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DECLINE OF EMPIRE AND PAPACYCHAPTER XI.FRANCE: THE LAST CAPETIANS
Philip
III’s reign is by no means such a colourless interlude between the two great
reigns of Louis IX and Philip IV as it has sometimes been represented. Its purely military aspects, it is true, are lamentable.
One great army in 1276, on its way to invade Castile, came marching tamely home
again without crossing the frontier. Another, in the Aragon “crusade” of 1285,
endured many sufferings in a hopeless and uninspiring cause, to which the
king’s own life was sacrificed. These Spanish expeditions, however, were
merely the premature outcome of the growing importance, confidence, and
ambition of the Capetian monarchy. The process by which the king’s power was
exalted and the royal domain extended is the capital interest of French
history in the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, and to that process
Philip Ill’s reign made a real contribution, overt or concealed. The failure of
designs of foreign conquest must not be allowed to blind us to the significance
of this fact, or cause us to turn from the reign with a shrug, like the
contemporary poet who sang:
De celui roi ne soi que dire
N’ai pas este a son concire
Ne ne sais rien de son afaire
Nostre Sire li donst bien faire.
Whether
Philip himself pursued a consciously formulated policy is another question. It
is hard to say how he earned that title of Audax which is traditionally his.
Contemporary writers praise him as a mighty hunter and a good churchman, but
blame him for illiteracy and overabsorption in secular affairs. Even Guillaume
de Nangis, in anxious quest of polite metaphor, could
do no better than to call his king “the carbuncle sprung from that most
precious gem of Christ,” St Louis. At any rate, Philip held that father’s
memory dear, and accepted the consequences of his father’s actions. He kept in
office the household clerks who had learnt their business in St Louis’ service,
men of sagacity and experience, wonderfully patient in turning the wheel of
routine, if ever expectant of reward. Pierre de la Broce,
who retained under Philip the post of chamberlain to which he had already risen
during St Louis’ lifetime, was an exemplar of the strength and weakness of this
class. After eight years, court jealousy achieved his undoing, and he was
hanged (1278). His disappearance cleared the way for his chief enemies, the
great feudalists, notable for courage, pride, limitation of vision, and
impulsive response to stirring appeals. Head and shoulders above the rest
towered the king’s uncle Charles, Count of Anjou and Provence and King of
Sicily, whose pressure had already been felt by Louis IX and who from 1274
onwards had a friend at court in Philip’s second wife, Mary of Brabant, a lady
as pretty and affectionate as she was consequential and intriguing. The
Queen-mother, however, Margaret of Provence, hated Charles because in right of
his marriage with her sister Beatrice he had acquired the whole county of
Provence when his father-in-law died, denying any share in it either to herself
or to the third sister, Eleanor, mother of Edward I of England. Concerted
schemes of the anti-Angevins on both sides of the Channel were constant, but
none bore permanent fruit.
In his
general treatment of the great feudal magnates Philip shewed a becoming dignity
and self-respect. At the very outset, the royal domain received a magnificent
addition in the escheated lands of Philip’s uncle, Alphonse, Count of Poitou
and Toulouse, who died on his way home from the crusade in 1271, leaving no
heirs. Though Charles of Anjou and his cousin, Philippa of Lomagne,
both laid claim to a share in this inheritance, it passed to the Crown
undivided, with the exception of the Comtat Venaissin, east of the Rhone, which was presented to the
Papacy, and the district of the Agenais on the middle Garonne, which was in
1279, by the Treaty of Amiens, handed over to Edward I, King of England and
Duke of Aquitaine. At the same time Philip promised to begin an enquiry as to
English rights in Quercy, and recognised Edward’s
queen Eleanor as countess of the little northern fief of Ponthieu, which she
had just inherited from her mother. Philip did well to acquiesce in this way in
new conditions, and to fulfil promises, contingent on the death of Alphonse,
which had been made as long before as the Treaty of Paris of 1259, for a
quarrel with his neighbour the English duke would have made the absorption of
his new southern dominions very difficult. As it was, he was able to carry out
the salsamentum comitatus Tolose on the whole with surprising ease, though he
could not entirely avoid complications inevitable for the northern lord of
southern fiefs, watched across the frontier by Castile, Aragon, and Navarre.
Roger Bernard III, Count of Foix, and Gerald V, Count of Armagnac, shewed in a
local quarrel such insolent indifference to the symbols of royal power used in
protection of their enemy, that Philip was compelled to a military
demonstration, followed by the imprisonment of the Count of Foix for a year.
Meanwhile James I, King of Aragon, put forward claims which took years to
settle concerning his rights over parts of the county.
Another
substantial addition to the lands of the Crown was quite unexpected. Henry I,
King of Navarre and Count of Champagne, died in 1274, leaving as his heiress
Jeanne, a three-year-old child, already betrothed to whichever son of Edward I
of England should survive to marriageable age. However, the widow, Blanche of
Artois, whose brother Robert was one of Philip’s greatest subjects, took refuge
at the court of France, and soon Philip secured the betrothal of Jeanne to his
own second son, his namesake and future successor. French armies took
possession of Navarre, and French officials proceeded to introduce innovations
bitterly resented by its inhabitants. The county of Champagne, however, was
administered till Jeanne’s marriage in 1284 by an Englishman whom her mother
now took as her second husband, Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, brother of Edward I.
Other
acquisitions, individually small but cumulatively important, were gained by
purchase or exchange. Moreover, the local representatives of the Crown, baillis
and sénéchaux, everywhere pressed forward royal
influence and rights, sometimes even more vigorously than the Crown itself
thought prudent. Before the reign ended, the seneschal of Beaucaire had coerced the Bishop of Viviers into recognising
the royal rights over his subjects; the bailli of Macon had by constant
interference with the suzerainty of the Archbishop of Lyons paved the way for
the official union of Lyons with France under Philip IV; and James II of
Majorca had been forced to admit the authority of the Crown in Montpellier. In
several quarters the Crown had acted as mediator: in the quarrels between Guy
of Dampierre, Count of Flanders, and the great
Flemish towns; in the “war of the three Roberts”, where Philip’s
brother-in-law, Robert II, Duke of Burgundy, was beset by rival claimants in
the persons of his nephews Robert, Count of Nevers, and Robert, Count of
Clermont; and in disputes in the county of Brittany. In all sorts of ways the
feudalists were being taught that, while on the one hand the way of the
transgressor was hard, on the other there were advantages in securing the
friendship and support of the Crown. In some respects they found Philip more
congenial than his saintly father, for he tolerated the judicial combat,
enjoyed tournaments in spite of their political undesirability, and was, in
fact, a human and conventional person of like parts and passions with
themselves. Had he lived longer, indeed, he might have done something to ease
the difficulties due to the double position of the king as feudalist and
sovereign.
In
ecclesiastical policy Philip III’s reign was not marked by any crisis or the
settlement of any outstanding problem. The king met his personal religious
obligations with decency and even zeal; secured preferment for his proteges
when possible; tried to keep some hold through his officials on the hosts of
clerks in minor orders whose unruliness so often endangered public peace;
avoided as far as he could taking sides in the quarrel between the Mendicant
Orders and the secular clergy, in the University of Paris and elsewhere; and
was, on the whole, no more and no less criticised in clerical circles than was
usual. The papal throne was vacant when he became king, but in 1271 was filled
by that admirable and energetic Pope, Gregory X, who aimed at orderliness,
reconciliation, and the sinking of political quarrels in common efforts towards
spiritual ends. Though Gregory turned a deaf ear to suggestions that Philip III
should be chosen as Emperor, his relations with the King of France were kindly
throughout his pontificate (1271-76). There followed in rapid succession four
Popes of whom nothing need here be said, until in 1281 Charles of Anjou’s
personal friend, Cardinal Simon of Brie, ascended the papal throne as Martin
IV.
Now at last
Charles had the leverage for which he had been waiting so long. The character
and career of the great Angevin, his masterful personality, his successes, and
the fantastic dreams with which his successes inspired him, have been described
elsewhere. The wine long mixed seemed ready at last for pouring, when suddenly,
in 1282, the cup was dashed from his lips, for his Sicilian subjects threw off
his rule in the “Sicilian Vespers”, and the rest of his life was spent in vain
efforts to retrieve his shattered fortunes. Martin IV did all he could to help.
When the Sicilians offered their throne to Peter III, King of Aragon, husband
of Constance the heiress of the Hohenstaufen, the Pope not only excommunicated
him for accepting, but also declared that he had forfeited the throne of
Aragon. Now came the critical moment for France, for the Pope offered the
vacated throne to Philip for one of his sous.
From some
points of view the offer was tempting. Navarre, the western of the two Spanish
kingdoms which marched with French soil, was already secured for Philip’s
eldest surviving son; it would be well if Aragon, its eastern neighbour, could
be in a similar position. And Philip had some stinging memories with regard to
Spain, which he would be glad to salve if possible. In 1275, on the death of
Philip’s brother-in-law, Ferdinand de la Cerda, heir to the throne of Castile,
King Alfonso X had entirely ignored the right of the dead man’s two little sons
to step into their father’s place, and had proclaimed as his heir their uncle
Sancho. The widow, Blanche of France, left, as Guillaume de Nangis says, “destitute of almost all human comfort, in desolation with her children
amid the rude manners of the Spaniards and their horrible appearance”, had
appealed to Philip for help, and he had not only sent protesting embassies but
had set off with a huge army of invasion. However, the army had got no farther
than Sauveterre, near Pau, and most of its members
had never had a chance of fighting, though some, it is true, went on to punish
a revolt in Navarre, and did dreadful work there. The whole business was
ineffective, and as by 1283 Alfonso was engaged in a fierce struggle with his
former protege Sancho, Philip need not fear interference from Castile if he
chose to blot out its humiliation by new ventures in Aragon. If to these
considerations we add the feudal love of war for its own sake, and further the
fact that the Aragonese expedition was to involve all the spiritual and
temporal privileges of a crusade, it is not surprising that the Pope’s offer
was accepted, after discussion in two assemblies of magnates, one at Bourges in
November 1283, the other at Paris in February 1284. Enthusiasm ignored the
difficulty of war in an unknown region, the strength of local feeling in
Aragon, and the misery of acting as cat’s paw in another man’s quarrel. There
may well have been moments later, however, when this last thought came home
with bitterness; for Charles of Anjou died in January 1285, and Martin IV in
the following March, so that Philip was left alone to face the consequences of
other people’s actions.
The story
of the ill-starred crusade is short. Philip set out in March 1285, accompanied
by his two sons and by the papal legate. His army was huge but cumbrous, fiery
but undisciplined, and as it advanced from Narbonne across Roussillon horrible
atrocities occurred, especially at Elna (25 May).
Aragon was entered in June, after a painful crossing of the Pyrenees, and on 27
June Philip settled down to a ten weeks’ siege of Gerona. What with shortage of
supplies, which had to be brought at irregular intervals from the supporting
fleet off Rosas, until this was defeated in August at the battle of the Islas Hormigas; what with disease, due to the heat, the flies,
and the deadly stenches of warfare; what with the disheartening effect of long
periods of inactivity, only now and then broken by trifling skirmishes; the
army which at last, on 7 September, marched into ruined Gerona, was hardly
victorious in anything but name. In any case that victory, such as it was,
represented the extreme of possible success, and within a week the invaders
were in retreat towards France. At Perpignan, on 5 October, Philip III died,
while his rival, Peter of Aragon, lived scarcely another month. The reign
ended, as it had begun, in an atmosphere of general mourning.
Philip IV
With the
accession of Philip IV there opened a period full of great happenings in French
history. How far was this due to the king himself? M. Langlois’ weighty support
is given to the view that we shall never know. “This little problem is
insoluble”. A German biographer, on the other hand, argues that a careful
reconsideration of contemporary evidence suggests that Philip had real driving
force. As the pupil of William of Ercuis, and the
recipient of many learned works, he had had frequent opportunities of acquiring
wisdom, and although contemporaries were unanimous in ascribing the
responsibility for Philip’s actions to others, in each case it is easy to see
why they should wish to do so. The monks of Saint-Denis did not want to
criticise a patron; Villani, a partner in the firm of the Peruzzi, must not
blame a valued client; Dubois thought it tactful to speak freely of past royal
mistakes as due to bad advice; Nogaret dared not alienate opinion from his
master by revealing to the outside world that Drang nach Herrschaft by
which he knew him to be possessed. And finally, Philip himself on his deathbed
assumed responsibility in striking words which were recorded by an impartial
witness in a letter written only eight days afterwards. “He said...that in many
ways he had done wrong and offended God, led by evil counsel, and that he himself
was the cause of that evil counsel. All this, however, is slender evidence from
which to deduce personality, and the self-accusation of a dying man in his
remorse is not enough to counterbalance the silence of a lifetime.
The few
definite remarks made by contemporaries about Philip do not help us much. The
French called him the Fair and the Flemings the Fat. That indiscreet and
hot-headed southerner, Bernard Saisset, was in the
midst of the irritations of his own trial when he declared: “The king is like
the eagle owl, the finest of birds, and yet worth nothing at all. He is the
handsomest man in the world, yet all he can do is to stare at people without
saying a word”. Yves of Saint-Denis, on the other hand, coming from an abbey
closely linked with the destinies of the monarchy, found as he stood by
Philip’s deathbed exactly those qualities that he would wish to find in a son
of St Louis, and phrased his admiration in terms suitable to any pious end.
Official documents conceal the individual by their formulae. And even the
achievements of the reign are no testimony of royal skill, for historical
experience proves that royal indifference was, in administrative connexions at
any rate, sometimes more beneficial than royal interference. On the whole we must
leave Philip’s personality where we found it, a riddle without an answer.
Next to the
king, the greatest position in France belonged to Charles of Valois, who had
been compensated for losing his promised kingdom of Aragon by marriage with
Margaret, the daughter of Charles II, King of Naples, who brought to him the
counties of Anjou and Maine. However, Charles had little time to spare for his
brother’s affairs, for he married three times and had to provide for the
futures of fourteen sons and daughters; he acquired with his second wife,
Catherine Courtenay, who was the granddaughter of Baldwin II, claims on the
Latin Empire of the East; and in 1308 he became an unsuccessful candidate for
election as Emperor in the West. Philip’s chief instruments—or leaders, if we
adopt the idea of his personal insignificance—were chosen from among those
professional administrators whose activities are so characteristic of the age,
and who had learnt their business in the personal service of the king or his
family. The researches made of late years into administrative history have
shown us how united, to the thirteenth-century mind, were public and private,
State and domestic, and how experience gained in one field was utilised in
another. Pierre Flote, to whom, as his enemies put it in bitter mockery, Philip
said, “Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my council”, had started
his career as head of the pantry in the queen’s household. Men of this sort,
Guillaume de Nogaret, Enguerrand de Marigny, and others, counted enormously with Philip.
Vigorous, impudent, and ingenious, they encouraged him in certain bold
departures from the policy of his father and grandfather. Foreign policy
deserted the Spanish peninsula for efforts in new fields, and the relations of
the Crown with Church and Pope put on startling and scandalous colours. Three
huge upheavals mark the reign—the bitter quarrel with Boniface VIII, the
establishment of the Avignon Papacy, and the suppression of the Order of the
Knights Templars.
It was in 1294
that Cardinal Benedict Gaetani ascended the papal throne as Pope Boniface VIII.
He was already known, and disliked, in France. In 1263 he had accompanied
Cardinal Simon of Brie when he came to preach an anti-Ghibelline crusade in the
interests of Charles of Anjou. So recently as 1290 he had again visited France,
this time as legate, and although his instructions were to make peace and
assuage the griefs of the clergy, his bitter tongue put such an edge on the
policy of Nicholas IV, whom he represented, that he brought not peace but a
sword. And as Benedict had begun, Boniface was to continue, robbing his real
qualities of courage and energy of some of their value by a contemptuous
disregard of other men’s prejudices or principles. In Philip IV, however, or in
those who dictated Philip’s attitude, Boniface soon found a pride and an
impatience to match his own. Even in the days of Nicholas IV, who had done his
best to veil in elaborate courtesy any difference of opinion between himself
and Philip, there had been signs of French resentment. “It is delightful for
us”, wrote Philip sarcastically in 1289, “to find that when we are in question,
he [the Pope] shows far more alacrity in attending to our correction, on bare
suspicion, than to that of other kings.’’ Under Boniface VIII this soreness was
rubbed into an open wound.
The first
friction occurred in 1296. Philip had in 1295 made his final peace with Aragon,
but twelve months before had become embroiled with Edward I of England, who in
turn set up alliances with Philip’s troublesome northern vassal, Guy of Dampierre, Count of Flanders. Both the English and French
Kings demanded for their war expenses clerical subsidies, Philip having fresh
in his memory that “crusading” tenth which by papal permission had financed the
campaign against Aragon. From both countries, however, clerical protests
reached Rome, and in February 1296 Boniface asserted himself by the issue of
the bull Clericis laicos.
Though this bull was addressed in a general way to all secular rulers, the
circumstances made it clear that it was aimed especially at England and France,
and though the doctrine it contained was not novel, both monarchs felt
resentful at its being emphasised at this particular moment. The bull began by
a provocative quotation from Gratian’s Decretum—“Antiquity
reports that laymen are exceedingly troublesome to clerks,” and went on to
insist that before kings exacted or clergy paid any collectae or talliae papal authorisation must always be
sought, on pain of excommunication.
Philip
showed extreme irritation at this, and the French clergy trembled lest his
wrath should recoil oil them in worse than words. The bull was discussed in an
assembly of prelates, envoys were sent to Rome, and in August Philip forbade
the exportation of gold or silver from France. This may have been a mere
war-time precaution, but Boniface took it as a personal affront, and commented
on it indignantly in September in the bull Ineffabilis amor, by which he disclaimed any intention of preventing the clergy from
contributing when required for the defence of the realm, but still insisted
that they must never do so without papal permission. After an interval of
spluttering wrath and windy threats at both the French and the Roman courts,
Boniface came to terms in a series of graduated withdrawals. In February 1297
he authorised the king to accept voluntary contributions from ecclesiastics, in
pressing necessity, without consulting the Pope. In July he committed to the
king the decision as to whether in any given case the necessity was pressing or
not, and on the last day of the same month, by the bull Etsi de statu, he formally renounced the claims made
in Clericis laicos.
During August Boniface made several friendly gestures, including the
canonisation of Louis IX. This outward good will was maintained for another
four years and more, but as both Boniface and Philip matured their policy it
became certain that a new clash of pretensions would occur, especially as the
celebration of the papal Jubilee in 1300 surrounded the Pope with compliments
and deference which left him less than ever disposed to endure criticism.
The second
quarrel, in which the questions at issue were wider, the conflict longer, the
defeat of the Pope more complete, and the historical results more lasting,
began at the end of 1301. Philip had asked the Pope, in a tone rather of
command than of request, to degrade from his orders Bernard Saisset,
Bishop of Pamiers, who was accused of trying to rouse
Languedoc against French rule, speaking treasonably of the king, his
councillors, and his policy, preaching heretical doctrines, and blaspheming
against God and the Pope. These charges, first made in the early summer of 1301
after a local enquiry, had been confirmed and extended in October, when Bernard
was arraigned before the king and the magnates in assembly at Senlis. The bishop was then placed in the custody of the
Archbishop of Narbonne, and was regarded by the Crown as a culprit whose guilt
was proven, but whose punishment would be deferred, out of respect for the
Church, until he had been deprived formally of his clerical status. “The king
is only waiting for this before making to God the agreeable sacrifice of a
traitor whose reformation is no longer possible.”
Now it is
unlikely that in the first attack on Saisset Philip
had in mind ecclesiastical considerations. He was, for political reasons,
curbing an unruly subject in a part of his dominions where local independence
and loose attachment made unruliness particularly dangerous. Yet Saisset was a bishop, and Philip shewed either an
incredible naivete or a deliberate blindness when he assumed that the Pope
would ruin an ecclesiastic upon secular judgment alone, even after Philip had
fed his indignation with tales of Bernard’s spiritual shortcomings and
impertinences in speaking of the Pope himself. To any Pope such a course would
have been a sacrifice of dignity; to Boniface, especially with pride newly
inflated by the Jubilee, it was unthinkable. Besides, Bernard was his protege,
occupant of a new bishopric carved out for his benefit from the see of
Toulouse. It is not surprising that Boniface refused Philip’s request. Letters
of 5 December 1301 ordered the king to release Bernard’s temporalities and set
him free to go to be judged at Rome, and though on 13 January 1302 this order
was countermanded, Boniface still insisted that the bishop must be tried in the
court of his superior, the Archbishop of Narbonne.
This check
to Philip’s wishes might in itself have been enough to cause a quarrel, which
became certain when Boniface surrounded the immediate decision with a pomp and
circumstance that almost concealed it from sight, reasserting papal claims in
terms intolerably harsh and pretentious. By the bull Salvator mundi he revoked the concessions made in 1297, and once again forbade
French prelates to make grants to the Crown without papal permission. In the
bull Ausculta fili he took the tone of a pedagogue to an unruly pupil, rebuking Philip for seizure
of ecclesiastical goods, debasement of the coinage, and other offences, and
announcing that in November 1302 representatives of the Gallican Church would
be required to come to Rome to a synod at which Philip himself might be present
if he chose, but which in any case would proceed to take measures for the
reform of his realm. Letters of summons addressed to the French prelates,
chapters, and masters of theology, plainly named “the correction of the king”
as among the business to be dealt with. What was Philip to do?
For nearly
eighteen months it seemed as if victory was this time to go to Boniface. For
one thing, Philip seemed so absorbed in the wider conflict that he ceased to
trouble about Saisset, who remained in obscurity for
some years, but in the end was restored to his see. The bull Ausculta fili was
burnt, by accident or design, and trouble was taken to circulate an inaccurate
and mocking summary of its contents, possibly with a pretended reply in which
Philip offered to “Boniface who calls himself Pope little or no greeting.” For
the first time in his reign, Philip summoned clergy, nobles, and townsfolk of
his realm to meet together at Paris in April, and there “begged most earnestly,
as a lord commanding and as a friend asking and urging with entreaties.” for
their support. He was so far successful that each order did address a letter to
Rome, rejecting any idea that the realm which the French kings held “from God
alone” could possibly be in temporal subjection to the Pope. So scant was the
civility of the laymen’s letters that the cardinals solemnly protested. “It was
indecent...not to name the Most Holy Father in your letters as supreme
pontiff... Laying aside all filial and customary deference, you referred to him
by some roundabout phrase of newly-invented words.” And yet, when the
threatened synod actually met, thirty-nine abbots and bishops from France were
present in person, while others were represented by proxies. This was
encouraging for Boniface, and so was the news that in July the Flemings had
inflicted a crushing defeat upon the French. He accordingly published the bull Unam Sanctam, “the most absolute proclamation of
theocratic doctrine ever formulated in the Middle Ages”. Reiterating well-worn
metaphors such as that of the two swords, firmly emphasising the inferiority of
the temporal to the spiritual, the bull closed with a striking pronouncement.
“Further we declare, say, define, and pronounce that it is a necessity of
salvation for every human creature to be subject to the Roman pontiff.”
There was
not a word in this bull, however, directly naming France; nor did the synod,
for all the talk beforehand, proceed to the chastisement of Philip. However,
after the meeting, Cardinal Jean Lemoine was sent as legate with a sort of
ultimatum. He was to ascertain Philip’s views on various points—the withdrawal
of hindrances, direct or indirect, to French prelates wishing to visit Rome,
especially those who had attended the council just ended; recognition of the
Pope’s rights in the collation of benefices, the dispatch of legates whenever
and wherever he chose, and the disposal of ecclesiastical revenues; and royal
respect for Church property and for the goods of bishoprics during vacancies.
Philip, much shaken by his ill luck in Flanders and by the loss of Pierre
Flote, replied with surprising patience. Boniface, misjudging his man and the
moment, then tried him too far. In April 1303 he rejected Philip’s answers, and
bade the legate threaten him with excommunication unless he would make entire
submission. That was the end of the upward trend of the Pope’s fortunes. Philip
pulled himself together, and lent a willing ear to Flote’s bold successor, Guillaume de Nogaret, who since February had been increasingly
in his confidence. By the end of the year the tables had been completely turned.
Nogaret’s advice, in
a nutshell, was to forsake the defensive for the offensive. Layman and lawyer
though he was, many a polemical sermon writer might have envied the skill with
which he turned Scripture to his own uses in the “requisition” which he laid
before the king and magnates in March 1303. Was it not St Peter himself, he
said, who wrote, “There were false prophets also among the people, even as
there shall be false teachers among you?” The present occupant of St Peter’s
throne was the embodiment of that fulfilled prophecy, and guilty of enormous
crimes. The King of France must flash the light of his drawn sword before the
Pope’s eyes, like the angel before Balaam. In other words, he must secure the
summons of a General Council to judge and condemn Boniface, and in the
meanwhile make the Pope a prisoner and set up, with the help of the cardinals,
a vicar to rule the Church until a new Pope could be elected. This was all
pleasant hearing for the anti-papalists, but although Philip had already given
Nogaret and three colleagues vaguely-worded credentials to go “to certain
places upon certain business”, he does not seem to have decided to proceed from
words to deeds till he found that Boniface had rejected his overtures to
Cardinal Lemoine, while that rejection itself shews that Boniface was as yet
unaware of the seriousness of the danger. It was not till April 1303, then,
that there opened the final conflict which was to reach its climax in
September.
Both sides
were henceforth uncompromising. Boniface, giving solemn audience on 30 April to
the proctors of his former enemy, the King of the Romans, Albert of Austria,
with a view to his “edification and confirmation”, said many things which were
meant to reach a wider circle than those who listened to him in the Lateran.
God made literally, he said, both sun and moon, but also the metaphorical sun
of the ecclesiastical power and the metaphorical moon of the secular power.
“And as the moon has no light save that which it received from the sun, so too
no earthly power has anything save that which it received from the
ecclesiastical power... Some princes are making their confederations, but we
say boldly that if all the princes of the earth were leagued against us and
against the Church, so long as we had the truth and were standing by truth, we
value them not a straw... Let the king know therefore that if he defends
himself well and recovers his rights and the rights of his realm and Empire, we
say boldly that we will defend his rights even more than our own, and this
against the King of France or anybody else....We with him and he with us will
put the pride of the French to confusion.” In September, Boniface issued the
bull Super Petri solio, reciting the history
of the quarrel, exhorting Philip to repentance, releasing his subjects from
allegiance to him, and declaring null any alliance he might make, but not
actually pronouncing him deposed.
Meanwhile,
in June 1303, before an assembly of magnates in the Louvre, accusations of the
most precise, varied, and startling kind were set forth, and even the bishops
and abbots present agreed that a General Council ought to meet, “thinking it
useful and very necessary that the innocence of Boniface should shine forth clearly”.
but refusing to commit themselves to any party. Royal commissioners were then
sent round the country to relate what had happened and canvass general support.
If some stalwarts, such as the Dominicans of Montpellier, would have nothing to
do with the project, and were accordingly ordered out of the country, a certain
number of new adhesions were secured. Meanwhile letters were addressed to the
cardinals, the Italian republics, Castile, Portugal, and Navarre. Nogaret
himself had gone to Italy to supervise the arrest of the Pope, and from
headquarters at Staggia, near Siena, organised an
armed band inspired by personal hatred of the Gaetani, greed of money, or
general rowdiness, quite as much as by loftier motives. This force, led by
Nogaret, Sciarra Colonna, and Rinaldo da Supino, burst into Anagni on 7
September 1303, and after sack, fire, and violence, secured the person of the
Pope himself. This was the supreme moment. The French, indeed, failed to carry
Boniface away, for many of their loudest advocates fell silent when they
actually saw, as Dante said, “Christ made captive in the person of his Vicar”.
A revulsion of feeling drove the invaders out of the town, while a band of
Roman knights led Boniface back to Rome. Yet the audacity of the attack had
been in itself impressive, and became more so when a month later Boniface, by
this time a very old man, succumbed to the shock he had undergone. Philip was
left in possession of the field, and it would be a bold man who would dare to
pick up the sword that had fallen from the hand of the dead Pope.
The
definite results of the conflict remained uncertain for about two years longer.
Benedict XI, who succeeded Boniface within eleven days of his death, but whose
pontificate lasted less than nine months, tried to hunt with the hounds by
releasing Philip from all sentences pronounced against him by Boniface, yet to
protect the hare by demanding that Nogaret should be punished for the scandal
at Anagni. Death relieved him of this awkward task, and after a vacancy of
nearly two years, French influence secured, in the person of Bertrand de Got,
Archbishop of Bordeaux, a Pope congenial to Philip in birth, career, and
personality. Clement V (1305-14), patron of art and learning, arbitrator in
many European quarrels, begetter of a large addition to the Canon Law, was no pape fainéant, but he was a French subject,
he and his family owed much to court favour, and he was temperamentally, or
perhaps physically (since he was in the throes of an illness which modern science
suspects to have been cancer), incapable of resisting Philip’s coercion. This
became gradually evident. Out of 28 cardinals created in 1305, 1310, and 1312,
25 were French. Clement did not venture to return to Rome, but was consecrated
at Lyons, and after 1308 set up a court at Avignon, which was geographically
situated in France, but was on the way to Italy, and in the midst of the papal Comtat Venaissin. Politically, it
was under the control of that younger branch of the Capetian house which ruled
Naples and Provence. Thus began the “Babylonish Captivity”, though so little
idea had Clement himself that it was destined to continue, that he did not
even send to Italy for all his treasures and archives, much less set about
building himself a palace. Meanwhile he had to respect French wishes, and in
1311 at last gave up the effort to shelter his predecessor. He congratulated
Philip on the zeal which had led him to attack Boniface, and ordered the
erasure from the papal records of all matter in a contrary sense. In 1312 he
made a further surrender, by yielding at last to that demand for the
destruction of the great Order of the Temple which Philip had been pressing
upon him for the last six years.
However
mixed may have been Philip’s motives in this attack, there were plenty of
reputable reasons to put forward. As the crusading movement declined during
the thirteenth century, the fortunes of the Military Orders had begun to
tremble in the balance, and even St Louis himself and his friend Pope Gregory
IX had wondered if it might not be advantageous to combine them all into a
single organisation. Nothing had been done, however, by the time that the Holy
Land had to be abandoned after the fall of Acre in 1291. The Templars could no
longer ply their trade of fighting, and the by-product of their activities,
finance, was not, like the nursing of the Hospitallers, an argument for
continued existence, but on the contrary a temptation to themselves and an
invitation to their enemies. The Popes now revived the project of fusion, and
Clement V himself, very early in his pontificate, consulted Jacques de Molay, Grand Master of the Temple, as to its advisability.
Unluckily, the Grand Master held as a general principle the view that, in his
own words, “rarely if ever does an innovation bring anything but danger”. He
argued soundly enough that competition in well-doing had its uses, and that the
forcible absorption into one Order of men who had taken their vows in another
was an obvious injustice. He shewed less wisdom, however, when he professed
himself at a loss to know how the two Orders would ever be able to do as much
almsgiving jointly as they had done separately, or to provide a safe escort for
pilgrims unless the vanguard was composed of one Order and the rearguard of the other, as had been customary hitherto! The
plan of union thus came to nothing, and the Templars soon found that the
alternative, in the eyes of their enemies, was their disappearance.
The last
chapter of the Templars’ existence opened in 1307 and closed in 1312, though
almost to the end it was uncertain what would be the final sentence written.
Accusations of heresy and immorality were brought forward, and the Pope in
August 1307 ordered an enquiry. In September Philip, calling to his assistance Nogaret
to be keeper of the seals, proceeded to au attack far swifter than anything the
Pope had contemplated. “Placed by God on the eminence of royalty for the
defence of the liberty of the faith”, as he said, he ordered the arrest of
every Templar in France, caused an inventory of their property to be made, and
examined the prisoners before royal commissioners, who were to hand on their
victims for a second questioning, with torture if required, before the
representatives of the Inquisitor. Numbers of bewildered Templars soon made
confessions which, by a suspicious coincidence, corresponded almost verbally
with the accusations set forth in the commissioners’ instructions. Nor was this
surprising. “You shall go on making enquiry by general words till you drag the
truth out of them and they persevere in the truth”. Not much imagination is
needed to fill up the gaps in the process thus indicated. Trembling old men,
who might well have forgotten the details of professions made as much as forty
years before, produced particulars of offensive ceremonial of the sort the
commissioners expected, offering their evidence with piteous little excuses
and reservations. The aged Grand Master was sure he had been told to deny
Christ and spit on the crucifix, but spat but once, unwillingly, and that upon
the ground. Hugues de Pairaud, visitor of the Order,
admitted that he had given very questionable instructions to those he was
receiving, but had always done so “not from the heart, but only from the
mouth”. Occasionally the commissioners could not extort what they wanted, as in
the case of that knight of thirty years of age whose profession must have been
quite recent, and who swore that “after he had made many promises as to keeping
the good statutes and observances of the Order, the mantle was placed on his
neck, and the brother receiving him let him kiss him on the mouth, and all the
other brothers present also”. Nothing else was enjoined upon or commanded to
him. Firmness of this sort, however, was unusual, and by the end of the year
Philip was able to confront the Pope with so nauseating a list of horrors that
Clement ordered all Christian rulers to arrest the Templars in their dominions.
In December the French prisoners were handed over to the custody of two papal
envoys.
The tale
was not yet told, however. Once out of Philip’s grip, many of the prisoners
took back their confessions, and in January 1308 the Pope decided to begin an
investigation on his own account, suspending, with rebukes, the powers of the
French inquisitors. For more than six months progress was checked, while Philip
took every possible means to coerce the Pope into fresh action. Harangues and
anonymous writings inflamed French opinion not only against the Templars but
against Clement himself. The States-General were called together at Tours by a
summons representing Philip as the avenger of the Crucified against the
enormities of the Templars. “Laws, arms, beasts, the four elements themselves,
should rise against a crime so impious.” Thus instructed, the deputies (among
whom, representing Coutances, was Pierre Dubois
himself, advocatus regalium causarum in far more than the merely technical sense) were of the dutiful opinion that
no punishment could be too severe for criminals so odious, and Philip was able
to go on encouraged to negotiate personally with Clement at Poitiers. In public
and in private, every resource of ingenuity was used. In particular, stress was
laid upon that unfortunate secrecy which was a feature of the Templars’ rule,
and which was now said to be cover for the evil deeds which love darkness
rather than light. Finally, in July, Pope and king came to terms. The examination
of individual Templars (except the great dignitaries, who were now reserved for
judgment by the Holy See itself) was to begin again, under the guidance of the
bishops, helped by secular and Mendicant colleagues, and by inquisitors if
required. A further enquiry, into the guilt or innocence of the Order as a
whole, was entrusted to papal commissioners, who were to report to a General
Council, summoned to Vienne. The two enquiries were to proceed simultaneously,
and it need hardly be pointed out how easily persons on their trial as
individuals in one process could be intimidated as witnesses on the general
question under judgment in the other. How many more witnesses were there like Aimery de Villiers-le-Duc in 1310? Pale and terrified,
alternately beating his breast in penitence or stretching out his hands to the
altar in passionate asseveration, he swore that all he confessed to the
discredit of the Order was untrue. But he had seen fifty-four brothers being
taken in carts on their way to be burnt alive, “and because he was afraid that
if he himself were to be burnt he would not be able to show good endurance”, he
had confessed that the errors imputed to the Order were true. “And he would
have confessed that he had slain God Himself, if they had asked him that”. “All
the brethren are so struck with terror,” wrote some defenders of the Order,
“that there is no reason to be surprised at those who tell lies, but rather at
those who stand by the truth”. Moreover, many of the rank and file of the
Templars were, as their Grand Master acknowledged himself to be, “poor and
unlettered,” floundered just as helplessly as he did when confronted with swift
and subtle arguments, and were fain, like him, to fall back upon the thought
that “when the soul is separated from the body, then it will appear who was
good and who was bad, and everyone will know the truth.”
The Council
of Vienne, often postponed, met at last in October 1311, and in April 1312 the
Pope was forced into his last surrender. The bull Vox in excelso admitted that the evidence produced was insufficient to warrant the canonical
condemnation of the Order, but as a measure of expediency, without sentence,
brought it to an end. “Thus perished the Order of the Temple, suppressed not
condemned, butchered unresisting”. Its belongings were transferred to the
Hospitallers, and in 1314 its last remaining dignitaries were condemned to
perpetual imprisonment. Two of them, the aged Grand Master and the Preceptor of
Normandy, now summoned strength for a final protest, declared the charges false
and the suppression unjust, and were rewarded by execution. The affair was at
an end, but not before it had demonstrated for all Europe the impotence of the
Papacy in the hands of the King of France.
Nothing in
the internal relations of Philip IV with the Church in France was nearly so
striking as these external conflicts with the Apostolic See. He continued, like
his predecessors, to enjoy and protect royal rights, such as the authorisation
of elections to bishoprics and abbacies, the custody of their temporalities
during vacancy, the special guardianship, with special privileges, of churches
or abbeys which placed themselves under royal protection, and the right of amortissement, or levy of a sum due for permission
given to the Church to acquire fresh lands. He exchanged with the bishops the
usual mutual reminders of the limits of ecclesiastical and secular
jurisdiction, with protests in particular instances, but he took no drastic
measures in defence of the secular courts of the kind recommended to him by
the ingenious Pierre Dubois in his Brevis Doctrina.
He had no desire, indeed, to quarrel with the bishops, many of whom owed their
position to his influence while others were among his administrative officials,
so long as they would reward his complaisance by financial and other support.
On the whole, his relations were much easier with the secular clergy than with
the regular, who were less identified with French interests as such. His new
responsibilities in Languedoc brought vividly to his notice the sufferings of
the inhabitants of those parts through the Dominican inquisition into heresy.
Horrified in 1301 at the stories he heard from Bernard Delicieux,
a brother in the Franciscan convent at Carcassonne, confirmed by the reports of
two royal envoys freshly returned from a commission of enquiry, he secured the
removal of the Dominican Inquisitor of Toulouse, fined his chief supporter, the
Bishop of Albi, and issued an ordinance directing the Dominicans to admit
episcopal, and even sometimes Franciscan, supervision in their dealings with
heresy. So indecent, however, was the window-smashing, rioting enthusiasm of
the southerners in their victory, so complete the absence of the peace and good
will which were expected after righted wrongs, so vigorous the action of the
Dominicans themselves both in France and at Rome, that even after a personal
visit to the south, in 1302, Philip was disinclined to go farther along the
path he had entered. Delicieux’s impatience over this
delay led to an abortive plot with the Aragonese heir to the throne of Majorca
against the northerners, which alienated Philip’s sympathy completely. He made
no further attempt to help the southerners.
War with
England
Before
examining Philip’s relations with other groups of his subjects, it will be well
to consider bis foreign and military ambitions. Here Philip broke with recent
tradition. He gave up all idea of active enterprise south of the Pyrenees,
while on the other band he embarked upon aggressions bolder than Philip III had
ever attempted, in trying to bring under the direct rule of the Crown the two
great independent fiefs of Gascony and Flanders. Mutual danger made the two
ally, and in neither quarter did Philip achieve permanent success.
For ten
years after the death of Philip III the diplomatists were kept busy over the
question of the rival claims to Aragon and Sicily. Philip IV, himself the son
of an Aragonese mother, had no intention of going to war, in the interests of
his younger brother Charles of Valois, against his cousin Alfonso of Aragon. A
settlement was almost reached in 1291 when at Tarascon the rights of James of Aragon, King of Sicily, were thrown over in an agreement
among the other powers concerned, by which Charles of Valois renounced his
claim to Aragon, Charles of Naples, heir of Charles of Anjou, was to have
Sicily, and in return Charles of Valois was to receive Anjou and Maine with the
hand of Charles of Naples’ daughter. Immediately afterwards, however, Alfonso III’s
death without sons made James of Sicily King of Aragon also, and hot in his own
defence. Finally, in 1295, by the Peace of Anagni, he agreed to give up Sicily.
The last trace of the crusade was effaced seventeen years later, when the
Spaniards recovered the Val d’Aran, occupied by the
French during the campaign of 1285. Philip forbore officially to take advantage
of the fact that the Sicilians declined the settlement of 1295 and chose James
of Aragon’s younger brother, Frederick, as their king. In 1301, indeed, Charles
of Valois, who regarded Italy as a half-way house to his designs on the Eastern
Empire, was allowed to take an expedition to the help of Boniface VIII and the
Guelfs, but Charles was unsuccessful and Philip tepid, and the troops were
recalled to France in 1802. Philip was equally apathetic about the cause of
Blanche of France and the Infantes de la Cerda with regard to Castile. Though
he offered a refuge to such Castilians as chose to flee to France, he avoided
any quarrel with the supplanter Sancho IV. That was bare prudence. If there was
to be war in the south over the English possessions, an essential preliminary was
to secure the good will of the adjacent Spanish kingdoms.
War between
France and England, indeed, was becoming increasingly probable, and the
partisanship which would seek to deny in the one side or ascribe to the other
the first motion towards it is really debating an unimportant question. In
Philip IV’s own lifetime, an anonymous French chronicler declared that Edward’s
behaviour was that of one “ who for long enough had been making ready to fight
the king,” while on the English side Edward was represented as peace-loving,
law-abiding, and forced to defiance in the end by French treachery. The truth
was that neither king could fail to have felt the irritations created by the
treaty made at Paris in 1259. “The essential article of that treaty,” says M. Bémont, “is that by which the King of England, Duke of Guienne, declared that he became the liege man of the King
of France. From the feudal point of view, this dependence was in no way
humiliating; but it created a legal situation difficult for a king to endure.”
Either side might at any moment find pretext for quarrel, and, as it happened,
Philip was ready to strike first. Bickerings between
French and English seamen reaching unusual heights of violence caused him to
call his vassal Edward to account before the Parlement of Paris in 1294. Edward, though he did not respond in person, sent his brother
Edmund in his place, and it was amicably agreed that the chief strongholds in
Gascony should be put as a matter of form into French hands for forty days
while enquiry was made into disputed questions. Such an arrangement was by no
means uncommon, and Edmund shewed no unusual stupidity in accepting it. Its
sequel also was not unparalleled. The castles were not returned when the
stipulated period had elapsed. All Edward could do was to make public protest,
renounce his homage, and prepare to fight for the recovery of his duchy.
The war
which thus began in 1294 did not come to a final and legal end till the Peace
of Paris of 1303, but all the campaigning was done in the first four years.
Edward, detained by trouble in England, was not once able to go in person to
lead his forces in Gascony, and those who represented him were defeated year
after year by the French armies, led in 1294 by Raoul de Nesle,
Constable of France, in 1295 by Charles of Valois, and in 1296 by Robert of
Artois. Edward was pinning his main hopes on a counter-offensive, to be
undertaken with a series of allies made by expensive diplomacy all along the
northern and eastern borders of France. Guy of Dampierre,
Count of Flanders, was the weightiest of these, and it was to join him that
Edward at last in 1297 crossed the Channel in person. Little came of their
efforts. The Flemish towns were divided in their sympathies, and when Robert of
Artois arrived, fresh from the memory of his Gascon successes, he was
victorious in a battle at Fumes. Lille was taken, Bruges opened its gates, and
Guy and Edward were bottled up in Ghent. In October a truce was proclaimed at Yve-Saint-Bavon, while in June
1298, as a move towards peace, marriages were arranged between Edward, now a
widower, and Philip IV’s sister Margaret, and also between Edward, his young
heir, and Philip’s daughter Isabella. Five years passed by before in 1303 a
final peace was made at Paris, but the delay was to England’s advantage,
because French fortunes took a turn for the worse in the interim. Consequently
peace left both sides much as they were, and the balance established was not
disturbed while Philip IV lived.
Flanders,
meanwhile, could not keep up the struggle without English help, and Guy went
with two of his sons to submit himself to his overlord, only to find himself
made prisoner. Philip came to make a triumphal progress through the confiscated
fief, and seemed well received. When he had gone, however, leaving James of
Chatillon to rule as his representative, French popularity soon waned, and
after one or two minor incidents came the startling “Matins of Bruges” on 18
May 1302, when in the grey of dawn the burghers fell upon the half-wakened and
unsuspecting French lodged within the town, and massacred all who could not
pronounce a phrase in Flemish previously agreed on as a shibboleth. All west
Flanders flamed into emulation, and on 11 July 1302, the blackest of days in
French annals, a punitive force rich in great names was miserably defeated by
the rebels at the battle of Courtrai. A chronicler writing at Tournai describes
how from the church-towers the roads and the paths and the fields were seen
black with fugitives, glad in a day or two to give their very armour to anyone
who would let them have bread in exchange. “The pick of the French,” wrote a
Paris chronicler in amazement and disgust, “were disgracefully defeated by a
handful of rustics, unarmed as compared with themselves.” In August Philip
himself arrived to the rescue, but neither then nor
next year could make headway, and even when, in September 1303, a truce was
made and Count Guy was released from prison in order that he might persuade his
subjects into submission, he failed to cool the ardour of the “Flandrenses Flamingantes.” It was
not till a French success in August 1304, at Mons-en-Pevele, an isolated hill between Lille and Douai, had done
something to diminish the confidence of one side and restore the self-respect
of the other, that negotiation became hopeful, and a year later, in June 1305,
a treaty was concluded at Athis-sur-Orge.
The French
in seeming came well out of their adventures, for the terms they gave were
hard. Though, on Guy’s death in 1305, his son Robert was to recover the county,
he was to pay a large war-indemnity, compensate any of his subjects who had
suffered through helping the French, and leave in Philip’s hands for the time
being the castellanies of Lille, Douai, Bethune, and Courtrai, while 3000 men
of Bruges were to go on pilgrimage to expiate the Matins, and in five towns the
walls were to be pulled down. Much of this remained empty words. The Flemish
towns would not ratify the treaty till 1309, and then only with modifications.
The indemnity was hard to collect. Philip blamed Robert, Robert blamed the
Italians who had the collection in hand, and the Flemings blamed a count who
could allow himself to make this financial apology for a war they had gloried
in waging. After some threats of fresh confiscation, Robert in 1312 saved
himself by agreeing to the permanent transference to France of the castellanies
of Lille, Douai, and Bethune, with their appurtenances. In 1314 cumulative
friction actually provoked war again for a few months, but again the
campaigning was indecisive, and in September the previous terms of peace were
confirmed again.
The only
solid result, then, of all Philip’s activities with regard to Flanders had been
the addition to the royal domain of some Walloon lands. Frontier readjustments
of this sort, however, made by treaty or by peaceful penetration, constitute in
modern eyes Philip’s chief claim to success in external policy, and can be
traced from north to south, all along the imperial frontier. Valenciennes, in Ostrevent, that province of Hainault which marched with the
Scheldt and Flanders, made good with French help its claim to be and “to have
been from very ancient times of the realm of France”, and the Count of
Hainault, after resistance, was forced to do homage to Philip for Ostrevent. In 1300 the town of Toul offered itself to
France. In 1301 Henry III, Count of Bar, whose wife Eleanor was a daughter of
Edward I of England, and who had been much tangled in anti-French alliances,
came to terms with Philip IV, promising to do homage to the French King for his
lands on the left bank of the Meuse. A very formidable encroachment on imperial
ground was made when Otto IV, Count of Burgundy, agreed that his daughter
should marry Philip IV’s son, the future Philip V, and by the Convention of
Vincennes (1295) transferred Franche Comté to France.
In the Rhone valley, Lyons, after a renewal of old disputes between the French
Crown and its archbishop, was detached from the Empire and united to France,
while French suzerainty was finally established over the fiefs of the Bishop of Viviers. The sum total of this long line of
encroachment is impressive, especially when there is added to it the constant
extension of French influence in border regions which were not actually
annexed.
Contemporaries,
or some of them, aiming at a million, missed the unit, and would have had
Philip embark upon foreign schemes far more showy and far less practical. A man
like Pierre Dubois, pouring out treatises in which world-reforms were to be
achieved by the means of that King of the French “who knows no superior on
earth”, may have been regarded as a visionary even by men of his own age. But
still, minds much more sober saw no reason why Philip should not achieve in the
sphere of secular politics something comparable with his triumph over the
Papacy, and Philip let himself to some extent be tempted by their suggestion.
In December 1299 he conferred at Quatrevaux, between Vaucouleurs and Tours, with King Albert I, and contemporary
observers believed that matters far more momentous were discussed than the
marriage alliance between Philip’s sister and Albert’s son which was the public
outcome of the interview. Subsequently, Philip’s thoughts turned to securing
the imperial crown for some member of his family. In the elections after the
deaths of Albert I in 1308 and Henry VII in 1313, he advanced as successive
candidates his brother Charles of Valois and his son Philip of Poitiers. In
neither case was he successful, and had he secured his end his problems would
have been increased rather than diminished. France had nothing to regret in his
failure.
Financial
policy
Three successive
wars—against Aragon under Philip III, against England and Flanders under Philip
IV—had put the French monarchy to huge expense. Constant diplomatic activity
also, notwithstanding the incessant complaints of the medieval envoy that he
was not adequately provided with funds either for his own maintenance or for
the persuasion of others, involved lavish outlay. Regular expenses of many
other kinds were increasing with the increasing obligations of the Crown. It
is clear, therefore, that a most complex financial problem confronted Philip
IV. His vigorous and even violent efforts to cope with it make his reign stand
out as critical in the financial history of the Capetian kings, and had
political, social, and economic consequences of the first importance.
The nucleus
of Philip’s revenue was, of course, that derived from his domain and feudal
rights; but neither additions to the former nor rigorous exaction and extension
of the latter could suffice to meet his needs. The novelty of his policy lies
in his treatment of his extraordinary revenue. He carried taxation to a height
hitherto unknown, organised its collection, and turned into regular and
permanent sources of income some contributions which hitherto had been regarded
as exceptional and occasional. We have already seen how Philip asserted
successfully against Boniface VIII the right to demand ecclesiastical tenths
when he judged it necessary; such tenths became normal and frequent. On several
occasions the king demanded annates, or the first-fruits of benefices. Clergy
and laymen alike were taught to attach precise significance to that auxilium
which with consilium made up the feudal duty
of vassal to lord. A few specimens of the taxes levied will shew their variety,
and their intimate connexion with successive political crises. The failure of
the war with Aragon led to money exactions from those southern towns which had
not responded to the call to arms. The Flemish wars brought burden upon burden.
In 1302 any noble who had forty livres revenue, or any non-noble with three
hundred livres, might ransom himself from personal service by a payment in
which the minimum fixed was one-fiftieth, but the maximum might be whatever the
collectors could extort. In 1303 whoever had a hundred livres in land must pay
one-fifth, and those with five hundred livres in movables one-twentieth. For
the great campaign of 1304, each prelate and noble was required to equip one
man-at-arms for every 500 livres of revenue, and to maintain him for four
months. The renewal of war in 1313 at once brought fresh demands. Besides aides
de Post, there were aids to be given on other occasions, such as the marriage
of Philip’s daughter Isabella in 1308, or the knighting of three of Philip’s
sons in 1313. In 1292 for the first time, but thereafter repeatedly, there was
levied denarius alias vocatus mala tolta, which began as a payment shared between vendor
and buyer on every commercial transaction and became a tax levied on such
essential things as wheat, wine, and salt, whether sold or owned. “King
Philip”, wrote John of Saint-Victor, “vexed and troubled the people of his
realm in every way with new exactions, such as hundredths and fiftieths,
setting a yoke of novel servitude upon the neck of a once free people.” And,
after all, the sum total obtained was insufficient, so that Philip was obliged
also to borrow money, from Italian financiers, the towns, and individuals, on
an enormous scale.
It was
financial need, also, which led Philip into that debasement of the coinage
which was the chief crime imputed to him by contemporaries. M. Borrelli de Serres has proved that the chroniclers and time between
them have made legend rather than history concerning this, and that the
fluctuations were less frequent and less extensive than has often been
supposed. Yet the fact remains that from 1295 onwards the currency was steadily
debased, and that two sudden attempts to return to a sounder basis, in 1306 and
1313, were almost equally injurious. Trade was dislocated, public feeling
incensed. Even Pierre Dubois had to utter a lament. “I, the writer of these
presents, know... that since they began the change of the money, I have lost
through it at least five hundred livres tournois. And
I believe, taking all things into consideration, that the king has lost and
will lose by this far more than he has gained.”
It is not
easy to summarise with brevity the many-sided effects of Philip’s financial
methods. He was compelled, as we shall see, to extend or invent elaborate
administrative machinery for financial purposes. He was led into jealousy and
suspicion of other financial organisations. The Jews were driven out in 1306,
the hurrying on of the attack on the Templars in 1307 was due to financial as
well as other motives, and in 1311 Philip expelled the Lombards,
those Italian experts who had made him large loans and had acted as his agents
in all sorts of business. In each case, of course, the Crown seized the
property belonging to its victims, and assiduously collected outstanding debts
due to the disgraced creditors. In some directions Philip’s policy was modified
or liberalised by his financial needs. Thus, when he wished to collect taxes in
the lands of the great feudalists, he had to propitiate them with a share of
the receipts or by granting them privileges. Moreover, since a tax imposed by
consent was easier to collect than one forced in the teeth of public opinion,
he was driven into consulting both individuals and groups more frequently than
might otherwise have seemed necessary. Sometimes this consultation was local,
and royal envoys either negotiated separately with magnates and town officials
or explained matters to them collectively in an assembly representing a given
area. Sometimes, again, it was central, and a tax would be blessed by the
approval of such prelates and magnates as the king could easily gather about
him. Finally, but not until the very last year of the reign, it occurred to
Philip to take the problem of finance, as he had already taken problems of
other sorts, to a central assembly of the kind which later would have been
called a meeting of States General.
Students of
the origins of the States General have been wont to
go to Philip IV’s reign in much the same way that students of the origins of
Parliament have sought out Edward I’s. And it is true that repeated experiments
in this direction were made at Philip’s instigation. In February 1302 the
seneschals and baillis were ordered to cause the towns in their area to choose
each two or three of their “more substantial and experienced” men to represent
them at an assembly to be held at Paris, where the king wished “to treat and
deliberate concerning several difficult matters... with the prelates, barons,
and other lieges and subjects of his realm”. On 10 April, accordingly, a
numerous company assembled in the cathedral of Notre Dame, heard Pierre Flote,
in the king’s presence, denounce Boniface, and then dissolved into its three
component parts, each of which finally addressed a letter to Rome. On this
occasion, therefore, Philip’s hands seemed to have been strengthened just in
the way he had wished. Yet in the still more embittered dispute which followed
next year, after the issue of Unam Sanctam, he
did not adopt exactly the same plan, but instead had at Paris a solemn assembly
of bishops and barons with proctors for chapters and towns, and in the summer
sent round commissioners to address local assemblies. In 1308, however, the
Templar dispute drew him back to his earlier practice, and he summoned the
magnates to Tours together with two men “strong in the fervour of the faith”
from every locus insignis, a term which was applied in the most liberal spirit
to market towns and even villages as well as the great cities. The elections
were made in various ways—sometimes in two degrees, by electors chosen by the
common consent; sometimes by the whole body of burgesses; sometimes by that
senior pars to which medieval custom was fond of trusting in many connexions.
To the chronicler John of Saint-Victor the assembly appeared as “a parliament
of nobles and non-nobles from every village and city of the realm.” He put its
summons down to the fact that “the king wished to act wisely, and therefore he
wished to have the judgment or consent of men of every sort”. Those summoned,
however, knew well enough that no alternative was offered to unquestioning,
premeditated obedience, as is clearly shewn both by the formulae used in the
towns’ instructions to their deputies and in the procurations given to
representatives by nobles and prelates unable to attend in person.
The last
assembly of this kind was provoked by the need for financial support when war
against Flanders was renewed. It met on 1 August 1314, in the palace of the
Cite at Paris. One chronicler gives a detailed description of what took place.
First, Enguerrand de Marigny preached on the iniquities of the Flemings; next he appealed to the
representatives of the towns to say whether they would not give an aid. The
implied alternative was quite unreal, as the hearers knew well. They had been
summoned ad obedienciam, and, one by one, the
representative of Paris speaking first, they made the required promise. Only in
the most artificial sense could it be said that the king had asked for popular
consent to taxation.
What, then,
had Philip done, and how far may his reign be said to mark a step forward in
the consultation of the nation by the Crown? There was nothing new in having a
popular element present, and it is quite possible that even in detail
precedents for the method of summons existed as far back even as the twelfth
century. But Philip had made more frequent use of the expedient than any king
before him. Three times within six years, and that at the most critical
moments, with matters at issue of importance not only for all France but for
all Europe, Philip had summoned nobles, prelates, and townsfolk to his support;
in 1314 he had used the same machinery when in terrible financial straits; and
on other occasions he had made other experiments of which we have less full
particulars. The fact was that he was being driven, by impulses and needs not
confined in that age to France or himself, to a policy which other kings also
adopted—an ostentatious appeal for general support. We need not take the view
that he sought a model in England, for we know on the one hand that English
practice in this respect was still variable, and on the other that for
precedents he need only go to his own forbears. Yet we must be equally cautious
about over-accentuating the contrast between institutions on the two sides of the
Channel. The French States General and the English Parliament sprang from
origins very similar, just as the French administrative system suggests at
every turn analogies with Angevin England. It was not some fatal flaw of
construction in the French assembly, or some masterpiece of engineering in the
English, which made the subsequent history of the two so different. If
Parliament became the tutor of royalty and the States General, except on rare
occasions, its instrument, that was mainly due to reasons which came into play
later, and especially to the acuteness of the English opposition in putting to
its own uses what was primarily a royal invention, whereas in France critics
hurled themselves blindly into rebellion.
The term
“States General”, used here for convenience, was not as yet in being, and
historians who occupy themselves in discussion as to which of Philip IV’s
assemblies were, and which were not, States General, are disquieting themselves
in vain. One contrast may be noted between Philip’s assemblies and their
descendants. The later States General were summoned only at the rarest
intervals; these, on the contrary, and their successors under Philip V, met
surprisingly often. Had that practice been continued, their dumb docility might
soon have been exchanged for critical discussion and gradual acquisition of new
powers. Even as it was, they played their part in political education, for no
doubt the tongues of the deputies wagged freely enough after they had returned
to their homes.
If
exceptional crises thus forced Philip to use exceptional means of consulting
his subjects, he had also, of course, to obtain advice for the ordinary and
daily purposes of government. He might seek this when he liked and from whom he
chose, but, by the beginning of the fourteenth century, contemporary usage,
hesitatingly and without consistency, had begun to refer to two sorts of
council to which the king would normally turn. The one, a large assembly of
important persons, meeting at intervals when summoned, they called the grant
conseil or plein conseil, the other, a group of advisers attached to the royal
household and moving about with the king, so that he always had at hand at any
rate some of its members, was the conseil secret. Letters patent of 1310,
quoted by Boutaric, shew Philip definitely appointing
a man to membership of this body. “We retain him in our council and our
household as our councillor and household clerk, wishing to add him to the
company (consortium) of our other councillors and household clerks”. Such
officials took a special oath. It is clear, then, that organisation was on the
way, though it was to be a long time still before the fluid stage was to end
and the conseil du roi take final shape.
Administration,
as the royal authority and responsibilities widened, became a matter of
increasingly serious concern. By Philip’s time, processes of administrative
improvement which had had a start in the days of Philip Augustus and St Louis,
and which in Philip III’s time were in good working order, had resulted in
making the chief administrative organs so prominent that the mistake has often
been made of thinking that they first came into being at the command of Philip
IV. The fact was that he simply continued the double process which explains
medieval administrative development—the drawing of a distinction between what
was private and what was public work, and the specialisation of functions
within what was once a universally responsible curia regis.
The idea came gradually that to supply the king’s domestic needs was a function
too humble to be performed by the same persons who aided the king to govern.
Great men who still held such a title as that of Butler no longer performed any
of the duties it would suggest; and even the deputies who had replaced them
when first they abandoned these functions were by this time themselves no
longer busied with domestic tasks, which were left to the domestic offices of
the household (ministeria). Further, whereas the
household must always move from place to place with the king, it had by this
time been found convenient to cause certain persons who in the old days would
also have travelled with him to remain stationary in a specified place to deal
with indispensable public business. Thus specialisation of functions began. It
must always be remembered, however, that such powers were simply delegated from
the Crown, and might at any moment be recalled or redistributed. The same men
did different work at different times, and the same work was not always sent to
the same place to be done. In short, the complications of Philip’s medieval
system must not be unduly simplified by the modern mind, nor must categories
and water-tight compartments be substituted for the vagueness of terminology
which was inevitable in an age when institutions were slowly shaping themselves
to meet needs which were also in process of development.
Foremost
among early administrative improvements were those connected with the keeping
of the king’s revenue and the supervision of those who had to spend it.
Although France was slower than England in making a clear distinction between
financial bodies inside and outside the household, by Philip IV’s time the line
had been drawn, both as to the keeping of the royal treasure and the
supervision of its spending. The domestic treasury was in charge of a staff of
household clerks known as the Chambre aux Deniers, while with regard to more
public funds the king at first relied on the banking and storage facilities of
the Templars. The Treasurer of the Temple at Paris in consequence had so much
business to do for his royal client that he received a payment from the Crown
that might almost be called a salary. Even before the destruction of the Order,
however, Philip had discarded this plan, and from 1295 onwards set up
treasurers of his own at the Louvre. Thus began a new office which gradually
got its own staff, its own traditions, its own methods. As to supervision,
various experiments were tried. At first, delegates from the court used to sit
for three short sessions each year to examine the accounts of all who were
financially responsible to the Crown. It soon became clear, however, that the
task was much too big to be disposed of in sessions lasting only two or three
weeks, and a permanent sub-commission was kept hard at work between whiles,
completing what was left unfinished at the last meeting and preparing for the
next. These officials at first worked with the Chambre aux Deniers, but soon
became a separate body; in an ordinance of 1309 they are called the Chambre des Comptes, and were henceforth so known. They had
really superseded the more magnificent but less expert group of whom at first
they had been the servants. Already in 1300 they had complained that the grands seigneurs hindered their work, and a royal
ordinance had bidden the ushers to shut the doors all morning against
“prelates, barons, and others of our council who come into the chamber to talk
and importune you about matters other than those with which you are busied.”
Even uninterrupted, the department found its work sufficiently harassing, and
was often behindhand with the mass of supervision entrusted to it. When Philip
IV rebuilt the palace of the Cite, it secured good quarters there, with ample
storage room, under the same roof with the Parlement.
Of parallel
importance with all this financial business was the secretarial work of
government—drafting, copying, registering, and sealing correspondence and
documents of the most varied kind. These duties were performed on the domestic
side by yet another body called a Chamber, this time without any additional
explanatory phrase, and on the national side by the Chancery. Again, the power
of the Crown in France made the line between the two less clear-cut than in
England. But though there was a Chancery, and an official at its head in charge
of the great seal, there was not, at this date, a Chancellor. The strengthening
Capetian monarchy, jealous of over-mighty subjects, had suppressed that title
in 1185, and though it reappeared under Louis VIII and in the early years of
Louis IX, it then vanished again for nearly ninety years. Documents issued from
the Chancery of Philip III and Philip IV were subscribed “data vacante cancellaria,” while the
head of the department was called “custos sigilli” or “qui defert sigilium.” That change of title was meant to reflect
a real change of position, emphasising the fact that the holder’s main duties
were administrative, not political, and that he might be a very great man
indeed in his own office without counting very much anywhere else. Even so the
post was desirable, for it carried a salary, larger or smaller according as its
holder was or was not being boarded at the royal expense, a percentage of the
fees, and a share in the common purse of the Chancery, as well as such
privileges as a seat in the court of peers and the right of prise when
travelling. What a man of strong personality could do when holding it, even
under these limitations, was plainly seen in the case of Pierre Flote and
Guillaume de Nogaret. After the death of Philip IV, the suppression of the
title ended, and in 1315 Etienne de Mornay was appointed Chancellor.
The
domestic secretariat, or Chamber, was a group gradually specialised for this
purpose out of the household staff. Its head, the Chamberlain, was in
particularly intimate relation with the king, and by 1312 certainly, and
perhaps earlier, was in charge of the king’s personal, “secret” seal.
There
remains for examination the Parlement, that
delegation from the Curia regis which came to
act on behalf of the king as the supreme judicial tribunal. The steps towards
this consummation were slow, and Philip IV did much to complete what Louis IX
had begun. Normally once a year, occasionally twice, and normally at Paris,
occasionally elsewhere, there met for a session lasting three or four months a
body mainly composed of professional members nominated by the king, but
reinforced as required by other officials, nobles, and prelates. At the end of
each session the date of the next was announced, and to each administrative
area a certain number of days was allotted. By Philip IV’s time three chambers
are discernible. The Chambre des Plaids or Grand Chambre, now and then
supplemented by an Auditoire du Droit écrit for cases coming from the Midi, was Parlement in its most solemn aspect, where the pleadings
took place, and where alone until the days of Charles VI sentence could be
pronounced. The Chambre des Requetes dealt
with petitions for the gracious jurisdiction of the Crown, and the Chambre
des Enquetes with judicial enquiries. The whole
organisation, with its impressive archives, its orderly procedure, its staff of
lawyers, clerks, notaries, and servants, and the spacious halls assigned to it
when the palace of the Cite was rebuilt, was a magnificent advertisement for
royal justice.
If the
central organisation of government had thus by Philip IV’s time become
elaborate, and within its limitations and difficulties efficient, there
remained a very hard problem to be faced in the shape of local government. The
whole of the royal domain was divided into administrative areas which were
known in the north as bailliages, but in the south as sénéchaussées,
headed by an official known as the bailli or senechal.
Under whichever name, he was a hard-worked and much-abused person. “His
competence”, says M. Langlois, “may be defined in one word. It was universal”.
He was the channel through which all royal orders and announcements reached his
district, and the instrument of their execution. He was responsible to the central
government for the collection and expending of the royal revenue. He had at all
times to keep his district in as good order as he could, and, when required, to
prepare it for defence or aggression. Sitting in his court as representative of
royal justice, he had to deal with feudal disputes, punish breaches of the
peace, and lend as discriminating an ear as possible to endless appeals against
the decisions of his subordinates or of the local magnates. And beyond such
duties, capable of definition, he had others which were undefined and
indefinable, involved in his position as the representative for all purposes of
a distant, unseen majesty. As subordinates he had prévôts in the north or bailes in the south, whose
functions were as varied as his own, and who as a rule had bought their office
for a price and were in consequence bent upon recouping themselves. Below these
again came a crowd of minor officials, called by different titles in different
parts, and rarely so disinterested or intelligent as was desirable. Thus even
the best-intentioned bailli, by the multiplicity of his duties and the
shortcomings of those through whom, in part at any rate, he must perform them,
was handicapped severely, while the brutal, stupid, or greedy had golden
opportunities for doing mischief. The records of the time brim over with
accounts of the iniquities of such men. They must be read, however, with a
lively sense of the difficulties of such posts and with a discount for the
ingenuity of the injured parties.
None of the
many devices used to keep the local administration up to the mark were entirely
satisfactory. Sometimes the local men were called to the centre to render
account and receive instructions. Sometimes they were inspected on the spot. In
Normandy and Champagne assemblies known as the Échiquiers and the Grands Jours, survivals of the days of
independence, were kept alive as royal instruments to hear local accounts and
examine local causes. At Toulouse, intermittently, the experiment was tried of dealing with cases for the whole of Languedoc,
except the English lands, in a local parlement composed of delegates from the Parlement of Paris.
Commissioners arrived from time to time in the local areas to advertise the
royal needs or the royal policy. Enqueteurs-reformateurs,
whose very name testifies to the admirable intentions of their original founder
St Louis, were by this time very doubtful blessings. It was said that they set
the existing officials by the ears, used their powers to extort money or to
satisfy private grudges, and so often left things worse than they found them.
What are we
to think of the success or failure of Philip’s internal policy, considered as a
whole? Though developed from that of earlier kings, it had reached lengths and
made impressions far more notable, partly because of the cumulative effect of
repeated experiments, partly because Philip’s violences,
assertions, and quarrels had made him the cynosure of all eyes. It is clear
that in the last years of his reign public opinion was setting against him.
When, in August 1314, he went to war again with Flanders after a nine years’
interval, he did indeed get lip-service from an assembly summoned to Paris to
grant an aid, but in the subsequent campaign little enthusiasm was shewn, and
still less about continuing to pay the tax after peace had been made in
September. On 6 October, the twenty-ninth anniversary of Philip’s accession, he
shewed that he was nervous of giving his subjects a chance to meet in arms by
issuing another ordinance against tournaments. Finally, in November and
December, angry feeling culminated in the formation of leagues of protest and
mutual support, in Burgundy, Champagne, Vermandois,
and elsewhere. Their instigators were not, for the most part, the greatest of
the French feudalists but the smaller men, and the latest historian of the
movement1 is sure that they do not represent a feudal reaction. Great magnates
such as the Count of Valois, the Countess of Artois, and the Duke of Burgundy,
not only stood aside but were themselves attacked, while the towns and the
clergy in some parts associated themselves with the protest. Philip thought so
seriously of the situation that he at once yielded what he conceived to be the
main point at issue by proclaiming the cessation of the Flemish levy on 28
November. Two days later he died. Had he lived, he would have found that his
concession had not been effective. Nor did his dying regrets for the more
violent of his actions appease his critics.
Croiserie ne penitence,
Aumosne, oroison, ne jeusne,
Ne te vaudra ja une prune,
wrote the
author of the chronicle attributed to Geoffrey of Paris. As to the Leaguers,
they continued to excogitate their grievances during the winter, and were ready
in the spring with a list of demands from the new king.
The
Leaguers: royal charters
Louis X’s
short reign, which lasted for less than two years (November 1314—June 1316),
has sometimes been represented as a reaction against that of his father. That
view exaggerates the significance of certain changes which now came about,
either as natural consequences of Philip IV’s own actions or to meet the wishes
of advisers who saw their opportunity of securing things they had long desired.
To the first class belong the charters of 1315; to the second, the restoration
of the office of Chancellor and the fall of Enguerrand de Marigny, both largely due to Charles of Valois.
Louis himself, a very ordinary young knight, dying prematurely sicut puer because
he could not resist a cold drink in a cold cavern after exercise, was the last
man in the world to speculate about constitutional problems. His chief guide,
his uncle Charles of Valois, had no wish to associate with the rebellious or
revolutionary. He did, however, secure the fall of one old enemy in the person
of Enguerrand de Marigny.
“The man who knows all the king’s secrets” had been climbing the ladder of
advancement ever since 1295, but it was not till 1313 that, by royal ordinance,
without any change of office or title, he was placed in a position of autocracy
in financial matters, accountable to nobody but the king himself. There is no
evidence that Enguerrand abused this trust. A first
enquiry was interrupted by the death of Philip IV; a second, in January 1315,
acquitted him. Yet on 11 March 1315 he was arrested, tried on forty-one counts,
including intercourse with a familiar spirit, and on 30 April was hanged. His
real crime was that he was too inventive, too ambitious, too well rewarded, and
his downfall was a personal matter unconnected with the Leaguers and their
protests.
A
contemporary chronicler assures us that Louis X earned his nickname of “le Hutin” (the stubborn) “because he always desired with his
whole heart to go to war against the Flemings.” As Count Robert did not obey
the order to do homage, the court of peers sentenced him to deprivation of his
fiefs, and a French army went out in the rain in 1315 to stick in the autumn
mud in Flanders and return with little accomplished. Experiences of that sort
were becoming commonplaces of Franco-Flemish campaigning. On this occasion,
however, a special importance attached to it, because Louis had paved the way
by going as far as dignity permitted toward meeting the demands of the
Leaguers. The various groups presented in the spring the cahiers they had
prepared in the winter, and received in answer a whole series of royal
charters, beginning, curiously enough, with a charter to Normandy, which had
taken no share in the original outbreak. But neither the sort of thing for
which the Leaguers asked, nor the sort of thing that Louis gave, was to remain
outstanding in French history. Most of them wanted, in a vague way, a return to
undefined halcyon days of the past—the laws of good King Louis. They wanted
respect for noble privilege, the right to fight and tourney at their will, the
right to hold their own against the meddlesomeness of royal officials, and to
have the full feudal courtesies respected however much time or money was lost
thereby. “Their programme,” says M. Langlois, “was neither new, nor bold, nor
of a sort to command sympathy. There is a striking difference between their
attitude and that of the English barons under John Lackland, Henry III, and
Edward I”. “For want of unity”, says M. Artonne,
“they did not, like their neighbours in England, obtain a Great Charter
applicable throughout the realm, but a number of local charters, often
confused, almost always filled with unimportant details, with concessions
annulled almost at once, which could not form a basis for public law”. On this
side of the Channel, perhaps, we may think that our own baronial opposition was
quite as old-fashioned and self-centred, especially if we use the strictly
contemporaneous comparison with the magnate quarrels under Edward II. At any
rate, in neither country, at this moment, did the party of protest shew any
such constructive ingenuity as could turn the tables permanently on the Crown.
Yet just as in England, in the Middle Ages as well as later, Magna Carta was
used, without too specific reference to its details, as a sort of symbolic
embodiment of liberty, so in France the charters won in 1315 took somewhat the
same position. The charter to Normandy, for example, was again and again
presented for confirmation in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. In so
far, the League movement did warn the monarchy that public opinion was not ripe
for over-rapid centralisation; but the vague, polite, and cautious terms of the
replies given shew how little definite practical change resulted.
Philip V
Louis X’s
death on 5 June 1316 left, for the first time in Capetian history, a vacant
throne without an heir. Louis’ second wife, Clementina of Hungary, was
expecting the birth of a child in the coming autumn; meanwhile, there was only
the four-year-old Jeanne, daughter by his first wife, and niece of Odo (Eudes) IV, Duke of Burgundy.
For the time being, the dead king’s brother Philip, Count of Poitiers, acted as
regent without much opposition from possible rivals; but when in November the
queen’s son was born, only to die a few days later, a final settlement had to
be made. Philip now claimed to succeed his brother, and was duly crowned on 9
January 1317. Charles of Valois, though displeased, as is shewn in a series of
bulls issued by John XXII, countenanced this step by his presence. He and Mahaut, Countess of Artois, however, were the only lay
magnates present. The Burgundian party, represented by the Duke Odo IV and his mother Agnes, appealed to the court of peers
on behalf of the rights of little Jeanne, and whipped up support from their
Burgundian subjects and from the Leaguers in Flanders, Artois, and elsewhere.
Nevertheless, an assembly of prelates, magnates, citizens of Paris, and
doctors of the university, held at Paris in February 1317, approved Philip’s
claim and went on to enunciate the general principle that “a woman does not
succeed to the throne of France”. Similar circumstances in 1322 and 1328 were
met by similar expedients, and soon legal ingenuity sought analogies in the
laws of the Salian Franks, while verbal ingenuities deemed it natural that the
lilies of France should not be borne by a labourer or a woman, for “they toil
not, neither do they spin”. In Philip V’s case, all danger of civil war was
over by 1318, and the Burgundians came to terms. Duke Odo married Philip’s daughter, another Jeanne, while his niece was compensated for
losing a throne by a revenue of 15,000 pounds tournois,
the promise of Champagne should Philip V die without male heirs, and the hand
of her father’s cousin Philip, Count of Évreux. From
the practical point of view this solution was certainly the best. France was in
no state to face the dangers of a minority.
Philip V,
moreover, was an excellent king—prudent, intelligent, active. “When we received
from God the government of our realms, the greatest desire which we had, and
still have, was and is to keep and maintain justice and righteousness.... And
to this end we began straightway to ponder, consider, and search for in every
possible way the means by which we could arrive at this.” These words are put
into Philip’s mouth in July 1318, as preamble to one of his letters, by the
clerks who drafted it. They need not be discounted as conventional formulae,
for they are borne out by his whole policy. Ordinance after ordinance,
generally issued after consultation with some assembly of his subjects, revived
wholesome legislation of St Louis or Philip IV, swept away the desordenement which had arisen since the time of “le roy monsieur St Loys”, or
found new remedies for new troubles. Notable among the last was the
establishment, in March 1317, of a system by which in each town or castellany
the inhabitants were to provide themselves with such weapons as after enquiry
were found suitable to their rank, and be placed under the command, for
military purposes only, of a capitaine bon et souffisans,
whom they should swear to “obey and aid”, while he in return swore to guard
them. These captains themselves were to be grouped under a captain general for
each large district. Because “the poor being necessitous may sell or pawn their
weapons,” they were to surrender them for common storage after each man had
marked his own. The Crown by these means secured a force which when need arose
could rapidly be put on a war footing, under commanders to whom it was
accustomed and who were entirely identified with the royal interests. Philip
thus carried to completion much the same sort of idea that had inspired the
Assize of Arms under Henry II or the Statute of Winchester under Edward I. Less
novel, but equally important, were the measures by which Philip renewed or
developed the efforts of Louis IX and Philip IV for the improvement of the
governmental machine. There were arrears to make up. The Chambre des Comptes, for example, as an ordinance of 1320 shows, had to
enlarge its staff to four maîtres clercs and eleven
subordinates, to cope with its “great multitude of accounts”. The clerks were
to arrive in good time each morning, and work till noon without leaving the
room or wasting time upon any business of their own or their friends. Even
after the mid-day bell had rung, they must stay to deal with any letters
urgently requiring answers. Similar minute instructions were issued with regard
to Parlement. Immediately after the first Mass had been
said in the royal chapel, the officials must go to their duties, and apply
themselves till noon, forfeiting a day’s wages if they so much as left their
seats without permission. The Chambre des Requêtes kept the same hours, but the Chambre des Enquêtes,
from Easter to Michaelmas, sat in the afternoon. Every month a certain number
of the members of the Great Council, named by the king (Conseil du Mois), were to meet and deal, among other business, with
reports on the state of the households of the king, the queen, and other
members of the royal family. Twice a year the Treasurer and household staff
were to account. As to local officials, the baillis and others were warned to
appear at the accustomed times, to reside in their bailiwicks, to carry out their
duties without oppression, to send up their moneys secretly and safely, and to
see that these were paid directly into the treasury.
There was
still, of course, no idea of transferring, but only of delegating, the Crown’s
responsibility for government, and Philip took a real and personal share.
Though he consulted both councils and wider assemblies of the States General type, he did so of choice rather than of
necessity, and selected his advisers much as he pleased. The ordinance of 1318
which set up the Conseil du Mois left its
composition to the king’s nomination each month; its sessions cannot be traced
after November 1320; and even while they lasted Philip could issue acts “non contrestant le conseil du mois”.
Even a cursory survey of the ordinances gives the impression that Philip was
genuinely anxious to secure peace and order, and that largely with an eye to
economic advantage. Brigandage, private war, and tournaments were put down.
Officials were to be moderate about prises and other exactions, and in
commandeering horses or carts. An effort was made to set up a uniform coinage
and standard weights and measures, though this met with so much opposition that
it could not be carried through. “All those who work”, in fact, as M. Lehugeur puts it, whether on the land or at trades or
handicrafts, had reason to be grateful to Philip. To the Church, too, he took
and enforced in others a tone of great respect, and though by ordinance he
forbade prelates to sit in the Parlement, this was
only, as he explained, because his desire was that those in Parlement should give their whole time to their duties there, whereas prelates would
necessarily be called away, or ought to be, to govern their dioceses and
exercise their spiritual functions.
It is in
internal affairs, then, that Philip V’s reign is memorable. He had little
fighting to do. He intervened in Artois to protect the Countess Mahaut against her nephew Robert of Artois, and completed
successfully the work there begun by Louis X. He carried on with Flanders the
usual alternate warfare and diplomatic negotiation, and in 1320 persuaded Count
Robert to do homage and agree that his heir should marry Philip’s daughter
Margaret; but the good feeling was as short-lived as usual, and in 1321 Philip
was complaining that Robert had kept none of his promises. War with England
seemed likely for a time, but it is to Philip’s credit that without pressing
matters to this extreme he induced Edward II, who had never done homage to
Louis X at all, to carry out this obligation by proxy in 1319, and in 1320 to
perform it in person in the cathedral at Amiens. A similar prudence caused
Philip to refuse Pope John XXII’s invitation to come forward as the champion of
the Guelf party in Italy against the Ghibellines. He was, in fact, exactly the
sort of king to win the admiration of the modern historian of administrative
and constitutional development, while to the warlike feudalist of his own day,
or to the conventionally-minded contemporary chronicler bent on praising the
conventionally correct, he was a disappointing figure. John of Saint-Victor,
for example, wrote of Philip with an obvious sense of something being wrong,
though in a king so “gentle, easy to get on with (tractabilis),
and kindly,” he found it hard to say exactly what was the matter. When an
illness, beginning in August 1321, resulted in Philip’s death in January 1322,
some at any rate of his subjects felt actual relief. “He was mourned by
everyone”, wrote one anonymous chronicler, but John of Saint-Victor, though cautiously,
took another view. Interference with the coinage and the weights and measures,
he said, would have meant heavy expense in compensation to those deprived of
privileges, and possibly rebellion on the part of the injured. “Wherefore
perchance it seemed to some that it was expedient that one man should die for
the people, rather than that so great a people should be exposed to so great a
danger.” It was a more grudging epitaph than Philip’s merits deserved.
For the
second time, a Capetian king had died without leaving a son to succeed him; for
the second time, to the exclusion of the dead man’s daughters, a brother was
crowned. In this case a real change of policy resulted, for Charles IV, who as
Count of La Marche during Philip’s lifetime had been anything but contented
and loyal, had friends very different from those of the late king. His
godparents were Mahaut, Countess of Artois, who held
his foot at his baptism, and Charles, Count of Valois, who had lifted him from
the font. This spiritual relationship not only secured their influence over
him, but also, many years later, came in a curious way to his relief when he
washed to get rid of his first wife, Blanche, daughter of the Countess Mahaut. The Church, which did not recognise as sufficient
ground for release the adultery for which Blanche was imprisoned in 1314,
permitted Charles to repudiate her in 1322 as being, as the child of his
godmother, within the prohibited degrees. He was thus enabled, in August 1322,
to marry Mary of Luxemburg, daughter of the late Emperor Henry VII and sister
to John, King of Bohemia. Such a connexion inevitably enmeshed him in imperial
politics. The year of his accession was that of the battle of Mühldorf, in
which Lewis of Bavaria finally triumphed over Frederick of Habsburg, who had
been his rival for the imperial crown ever since the votes of the Electors had
been divided between them in 1314. John of Bohemia, who had been passed over on
that occasion, was full of schemes for at any rate diminishing the importance
of a suzerain whom he could not dislodge. In one of these, for the revival of
the kingdom of Arles, he tried to interest France by offering its throne to
Charles of Valois. Nothing came of this. A still more tempting offer was made
to Charles IV himself in 1324, when Pope John XXII, who had quarrelled with and
excommunicated Lew is IV, suggested that for a substantial consideration it
might be possible to secure the election of Charles to the dignity thus
theoretically vacant. Charles certainly nibbled at this bait, but matters went
no farther.
Opportunities
less grandiose but less visionary were meanwhile presenting themselves nearer
home. In September 1322 Louis of Nevers succeeded Robert of Bethune as Count of
Flanders and was led by the need of support against a rival to a rapprochement
with France. The leliaert party raised its
head again, and when the populace of Bruges and the coastal district rose in
revolt in 1323, Charles IV proposed to go to the rescue of Louis and the
pro-French party. In 1326 a peace at Arques reiterated the usual promises of submission and amends, but the rebels remained
sulky, and were still unsubdued when Charles IV died. He had not, after all,
got any farther than his predecessors towards subjecting Flanders. There
remained the parallel question of tightening the grasp of the Crown upon
Gascony and its English duke. Here the weakness of Edward II combined with
Charles’ personal inclinations and the desires of his uncle Charles of Valois
to achieve something tangible. The tale is told in another chapter1 of the
relations between Charles and Edward, the affair of Saint-Sardos and the war to which it led, the prospects of peace in 1325 and their ruin in
1326. The revolution which cost Edward II his throne left his supplanters, Isabella
and Mortimer, with their young charge Edward III, in too weak a position to
prolong war or even to extort a favourable peace, so that when, on 31 March
1327, yet another Treaty of Paris was made, it was much more to French than
English advantage. France restored to England Ponthieu and a much diminished
Gascony, but retained Agen and the Agenais, Bazas and the Bazadais. Nothing
was said about the points in dispute as to Saint-Sardos and Montpezat. The English had to pay a war indemnity
of 50,000 marks sterling, and the only concession made with regard to eight
great Gascon loyalists who had stood by England was that their sentence of
death was commuted to banishment. The moral effect of all this, of course, was
enormous, and Charles could congratulate himself upon a real shock given to the
prestige of a vassal who, in name at any rate, had always hitherto remained formidable.
This triumph is the capital incident of Charles IVs reign.
In February
1328 Charles died. Though he had married three times, no son was left to follow
him. His one boy, the child of Mary of Luxemburg, was dead, and his third
wife, Jeanne of vreux, bore him daughters only,
including a baby yet unborn at the time of its father’s death. Following and
developing the precedents set in 1316 and 1322, not only women but also male
heirs descended through heiresses were now excluded, so that the crown passed
to Charles IV’s cousin, Philip of Valois. The direct line of Hugh Capet was now
at an end.
CHAPTER XIIFRANCE: THE HUNDRED YEARS’ WAR (to 1380)
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