THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES VBOOK
XI.
ABDICATION
OF CHARLES V
As
soon as the treaty of Passau was signed, Maurice, in consequence of his
engagements with Ferdinand, marched into Hungary with twenty thousand men [Aug.
3]. But the great superiority of the Turkish armies, the frequent mutinies both
of the Spanish and German soldiers, occasioned by their want of pay, together
with the dissensions between Maurice and Castaldo, who was piqued at being
obliged of resign the chief command to him, prevented his performing anything
in that country suitable to his former fame, or of great benefit to the king of
the Romans.
When
Maurice set out for Hungary, the prince of Hesse parted from him with the
forces under his command, and marched back into his own country, that he might
be ready to receive his father upon his return, and give up to him the reins of
government which he had held during his absence. But fortune was not yet weary
of persecuting the landgrave. A battalion of mercenary troops, which had been
in the pay of Hesse, being seduced by Reifenberg, their
colonel, a soldier of fortune, ready to engage in any enterprise, secretly
withdrew from the young prince, as he was marching homewards, and joined Albert
of Brandenburg, who still continued in arms against the emperor, refusing to be
included in the treaty of Passau.
Unhappily
for the landgrave, an account of this reached the Netherlands, just as he was
dismissed from the citadel of Mechlin, where he had been confined, but before
he had got beyond the frontiers of that country. The queen of Hungary, who
governed there in her brother's name, incensed at such an open violation of the
treaty to which he owed his liberty, issued orders to arrest him, and committed
him again to the custody of the same Spanish captain who had guarded him for
five years with the most severe vigilance. Philip beheld all the horrors of his
imprisonment renewed, and his spirits subsiding in the same proportion as they
had risen during the short interval in which he had enjoyed liberty; he sunk
into despair, and believed himself to be doomed to perpetual captivity. But the
matter being so explained to the emperor, as fully satisfied him that the
revolt of Reitenberg’s mercenaries could be imputed
neither to the landgrave nor to his son, he gave orders for his release; and
Philip at last obtained the liberty for which he had so long languished. But
though he recovered his freedom, and was reinstated in his dominions, his
sufferings seem to have broken the vigour, and to have
extinguished the activity of his mind: from being the boldest as well as most
enterprising prince in the empire, he became the most timid and cautious, and
passed the remainder of his days in a pacific indolence.
The
degraded elector of Saxony, likewise, procured his liberty in consequence of
the treaty of Passau. The emperor having been obliged to relinquish all his
schemes for extirpating the protestant religion, had no longer any motive for
detaining him a prisoner; and being extremely solicitous, at that juncture, to
recover the confidence and good-will of the Germans, whose assistance was
essential to the success of the enterprise which he meditated against the king
of France, he, among other expedients for that purpose, thought of releasing
from imprisonment a prince whose merit entitled him no less to esteem, than his
sufferings rendered him the object of compassion. John Frederick took
possession accordingly of that part of his territories which had been reserved
for him, when Maurice was invested with the electoral dignity. As in this
situation he continued to display the same virtuous magnanimity for which he
had been conspicuous in a more prosperous and splendid state, and which he had
retained amidst all his sufferings, he maintained during the remainder of his
life that high reputation to which he had so just a title.
The
loss of Metz, Toul, and Verdun, had made a deep impression on the emperor.
Accustomed to terminate all his operations against France with advantage to
himself, he thought that it nearly concerned his honor not to allow Henry the
superiority in this war, or to suffer his own administration to be stained with
the infamy of having permitted territories of such consequence to be
dismembered from the empire.
This
was no less a point of interest than of honor. As the frontier of Champagne was
more naked, and lay more exposed than that of any province in France, Charles
had frequently, during his wars with that kingdom, made inroads upon that
quarter with great success and effect, but if Henry were allowed to retain his
late conquests, France would gain such a formidable barrier on that side, as to
be altogether secure, where formerly she had been weakest. On the other hand,
the empire had now lost as much, in point of security, as France had acquired;
and being stripped of the defence which those cities
afforded it, lay open to be invaded on a quarter, where all the towns having
been hitherto considered as interior, and remote from any enemy, were but
slightly fortified. These considerations determined Charles to attempt
recovering the three towns of which Henry had made himself master; and the
preparations which he had made against Maurice and his associates enabled him
to carry his resolution into immediate execution.
As
soon, then, as the peace was concluded at Passau, he left his inglorious
retreat at Villach, and advanced to Augsburg, at the head of a considerable
body of Germans which he had levied, together with all the troops which he had
drawn out of Italy and Spain. To these he added several battalions, which
having been in the pay of the confederates entered into his service when
dismissed by them; and he prevailed likewise on some princes of the empire to
join him with their vassals. In order to conceal the destination of this
formidable army, and to guard against alarming the French king, so as to put
him on preparing for the defence of his late conquests,
he gave out that he was to march forthwith into Hungary, in order to second
Maurice in his operations against the Infidels. When he began to advance
towards the Rhine, and could no longer employ that pretext, he tried a new
artifice, and spread a report, that he took this route in order to chastise
Albert of Brandenburg, whose cruel exactions in that part of the empire called
loudly for his interposition to check them.
But
the French having grown acquainted, at last, with arts by which they had been
so often deceived, viewed all Charles's motions with distrust. Henry
immediately discerned the true object of his vast preparations, and resolved to
defend the important conquests which he had gained with vigor equal to that
with which they were about to be attacked. As he foresaw that the whole weight
of the war would be turned against Metz, by whose fate that of Toul and Verdun
would be determined, he nominated Francis of Lorrain, duke of Guise, to take
the command in that city during the siege, the issue of which would equally
affect the honor and interest of his country. His choice could not have fallen
upon any person more worthy of that trust. The duke of Guise possessed, in a
high degree, all the talents of courage, sagacity, and presence of mind, which
render men eminent in military command. He was largely endowed with that
magnanimity of soul which delights in bold enterprises, and aspires to fame by
splendid and extraordinary actions. He repaired with joy to the dangerous
station assigned him, as to a theatre on which he might display his great
qualities under the immediate eye of his countrymen, all ready to applaud him.
The martial genius of the French nobility in that age, which considered it as
the greatest reproach to remain inactive, when there was any opportunity of
signalizing their courage, prompted great numbers to follow a leader who was
the darling as well as the pattern of every one that courted military fame.
Several princes of the blood, many noblemen of the highest rank, and all the
young officers who could obtain the king's permission, entered Metz as
volunteers. By their presence they added spirit to the garrison, and enabled
the duke of Guise to employ, on every emergency, persons eager to distinguish
themselves, and fit to conduct any service.
But
with whatever alacrity the duke of Guise undertook the defence of Metz, he found everything upon his arrival there, in such a situation, as
might have induced any person of less intrepid courage to despair of defending
it with success. The city was of great extent, with large suburbs; the walls
were in many places feeble and without ramparts; the ditch narrow; and the old
towers, which projected instead of bastions, were at too great distance from
each other to defend the space between them. For all these defects he
endeavored to provide the best remedy which the time would permit. He ordered
the suburbs, without sparing me monasteries or churches, not even that of St. Arnulph, in which several kings of France had been buried,
to be leveled with the ground; but in order to guard against the imputation of
impiety, to which such a violation of so many sacred edifices, as well as of
the ashes of the dead, might expose him, he executed this with much religious
ceremony. Having ordered all the holy vestments and utensils, together with the
bones of the kings, and other persons deposited in these churches to be removed,
they were carried in solemn procession to a church within the walls, he himself
walking before them bare-headed, with a torch in his hand. He then pulled down
such houses as stood near the walls, cleared and enlarged the ditch, repaired
the ruinous fortifications, and erected new ones. As it was necessary that all these
works should be finished with the utmost expedition, he labored at them with
his own hands: the officers and volunteers imitated his example, and the
soldiers submitted with cheerfulness to the most severe and fatiguing service,
when they saw that their superiors did not decline to bear a part in it. At the
same time he compelled all useless persons to leave the place; he filled the
magazines with provisions and military stores; he burnt the mills, and
destroyed the corn and forage for several miles round the town. Such were his
popular talents, as well as his arts of acquiring an ascendant over the minds
of men, that the citizens seconded him with no less ardor than the soldiers;
and every other passion being swallowed up in the zeal to repulse the enemy,
with which he inspired them, they beheld the ruin of their estates, together
with the havoc which he made among their public and private buildings, without
any emotion of resentment.
Meantime
the emperor having collected all his forces, continued his march towards Metz.
As he passed through the cities on the Rhine, he saw the dismal effects of that
licentious and wasteful war which Albert had carried on in these parts. Upon
his approach, that prince, though at the head of twenty thousand men, withdrew
into Lorrain, as if he had intended to join the French king, whose arms he had
quartered with his own in all his standards and ensigns. Albert was not in a
condition to cope with the Imperial troops, which amounted at least to sixty
thousand men, forming one of the most numerous and best appointed armies which
had been brought into the field during that age, in any of the wars among
Christian princes.
The
chief command, under the emperor, was committed to the duke of Alva, assisted
by the marquis de Marignano, together with the most experienced of the Italian
and Spanish generals. As it was now towards the end of October, these
intelligent officers represented the great danger of beginning, at such an
advanced season, a siege which could not fail to prove very tedious. But
Charles adhered to his own opinion with his usual obstinacy, and being
confident that he had made such preparations, and taken such precautions, as
would ensure success, he ordered the city to be invested. As soon as the duke
of Alva appeared [Oct. 191], a large body of the French sallied out and
attacked his vanguard with great vigor, put it in confusion, and killed or took
prisoners a considerable number of men. By this early specimen which they gave
of the conduct of their officers, as well as the valor of their troops, they
showed the Imperialists what an enemy they had to encounter, and how dear every
advantage must cost them. The place, however, was completely invested, the
trenches were opened, and the other works begun.
The
attention both of the besiegers and besieged was turned for some time towards
Albert of Brandenburg, and they strove with emulation which should gain that
prince, who still hovered in the neighborhood, fluctuating in all the
uncertainty of irresolution, natural to a man, who, being swayed by no
principle, was allured different ways by contrary views of interest. The French
tempted him with offers extremely beneficial; the Imperialists scrupled at no
promise which they thought could allure him. After much hesitation he was
gained by the emperor, from whom he expected to receive advantages which were
both more immediate and more permanent. As the French king, who began to
suspect his intentions, had appointed a body of troops under the duke of Aumale, brother to the duke of Guise, to watch his motions,
Albert fell upon them unexpectedly with such vigour that he routed them entirely [Nov. 41], killed many of the officers wounded Aumale himself, and took him prisoner. Immediately after
this victory, he marched in triumph to Metz, and joined his army to that of the
emperor. Charles, in reward for this service, and the great accession of
strength which he brought him, granted Albert a formal pardon of all past offences,
and confirmed him in the possession of the territories which he had violently
usurped during the war.
The
duke of Guise, though deeply affected with his brother's misfortune, did not
remit, in any degree, the vigor with which he defended the town. He harassed
the besiegers by frequent sallies, in which his officers were so eager to
distinguish themselves, that his authority being hardly sufficient to restrain
the impetuosity of their courage, he was obliged at different times to shut the
gates, and to conceal the keys, in order to prevent the princes of the blood,
and noblemen of the first rank, from exposing themselves to danger in every
sally. He repaired in the night what the enemy's artillery had beat down during
the day, or erected behind the ruined works new fortifications of almost equal
strength. The Imperialists, on their part, pushed on the attack with great
spirit, and carried forward, at once, approaches against different parts of the
town. But the art of attacking fortified places was not then arrived at that
degree of perfection to which it was carried towards the close of the sixteenth
century, during the long war in the Netherlands. The besiegers, after the
unwearied labor of many weeks, found that they had made but little progress; and
although their batteries had made breaches in different places, they saw, to
their astonishment, works suddenly appear, in demolishing which their fatigues
and dangers would be renewed. The emperor, enraged at the obstinate resistance
which his army met with, left Thionville, where he
had been confined by a violent fit of the gout, and though still so infirm that
he was obliged to be carried in a litter, he repaired to the camp [Nov. 26];
that, by his presence, he might animate the soldiers, and urge on the attack
with greater spirit. Upon his arrival, new batteries were erected, and new
efforts were made with redoubled ardor.
But,
by this time, winter had set in with great rigor; the camp was alternately
deluged with rain or covered with snow; at the same time provisions were become
extremely scarce, as a body of French cavalry which hovered in the
neighborhood, often interrupted the convoys, or rendered their arrival
difficult and uncertain. Diseases began to spread among the soldiers,
especially among the Italians and Spaniards, unaccustomed to such inclement weather;
great numbers were disabled from serving, and many died. At length such
breaches were made as seemed practicable, and Charles resolved to hazard a
general assault, in spite of all the remonstrances of his generals against the
imprudence of attacking a numerous garrison, conducted and animated by the most
gallant of the French nobility, with an army weakened by diseases, and
disheartened with ill success. The duke of Guise, suspecting the emperor's
intentions from the extraordinary movements which he observed in the enemy's
camp, ordered all his troops to their respective posts. They appeared
immediately on the walls, and behind the breaches, with such a determined
countenance, so eager for the combat, and so well prepared to give the
assailants a warm reception, that the Imperialists, instead of advancing to the
charge when the word of command was given, stood motionless in a timid,
dejected silence. The emperor, perceiving that he could not trust troops whose
spirits were so much broken, retired abruptly to his quarters, complaining that
he was now deserted by his soldiers, who deserved no longer the name of men.
Deeply
as this behavior of his troops mortified and affected Charles, he would not
hear of abandoning the siege, though he saw the necessity of changing the
method of attack. He suspended the fury of his batteries, and proposed to
proceed by the more secure but tedious method of sapping. But as it still
continued to rain or to snow almost incessantly, such as were employed in this
service endured incredible hardships: and the duke of Guise, whose industry was
not inferior to his valor, discovering all their mines, counter-worked them,
and prevented their effect. At last, Charles finding it impossible to contend
any longer with the severity of the season, and with enemies whom he could
neither overpower by force, nor subdue by art, while at the same time a
contagious distemper raged among his troops, and cut off daily great numbers of
the officers as well as soldiers, yielded to the solicitations of his generals,
who conjured him to save the remains of his army by a timely retreat.
"Fortune", says he, "I now perceive, resembles other females,
and chooses to confer her favors on young men, while she turns her back on
those who are advanced in years".
Upon
this, he gave orders immediately to raise the siege [Dec. 26], and submitted to
the disgrace of abandoning the enterprise, after having continued fifty-six
days before the town, during which time he had lost upwards of thirty thousand
men, who died of diseases, or were killed by the enemy. The duke of Guise, as
soon as he perceived the intention of the Imperialists, sent out several bodies
both of cavalry and infantry to infest their rear, to pick up stragglers, and
to seize every opportunity of attacking thin with advantage. Such was the
confusion with which they made their retreat, that the French might have
harassed them in the most cruel manner. But when they sallied out, a spectacle
presented itself to their view, which extinguished at once all hostile rage,
and melted them into tenderness and compassion. The Imperial camp was filled
with the sick and wounded, with the dead and the dying. In all the different
roads by which the army retired, numbers were found, who, having made an effort
to escape, beyond their strength, were left, when they could go no farther, to
perish without assistance. This they received from their enemies, and were
indebted to them for all the kind offices which their friends had not the power
to perform. The duke of Guise immediately ordered proper refreshments for such
as were dying of hunger; he appointed surgeons to attend the sick and wounded;
he removed such as could bear it to the adjacent villages; and those who would
have suffered by being carried so far, he admitted into the hospitals which he
had fitted up in the city for his own soldiers. As soon as they recovered, he
sent them home under an escort of soldiers, and with money to bear their
charges. By these acts of humanity, which were uncommon in that age, when war
was carried on with greater rancor and ferocity than at present, the duke of
Guise completed the fame which he had acquired by his gallant and successful defence of Metz, and engaged those whom he had vanquished
to vie with his own countrymen in extolling his name.
To
these calamities in Germany, were added such unfortunate events in Italy as
rendered this the most disastrous year in the emperor's life. During his
residence at Villach, Charles had applied to Cosmo di Medici for the loan of
two hundred thousand crowns. But his credit at that time was so low, that in
order to obtain this inconsiderable sum, he was obliged to put him in
possession of the principality of Piombino; and by
giving up that, be lost the footing which he had hitherto maintained in
Tuscany, and enabled Cosmo to assume, for the future, the tone and deportment
of a prince altogether independent. Much about the time that his indigence
constrained him to part with this valuable territory, he lost Sienna, which was
of still greater consequence, through the ill conduct of Don Diego de Mendoza.
Sienna,
like most of the great cities in Italy, had long enjoyed a republican
government, under the protection of the empire; but being torn in pieces by the
dissensions between the nobility and the people, which divided all the Italian
commonwealths, the faction of the people, which gained the ascendant, besought
the emperor to become the guardian of the administration which they had established,
and admitted into their city a small body of Spanish soldiers, whom he had sent
to countenance the execution of the laws, and to preserve tranquility among
them. The command of these troops was given to Mendoza, at that time ambassador
for the emperor at Rome, who persuaded the credulous multitude, that it was
necessary for their security against any future attempt of the nobles, to allow
him to build a citadel in Sienna; and as he flattered himself that by means of
this fortress he might render the emperor roaster of the city, he pushed on the
works with all possible dispatch. But he threw off the mask too soon. Before
the fortifications were completed, he began to indulge his natural haughtiness
and severity of temper, and to treat the citizens with great insolence. At the
same time the soldiers in garrison being paid as irregularly as the emperor’s
troops usually were, lived almost at discretion upon the inhabitants, and were
guilty of many acts of license and oppression.
These
injuries awakened the Siennese to a sense of their
danger. As they saw the necessity of exerting themselves, while the unfinished
fortifications of the citadel left them any hopes of success, they applied to
the French ambassador at Rome, who readily promised them his master's
protection and assistance. At the same time, forgetting their domestic
animosities when such a mortal blow was aimed at the liberty and existence of
the republic, they sent agents to the exiled nobles, and invited them to concur
with them in saving their country from the servitude with which it was
threatened. As there was not a moment to lose, measures were concerted
speedily, but with great prudence; and were executed with equal vigour. The citizens rose suddenly in arms: the exiles
flocked into the town from different parts with all their partizans,
and what troops they could draw together; and several bodies of mercenaries in
the pay of France appeared to support them. The Spaniards, though surprised,
and much inferior in number, defended themselves with great courage; but seeing
no prospect of relief, and having no hopes of maintaining their station long in
a half-finished fortress, they soon gave it up. The Siennese,
with the utmost alacrity, leveled it with the ground, that no monument might
remain of that odious structure, which had been raised in order to enslave
them. At the same time renouncing all connection with the emperor, they sent
ambassadors to thank the king of France as the restorer of their liberty, and
to entreat that he would secure to them the perpetual enjoyment of that
blessing, by continuing his protection to their republic.
To
these misfortunes, one still more fatal had almost succeeded. The severe
administration of Don Pedro de Toledo, viceroy of Naples, having tilled that
kingdom with murmuring and disaffection, the prince of Salerno, the head of the
malcontents, had fled to the court of France, where all who bore ill-will to
the emperor or his ministers were sure of finding protection and assistance.
That nobleman, in the usual style of exiles, boasting much of the number and
power of his partisans, and of his great influence with them, prevailed on
Henry to think of invading Naples, from an expectation of being joined by all
those with whom the prince of Salerno held correspondence, or who were
dissatisfied with Toledo's government. But though the first hint of this
enterprise was suggested by the prince of Salerno, Henry did not choose that
its success should entirely depend upon his being able to fulfill the promises
which he had made. He applied for aid to Solyman, whom he courted, after his
father's example, as his most vigorous auxiliary against the emperor, and
solicited him to second his operations, by sending a powerful fleet into the
Mediterranean. It was not difficult to obtain what he requested of the sultan,
who, at this time, was highly incensed against the house of Austria, on account
of the proceedings in Hungary. He ordered a hundred and fifty ships to be
equipped, that they might sail towards the coast of Naples, at whatever time
Henry should name, and might co-operate with the French troops in their
attempts upon that kingdom. The command of this fleet was given to the corsair Dragut, an officer trained up under Barbarossa, and
scarcely inferior to his master in courage, in talents, or in good fortune. He
appeared on the coast of Calabria at the time which had been agreed on, landed
at several places, plundered and burnt several villages; and at last, casting
anchor in the bay of Naples, filled that city with consternation. But as the
French fleet, detained by some accident, which the contemporary historians have
not explained, did not join the Turks according to concert, they, after waiting
twenty days without hearing any tidings of it, set sail for Constantinople, and
thus delivered the viceroy of Naples from the terror of an invasion, which he
was not in a condition to have resisted.
ALBERT
OF BRADENBURG
1553.]
As the French had never given so severe a check to the emperor in any former
campaign, they expressed immoderate joy at the success of their arms. Charles
himself; accustomed to a long series of prosperity, felt the calamity most
sensibly, and retired from Metz into the Low-Countries, much dejected with the
cruel reverse of fortune which affected him in his declining age, when the
violence of the gout had increased to such a pitch, as entirely broke the vigour of his constitution, and rendered him peevish,
difficult of access, and often incapable of applying to business. But whenever
he enjoyed any interval of ease, all his thoughts were bent on revenge; and he
deliberated, with the greatest solicitude, concerning the most proper means of
annoying France, and of effacing the stain which had obscured the reputation
and glory of his arms. All the schemes concerning Germany which had engrossed
him so long, being disconcerted by the peace of Passau, the affairs of the
empire became only secondary objects of attention, and enmity to France was the
predominant passion which chiefly occupied his mind.
The
turbulent ambition of Albert of Brandenburg excited violent commotions, which
disturbed the empire during this year. That prince's troops having shared in
the calamities of the siege of Metz, were greatly reduced in number. But the
emperor, prompted by gratitude for his distinguished services on that occasion,
or perhaps with a secret view of fomenting divisions among the princes of the
empire, having paid up all the money due to him, he was enabled with that sum
to hire so many of the soldiers dismissed from the Imperial army, that he was
soon at the head of a body of men as numerous as ever. The bishops of Bamberg
and Würzburg having solicited the Imperial chamber to annul, by its authority,
the iniquitous conditions which Albert had compelled them to sign, that court
unanimously found all their engagements with him to be void in their own
nature, because they had been extorted by force; enjoined Albert to renounce
all claim to the performance of them; and, if he should persist in such an
unjust demand, exhorted all the princes of the empire to take arms against him
as a disturber of the public tranquility. To this decision, Albert opposed the
confirmation of his transactions with the two prelates, which the emperor had
granted him as the reward of his having joined the Imperial army at Metz and in
order to intimidate his antagonists, as well as to convince them of his
resolution not to relinquish his pretensions, he put his troops in motion, that
he might secure the territory in question. Various endeavors were employed, and
many expedients proposed, in order to prevent the kindling a new war in
Germany. But the same warmth of temper which rendered Albert turbulent and
enterprising, inspiring him with the most sanguine hopes of success, even in
his wildest undertakings, he disdainfully rejected all reasonable overtures of
accommodation.
Upon
this, the Imperial chamber issued its decree against him, and required the
elector of Saxony, together with several other princes mentioned by name, to
take arms in order to carry it into execution. Maurice, and those associated
with him, were not unwilling to undertake this service. They were extremely
solicitous to maintain public order by supporting the authority of the Imperial
chamber, and saw the necessity of giving a timely check to the usurpations of
an ambitious prince, who had no principle of action but regard to his own
interest, and no motive to direct him but the impulse of ungovernable passions.
They had good reason to suspect, that the emperor encouraged Albert in his
extravagant and irregular proceedings, and secretly afforded him assistance
that, by raising him up to rival Maurice in power, he might, in any future
broil, make use of his assistance to counterbalance and control the authority
which the other had acquired in the empire.
These
considerations united the most powerful princes in Germany in a league against
Albert, of which Maurice was declared generalissimo [April 2]. This formidable
confederacy, however, wrought no change in Albert's sentiments; but as he knew
that he could not resist so many princes, if he should allow them time to
assemble their forces, he endeavored, by his activity, to deprive them of all
the advantages which they might derive from their united power and numbers; and
for that reason marched directly against Maurice, the enemy whom he dreaded most.
It was happy for the allies that the conduct of their affairs was committed to
a prince of such abilities. He, by his authority and example, had inspired them
with vigour; and having carried on their preparations
with a degree of rapidity of which confederate bodies are seldom capable, he
was in condition to face Albert before he could make any considerable progress.
Their
armies, which were nearly equal in number, each consisting of twenty-four
thousand men, met at Seiverhausen, in the duchy of
Lunenburg; and the violent animosity against each other, which possessed the
two leaders, did not suffer them to continue long inactive. The troops inflamed
with the same hostile rage, marched fiercely to the combat [June 9]; they
fought with the greatest obstinacy; and as both generals were capable of
availing themselves of every favorable occurrence, the battle remained long
doubtful, each gaining ground upon the other alternately. At last victory declared
for Maurice, who was superior in cavalry, and Albert's army fled in confusion,
leaving four thousand dead in the field, and their camp, baggage, and artillery
in the hands of the conquerors. The allies bought their victory dear, their
best troops suffered greatly, two sons of the duke of Brunswick, a duke of
Lunenburg, and many other persons of distinction, were among the number of the
slain. But all these were soon forgotten; for Maurice himself, as he led up to
a second charge a body of horse which had been broken, received a wound with a
pistol bullet in the belly, of which he died two days after the battle, in the
thirty-second year of his age, and in the sixth after his attaining the
electoral dignity.
Of
all the personages who have appeared in the history of this active age, when
great occurrences and sudden revolutions called forth extraordinary talents to
view, and afforded them full opportunity to display themselves, Maurice may
justly he considered as the most remarkable. If his exorbitant ambition, his
profound dissimulation, and his unwarrantable usurpation of his kinsman's
honors and dominions exclude him from being praised as a virtuous man; his
prudence in concerting his measures, his vigor in executing them, and the
uniform success with which they were attended, entitle him to the appellation
of a great prince. At an age when impetuosity of spirit commonly predominates
over political wisdom, when the highest effort even of a genius of the first
order is to fix on a bold scheme, and to execute it with promptitude and
courage, he formed and conducted an intricate plan of policy, which deceived
the most artful monarch in Europe. At the very juncture when the emperor had
attained to almost unlimited despotism, Maurice, with power seemingly inadequate
to such an undertaking, compelled him to relinquish all his usurpations, and
established not only the religious but civil liberties of Germany on such
foundations as have hitherto remained unshaken. Although, at one period of his
life, his conduct excited the jealousy of the protestants, and at another drew
on him the resentment of the Roman catholics, such
was his masterly address, that he was the only prince of the age who in any
degree possessed the confidence of both, and whom both lamented as the most
able as well as faithful guardian of the constitution and laws of his country.
The
consternation which Maurice’s death occasioned among his troops, prevented them
from making the proper improvement of the victory which they had trained.
Albert, whose active courage, and profuse liberality, rendered him the darling
of such military adventurers as were little solicitous about the justice of his
cause, soon reassembled his broken forces, and made fresh levies with such
success that he was quickly at the head of fifteen thousand men, and renewed
his depredations with additional fury. But Henry of Brunswick having taken the
command of the allied troops, defeated him in a second battle [Sept. 12]
scarcely less bloody than the former. Even then his courage did not sink, nor
were his resources exhausted. He made several efforts, and some of them very
vigorous, to retrieve his affairs: but being laid under the ban of the empire
by the Imperial chamber; being driven by degrees out of all his hereditary territories,
as well as those which he had usurped; being forsaken by many of his officers,
and overpowered by the number of his enemies, he fled for refuge into France.
After having been, for a considerable time, the terror and scourge of Germany,
he lingered out some years in an indigent and dependent state of exile, the
miseries of which his restless and arrogant spirit endured with the most
indignant impatience. Upon his death without issue [Jan. 12, 1577], his
territories, which had been seized by the princes who took arms against him,
were restored, by a decree of the emperor, to his collateral heirs of the house
of Brandenburg.
Maurice
having left only one daughter, who was afterwards married to William prince of
Orange, by whom she had a son who bore his grandfather's name, and inherited
the great talents for which he was conspicuous, a violent dispute arose
concerning the succession to his honors and territories. John Frederick, the
degraded elector, claimed the electoral dignity, and that part of his patrimonial
estate of which he had been violently stripped after the Smalkaldic war. Augustus, Maurice's only brother, pleaded his right not only to the
hereditary possessions of their family, but to the electoral dignity, and to
the territories which Maurice had acquired. As Augustus was a prince of
considerable abilities, as well as of great candor and gentleness of manners,
the states of Saxony, forgetting tHe merits and
sufferings of their former master, declared warmly in his favor. His
pretensions were powerfully supported by the king of Denmark, whose daughter he
had married, and zealously espoused by the king of the Romans, out of regard to
Maurice's memory. The degraded elector, though secretly favored by his ancient
enemy the emperor, was at last obliged to relinquish his claim, upon obtaining
a small addition to the territories which had been allotted to him, together
with a stipulation, securing to his family the eventual succession, upon a
failure of male heirs in the Albertine line. That unfortunate, but magnanimous
prince, died next year, soon after ratifying this treaty of agreement; and the
electoral dignity is still possessed by the descendants of Augustus.
During
these transactions in Germany, war was carried on in the Low-Countries with considerable vigour. The emperor, impatient to efface the stain which
his ignominious repulse at Metz left upon his military reputation, had an army
early in the field, and laid siege to Térouanne. Though the town was of such
importance, that Francis used to call it one of the two pillows on which a king
of France might sleep with security, the fortifications were in bad repair:
Henry, trusting to what had happened at Metz, thought nothing more was
necessary to render all the efforts of the enemy abortive, than to reinforce
the garrison with a considerable number of the young nobility. But d'Esse, a veteran officer who commanded them, being killed,
and the Imperialists pushing the siege with great vigor and perseverance, the
place was taken by assault [June 21]. That it might not fall again into the
hands of the French, Charles ordered not only the fortifications but the town
itself to be razed, and the inhabitants to be dispersed in the adjacent cities.
Elated with this success, the Imperialists immediately invested Hesden, which, though defended with great bravery, was
likewise taken by assault, and such of the garrison as escaped the sword were
made prisoners. The emperor entrusted the conduct of this siege to Emanuel
Philibert of Savoy, prince of Piedmont, who, on that occasion, gave the first
display of those great talents for military command, which soon entitled him to
be ranked among the first generals of the age, and facilitated his
reestablishment in his hereditary dominions, the greater part of which having
been overrun by Francis in his expeditions into Italy, were still retained by
Henry.
The
loss of these towns, together with so many persons of distinction, either
killed or taken by the enemy, was no inconsiderable calamity to France, and
Henry felt it very sensibly; but he was still more mortified at the emperor's
having recovered his wonted superiority in the field so soon after the blow at
Metz, which the French had represented as fatal to his power. He was ashamed
too, of his own remissness and excessive security at the opening of the
campaign; and in order to repair that error, he assembled a numerous army, and
led it into the Low-Countries.
Roused
at the approach of such a formidable enemy, Charles left Brussels, where he had
been shut up so closely during seven months, that it came to be believed in many
parts of Europe that he was dead; and though he was so much debilitated by the
gout that he could hardly bear the motion of a litter, he hastened to join his
army. The eyes of all Europe were turned with expectation towards those mighty
and exasperated rivals, between whom a decisive battle was now thought
unavoidable. But Charles having prudently declined to hazard a general
engagement, and the violence of the autumnal rains rendering it impossible for
the French to undertake any siege, they retired, without having performed
anything suitable to the great preparations which they had made.
The
Imperial arms were not attended with the same success in Italy. The narrowness
of the emperor's finances seldom allowed him to act with vigor in two different
places at the same time; and having exerted himself to the utmost in order to
make a great effort in the Low-Countries, his operations on the other side of
the Alps were proportionally feeble. The viceroy of Naples, in conjunction with
Cosmo di Medici, who was greatly alarmed at the introduction of French troops
into Sienna, endeavored to become master of that city. But, instead of reducing
the Siennese, the Imperialists were obliged to retire
abruptly, in order to defend their own country, upon the appearance of the
Turkish fleet, which threatened the coast of Naples; and the French not only
established themselves more firmly in Tuscany, but, by the assistance of the
Turks, conquered a great part of the island of Corsica, subject at that time to
the Genoese.
The
affairs of the house of Austria declined no less in Hungary during the course
of this year. As the troops which Ferdinand kept in Transylvania received their
pay very irregularly, they lived almost at discretion upon the inhabitants; and
their insolence and rapaciousness greatly disgusted all ranks of men, and
alienated them from their new sovereign, who, instead of protecting, plundered
his subjects. Their indignation at this, added to their desire of revenging Martinuzzi’s death, wrought so much upon a turbulent
nobility impatient of injury, and upon a fierce people prone to change, that
they were ripe for a revolt. At that very juncture, their late queen Isabella,
together with her son, appeared in Transylvania. Her ambitious mind could not
bear the solitude and inactivity of a private life; and repenting quickly of
the cession which she had made of the crown in the year one thousand live
hundred and fifty-one, she left the place of her retreat, hoping that the
dissatisfaction of the Hungarians with the Austrian government would prompt
them once more to recognize her son’s right to the crown. Some noblemen of
great eminence declared immediately in his favor. The basha of Belgrade, by Solyman’s order, espoused his cause, in opposition to
Ferdinand; the Spanish and German soldiers, instead of advancing against the
enemy, mutinied for want of pay, declaring that they would march back to
Vienna; so that Castaldo, their general, was obliged to abandon Transylvania to
Isabella and the Turks, and to place himself at the head of the mutineers, that
by his authority he might restrain them from plundering the Austrian
territories through which they passed.
The
Story of Roxalana and Mustapha
Ferdinand's
attention was turned so entirely towards the affairs of Germany, and his
treasures so much exhausted by his late efforts in Hungary, that he made no
attempt to recover that valuable province, although a favorable opportunity for
that purpose presented itself, as Solyman was then engaged in a war with
Persia, and involved besides in domestic calamities which engrossed and
disturbed his mind. Solyman, though distinguished by many accomplishments, from
the other Ottoman princes, had all the passions peculiar to that violent and
haughty race. He was jealous of his authority, sudden as well as furious in his
anger, and susceptible of all that rage of love, which reigns in the East, and
often produces the wildest and most tragical effects. His favorite mistress was
a Circassian slave of exquisite beauty, who bore him a son called Mustapha,
whom, both on account of his birthright and merit, he destined to be the heir
of his crown. Roxalana, a Russian captive, soon
supplanted the Circassian, and gained the sultan's heart. Haying the address to
retain the conquest which she had made, she kept possession of his love without
any rival for many years, during which she brought him several sons and one
daughter. All the happiness, however, which she derived from the unbounded sway
that she had acquired over the mind of a monarch whom one half of the world
revered or dreaded, was embittered by perpetual reflections on Mustapha's
accession to the throne, and the certain death of her sons, who, she foresaw,
would be immediately sacrificed, according to the barbarous jealousy of Turkish
policy, to the safety of the new emperor. By dwelling continually on this
melancholy idea, she came gradually to view Mustapha as the enemy of her
children, and to hate him with more than a stepmother's ill-will. This prompted
her to wish his destruction, in order to secure for one of her own sons the
throne which was destined for him. Nor did she want either ambition to attempt
such a high enterprise, or the arts requisite for carrying it into execution.
Having prevailed on the sultan to give her only daughter in marriage to Rustan the grand vizier, she disclosed her scheme to that
crafty minister, who, perceiving that it was his own interest to co-operate
with her, readily promised his assistance towards aggrandizing that branch of
the royal line to which he was so nearly allied.
As
soon as Roxalana had concerted her measures with this
able confidant, she began to affect a wonderful zeal for the Mahometan
religion, to which Solyman was superstitiously attached, and proposed to found
and endow a royal mosque, a work of great expense, but deemed by the Turks
meritorious in the highest degree. The mufti whom she consulted, approved much
of her pious intention; but having been gained and instructed by Rustan, told her, that she being a slave could derive no
benefit herself from that holy deed, for all the merit of it would accrue to
Solyman, the master whose property she was. Upon this she seemed to be
overwhelmed with sorrow, and to sink into the deepest melancholy, as it she had
been disgusted with life and all its enjoyments. Solyman, who was absent with
the army, being informed of this dejection of mind, and of the cause from which
it proceeded, discovered all the solicitude of a lover to remove it, and by a
writing under his hand declared her a free woman. Roxalana having gained this point, proceeded to build the mosque, and reassumed her
usual gayety of spirit.
But
when Solyman, on his return to Constantinople, sent a eunuch, according to the
custom of the seraglio, to bring her to partake of his bed, she seemingly with
deep regret, but in the most peremptory manner, declined to follow the eunuch,
declaring that what had been an honor to her while a slave, became a crime as
she was now a free woman, and that she would not involve either the sultan or
herself in the guilt that must be contracted by such an open violation of the
law of their prophet. Solyman, whose passion this difficulty, as well as the
affected delicacy which gave rise to it, heightened and inflamed, had recourse
immediately to the mufti for his direction. He replied, agreeably to the koran, the Roxalana’s scruples
were well founded; but added, artfully, in words which Rustan had taught him to use, that it was in the sultan's power to remove these
difficulties, by espousing her as his lawful wife.
The
amorous monarch closed eagerly with the proposal, end solemnly married her,
according to the form of the Mahometan ritual; though, by doing so, he
disregarded a maxim of policy which the pride of the Ottoman blood had taught
all the sultans since Bajazet I to consider as
inviolable. From his time, none of the Turkish monarchs had married, because,
when he was vanquished and taken prisoner by Tamerlane, his wife had been
abused with barbarous insolence by the tartars. That no similar calamity might
again subject the Ottoman family to the same disgrace, the sultans admitted
none to their beds but slaves, whose dishonor could not bring any such stain
upon their house.
But
the more uncommon the step was, the more it convinced Roxalana of the unbounded influence which she had acquired over the sultan's heart; and
emboldened her to prosecute, with greater hope of success, the scheme that she
had formed in order to destroy Mustapha. This young prince having been
entrusted by his father, according to the practice of the sultans in that age,
with the government of several different provinces, was at that time invested
with the administration in Diarbequir, the ancient
Mesopotamia, which Solyman had wrested from the Persians, and added to his
empire. In all these different commands, Mustapha had conducted himself with
such cautious prudence as could give no offence to his father, though, at the
same time, he governed with so much moderation as well as justice, and
displayed such valor and generosity, as rendered him equally the favorite of
the people and the darling of the soldiery.
There
was no room to lay any folly or vice to his charge, that could impair the high
opinion which his father entertained of him. Roxalana’s malevolence was more refined; she turned his virtues against him, and made use
of these as engines for his destruction. She often mentioned, in Solyman’s presence, the splendid qualities of his son; she
celebrated his courage, his liberality, his popular arts, with malicious and
exaggerated praise. As soon as she perceived that the sultan heard these
encomiums, which were often repeated, with uneasiness that suspicion of his son
began to mingle itself with his former esteem and that by degrees he came to
view him with jealousy and fear she introduced, as by accident, some discourse
concerning the rebellion of his father Selim against Bajazet his grandfather: she took notice of the bravery of the veteran troops under
Mustapha's command, and of the neighborhood of Diarbequir to the territories of the Persian sophi, Solyman’s mortal enemy. By these arts, whatever remained of
paternal tenderness was gradually extinguished, and such passions were kindled
in the breast of the sultan, as gave all Roxalana's malignant suggestions the color not only of probability but of truth. His
suspicions and fear of Mustapha settled into deep-rooted hatred. He appointed
spies to observe and report all his words and actions; he watched and stood on
his guard against him as his most dangerous enemy.
Having
thus alienated the sultan's heart from Mustapha, Roxalana ventured upon another step. She entreated Solyman to allow her own sons the
liberty of appearing at court, hoping that by gaining access to their father,
they might, by their good qualities and dutiful deportment, insinuate
themselves into that place in his affections which Mustapha had formerly held;
and though what she demanded was contrary to the practice of the Ottoman
family in that age, the uxorious monarch granted her request. To all these
female intrigues Rustan added an artifice still more
subtle, which completed the sultans delusion, and heightened his jealousy and
fear. He wrote to the bashaws of the provinces adjacent to Diarbequir,
instructing them to send him regular intelligence of Mustapha's proceedings in
his government, and to each of them he gave a private hint, flowing in
appearance from his zeal for their interest, that nothing would be more
acceptable to the sultan than to receive favorable accounts of a son whom he
destined to sustain the glory of the Ottoman name. The bashaws, ignorant of his
fraudulent intention, and eager to pay court to their sovereign at such an easy
price, filled their letters with studied but fatal panegyrics of Mustapha,
representing him as a prince worthy to succeed such an illustrious father, and
as endowed with talents which might enable him to emulate, perhaps to equal,
his fame. These letters were industriously shown to Solyman, at the seasons
when it was known that they would make the deepest impression. Every expression
in recommendation of his son wounded him to the heart; he suspected his
principal officers of being ready to favor the most desperate attempts of a
prince whom they were so fond of praising; and fancying that he saw them
already assaulting his throne with rebellious arms, he determined, while it was
yet in his power, to anticipate the blow, and to secure his own safety by his
son's death.
For
this purpose, though under pretence of renewing the
war against Persia, he ordered Rustan to march
towards Diarbequir at the head of a numerous army,
and to rid him of a son whose life he deemed inconsistent with his own safety.
But that crafty minister did not choose to be loaded with the odium of having
executed this cruel order. As soon as he arrived in Syria he wrote to Solyman,
that the danger was so imminent as called for his immediate presence; that the
camp was full of Mustapha's emissaries; that many of the soldiers were
corrupted; that the affections of all leaned towards him; that he had
discovered a negotiation which had been carried on with the sophi of Persia in order to marry Mustapha with one of his daughters; that he already
felt his own talents as well as authority to be inadequate to the exigencies of
such an arduous conjuncture; that the sultan alone had sagacity to discern what
resolution should be taken in those circumstances, and power to carry that
resolution into execution.
This
charge of courting the friendship of the sophi, Roxalana and Rustan had reserved
as the last and most envenomed of all their calumnies. It operated with the
violence which they expected from Solyman’s inveterate abhorrence of the Persians, and threw him into the wildest
transports of rage. He set out instantly for Syria, and hastened thither with
all the precipitation and impatience of fear and revenge. As soon as he joined
his army near Aleppo, and had concerted measures with Rustan,
he sent a chiaus, or messenger of the court, to his son, requiring him to
repair immediately to his presence. Mustapha, though no stranger to his
stepmother's machinations, or to Rustan’s malice, or
to his father's violent temper, yet relying on his own innocence, and hoping to
discredit the accusations of his enemies by the promptitude of his obedience,
followed the messenger without delay to Aleppo. The moment he arrived in the
camp, he was introduced into the sultan's tent. As he entered it, he observed
nothing that could give him any alarm; no additional crowd of attendants, no
body of armed guards, but the same order and silence which always reign in the
sultan's apartments. In a few minutes, however, several mutes appeared, at the
sight of whom Mustapha, knowing what was his doom, cried with a loud voice,
“Lo, my death!” and attempted to fly. The mutes rushed forward to seize him; he
resisted and struggled, demanding with the utmost earnestness to see the
sultan; and despair, together with the hope of finding protection from the
soldiers, if he could escape out of the tent, animated him with such
extraordinary strength, that for some time, he baffled all the efforts of the
executioners. Solyman was within hearing of his son's cries, as well as of the
noise which the struggle occasioned. Impatient of this delay of his revenge,
and struck with terror at the thoughts of Mustapha’s escaping, he drew aside
the curtain which divided the tent, and thrusting in his head, darted a fierce
look towards the mutes, and with wild and threatening gestures, seemed to
condemn their sloth and timidity. At sight of his father's furious and
unrelenting countenance, Mustapha's strength failed, and his courage forsook
him; the mutes fastened the bow-string about his neck, and in a moment put an
end to his life.
The
dead body was exposed before the sultan’s tent. The soldiers gathered round it,
and contemplating that mournful object with astonishment, and sorrow, and
indignation, were ready, if a leader had not been wanting, to have broke out into the wildest excesses of rage. After giving
vent to the first expressions of their grief, they retired each man to his
tent, and shutting themselves up, bewailed in secret the cruel fate of their
favorite; nor was there one of them who tasted food or even water, during the
remainder of that day. Next morning the same solitude and silence reigned in
the camp; and Solyman, being afraid that some dreadful storm would follow this
sullen calm, in order to appease the enraged soldiers, deprived Rustan of the seals, ordered him to leave the camp, and
raised Achmet, a gallant officer much beloved in the
army, to the dignity of vizier. This change, however, was made in concert with Rustan himself; that malty minister suggesting it as the
only expedient which could save himself or his master. But within a few months,
when the resentment of the soldiers began to subside, and the name of Mustapha
to be forgotten, Achmet was strangled by the sultan's
command, and Rustan reinstated in the office of
vizier. Together with his former power, he reassumed the plan for exterminating
the race of Mustapha which he had concerted with Roxalana;
and as they were afraid that an only son whom Mustapha had left, might grow up
to avenge his death, they redoubled their activity, and by employing the same
arts against him which they had practised against his
father, they inspired Solyman with the same fears, and prevailed on him to
issue orders for putting to death that young innocent prince. These orders were
executed with barbarous zeal, by an eunuch, who was despatched to Bursa, the place where the prince resided; and no rival was left to dispute
the Ottoman throne with the sons of Roxalana.
Such
tragical scenes, productive of so deep distress, seldom occur but in the
history of the great monarchies of the East, where the warmth of the climate
seems to give every emotion of the heart its greatest force, and the absolute
power of sovereigns accustoms and enables them to gratify all their passions
without control. While this interesting transaction in the court of Solyman
engaged his whole attention, Charles was pursuing, with the utmost ardor, a new
scheme for aggrandizing his family.
Mary
of England and Philip of Spain
About
this time, Edward the sixth of England, after a short reign, in which he
displayed such virtues as filled his subjects with sanguine hopes of being
happy under his government, and made them bear with patience all that they
suffered from the weakness, the dissensions, and the ambition of the ministers
who assumed the administration during his minority, was seized with a lingering
distemper which threatened his life. The emperor no sooner received an account
of this, than his ambition, always attentive to seize every opportunity of
acquiring an increase of power, or of territories, to his son, suggested the
thought of adding England to his other kingdoms by the marriage of Philip with
the princess Mary, the heir of Edward's crown. Being apprehensive, however,
that his son, who was then in Spain, might decline a match with a princess in
her thirty-eighth year, and eleven years older than himself; Charles
determined, notwithstanding his own age and infirmities, to make offer of
himself as a husband to his cousin.
But
though Mary was so far advanced in years, and destitute of every charm either
of person or of manners that could win affection or command esteem, Philip,
without hesitation, gave his consent to the match proposed by his father, and
was willing, according to the usual maxim of princes, to sacrifice his
inclination to his ambition. In order to ensure the success of his scheme, the
emperor, even before Edward's death, began to take such steps as might
facilitate it. Upon Edward’s demise, Mary mounted the throne of England; the
pretensions of the lady Jane Grey proving as unfortunate as they were
ill-founded. Charles sent immediately a pompous embassy to London to
congratulate Mary on her accession to the throne, and to propose the alliance
with his son. The queen, dazzled with the prospect of marrying the heir of the
greatest monarch in Europe had fond of uniting more closely with her mother's
family, to which she had been always warmly attached; and eager to secure the
powerful aid which she knew would be necessary towards carrying on her favorite
scheme of reestablishing the Romish religion in England, listened in the most
favorable manner to the proposal. Among her subjects, it met with a very
different reception. Philip, it was well known, contended for all the tenets of
the church of Rome with a sanguinary zeal which exceeded the measure even of
Spanish bigotry: this alarmed all the numerous partisans of the Reformation.
The Castilian haughtiness and reserve were far from being acceptable to the
English, who, having several times seen their throne occupied by persons who
were born subjects, had become accustomed to an unceremonious and familiar
intercourse with their sovereigns. They could not think, without the utmost
uneasiness, of admitting a foreign prince to that influence of their councils,
which the husband of their queen would naturally possess. They dreaded, both
from Philip’s overbearing temper, and from the maxims of the Spanish monarchy
which he had imbibed, that he would infuse ideas into the queen's mind,
dangerous to the liberties of the nation, and would introduce foreign troops
and money into the kingdom, to assist her in any attempt against them.
Full
of these apprehensions, the house of commons, though in that age extremely
obsequious to the will of their monarchs, presented a warm address against the
Spanish match; many pamphlets were published, representing the dangerous
consequences of the alliance with Spain, and describing Philip’s bigotry and
arrogance in the most odious colors. But Mary, inflexible in all her
resolutions, paid no regard to the remonstrances of her commons, or to the
sentiments of the people. The emperor, having secured, by various arts, the
ministers whom she trusted most, they approved warmly of the match, and large
sums were remitted by him in order to gain the rest of the council. Cardinal
Pole, whom the pope, immediately upon Mary's accession, bad despatched as his legate into England, in order to reconcile his native country to the see
of Rome, was detained by the emperor's command at Dillinghen in Germany, lest by his presence he should thwart Philip’s pretensions, and employ
his interest in favor of his kinsman Courtnay earl of
Devonshire, whom the English ardently wished their sovereign to choose for a
husband.
As
the negotiation did not admit of delay, it was carried forward with the
greatest rapidity, the emperor agreeing, without hesitation, to every article
in favor of England, which Mary's ministers either represented as necessary to
soothe the people and reconcile them to the match, or that was suggested by
their own fears and jealousy of a foreign master. The chief articles were [Jan.
12, 15541] that Philip, during his marriage with the queen, should bear the
title of king of England, but the entire administration of affairs, as well as
the sole disposal of all revenues, offices, and benefices, should remain with the
queen; that the heirs of the marriage should, together with the crown of
England, inherit the duchy of Burgundy and the Low-Countries; that if prince
Charles, Philip's only son by a former marriage, should die without issue, his
children by the queen, whether male or female, should succeed to the crown of
Spain, and all the emperor's hereditary dominions; that before the consummation
of the marriage, Philip should swear solemnly, that he would retain no domestic
who was not a subject of the queen, and would bring no foreigners into the
kingdom that might give umbrage to the English; that he would make no
alteration in the constitution or laws of England; that he would not carry the
queen, or any of the children born of this marriage, out of the kingdom; that
if the queen should die before him without issue, he would immediately leave
the crown to the lawful heir, without claiming any right of administration
whatever; that in consequence of this marriage, England should not be engaged
in any war subsisting between France and Spain; and that the alliance between
France and England should remain in full force.
But
this treaty, though both the emperor and Mary’s ministers employed their utmost
address in framing it so as to please the English, was far from quieting their
fears and jealousies. They saw that words and promises were a feeble security
against the encroachments of an ambitious prince, who, as soon as he got
possession of the power and advantages which the queen’s husband must
necessarily enjoy, could easily evade any of the articles which either limited
his authority or obstructed his schemes. They were convinced that the more
favorable the conditions of the present treaty were to England, the more Philip
would be tempted hereafter to violate them. They dreaded that England, like
Naples, Milan, and the other countries annexed to Spain, would soon feel the
dominion of that crown to be intolerably oppressive, and he constrained, as
these had been, to waste its wealth and vigour in
wars wherein it had no interest, and from which it could derive no advantage.
These sentiments prevailed so generally that every part of the kingdom was
filled with discontent at the match, and with indignation against the advisers
of it. Sir Thomas Wyat, a gentleman of some note, and
of good intentions towards the public, took advantage of this, and roused the
inhabitants of Kent to arms, in order to save their country from a foreign
yoke. Great numbers resorted in a short time to his standard; he marched to
London with such rapidity, and the queen was so utterly unprovided for defence, that the aspect of affairs was extremely
threatening; and if any nobleman of distinction had joined the malcontents, or
had Wyat possessed talents equal, in any degree, to
the boldness of his enterprise, the insurrection must have proved fatal to
Mary's power. But all Wyat’s measures were concerted with so little prudence, and executed with such
irresolution, that many of his followers forsook him; the rest were dispersed
by a handful of soldiers; and he himself was taken prisoner, without having
made any effort worthy of the cause that he had undertaken, or suitable to the
ardor with which he engaged in it. He suffered the punishment due to his
rashness and rebellion. The queen's authority was confirmed and increased by
her success in defeating this inconsiderate attempt to abridge it. The lady
Jane Grey, whose title the ambition of her relations had set up in opposition
to that of the Queen, was, notwithstanding her youth and innocence, brought to
the scaffold. The lady Elizabeth, the queen’s sister, was observed with the
most jealous attention. The treaty of marriage was ratified by the parliament.
Philip
landed in England with a magnificent retinue, celebrated his nuptials with
great solemnity; and though he could not lay aside his natural severity and pride,
or assume gracious and popular manners, he endeavored to conciliate the favor
of the English nobility by his extraordinary liberality. Lest that should fail
of acquiring him such influence in the government of the kingdom as he aimed at
obtaining, the emperor kept a body of twelve thousand men on the coast of
Flanders in readiness to embark for England, and to support his son in all his
enterprises.
Emboldened
by all these favorable circumstances, Mary pursued the scheme of extirpating
the protestant religion out of her dominions, with the most precipitate zeal.
The laws of Edward the Sixth, in favor of the Reformation, were repealed; the
protestant clergy ejected; all the forms and rights of the popish worship were
re-established; the nation was solemnly absolved from the guilt which it had
contracted during the period of its apostasy, and was publicly reconciled to
the church of Rome by cardinal Pole, who immediately after the queen's marriage,
was permitted to continue his journey to England, and to exercise his legatine
functions with the most ample power. Not satisfied with having overturned the
protestant church, and re-establishing the ancient system on its ruins, Mary
insisted that all her subjects should conform to the same mode of worship which
she preferred; should profess their faith in the same creed which she had
approved; and abjure every practice or opinion that was deemed repugnant to
either of them. Powers, altogether unknown in the English constitution, were
vested in certain persons appointed to take cognizance of heresy, and they
proceeded to exercise them with more than inquisitorial severity. The prospect
of danger, however, did not intimidate the principal teachers of the protestant
doctrines, who believed that they were contending for truths of the utmost
consequence to the happiness of mankind. They boldly avowed their sentiments,
and were condemned to that cruel death which the church of Rome reserves for
its enemies. This shocking punishment was inflicted with that barbarity which
the rancor of false zeal alone can inspire. The English, who are inferior in
humanity to no people in Europe, and remarkable for the mildness of their
public executions, beheld with astonishment and horror, persons who had filled
the most respectable stations in their church, and who were venerable on
account of their age, their piety, and their literature, condemned to endure
torments to which their laws did not subject even the most atrocious criminals.
This
extreme rigor did not accomplish the end at which Mary aimed. The patience and
fortitude with which these martyrs for the Reformation submitted to their
sufferings, the heroic contempt of death expressed by persons of every rank,
and age, and sex, confirmed many more in the protestant faith, than the threats
of their enraged persecutors could frighten into apostasy. The business of such
as were entrusted with trying of heretics multiplied continually, and appeared
to be as endless as it was odious. The queen’s ablest ministers became sensible
how impolitic, as well as dangerous, it was to irritate the people by the
frequent spectacle of public executions, which they detested as no less unjust
than cruel. Even Philip was so thoroughly convinced of her having run to an
excess of rigor, that on this occasion he assumed a part to which he was little
accustomed, becoming an advocate for moderation and lenity.
But
notwithstanding this attempt to ingratiate himself with the English, they
discovered a constant jealousy and distrust of all his intentions; and when
some members, who had been gained by the court, ventured to move in the house
of commons that the nation ought to assist the emperor, the queen’s
father-in-law, in his war against France, the proposal was rejected with
general dissatisfaction. A motion which was made, that the parliament should
give its consent that Philip might be publicly crowned as the queen's husband,
met with such a cold reception that it was instantly withdrawn.
The
king of France had observed the progress of the emperor's negotiation in
England with much uneasiness. The great accession of territories as well as
reputation which his enemy would acquire by the marriage of his son with the
queen of such a powerful kingdom, was obvious and formidable. He easily foresaw
that the English, notwithstanding all their fears and precautions, would be
soon drawn in to take part in die quarrels on the continent, and he compelled
to act in subserviency to the emperor’s ambitious schemes. For this reason,
Henry had given it in charge to his ambassador at the court of London, to
employ all his address in order to defeat or retard the treaty of marriage; and
as there was not, at that time, any prince of the blood in France whom he could
propose to the queen as a husband, he instructed him to cooperate with such of
the English as wished their sovereign to marry one of her own subjects. But the
queen's ardor and precipitation in closing with the first overtures in favor of
Philip, having rendered all his endeavors ineffectual, Henry was so far from
thinking it prudent to give any aid to the English malecontents,
though earnestly solicited by Wyat and their other
leaders, who tempted him to take them under his protection, by offers of great
advantage to France, that he commanded his ambassador to congratulate the queen
in the warmest terms upon the suppression of the insurrection.
Notwithstanding
these external professions, Henry dreaded so much the consequence of this
alliance, which more than compensated for all the emperor had, lost in Germany,
that he determined to carry on his military operations, both in the
Low-Countries and in Italy, with extraordinary rigor, in order that, he might
compel Charles to accept of an equitable peace, before his daughter-in-law
could surmount the aversion of her subjects to a war on the continent, and
prevail on them to assist the emperor either with money or troops. For this
purpose he exerted himself to the utmost in order to have a numerous army early
assembled on the frontiers of the Netherlands, and while one part of it laid
waste the open country of Artois, the main body, under the constable
Montmorency, advanced towards the provinces of Liege and Hainault by the forest
of Ardennes.
The
campaign was opened with the siege of Mariemburg, a
town which the queen of Hungary, the governess of the Low-Countries, had
fortified at great expense; but, being destitute of a sufficient garrison, it
surrendered in six days [June 26]. Henry, elated with this success, put himself
at the head of his army, and investing Bouvines, took
it by assault, after a short resistance. With equal facility he became master
of Dinant; and then, turning to the left, bent his march towards the province
of Artois The large sums which the emperor had remitted into England had so
exhausted his treasury, as to render his preparations at this juncture slower
and more dilatory than usual. He had no body of troops to make head against the
French at their first entrance into his territories; and though he drew
together all the forces in the country in the utmost hurry, and gave the
command of them to Emanuel Philibert of Savoy, they were in no condition to
lace an enemy so far superior in number. The prince of Savoy, however, by his
activity and good conduct, made up for his want of troops. By watching all the
motions of the French at a distance, and by choosing his own posts with skill,
he put it out of their power either to form any siege of consequence, or to
attack him. Want of subsistence soon obliged them to fall back towards their
own frontiers, after having burnt all the open towns, and having plundered the
country through which they marched with a cruelty and license more becoming a
body of light troops than a royal army led by a great monarch.
But
Henry, that he might not dismiss his army without attempting some conquest
adequate to the great preparations, as well as sanguine hopes, with which he
had opened the campaign, invested Renti, a place
deemed in that age of great importance, as, by its situation on the confines of
Artois and the Boulonnois, it covered the former
province, and protected the parties which made incursions into the latter. The
town, which was strongly fortified, and provided with a numerous garrison, made
a gallant defence; but being warmly pressed by a
powerful army, it must soon have yielded. The emperor, who at that time enjoyed
a short interval of ease from the gout, was so solicitous to save it, that,
although he could bear no other motion but that of a litter, he instantly put
himself at the head of his army, which, having received several reinforcements,
was now strong enough to approach the enemy,. The French were eager to decide
the fate of Renti by a battle, and expected it from
the emperor's arrival in his camp; but Charles avoided a general action with
great industry, and as he had nothing in view but to save the town, he hoped to
accomplish that, without exposing himself to the consequences of such a
dangerous and doubtful event.
Notwithstanding
all these precautions a dispute, about a post which both armies endeavored to
seize, brought on an engagement [Aug. 13], which proved almost general. The
duke of Guise, who commanded the wing of the French which stood the brunt of
the combat, displayed a valor and conduct worthy of the defender of Metz; the
Imperialists, after an obstinate struggle, were repulsed; the French remained
masters of the post in dispute, and if the constable, either from his natural
caution and slowness, or from unwillingness to support a rival whom he hated,
had not delayed bringing up the main body to second the impression which Guise
had made, the rout of the enemy must have been complete. The emperor,
notwithstanding the loss which he had sustained, continued in the same camp and
the French, being straitened for provisions, and finding it impossible to carry
on the siege in the face of a hostile army, quitted their entrenchments. They
retired openly, courting the enemy to approach, rather than shunning an
engagement.
But
Charles, having gained his end, suffered them to march of unmolested. As soon
as his troops entered their own country, Henry threw garrisons into the
frontier towns, and dismissed the rest of the army. This encouraged the
Imperialists to push forward with a considerable body of troops into Picardy,
and by laying waste the country with fire and sword, they endeavored to revenge
themselves for the ravages which the French had committed in Hainault and
Artois. But, as they were not able to reduce any place of importance, they
gained nothing more than the enemy had done by this cruel and inglorious method
of carrying on the war.
The
arms of France were still more unsuccessful in Italy. The footing which the
French had acquired in Sienna occasioned much uneasiness to Cosmo di Medici,
the most sagacious and enterprising of all the Italian princes. He dreaded the
neighborhood of a powerful people, to whom all who favored the ancient
republican government in Florence would have recourse, as to their natural
protectors, against that absolute authority which the emperor had enabled him
to usurp; he knew how odious be was to the French, on account of his attachment
to the Imperial party, and he foresaw that, if they were permitted to gather
strength in Sienna, Tuscany would soon feel the effects of their resentment.
For these reasons, he wished with the utmost solicitude for the expulsion of
the French out of the Siennese, before they had time
to establish themselves thoroughly in the country, or to receive such
reinforcements from France as would render it dangerous to attack them. As
this, however, was properly the emperor’s business, who was called by his
interest as well as honor to dislodge those formidable intruders into the heart
of his dominions, Cosmo labored to throw the whole burden of the enterprise on
him; and on that account had given no assistance during the former campaign but
by advancing some small sums of money towards the payment of the Imperial
troops.
The
Siege of Sienna
But
as the defence of the Netherlands engrossed all the
emperor’s attention, and his remittances into England had drained his treasury,
it was obvious that his operations in Italy would be extremely feeble; and
Cosmo plainly perceived, that if he himself did not take part openly in the
war, and act with vigor, the French would scarcely meet with any annoyance.
As
his situation rendered this resolution necessary and unavoidable, his next care
was to execute it in such a manner, that he might derive from it some other
advantage, beside that of driving the French but of his neighborhood. With this
view, he despatched an envoy to Charles, offering to
declare war against France, and to reduce Sienna at his own charges, on
condition that he should be repaid whatever he should expend in the enterprise,
and be permitted to retain all his conquests until his demands were fully
satisfied. Charles, to whom, at this juncture, the war against Sienna was an
intolerable burden, and who had neither expedient nor resource that could
enable him to carry it on with proper vigour, closed
gladly with this overture; and Cosmo, well acquainted with the low state of the
Imperial finances, flattered himself that the emperor, finding it impossible to
reimburse him, would suffer him to keep quiet possession of whatever places he
should conquer.
Full
of these hopes, he made great preparations for war, and as the French king had
turned the strength of his arms against the Netherlands, he did not despair of
assembling such a body of men as would prove more than a sufficient match for
any force which Henry could bring into the field in Italy. He endeavored, by
giving one of his daughters to the pope’s nephew, to obtain assistance from the
holy see, or at least to secure his remaining neutral. He attempted to detach
the duke of Orsini, whose family had been long attached to the French party,
from his ancient confederates, by bestowing on him another of his daughters;
and what was of greater consequence than either of these, he engaged John James Medecino, marquis of Marignano, to take the command
of his army. This officer, from a very low condition in life, had raised
himself, through all the ranks of service, to high command, and had displayed
talents, and acquired reputation in war, which entitled him to he placed on a
level with the greatest generals in that martial age. Having attained a station
of eminence so disproportionate to his birth, he labored with a fond solicitude
to conceal his original obscurity, by giving out that he was descended of the
family of Medici, to which honor the casual resemblance of his name was his
only pretension.
Cosmo,
happy that he could gratify him at such an easy rate, flattered his vanity in
this point, acknowledged him as a relation, and permitted him to assume the
arms of his family : Medecino, eager to serve the
head of that family of which he now considered himself as a branch, applied
with wonderful zeal and assiduity to raise troops; and as, during his long
service, he had acquired great credit with the leaders of those mercenary bands
which formed the strength of Italian armies, he engaged the most eminent of
them to follow Cosmo’s standard.
To
oppose this able general, and the formidable army which he had assembled, the
king of France made choice of Peter Strozzi, a
Florentine nobleman, who had resided long in France as an exile, and who had
risen by his merit to high reputation as well as command in the army. He was
the son of Philip Strozzi, who, in the year one
thousand five hundred and thirty-seven, had concurred with such ardor in the
attempt to expel the family of Medici out of Florence, in order to reestablish
the ancient republican form of government; and who had perished in the
undertaking.
The
son inherited the implacable aversion to the Medici, as well as the same
enthusiastic zeal for the liberty of Florence, which had animated his father,
whose death he was impatient to revenge. Henry flattered himself that his army
would make rapid progress under a general whose zeal to promote his interest
was roused and seconded by such powerful passions; especially as he had
allotted him, for the scene of action, his native country, in which he had many
powerful partisans, ready to facilitate all his operations.
But
how specious soever the motives might appear which induced Henry to make this
choice, it proved fatal to the interests of France in Italy. Cosmo, as soon as
he heard that the mortal enemy of his family was appointed to take the command
in Tuscany, concluded that the king of France aimed at something more than the
protection of the Siennese, and saw the necessity of
making extraordinary efforts, not merely to reduce Sienna, but to save himself
from destruction. At the same time, the cardinal of Ferrara, who had the entire
direction of the French affairs in Italy, considered Strozzi as a formidable rival in power, and in order to prevent his acquiring any
increase of authority from success, he was extremely remiss in supplying him
either with money to pay his troops, or with provisions to support them. Strozzi himself, blinded by his resentment against the
Medici, pushed on his operations with the impetuosity of revenge, rather than
with the caution and prudence becoming a great general.
At
first, however, he attacked several towns in the territory of Florence with
such vigor as obliged Medecino, in order to check his
progress, to withdraw the greater part of his army from Sienna, which he had
invested before Strozzi's arrival in Italy. As Cosmo
sustained the whole burden of military operations, the expense of which must
soon have exhausted his revenues; as neither the viceroy of Naples nor governor
of Milan were in condition to afford him any effectual aid; as the troops which Medecino had left in the camp before Sienna could
attempt nothing against it during his absence; it was Strozzi’s business to have protracted the war, and to have transferred the seat of it
into the territories of Florence. But the hope of ruining his enemy by one
decisive blow, precipitated him into a general engagement [Aug. 3], not far
from Marciano. The armies were nearly equal in number; but a body of Italian
cavalry, in which Strozzi placed great confidence,
having fled without making any resistance, either through the treachery or
cowardice of the officers who commanded it, his infantry remained exposed to
the attacks of all Medecino’s troops. Encouraged,
however, by Strozzi’s presence and example, who,
after receiving a dangerous wound in endeavoring to rally the cavalry, placed
himself at the head of the infantry, and manifested an admirable presence of mind,
as well as extraordinary valor, they stood their ground with great firmness,
and repulsed such of the enemy as ventured to approach them. But those gallant
troops being surrounded at last on every side, and torn in pieces by a battery
of cannon which Medecino brought to bear upon them,
the Florentine cavalry broke in on their flanks, and a general route ensued. Strozzi, faint with the loss of blood, and deeply affected
with the fatal consequences of his own rashness, found the utmost difficulty in
making his escape with a handful of men.
Medecino returned immediately to
the siege of Sienna with his victorious forces, and as Strozzi could not, after the greatest efforts of activity, collect as many men as to
form the appearance of a regular army, he had leisure to carry on his
approaches against the town without molestation. But the Siennese,
instead of sinking into despair upon this cruel disappointment of their only
hope of obtaining relief, prepared to defend themselves to the utmost
extremity, with that undaunted fortitude which the love of liberty alone can inspire.
This generous resolution was warmly seconded by Monluc,
who commanded the French garrison in the town. The active and enterprising
courage which he had displayed on many occasions, had procured him this
command; and as he had ambition which aspired at the highest military
dignities, without any pretensions to attain them but what he could derive from
merit, he determined to distinguish his defence of
Sienna by extraordinary efforts of valor and perseverance.
For
this purpose, he repaired and strengthened the fortifications with unwearied
industry; he trained the citizens to the use of arms, and accustomed them to go
through the fatigues and dangers of service in common with the. soldiers; and
as the enemy were extremely strict in guarding all the avenues to the city, he
husbanded the provisions in the magazines with the most parsimonious economy,
and prevailed on the soldiers, as well as the citizens, to restrict themselves
to a very moderate daily allowance for their subsistence. Medecino,
though his army was not numerous enough to storm the town by open force,
ventured twice to assault it by surprise; but he was received each time with so
much spirit, and repulsed with such loss, as discouraged him from repeating the
attempt, and left him no hopes of reducing the town but by famine.
With
this view he fortified his own camp with great care, occupied all the posts of
strength round the place, and having entirely cut off the besieged from any
communication with the adjacent country, he waited patiently until necessity
should compel them to open their gates. But their enthusiastic zeal for liberty
made the citizens despise the distresses occasioned by the scarcity of
provisions, and supported them long under all the miseries of famine. Monluc, by his example and exhortations, taught his
soldiers to vie with him in patience and abstinence; and it was not until they
had withstood a siege of ten months, until they had eaten up all the horses,
dogs, and other animals in the place, and were reduced almost to their last
morsel of bread, that they proposed a capitulation [1555]. Even then they
demanded honorable terms; and as Cosmo, though no stranger to the extremity of
their condition, was afraid that despair might prompt them to venture upon some
wild enterprise, he immediately granted them conditions more favorable than
they could have expected.
April
22] The capitulation was made in the emperor’s name, who engaged to take the
republic of Sienna under the protection of the empire; he promised to maintain
the ancient liberties of the city, to allow the magistrates the full exercise
of their former authority, to secure the citizens in the undisturbed possession
of their privileges and property; he granted an ample and unlimited pardon to
all who had borne arms against him; he reserved to himself the right of placing
a garrison in the town, but engaged not to rebuild the citadel without the
consent of the citizens. Monluc and his French
garrison were allowed to march out with all the honors of war.
Medecino observed the articles of
capitulation, as far as depended on him, with great exactness. No violence or
insult whatever was offered to the inhabitants, and the French garrison was
treated with all the respect due to their spirit and bravery. But many of the
citizens suspecting, from the extraordinary facility with which they had
obtained such favorable conditions, that the emperor, as well as Cosmo, would
take the first opportunity of violating them, and disdaining to possess a
precarious liberty, which depended on the will of another, abandoned the place
of their nativity, and accompanied the French to Monte-Alcino,
Porto Ercole, and other small towns in the territory
of the republic. They established in Monte-Alcino,
the same model of government to which they had been accustomed at Sienna, and
appointing magistrates with the same titles and jurisdiction, solaced
themselves with this image of their ancient liberty.
The
fears of the Siennese concerning the fate of their
country were not imaginary, or their suspicion of the emperor and Cosine ill
founded; for no sooner had the Imperial troops taken possession of the town,
than Cosmo, without regarding the articles of capitulation, not only displaced
the magistrates who were in office, and nominated new ones devoted to his own
interest, but commanded all the citizens to deliver up their arms to persons
whom he appointed to receive them. They submitted to the former from necessity,
though with all the reluctance and regret which men accustomed to liberty feel
in obeying the first commands of a master. They did not yield the same tame
obedience to the latter; and many persons of distinction, rather than degrade
themselves from the rank of freemen to the condition of slaves by surrendering
their arms, fled to their countrymen at MonteAlcino,
and chose to endure all the hardships, and encounter all the dangers which they
had reason to expect in that new station, where they had fixed the seat of
their republic.
Cosmo,
not reckoning himself secure while such numbers of implacable and desperate
enemies were settled in his neighborhood, and retained any degree of power,
solicited Medecino to attack them in their different
places of retreat, before they had time to recruit their strength and spirits,
after the many calamities which they had suffered. He prevailed on him, though
his army was much weakened by hard duty during the siege of Sienna, to invest
Porto Ercole; and the fortifications being both
slight and incomplete, the besieged were soon compelled to open their gates [June
13]. An unexpected order, which Medecino received
from the emperor to detach the greater part of his troops into Piedmont,
prevented farther operations, and permitted the Siennese exiles to reside for some time undisturbed in Monte-Alcino.
But their unhappy countrymen who remained at Sienna were not yet at the end of
their sufferings; for the emperor, instead of adhering to the articles of
capitulation, granted his son Philip the investiture of that city and all its
dependencies; and Francis de Toledo, in the name of their new master, proceeded
to settle the civil and military government, treated them like a conquered
people, and subjected them to the Spanish yoke, without paying any regard whatever
to their privileges or ancient form of government.
The
Imperial army in Piedmont had been so feeble for some time, and its commander
so inactive, that the emperor, in order to give vigor to his operations in that
quarter, found it necessary not only to recall Medecino’s troops from Tuscany, while in the career of conquest, but to employ in Piedmont
a general of such reputation and abilities, as might counterbalance the great
military talents of the marechal Brissac,
who was at the head of the French forces in that country.
He
pitched on the duke of Alva for that purpose; but that choice was as much the
effect of a court intrigue, as of his opinion with respect to the duke's merit.
Alva had long made court to Philip with the utmost assiduity, and bad endeavored
to work himself into his confidence by all the insinuating arts of which his
haughty and inflexible nature was capable. As he nearly resembled that prince
in many features of his character, he began to gain much of his good-will. Ruy Gomez de Silva, Philip’s favorite, who dreaded the
progress which this formidable rival made in his master’s affections, had the
address to prevail with the emperor to name Alva to this command. The duke,
though sensible that he owed this distinction to the malicious arts of an
enemy, who had no other aim than to remove him at a distance from court, was of
such punctilious honor, that he would not decline a command that appeared
dangerous and difficult, but, at the same time, was so haughty, that he would
not accept of it but on his own terms, insisted on being appointed the emperor's
vicar-general in Italy, with the supreme military command in all the Imperial
and Spanish territories in that country. Charles granted all his demands; and
he took possession of his new dignity with almost unlimited authority.
His
first operations, however, were neither proportioned to his former reputation
and the extensive powers with which he was invested, nor did they come up to
the emperor's expectations. Brissac had under his
command an army which, though inferior in number to the Imperialists, was
composed of chosen troops, which having grown old in service in that country,
where every town was fortified, and every castle capable of being defended,
were perfectly acquainted with the manner of carrying on war there. By their
valor, and his own good conduct, Brissac not only
defeated all the attempts of the Imperialists, but added new conquests to the
territories of which he was formerly master. Alva, after having boasted, with
his usual arrogance, that he would drive the French out of Piedmont, in a few
weeks, was obliged to retire into winter-quarters, with the mortification of
being unable to preserve entire that part of the country of which the emperor
had hitherto kept possession.
As
the operations of this campaign in Piedmont were indecisive, those in the
Netherlands were inconsiderable, neither the emperor nor king of France being
able to bring into the field an army strong enough to undertake any enterprise
of moment. But what Charles wanted in force, he endeavored to supply by a bold
stratagem, the success of which would have been equal to that of the most
vigorous campaign. During the siege of Metz, Leonard, father guardian of a
convent of Franciscans in that city, had insinuated himself far into the esteem
and favor of the duke of Guise, by his attachment to the French. Being a man of
an active and intriguing spirit, he had been extremely useful both in animating
the inhabitants to sustain with patience all the hardships of the siege, and in
procuring intelligence of the enemy’s designs and motions.
The
merit of those important services, together with the warm recommendations of
the duke of Guise, secured him such high confidence with Vielleville,
who was appointed governor of Metz when Guise left the town, that he was
permitted to converse or correspond with whatever persons he thought fit, and
nothing that he did created any suspicion. This monk, from the levity natural
to hold and projecting adventurers; or from resentment against the French, who
had not bestowed on him such rewards as he thought due to his own merit; or
tempted by the unlimited confidence which was placed in him, to imagine that he
might carry on and accomplish any scheme with perfect security, formed a design
of betraying Metz to the Imperialists.
He
communicated his intention to the queen-dowager of Hungary, who governed the
Low-Countries in the name of her brother. She approving without any scruple, an
act of treachery, from which the emperor might derive such signal advantage,
assisted the father guardian in concerting the most proper plan for ensuring
its success. They agreed, that the father guardian should endeavor to gain his
monks to concur in promoting the design, that he should introduce into the convent
a certain number of chosen soldiers, disguised in the habit of friars; that
when everything was ripe for execution, the governor of Thionville should march towards Metz in the night with a considerable body of troops, and
attempt to scale the ramparts; that while the garrison was employed in
resisting the assailants, the monks should set fire to the town in different
places; that the soldiers who lay concealed should sally out of the convent,
and attack those who defended the ramparts in the rear. Amidst the universal
terror and confusion which events so unexpected would occasion, it was not
doubted but that the Imperialists might become masters of the town. As a
recompense for this service, the father guardian stipulated that he should be
appointed bishop of Metz, and ample rewards were promised to such of his monks
as should be most active in co-operating with him.
The
father guardian accomplished what he had undertaken to perform with great
secrecy and dispatch. By his authority and arguments, as well as by the
prospect of wealth or honors which he set before his monks, he prevailed on all
of them to enter into the conspiracy. He introduced into the convent, without
being suspected, as many soldiers as were thought sufficient. The governor of Thionville, apprized in due time of the design, had
assembled a proper number of troops for executing it; and the moment
approached, which probably would have wrested from Henry the most important of
all his conquests.
But,
happily for France, on the very day that was fixed for striking the blow, Vielleville, an able and vigilant officer, received
information from a spy whom he entertained at Thionville,
that certain Franciscan friars resorted frequently thither and were admitted to
many private conferences with the governor, who was carrying on preparations
for some military enterprise with great dispatch, but with a most mysterious
secrecy. This was sufficient to awaken Vielleville’s suspicions. Without communicating these to any person, he instantly visited the
convent of Franciscans; detected the soldiers who were concealed there; and
forced them to discover as much as they knew concerning the nature of the
enterprise. The father guardian, who had gone to Thionville that he might put the last hand to is machinations, was seized at the gate as
he returned; and he, in order to save himself from the rack, revealed all the
circumstances of the conspiracy.
Vielleville, not satisfied with
having seized the traitors, and having frustrated their schemes, was solicitous
to take advantage of the discoveries which he had made, so as to be revenged on
the Imperialists. For this purpose he marched out with the best troops in his
garrison, and placing these in ambush near the road, by which the father
guardian had informed him that the governor of Thionville would approach Metz, he fell upon the Imperialists with great fury, as they
advanced in perfect security, without suspecting any danger to be near.
Confounded at this sudden attack, by an enemy whom they expected to surprise,
they made little resistance; and a great part of the troops employed in this
service, among whom were many persons of distinction, was killed or taken
prisoners. Before next morning, Vielleville returned
to Metz in triumph.
No
resolution was taken for some time concerning the fate of the father guardian
and his monks, the framers and conductors of this dangerous conspiracy. Regard
for the honor of a body so numerous and respectable as the Franciscans, and
unwillingness to afford a subject of triumph to the enemies of the Romish
church by their disgrace, seem to have occasioned this delay. But at length,
the necessity of inflicting exemplary punishment upon them, in order to deter
others from venturing to commit the same crime, became so evident, that orders
were issued to proceed to their trial. The guilt was made apparent by the
clearest evidence; and sentence of death was passed upon the father guardian,
together with twenty monks. On the evening previous to the day fixed for their
execution, the jailer took them out of the dungeons in which they had hitherto
been confined separately, and shut them all up in one great room, that they
might confess their sins to one another, and join together in preparing for a
future state. But as soon as they were left alone, instead of employing
themselves in the religious exercises suitable to their condition, they began
to reproach the father guardian, and four of the senior monks who had been most
active in seducing them, for their inordinate ambition, which had brought such
misery on them, and such disgrace upon their order. From reproaches they
proceeded to curse's and execrations, and at last, in a frenzy of rage and
despair, they fell upon them with such violence, that they murdered the father
guardian on the spot, and so disabled the other four, that it became necessary
to carry them next morning in a cart, together with the dead body of the
father guardian, to the place of execution. Six of the youngest were pardoned,
the rest suffered the punishment which their crime merited.
Though
both parties, exhausted by the length of the war, carried it on in this
languishing manner, neither of them showed any disposition to listen to
overtures of peace. Cardinal Pole indeed labored with all the zeal becoming his
piety and humanity, to re-establish concord among the princes of Christendom.
He had not only persuaded his mistress, the queen of England, to enter warmly
into his sentiments, and to offer her mediation to the contending powers, but
had prevailed both on the emperor and the king of France to send their
plenipotentiaries to a village between Gravelines and Ardres. He himself, together with Gardiner bishop of
Winchester, repaired thither in order to preside as mediators in the
conferences which were to be held for adjusting all the points in difference.
But though each of the monarchs committed this negotiation to some of their
ministers, in whom they placed the greatest confidence, it was soon evident
that they came together with no sincere desire of accommodation. [May 21].
Each
proposed articles so extravagant that they could have no hopes of their being
accepted. Pole, after exerting in vain all his zeal and address, in order to
persuade them to relinquish such extravagant demands, and to consent to the
substitution of more equal conditions, became sensible of the folly of wasting
time in attempting to reestablish concord between those whom their obstinacy
rendered irreconcilable, broke off the conference, and returned into England.
The
recess of Augsburg
During
these transactions in other parts of Europe, Germany enjoyed such profound
tranquility, as afforded the diet full leisure to deliberate, and to establish
proper regulations concerning a point of the greatest consequence to the
internal peace of the empire. By the treaty of Passau in one thousand five
hundred and fifty-two, it had been referred to the next diet of the empire to
confirm and perfect the plan of religious pacification, which was there agreed
upon. The terror and confusion with which the violent commotions excited by
Albert of Brandenburg had filled Germany, as well as the constant attention
which Ferdinand was obliged to give to the affairs of Hungary, had hitherto
prevented the holding a diet, though it had been summoned, soon after the conclusion
of the treaty, to meet at Augsburg.
But
as a diet was now necessary on many accounts, Ferdinand, about the beginning of
this year, had repaired to Augsburg. Though few of the princes were present,
either in person or by their deputies, he opened the assembly by a speech, in
which he proposed a termination of the dissensions to which the new tenets and
controversies with regard to religion had given rise, not only as the first and
great business of the diet, but as the point which both the emperor and he had
most at heart. He represented the innumerable obstacles which the emperor had
to surmount before he could procure the convocation of a general council, as
well as the fatal accidents which had for some time retarded, and had at last
suspended the consultations of that assembly. He observed, that experience had
already taught them how vain it was to expect any remedy for evils which
demanded immediate redress from a general council, the assembly of which would
either be prevented, or its deliberations be interrupted by the dissensions and
hostilities of the princes of Christendom: that a national council in Germany,
which, as some imagined, might be called with greater ease, and deliberate with
more perfect security, was an assembly of an unprecedented nature, the
jurisdiction of which was uncertain in its extent, and the form of its
proceedings undefined: that in his opinion there remained but one method for
composing their unhappy differences, which though it had been often tried
without success, might yet prove effectual if it were attempted with a better and
more pacific spirit than had appeared on former occasions, and that was to
choose a few men of learning, abilities, and moderation, who, by discussing the
disputed articles, in an amicable conference, might explain them in such a
manner as to bring the contending parties either to unite in sentiment, or to
differ with charity.
This
speech being printed in common form, and dispersed over the empire, revived the
fears and jealousies of the protestants; Ferdinand, they observed with much
surprise, had not once mentioned, in his address to the diet, the treaty of
Passau, the stipulations of which they considered as the great security of
their religious liberty. The suspicions to which this gave rise were confirmed
by the accounts which they daily received of the extreme severity with which
Ferdinand treated their protestant brethren in his hereditary dominions, and,
as it was natural to consider his actions as the surest indication of his
intentions, this diminished their confidence in those pompous professions of
moderation or of zeal for the re-establishment of concord, to which his
practice seemed to be so repugnant.
The
arrival of the cardinal Morone, whom the pope had
appointed to attend the diet as his nuncio, completed their conviction, and
left them no room to doubt that some dangerous machination was forming against
the peace or safety of the protestant church. Julius, elated with the unexpected
return of the English nation from apostacy, began to flatter himself, that the
spirit of mutiny and revolt having now spent its force, the happy period was
come when the church might resume its ancient authority, and be obeyed by the
people with the same tame submission as formerly. Full of these hopes, he had
sent Morone to Augsburg, with instructions to employ
his eloquence to excite the Germans to imitator the laudable example of the
English, and his political address in order to prevent any decree of the diet
to the detriment of the catholic faith. As Morone inherited from his father, the chancellor of Milan, uncommon talents for
negotiation and intrigue, he could hardly have failed from embarrassing the
measures of the protestants in the diet, or of defeating whatever they aimed at
obtaining in it for their farther security.
But
an unforeseen event delivered them from all the danger which they had reason to
apprehend from Morone’s presence. Julius, by
abandoning himself to pleasures and amusements, no less unbecoming his age than
his character, having contracted such habits of dissipation, that any serious occupation,
especially if attended with difficulty, became an intolerable burden to him,
had long resisted the solicitations of his nephew to hold a consistory; because
he expected there a violent opposition to his schemes in favor of that young
man. But when all the pretexts which he could invent for eluding this request
were exhausted, and at the same time his indolent aversion to business
continued to vow upon him, he feigned indisposition rather than yield to his
nephews importunity; and that he might give the deceit a greater color of
probability, he not only confined himself to his apartment, but changed his
usual diet and manner of life. By persisting long in acting this ridiculous
part, he contracted a real disease, of which he died in a few days [March 23],
leaving his infamous minion the cardinal de Monte to bear his name, and to
disgrace the dignity which he had conferred upon him. As soon as Morone heard of his death, he set out abruptly from
Augsburg, where he had resided only a few days, that he might be present at the
election of a new pontiff.
One
cause of their suspicions and fears being thus removed, the protestants soon
became sensible that their conjectures concerning Ferdinand's intentions,
however specious, were ill-founded, and that he had no thoughts of violating
the articles favorable to them in the treaty of Passau. Charles, from the time
that Maurice had defeated all his schemes in the empire, and overturned the
great system of religious and civil despotism, which he had almost established
there, gave little attention to the internal government of Germany, and
permitted his brother to pursue whatever measures he judged most salutary and
expedient. Ferdinand, less ambitious and enterprising than the emperor,
instead of resuming a plan which he with power and resources so far superior
had failed of accomplishing, endeavored to attach the princes of the empire to
his family by an administration uniformly moderate and equitable. To this he
gave, at present, particular attention, because his situation at this juncture
rendered it necessary to court their favor and support with more than usual
assiduity.
Charles
had again resumed his favorite project of acquiring the Imperial crown for his
son Philip, the prosecution of which, the reception it had met with when first
proposed had obliged him to suspend, but had not induced him to relinquish.
This led him warmly to renew his request to his brother that he would accept of
some compensation for his prior right of succession, and sacrifice that to the
grandeur of the house of Austria. Ferdinand, who was as little disposed as
formerly to give such an extraordinary proof of self-denial, being sensible
that, in order to defeat this scheme, not only the most inflexible firmness on
his part, but a vigorous declaration from the princes of the empire in behalf
of his title, were requisite, was willing to purchase their favor by gratifying
them in every point that they deemed interesting or essential.
At
the same time he stood in need of immediate and extraordinary aid from the
Germanic body, as the Turks, after having wrested from him great part of his
Hungarian territories, were ready to attack the provinces still subject to his
authority with a formidable army, against which he could bring no equal force
into the field. For this aid from Germany he could not hope, if the internal
peace of the empire were not established on a foundation solid in itself, and
which should appear, even to the protestants, so secure and so permanent, as
might not only allow them to engage in a distant war with safety, but might
encourage them to act in it with vigour.
A
step taken by the protestants themselves, a short time after the opening of
the diet, rendered him still more cautious of giving them any new cause of offence.
As soon as the publication of Ferdinand's speech awakened the fears and
suspicions which have been mentioned, the electors of Saxony and Brandenburg,
together with the landgrave of Hesse, met at Naumburgh,
and confirming the ancient treaty of confraternity which had long united their
families, they added to it a new article, by which the contracting parties
bound themselves to adhere to the confession of Augsburg, and to maintain the
doctrine which it contained in their respective dominions.
Ferdinand,
influenced by all these considerations, employed his utmost address in
conducting the deliberations of the diet, so as not to excite the jealousy of a
party on whose friendship he depended, and whose enmity, as they had not only
taken the alarm, but had begun to prepare for their defence,
he had so much reason to dread. The members of the diet readily agreed to
Ferdinand's proposal of taking the state of religion into consideration,
previous to any other business. But as soon as they entered upon it, both
parties discovered all the zeal and animosity which a subject so interesting
naturally engenders, and which the rancor of controversy, together with the
violence of civil war, had inflamed to the highest pitch.
The
protestants contended, that the security which they claimed in consequence of
the treaty of Passau, should extend, without limitation, to all who had
hitherto embraced the doctrine of Luther, or who should hereafter embrace it.
The Catholics, having first of all asserted the pope's right as the supreme and
final judge with respect to all articles of faith, declared, that though, on
account of the present situation of the empire, for the sake of peace, they
were willing to confirm the toleration granted by the treaty of Passau, to such as had already adopted the new opinions; they must
insist that this indulgence should not be extended either to those cities which
had conformed to the Interim, or to such ecclesiastics as should for the future
apostatize from the church of Rome. It was no easy matter to reconcile such
opposite pretensions, which were supported, on each side, by the most elaborate
arguments, and the greatest acrimony of expression, that the abilities or zeal
of theologians long exercised in disputation could suggest, Ferdinand, however,
by his address and perseverance; by softening some things on each side, by
putting a favorable meaning upon others; by representing incessantly the
necessity as well as the advantages of concord; and by threatening, on some
occasions, when all other considerations were disregarded, to dissolve the
diet, brought them at length to a conclusion in which they all agreed.
Conformably
to this, a recess was framed, approved of and published with the usual
formalities [Sept. 25]. The following are the chief articles which it contained
: That such princes and cities as have declared their approbation of the
confession of Augsburg, shall be permitted to profess the doctrine and exercise
the worship which it authorizes, without interruption or molestation from the
emperor, the king of the Romans, or any power or person whatsoever; That the
protestants, on their part shall give no disquiet to the princes and states who
adhere to the tenets and rites of the church of Rome; That, for the future, no
attempt shall be made towards terminating religious differences, but by the
gentle and pacific methods of persuasion and conference; That the popish
ecclesiastics shall claim no spiritual jurisdiction in such states as receive
the confession of Augsburg; That such as had seized the benefices or revenues
of the church, previous to the treaty of Passau, shall retain possession of
them, and be liable to no prosecution in the Imperial chamber on that account;
That the supreme civil power in every state shall have right to establish what
form of doctrine and worship it shall deem proper, and if any of its subjects
refuse to conform to these, shall permit them to remove with all their effects,
whithersoever they shall please; that if any prelate or ecclesiastic shall
hereafter abandon the Romish religion, he shall instantly relinquish his
diocese or benefice, and it shall be lawful for those in whom the right of
nomination is vested, to proceed immediately to an election, as if the office
were vacant by death or translation, and to appoint a successor of undoubted
attachment to the ancient system.
Such
are the capital articles in this famous recess, which is the basis of religious
peace in Germany, and the bond of union among its various states, the
sentiments of which are so extremely different with respect to points the most
interesting as well as important. In our age and nation, to which the idea of
toleration is familiar, and its beneficial effects well known, it may seem
strange, that a method of terminating their dissensions, so suitable to the
mild and charitable spirit of the Christian religion, did not sooner occur to
the contending parties. But this expedient, however salutary, was so repugnant
to the sentiments and practice of Christians during many ages, that it did not lie
obvious to discovery. Among the ancient heathens, all whose deities were local
and tutelary, diversity of sentiment concerning the object or rites of
religious worship seems to have been no source of animosity, because the
acknowledging veneration to be due to any one God, did not imply denial of the
existence or the power of any other God; nor were the modes and rites of
worship established in one country incompatible with those which other nations
approved of and observed. Thus the errors in their system of theology were of
such a nature as to be productive of concord; and notwithstanding the amazing
number of their deities, as well as the infinite variety of their ceremonies, a
sociable and tolerating spirit subsisted almost universally in the pagan world.
But
when the Christian revelation declared one Supreme Being to be the sole object
of religious veneration, and prescribed the form of worship most acceptable to
him, whoever admitted the truth of it, held, of consequence, every other system
of religion as a deviation from what was established by divine authority, to be
false and impious. Hence arose the zeal of the first converts to the Christian
faith in propagating its doctrines, and the ardor with which they labored to
overturn every other form of worship. They employed, however, for this purpose,
no methods but such as suited the nature of religion. By the force of powerful
arguments, they convinced the understandings of men; by the charms of superior
virtue, they allured and captivated their hearts. At length the civil power
declared in favor of Christianity; and though numbers, imitating the example of
their superiors, crowded into the church, many still adhered to their ancient
superstitions. Enraged at their obstinacy, the ministers of religion, whose
zeal was still unabated, though their sanctity and virtue were much diminished,
forgot so far the nature of their own mission, and of the arguments which they
ought to have employed, that they armed the Imperial power against these
unhappy men, and as they could not persuade, they tried to compel them to
believe.
At
the same time, controversies concerning articles of faith multiplied, from
various causes, among Christians themselves, and the same unhallowed weapons
which had at first been used against the enemies of their religion, were turned
against each other. Every zealous disputant endeavored to interest the civil
magistrate in his cause, and each in his turn employed the secular arm to crush
or to exterminate his opponents. Not long after, the bishops of Rome put in
their claim to infallibility in explaining articles of faith, and deciding
points in controversy; and, bold as the pretension was, they, by their articles
and perseverance, imposed on the credulity of mankind, and brought them to recognize
it. To doubt or to deny any doctrine to which these unerring instructers had given the sanction of their approbation,
was held to be not only a resisting of truth, but an act of rebellion against
their sacred authority; and the secular power, of which by various arts they
had acquired the absolute direction, was instantly employed to avenge both.
Thus
Europe had been accustomed, during many centuries, to see speculative opinions
propagated or defended by force; the charity and mutual forbearance which
Christianity recommends with so much warmth, were forgotten, the sacred rights
of conscience and of private judgment were unheard of, and not only the idea of
toleration, but even the word itself, in the sense now affixed to it, was
unknown. A right to extirpate error by force was universally allowed to be the
prerogative of such as possessed the knowledge of truth; and as each party of
Christians believed that they had got possession of this invaluable attainment,
they all claimed and exercised, as far as they were able, the rights which it
was supposed to convey. The Roman catholics, as their
system rested on the decisions of an infallible judge, never doubted that truth
was on their side, and openly called on the civil power to repel the impious and
heretical innovators who had risen up against it. The protestants, no less
confident that their doctrine was well founded, required, with equal ardor, the
princes of their party to check such as presumed to impugn it. Luther, Calvin,
Cranmer, Knox, the founders of the reformed church in their respective
countries, as far as they had power and opportunity, inflicted the same
punishments upon such as called in question any article in their creeds, which
were denounced against their own disciples by the church of Rome. To their
followers, and perhaps to their opponents, it would have appeared a system of
diffidence in the goodness of their cause, or an acknowledgment that it was not
well founded, if they had not employed in its defence all those means which it was supposed truth had a right to employ.
It
was towards the close of the seventeenth century, before toleration, under its
present form, was admitted first into the republic of the United Provinces, and
from thence introduced into England. Long experience of the calamities flowing
from mutual persecution, the influence of free government, the light and
humanity acquired by the progress of science, together with the prudence and
authority of the civil magistrate, were all requisite in order to establish a
regulation, so repugnant to the ideas which all the different sects had
adopted, from mistaken conceptions concerning the nature of religion and the
rights of truth, or which all of them had derived from the erroneous maxims
established by the church of Rome.
The
recess of Augsburg, it is evident, was founded on no such liberal and enlarged
sentiments concerning freedom of religious inquiry, or the nature of
toleration. It was nothing more than a scheme of pacification, which political
considerations alone had suggested to the contending parties, and regard for
their mutual tranquility and safety had rendered necessary. Of this there can
be no stronger proof than an article in the recess itself, by which the
benefits of the pacification are declared to extend only to the catholics on the one side, and to such as adhered to the
confession of Augsburg on the other. The followers of Zuinglius and Calvin remain all, in consequence of that exclusion, without any protection
from the rigor of the laws denounced against heretics. Nor did they obtain any
legal security, until the treaty of Westphalia, near a century after this
period, provided, that they should be admitted to enjoy, in as ample a manner as
the Lutherans, all the advantages and protection which the recess of Augsburg
affords.
But
if the followers of Luther were highly pleased with the security which they
acquired by this recess, such as adhered to the ancient system had no less
reason to be satisfied with that article in it, which preserved entire to the
Roman catholic church the benefices of such ecclesiastics as should hereafter
renounce its doctrines. This article, known in Germany by the name of the
Ecclesiastical Reservation, was apparently so conformable to the idea and to
the rights of an established church, and it seemed so equitable to prevent
revenues, which had been originally appropriated for the maintenance of persons
attached to a certain system, from being alienated to any other purpose, that
the Protestants, though they foresaw its consequences, were obliged to
relinquish their opposition to it. As the Roman catholic princes of the empire
have taken care to see this article exactly observed in every case where there
was an opportunity of putting it in execution, it has proved the great barrier
of the Romish church in Germany against the reformation; and as, from this
period, the same temptation of interest did not allure ecclesiastics to
relinquish the established system, there have been few of that order, who have
loved truth with such disinterested and ardent affection, as, for its sake, to
abandon the rich benefices which they had in possession.
The
Court of Paul the Fourth
During
the sitting of the diet [April 9], Marcellus Cervino,
cardinal of St. Croce, was elected pope in the room of Julius. He, in imitation
of Adrian, did not change his name on being exalted to the papal chair. As he
equaled that pontiff in purity of intention, while he excelled him much in the
arts of government, and still more in knowledge of the state and genius of the
papal court; as he had capacity to discern what reformation it needed, as well
as what it could bear; such regulations were expected from his virtue and
wisdom, as would have removed many of its grossest and most flagrant
corruptions, and have contributed towards reconciling to the church such as,
from indignation at these enormities, had abandoned its communion. But this
excellent pontiff was only shown to the church, and immediately snatched away.
The confinement in the conclave had impaired his health, and the fatigue of
tedious ceremonies upon his accession, together with too intense and anxious
application of mind to the schemes of improvement which he meditated, exhausted
so entirely the vigour of his feeble constitution,
that he sickened on the twelfth, and died on the twentieth day after his
election.
All
the refinements in artifice and intrigue, peculiar to conclaves, were displayed
in that which was held for electing a successor to Marcellus; the cardinals of
the Imperial and French factions laboring, with equal ardor, to gain the
necessary number of suffrages for one of their own party. But, after a struggle
of no long duration, though conducted with all the warmth and eagerness natural
to men contending for so great an object, they united in choosing John Peter
Caraffa [May 23], the eldest member of the sacred college, and the son of count Montorio, a nobleman of an illustrious family in the
kingdom of Naples. The address and influence of cardinal Farnese, who favored
his pretensions, Caraffa’s own merit, and perhaps his
great age, which soothed all the disappointed candidates with the near prospect
of a new vacancy, concurred in bringing about this speedy union of suffrages.
In order to testify his respect for the memory of Paul III by whom he had been
created cardinal, as well as his gratitude to the family of Farnese, he assumed
the name of Paul the Fourth.
The
choice of a prelate of such a singular character, and who had long held a
course extremely different from that which usually led to the dignity now
conferred upon him, filled the Italians, who had nearest access to observe his
manners and deportment, with astonishment, and kept them in suspense and
solicitude with regard to his future conduct. Paul, though born in a rank of
life which, without any other merit, might have secured to him the highest
ecclesiastical preferments, had, from his early years, applied to study with
all the assiduity of a man who had nothing but his personal attainments to
render him conspicuous. By means of this, he not only acquired profound skill
in scholastic theology, but added to that a considerable knowledge of the
learned languages and of polite literature, the study of which had been lately
revived in Italy, and was pursued at this time with great ardor. His mind,
however, naturally gloomy and severe, was more formed to imbibe the sour spirit
of the former, than to receive any tincture of elegance or liberality of
sentiment from the latter; so that he acquired rather the qualities and
passions of a recluse ecclesiastic, than the talents necessary for the conduct
of great affairs. Accordingly, when he entered into orders, although several
rich benefices were bestowed upon him, and he was early employed as nuncio in
different courts, he soon became disgusted with that course of life, and
languished to be in a situation more suited to his taste and temper. With this
view, he resigned at once all his ecclesiastical preferments; and having instituted
an order of regular priests, whom he denominated Theatines, from the name of
the archbishopric which he had held, he associated himself as a member of their
fraternity, conformed to all the rigorous rules to which he had subjected them,
and preferred the solitude of a monastic life, with the honor of being the
founder of a new order, to all the great objects which the court of Rome
presented to his ambition.
In
this retreat he remained for many years, until Paul III, induced by the fame of
his sanctity and knowledge, called him to Rome, in order to consult with him
concerning the measures which might be most proper and effectual for
suppressing heresy, and re-establishing the ancient authority of the church.
Having thus allured him from his solitude, the pope, partly by his entreaties,
and partly by his authority, prevailed on him to accept of a cardinal's hat, to
reassume the benefices which he had resigned, and to return again into the
usual path of ecclesiastical ambition which he seemed to have relinquished.
But, during two successive pontificates, under the first of which the court of
Rome was the most artful and interested, and under the second the most
dissolute of any in Europe, Caraffa retained his monastic austerity. He was an
avowed and bitter enemy not only of all innovation in opinion, but of every irregularity
in practice; he was the chief instrument in establishing the formidable and
odious tribunal of the inquisition in the papal territories; he appeared a
violent advocate on all occasions for the jurisdiction and discipline of the
church, and a severe censurer of every measure which seemed to flow from
motives of policy or interest, rather than from zeal for the honor of the
ecclesiastical order, and the dignity of the holy see. Under a prelate of such
a character, the Roman courtiers expected a severe and violent pontificate,
during which the principles of sound policy would be sacrificed to the narrow
prejudices of priestly zeal; while the people of Rome were apprehensive of
seeing the sordid and forbidding rigor of monastic manners substituted in place
of the gayety or magnificence to which they had long been accustomed in the
papal court. These apprehensions Paul was extremely solicitous to remove. At
his first entrance upon the administration, he laid aside that austerity which
had hitherto distinguished his person and family, and when the master of his
household inquired in what manner he would choose to live, he haughtily
replied, "As becomes a great prince". He ordered the ceremony of his
coronation to he conducted with more than usual pomp; and endeavored to render
himself popular by several acts of liberality and indulgence towards the
inhabitants of Rome.
His
natural severity of temper, however, would have soon returned upon him, and
would have justified the conjectures of the courtiers, as well as the fears of
the people, if he had not, immediately after his election, called to Rome two
of his nephews, the sons of his brother the count of Montorio.
The eldest he promoted to be governor of Rome. The youngest, who had hitherto
served as a soldier of fortune in the armies of Spain or France, and whose
disposition as well as manners were still more foreign from the clerical
character than his profession, he created a cardinal, and appointed him legate
of Bologna, the second office in power and dignity which a pope can bestow.
These marks of favor, no less sudden than extravagant, he accompanied with the
most unbounded confidence and attachment, and forgetting all his former severe
maxims, he seemed to have no other object than the aggrandizement of his
nephews. Their ambition, unfortunately for Paul, was too aspiring to be
satisfied with any moderate acquisition. They had seen the family of Medici
raised by the interest of the popes of that house to supreme power in Tuscany;
Paul III had, by his abilities and address, secured the duchies of Parma and
Placentia to the family of Farnese.
They
aimed at some establishment for themselves, no less considerable and
independent; and as they could not expect that the pope would carry his
indulgence towards them so far as to secularize any part of the patrimony of
the church, they had no prospect of attaining what they wished, but by
dismembering the Imperial dominions in Italy, in hopes of seizing some portion
of them. This alone they would have deemed a sufficient reason for sowing the
seeds of discord between their uncle and the emperor.
But
cardinal Caraffa had, besides, private reasons which filled him with hatred and
enmity to the emperor. While he served in the Spanish troops be had not
received such marks of honor and distinction as he thought due to his birth and
merit. Disgusted with this ill usage, he had abruptly quitted the Imperial
service; and entering into that of France, he had not only met with such a
reception as soothed his vanity, and attached him to the French interest, but
by contracting an intimate friendship with Strozzi,
who commanded the French army in Tuscany, he had imbibed a mortal antipathy to
the emperor as the great enemy to the liberty and independence of the Italian
states. Nor was the pope himself indisposed to receive impressions unfavorable
to the emperor. The opposition given to his election by the cardinals of the
Imperial faction, left in his mind deep resentment, which was heightened by the
remembrance of ancient injuries from Charles or his ministers.
Of
this his nephews took advantage, and employed various devices, in order to
exasperate him beyond a possibility of reconciliation. They aggravated every
circumstance which could be deemed any indication of the emperor's
dissatisfaction with his promotion; they read to him an intercepted letter, in
which Charles taxed the cardinals of his party with negligence or incapacity in
not having defeated Paul's election: they pretended, at one time, to have
discovered a conspiracy formed by the Imperial minister and Cosmo di Medici
against the pope's life; they alarmed him, at another, with accounts of a plot
for assassinating themselves. By these artifices, they kept his mind, which was
naturally violent, and become suspicious from old age, in such perpetual
agitation, as precipitated him into measures which otherwise he would have been
the first person to condemn. He seized some of the cardinals who were most
attached to the emperor, and confined them in the castle of St. Angelo; he
persecuted the Colonnas and other Roman barons, the
ancient retainers to the Imperial faction, with the utmost severity; and
discovering on all occasions, his distrust, fear, or hatred of the emperor, he
began at last to court the friendship of the French king, and seemed willing to
throw himself absolutely upon him for support and protection.
This
was the very point to which his nephews wished to bring him, as most favorable
to their ambitious schemes; and as the accomplishment of these depended on their
uncle's life, whose advanced age did not admit of losing a moment unnecessarily
in negotiations, instead of treating at secondhand with the French ambassador
at Rome, they prevailed on the pope to dispatch a person of confidence directly
to the court of France, with such overtures on his part as they hoped would not
be rejected. He proposed an alliance offensive and defensive between Henry and
the pope; that they should attack the duchy of Tuscany and the kingdom of
Naples with their united forces; and if their arms should prove successful,
that the ancient republican form of government should be reestablished in the
former, and the investiture of the latter should be granted to one of the French
king's sons, after reserving a certain territory which should be annexed to the
patrimony of the church, together with an independent and princely
establishment for each of the pope's nephews.
The
king, allured by these specious projects, gave a most favorable audience to the
envoy. But when the matter was proposed in council, the constable Montmorency,
whose natural caution and aversion to daring enterprises increased with age and
experience, remonstrated with great vehemence against the alliance. He put
Henry in mind how fatal to France every expedition into Italy had been during
three successive reigns, and if such an enterprise had proved too great for the
nation even when its strength and finances were entire, there was no reason to
hope for success, if it should be attempted now, when both were exhausted by
extraordinary efforts during wars, which had lasted, with little interruption,
almost half a century.
He
represented the manifest imprudence of entering into engagements with a pope of
fourscore, as any system which rested on no better foundation than his life,
must be extremely precarious, and upon the event of his death, which could not
be distant, the face of things, together with the inclination of the Italian
states, must instantly change, and the whole weight of the war be left upon the
king alone. To these considerations he added the near prospect which they now
bad of a final accommodation with the emperor, who, having taken the resolution
of retiring from the world, wished to transmit his kingdoms in peace to his
son; and he concluded with representing the absolute certainty of drawing the
arms of England upon France, if it should appear that the re-establishment of
tranquility in Europe was prevented by the ambition of its monarch.
These
arguments, weighty in themselves, and urged by a minister of great authority,
would probably have determined the king to decline any connection with the
pope. But the duke of Guise, and his brother the cardinal of Lorrain, who
delighted no less in bold and dangerous undertakings than Montmorency shunned
them, declared warmly for an alliance with the pope. The cardinal expected to
be entrusted with the conduct of the negotiations in the court of Rome to which
this alliance would give rise; the duke hoped to obtain the command of the army
which would he appointed to invade Naples; and considering themselves as
already in these stations, vast projects opened to their aspiring and unbounded
ambition. Their credit, together with the influence of the king's mistress, the
famous Diana of Poitiers, who was, at that time, entirely devoted to the
interest of the family of Guise, more than counterbalanced all Montmorency's
prudent remonstrances, and prevailed on an inconsiderate prince to listen to
the overtures of the pope's envoy.
The
cardinal of Lorrain, as he had expected, was immediately sent to Rome with full
powers to conclude the treaty, and to concert measures for carrying it into
execution. Before he could reach that city, the pope, either from reflecting on
the danger and uncertain issue of all military operations, or through the
address of the Imperial ambassador, who had been at great pains to soothe him,
had not only begun to lose much of the ardor with which he had commenced the
negotiation with France, but even discovered great unwillingness to continue
it. In order to rouse him from this fit of despondency, and to rekindle his
former rage, his nephews had recourse to the arts which they had already practised with so much success. They alarmed him with new
representations of the emperor's hostile intentions, with fresh accounts which
they had received of threats uttered against him by the Imperial ministers, and
with new discoveries which they pretended to have made of conspiracies formed,
and just ready to take effect against his life.
But
these artifices, having been formerly tried, would not have operated a second
time with the same force, nor have made the impression which they wished, if
Paul had not been excited by an offence of that kind which he was least able to
bear. He received advice of the recess of the diet of Augsburg, and of the
toleration which was thereby granted to the protestants; and this threw him at
once into such transports of passion against the emperor and the king of the
Romans, as carried him headlong into all the violent measures of his nephews.
Full of high ideas with respect to the papal prerogative, and animated with the
fiercest zeal against heresy, he considered the liberty of deciding concerning
religious matters, which had been assumed by an assembly composed chiefly of
laymen, as a presumptuous and unpardonable encroachment on that jurisdiction
which belonged to him alone; and regarded the indulgence which had been given
to the protestants as an impious act of that power which the diet had usurped.
He complained loudly of both to the Imperial ambassador.
He
insisted that the recess of the diet should immediately be declared illegal and
void. He threatened the emperor and king of the Romans, in case they should
either refuse or delay to gratify him in this particular, with the severest
effects of his vengeance. He talked in a tone of authority and command which
might have suited a pontiff of the twelfth century, when a papal decree was
sufficient to have shaken, or to have overturned, the throne of the greatest
monarch in Europe; which was altogether improper in that age, especially when
addressed to the minister of a prince who had so often made pontiffs more
formidable than Paul feel the weight of his power. The ambassador, however,
heard all his extravagant propositions and menaces with much patience, and
endeavored to soothe him, by putting him in mind of the extreme distress to
which the emperor had been reduced at Innsbruck, of the engagements which he
had come tinder to the protestants, in order to extricate himself, of the necessity
of fulfilling these, and of accommodating his conduct to the situation of his
affairs.
But
weighty as these considerations were, they made no impression on the mind of
the haughty and bigoted pontiff, who instantly replied that he would absolve
him by his apostolic authority from those impious engagements, and even command
him not to perform them; that in carrying on the cause of God and of the
church, no regard ought to be had to the maxims of worldly prudence and policy;
and that the ill success of the emperor's schemes in Germany might justly be
deemed a mark of the divine displeasure against him, on account of his having
paid little attention to the former, while he regulated his conduct entirely by
the latter. Having said this, he turned from the ambassador abruptly without
waiting for a reply.
His
nephews took care to applaud and cherish these sentiments, and easily wrought
up his arrogant mind, fraught with all the monkish ideas concerning the extent
of the papal supremacy, to such a pitch of resentment against the house of
Austria, and to such a high opinion of his own power, that he talked
continually of his being the successor of those who had deposed kings and
emperors; that he was exalted as head over them all, and would trample such as
opposed him under his feet. In this disposition the cardinal of Lorrain found
the pope, and easily persuaded him to sign a treaty [Dec. 15], which had for
its object the ruin of a prince, against whom be was so highly exasperated. The
stipulations in this treaty were much the same as had been proposed by the
pope’s envoy at Paris; and it was agreed to keep the whole transaction secret
until their united forces should be ready to take the field.
1556.]
Abdication of Charles V
During
the negotiation of this treaty at Rome and Paris, an event happened which
seemed to render the fears that had given rise to it vain, and the operations
which were to follow upon it unnecessary. This was the emperor's resignation of
his hereditary dominions to his son Philip; together with his resolution to
withdraw entirely from any concern in business or the affairs of this world, in
order that he might spend the remainder of his days in retirement and solitude.
Though it requires neither deep reflection nor extraordinary discernment to
discover that the state of royalty is not exempt from cares and disappointment;
though most of those who are exalted to a throne find solicitude, and satiety,
and disgust to be their perpetual attendants in that envied pre-eminence; yet
to descend voluntarily from the supreme to a subordinate station, and to
relinquish the possession of power in order to attain the enjoyment of
happiness, seems to be an effort too great for the human mind. Several
instances, indeed, occur in history, of monarchs who have quitted a throne, and
have ended their days in retirement. But they were either weak princes who took
this resolution rashly, and repented of it as soon as it was taken; or
unfortunate princes, from whose hands some stronger rival had wrested their scepter,
and compelled them to descend with reluctance into a private station.
Diocletian is perhaps the only prince capable of holding the reins of
government, whoever resigned them from deliberate choice, and who continued
during many years to enjoy the tranquility of retirement without fetching one
penitent sigh, or casting back one look of desire, towards the power or dignity
which he had abandoned.
No
wonder, then, that Charles's resignation should fill all Europe with
astonishment, and give rise, both among his contemporaries, and among the
historians of that period, to various conjectures concerning the motives which
determined a prince, whose ruling passion had been uniformly the love of power,
at the age of fifty-six when objects of ambition continue to operate with full
force on the mind, and are pursued with the greatest ardor, to take a
resolution so singular and unexpected. But while many authors have imputed it
to motives so frivolous and fantastical, as can hardly be supposed to influence
any reasonable mind; while other have imagined it to be the result of some
profound scheme of policy; historians more intelligent and better informed,
neither ascribe it to caprice, nor search for mysterious secrets of state,
where simple and obvious causes will fully account for the emperor's conduct.
Charles had been attacked early in life with the gout, and notwithstanding all
the precautions of the most skillful physicians, the violence of the distemper
increased as he advanced in age, and the fits became every year more frequent,
as well as more severe. Not only was the vigor of his constitution broken, but
the faculties of his mind were impaired by the excruciating torments which he
endured. During the continuance of the fits, he was altogether incapable of applying
to business, and even when they began to abate, as it was only at intervals
that he could attend to what was serious, he gave up a great part of his time
to trilling and even childish occupations, which served to relieve or to amuse
his mind, enfeebled and worn out with excess of pain Under these circumstances,
the conduct of such affairs as occurred of course, in governing so many
kingdoms, was a burden more than sufficient: but to push forward and complete
the vast schemes which the ambition of his more active years had formed, or to
keep in view and carry on the same great system of policy, extending to every
nation in Europe, and connected with the operations of every different court,
were functions which so far exceeded his strength, that they oppressed and
overwhelmed his mind. As he had been long accustomed to view the business of
every department, whether civil, or military, or ecclesiastical, with his own
eyes, and to decide concerning it according to his own ideas, it gave him the
utmost pain when he felt his infirmities increase so fast upon him, that he was
obliged to commit the conduct of all affairs to his ministers. He imputed every
misfortune which befell him, and every miscarriage that happened, even when the
former was unavoidable and the latter accidental, to his inability to take the
inspection of business himself. He complained of his hard fortune, in being
opposed, in his declining years, to a rival, who was in the full vigour of life, and that while Henry could take and execute
all his resolutions in person, he should now be reduced, both in council and in
action, to rely on the talents and exertions of other men. Having thus grown
old before his time, he wisely judged it more decent to conceal his infirmities
in some solitude, than to expose them any longer to the public eye; and
prudently determined not to forfeit the fame, or lose the acquisitions of his
better years, by struggling, with a vain obstinacy, to retain the reins of
government, when he was no longer able to hold their, with steadiness, or to
guide them with address.
But
though Charles had revolved this scheme in his mind for several years, and had
communicated it to his sisters the dowager queens of France and Hungary, who
not only approved of his intention, but offered to accompany him to whatever
place of retreat be should choose; several things had hitherto prevented his
carrying it into execution. He could not think of loading his son with the
government of so many kingdoms, until he should attain such maturity of age,
and of abilities, as would enable him to sustain that weighty burden. But as
Philip had now reached his twenty-eighth year, and had been early accustomed to
business, for which he discovered both inclination and capacity, it can hardly
be imputed to the partiality of paternal affection, that his scruples, with
regard to this point, were entirely removed; and that he thought he might place
his son, without further hesitation or delay, on the throne which he himself
was about to abandon. His mother's situation had been another obstruction in
his way. For although she had continued almost fifty years in confinement, and
under the same disorder of mind which concern for her husband's death had brought
upon her, yet the government of Spain was still invested in her jointly with
the emperor; her name was inserted together with his in all the public
instruments issued in that kingdom; and such was the fond attachment of the
Spaniards to her, that they would probably have scrupled to recognize Philip as
their sovereign, unless she had consented to assume him as her partner on the
throne. Her utter incapacity for business rendered it impossible to obtain her
consent. But her death, which happened this year, removed this difficulty; and
as Charles, upon that event, became sole monarch of Spain, it left the
succession open to his son. The war with France had likewise been a reason for
retaining the administration of affairs in his own hand, as he was extremely
solicitous to have terminated it, that he might have given up his kingdoms to
his son at peace with all the world. But as Henry had discovered no disposition
to close with any of his overtures, and had even rejected proposals of peace,
which were equal and moderate, in a tone that seemed to indicate a fixed purpose
of continuing hostilities, he saw that it was vain to wait longer in
expectation of an event, which, however desirable, was altogether uncertain.
As
this, then, appeared to be the proper juncture for executing the scheme which
he had long meditated, Charles resolved to resign his kingdoms to his son, with
a solemnity suitable to the importance of the transaction, and to perform this
last act of sovereignty with such formal pomp, as might leave a lasting
impression on the minds not only of his subjects but of his successor. With
this view he called Philip out of England, where the peevish temper of his
queen, which increased with her despair of having issue, rendered him extremely
unhappy; and the jealousy of the English left him no hopes of obtaining the
direction of their affairs. Having assembled the States of the Low-Countries at
Brussels, on the twenty-fifth of October, Charles seated himself, for the last
time, in the chair of state, on one side of which was placed his son, and on
the other his sister, the queen of Hungary, regent of the Netherlands, with a
splendid retinue of the princes of the empire and grandees of Spain standing
behind him. The president of the council of Flanders, by his command,
explained, in a few words, his intention in calling this extraordinary meeting
of the States. He then read the instrument of resignation, by which Charles
surrendered to his son Philip all his territories, jurisdiction, and authority
in the Low-Countries, absolving his subjects there from their oath of allegiance
to him, which he required them to transfer to Philip his lawful heir, and to
serve him won the same loyalty and zeal which they had manifested, during so
long a course of years, in support of his government.
Charles
then rose from his seat, and leaning on the shoulder of the prince of Orange,
because he was unable to stand without support, he addressed himself to the
audience, and from a paper which he held in his hand, in order to assist his
memory, he recounted, with dignity, but without ostentation, all the great
things which he had undertaken and performed since the commencement of his
administration. He observed, that from the seventeeth year of his age, he had dedicated all his thoughts and attention to public
objects, reserving no portion of his time for the indulgence of his ease, and
very little for the enjoyment of private pleasure; that either in a pacific or
hostile manner, he had visited Germany nine times, Spain six times, France four
times, Italy seven times, the Low-Countries ten times, England twice, Africa as
often, and had made eleven voyages by sea; that while his health permitted him
to discharge his duty, and the vigor of his constitution was equal, in any
degree, to the arduous office of governing such extensive dominions, he had
never shunned labor, nor repined under fatigue; that now, when his health was
broken, and his vigor exhausted by the rage of an incurable distemper, his
growing infirmities admonished him to retire, nor was he so fond of reigning,
as to retain the scepter in an impotent hand, which was no longer able to
protect his subjects or to secure to them the happiness which he wished they
should enjoy; that instead of a sovereign worn out with disease, and scarcely
half alive, he gave them one in the prime of life, accustomed already to
govern, and who added to the vigor of youth all the attention and sagacity of maturer years; that if, during the course of a long
administration, he had committed any material error in government, or if, under
the pressure of so many and great affairs, and amidst the attention which he
had been obliged to give to them, he had either neglected or injured any of his
subjects, he now implored their forgiveness; that, for his part, he should ever
retain a grateful sense of their fidelity and attachment, and would carry the
remembrance of it along with him to the place of his retreat, as his sweetest
consolation, as well as the best reward for all his services, and in his last
prayers to Almighty God would pour forth his most earnest petitions for their
welfare.
Then
turning towards Philip, who fell on his knees and kissed his father's hand,
“If” says he, “I had left you by death this rich inheritance, to which I have
made such large additions, some regard would have been justly due to my memory
on that account; but now, when I voluntarily resign to you, what I might have
still retained, I may well expect the warmest expressions of thanks on your
part. With these, however, I dispense, and shall consider your concern for the
welfare of your subjects, and your love of them, as the best and most
acceptable testimony of your gratitude to me.
It
is in your power, by a wise and virtuous administration, to justify the
extraordinary proof which I, this day, give of my paternal affection, and to
demonstrate that you are worthy of the confidence which I repose in you.
Preserve an inviolable regard for religion; maintain the catholic faith in its
purity; let the laws of your country be sacred in your eyes; encroach not on
the rights and privileges of your people; and if the time should ever come when
you shall wish to enjoy the tranquility of private life, may you have a son
endowed with such qualities, that you can resin your scepter to him with as
much satisfaction as I give up mine to you”.
As
soon as Charles had finished this long address to his subjects and to their new
sovereign, he sunk into the chair, exhausted and ready to faint with the
fatigue of such an extraordinary effort. During his discourse, the whole
audience melted into tears, some from admiration of his magnanimity, others
softened by the expressions of tenderness towards his son, and of love to his
people; and all were affected with the deepest sorrow at losing a sovereign,
who, during his administration, had distinguished the Netherlands, his native
country, with particular marks of his regard and attachment.
Philip
then arose from his knees, and after returning thanks to his father, with a low
and submissive voice, for the royal gift which his unexampled bounty had
bestowed upon him, he addressed the assembly of the States, and regretting his
inability to speak the Flemish language with such facility as to express what
he felt on this interesting occasion, as well as what be owed to his good
subjects in the Netherlands, he begged that they would permit Granvelle bishop
op of Arras to deliver what he had given him in charge to speak in his name.
Granvelle, in a long discourse, expatiated on the zeal with which Philip was
animated for the good of his subjects, on his resolution to devote all his time
and talents to the promoting of their happiness, and on his intention to
imitate his father's example in distinguishing the Netherlands with peculiar
marks of his regard. Maeis, a lawyer of great
eloquence, replied, in the name of the States, with large Professions of their
fidelity and affection to their new sovereign.
Then
Mary, queen-dowager of Hungary, resigned the regency with which she had been
entrusted by her brother during the space of twenty-five years. Next day [Jan.
6] Philip, in presence of the States, took the usual oaths to maintain the
rights and privileges of his subjects; and all the members, in their own name,
and in that of their constituents, swore allegiance to him.
Philip
the Second
A
few weeks after this transaction, Charles, in an assembly no less splendid, and
with a ceremonial equally pompous, resigned to his son the crowns of Spain,
with all the territories depending on them, both in the old and in the new
world. Of all these vast possessions, he reserved nothing for himself but an
annual pension of a hundred thousand crowns, to defray the charges of his
family, and to afford him a small sum for acts of beneficence and charity.
As
he had fixed on a place of retreat in Spain, hoping that the dryness of the air
and the warmth of the climate in that country might mitigate the violence of
his disease, which had been much increased by the moisture of the air and the
rigor of the winters in the Netherlands, he was extremely impatient to embark
for that kingdom, and to disengage himself entirely from business, which he
found to be impossible while he remained in Brussels. But his physicians
remonstrated so strongly against his venturing to sea at that cold and
boisterous season of the year, that he consented, though with reluctance, to
put off his voyage for some months.
By
yielding to their entreaties, he had the satisfaction, before he left the
Low-Countries, of taking a considerable step towards a peace with France, which
he ardently wished for, not only on his son's account, but that he might have
the merit, when quitting the world, of reestablishing that tranquility in
Europe, which he had banished out of it almost from the time that he had
assumed the administration of affairs. Previous to his resignation, commissioners
had been appointed by him and by the French king, in order to treat of an
exchange of prisoners. In their conference at the Abbey of Vaucelles,
near Cambray, an expedient was accidentally proposed for terminating
hostilities between the contending monarchs, by a long truce, during the
subsistence of which, and without discussing their respective claims, each
should retain what was now in his possession. Charles, sensible how much his kingdoms
were exhausted by the expensive and almost continual wars in which his ambition
had engaged him, and eager to gain for his son a short interval of peace. that
he might establish himself firmly on his throne, declared warmly for closing
with the overture, though manifestly dishonorable as well as disadvantageous;
and such was the respect due to his wisdom and experience, that Philip,
notwithstanding his unwillingness to purchase peace by such concessions, did
not presume to urge his opinion in opposition to that of his father.
Henry
could not have hesitated one moment about giving his consent to a truce on such
conditions, as would lease him in quiet possession of the greater part of the
duke of Savoy's dominions, together with the important conquests which he had
made on the German frontier. But it was no easy matter to reconcile such a step
with the engagements which he had come under to the pope in his late treaty
with him. The constable Montmorency, however, represented in such a striking
light the imprudence of sacrificing the true interests of his kingdom to these
rash obligations, and took such advantage of the absence of the cardinal of
Lorrain, who had seduced the king into his alliance with the Caraffas, that Henry, who was naturally fluctuating and
unsteady, and apt to be influenced by the advice last given him, authorized his
ambassadors [5th Feb.] to sign a treaty of truce with the emperor for five
years, on the terms which had been promised. But that he might not seem to have
altogether forgotten his ally the pope, who, he foresaw, would be highly exasperated,
he, in order to soothe him, took care that he should be expressly included in
the truce.
The
count of Lalain repaired to Blois, and the admiral
Coligny to Brussels, the former to be present when the king of France, and the
latter when the emperor and his son ratified the treaty and bound themselves by
oath to observe it.
When
an account of the conference at Vaucelles, and of the
conditions of truce which had been proposed there, were first carried to Rome,
it gave the pope no manner of disquiet. He trusted so much to the honor of the
French monarch, that he would not allow himself to think that Henry could
forget so soon, or violate so shamefully, all the stipulations in his league
with him. He had such a high opinion of the emperor’s wisdom, that he made no
doubt of his refusing his consent to a truce, on such unequal terms: and on
both these accounts he confidently pronounced that this, like many preceding
negotiations, would terminate in nothing. But later and more certain
intelligence soon convinced him that no reasoning in political affairs is more
fallacious, than, because an event is improbable, to conclude that it will not
happen. The sudden and unexpected conclusion of the truce filled Paul with
astonishment and terror. The cardinal of Lorrain durst not encounter that storm
of indignation, to which he knew that he should be exposed from the haughty
pontiff, who had so good reason to be incensed; but departing abruptly from
Rome, he left to the cardinal Tournon the difficult
task of attempting to soothe Paul and his nephews. They were fully sensible of
the perilous situation in which they now stood. By their engagements with
France, which were no longer secret, they had highly irritated Philip. They
dreaded the violence of his implacable temper. The duke of Alva, a minister
fitted, as well by his abilities as by the severity of his nature, for
executing all Philip's rigorous schemes, had advanced from Milan to Naples, and
began to assemble troops on the frontiers of the ecclesiastical state: while
they, if deserted by France, must not only relinquish all the hopes of dominion
and sovereignty to which their ambition aspired, but remained exposed to the
resentment of the Spanish monarch, without one ally to protect them against an
enemy with whom they were so little able to contend.
Under
these circumstances, Paul had recourse to the arts of negotiation and intrigue,
of which the papal court knows well how to avail itself in order to ward off
any calamity threatened by an enemy superior in power. He affected to approve
highly of the truce, as a happy expedient for putting a stop to the effusion of
Christian blood. He expressed his warmest wishes that it might prove the
forerunner of a definitive peace. He exhorted the rival princes to embrace this
favorable opportunity of setting on foot a negotiation for that purpose, and
offered, as their common father, to be mediator between them. Under this
pretext, he appointed cardinal Rebiba his nuncio to
the court of Brussels, and his nephew cardinal Caraffa to that of Paris. The
public instructions given to both were the same; that they should use their
utmost endeavors to prevail with the two monarchs to accept of the pope's
mediation, that, by means of it, peace might be reestablished, and measures
might be taken for assembling a general council. But under this specious
appearance of zeal for attaining objects so desirable in themselves, and so
becoming his sacred character to pursue, Paul concealed very different
intentions. Caraffa, besides his public instructions, received a private
commission to solicit the French king to renounce the treaty of truce, and to
renew his engagements with the holy see; and he was empowered to spare neither
entreaties, nor promises, nor bribes, in order to gain that point. This, both
the uncle and the nephew considered as the real end of the embassy; while the
other served to amuse the vulgar, or to deceive the emperor and his son. The
cardinal, accordingly, set out instantly for Paris [11th March], and travelled
with the greatest expedition, while Rebiba was
detained some weeks at Rome; and when it became necessary for him to begin his
journey, he received secret orders to protract it as much as possible, that the
issue of Caraffa’s negotiation might be known before
he might reach Brussels, and according to that, proper directions might be
given to him with regard to the tone which he should assume, in treating with
the emperor and his son.
Caraffa
made his entrance into Paris with extraordinary pomp: and having presented a consecrated
sword to Henry, as the protector on whose aid the pope relied in the present
exigency, he besought him not to disregard the entreaties of a parent in
distress, but to employ that weapon which he gave him in his defence. This he represented not only as a duty of filial
piety, but as an act of justice. As the pope, from confidence in the assistance
and support which his late treaty with France entitled him to expect, had taken
such steps as had irritated the king of Spain, he conjured Henry not to suffer
Paul and his family to be crushed under the weight of that resentment which
they had drawn on themselves merely by their attachment to France. Together
with this argument addressed to his generosity, he employed another which he
hoped would work on his ambition. He affirmed that now was the time, when, with
the most certain prospect of success, he might attack Philip’s dominions in
Italy; that the flower of the veteran Spanish hands had perished in the wars of
Hungary, Germany, and the Low-Countries; that the emperor had left his son an
exhausted treasury, and kingdoms drained of men; that he had no longer to
contend with the abilities, the experience, and good fortune of Charles, but
with a monarch scarcely seated on his throne, unpracticed in command, odious to
many of the Italian States, and dreaded by all. He promised that the pope, who
had already levied soldiers, would bring a considerable army into the field,
which, when joined by a sufficient number of French troops, might, by one brisk
and sudden effort, drive the Spaniards out of Naples, and add to the crown of
France a kingdom, the conquest of which had been the great object of all his
predecessors during half a century, and the chief motive of all their
expeditions into Italy.
July
31.] Every word Caraffa spoke made a deep impression on Henry; conscious on the
one hand, that the pope had just cause to reproach him with having violated the
laws not only of generosity but of decency, when he renounced his league with
him, and had agreed to the truce of Vaucelles; and
eager on the other hand, not only to distinguish his reign by a conquest which
three former monarchs had attempted without success, but likewise to acquire an
establishment of such dignity and value for one of his sons. Reverence, however,
for the oath, by which he had so lately confirmed the truce of Vaucelles; the extreme old age of the pope, whose death
might occasion an entire revolution in the political system of Italy; together
with the representations of Montmorency, who repeated all the arguments he had
used against the first league with Paul, and pointed out the great and
immediate advantages which France derived from the truce; kept Henry for some
time in suspense, and might possibly have outweighed all Caraffa’s arguments. But the cardinal was not such a novice in the arts of intrigue and
negotiation, as not to have expedients ready for removing or surmounting all
these obstacles. To obviate the king’s scruple with regard to his oath, he
produced powers from the pope, to absolve him from the obligation of it. By way
of security against any danger which he might apprehend from the pope's death,
he engaged that his uncle would make such a nomination of cardinals, as should
give Henry the absolute command of the next election, and enable him to place
in the papal chair a person entirely devoted to his interest.
In
order to counterbalance the effect of the constable's opinion and influence, he
employed not only the active talents of the duke of Guise, and the eloquence of
his brother the cardinal of Lorrain, but the address of the queen, aided by the
more powerful arts of Diana of Poitiers, who, unfortunately for France,
co-operated with Catherine in this point, though she took pleasure, on almost
every other occasion, to thwart and mortify her. They, by their united
solicitations, easily swayed the king, who leaned, of his own accord, to that
side towards which they wished him to incline. All Montmorency's prudent remonstrances
were disregarded; the nuncio absolved Henry from his oath; and he signed a new
league with the pope, which rekindled the flames of war both in Italy and in
the Low-Countries.
As
soon as Paul was informed by his nephew that there was a fair prospect of
succeeding in this negotiation, he despatched a
messenger after the nuncio Rebiba [July 31], with
orders to return to Rome, without proceeding to Brussels. As it was now no
longer necessary to preserve that tone of moderation, which suited the character
of a mediator, and which he had affected to assume, or to put any farther
restraint upon his resentment against Philip, he boldly threw of the mask, and
took such violent steps as rendered a rupture unavoidable. He seized and
imprisoned the Spanish envoy at his court. He excommunicated the Colonnas; and having deprived Mark Antonio, the head of
that family, of the dukedom of Paliano, he granted
that dignity, together with the territory annexed to it, to his nephew the
count of Montorio. He ordered a legal information to
be presented in the consistory of cardinals against Philip, setting forth that
he, notwithstanding the fidelity and allegiance due by him to the holy see, of
which he held the kingdom of Naples, had not only afforded a retreat in his dominions
to the Colonnas, whom the pope had excommunicated and
declared rebels, but had furnished them with arms, and was ready in conjunction
with them, to invade the ecclesiastical state in a hostile manner; that such
conduct in a vassal was to be deemed treason against his liege lord, the
punishment of which was the forfeiture of his fief. Upon this, the consistorial
advocate requested the pope to take cognizance of the cause, and to appoint a
day for hearing of it, when he would make good every article of the charge, and
expect from his justice that sentence which the heinousness of Philip's crimes
merited. Paul, whose pride was highly flattered with the idea of trying and
passing judgment on so great a king, assented to his request [July 27], and as
if it had been no less easy to execute than to pronounce such a sentence,
declared that he would consult with the cardinals concerning the formalities
requisite in conducting the trial.
But
while Paul allowed his pride and resentment to drive him on with such headlong
impetuosity, Philip discovered an amazing moderation on his part. He had been
taught by the Spanish ecclesiastics, who had the charge of his education, a
profound veneration for the holy see. This sentiment, which had been early
infused, grew up with him as he advanced in years, and took full possession of
his mind, which was naturally thoughtful, serious, and prone to superstition.
When he foresaw a rupture with the pope approaching, he had such violent
scruples with respect to the lawfulness of taking arms against the vicegerent
of Christ, and the common father of all Christians, that he consulted some
Spanish divines upon that point. They, with the usual dexterity of casuists in
accommodating their responses to the circumstances of those who apply to them
for direction, assured him that, after employing prayers and remonstrances in
order to bring the pope to reason, he had full right, both by the laws of
nature and of Christianity, not only to defend himself when attacked, but to
begin hostilities, if that were judged the most proper expedient for preventing
the effects of Paul's violence and injustice. Philip, nevertheless, continued
to deliberate and delay, considering it as a most cruel misfortune, that his
administration should open with an attack on a person, whose sacred function
and character he so highly respected.
At
last the duke of Alva, who, in compliance with his master's scruples, had
continued to negotiate long after he should have begun to act, finding Paul
inexorable, and that every overture of peace, and every appearance of
hesitation on his part, increased the pontiff's natural arrogance, took the
field [Sept. 5] and entered the ecclesiastical territories. His army did not
exceed twelve thousand men, but it was composed of veteran soldiers, and
commanded chiefly by those Roman barons, whom Paul's violence had driven into
exile. The valor of the troops, together with the animosity of their leaders,
who fought in their own quarrel, and to recover their own estates, supplied the
want of numbers. As none of the French forces were yet arrived, Alva soon
became master of the Campagna Romans; some cities being surrendered through the
cowardice of the garrisons, which consisted of raw soldiers, ill disciplined,
and worse commanded; the gates of others being opened by the inhabitants, who
were eager to receive back their ancient masters. Alva, that he might not be
taxed with impiety in seizing the patrimony of the church, took possession of
the towns which capitulated, in the name of the college of cardinals, to which,
or to the pope that should be chosen to succeed Paul, he declared that he would
immediately restore them.
The
rapid progress of the Spaniards, whose light troops made excursions even to the
gates of Rome, filled that city with consternation. Paul, though inflexible and
undaunted himself, was obliged to give way so far to the fears and
solicitations of the cardinals, as to send deputies to Alva in order to propose
a cessation of arms. The pope yielded the more readily, as he was sensible of a
double advantage which might be derived from obtaining that point. It would
deliver the inhabitants of Rome from their present terror, and would afford
time for the arrival of the succors which he expected from France. Nor was Alva
unwilling to close with the overture, both as he knew how desirous his master
was to terminate a war, which he had undertaken with reluctance, and as his
army was so much weakened by garrisoning the great number of towns which he had
reduced, that it was hardly in a condition to keep the field without fresh
recruits. A truce was accordingly concluded [Nov. 19], first for ten, and
afterwards for forty days, during which, various schemes of peace were
proposed, and perpetual negotiations were carried on, but with no sincerity on
the part of the pope. The return of his nephew the cardinal to Rome, the
receipt of a considerable sum remitted by the king of France, the arrival of
one body of French troops, together with the expectation of others which had
begun their march, rendered him more arrogant than ever, and banished all
thoughts from his mind, but those of war and revenge.
|