctuary serve as a place of refuge whence they might start again
upon a fresh career of crime. Thus Innocent VIII’s bull of the 6th of August,
1487, confirmed by Alexander VI on the 3rd of August, 1493, provided that,
should a robber or murderer seek refuge in the sanctuary a second time in
consequence of a fresh crime, he could be taken out by the officers of the
king; a man suspected of high treason should be watched from the very first, in
order to guard against further crimes. This enactment was, by the bull of
Julius II, dated the 20th of May, 1504, extended to all criminals, who,
moreover, when they quitted the place of refuge, were neither to be readmitted
to that or to any other sanctuary. The right of asylum had also been abused by
fraudulent debtors, who made a show of handing over their property to a third
party, and lived in a sanctuary on their income, leaving their creditors
unsatisfied; an Act of Parliament of 1487 declared therefore that such
assignments of property were illegal.
The strongest opposition to ecclesiastical privileges
proceeded from the judges. Though in a few cases, as in the laws against usury,
ecclesiastical jurisdiction received especial respect in the legislation, the
privileges of the Church were in the main disliked, nay, hated. The judges
especially alluded to them in their decisions with disrespect and open
contempt, and ruled, where possible, against the principle of such privileges.
They did their best to set aside ecclesiastical jurisdiction even in those
questions that belonged to it of right, and whenever they could overrule an
appeal to the right of asylum, they indulged in specially cruel punishments. We
know, for example, the sentence on Humphrey Stafford in the year 1487, when the
judges rejected the plea of right of asylum, as powerless to protect the
traitor.
On the question of the claims of the ecclesiastical
jurisdiction, the judges stood forward as champions of the royal authority, and
in this particular supported Henry’s endeavours to strengthen the prerogative
of the Crown. As the English judicature had failed directly the strong support
of a monarch had been withdrawn, it was undoubtedly a blessing for the country,
that an impartial royal power should again take law and justice under its
protection, and be able to execute them with its own strong hand. But as soon
as this impartiality no longer existed, and the power of the Crown was misused
to serve the personal interests of the king alone, then the most serious and
most profound apprehensions could not fail to be awakened. Unfortunately this
was the case during the reign of Henry VII.
In the Parliament of 1495—a fruitful one in
legislation— a noteworthy statute was passed. It stated that many excellent
laws had been made, but were not kept, and the prosecution of offenders was
hindered by the corruption of the jurors at the sessions. Wherefore the judges
of assize and the justices of the peace were empowered on the information of
any private individual to decide upon the initiation of judicial proceedings;
and the judge who authorised these then referred the matter to his own court,
and again awarded punishment according to the measure of the violation of the
law. It was only required that the informer should be resident in the county,
and should, if his information was proved to be wrong, pay the costs of the
defendant. Treason, murder, and the more serious crimes in general, involving loss
of life and limb, were excluded from this Act, as also cases involving
forfeiture of property to the informer.
It was a revolutionary law, directly in opposition to
the fundamental principles of English jurisprudence; the legal officer,
dependent on the king, took the place of the grand jury—he was public
prosecutor and judge in one person. Here again Henry introduced into England a
custom with which he had become acquainted in France ; for the technical
expression “information” used in France for the same procedure was adopted. If
the system thus begun had been continued in England, a purely bureaucratic
criminal prosecution by officials would have been established here, as it has
been in France. It was the first step towards doing away with the jury.
This law was at once put to the worst possible use,
for the king’s advantage. Polydore Vergil, who reports things on his own
personal observation, describes the method pursued as follows. Having found
himself unable to take money from his richer subjects illegally, it occurred to
Henry that almost every one of them might be convicted of offending against
existing laws. He began therefore to impose on such offenders light money
penalties. For this he appointed two Exchequer Judges, the lawyers, Richard
Empson, whom he subsequently knighted, and Edmund Dudley. These now gathered
round them a crowd of informers, eager to compete for the king’s favour, “and
in their greed for money, paid too little heed to their duty, to their own
danger, or to humanity, although they were often admonished by persons of
importance that they should act with more moderation.” Polydore Vergil also
characterises, as strange in the telling and lamentable in reality, a procedure
which was called by the name of justice, but was rather a criminal abuse made
possible by the corruption of the courts. A completely unsuspecting person was
accused before the judge, and if he did not respond to the summons—of which
very often, as he lived at a distance, he had no knowledge—he was condemned,
his goods were confiscated, and he himself put in prison; his property,
however, was not forfeited to the informer, but to the king. “Men thus
condemned were marked for the future as outlaws, that is, deprived of every
civil right which the law gives to man.” The result of this procedure is obvious
enough; large sums were extorted for the benefit of the royal treasury, and all
sorts of possible or impossible claims for the royal prerogative could by the
help of easily procurable accusations be brought forward and established. The
character of this law is best described in a statute of Henry VIII’s first
Parliament, by which it was repealed, on the grounds that, as was well known,
many dishonest, cunningly devised, and false accusations had, on the authority
of this Act, been made against various subjects of the king to their great
damage and wrongful vexation.
We are acquainted with some cases, which aroused
especial attention. One of these was the action taken against the London alderman,
William Capell, of the Clothworkers’ Guild, who from 1489 to 1490 had been one
of the sheriffs of the city, and was subsequently knighted. Five years later he
was charged with having sold goods to foreigners without requiring in return
immediate payment in money or in other goods, and “thereupon condemned by the
king to pay £2744, which fine was subsequently reduced by the royal mercy to £1615
6s. 3d., of which £732 were to be paid at once, and the rest within
three years.” Even then Capell was by no means free, his riches had attracted
too much the attention of the exchequer officials ; but no legal pretext to
touch him could be found until he became Lord Mayor of London (1503-1504). It
was a disastrous year for the town, as many destructive fires had taken place;
we do not know, however, for what failure in the execution of his official duty
it was that Capell, towards the end of 1507 or the beginning of 1508, was
arrested at the suggestion of Empson and Dudley, and delivered over into the
charge of the sheriffs. Shortly before this, these two had caused Thomas Kneysworth, of the Fishmongers’ Guild, the Lord Mayor for
1505-1506, to be put in prison with his two sheriffs, Shore and Grove, until
they purchased their freedom for £1400. It is possible that André is referring
to Kneysworth when he relates that in July, 1508, a
former Lord Mayor with his two sons died, according to some from grief of heart
at the loss of their wealth, according to others, from a disease then
prevalent. Capell this time remained obdurate, in spite of the attempts made to
coerce him, by taking him from the charge of the sheriffs and shutting him up
in strict confinement in the Tower, where he remained until the death of the
king restored him to liberty. Henry’s death appears also to have been the
salvation of Sir Lawrence Aylmer, the Lord Mayor who was taken into custody
with his sheriffs at the end of his year of office, in 1508. We can form an
approximate idea of the number of notes of hand thus extorted, from the fact
that quite half a hundred of them, all dating from the last two or three years
of Henry VII, were declared null and void in the first two years of his son’s
reign. The sums in question were from £50 to £100; the Earl of Northumberland,
however, was fined £10,000, of which Henry VIII remitted £5000; it is not known
if he was compelled to pay the other half of this enormous sum. Two townsmen
had made themselves answerable for 9000 marks, of which 2450 had already been
paid, and Corsy, the farmer of the money exchange,
had to disburse considerable sums. In many of the orders by which such bonds
were cancelled, these significant words are found—that obligations had been
incurred on the unreasonable instigation of certain counsellors of the king,
“against law, right, and conscience, to the evident overburdening and danger
of our late father’s soul.”
Henry VII himself had felt some qualms of conscience.
On the 19th of August, 1504, a royal decree was addressed to the sheriffs, to
the effect that the king, having always striven to deal justly towards his
subjects, and never to lay claim unfairly to any one’s property and goods,
announced, for the unburdening of his conscience, that any man who felt himself
aggrieved might, within two years, present his complaint in writing, whereupon
he should receive all reasonable satisfaction. We do not hear of any fulfilment
of this promise—in fact, the evil rather grew worse during the last two years ;
and the chronicler Hall remarks that the execution of this design having been
prevented by Henry’s death, which, however, did not occur till five years
later, it was repeated in the king’s will; “but in the meane season many men’s
coffers were emptied.”
Empson and Dudley by no means always acted in the
interests of the king. They were far more often concerned with their own
private advantage, making for that purpose a most unscrupulous use of the
king’s name and influence. They certainly did not always adhere to the
principles of the law of 1495, but managed in every way to make the courts
serve to their own profit. An example of this, and of the tenacity and energy
with which they dogged their victims, is afforded by Empson’s legal proceedings
against Sir Robert Plumpton, as far as can be gathered from the somewhat complicated
story preserved in the family correspondence of the Plumptons
and in other papers. It is not possible to follow it in detail.
In February, 1497, the first signs were visible that
Empson—of course as the legal representative of others who had claims on Sir
Robert—had some design in view. On the 2nd of May, 1499, the knight was
dispossessed of various portions of the Plumpton family estate, by order of the
king’s council; in November, 1500, he was threatened with a lawsuit at the next
assizes, and was advised to gain over the sheriffs and other friends in the
various counties in which his estates lay; these included besides Yorkshire,
Nottingham, Derby, and Stafford. Some sympathy was felt in the fate of the
persecuted man. “ May God give you the power to resist and withstand the utter
and malicious enmity and false craft of Master Empson and such others your
adversaries, which as all the great parte of England knoweth, hath done to you and yours the most injury and
wrong, that ever was done or wrought to any man of worship in this land of
peace.”
Empson’s legal machine, however, worked too well, and
in 1501, Sir Robert was deprived of his domains in three of the four counties,
York being excepted, and, in 1502, of Plumpton also; Empson received as his reward
the estate of Kinalton, and married his daughter to
the son and heir of his successful client.
But the knight was not disposed to give in quietly. At
the first the complainants stood somewhat in fear of his and his servants’
vengeance; having lodged an appeal, he tried to assert his rights by force, and
evicted the farmers who refused any longer to pay him their rents. At the same
time Plumpton tried, as a last resource, to appeal to the king’s mercy, and
begged that Henry, his Council, or two judges, might pronounce the decision;
although he had already been warned that he would “get little favour.” He was
so far successful that Henry appointed him a Knight of the Body, and thereby
protected him from personal imprisonment, and, further, insured to him the
usufruct of his manors of Plumpton and Idle. The lawsuit continued. The family
were completely ruined through all the expense and pressure they had had to
bear, and in Henry VIII’s reign, the unfortunate Sir Robert, now no longer
protected by his position at court, was consigned to a debtor’s prison, where
for a long time he ate his scanty fare in a dungeon. Not till his hard-hearted
opponent Empson had met his death on the scaffold, was an agreement entered
into between the two parties.
In the whole case there had been no question of the
interests of the Crown; the advantage accruing to it consisted solely in the
dues to be paid. Probably this may have been the reason why the
Under-Treasurer, Sir Robert Lytton, deaf to all entreaties for delay, exacted
from Plumpton the payment of his debts. This was one case among many, possibly
a bad one; but it is obvious that a misuse of the power of the law, as
exercised against the London citizens and Plumpton, could not fail to have
aroused much bitter feeling. Though the heaviest guilt lies on the two
assistants, much still attaches to the king himself. Nothing could be more
serviceable to the country after the Wars of the Roses than a severe and
rigorous administration of justice; on the other hand, nothing could more
undermine all respect for the law than the financial abuses which Henry allowed
to be carried on by Empson and Dudley, under the legal authority of the king.
In Henry’s administration of justice there may be traced an irreconcilable
contradiction, for ideas which y were good and sound in their conception
degenerate in his latter years into mere caricature.
This is identically the same change which we have observed in his general
policy; and it is just this discrepancy in his conduct at the close of his
reign, which has contributed so much to the harsh judgment passed on his whole
mode of government. The only result of these abuses of the law was, that his
successor found himself obliged to sacrifice to the popular clamour a statute
so important to the power of the king as that which, in the interests of
judicial reform, made the judge, who was dependent on the Crown, take the place
of the jury. Empson and Dudley fell victims to the same popular hatred, and
lost their heads on the scaffold. The wrongs of men who, like Sir R. Plumpton,
Capell, and Kneysworth, had been by them almost done
to death, were thus avenged.
ADMINISTRATION OF FINANCE.
The fiscal oppressions associated with the names of
Empson and Dudley are the darkest spot, not only in the judicial
administration, but also in the financial financial
policy of Henry VII, and the judgments of posterity on him have thereby been
prejudicially influenced. Still, if we compare what we know of Henry’s
commercial and industrial policy with the reckless ideas on finance, which in
these questions guided the monarchs of the Middle Ages, the contrast between
them is evident. Where the public interest and his own financial interest were
alike concerned, the former was regarded by Henry as the most important, and
determined in the main his course of action.
No doubt Henry was consulting his own interests in
departing from the policy of Richard III towards foreigners, and forcing them,
with the exception of the Hanse merchants, to pay far
heavier customs. And yet, if the question of the customs duties had been
paramount with him, he would not have tried at the same time to supplant the
foreigners by his own English trade, the efficiency of which was constantly on
the increase. The high duty on wines imposed on the Venetians served solely for
Henry’s navigation policy, and was at once reduced when that end had been
accomplished. The raising of the customs duties, so often objected to by the
Spaniards in the interest of their merchants, was certainly beneficial to the
royal treasury, but it also served Henry materially as an expedient for
furthering the other political demands he was making from Spain ; and these
having been secured, the duties were reduced.
It is only in the support of the Staple and of the
high duty on wool that any advantage to the Crown seems to stand out
prominently. This most secure source of customs revenue was, however,
exclusively devoted to the object of preserving Calais—an important one to the
State—and the heavy charges laid on wool had for their principal object, even
in the eyes of contemporaries, to further the cloth industry. Had Henry herein
allowed himself to be swayed by purely fiscal considerations, he would hardly
have issued enactments which were intended to restrict the purchase of wool by
foreigners, and especially to limit the production of it.
Henry had promoted commerce, even from his own funds.
For instance, he contributed to Cabot’s expeditions to the West, and gave help
to merchants on other occasions by advances out of his own private purse. No
doubt his far-seeing commercial and industrial policy operated so far to his
own advantage, that, with the growth of trade, the whole receipts from customs
increased. For the rest, we cannot insist too strongly on the point that
Henry’s economic policy was determined by other political interests—as, for
instance, with regard to the Netherlands—rather than by any temporary and
shifty financial interest of the Crown.
We must the more acknowledge this, since the creation
of an independent, secure, and well-regulated system of finance was one of the
most important and difficult tasks of Henry’s reign, for the fulfilment of
which any useful expedient would be welcome. He had to make good the deficit of
the preceding decade, ruin in the exchequer as well as everywhere else. The
revenues of the Crown had to be regulated, the sources from which they were
derived made as productive as possible, new ones opened, and those which had
been diverted from the Crown in the civil war, recovered. These were tasks
which, added to the claims put forward on all sides upon the king, were as easy
to undertake as they were difficult to perform.
Of the ordinary revenues of the king, the most important,
the amount of which could also be most exactly estimated, were those derived
from the landed property of the Crown. Next to these, stood the varying but yet
usually lucrative customs duties, then the taxes less certain in amount—such as
the still-surviving feudal dues—the judicial fines, the profits from the Mint,
and the business of exchange. Among the extraordinary revenues, the grants made
from time to time by Parliament stood first, and to these were added the
benevolence levied once by the king, confiscations of the property of outlaws,
and the payments agreed upon by international treaties. The revenues from
confiscated property, besides those payments made at intervals to Henry by
France after the treaty of Etaples, must also be
added to his regular income.
To render this secure, and to increase it, was an
important object with the king. The revenues from his landed property formed
the bulk of his capital. The possessions of the Houses of York and Lancaster,
the property which, after the ruin of so many families, had fallen in or had
been confiscated, were all collected together in the hands of Henry VII. Much
had been squandered away in the time of Henry VI Henry VII’s first Parliament
required the restitution of all the Crown lands which had been given away since
the 2nd of October, 1455. The Parliament of 1495 went still further; the fiscal
.agents even went back to the times of Richard II and Edward III, to recover
such alienated property. In spite of all limitations, these laws resulted in
great harshness and frequent perversion of justice. An attempt was made in 1495
to increase the revenues of those portions of the property of the Prince of
Wales which were farmed out; contracts which had till then held good were
simply repudiated. It was a harsh and severe system of retrenchment, after the
disorderly extravagance of the preceding period. The total income from the
private property of the Crown, to which belonged that of the Prince of Wales
and of the duchies of York and Lancaster, amounted—according to the reckoning
of the Italian narrator—to 547,000 crowns, or £109,400. Proscriptions had
contributed much to increase this source of Henry’s income; he seems also
occasionally to have added to his landed property by purchase?
Next came the much smaller revenues from tonnage and
poundage, and from the customs. Formerly these had only been granted to the
kings for stated periods and definite objects. Henry V, after his victory at Agincourt
in 1415, was granted them for the remainder of his reign; Henry VI, not till
1453; Edward IV, in 1465; and Richard III, in 1484. We know that the first
response made by the Commons in Henry VII’s first Parliament, to their
speaker’s address, was to confer their grant on the king for his lifetime. By
this means the customs were converted for the lifetime of the reigning king
into an assured revenue for the Crown; and the result of Henry’s commercial
policy—if we take the yearly average of three periods of eight years each since
his accession—was that these customs rose from £32,600 to £37,700, and finally
to £42,000, that is, by quite twenty-eight per cent.
A far more assured source of revenue—though from its
nature variable—was afforded by the old feudal dues, especially from the king’s
right of wardship over the children still under age of deceased vassals, from
the administration and usufruct of their estate, and from the “ relief” upon
the acquisition of the fief, and the dues on the marriage of the heiress. Henry
insisted very strongly that the freeholder with a land-rental of £40 should
receive knighthood and pay fees for the same. The frequent repetition of this
order issued to the sheriffs shows that it was evaded whenever possible, and
that it must have been a question of considerable importance to the royal
revenue. It was part of Empson’s duties to hunt out defaulters in this
particular, and bring them up for punishment. Twice over the law enjoined not
only the duty of money payments, but also that of serving in the army, on all
holders of offices and estates conferred by the Crown.
Included in the king’s income were also the revenues
from the Annates on appointments to bishoprics, although Henry often resigned
these in the newly appointed bishop’s favour; the revenues from coinage and the
farming-out of the exchange business, and occasional payments on the bestowal
of offices, even when at the same time Henry granted compensation for official
expenses.1 Finally, we must not forget the imposition and extortion of judicial
fines, which led at last to such crying abuse.
Henry endeavoured to augment these ordinary revenues
as much as possible, that he might thereby provide for all State expenses, and
be relieved from the necessity of drawing upon parliamentary grants—the
principal source of his extraordinary revenues. We have already noticed these
various grants and the object of them. In 1489, on the occasion of a vote of
£75,000 for the war, the usual form of levy was departed from; out of each
man’s yearly income a tenth part was to be paid, and on personal property of
ten marks and upwards, 1s. 8d. on every ten marks capital. The
assessment and collection proved so faulty that only £27,000 came in, and
perhaps this was the reason why the old form of a fifteenth and tenth was
reverted to. A “fifteenth and tenth” was originally a levy to these amounts on
personal estates; since the time of Edward III it was understood to mean a sum
of £37,000 to £38,000, fixed portions of which were to be contributed by each
separate parish in the counties and towns. By this means a definite standard of
taxation was obtained, and, when required, many fifteenths and tenths were
granted. In* the last Parliament of 1504, when no special reason for making a
demand on Parliament existed, Henry bethought him of claiming the old English
feudal aid due on the knighting of his eldest son, and the dowry of his eldest
daughter, although Arthur’s knighting had already taken place on the 30th of
November, 1488, and the prince himself had been dead nearly two years. It is
said that to this demand a serious opposition was raised, under the leadership
of young Thomas More, which resulted in a considerable reduction of the
original amount, and that Henry revenged himself for this in a somewhat
undignified manner on More’s father, by condemning him, on some pretext or
other, to a fine of £100, and keeping him in the Tower until he paid. In the
end, however, a show of polite accommodation was arrived at; the Commons
offered £40,000, and the king took only £30,000. During the twenty-four years
his reign lasted, Henry did not demand more than five parliamentary grants, of
which the second was merely to supply what was needed to bring up the first to
the required estimate, and of these grants only two were made from 1492 to
1509, a period of nearly eighteen years.
The disorders, which on two occasions were associated
with the levying of these direct taxes, show how unpopular they were, and this
led Henry, in the autumn of 1491, before the French war, to resort to a benevolence,
an imposition pressing solely on his wealthier subjects. Various obligations
then incurred not having been fulfilled, the Parliament of 1495 granted him the
power of collecting the arrears of these so-called voluntary presents to the
Crown, in the same way as with assessed taxes, under severe punishment for the
refractory. It looks very much like extortion, that Henry, after having granted
privileges to London, on the 21st of May, 1498, which then brought him in
£5000, should, scarce seven years later, demand the payment of five thousand
marks for a fresh confirmation of these privileges. To his extraordinary
revenues must be added the profits which he made from mercantile ventures,
undertaken on his own account, in wool, tin, and wine.
Temporary money difficulties Henry met by loans. In
the very first year of his reign he asked for £4000 from the city, but had to
be content with half that sum; in the following year he borrowed smaller sums
from private persons, and did the same on the occasion of the preparations
for Elizabeth’s coronation. In this case the king showed that he was to be
trusted, and two loans obtained from the city, in the third year of his reign
(1487-88), together amounting to £6000, were also punctually repaid in the
following year. When in November, 1496, he wished for a loan in advance of £10,000
for the Scottish war, in anticipation of the grant to be made by Parliament,
the city only gave him £4000; but loans for £40, £20, or even £10 were at the
same time raised in different parts of the country, from a great number of
wealthy persons, to whom the king addressed himself in a special letter, signed
by his own hand, promising to each punctual repayment before the following 30th
of November. His commissioners did not receive everywhere the sum demanded,
sometimes not more than the half, but yet the considerable sum of £58,000 was
collected, and, as far as we can see, duly repaid. Henry justified the credit
which he enjoyed. Among his items of expenditure, payments of debts of this
kind are often noted, but the creditor is never named, and only sometimes the
purpose of the payment. The queen also was often obliged to borrow money; she applied
to strangers as well as to her husband, who, even from her, required punctual
repayment.
Only in sudden emergencies did Henry resort to larger
loans of this kind, or to grants from Parliament or to benevolences. That he
was enabled to free himself more and more from all these external aids,
especially from the necessity of calling parliaments, he owed in the first
place to his firm policy of peace; next, to the increase of his ordinary
revenues; lastly, to the severely economical administration of his finances.
The arrangement he adopted was as follows: for important expenditure recurring
regularly, certain fixed and permanent revenues were assigned, as we have seen,
in the appropriation of the Staple customs to the maintenance of Calais. In the
same way, for the protection of the north against Scotland, certain revenues
were apportioned by law to Berwick and Carlisle; the safety of the northern
bishopric of Durham was to be provided for out of the revenues of the bishopric,
on which account Henry left the see vacant for a long time, and, when the
appointment was made, diverted, with the approval of the Pope, a portion of the
income of the see towards its defence.
The oppressions connected with the maintenance of the royal
court when in progress were a grievance of long standing. After Edward III’s
time judicial measures promised a remedy, but these were never carried out, and
the complaints continued. The court officials took from the surrounding
inhabitants more than was necessary; they used compulsion and extortion, and
forgot to pay. In Henry’s first Parliament, the Commons protested against the “constant
appropriation of property and cattle for the expenses of the royal household,
for which the owners do not receive satisfactory and proper payment.” Henry,
who was endeavouring to secure popularity for his new dynasty, adopted a more
effectual measure for redress, by getting Parliament to grant ,£14,000 a year
for the expenses of the royal household, and assign for the purpose definite
sources of revenue, such as land dues and customs. By this means the king
guaranteed as it were the possibility of payment, which up to that time had
depended on bare promises, and likewise managed to separate the expenses of
the royal household from those of the State. In 1495 the Act underwent
modification in certain particulars. It was on the same principle that £2105 19s.
were appropriated for the king’s wardrobe.
Expenditure was thus from the first regulated in
detail, but Henry nevertheless kept a strict eye over all the accounts, both of
State and court. Among the printed and unprinted records bearing on the history
of Henry VII, a remarkable number of statements of accounts are to be met with,
often drawn up in a very neat and ingenious fashion. The king demanded an exact
account for everything, and we can well understand that officials, to whom this
strictness was irksome, should find fault with him for his avarice. That these
accounts are not exactly on the pattern of modern book-keeping does not in the
least diminish their importance.
Among the most interesting of these are the accounts
of the Privy Purse expenses for the years 1491 to 1505, which have been
preserved and published, though in a somewhat Inadequate form. These fragments,
however, are quite sufficient to enable us to gain an insight into the variety
of matters which occupied the king’s mind, and especially to note and admire
his careful and orderly method. Ayala relates, though with a certain amount of
exaggeration, that Henry employed all the time he did not spend in public or in
his Council, in writing down his accounts with his own hand. This was not
approved of by the Spaniard, who thought Henry was too fond of money. But this
reproach of avarice against the king rests, for the most part, on a confusion
between careful orderliness and avaricious niggardliness. There is no doubt
that Henry often showed signs of parsimony, even on occasions when it was out
of place, as in the marriage treaty with Scotland, but the failing was not one
which belonged to his real nature. It was simply the result of that carefulness
he was obliged to exercise, in order to establish a sound system of finance,
after the extravagant prodigality of former times.
At the right moment Henry was quite ready to deal out
money with unstinting hands. We need only recall the magnificence of his court
festivities, the lavish splendour with which he received King Philip in 1506,
the profusion of precious household possessions which he displayed on such
occasions. Henry himself also had many expensive tastes. In the privy purse
accounts the sum of £110,000 is set down for jewels alone; and for political
purposes he expended without hesitation very considerable amounts, as, for
instance, on Maximilian in 1503, and in 1505 on Philip. We cannot but respect
that strict orderliness which noted with equal care sums of thousands of pounds
and the three or four shillings which the king had disbursed in alms or on a
small present or salary.
The energy with which Henry imposed this exactness on
himself and on his officials met with its reward. It is an evidence of the
financial independence which he gained for himself at the cost of such
laborious and continued effort, that he could carry on the whole current
administration, and provide for court expenses out of his regular income, while
at the same time he commanded without difficulty considerable sums for special
purposes, and yet made his income largely exceed his expenditure. Of no single
prince of his time could the same be said.
Nevertheless it is certain that England was not then
rich either in population or resources. It stood below France, for example, in
both respects. The levy of a tax, which after all only produced £27,000,
pressed so heavily that it caused that outbreak in the north, in which the Earl
of Northumberland lost his life, and the levy of two fifteenths and tenths in
the year 1497, was sufficient to stir up the Cornish insurrection. On the other
hand, we find that Henry alone was able to disburse large sums in quick
succession, £4000 on the 16th of September, 1502, £10,000 on the 1st of
October, and £30,000 on the 16th of December. His privy purse was not generally
burdened with the costs of government, but yet from it were made payments to
foreign Powers and for entertainment of foreign guests, and from it alone, in
the financial years 1495-1496, upwards of £25,000 was paid out; in 1497-1498
over £72,000; in 1499-1500 over £46,000; in the following year about £48,000;
and in 1502-1503 as much as £90,327.
Sums such as these are the best evidence of the
success of Henry’s financial system, supported as it was by his whole policy.
Our otherwise excellent Italian observer had allowed himself to be deceived by
his informants, when he estimated Henry’s entire expenditure for himself and
his court at £20,000. In this matter the king had taken care not to show his
hand.
As to the amount of Henry’s accumulated treasure, we
have no reliable information. This did not consist of coined money alone. The
treasure in jewels which he amassed, and his enormous wealth in gold and silver
plate display, were not only intended for pomp and display, but formed at the
same time a secure fund of capital, a part of the royal treasure which could at
any moment be realised. These treasures served especially to spread throughout
the world rumours of King Henry’s riches, which no doubt were of great use to
him. Much exaggeration was also afloat on the subject; Ayala asserts that any
gold pieces which found their way into the king’s coffers never came out again,
and the ambassador of the Duke of Milan estimated Henry’s treasure, even in
1497, at £1,350,000, and what he put by yearly at £112,500. Peter Martyr also
calls him the richest of all kings in money. He is spoken of in the same way at
Venice, and Duke George of Saxony received from Brussels, at the beginning of
1509, the information that Henry “is described as the wisest and richest lord
that is now known in the world.”
No one recognised more clearly than King Henry that in
the political life of nations money is all powerful. From the outset therefore
he bent his mind on creating, by means of his finances, a broad, independent,
and solid foundation for his royal authority. Here too he worked so that
everything should contribute to one end, and in the whole conduct of his policy
he took special care not to endanger this financial security, which he had with
such trouble created. By this means he became more independent, especially of
grants from Parliament, than any English king before him. His financial policy
was thoroughly monarchical. Upon it rested to a great extent the independence
and power of the newly established Tudor sovereignty.
THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN ENLIGHTENED ABSOLUTISM.
The life’s work of the first Tudor king was
constantly, and to the very last, directed towards one great object—the
restoration of the monarchy by the establishment of royal absolutism in the
English Constitution. If therefore, in conclusion, we wish to treat of this king’s
monarchical policy as a whole, we must glance back again for a moment over the
history we have been relating.
By the help of a strong monarchy alone could the England
of the Wars of the Roses be saved from falling into utter ruin. Edward IV and
Richard III had alike failed to create such a monarchy, and it was left for
that man to accomplish, who overthrew the revolutionary throne of the House of
York. Thus England became the prize of that Tudor dynasty which had brought her
deliverance. Henry was able to make the most of his first success, and to use
it to secure for the Crown a position of authority such as had long been
unknown, because he always understood how to link closely together the
interests of king and State, never promoting the one to the detriment of the
other. In this consisted the significant character of Henry’s personal rule. It
was the same with his great contemporary, Ferdinand the Catholic; with both of
them dynastic interests no longer existed apart from the interests of the
State. For this reason no king ever accomplished more for himself and his own
position in the State than this Tudor monarch.
He renounced all thoughts of a return to that
mediaeval policy of conquest, of which kings before and even after him dreamed,
as the highest aim of their ambition; he never sought to extend his royal
authority beyond the borders of England and Ireland. He realised that the
strength of the island kingdom, girdled about by the sea, lay in the isolation
of its natural position, that any possessions on the Continent which would
bring it into immediate contact with the Powers there in conflict, instead of
adding to its strength, as they might appear to do, would in reality diminish
it. Fleets no longer sailed with armed hosts against France; under Henry’s
rule, the ships of England bore the English merchant and English products to
foreign lands; it was they who carried out his new policy of conquest. The one
outpost beyond the sea was Calais, maintained at great expense, since it was
necessary to the trade with the Continent, and for holding supremacy in the
Channel. To this insular policy of Henry’s, which cannot be too much commended,
belongs also his constant endeavour to bring about a lasting peace with
Scotland, and the remark with which he is credited on the possible future union
of Scotland with England, as the result of the Anglo-Scottish marriage alliance
he had brought about, already contains the idea of that union of Great Britain,
which was one day to spring from that marriage.
No doubt, at first, the exigencies of the time in
England were his best allies, as they afforded him the opportunity to exercise
his power in re-establishing peace and order in the kingdom, in protecting it
permanently from all who might create disturbance, and finally, after many
unsuccessful beginnings, in gaining for his kingdom an independent and honoured
position in the eyes of foreign Powers. But besides these political duties,
belonging properly to the functions of the Crown, the king had interfered in
the wider field of commerce and industry, where the English spirit of
enterprise was more than usually astir. Here from the first he had taken the
guidance into his own hand, and had promoted or restrained according to his own
views. He aimed at being the leader of the State in all foreign relations, as
well as the master and guide of all the forces at home. Thus from the Crown
came that new life which now throbbed throughout England after many years of
disorder. Whatever of their prerogative the kings in earlier times had been
compelled to relinquish in consequence of their own weakness, or for the sake
of obtaining help from their subjects to carry out their policy of war, Henry
won back to the full for the monarchy, in the work he did for the State.
Not only in all his actions was he indirectly working
for himself and his royal authority; but he allowed no opportunity to slip of
directly furthering the power of his dynasty. We see this clearly in his policy
with regard to those marriage alliances which he so assiduously endeavoured to
promote. By their means the royal upstart of still apparently doubtful origin
would be entitled to take his place on an equality with the other royal families,
and what his dynasty gained in Europe thereby and by the further success of his
political schemes, it gained at the same time, and to a far greater degree, in
England itself.
When Henry began his reign, he was obliged to revert
to very primitive safeguards for his throne. He surrounded himself at once with
a bodyguard, which he subsequently retained, but which never exceeded the
number of two hundred men. Our Italian authority states that never before
Henry’s time had the Tower been so well guarded, that it was plentifully
provided with material of war, especially with bows and crossbows. Against
those chance dangers which in former times menaced the English kings, Henry was
resolved “to protect himself by strongholds,” which should also serve for
protection within the country, and among these he reckoned the border towns of
Calais and Berwick. From other sources we learn that Portsmouth likewise
received a garrison, and Henry’s endeavour to keep his forts as inaccessible
as possible is shown by his order to the governor of Scarborough, to allow no
foreigner residing in the town to have access to the castle. We also hear
occasionally of the presence of German mercenaries in the kingdom.
Henry was the first to protect his royal power by mercenaries
and strong places. Means for the purpose he obtained by clever administration
of his finances, and this he subsequently contrived to develop still further
into one of the securest supports of his kingly independence. His legislation
furnished another pillar of the royal authority; more especially that which
dealt with judicial procedure, and the statutes which brought the guilds and
other companies directly under the power of the Crown, or withdrew the
administration of certain laws, as of those concerning usurers, from municipal
jurisdiction.
This policy, contrary as it was to every custom of the
country, shows very plainly the influence which Henry’s residence in France
before his accession had exercised upon him. It must have been there that he
formed those theories of personal government, which he tried to introduce into
the English Constitution; from thence he borrowed the idea of strengthening the
defences of the country; thence those judicial reforms, which aimed at the
abolition of juries. Indeed, his desire to transplant French institutions into
English soil went still further, as we are told by Ayala, “He would like to govern
England in the French fashion, but he cannot do it.”
All, however, that Henry had accomplished would have
remained still of doubtful advantage, if he had been unable to protect his
newly established monarchy against the two greatest rivals which confronted it
in England. The most difficult part of his policy was to assert his royal
authority against the two Estates assembled in Parliament—the Lords of the
Upper House, and the Commons in the Lower.
It was reserved for Henry VII to put an end for ever
to the fierce struggle between the Crown and the aristocracy. We know that the
Wars of the Roses, the last and the furious outburst of this long struggle, had
struck down deep to the very roots of both parties. And while Henry had only to
grapple with a few isolated members of the rival royal House, it was but the
remnants of the old nobility that were left to oppose him. To keep them in
subjection, and especially to prevent them from ever rising to fresh power was
not only imperative in the interests of the Crown, but also necessary for the
peace and prosperous development of the country.
In the very first years of his reign, Henry began to
take vigorous measures. It is noteworthy that of the three friends on whom he
conferred peerages after his victory, only one was not already a peer, and he
was always careful not to augment to a dangerous degree the ranks of the
nobility. In his first Parliament he exacted from the assembled lords,
spiritual and temporal, a special oath that they would loyally keep the peace,
while his second Parliament, by its law of the Star Chamber, put into his hand
a most powerful weapon against the nobles and their excesses. By this law the
aristocracy were delivered over, not to the courts of the realm, but entirely
to the Crown, and the Crown then had to show that it possessed the power to
execute the law effectively.
The men who stood foremost by the king’s side to help
and advise him in this as in other matters, were not chosen from the ranks of
the great nobles of the realm. We meet in the highest offices with the names of
the churchmen, John Morton, Richard Fox, William Warham, and the laymen Sir
Reginald Bray, Sir Giles Daubeney, who was not created a lord till later,
Richard Edgecombe, Edward Poynings, and Sir Thomas
Lovell, with whom eventually were associated such men as Empson and Dudley.
Except the king’s own relatives, the only members of the aristocracy who can be
named as occupying positions of influence are the Earl of Oxford and the Earl
of Surrey, Lord Treasurer, and even they stood in importance far below men such
as Morton, Fox, Warham, and Bray. The hereditary nobility had to make way
before the talent of the statesman. In this Henry set the example to his
successors, for the leading statesmen of the Tudors were men of low origin.
The part which the high aristocracy had played in
politics was over. The estates of the old families had passed into other hands;
most of them, by attainders and confiscations, had fallen to the Crown. In the
Upper House the aristocracy found themselves confronted by the spiritual peers,
who outweighed them in number, and amongst these the leading men were Henry’s
firmest and most faithful supporters, whom he had thrust into high places in
the Church. We scarcely hear anything more of the Upper House. The supreme
court of justice, formed of the peers of the realm, sank into an unimportant
tool in the hands of the Crown.
The members of the nobility henceforward became the
mere ornaments of the court; they surrounded the king on festive occasions, and
solemn embassies, which did not involve any diplomatic difficulty, were
confided to them. As was natural, the principal part still was theirs whenever
there was a call to arms, but Henry was careful that this should take place as
seldom as possible; and as to the conduct of a campaign, such as that in France
in 1492, no one could have been less enlightened than the noble lords, who then
took the field. Court festivities and tournaments were henceforward their
principal field of action, service at court the only mode in which they could
fulfil their feudal duties. For to appear at court was their duty. Andre, the
court historiographer, considered it especially necessary to note and justify
the long absence of a few lords from the court. And yet this nobility, which
had sunk to a position of such political insignificance, still retained its
prominent social position, and it was only by promotion to the highest
ecclesiastical dignities that statesmen such as Morton, Warham, and Fox could
be placed on a level of equal or superior rank. Thus the old and powerful
aristocracy of England was already in Henry’s reign turning into a nobility of
court and office, required for the sole purpose of enhancing the splendour of
the Crown, but unable any longer to threaten its position.
In Henry’s attitude towards the aristocracy he could
be certain of the approval and support of all those who had suffered under the
oppressions of powerful nobles. Polydore Vergil declares that Henry “was the
firmest protector of justice, whereby his people were much beholden to him, as
they could now live their lives free from the vexations of the mighty.” Thus at
the very outset he pressed on the legislation which should give greater
authority to the king, because it insured for the weak the powerful protection
of the law against the violence of the strong. The Commons took sides with the
king; they were protecting themselves when they increased the prerogative of
the Crown.
We may remember that any advance in power gained by the
Lower House had taken place under the rule of strong monarchs who were able to
repress the nobles; the same might be expected under the rule of and the Henry
VII. His reign seems most to resemble that of the first Lancastrian, Henry IV,
who, having won the throne by the sword, likewise grounded his claim on the
sanction of Parliament, and thenceforth found in the Commons support against
foes within and without. But, unlike his predecessors, unlike Edward I and III,
Henry IV and V, the Tudor king knew how to compel the Lower House to keep idly
in its scabbard that weapon which it had so often made use of to resist any
extension of the royal prerogative—its claim to grant or withhold money. It was
to the constant need for money of those earlier kings that the Commons owed all
the steps they had gained; but the Crown’s financial need ceased with Henry
VII. He was independent of his Lower House, because his financial policy made
it possible for him to avoid any dangerous conflict with it; and accordingly he
was able, with one exception, to abstain from summoning Parliament during the
last twelve years of his reign.
We see, therefore, that Henry did not afford the
classes represented in the Lower House an opportunity of expressing their
opinion on political matters much more often than the peers of the Upper House.
Yet his whole solicitude was directed to the interests of the industrial middle
classes, and to the smaller landowners, who were for the most part represented
in the Lower House. He knew that by raising and strengthening them, he would
lay the best foundation for his dynasty. For them, therefore, was the
protection of justice undertaken by the king, for them his many measures to promote
commerce and industry, for them the agrarian legislation in the interests of
the peasants and tenant farmers, for them, in fact, his whole endeavour to
guard the kingdom and, in his own words, to advance it in “rest, peace, and
wealthy condition.”
One peculiar economic principle of Henry’s should here
be noted. Polydore Vergil remarks that he did his best to keep down his
burghers, especially the economic richer among them, because he well knew that,
as they grow richer, men become overbearing, and allow their actions to be
controlled by money interests alone. To the Spaniard Ayala Henry had, in fact,
said almost in the words of the chronicler, that he tried to keep his subjects
down because riches would make them insolent. In this, however, Henry did not
show an inconsistency with his general views; he certainly wished to see
England rich and flourishing—that was the very aim of his state and economic
policy—but this wealth was to be diffused as widely as possible, and not to be
amassed in the hands of individuals. While shattering the hereditary power of
the great nobles, Henry sought to check the rise of others, whose new power was
founded on their wealth, and who seemed to him just as dangerous. Men who were
influential either from their birth or their riches were, in his opinion,
likely to be tempted to stir up or to support a fresh contest for power, and
cause fresh confusion and disorder in the kingdom. It was from this point of
view that he restrained the efforts after monopoly made by the London merchant
adventurers, and resisted the increase and consolidation of large landed
properties. Viewed from the standpoint of a struggle with capital, his fiscal
abuse of justice, if not excused, is somewhat freed from the reproach of
personal avarice, and appears in a more generous light. Polydore Vergil, in
fact, connects those cruel exactions, which resulted in the ruin of many
individuals, with the principle mentioned above. Henry acted thus, he says, in
order to stifle the restless spirit of party in the country, not from greed for
money, although the sufferers complained, that they were not so much the
victims of severity as of covetousness. Henry even gave a helping hand to those
who had been severely bled by his judges, as if, having been once plucked,
their feathers could be made to grow again. “Certain it is that the prince, so
moderate himself, did not rob his subjects above measure, he who left his
kingdom in every respect in the greatest prosperity.”
The policy of Henry is clear enough; he wished for a
comfortable, well-to-do commonalty, a numerous and wealthy middle-class, as
much as possible on an equality, by whom the dependent labourer, kept by law at
work and under discipline should be employed. Interfering in all the details of
life, controlling and regulating according to his own supreme will, the king
should stand over all, without too many intermediate links formed either by a
powerful aristocracy or by individual citizens, influential by their wealth.
Thus Henry’s endeavour to establish the sole
sovereignty of the Crown, unmolested by any other power in the State, stands
out very obviously. Whoever raised himself above what was, in Henry’s opinion,
his proper sphere, was at once energetically suppressed, even though he might
have hitherto enjoyed the royal favour. Hence, as we have seen, the king
extended his influence to the utmost in his legislation. And that he made real
use of this newly acquired prerogative, as, for instance, in dealing with the
trade guilds, is shown by the occasional experience of the Londoners.
On the 6th of January, 1503, Henry bestowed on the
London Tailors’ Guild, together with a new charter, the name of the Merchant
Taylors, and aroused thereby great discontent among the other companies. This
feeling was displayed at the election of sheriffs in the year 1505, when
Fitzwilliam, the candidate of the Taylors’ Guild, was unsuccessful. In the
next election of 1506, Henry in consequence interfered. When on the 30th of
September the customary presentation of the sheriff's took place before the
lords in the Star Chamber, one Thomas Johnson, who had been legally elected,
was not admitted to take the oath ; and on the 10th of October came an order
from the king to the Lord Mayor to set about a fresh election, and Edmund
Dudley appeared in Guildhall with the express command that Fitzwilliam should
be elected sheriff, “which took place at last after great difficulty.”
The Parliament of 1495, took from the inhabitants of
the lordships of North and South Tynedale on the Scotch Border, those
privileges under cover of which they had, in company with the Scots, done many
deeds of violence. Henry, in like manner, interfered in the municipal
government of Leicester, where there had often been disturbances on public
occasions, as on the election of mayors or members of Parliament. Thus rights
and privileges were set aside, even with the assistance of Parliament, if they
were contrary to the welfare of the State; and of this the king was sole judge.
Henry did not directly attack the constitutional
position of Parliament; even under his rule the judges stated expressly that a
statute, to be legally binding, must have passed through “the full assembly of
commons, lords, and king.” He did not suppress the expression of adverse
opinions in the Commons, although he is said to have taken revenge afterwards
for any opposition that was distasteful to him. But the petitions from the
Commons which he granted, coincided so strikingly with his own ideas and
wishes, that we can hardly be mistaken if we seek the real originator of the
petition in the person to whom it was addressed.
He did not injure the form of the Constitution, for
after all, he found it pliant enough even when he carried measures which
violated its spirit; and in this was most clearly illustrated the real strength
of his kingly authority. Only men who were agreeable to him were chosen as
speakers of the Lower House, Richard Empson, in 1491, and in 1504, even Dudley,
when public hatred was already strong against both him and Empson. The name of
the “obedient Parliament” can best be applied to the Parliament of 1495 ; it
carried back further than any other the restitutions of Crown lands which it
granted to the king, it raised the benevolence imposed by the king to the same
level as a tax voted by Parliament, and it was in this Parliament that Henry
passed his judiciary laws, in particular the statute, afterwards so notorious,
for the partial abolition of the indictment by jury. One step to be noted was
gained by him when the Parliament of 1504, under the pretext of the limited
time at its disposal, granted him the right to reverse on his own authority all
the attainders which had taken place in Parliament during Richard III.’s time
and his own; in this instance the Parliament abandoned for the lifetime of the
king that fundamental law by virtue of which statutes passed by king and
Parliament could only be repealed or modified by the same authority.
Thus Parliament supported the absolutist policy of the
king, who, although without outward powers of compulsion, had succeeded in
raising the Crown to its new and commanding position. Our Italian observer,
comparing the English of the time with the Scotch, declares that only a few of
them were loyally devoted to their king, “generally they hate the living king
and praise the dead one.” Yet this same writer testifies emphatically to
Henry’s success. “From the time of William the Conqueror to the present, no
king has reigned more peaceably that he has ; his great prudence causing him to
be universally feared.” From other sources also we hear that Henry held the
people in subjection, as had never before been the case; “his crown is unassailed and his rule strong in every respect.” A
Milanese writer, who confirms the opinion that the kingdom for many years had
not been so obedient to any sovereign as it was to Henry, expresses his
astonishment that the king, in spite of the small number of his body-guard, was
able to reside in open and unprotected places in the forest districts.
The above are the opinions of contemporaries before
the opening of the new century. The monarchy, having fallen into decay with the
weakness of those who held it, now rose up again with renewed strength, when a
real master stood at the head of the State. It would be an idle question to
discuss, when determining the causes of the royal success, whether the creative
ideas originated with the king himself or with his counsellors ; the will to
carry into effect remained always with the wearer of the crown. But the
question is by no means unimportant when we are passing judgment on the persons
concerned in this success, though the answer, which in the case of Henry’s
successor is perfectly clear, with him is doubtful and obscure.
In the year 1498, Ayala asserts that Henry had been
governed by the members of his council, but that he had already shaken off some
of them, and had to a great extent freed himself from this control. Nine years
later, according to Puebla, Henry no longer had any confidential advisers; and
Polydore Vergil, who was only acquainted with these later years, characterises
his mode of government shortly and to the point. “No man enjoyed so much
consideration with the king that he could venture to do anything of his own
will.” Henry desired that “he might not wrongly be called a ruler, but be one
who would rule and not be ruled.”
So far as a general survey of Henry’s reign allows us
to form an opinion, it seems clear that the more he became himself initiated
into his kingly office, the more he grew independent of his councillors. One
cause of this, however, was that the men whom he chiefly trusted, had preceded
him to the grave.
On the 12th of October, 1500, died John Morton, the
Cardinal Archbishop of Canterbury, who, in Puebla’s opinion “left no statesman
behind him, to be compared with him,” and whom the London Chronicle extols as “a
man worth of memory for his many great deeds, and specially for his great
wisdom, which continued to the time of his disease, passing the years of eighty
and odd; in his time was no man like to be compared with him in all things.
Albeit that he lived not without the great disdain and great hate of the commons
of this land.” Above all, More, who when a boy lived in the house of the
cardinal, bears in his Utopia, splendid testimony to Morton’s worth : he was a
man “not more honourable for his authority, then for his prudence and virtue.
He was of a meane stature, and though stricken in age, yet bare he his body
upright. In his face did shine such an amiable reverence, as was pleasant to
behold, gentile in communication, yet earnest, and sage. He had great delight
many times with rough speech to his sewters, to
prove, but without harm, what prompted wit and what bold spirit were in every
man. In the which, as in a virtue much agree with his nature, so that therewith
were not joined impudence, he takes great delegation. ... In his speech he was fine,
eloquent. In the law he had profound knowledge, in wit he was incomparable, and
in memory wonderful excellent. These qualities, which in him were by nature
singular, he by learning and use had made perfect. The king put much trust in
his counsel, the weak public also in a manner leaned unto him. For even in the chief
of his youth he was taken from school into the court, and there passed all his time
in much trouble and business, being continually tumbled and tossed in the waves
of divers misfortunes and adversities. And so by many and great dangers he learned
the experience of the world, which so being learned cannot easily be forgotten.”
Such was the man whom we first learnt to know as the
most faithful of Henry’s adherents in the early days of his exile, and who,
soon after his accession, held, as primate and chancellor, the highest
ecclesiastical and the highest secular dignity in England, and died a cardinal
of the Church of Rome.
Morton’s death took place on the threshold of the new
century; three years afterwards, on the 5th of August, 1503, died Sir Reginald
Bray, whom Morton himself had brought into the service of Henry before his
accession. It certainly is more than a mere coincidence that from this period
is to be dated that decline in so many directions, which we have noticed in
Henry’s policy. We meet now with no new idea, for we cannot know how long
beforehand the few laws passed by the Parliament of 1504 had been in
preparation, during the intermission of Parliament. The Spanish and the Scotch
marriage treaties were still being concluded, the subsequent marriage treaty
between Charles and Mary remained therefore the one success amid a mass of
hopeless and unfruitful projects ; on the other hand, it was then that Henry’s
almost incomprehensible action with regard to Ferdinand and Katharine began;
then that the unfortunate commercial treaty of 1506 took place with Philip. Then,
too, occurred that sudden and temporary episode in the relations of England and
the Hansa, when Henry for a while gave way. To this period, finally, belong the
abuse and discredit of the administration of justice, when Henry allowed Empson
and Dudley to rule.
All this happened after the death of Morton. The old
tact and the old firmness seemed to have vanished; the evil for the most part
consisted in the degeneracy of ideas that in themselves were good. Whoever may
have originated these ideas, Henry had made them completely his own, although
he was now mistaken in his mode of carrying them out; it is possible that this
deterioration in his latter years was connected, not
only with a decay of his physical, but of his mental powers.
Nothing, however, can diminish the fame of King Henry
as the restorer of the English monarchy. Since William the Conqueror no power
so absolute had existed in England as that which Henry bequeathed, on firmly
fixed foundations, to his successors. It was not a new edifice, like that
feudal sovereignty which the powerful Norman had erected in the place of the
shattered Anglo-Saxon kingdom, but an arbitrary yet constitutional monarchy,
constructed with consummate art, within and upon the already existing
Constitution. A new epoch had begun in England—THE PERIOD OF AN ENLIGHTENED
ABSOLUTISM UNDER THE TUDORS.
HENRY’S PERSONAL CHARACTER AND DEATH.
When a monarch of such individuality and force of
character as the first Tudor forms the central figure of a State which is
advancing by strides to a new and important position, the historian cannot fail
to take an interest in that monarch’s personality. The pictures of him by
Mabuse and the bronze figure by Torrigiano on his
tomb, depict for us Henry’s form and features. Neither in figure nor
countenance was he handsome: his thin form was somewhat above middle height,
his face was furrowed, his eyes serious, but with a soft expression. His
features bear far more strongly the impress of a certain mildness of character,
than of that tenacious and energetic determination which he displayed
throughout life. His hair was thin, and his mouth disfigured by loss of teeth;
but when he spoke, his grave countenance, it is said, would light up. The cares
and anxieties of his reign showed themselves in his outward appearance; he was
old for his years, but yet “young for the sorrowful life he has led.” As we
gaze upon him in the picture at Hampton Court Palace, in long robe, raised on a
step behind his son, who, in short doublet, stands with outstretched legs
before him, there seems something priest-like about the appearance of the king.
Yet, though cautious and deliberate in life as in his
policy, he was not always reserved. He was of a ready wit, and loved to make a
joking repartee, and was quick at times in showing pleasure or
annoyance. There was no doubt of the impression he made on men, for the fame of
his prudence and sagacity was far more than a mere courtly compliment. Good
evidence of this is supplied by the Spaniard, Ayala, who, conscious that the
king, for all his amiable manner, had cleverly over-reached him on commercial
questions, burst out with the half-angry words, “He is so clever in everything,
and in this matter displays it so much, that it is a miracle.”
There was much judicious calculation in the manner in
which Henry showed himself to people. He was careful to guard his dignity, and
in no way to lower it, “ for he knew that his life was observed by many, and
that therefore the sovereign must excel all others as much in wisdom as in
power.” Henry was desirous to be thought a wise and great man; he anxiously
avoided yielding to any weakness, and made use of every opportunity to show
himself to the best advantage. He wished not only to make an impression, but
also that men should speak of it; still it is possible that, in spite of the
high opinion generally formed of him, his success in this respect fell below
his somewhat lofty expectations. Such a desire was quite in accordance with his
general monarchical policy, where it was important that the personality of the
monarch should stand high in the respect and consideration of men.
In the whole outward life of his court, as well as in
his personal demeanour, Henry kept this end in view, displaying on State
occasions his wonderful riches and magnificence. Great sums were expended on
costly materials, furniture, and jewels, and he himself took pleasure in the
arrangement of festivities. He instituted for these a special and solemn
ceremonial, and when we read how the Church festivals, St. George’s Day,
Arthur’s christening, his promotion to be Prince of Wales, his knighting, his
wedding, and finally his obsequies were solemnised, we cannot doubt that Henry
thought seriously of the dignity and solemnity of his position as king. Added
to this, he kept a liberal table, and was hospitable host.
In Henry’s opinion, all this belonged to his calling
and to his duty as king ; his own inclinations were more simple, and he was
personally very frugal. Still he showed himself not averse to the more serious
or to the lighter joys of life. For this side of his character we have but one
source of information—the king’s account-book. Its dry entries, however, give
us many glimpses into his private life and that of his family, and present us
even with a vivid picture.
We meet there often with the names of the king's
relatives, who in State affairs played a not very prominent, and at the most a passive,
part. It was, indeed, asserted that he influence of Henry’s mother, Margaret,
upon her son had been important, but this can scarcely have extended to
political matters, for although she outlived the king, she had been unable to
prevent the absurd and unworthy matrimonial projects of his latter
years. Within the court itself it was otherwise; there the aged countess had an
influential voice in the organisation of ceremonial, and took the lead over the
king’s wife, Queen Elizabeth. Yet it was to the queen, who was usually kept in
the background, that the sympathies of England were directed; her favour with
the people was to be attributed in great measure to her lack of influence with
the king, who, on the whole, was not beloved. Their domestic life seems to have
been irreproachable, and, on the occasion of Arthur’s death, husband and wife
displayed a certain warmth of affection.
Henry found his greatest delight in the freedom of a
country life. He was passionately fond of the chase; ambassadors had frequently
to follow his travelling camp from place to place, and he would sometimes send
word to them that, if their business was not very urgent, they might wait, as
he did not wish to be disturbed. In his last years he was more addicted to
sport than ever; in September, 1507, he was in the country hunting, and “going
from forest to forest, from one mountain to another; he did not remain a single
day quiet in the same place.” He also encouraged knightly exercises among his
subjects, anxious at the same time that they should keep up their skill in the
use of arms. As there were fears of a decline in the art of shooting with the
long bow—that national weapon with which the English excelled—he called in the
aid of legislation to keep down the price of bows, and to restrain the use of
the cross-bow, which was coming into vogue.
The capital Henry visited with reluctance, and only
for a short time together, he preferred rather the neighbourhood, and his
favourite seat was the charming palace at Sheen, the later Richmond, where,
from a slight eminence, a wide view is obtained over a beautiful landscape of
wood and meadow, amidst which the Thames winds its way.
Sometimes Henry gave himself up entirely to those
pleasures that were congenial to him. We learn what were the usual occupations
of both king and court, besides work and the chase, from his accurately kept
account-book. From that, too, we get to know many of the persons belonging to
the king’s household; his physicians, Dr. Holand,
Master Ralf Sintclair, and Vincent Wolff, who, judging
by the amount of his salary, must have been specially skilful; and the queen’s
physicians, Master Lewes and Robert Taillour. To a
good preacher the king would occasionally give a pound: his preference for
France is sometimes shown in these presents, for if the preacher had the good
fortune to be a native of that country, he would receive two pounds. Music was
a favourite recreation with Henry and his family; he often bought instruments
organs, and also lutes, especially for the Princesses Margaret and Mary. He
bestowed regular though limited salaries on minstrels and organists, as well as
on the “king’s pipers.” For a change, the wandering musicians of the queen or
the princesses, would perform before the king; and again his purse was opened freely,
when on one occasion, the minstrels of the Queen of France appeared before him.
He also gladly rewarded solo performers on the organ, harp, violin, or horn, as
well as the trumpeters who greeted him upon the Thames, and the children who
pleased him with their singing in the church or in the garden. Composers and
painters, and among poets the “Walshe rymers” in particular,
received substantial recognition of their works; one Spanish musician received
at one time ten pounds, and an Italian poet even twenty pounds. For his
library, Henry caused some books to be procured from abroad, others to be
copied; the court bookseller, Quintin, was charged with the copying of the
books, and their proper get-up and binding. He encouraged the new art of
printing, and gave the printer Pynson an advance of
ten pounds to print a mass book. Considerable sums were often paid for books;
occasionally two pounds for a single book, for several together from ten to
twenty pounds, and in one entry to a Frenchman, as much as twenty-five pounds.
As to numbers of volumes and titles, the account-book is, unfortunately,
silent; once only does it add the detail, that one Anthony Verard
received six pounds for two books entitled the “Gardyn of Helth.”
Lighter recreations were not neglected. Henry was fond
of games of dice, and, above all, cards—which were strictly forbidden by law to
the poor apprentice boys: he often lost quite substantial sums; how much he won
he does not inform us. Jesters, jugglers, and clowns seem to have afforded him
special amusement; when he went to any house as a guest, his host would be
careful to provide for him this sort of entertainment; and if a pretty young
girl danced before the king, he was ready to reward her liberally; jugglers of
various kinds, skilful swimmers, conjurors, rope-dancers, and fireeaters had to be content with less. Henry seems to
have kept a whole troop of jesters at his court; we read of “the foolyshe due of Lancastre,” of Dego,
the Spanish jester, as well as of Thomas Blackall, and Scot and Dick ‘the
master fools.’ ” These jesters received from the king their appropriate costume;
to the Spanish fool, Dego, he also presented a horse,
with a saddle and bridle. Besides jugglers and jesters, men with physical
peculiarities seem to have found favour with him; the “grete
Walshe child,” “Alen the litell Scottisman,”
“the grete woman of Flaunders”;
possibly the “Greek with a beard might
be reckoned among these. For rare animals, such as lions, leopards, wild cats,
and foreign birds, he was willing to pay, as well as for human monstrosities;
for a common nightingale he once paid a whole pound.
Thus, with the help of the royal account-book, we can
take a glance into the life of the narrow court circle, and into the favourite
relaxations of the monarch. On the same pages on which are recorded large sums
for political, military, and similar objects, we find, accurately entered, a
bow for Prince Arthur, new hose for Prince Henry, and the wages of the royal
barber. The king’s own purchases are also found, such as a weather-glass, an
ornamental sword, a dagger, an artistic glass, or a silver fork. He supported
an alchymist, who practised his art within the Tower,
rewarded the monk who manufactured gunpowder, and the constructor of the first
paper-mill in England. But he would pay just as much to a woman who brought him
cherries and strawberries in April, to a girl who offered him flowers, or to
another who supplied him with refreshment on a journey. Many a small but
interesting trait of character is here to be traced, showing, as also do his
alms to the poor and injured, that the king was not wanting in kindly feeling,
and through all there is that ' touch of humour, which we see him display in
his intercourse with men.
And yet his almsgiving, especially for religious
purposes, was rather the expression of his devotion to the Church, and of that
piety which, in his latter years, Henry liked to
exercise, in accordance with the precepts of the Church. Amongst the persons
who had received presents, we find on one occasion, a heretic at Canterbury;
this gift is said to have been a sign of Henry’s satisfaction at having himself
induced him to retract. It would seem, however, that the wretched man was burnt
after all. Unfortunately in this matter Henry inherited the views of the
Lancastrian kings ; and many times during his reign heretics perished at the
stake at Smithfield. Exposure on the pillory and other milder punishments for
heresy were also frequent. Heroic endurance was often displayed by these
martyrs. On the 24th of April, 1494, a woman of upwards of eighty was burnt;
her heresies comprised nine articles; “and never wold
she turne from the said heresys
for noon Exhortation, but in the said false and heronyous
opynyons dyed.” Henry promised the Spanish ambassador
that he would persecute with severity the Spanish Jews, who had fled to
England.
A unique present was made to the king by the French
statesman, Cardinal d’Amboise, who sent over a precious relic, the thigh-bone
of St. George, enclosed in silver. On St. George’s Day, the 23rd of April,
1505, Henry went in solemn procession to St. Paul’s, where the holy relic was
displayed before a devout multitude. The Convocation of Canterbury, when
sitting in August, 1504, bestowed upon the king a spiritual favour—he was to
participate in all the Church’s acts and good deeds in England during his lifetime,
as well as after his death, and at the Mass in every large church, the
celebrating priest was to pray for the king’s salvation.
The devotion of the king and his family to the Church
was shown in religious foundations of various kinds. The Franciscans he
especially favoured. For the Observants, a branch of this order of friars, he
founded three houses, at Canterbury, Newcastle, and Southampton ; for another,
that of the Conventuals, three, at Richmond, Greenwich, and Newark. These he
evidently continued to bear in mind, for on one occasion he made a valuable
present of books to the friars at Greenwich for their library. We hear of
chapels founded by Henry’s wife and mother. He himself built the Savoy
Hospital, near Charing Cross, in London, destined to afford shelter for one
hundred poor persons; and in the last year of his life he determined to erect
at Bath a large hospital, on the model of the one in Paris. For these and
similar foundations he appropriated the revenues of ecclesiastical institutions
which were falling into decay, and thereby diverted them to better uses. To
John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, he gladly gave permission to abolish an ancient
nunnery, and to found in its stead a college at Cambridge. His mother in like
manner founded Christ’s and St. John’s Colleges in the same University, and the
Bishops of Lincoln and Winchester one each at Oxford.
Henry’s activity both in sacred and secular building
bears testimony to his feeling and love for architecture. On the evening of the
21st of December, 1497, a fire broke out in the palace which he had built for himself
at Sheen, and in less than three hours the greater portion of the building, and
the whole of its valuable contents, were destroyed. A splendid new building was
at once begun, and was almost completed by the year 1501; but in consequence of
the disaster the old name seems to have become distasteful to Henry, who
therefore called the place Richmond, after his former title as earl. He also
rebuilt Baynard’s Castle, in London, and took in hand alterations at the palace
at Greenwich, which he often visited.
But the most splendid monument of the architecture of
the Tudor king is the chapel in Westminster Abbey that is called by his name.
At first Henry’s design was to found a chapel at Windsor, to be dedicated to
the Holy Virgin, in which he intended one day to be interred, and to which
should be attached a hospital for the support of the needy. To this plan Pope
Alexander VI. gave his consent on the 4th of October, 1494, and allowed at the
same time that the revenues of two decayed priories in the dioceses of
Winchester and Lincoln should be devoted for the purpose. In the matter of
granting indulgences, this new chapel was to have the same privileges as the “De
Scala Coeli ”at Rome. The works for the king’s tomb had already been begun at
Windsor, when he changed his plan and removed his new foundation to
Westminster. New bulls were obtained from Alexander VI and Julius II, and the
arrangements for the chapel and hospital were drawn up in detail; other
benefices were appropriated to endow it, and the new foundation was to be
placed under the immediate protection of the papal chair. In January, 1503, the
demolition of the surrounding buildings having been completed, the
foundation-stone was laid.
Then began to rise, at the east end of Westminster
Abbey, the chapel of Henry VII, which was completed by the son of the founder,
and remains to this day one of the most beautiful ecclesiastical buildings in
London. The chapel is built in the Tudor style, with its characteristic
low-pitched arch, and seems in the luxuriant richness of its ornament to defy
all the stricter rules of constructive form. The principal lines of the
building, which in the Gothic style stand out clearly, are here obscured by
this overhanging fretwork of stone, and the architectural form is made use of
for the indulgence of the most exuberant play of fancy. Yet the architect has
not carried this freedom too far. He has kept within the limits of good taste,
and all is blended into a most artistic, beautiful, and harmonious whole. At
the east end of the chapel stands the sarcophagus of the royal pair, brought
from Windsor and completed later, on which lie the bronze figures of both the
king and queen, the whole being surrounded by an iron screen.
This chapel is a splendid monument raised for himself
by the founder of a dynasty, after he had successfully passed through all
dangers and all struggles and established the security of his throne. It stands,
before the world as an enduring symbol in stone of the solidity and power which
distinguished the new sovereignty of the Tudors.
This taste for architecture the king shared in common
with his most eminent ministers, Morton and Bray. Morton was a true Maecenas. A
whole series of edifices were, after his death, attributed to him, among which
the most important are the archiepiscopal palaces of Canterbury and Lambeth. He
also entertained the idea of converting into a harbour that arm of the sea which
was gradually closing up between the island of Thanet and the mainland.
Reginald Bray, who moreover had had a share in the education of Prince Arthur,
was not only a patron of architecture, but himself an architect. He laid the
foundation stone of the chapel at Westminster, and to him is attributed the
design of that chapel, and also the rebuilding of St. George’s Chapel at
Windsor; the resemblance between these two edifices is no doubt striking. Bray
died on the 5th oft August, 1503, a few months after the laying of the
foundation stone at Westminster. He had gained wealth in his official position,
and had bestowed bountiful gifts on the chapel at Windsor.
There were others also who vied with Henry and his
ministers in this work. The London Chronicle gives us a glimpse of the
munificent public spirit of wealthy citizens, who erected churches and public
buildings in London and other towns. The aldermen, John Trite, Hugh Clopton,
Ralph Austry, Kneysworth,
and others, hereby distinguished themselves.
Henry VII had while on the throne led a life of
incessant and fruitful work, and thus he soon became old beyond his years.
Towards the close of the century, when he had victoriously passed through all
the dangers, domestic and foreign, which had beset him on all sides, he began
to get more anxious, he attached importance to gloomy prophecies, or feared
some new misfortune, should they become known among the people. His more strict
observance of religious duties seems to have begun about this time. At last his
health began visibly to decline. Early in life he had begged for dispensation
from fasting, on account of weak health; it was not until later that he became
more strict in this as in all other ordinances of the Church. On the occasion
of Suffolk’s rising, a rumour was circulated that the king was in declining
health and had not much longer to live, but it is not till the first months of
the year 1507 that we hear of a severe illness. Then, however, he was in great
danger. In the summer he regained his strength by taking frequent bodily
exercise; but in the following February, attacks of gout kept him to his room
at Greenwich, and it was not till the end of March that he slowly recovered. In
June, Henry was still very weak. All idea of his getting well again was then
abandoned—in fact, he never really recovered; and after a fresh attack, in
March, 1509, all hope disappeared.
The king indeed continued to speak of his recovery,
and occupied himself with the affairs of State, but at the same time he made
preparations for his end. His last will, no doubt made long beforehand, bears the
date of the 30th of March, 1509. He desired to rest by the side of his wife,
before the high altar in his chapel at Westminster. To complete the building,
he left £5000 to the abbot, and ordered masses for his soul, the distribution
of alms, and the satisfaction of the just claims of all those who might have
any grievance against him. He remembered his counsellors and servants, the
completion of his religious foundations, also the conclusion of the most
important political treaty of his last years—the marriage of the Princess Mary
with the Archduke Charles. His mother’s name headed the list of those trusted
friends who were commissioned to carry out his last will and testament.
To appease Heaven, a last general pardon was granted and pilgrimages were undertaken for
the king’s recovery, but the end could not be averted. On the 21st of April,
1509, in his fifty-third year, Henry VII died at his beloved Richmond.
On the 8th of May, a Tuesday, his body was brought by
land along the south bank of the Thames to London. In the gloom of the evening,
lighted up by countless torches, the long procession passed in mournful state
over London Bridge. In front rode the sword-bearer and the vice-chamberlain of
the town, and among the great crowd that followed them were the trumpeters and
minstrels of the king, the foreign merchants, and officials of the court. The
sheriffs and aldermen each carried two white roses in their hands, on horseback
came two heralds-at-arms, a knight on a horse with black trappings with the
king’s standard, dignitaries of the Church, and the chief justices of the royal
courts of law. The friars walked along chanting, with the canons of London, and
the choir of the king’s chapel. The lords followed them on horseback, the
temporal lords on the left, the spiritual lords on the right. Sir David Owen
carried a steel helmet with a gold crown upon it; Sir Edward Howard wore the
king’s armour, with an open vizor, in his hand the battle-axe, the head bent
downward resting on his stirrup ; one knight displayed on rich armour the arms
of England. Alone, in front of the car, with his mace in his hand, rode the
Lord Mayor of London.
Seven large horses, with trappings of black velvet,
drew the car, on which lay an effigy of the deceased king, clothed in his rich
robe of state, with the crown on his head, the sceptre and golden ball in
either hand. Over it rose a canopy of cloth of gold. At the side of each horse
marched a knight, and four lords at the side of the car, each one with a banner
in his hand. Then followed the knights of the garter, according to their rank,
one lord, five earls, and three barons, led by the Duke of Buckingham; esquires
bore the swords and caps sent by the successive popes; Sir Thomas Brandon, the
Master of the Horse, led a horse, with velvet trappings, on which were the arms
of England ; Lord Darcy rode at the head of the bodyguard; gentlemen, members
of the trade guilds, and others in great numbers, formed the remainder of the
procession.
At the west doors of St. Paul’s Church, where the
Bishop of London was waiting in full canonicals, the procession paused.
Amidst clouds of incense, twelve men of the guard
lifted the heavy coffin with the effigy lying on it, from the car, the Duke of
Buckingham and five earls walked at the side and . laid their hand on the
coffin, four barons held a rich canopy over it, till it was set down before the
high altar. After a solemn dirge by the Bishop of London, the procession left
the church, and knights and heralds kept guard over the corpse. On the
following day three masses were sung, and the Bishop of Rochester preached. About
one o’clock, after the midday meal, the coffin was borne out of the church, and
the procession went in the same order as on the previous day, through Fleet
Street to Charing Cross, where the Abbot of Westminster, with three abbots and
the monks of the abbey stood, and incensed the corpse. In the same way it was
received at the west door of the abbey by the Archbishops of Canterbury and
York, whilst the Abbey Church was lighted up with a costly and curious light.
Here also knights kept guard by the coffin throughout the night.
On Thursday, the 10th of May, took place the
interment. After three masses had been celebrated, and a solemn requiem by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, the offerings were made with befitting solemnity;
four heralds received the king’s coat of mail, shield, sword, and the crowned
helmet; then Sir Edward Howard rode in full armour, but without a helmet, into
the church, sprang from his saddle, and, led by the earls of Kent and Essex,
stepped up to the archbishop before the altar; two monks then led him into the
sacristy, where he took off his armour. He appeared again in a black garment,
and presented his offering, where upon all, according to their rank, followed
him with their gifts. Meanwhile the Duke of Buckingham and the knights accompanying
him, carried in palls with slow and solemn step, and spread them over the
catafalque. The Bishop of London preached the sermon; then they raised the
image of the king from the bier, and the choir chanted the psalm, “Circumdederunt me gemitus
mortis.” Again the corpse was incensed, and the insignia were taken from the
coffin, upon which lay, on black velvet, a large cross in white satin.
Thus they bore King Henry to the vault. The prelates
pronounced the absolution, the Archbishop of Canterbury threw earth upon the
coffin, the Lord Treasurer and the Lord Steward broke their staves and threw
them into the vault, and the other state officials did the same. The vault was
then closed, and a pall of cloth of gold was spread over it But the heralds
took their tabards from their shoulders, and hung them on the railing round the
catafalque, and cried out in French the lamentation, “The noble King Henry VII
is dead!”. Then they put their tabards on again, and with loud voices uttered
the joyful cry, “Long live the noble King Henry VIII”
A new reign had begun.