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DECLINE OF EMPIRE AND PAPACYCHAPTER XX.SPAIN, 1252-1410
The
period treated in chapter XII of the last volume comprised the main movement in
Spanish history from the early part of the eleventh century to the middle of
the thirteenth, that is to say the reconquest from the Muslims of the greater
part of southern and eastern Spain. The men who carried through the decisive
efforts were Ferdinand III of Castile, who died in 1252, and James I of Aragon,
who survived until 1276. Accordingly in that chapter the story was carried
somewhat later than 1248, the date of the capture of Seville. The period now to
be treated begins, in Castile, with Alfonso X, under whose sceptre the ancient
kingdoms of Asturias, Leon, and Castile were now united, together with the
conquests south of the Tagus as far as the Guadalquivir. The new period in
Aragon starts with Peter III.
Logically,
Alfonso X and his successors in Castile should have continued the peninsular
policy of Ferdinand III, by mastering the Moorish kingdom of Granada and thus
completing the reconquest, and by confirming it afterwards by dominating the
coast of Morocco in order to check any fresh offensive on the part of the
Muslims. Aragon could do no more in this direction, since the treaties with
Castile, ratified in 1244, had closed the south to her, leaving the future conquests
of the small territory which remained in the hands of the Muslims exclusively
to the care and to the advantage of Castile. But the kings of Castile did not
pursue continuously or decisively the policy laid down by their forerunners,
nor did the opinion of their subjects urge them to do so. They considered that,
after the great victories of the thirteenth century, the military power of the
enemy was no longer formidable or able to take the offensive. Moreover, a
struggle now so remote from their homes no longer interested the inhabitants
of Leon and Castile, and was consequently reduced for the most part to frontier
strife, chiefly carried on by the people of Andalusia—a circumstance which
gives a special character to the expeditions against the Moors in the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries till the reign of Isabella. Only kings such
as Sancho IV and Alfonso XI showed that they had not forgotten the fundamental
importance of completing the reconquest and, perhaps even more clearly, the
question of neutralising the African peril by the conquest, not only of the
Andalusian coast at the Straits, but also of the coast of Morocco. On their
side the Moors of Granada, changing the old policy of the kings of the Taifas, who had sought direct aid from the Moroccan
kingdoms and had thereby brought about the invasions of the Almohades and
Almoravides, restricted themselves to making an entente with the Banu-Marin,
the then masters of the region of Maghrib, and to strengthening the armies of
the kingdom of Granada with African elements, the Zeneteh,
which enabled them to resist for a long time the occasional attacks of the
Christians.
The
progress of the reconquest was checked by these causes, but still more by two
crucial questions which preoccupied the Castilian monarchy, dynastic struggles
and the anarchy of the nobles, who resisted the efforts of the Crown for
discipline, order, and centralisation of power. During the second half of the
thirteenth century and the whole of the fourteenth, these two questions
distracted and absorbed the strength of the community, and had the disastrous
effect of driving the contending parties into frequent alliances with the Moors
of Granada—a fact which prolonged the existence of that kingdom. This provides
an additional explanation for the intermittent character of the reconquest and
the rarity of any decisive advance southward.
Meantime
the Aragonese monarchy, no longer concerned with war against the Moors,
directed its military energies and ambitions towards other lands. Expansion to
the north of the Pyrenees having been checked by the victory of Simon de
Montfort, the Aragonese kings turned again towards that Mediterranean movement
which had been pursued by the independent Counts of Barcelona and had received
a great impulse from the conquests of James I and the Aragonese occupation of
all the eastern coast as far as Gandia together with
the Balearic Islands. It was natural that this eastward movement should extend
to the other Mediterranean islands and to Italy, where it was sure to clash
once again with the ambitions of the French kings.
Such
is the purely political outline of the period. The cultural background is
supplied by the steady extension of the Castilian element over the rest of
Spain, and by the prevalence of the culture already developed through the
contributions of Moorish and Jewish influence and the penetration throughout
the peninsula of the literary, artistic, and juridical renaissance. This
followed Spanish lines and encouraged the development of the Spanish character
in its distinct regional traits and its various spiritual expressions.
The
reign of Alfonso X of Leon and Castile (1252-84) is characterised in the
political sphere by two features. One of these is the struggle carried on
between the king and the ever rebellious nobility; the other his aspiration to
the imperial crown. Success in the latter, which was almost attained, would
have anticipated by three centuries, though it is impossible to say whether
with similar consequences, the achievement of Charles V. Many and various
circumstances produced these two movements, circumstances which interacted upon
one another. The consequent complexity was increased by a strong personal
element, the principal cause of the misfortunes which embittered the life of
the king and which rendered unfruitful for the time his political work. In
theory this work was sound, as is shown by the king’s juridical labours,
especially in his great book, Las Partidas. His
failing was indecision in the question of succession to the crown and in
dealing with the ambitions and wilful character of his second son, Sancho.
Alfonso
X, largely brought up on the books of the contemporary writers of Roman Law,
believed in absolute monarchy and the subordination to it of the power then
enjoyed by the nobles. This brought him face to face with the aristocracy,
rebellious, proud, and unscrupulous in its public conduct, ever ready for
revolt, and a natural enemy to the authority of the monarch. In the struggle he
found himself weakened by two factors of great influence upon public opinion,
namely, the exhaustion of the treasury greatly impoverished by the previous
wars, and his own wasteful, careless, and somewhat ostentatious character. The
opponents of the king took full advantage of these two causes of unpopularity.
Reduction of the tribute paid by the King of Granada, debasement, on two
occasions, of the coinage, a measure which always disturbs the economic life of
a country, and other ineffective fiscal measures aroused protests and
disapproval, all the more alarming as the king increased his expenditure upon
servants and courtiers and spent enormous sums on entertainments and presents.
To these causes of discontent were added others of a strictly political nature,
which clearly shewed Alfonso’s conception of the royal authority. These were
the cession of the Algarves to the King of Portugal
(1254), the renunciation of the feudal tie which bound that monarch to the King
of Castile, and the abandonment of the claims of the Crown of Castile to the
duchy of Gascony (1254), which had been the dowry of the wife of Alfonso VIII,
Alfonso X’s great-grandfather.
The
nobility considered these acts as an abuse of the royal authority and as a sign
of a tendency towards absolutism, and made this a pretext for repeated
rebellions, which usually took the unpatriotic form of aiding the Moors of
Granada against the Christian king, or forsaking the service of the latter by
denaturalising themselves—that is to say “changing their nationality,” as one would
say nowadays, and offering their services to the Kings of Navarre and Aragon.
These disturbances were promoted principally by the house of Haro, whose head was lord of Biscay, and by the king’s
brothers Don Henry and Don Frederick. Alfonso attempted to avert civil war, by
granting extensive privileges to the nobles in the Cortes of Burgos in 1271, or
again by the execution of some rebel leader; but the efficacy of both measures
was slight and merely temporary.
He
was not more fortunate in his efforts to acquire the imperial crown, which was
his main political ambition. Besides other factors of an international nature,
the king’s indecision was as usual most damaging to his cause. The military
reputation of certain of the Kings of Leon and Castile in the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries had opened up direct relations with the Emperors, and
alliances by marriage were formed between the two reigning houses. The decisive
event in these relations was the marriage of Ferdinand III with Beatrix the
Younger, daughter of King Philip, Duke of Swabia (1199-1208). Alfonso X, as
their son, claimed the duchy of Swabia. During the Great Interregnum, after the
deaths of Conrad IV in 1254 and William of Holland in 1256, the opportunity
arose for Alfonso X to become a candidate for the Empire. The republic of Pisa
took the initiative by sending an embassy to the King of Castile in 1256 with
the object of recognising him as Emperor and of negotiating a military and
commercial treaty with him. Alfonso accepted the offer, and in spite of the
fact that Richard of Cornwall, brother of Henry III of England, presented
himself as a rival candidate, the King of Castile soon obtained by means of
bribes the support of four of the Electors to the imperial crown. The majority
having been thus obtained, the election took place on 1 April 1257, in spite of
the active opposition of Richard’s partisans. A few months later a German
embassy arrived at Burgos to offer the imperial crown to Alfonso, who accepted
it; but Spanish opinion, far from rejoicing at this high honour, which might
have greatly enhanced the political position of a Spanish kingdom in Europe,
shewed itself hostile. The obvious reason for this hostility was the great
expenditure of the king, not only on the election but also on the presents to
the ambassadors. Very probably the spontaneous aversion of certain important
elements in Castilian politics to any adventures abroad influenced this
attitude, coupled perhaps with a lack of clear conception on the part of the
Castilian people of the position in Europe which the Empire represented and
which at a later date Charles V and Philip II were to understand, each in his
own way. In any case, the election to the Empire was unpopular in Castile, and
this unpopularity produced a series of vacillations and subterfuges on the part
of the weak-willed king which gravely compromised his position with regard to
the Empire.
It
should be added that the opposition of Pope Alexander IV and his three
successors was as potent a factor in the final failure of Alfonso. The Popes,
for various reasons connected with their Italian policy, inclined to Richard of
Cornwall, and then supported Rudolf of Habsburg, who was elected on Richard’s
death (1272). The culminating point was reached in the interview between Pope
Gregory X and Alfonso at Beaucaire (June, July 1275).
The King of Castile left this interview a beaten man, and was obliged to
renounce the Empire, first verbally and later (October 1275) in a formal and
decisive document. It is true that in the last stage of the struggle for the
imperial crown the situation of the king was most unfavourable, for to his
enemies abroad, who were both numerous and powerful, were soon added his
domestic foes. The fresh rising of the nobles in 1272, an invasion of the
Banu-Marin from Morocco in conjunction with the Moors of Granada (1275), and
the death of Ferdinand de la Cerda (1275), Alfonso’s eldest son, profoundly
affected both the spirit and the public position of the king.
The
unexpected death of the heir brought yet another conflict upon him. The Crown
of Castile had succeeded in obtaining the legalisation of the hereditary
principle, which had been in practice since the beginning of the eleventh
century. Alfonso, so careful in converting juridical principles into legal
rules, had established as one of his laws in Las Partidas an older of succession upon the basis of the Roman law of representation, by
virtue of which the eldest son transmitted the right of inheritance to his
children. By this law, when the Infante de la Cerda died, his firstborn,
Ferdinand, should have been recognised as heir to the throne; but Don Sancho,
Alfonso’s second son, refused to abide by the law and insisted upon being
recognised as heir to the throne, relying upon the nobility, who were hostile
to the king. The latter, on his return from Beaucaire,
instead of maintaining the law which he himself had formulated, gave way to the
demands of Don Sancho. The Infantes de la Cerda fled to Aragon with their
mother Blanche, a French princess, daughter of St Louis and sister of Philip
III of France.
Sancho
IV
Shortly
afterwards Alfonso repented under strong pressure from the King of France, who
urged him to remedy the illegality committed. Alfonso now proposed to create
for the Infante Ferdinand de la Cerda a new kingdom, feudatory to Castile, out
of the territories of the old Moorish kingdom of Jaen. Don Sancho would not
agree to this, and when Alfonso persisted in his scheme, civil war broke out
between father and son (1281). In this war we have again the spectacle of the
contending parties allying themselves with Moorish kings, a situation which
recurs in Spanish history, as we have already seen, and which shews how the
reconquest was not mainly religious but rather a political war on the part of
the ruling classes in Spain. Alfonso allied himself with the Banu-Marin, Sancho
with the Moors of Granada and with the majority of the nobility, who in this
way sought to satisfy their resentment against the king. The Cortes which were
assembled at Valladolid (1282) by the partisans of Sancho deposed Alfonso. The
Pope intervened this time on the side of the legitimate king, who, however, was
not able to continue the struggle long, as he died in 1285. He left a will in
which he disinherited Sancho, bestowing the throne of Castile upon Don
Ferdinand de la Cerda. Out of the territories of Seville and Badajoz on one
side and Murcia on the other he formed two new kingdoms, one for the Infante
Don John and the other for the Infante Don James, his younger sons; but Sancho
was strong enough to prevent the execution of the will, and the civil war
dragged on for many years, as we shall see, with the usual complications in
respect of relations with the Moors of Granada and Morocco. The only positive
advantages gained by Alfonso for the reconquest were the occupation of the
district round Cadiz, from Moron to Medina Sidonia and Rota, Niebla and part of
the Algarves (1262), and Cartagena (1263). By these
conquests the coast of the kingdom of Granada was further restricted. Alfonso
fortified afresh both of these districts, and moreover encouraged the
settlement in Cadiz of Christians, especially Cantabrian sailors. The
unfortunate picture which, apart from these military advantages, is presented
in the political sphere by the reign of Alfonso the Learned, is only
counterbalanced by his contribution to learning and his considerable influence
on Spanish culture, especially with regard to jurisprudence and the
introduction of theories of Roman Law, the protection of Moorish and Jewish
culture, the production of lyrical poetry in the Galician idiom, and the
writing of national history.
The
eleven years’ reign of Sancho IV, who was recognised as king by the majority of
the nobles and the towns, was very turbulent. On the one hand, those who
remained loyal to the Infantes de la Cerda and to the testament of Alfonso X
did not resign themselves to the violation of the will and continued in
rebellion against the new king. As usual, some nobles took advantage of the
situation, and once again we have the case of one of the pretenders, the
Infante John, Sancho1s brother, seeking the aid of the Banu-Marin, as Alfonso X
had done, and of Don Alfonso de le Cerda seeking aid from the Moors of Granada
and from the King of Aragon. Consequently Sancho was obliged to fight at the
same time against rebellious subjects, who were, however, supporting a better
legal claim, and against the Moors of Africa. Sancho defeated the latter,
dispersing the fleet which they had prepared at Tangier in order to invade
Spain, and thus prevented the stronghold Tarifa, conquered some years earlier
from the Banu-Marin, from falling into the hands of Don John and his Moorish
auxiliaries. In the defence of this stronghold occurred the heroic deed of the
Governor Guzman el Bueno, who refused to purchase the life of his son, a
prisoner in the hands of Don John, by an act of infidelity towards his king and
country.
A
most important episode in this reign in respect of international politics was
the change of attitude on the part of the new King of Aragon, James II, towards
Castile. Alfonso III, the late King of Aragon, had helped, as we have said, the
Infante de la Cerda, Don Alfonso, who was proclaimed King of Castile at Jaca in 1288, whence followed a short war between Alfonso
III of Aragon and Sancho IV of Castile. The latter, ever intent on diminishing
the number of his enemies, now succeeded in obtaining an alliance with James
II, the successor of Alfonso III, and made a pact with him whereby the
territories of North Africa were divided between the two kingdoms, Castile
reserving for herself the eastern part from Melilla as far as Bougie and Tunis.
This agreement, which shews clearly the determination to secure the African
coast, was initiated by the afore-mentioned capture of Tarifa, an enterprise in
which Sancho IV received military aid from James II.
The
premature death of Sancho IV entailed on Castile the difficulties of a
minority, since the heir, Ferdinand IV, was a child nine years old. The crisis
which had occurred during the minority of Alfonso VIII was now to be repeated.
In those days a king’s word and a king’s friendship counted for little. The
King of Aragon, James II, turned once again to the side of Don Alfonso de la
Cerda, who was receiving aid from the King of Granada, Muhammad II, and from
many Castilian nobles. For his part, the Infante Don John reasserted his
claims, supported by King Denis of Portugal. The situation would have been
hopeless for Ferdinand IV had it not been for the great qualities of his
mother, Doha Maria de Molina, granddaughter of Ferdinand III, queen-regent for
the young king. She was a woman of courage, endowed with presence of mind in
the face of dangers and with ready skill in dealing with the ambitious
politicians of the time. In the midst of the war, not only civil but
international, with Aragon, Portugal, Granada, and France, whose king seized
the opportunity to gain advantages in Navarre, Doña María contrived gradually
to detach the towns from their support of the Infante de la Cerda or of Don
John by means of donations and promises of fresh fueros and privileges and by a
policy of mildness and the great prestige of her word and presence. At the same
time she strove to win over the Castilian nobles by granting them concessions,
and by other modes of enlisting them on the king’s side. She also worked to win
the Kings of Aragon and Portugal to her cause. No less arduous was her struggle
to obtain from the Cortes and the towns funds with which to prosecute the war.
For this end, she herself sold her jewels and continually sacrificed herself
for her son. The position held by the queen-mother in the court resembled that
held by Guzman el Bueno in the army. He continued to defend bravely and loyally
the stronghold of Tarifa and the surrounding territory against all attacks,
especially on the part of the Moors of Granada aided by the Banu-Marin, and he
resisted all the proposals of treason against the king which were made to him.
So the ground was held until the king, now sixteen, was declared of age in
1303; and shortly afterwards peace was made with the Kings of Portugal and
Aragon. With the latter Ferdinand IV concerted a campaign against Granada and
the possessions of the Banu-Marin in the south-east of Andalusia (1309). In this
campaign, which was favoured by a political revolt in Granada, James II laid
siege to the fortified city of Almeria, and Ferdinand IV to that of Algeciras,
but the only result achieved was the capture of Gibraltar, effected by the
initiative of Guzman el Bueno with the help of an Aragonese squadron. The
defeat of a Castilian expedition against Granada led by Guzman, in which he
lost his life, compelled James II to raise the siege of Almeria, and shortly
afterwards Ferdinand was obliged to abandon the siege of Algeciras and arrange
a peace and alliance with Nasr, the new King of Granada. This peace was
short-lived. But Aragon afterwards took little part in the reconquest of
Andalusia.
Alfonso
XI and the Moors
On
the death of Ferdinand IV in 1312, another minority occurred; for his son
Alfonso XI was only one year old. This minority was even more serious and
disturbing than that of the previous reign, since various members of the royal
family, supported respectively by the nobles and by the towns, disputed the
regency. This situation lasted until 1325, when the Cortes, meeting at
Valladolid, declared the king of age, but it became singularly grave when a
fresh war broke out with the Moors of Granada, in which the Christians suffered
various defeats (1319-25) and lost several strongholds in the south, amongst
others Baza (1324). When Alfonso XI assumed the
government, he showed himself to be endowed with great military and political
ability. He soon overcame the internal anarchy, reducing the nobles to order;
he favoured the municipalities, protecting them against the nobles; he reformed
the public finances and succeeded in imposing the principle of equality in the
eyes of the law. But he also longed to complete the reconquest, and vigorously
attacked the Moors as soon as he took the reins of power. The struggle was
again complicated by the help which the Banu-Marin, desirous of regaining
Gibraltar, gave to the Moors of Granada. At first the Moors gained advantages,
recapturing Gibraltar (1333) and defeating the Christians at Algeciras (1340),
but Alfonso XI was not discouraged by these defeats and in the same year, 1340,
going to the relief of Tarifa which was again besieged by the Banu-Marin and
Moors of Granada, gained a brilliant victory in the battle of the Salado,
followed by another in 1343 in the battle of the river Palmones.
The consequence was the capture of Algeciras, which the king entered in March
1344. In this second enterprise he was aided by various English, German, and
Gascon knights and by the King of Navarre, Philip of Evreux. To complete these
victories, Alfonso XI laid siege to Gibraltar in 1349, and died in his camp a
victim of the Black Death, which was then desolating Spain. If this misfortune
delayed the reconquest of that stronghold, the preceding victories on the other
hand averted the possibility of any further invasions from Morocco. Another
advantage gained by Alfonso XI was the final incorporation of the Biscayan
province of Alava under the crown of Castile in 1332, the king undertaking to
respect the fueros or special laws of that district.
Alfonso
XI at his death left one legitimate son, Peter, issue of his marriage with Doña
Maía of Portugal, and five bastards by a lady of Seville, Doña Leonor de
Guzman, who had been his mistress for twenty years. The bastard sons of Alfonso
XI were Don Henry, Count of Trastamara, Don Frederick, Master of the Order of
Santiago, Don Ferdinand, Don Tello, and Don John. The mere existence of this
double line in the royal house was conducive to internal strife. The widowed
queen, as soon as her husband was buried, imprisoned Doña Leonor and the
struggle began, though at first not openly. Indeed the bastards and their
half-brother Peter were apparently reconciled, though with intermittent revolts
on one side and persecution on the other. At this time none of the bastards put
forward any pretension to the throne, nor in spite of their wealth and their
many powerful friends did anyone consider them in that light. This was clearly
shown by the fact that when Peter fell so gravely ill that his life was
despaired of, two parties of nobles were formed with a view to the succession.
While one of these supported the candidature of the Marquess of Tortosa, nephew
of Alfonso XI, the other supported Don Juan Nuñez de Lara,
lord of Biscay and a descendant of one of the Infantes de la Cerda. The king
recovered and matters returned to their normal course, which meant a constant
struggle on the part of the Crown against the nobles and the prelates, who
continued their lawless and deplorable custom of oppressing the weak and of
taking justice into their own hands whenever it suited them. Things being thus,
Dona Leonor was murdered by order of the widowed queen— whether with Peter’s
consent is unknown, as he was still almost a boy, but certainly with the
complicity of the king’s favourite, Don Juan Alfonso de Albuquerque, a noble of
Portuguese origin. In spite of this heinous deed, the sons of Doña Leonor did
not revolt immediately. However, it was to be expected that some, if not all of
them, would finally revolt, although others, for instance the second, Don
Frederick, were almost constantly loyal to Peter. The occasion came a little
later when one of the frequent episodes of anarchy produced the customary
repression on the part of the king. In the first place certain citizens of
Burgos, stirred up by a noble of that city, Garcilaso de la Vega, revolted and killed one of the king’s tax-collectors; shortly
afterwards the lord of Aguilar, Don Alfonso Fernández de Coronel, also revolted,
seeking alliance with other nobles and with the Moors of Granada and Africa.
Peter put down the revolt at Burgos and put to death Garcilaso and other people of the city. He then attacked and took the town of Aguilar,
put Coronel to death together with his principal followers, and declared the
town to be the property of the Crown in perpetuity. Thereupon the bastards Don
Henry and Don Tello attempted to stir up a rebellion; the former was obliged to
flee |o Aragon and the latter, defeated at Gijon by Peter, was pardoned by the
king and reinstated in all his castles and lands in Asturias.
A
fresh occurrence added to the motives for the struggle thus begun. In 1353
Peter married Blanche de Bourbon of the royal house of France, a marriage
negotiated by the queen-mother and by the favourite, Albuquerque. Peter, who
was then only seventeen years old, had previously had relations with a lady of
good family, Doña Maria de Padilla. So great was the love which the king had
for her that he accompanied her everywhere, much as his father had done
previously with Dona Leonor. Three days after the celebration of his ma rriage
with Blanche de Bourbon the king abandoned her, leaving the palace and rejoining Doña María. The reasons for this step are
unknown. It has been supposed that it was on account of his passion for Dona
Maria; also that the king suspected some previous intrigue between Blanche and
the bastard Don Frederick. It has also been suggested that the main reason was
the non-payment of the dowry of Blanche which had been promised by the King of
France. In any case, the event caused great scandal in the Court and amongst
the nobles: it also aroused the apprehensions of Albuquerque, who feared that
the relatives of Doña Maria would supplant him in the king’s favour. On the
other hand, other nobles and among them the bastard brothers of the king took
Peter’s side, thinking thereby perhaps to compass the fall of Albuquerque. The
situation grew worse when Peter had Blanche imprisoned in the castle of Arevalo
and changed all the officials of the Court. Some disaffected nobles whom the
king had meant to execute owed their lives to the intercession of Maria de
Padilla. Albuquerque had taken refuge in the fortress of Carvajales near the Portuguese frontier. Peter, regarding him as a rebel, marched against
him. Thereupon Albuquerque planned a rising, with the connivance of the
bastards Henry and Frederick, intending to dethrone Peter and offer the crown
to a Portuguese prince. This rising gathered strength, being supported by
various nobles in Galicia and in other districts, and also by the city of
Toledo and by the queen-mother herself. They all demanded that Peter should
give up Maria de Padilla. Some alleged feelings of pity for Blanche; but the
majority were merely intent upon supplanting the relatives of Doña María in the
king’s favour. Inveigled by his mother, Peter went to Toro to confer with her
and certain of the nobles. They promptly seized him and treated him with scant
respect (1354); but the king succeeded in escaping, got together some troops,
and attacked the rebels, who were clearly guilty of treason. He defeated them;
many were executed, and the civil war was ended for the time. Don Frederick and
Don Tello submitted, and Don Henry fled to France. Peter pardoned his mother,
who retired to Portugal.
The
peace was of but short duration. It was broken by the personal rivalry between
Peter and the King of Aragon, Peter IV, who had succeeded to the throne in
1336. Both kings were wilful, short-tempered, and but little disposed to
abandon their whims. War broke out in 1356 concerning a discourtesy towards the
King of Castile on the part of a captain of the Catalan squadron at Sanlucar. The importance of this war, stopped soon after it
had started by a truce arranged by the legate of Pope Innocent VI (1357), lay
in the fact that Henry of Trastamara immediately went over to the side of Peter
IV and that several Castilian nobles who had been loyal to Peter went with him.
From that time Trastamara always found support in the King of Aragon; but six
years were yet to elapse before he could openly aim at the throne of Castile.
The truce of 1357 lasted but a little while. Both the King of Castile and the
King of Aragon were aware of their perpetual and irremediable enmity and sought
alliances with a view to future warfare. Peter I succeeded in obtaining the
support of King Edward III of England. Peter IV, in addition to the aid of
Trastamara and his party, got help from the Kings of Granada and Morocco. The
King of Castile, suspicious of everybody, not without reason in view of the
constant disloyalty, had been deserted by some of his partisans, among them his
bastard brother Frederick. Peter had him executed in the royal palace at
Seville, believing him to be in league with Trastamara, although he had just
conquered for Castile the town of Jumilla in Murcian territory (1358). Peter’s cousin Don Juan, and many other nobles and knights of
Cordova, Salamanca, and other cities were also alienated from him. The murder
of Don Frederick angered Trastamara so much that he broke the truce and invaded
Castile. The Pope intervened again, and Peter was ready to give way, but not so
Peter of Aragon. This so much irritated the King of Castile that he ordered
fresh assassinations, that of his aunt Doha Leonor, of Don Tello’s wife and her
sister, of the bastards Don John and Don Tello, and of various castellans and
others. The defeat of Trastamara at Najera caused the Aragonese King to sue for
peace, but the struggle was not ended until May 1361. This peace also was of
short duration. During this time Peter intervened in the dynastic struggle in
Granada between the King Muhammad V and a pretender who had dethroned him in
1359, called Abu-Sa‘id or Bermejo. Peter aided
Muhammad V, and attacking the territory of Granada took possession of Iznajar, Cerna, Sagra, and Benameji. These
victories forced Abu-Sa‘id to come and sue for peace
in person. Peter killed the suppliant with his own hand in revenge for the help
given to the King of Aragon in the late war.
Peter
I and Henry of Trastamara
Once
again war broke out between the two Christian kings and once again Trastamara
fought on the side of Peter IV. These two now signed the pact of 1363 in which
Trastamara appears as pretender to the throne of Castile. In a later agreement
Trastamara undertook to hand over to the King of Aragon the kingdom of Murcia
and various important Castilian strongholds near the Aragonese frontier.
Trastamara started the struggle with the aid of the celebrated bands of German,
Gascon, English, and Spanish adventurers, so well-known by the name of the
White Companies, whose outrages at that time filled the south of France with
terror. These were under the command of the French knight Bertrand du Guesclin;
and in order to get rid of them, not only the King of France but also the Pope,
then residing at Avignon, encouraged them to pass into Spain. The latter gave
them 100,000 gold florins; the King of Aragon also gave them 100,000 gold
florins and bestowed the title of Count of Borja upon du Guesclin. With these
troops Trastamara first of all entered Calahorra (March 1366) and then Burgos, Toledo, and Seville. At Burgos he had himself
proclaimed King of Castile.
Peter,
without sufficient means to defend himself, fled to Bayonne and negotiated
there for help from the King of England, to whom he promised the cession of
various ports, castles, and lands along the Cantabrian coast. He also sought
the aid of the King of Navarre. From the King of England he obtained an army
under the command of the Black Prince, by whom Trastamara was again defeated at
the battle of Najera (1367). In spite of the chivalrous protection which the
Black Prince wished to accord to the prisoners taken in this battle, Peter had
a number of them executed and insisted that others should be handed over to
him. This disgusted the Black Prince. In Toledo, Cordova, and Seville the king
also put to death a number of his enemies. These fresh cruelties, in addition
to the fact that Peter had not given the pay promised to the English troops nor
handed over the promised towns to the Black Prince, caused the English to
abandon him and withdraw to France. Various cities of Castile at once rose in
favour of Trastamara; he again took the field, and gained the crowning victory
of Montiel over the troops which remained loyal to Peter. The latter took
refuge in the castle, where he was besieged by Trastamara. Peter proposed to du Guesclin that he should be allowed to escape; du
Guesclin refused out of loyalty to Trastamara, but then pretending to agree he
induced Peter with several followers to visit him in his tent. They were all
made prisoners. Trastamara came to see the prisoners, and the two brothers
joined in a hand to hand struggle. Trastamara fell beneath his adversary but
one of his followers, whether the Count of Rocaberti or another is uncertain, helped him to get on top; and Trastamara, thus getting
the advantage, killed his brother (23 March 1369). Such was the end of the king
whom historians and tradition have called alternately Peter the Cruel and Peter el Justiciero. The recent examination of
Peter’s skull has given rise to the opinion that he was abnormal, and certainly
most of his punishments and acts of vengeance have the appearance of insanity;
many of his executions, however, which shock our present conceptions, were only
the application of the contemporary penal code and an example of the cruelty
and violence of public morality at that time. We find numerous similar examples
in the political history of all medieval kings and of many nobles. The struggle
between the nobility and the monarchy was violent and presupposed the
destruction of one or the other.
Don
Henry of Trastamara, who became king as Henry II after the defeat and murder of
Peter and was not less cruel than he, at once showed the truth of what has
already been stated. Although after the victory of Montiel the majority of the
nobles, cities, and towns of Castile and Leon recognised Peter’s bastard
brother as king, certain important cities, such as Zamora, Ciudad Rodrigo,
Carmona, Morlina, Vitoria, Salvatierra,
Cañete, Requena, and others remained loyal to the
memory of Peter I and continued the civil war for some time. But this
resistance was useless against the superiority of the new king’s military
forces. On the surrender of Carmona Henry II promised to respect the life of
the governor, Martin Lopez de Cordoba, who was the guardian of Peter’s two
daughters, but after the custom of the time he broke his word and had him
executed; the daughters of Peter I were imprisoned. Henry was soon involved in
war with the King of Aragon, who had now turned against him, also with the
Kings of Portugal, Navarre, Granada, and even England. The Portuguese King, as
protector of Peter’s daughters, invaded Galicia, where partisans hostile to
Henry were gathered. The King of Navarre, Charles II, attacked the frontiers of
Castile and took Logrono and other places in the Rioja.
With
regard to England a serious dynastic question arose. The Dukes of Lancaster and
York, sons of Edward III of England, had married respectively Dona Constance and
Dona Isabella, daughters of Peter the Cruel by Dona Maria de Padilla. At the
Cortes held in Seville in the year 1362 Peter had declared that before his
marriage to Blanche of Bourbon he had married Dona Maria de Padilla and that
consequently his issue by her was legitimate; thus their claims had some legal
basis. This right in the first place descended to Don Alfonso, Dona Maria’s
son, but he died in 1367 and consequently his rights went to his sisters, who
had in fact been recognised as heiresses to the throne by the Cortes of Briviesca in 1363. This was the basis of the Plantagenet
claims to the throne of Castile, legally vacant on the death of Peter, and they
were championed by the Duke of Lancaster, John of Gaunt, who assumed the title
of King of Castile. For Henry it was important not only to repel these claims
but also to weaken the power of England as much as possible. For this purpose
his friendship with Charles V of France, a constant enemy of the English King,
supplied a pretext. Accordingly, while Henry himself invaded Portugal, besieged
Lisbon, and forced the Portuguese King to sue for peace, he also sent to the
coast of Guienne a Castilian fleet which defeated the
English fleet, under the Earl of Pembroke, off La Rochelle (23 June 1372); the
earl, with seventy knights, was made prisoner and brought to Spain. On land
Henry crossed the Bidasoa and laid siege to the
fortress of Bayonne, but without success. However, he thereby succeeded in
averting the invasion of Spain which was being prepared by the Duke of
Lancaster. Henry also held in check the attacks made by the Kings of Navarre
and Aragon. With the latter he formed an alliance by means of marriages between
Don John, the heir of Castile, and a daughter of Peter IV of Aragon, and
between Charles (III) the heir of Navarre and one of his own daughters. Peace
with England followed as a consequence of the truce arranged by the mediation
of the Pope between the Kings of England and France (Bruges, 27 June 1375), to
which Castile was also a party. This truce and the peace also renewed with the
Moors of Granada initiated a period of calm such as had not been known for many
years in Castile, and which was only broken for a short time at the end of
Henry’s reign by a brief war with Navarre.
John
I
Henry
spent the last four years of his life (1375-79) in strengthening his dynasty by
a policy of amity, even towards his former enemies. To this end he showered
honours and gifts of lands and lordships, a type of favour which, from its
abundance and the name of him who bestowed it, became known as mercedes enriqueñas.
Henry himself was called El de las mercedes (gifts). His son John I succeeded him at the age of twenty. John’s reign is
marked by two important political events: the alliances with Portugal and with
England. The former might have brought about the union of the two crowns of
Castile and Portugal in one sovereign, the latter effected the legitimisation
of the illegitimate dynasty of Trastamara through the union with the legitimate
branch of Peter. Alliance with Portugal came as a consequence of a fresh war in
which Castile had the advantage and negotiated a treaty of peace; one condition
of this was the marriage of the Infanta Doha Beatriz, heiress to the Portuguese
crown, with the second son of John I, but the king having become a widower in
the meantime married Doña Beatriz himself. It was agreed that on the death of
the Portuguese King, Ferdinand I, the Kings of Castile should assume the title
of “King of Portugal,” but that they should not become so in fact except in the
person of the son or daughter who should attain fourteen years of age. This
condition was never fulfilled, since at the death of Ferdinand I in 1383 the
Portuguese people, and particularly the nobility, refused to recognise the
validity of his promise and elected for their king the Master of the Military
Order of Avis founded in the thirteenth century. The King of Castile determined
to assert his treaty rights by force, but the war thus begun, although at first
favourable to the Castilians, ended with the decisive Portuguese victory of
Aljubarrota (15 August 1385). Thus the proposed union of the two crowns came to
nothing, and the Master of Avis reigned as John I of Portugal. The alliance
between Castile and England came about from the renewal of the pretensions of
the Duke of Lancaster, who invaded Galicia with the help of the King of
Portugal and took possession of several strongholds. John I of Castile, instead
of venturing on a doubtful war, preferred to negotiate with Lancaster, and
finally concluded in 1387 the Treaty of Troncoso,
which arranged for the marriage of Henry, heir to the Castilian throne, with
Catherine, daughter of the Duke of Lancaster and granddaughter of Peter I. The
newly-married couple thenceforward assumed the title of Princes of Asturias
(1388), which was used by the heirs to the throne of Leon and Castile and later
of Spain. Thus the two rival branches, that of Peter and that of Henry II, were
united, and the memory of the fratricide of 1369 was wiped out.
Henry
III
On
the death of John I in 1388 Henry III, who was still a minor, succeeded to the
throne. During his minority the political upheavals of the time of Ferdinand IV
and Alfonso XI were repeated, a proof that neither Henry II’s gifts nor those
afterwards granted by John I had solved the problems of strife between royal
discipline and the anarchical ways of the nobles. The regents governed rather
to their personal advantage than in the interests of the State. The nobles,
divided into factions as usual, fought amongst themselves, filling the cities
and countryside with sanguinary strife as, for example, in Seville, where the
Count of Niebla and the Ponce family fought for mastery, and in Murcia where
the Fajardos and Manuales did likewise. Moreover, assaults on the ghettos and massacres of Jews, which
had been occasional episodes in the time of Alfonso VIII and of Peter the
Cruel, now, as in other parts of Europe, became regular proceedings, beginning
in Seville and spreading thence over most of Andalusia and Castile. The king,
although of a weak constitution, as is evident from his nickname “el doliente” (the invalid), had great force of character.
Hardly had he been declared of age in his fifteenth year than he began to
remedy the evils introduced by the regents and nobles. To this end he revoked
many of the gifts which the regents had granted to the detriment of the royal
treasury. He insisted on the return of rents and lands usurped from the Crown and
chastised the factions of nobles. The ever-latent strife with Portugal broke
out again through an unexpected act of aggression without previous declaration
of war on the part of the Portuguese King, whose forces took possession of
Badajoz, but the Castilian troops soon recovered the stronghold (1397). The
African Moors still disturbed the coasts of Andalusia by their piratical
expeditions. To put an end to these Henry III ordered a naval expedition
against Tetuan. The Castilian navy forced the bar of
the river Martin and destroyed the city (1400), which had been the lair of the
pirates. He attempted to make a truce with the Moors of Granada, but without
success, and consequently in 1405 prepared to undertake a war against them.
Henry
also turned his attention to international relations, aiming at a peaceful
understanding with the most powerful and influential kings of the time. This
policy, very probably connected with the importance of commercial relations
with the East, induced him to send embassies to the celebrated conqueror,
Tamerlane, ruler of Persia and Turkestan (13761405), and to the Sultan of the
Ottoman Turks, Bayazid I (1360-1403). In these
embassies there were among others two Castilian nobles and a monk. One of the
Castilian ambassadors, Ruy González de Clavijo, wrote
a curious account of the visit to Tamerlane, entitled Historia del Gran Tamerlan. Tamerlane sent to Henry among other presents two
maidens mentioned in poems collected fifty years later and published in the
Cancionero de Baena (compiled about 1445). Henry also
encouraged the capture and colonisation of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic,
already known and a matter of dispute in the time of Alfonso XI, but not yet
taken by any European power. In 1402 the conquest was undertaken by the
Spaniard Rubin de Bracamonte and the French
adventurer Jean de Bethencourt, who had sworn fealty to the King of Castile.
The islands conquered, not without great resistance on the part of the
inhabitants, were then named Hierro, Fuerteventura,
Gomera, and Lanzarote. But their definite possession and incorporation with the
Crown of Castile did not take place until the end of the fifteenth century.
Henry
died prematurely in 1407. All his efforts on behalf of internal peace, social
order, and the aggrandisement of Castile were insufficient to solve the
political problems of the period. And indeed the difficulties were insuperable.
This was to be shewn by the wars during the fifteenth century, at the end of
which the firm hand of Isabella, as we shall see later, and other favourable
factors, were at last able to change the face of things.
While
the history of the Castilian part of the Peninsula was developing along these
lines, on the eastern side, in the united realms of Aragon and Catalonia,
events were taking place which partly corresponded to the same social and
political problems as in Castile and in some measure opened the way to Spanish
expansion beyond the Peninsula. Seven kings occupy' the period under
discussion, four of whom are of capital importance in the history of Aragon and
Catalonia.
The
Crown of Aragon
The
partition by James I of his dominions into the kingdoms of Aragon and Majorca,
inherited by his sons Peter and James respectively, brought about the political
independence of the Balearic Islands for a number of years, but the bonds
between the kingdoms of Majorca and Aragon were not completely severed,
especially when James of Majorca declared himself a feudatory of the Crown of
Aragon (1278). If the policy of James I in this direction does not appear very
wise, since it weakened the power of the monarchy which he had increased by the
conquest of Valencia and the Balearic Islands, yet he deserves credit for his
diplomatic aggrandisement of Aragon by the marriage of his son Peter to
Constance, daughter of Manfred, King of Sicily. The rights of the Aragonese
kings to parts of Italy were derived from this marriage. James I proposed at
the same time to counteract in this way the alliance advantageous to France
brought about by the marriage of the Countess of Provence with Charles of
Anjou, the perpetual rival of the Catalans and Aragonese in the south of
France.
The
first act of the new king, Peter III, was to affirm his political independence
with regard to the Papacy, thus denying the validity of the vassalage
contracted by his grandfather Peter II. Peter III expressed this doctrine in
the declaration which he made at his coronation at Saragossa that he was not
receiving the crown from the hands of the archbishop in the name of the Church,
and was neither for her nor against her (16 November 1276). James I had been
the ally of Mustansir, King of Tunis, who paid tribute to Aragon. On the death
of Mustansir the throne was usurped by one of his sons, and Peter III seized
the opportunity to intervene in Tunisian affairs. To this end he sent an
expedition in 1280 under the command of a Sicilian captain, Coral or Corrado Lancia, with the result that a sort of Aragonese
protectorate was established over Tunis, which comprised the right of levying
direct tribute and half of the taxation imposed on the country, the
establishment of consuls in Bougie and Tunis, and a governor for the Christian
residents in the district. This governor, who was to be an Aragonese or
Catalan, enjoyed the privilege of flying the Aragonese flag, to which equal honours
were to be paid as to the Tunisian flag. This important diplomatic success,
which laid the foundation of Aragonese influence in the north of Africa, was
the forerunner of new events of which the kingdom of Sicily was the scene and
in prevision of which Peter III probably undertook the expedition to Tunis.
The
kingdom of Sicily was composed of the island of that name and of the territory
of Naples on the mainland. It was then ruled by the Hohenstaufen in the person
of Manfred, father-in-law of Peter III and son of the Emperor Frederick II. The
long struggle between the Papacy and the Hohenstaufen was drawing to its close,
and the Pope was resolved to wrest the kingdom, of which he was the lawful
suzerain, from the enemy house. For this end, the Pope enfeoffed Charles of
Anjou with the kingdom of Sicily on condition that he should conquer it as
papal vassal and champion. Charles invaded the kingdom (1264), and Manfred
perished at the battle of Benevento. A similar fate befell Manfred’s nephew Conradin, the last of the Hohenstaufen. Overcome by Charles
of Anjou, Conradin was taken prisoner and beheaded at
Naples. Thus Peter III remained the legitimate representative of the rights of
the house of Swabia in Sicily and the last hope of the Ghibelline party, persecuted
by the Guelf or papal party. The most important members of the Ghibelline party
in Sicily fled from the cruel persecutions of Charles of Anjou, now master of
Sicily, and sought refuge with Peter III. It is not known for certain whether
the King of Aragon planned the conquest of Sicily independently at this time or
whether he made an agreement with the Sicilians to that end. It may, however,
be affirmed that Peter conducted negotiations through the Sicilian John of Procida to concert a league against Charles of Anjou into
which the Kings of Aragon and Castile were to enter, together with the Emperor
of Constantinople, many of the Sicilian nobles, and even Pope Nicholas III
himself. The Pope appears to have designed the establishment of two kingdoms in
Italy, one in Lombardy and the other in Tuscany, for two of his nephews and to
have found that Charles of Anjou was an obstacle to this plan.
The
death of Nicholas III and the election in 1281 of the Frenchman Martin IV, who
immediately shewed opposition to Peter III, caused the projected alliance to
fail. But the King of Aragon did not abandon his scheme. He made sure of peace
at home by an alliance with Sancho IV of Castile, and coming to an agreement
with the Count of Pallars and the Viscount of Cardona
who might have caused disturbances in Catalonia, he made Constance queen-regent
of the kingdom in case of his own absence. At the same time he made great
preparations for war, assembling on the coast of Catalonia and Valencia a fleet
which counted as many as 140 ships and 15,000 men. The King of France in alarm
sent ambassadors to Peter to learn what the reason of these preparations might
be. But the King of Aragon gave an evasive answer. The ostensible motive was to
make a crusade to Constantine in Africa, where the governor had sought help
from Peter against the King of Tunis, promising to hand over the city and to
become a Christian. The fleet put to sea with the troops in June 1282 and made
towards Collo on the Barbary coast. The Aragonese
took the city, where they fortified themselves and continued for some time the
war against the natives of the country.
Shortly
before, there had taken place in Sicily the rising against the French known as
the Sicilian Vespers (31 March 1282); and an embassy from the Sicilians now
offered to Peter, as representative of the house of Swabia, the crown which
Charles of Anjou had wrested from Manfred. Peter III accepted, fully convinced
of his rights. Notwithstanding the opposition of many of the nobles in his
host, he ordered Collo to be burnt as well as other
towns in the district, and embarked his army for Sicily. On 30 August he
arrived at Trapani, and soon afterwards defeated the French fleet and made
himself master of the whole island. Charles of Anjou, who was then engaged in
besieging Messina, abandoned that enterprise and withdrew towards the north of
Calabria, whose coasts however fell into Peter’s hands in February 1283.
Charles, in despair at these defeats, had recourse to a measure frequent at
that time and challenged the King of Aragon to a duel. The challenge was
accepted, and the combat was arranged to take place at Bordeaux on 1 June 1283.
When the time came, Peter learnt that the King of France, in agreement with the
King of England to whom Bordeaux belonged, was preparing an ambush for him and
for the nobles who were to accompany him. To avoid this danger and to keep his
word, Peter went to Bordeaux in disguise and learnt that the plot was a fact,
and that the governor could give no guarantee for the person of the king and
his company. Peter thereupon made himself known at the place appointed for the
combat and had it certified that he had been there. He then immediately rode
back to Spain, not without grave peril of capture by the partisans of the King
of France. He entered Spain by way of Guipuzcoa and
proceeded to Tarragona.
In
the meanwhile the war continued in Italy with favourable results for the King
of Aragon, whose admiral Roger Loria gained a great reputation as a sailor and
warrior. He defeated the French fleet twice off Malta and off Naples, taking
prisoner Charles the Lame son of Charles of Anjou (1284). In the January of the
following year Charles of Anjou died, leaving the Angevin cause in the kingdom
of Sicily without a leader; but Pope Martin IV on the other hand, who did not
forgive the King of Aragon for having conquered the island of Sicily and who
maintained his claims to the feudal rights over Aragon repudiated by Peter III,
excommunicated the latter and, declaring him to be deprived of his possessions,
absolved his subjects from their oaths of fealty, and granted his dominions to
Charles of Valois, third son of Philip III of France (May 1284). King Philip
III invaded Catalonia at the head of an army of 1800 horse and countless foot.
The Holy See declared this war to be a crusade and gathered contributions to
support it, while the invaders found support in James II, King of Majorca, the
brother of Peter III and also lord of Roussillon, who allowed passage through
that territory. Accordingly the French penetrated through Ampurias (Ampurdan), notwithstanding the fact that some fortresses in
Roussillon such as Salces and Coplliure held out for Peter. The French took possession of places in Ampurias and then
laid siege to Gerona. Charles of Valois was crowned king in the castle of Lleis with the support of certain Catalan nobles and
ecclesiastics and of various towns of Ampurdan.
Peter
III was hard pressed. His preparations to beat back the invasion, which had
obliged him to temporise with some political claims of the nobles and of the
city of Barcelona, were insufficient. Fortunately the fortress of Gerona held
out long enough to allow Roger Loria, who had been summoned by Peter, to arrive
with his ships. He defeated the French fleet at the battle of the Islas Hormigas. This victory, which stopped the provisioning of
the French army by sea, together with an epidemic which broke out amongst the
troops through lack of food and excessive crowding in the camp, forced the
French King, Philip the Bold, to retire. His retreat was disastrous. The
Aragonese and Catalan forces posted on the pass of Panisars allowed Philip to go by, but fell upon the rest of the troops and slaughtered
them. The war went on for some time in Roussillon, but the towns which had been
taken by the French soon surrendered to Peter III. Shortly afterwards (2
November 1285) Peter died, at the moment when his son Alfonso was leading an
expedition against Majorca to punish the disloyalty of King James II. Before
his death Peter III had asked the Archbishop of Tarragona to remove the
excommunication which the Pope had laid upon him, declaring at the same time
that he was willing to hand over the kingdom of Sicily to the Holy See. But
Peter’s successor Alfonso III did not carry out his father’s intentions. Having
gained possession of Majorca he retained it during the whole of his reign, as a
punishment for the conduct of his uncle at the time of the French invasion, and
soon afterwards he took Minorca, which from the time of James I had been only a
vassal-State. Peter’s second son James, who during the life-time of his father
had been accepted as the heir to Sicily, kept the island with the connivance of
his brother Alfonso and was crowned its king in 1286. Consequently the war
continued between the Sicilians and the French in Italy; but Aragon was not
directly concerned in it, since Sicily was now a separate kingdom. This fact
aided Alfonso III in composing his differences with France and with the Papacy,
under pressure from other European States, especially England.
Peace
was finally made at Canfranc in 1288, the principal conditions of which with
regard to Aragon were: the revocation of the investiture of the kingdom of
Aragon made by the Pope in favour of Charles of Valois in 1284; the recognition
of the sovereignty of the Crown of Aragon over Majorca and Roussillon; and the
liberation of Charles the Lame, a prisoner since June 1284, in exchange for
indemnities and fresh securities and the possession of the island of Sicily for
James the brother of Alfonso III. When Charles the Lame was set at liberty,
neither the King of France nor the Pope fulfilled the pact, the former renewing
his menaces with the connivance of the dethroned King of Majorca; and the
struggle went on both in Sicily and Calabria. A new peace signed at Tarascon in 1291 put an end to the struggle, but greatly to
the prejudice of Aragon, seeing that Alfonso now undertook to pay to the Holy
See the tribute promised by Peter II with all arrears in return for the Pope’s
renewed withdrawal of his grant of the kingdom to Charles of Valois; this is
very clear evidence of the moral force which the Papacy still exercised upon
secular politics. By the Treaty of Tarascon Alfonso
undertook to prevent Aragonese and Catalans from serving under James of Sicily,
to require of the latter the surrender of Sicily to the Pope, and in the case
of his refusal to declare war upon him. Shortly afterwards Alfonso III died
without issue and the throne passed to his brother James, who had been deprived
of his rights over Sicily by the terms of the Treaty of Tarascon.
Events showed that, in spite of everything, the aims of France and the Papacy
could not be realised. James II left Sicily in order to be crowned King of
Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia, but he appointed his brother Frederick
governor in Sicily. This open violation of the Treaty of Tarascon,
to which James had never consented when reigning in Sicily, provoked a fresh
war with France. But James desired peace, and now accepted the terms of Pope
Boniface VIII. Accordingly a third treaty was soon made at Anagni in 1295, in
which once again the King of Aragon renounced his claims to Sicily, as Alfonso
III had done in 1291, and undertook to make war upon the Sicilians and upon
Frederick, should they not agree to restore the island to the Pope. On his side
the Pope raised all sentences of excommunication from the Aragonese sovereigns.
The King of France also renounced for himself and Charles of Valois their
claims on Aragon, and the marriage was arranged of Blanche, daughter of Charles
the Lame, to the King of Aragon. Finally, two years later, by way of
compensation for the loss of Sicily, James obtained from the Papacy the grant
of dominion over the islands of Sardinia and Corsica, provided that he should
conquer them and pay a tribute to the Pope.
Alfonso,
heir to the Aragonese throne, undertook (1323-24) the conquest of Sardinia, but
met with great resistance on the part of the islanders, and failed to effect
complete occupation. The dispute with France over the Pyrenean Val d’Aran was settled by arbitration in favour of the
Aragonese King, who adduced documentary proof of his rights. But the Treaty of
Anagni did not solve the question of Sicily. Neither Frederick nor—what was
more important—the people of Sicily would surrender their independence. The
war was reopened, and James fought against his brother, now Frederick II of
Sicily, with varying fortunes, although brilliant naval victories were won by
the famous admiral Roger Loria, now in James’ service. Finally, however, all
being weary of such a prolonged struggle and the great invasion of Sicily by
Charles of Valois having failed, peace was made in 1302, by which Boniface VIII
and Charles the Lame recognised Frederick as King of island Sicily (Trinacria), but on the condition that the latter should
marry Eleonor Charles’ daughter and that on Frederick’s death the island should
be reunited with Naples, which had been all the time Angevin. In compensation
for this promised concession, the King of Naples undertook to pay Frederick’s
children 100,000 ounces of gold and to induce the King of Aragon to allow them
to conquer a kingdom, either Cyprus or else Sardinia, which he had not yet
attacked. In spite of this new treaty, Sicily remained in the power of the
house of Aragon even after Frederick’s death.
While
James was thus intervening in Sicily in a way so contrary to the political interests
of Aragon, he aimed at extending his dynastic influence by marriages. He
himself married Blanche of Anjou, and, after her death, Mary, daughter of the
King of Cyprus. Their daughter Isabella married Frederick the Handsome, Duke of
Austria, later the rival of Lewis IV for the Empire, a union of far-reaching
consequences in the struggle with the Papacy. His second son Alfonso married a
niece of the Count of Urgel and inherited his
estates. His third son Peter inherited the counties of Ribagorza and Ampurias.
Finally, a granddaughter of James was married to his cousin James III, King of
Majorca; Majorca had been restored in 1295 to James III’s grandfather James II,
who had betrayed Peter III, but on condition that it was a fief of the Crown of
Aragon. James also acquired the northern part of the kingdom of Murcia in
return for his intervention in the war of succession between Sancho IV and the
Infante de la Cerda in Castile. Thus James II of Aragon can be considered as a
king solicitous for the aggrandisement of his possessions in spite of his
weakness with regard to Sicily.
The
Catalan Company in the East
Before
beginning the account of the reign of Alfonso IV who succeeded to the throne on
the death of James in 1327, it is necessary to mention an episode of great
importance in the history of south-east Europe which resulted from the termination
of the war in Sicily in 1302, an exploit which can be considered glorious
amongst the military achievements and adventures of that time, and which is
known to history as the “Catalan Expedition to the East”, although, as we shall
see, there were recruits from Navarre and from other countries as well. Owing
to the lack of regular armies paid by the State or maintained by compulsory
military service as at the present day, it happened that when some war was
finished for which thousands of men had been got together in a certain
district, a great number of them were left without occupation. This became a
veritable menace to the country, particularly if they were not natives, as was
frequently the case. These unemployed troops often formed themselves into companies
of robbers or conquerors who fought on their own account or sold their services
to the highest bidder. It may be easily understood that every country attempted
to shake off such a plague, facilitating their departure to other lands, as we
have already seen in the case of the White Companies in southern France in the
time of Peter I of Castile. Frederick II, King of Sicily, wishing to get rid of
the numerous adventurers who had remained in the island after the peace of
1302, suggested to one of the captains, Roger de Flor of Brindisi, that he should go to the aid of Andronicus, Emperor of
Constantinople, who was then hard pressed by the Turks, already masters of all
the Byzantine possessions in Asia Minor. Roger agreed, and in ships lent by
Frederick sailed to Constantinople in 1303, with 1500 horse, 1000 infantry from
various parts, and 4000 almogavares (“raiders”),
picked troops so called because they followed the Moorish tactics of incursions
and raids in enemy country. The Emperor received them with joy, bestowed upon
Roger de Flor the title of megaduke,
and married him to a daughter of the King of Bulgaria. Roger and his troops
invaded Asia Minor and won great victories over the Turks. The news of these
victories and of the honours and gifts bestowed upon the leader of the
expedition attracted fresh adventurers from Catalonia, Aragon, and Navarre, who
made two new expeditions to Asia Minor under Berengar de Rocafort and Berengar de Entenza.
The Emperor in reward for these successes, which freed him for the time from
the Turkish peril, gave the exalted title of Caesar to Roger de Flor; on Entenza he bestowed the
title of megaduke. He also granted the whole of Anatolia
to be parcelled out among those who took part in the expedition (1305).
Such
great favours, although well earned, roused the jealousy of the Greek courtiers
and of Michael the heir to the throne. They formed a conspiracy. Roger de Flor, many of his officers, and 1300 of their followers
were murdered at a banquet. A body of Catalans and Aragonese stationed in the
town of Gallipoli were also massacred, as well as those under the command of
Admiral Fernando de Ahones in Constantinople.
Thereby the expeditionary force was reduced to some 3300 men and 200 horses.
However, so far from being intimidated, these survivors, furious for re venge,
rose against the Byzantines, defeated them repeatedly, and set fire to several
towns. Rivalry broke out between the leaders of the various bands, which were
joined for a time by the Infante Ferdinand of Majorca, appointed
commander-in-chief by his cousin, Frederick of Sicily, in order to turn the
situation to account. This rivalry rendered their victories politically
useless, and gave a new direction to the action of the Spanish and other
warriors in the East. The Catalans and Aragonese, with some Turkish
auxiliaries, entered the service of Walter, Duke of Athens, who was hard
pressed by his enemies. They delivered him from this peril. But the treacherous
duke attempted to make away with his deliverers after the example of
Constantinople. The adventurers thereupon stormed the city of Athens and placed
themselves under the protection of the King of Sicily. The latter seized the
opportunity and sent his second son Manfred, who became sovereign of the
Sicilian duchy of Athens, which however owed its origin to Catalans and
Aragonese. The duchy, which lasted from 1326 to 1387, was a singular conclusion
to the exploits of those adventurers who, leaving Sicily in 1303, not only
earned the banner of Aragon for the first time triumphantly through Asia Minor
and Greece, but introduced Spanish culture into those countries, especially
Greece.
Peter
IV: annexation of Majorca
The
short reign of Alfonso IV of Aragon (1327-36) was marked in foreign affairs by
the continued effort to conquer Sardinia and at home by family disputes.
Alfonso’s second wife, Leonor of Castile, sister of Alfonso XI, strove to
favour her own children at the expense of those by her husband’s first
marriage. These resisted vigorously, especially the eldest, Peter, who from his
earliest years shewed remarkable energy. He won the support of the people, and
succeeded to the throne on his father’s death without serious opposition from
Leonor.
The
new king Peter IV, whose struggles with Peter I of Castile and whose
intervention in the civil wars of that country we have already related, was,
although energetic, treacherous and cruel like his contemporary in Castile. Less
harsh than the latter, he was more hypocritical and observant of outward
appearances, whence his name Peter the Ceremonious. The first years of Peter
IV’s reign were occupied with the above-mentioned war against the Banu-Marin
and the Moors of Granada, in which he gave his aid to Alfonso XI of Castile,
and with the struggle to effect the annexation of Majorca in order to restore
the unity of the possessions of the Crown which had been divided by the
testament of James I. Peter IV sought a pretext in the claims of the French
King to the stronghold of Montpellier, which belonged to James III, King of
Majorca. Instead of aiding the latter against the King of France, Peter drew up
a list of charges against James, accusing him of the infraction of his feudal
duties to the Crown of Aragon. James III was willing to submit the question to
trial and went to Barcelona, but Peter IV, bent on gaining his ends, alleged
that James III had conspired against his life, and accused him of high treason.
The natural result was a war between the two kings, easily won by Peter IV, who
seized Majorca and Roussillon; James was killed in battle. To flatter the
national pride, Peter promised solemnly in the Cortes of March 1354 never to
separate the two recovered States from the kingdom of Aragon. Majorca
thenceforth formed part of the Aragonese kingdom. Roussillon was retained by
the kings of Aragon until 1462, when John II ceded it to France, although
shortly afterwards he tried to regain it, thus bequeathing a new political problem
to his successors.
The
war in Sardinia continued, causing serious trouble to the kings of Aragon. The
Republic of Genoa in conjunction with Pisa and other Italian States stirred up
frequent revolts amongst the islanders against the Aragonese dominion. Peter IV
decided to attack the evil at its root, and so allying himself with Venice, the
perpetual enemy of Genoa, he declared war on the latter. Two naval victories
gained by the Aragonese and Venetians did not suffice to pacify Sardinia. The
king himself, at the head of a strong army, took several important places on
the island, but not even so did he succeed in overcoming the local disorders of
the Sardinians, who were always in a state of insurrection. However, as a
contrast to this unfortunate state of affairs, Peter IV in 1381 had a pleasant
surprise. The duchy of Athens—so far a Sicilian dependency—was offered to him
by an embassy of nobles and burghers of the city. Peter accepted their offer
and in return granted Athens the same civic privileges as those enjoyed by
Barcelona, which was the most autonomous and powerful of all Catalan
municipalities. Moreover, from his intervention in the dynastic wars of
Castile, Peter IV obtained in addition to certain material advantages a union
with the victorious house of Trastamara, through the marriage of the Aragonese
Infanta Leonora with the Infante Don John of Castile. Upon this marriage were
based the claims of the Castilian dynasty which some forty years later was to
rule in Aragon. The last years of Peter IV were embittered by family
dissensions and by an unfortunate attempt to subjugate the peasant vassals of
the Archbishop of Tarragona. The king died in January 1387, abandoned by his
wife and children.
More
valuable perhaps to his country than all his territorial acquisitions was his
decisive victory over the anarchical nobility, principally Aragonese and
Valencian, and over those municipalities which had made common cause with them.
The struggle, already of long standing, had reached a serious crisis in the
reign of Peter III. The great nobles of Aragon and their retainers, together
with the above-mentioned municipalities, more interested in the increase of
their particular privileges than in the political task of breaking the power of
the nobles which was really more formidable than that of the Crown, had formed
a league known as the “Union” which possessed an organisation and armed force
of its own. Confident of its strength, the Union had presented to the king in
1282 a list of petitions and complaints to which Peter III was obliged to
agree, being hard pressed at that moment with other political troubles, notably
the war in Sicily with Charles of Anjou. The whole body of privileges and
promises made by the king was termed Privilegio General. This document was both
a statute recognising an aristocratic oligarchy of nobles and citizens and also
a charter which defined the immunities and class privileges obtained by the
nobility, particularly in the reign of James I (1265), and the civic liberties
obtained in successive steps by the municipalities. Alfonso III, who succeeded
Peter III, less energetic and resolute than his father, gave way still farther
and granted in 1288 to the revolted nobles and municipalities the Privilegio de
la Union, still more irksome to the royal authority than the Privilegio
General. One clause gave to the Cortes the right of deposing the king if he
omitted to fulfil certain of the privileges granted. Obviously matters could
not rest there. The accession of a vigorous and resolute king, tenacious of
royal prerogatives as they were then conceived, was certain to renew the
struggle.
And
so it was when Peter IV came to the throne: the struggle soon broke out, since
the king, as we have seen, was not a man of a complacent disposition. The
trouble began when Peter, being without male heirs, appointed his daughter
Constance regent and heiress to the throne, whereas the Aragonese and Valencian
nobles preferred the claim of Peter’s brother James, Count of Urgel. For the time being the king was obliged to give way,
for only the Catalan nobility and four Aragonese municipalities, Huesca, Daroca, Calatayud, and Teruel,
took his side in the Cortes of 1347 at Saragossa. He confirmed the Privilegio
de la Union and agreed to change his council and the high officials of the
palace, dismissing the Catalan nobles. But this submission on the part of the
king was only provisional. Peter IV was waiting for the moment of his revenge,
and for this purpose he strove to divide the nobles and form a strong party of
his own. The members of the Union in Valencia gave him an excellent opportunity
by sacking the houses of those whom they suspected of being partisans of the
king. Peter attacked them, but failed in this first attempt (1348). He was
himself for some time practically a prisoner in the hands of the Valencians,
and suffered treatment but little compatible with his authority. About
midsummer he escaped to Aragon, where the Union troops under the command of his
brother were besieging the town of Epila. Loyal
troops came to the assistance of the besieged, and in the battle which ensued
the Union suffered a crushing defeat (21 July 1348). The king entered
Saragossa, abolished the Privilegio de la Union, and punished many of the
delinquents with death. He did the same in Valencia shortly afterwards. The
ferocity of these struggles and of the legal penalties of that age appears in
the torments inflicted upon the Valencian unionists by the king. They were even
compelled to drink the molten metal of the very bells which had called them to
the meetings of the Union.
However,
the abolition of the Privilegio went no farther than the actual contents of the
document. The rights of the nobility as a social class remained intact, also
those of the municipalities just as they existed in the ancient laws of the
kingdom and in the local fueros, a fact which shews that Peter IV did not move
against the fundamental political organisation of Aragon, but against the
unwarrantable pretensions of the nobility and municipalities. Consequently, if
the political power which the nobles had acquired by the Union was shattered,
in other respects the Aragonese aristocracy retained their former power and
social influence, and did not acquiesce, as did the Castilian nobility a
century later, in the total abolition of their political importance and their
privileges over the plebeian classes.
The
two kings who succeeded Peter IV, and with whom the fourteenth century in
Aragon comes to a close, are of but slight importance in the political history
of the country. The first of them, John I (1387-95), son of Peter IV, had to
contend with the Count of Armagnac and the Count of Foix, who made vague claims
to the crown, and had to quell another insurrection in Sardinia and a rising in
Sicily. During his reign the duchy of Athens was lost to Aragon. John I was
succeeded by Martin I (1395-1410), regent of Sicily, who left his only son,
also named Martin, as king of that island. The latter died in 1409, leaving the
kingdom to his father Martin I of Aragon; but he also died in less than a year
without surviving issue or leaving any other will than that by which he had
bequeathed his throne to his son Martin of Sicily. Thus uncertainty as to the
succession raised a serious question which might have been calamitous if the
usual appeal to arms had been made. Fortunately this did not occur.
Social
classes
The
period of about a century so far covered in this chapter is a brief space in
the nation’s history. Yet in Castile the period from Alfonso X to Henry III and
in Aragon that from Peter III to Martin I brought some interesting and
sometimes radical changes both in political and in civil institutions.
With
regard to social and economic life we see on the one hand in Leon and Castile
an evolution towards personal freedom among the rural and urban lower classes,
and on the other hand the growth of municipalities, centres of free civic life.
We have little detailed knowledge concerning the former tendency. Documents of
the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries contain evidence of servile
insurrections and of protests against seignorial excesses—proof that in some
districts the liberating movement was slow and met with strong resistance. The
movement received legal support through the extension to the whole country of
the law granted by Alfonso IX in 1215 to the serfs, known as foreros, in the royal manors of Leon and in those subject
to the Archbishop of Santiago. On the other hand it appears that the right of
asylum in municipal territory enjoyed by fugitive serfs from the seignories was
restricted; also there was a change for the worse in the status of a certain
class, known as behetrías, who had to pay tribute and services to a lord. This
change seems to have consisted of a restriction, in many cases, of the right
possessed by some of these behetrías to choose any noble as their lord, this
right being now restricted to choice among the members of some specified noble
family. But apart from the behetrías, the number of free labourers must have
become greater as the cultivation of the land spread and as the general wealth
increased.
This
increase of wealth was furthered in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries by the
formation of important industrial and commercial urban centres, first Santiago
de Galicia, and later, after the conquests of Ferdinand III and Alfonso X,
Seville and other towns in Andalusia. Moreover, the greater security of the
strictly Castilian and Leonese districts, once the frontier reached and passed
the line of the Guadalquivir, allowed the normal development of economic life
in the north. In rural life and the extension of tillage the monasteries still
played an important part, while at the same time they gave military aid to the
kings, sending bodies of slaves, labourers, and dependants under the command of
the abbot or of some layman appointed by him. Indeed so great was the
civilising influence of the monastic system that the progress of the reconquest
and the successive prosperity of the kingdoms so recovered can be traced on the
map by counting the number of monasteries as exactly as by following the dates
of Christian victories and the conquest of Moorish territories. The Military
Orders founded in Leon and Castile during the Middle Ages, especially those of
Calatrava and Alcantara, played a similar part to the monasteries in the
colonisation of territory reconquered from the Arabs.
With
regard to urban and municipal life, in proportion as the middle class
increased, either entirely plebeian or possessing something of aristocratic
privilege (los Caballeros de villa or colatión),
the manual workers organised themselves in gremios, an institution similar to
the gilds and corporations of other European countries. The professions or
trades grouped in gremios were composed of the menestrales or workmen in manual industries, merchants, sailors, and artistas or workers in industrial arts. Protected by the municipalities and also by the
kings, the gilds increased in importance and became an influential social
element in city life. From the fourteenth century particularly, the kings made
general laws, ordenanzas de menestrales, to regulate not only the inner life of
the gremios but also the wages, the working day, the technical conditions of
production in each trade. The development of commerce, especially the commerce
of Castile and of the Cantabrian coast with France, Flanders, and other
northern countries is shewn, among other things, by the existence of consuls,
representatives in various foreign cities of the Spanish producers and
exporters.
With
regard to the nobility, the introduction of new titles is noticeable, replacing
the old names of ricoshombres, infanzones, etc. From the time of Henry II the newer
titles of marquess and duke are added to the ancient title of count. The title
of Constable of Castile, the head of the army, appears to have been created
during the reign of John I. Other important innovations were the fixing of the
order of succession to titles by a law of the Partidas of Alfonso X and the institution of mayorazgos,
an entail on real estate generally in favour of the eldest son. These mayorazgos soon extended to the upper middle class and
caused a rigidity in the ownership of landed property. The wealth of the
nobles, originally founded on land, which by the progress of economic life, the
freedom of the labourers, and the ever increasing importance of movable
property was becoming less lucrative than formerly for the landowners, was
however increased by the above-mentioned gifts or mercedes of the kings. These mercedes were often known
as encomiendas. They were of two kinds: encomiendas de honor,
when the king ceded to the noble the fiscal rights of a town or district; and encomiendas de tierra, when the king granted
a rent or sum to be raised from one or various places or from the Jewish or
Moorish quarter of a city.
The
principal innovation in the social sphere was in respect of the Jews, as we
have already indicated. They were strongly protected in the interests of
science and literature in the time of Alfonso X and other kings, and played a
great part in financial affairs both public and unofficial. Thenceforward we
find mention of their economic privileges, as for instance the regulation by
Alfonso X of the rate of usury. At the same time religious intolerance, stirred
by pulpit oratory, was increasing among the people. In the Cortes of Burgos
(1396) it was petitioned that the Jews should be deprived of the fortresses
they held, of their public offices, of the farming of the royal revenues, and
of the posts which certain of them held in the council of Henry III. The king
granted only the last demand. But assaults on the ghettos and massacres by the
populace became more frequent, and aggravated the situation.
Social
innovations in Aragon and Catalonia were unimportant during this time. In the
new kingdom of Valencia constituted by James I and inherited by Peter III,
there was no servile Christian class of cultivators, but a class of Moorish
slaves and tenant-farmers bestowed by the king upon the conquerors who obtained
grants of land. As the majority of these were Aragonese nobles, rural life in
Valencia was dominated by these lords and regulated according to the customs of
Aragon. On the other hand, the middle class and the popular element
predominated in the cities and important towns, giving to the Valencian
municipalities a markedly democratic character, which received legal sanction
from the fuero or charter granted by James I to the capital. This charter is
one of the best models of municipal legislation of the late thirteenth and
early fourteenth centuries, and was imitated later at Tarragona.
Social
history in Majorca resembled that of Catalonia, with the difference that the
aristocratic element was not represented there by the nobles and clergy but by
the burghers or rich citizens of the capital who were the chief landowners.
Their exploitation of the country folk (forenses)
provoked a ferment of protests and tumults which at a later date degenerated
into sanguinary revolts.
The
chief political movement in Leon and Castile is the struggle between the
monarch and the nobility, of which some account has been already given. As to
public administration, a reform introduced by Ferdinand III was extended and
securely established, the old condados or mandationes (counties) being replaced by new
territorial divisions known as adelantamientos,
ruled by adelantados, divided into two classes, mayores and menores. Alfonso X defined their functions
by law. If an adelantamiento touched the
Moorish frontier, the governor was called adelantado de frontera. The legislative tendency, also initiated by Ferdinand III and greatly developed
by Alfonso X, was more important and progressive. This tendency took two
directions: the unification or steps towards the unification of law, and the
introduction of the doctrines of the Justinianean Code. Unification was prepared by extending to various towns, by way of a
municipal code, the application of the Visigothic Liber Iudiciorum,
translated with some modifications into Castilian under the name of Fuero Juzgo, which was in force as the law of appeal in the
royal tribunal. The same use was made of the so-called Royal Fuero promulgated
by Alfonso X in 1254 and based on that of Soria. This was meant to be a typical
or model municipal code and was extended to various cities such as Burgos,
Valladolid, Avila, and Segovia. But this method was slow, and moreover clashed
to a certain degree with the Romanising tendency favoured by the lawyers, which
naturally tended towards juridical doctrines of a more modern character.
Accordingly the late thirteenth century and the early fourteenth century is a
time of erudite juridical compilations, sometimes the work of individual
jurisconsults, sometimes the result of official orders, but seldom attaining
legal authority. Nevertheless these compilations often had greater weight in
jurisdiction than the very laws promulgated by the kings. Such was the case
notably with the juridical encyclopedia, 1256-63, of
Alfonso the Learned, drawn up in the form of a code and generally known by the
name of the Siete Partidas because it is divided into seven books. Although composed by jurisconsults,
some of whose names are known, the king himself directed the work, wrote a
great amount of it, and revised the compilation of his collaborators. It draws
upon the fueros and customs of Leon and Castile, but much more upon the Justinianean Code, the Italian commentators, and the Canon
Law. Even these elements were not slavishly copied, but rather remodelled with
modifications, which in some matters, such as the doctrine of royal authority,
rectify the Caesarism so prevalent in the writers and the religious and
political theories of the time. The Partidas,
though not promulgated as law, were immediately established as a text-book in
the universities, not only in the kingdom of Castile but in those of Aragon and
Portugal as well, and through the students of law it exercised great influence
upon jurisprudence.
Another
compilation less extensive, known as the Especulo,
composed either during the reign of Alfonso the Learned or that of Sancho IV,
had a similar influence. While these innovations were being made in juridical
principles, the municipal institutions were developing in the direction of
self-government. The first municipal organisations, whose fueros or charters
contain economic and juridical privileges and the recognition of individual rights,
worked under the authority of the king and the immediate direction of the count
representing the king. The judges who administered justice were appointed by
the king either directly or through the juntas or judicial assemblies presided
over by the count. In addition to these judicial assemblies, there were also
others composed of all the householders, which like the ancient rural juntas of
the Visigoths (concilium vicinorum) concerned themselves with local affairs
connected with land, irrigation, and cattle. Some of these assemblies are
called concilios in documents of the period,
whence the Castilian word concejo, which later
came to mean the corporate entity of the town.
By
degrees the cities obtained, either from the king or from their seigniors, the
right of electing their own judges as distinct from the royal judges in order
to reduce litigation and to settle questions of general interest to the
citizens. The exercise of this right, which gained ground during the period we
are considering, gave to the concejos or
municipalities a more democratic tendency and a growing feeling of strength and
importance, particularly in the principal towns such as Burgos, Toledo,
Valladolid, Seville; and it strengthened their influence in the Cortes on
matters of general policy. But the equality imposed by the fuero on all
citizens, of whatever class, could not prevent strife between the classes for
the exercise of power, especially when the assemblies were replaced by
town-councils or Cabildos, executive corporations composed necessarily of
smaller numbers than the assemblies and elected by the householders. These
struggles were less violent in Leon and Castile than in Catalonia, Valencia,
and other regions. Nevertheless in the long run the result was that the Caballeros
of noble or plebeian origin took possession of the towncouncils or dominated them.
In
the kingdom of Aragon, through special circumstances of a social and economic
nature, the two cities most typical and most advanced in their autonomy were
Barcelona and Valencia, the former being the capital of the ancient county and
the latter the capital of the new kingdom created by James I. But on the other
hand these cities were the scene of the hottest political struggles between the
rich burghers and the plebeians.
The
importance of the Cortes also increased during this period through the combined
effect of all the afore-mentioned circumstances and of the struggles between
the nobility and the king, who sometimes from motives of policy and frequently
of necessity sought the support of the municipalities and of the Cortes which
represented them, particularly in Leon and Castile. For some time these two
ancient kingdoms, definitely united as we have seen under Ferdinand III, had
separate Cortes; but already in the time of Alfonso X they met together, and
the fusion was finally established in the fourteenth century. But the existence
of three separate Cortes for the three great territories of the Crown of Aragon
was maintained, except in certain exceptional cases. There were therefore
separate Cortes in Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia. Among their functions was
the singular right known as the derecho de greuges or agravios,
which meant the presentation of protests made by the municipalities or by other
bodies attending the Cortes against the king or his officers for infringements
of law. As time went on they also enjoyed a greater share in legislation than
the Cortes of Leon and Castile. The origin of this does not appear to be
earlier than 1283, that is to say than the reign of Peter III. Unanimity was
necessary for the passing of any resolution. The principal cities disposed of a
number of votes, while the less important had only one. Saragossa and Barcelona
had five votes each.
When,
on account of the death of the king and the extinction of the dynasty through
lack of direct heirs, a new king had to be elected, the Cortes held a special
meeting which took the name of Parlamento.
Such a meeting was first held at Borja in 1134 and elected Ramiro the Monk as
King of Aragon. During the intervals between the sessions of the Cortes, a
Junta or Committee, appointed by the Cortes, sat, called Diputación General in
Aragon and Diputación General or Generalidad in Catalonia. The formal existence of this Junta cannot be clearly traced
before the fourteenth century. Navarre and Valencia had similar permanent
committees of the Cortes. The duty of the Junta was to watch over the
observance of the laws and the expenditure of public funds.
In
the reign of James II, and even more so in that of Peter IV after the defeat of
the Unionists, the special institution, which probably originated in the
twelfth century, known as the Justicia Mayor de Aragon, became particularly
important. James I on the petition of the nobles granted to this judge, who was
a member of the Curia or Royal Tribunal, the power of holding a court of first
instance and also of hearing appeals from the courts of the local justices. In
the Cortes of 1348, Peter IV made the office tenable for life, with the special
function of interpreting the fueros and acting as judge of contrafuero or violation of fueros. In this capacity the Justicia Mayor saw to the
fulfilment of the fuero de manifestation, a sort of legal guarantee by which
the accused was kept in a special prison while the competent judge dealt with
the case. The Justicia also saw to the enforcement of the fuero de derecho, which guaranteed the personal liberty and
the property of the litigant, except in cases of serious offences, during the
time he remained uncondemned, a guarantee similar to
the mesures conservatoires of the present law. These
two powers of the Justicia played an important part in later centuries, when
the struggle developed between the absolute monarchy and the fueros. On the
other hand, the power also granted to him of acting as mediating judge between
the king and the nobles was no more than a moral guarantee which has been
compared to a sheathed sword. Only once, in the time of James II, did the Justicia
settle a question of that nature between the king and the nobility.
Finally,
a fact of considerable importance from the economic as well as from the
legislative point of view was the creation, in Valencia in 1283, Majorca in
1343, and Barcelona in 1347, of a court to deal with commercial affairs, known
as the Court of the Consulate of the Sea. Simultaneously, there appeared at
Barcelona (in, or shortly before, 1283) a collection of commercial law (Llibre del Consolat de Mar), thus
giving legal form to the customary maritime law which had been elaborated
during the preceding centuries along the eastern coasts of Spain.
RUSSIA, 1015-1462
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