THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
BOOK
I.
FERDINAND, KING OF SPAIN
CHARLES
V was born at Ghent on the twenty-fourth day of February, in the year one
thousand five hundred. His father, Philip the Handsome, archduke of Austria,
was the son of the emperor Maximilian, and of Mary the only child of Charles
the Bold, the last prince of the house of Burgundy. His mother, Joanna, was the
second daughter of Ferdinand king of Aragon, and of Isabella queen of Castile.
A
long train of fortunate events had opened the way for this young prince to the
inheritance of more extensive dominions, than any European monarch, since
Charlemagne, had possessed. Each of his ancestors had acquired kingdoms or
provinces, towards which their prospect of succession was extremely remote. The
rich possessions of Mary of Burgundy had been destined for another family, she
having been contracted by her father to the only son of Louis XI of France; but
that capricious monarch, indulging his hatred to her family, chose rather to
strip her of part of her territories by force, than to secure the whole by
marriage; and by this misconduct, fatal to his posterity, he threw all the
Netherlands and Franche Compté into the hands of a rival. Isabella, the daughter of John II of Castile, far
from having any prospect of that noble inheritance which she transmitted to her
grandson, passed the early part of her life in obscurity and indigence. But the
Castilians, exasperated against her brother Henry IV, an ill-advised and
vicious prince, publicly charged him with impotence, and his queen with
adultery. Upon his demise, rejecting Joanna, whom Henry had uniformly, and even
on his death-bed, owned to be his lawful daughter, and whom an assembly of the
states had acknowledged to be the heir of his kingdom, they obliged her to
retire into Portugal, and placed Isabella on the throne of Castile. Ferdinand
owed the crown of Aragon to the unexpected death of his elder brother, and
acquired the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily by violating the faith of treaties,
and disregarding the ties of blood. To all these kingdoms, Christopher
Columbus, by an effort of genius and of intrepidity, the boldest and most
successful that is recorded in the annals of mankind, added a new world, the
wealth of which became one considerable source of the power and grandeur of the
Spanish monarchs.
Don
John, the only son of Ferdinand and Isabella, and their eldest daughter, the
queen of Portugal, being cut off, without issue, in the flower of youth, all
their hopes centred in Joanna and her posterity. But
as her husband, the archduke, was a stranger to the Spaniards, it was thought
expedient to invite him into Spain, that by residing among them, he might
accustom himself to their laws and manners; and it was expected that the
Cortes, or assembly of states, whose authority was then so great in Spain, that
no title to the crown was reckoned valid unless it received their sanction,
would acknowledge his right of succession, together with that of the infanta,
his wife. Philip and Joanna, passing through France in their way to Spain, were
entertained in that kingdom with the utmost magnificence. The archduke did
homage to Louis XII for the earldom of Flanders, and took his seat as a peer of
the realm in the parliament of Paris. They were received in Spain with every
mark of honor that the parental affection of Ferdinand and Isabella, or the
respect of their subjects, could devise; and their title to the crown was soon
after acknowledged by the Cortes of both kingdoms.
But
amidst these outward appearances of satisfaction and joy, some secret
uneasiness preyed upon the mind of each of these princes. The stately and
reserved ceremonial of the Spanish court was so burdensome to Philip, a prince,
young, gay, affable, fond of society and of pleasure, that he soon began to
express a desire of returning to his native country, the manners of which were
more suited to his temper. Ferdinand, observing the declining health of his
queen, with whose life he knew that his right to the government of Castile must
cease, easily foresaw, that a prince of Philip's disposition, and who already
discovered an extreme impatience to reign, would never consent to his retaining
any degree of authority in that kingdom; and the prospect of this diminution of
his power awakened the jealousy of that ambitious monarch.
Isabella
beheld, with the sentiments natural to a mother, the indifference and neglect
with which the archduke treated her daughter, who was destitute of those
beauties of person, as well as those accomplishments of mind, which fix the
affections of a husband. Her understanding, always weak, was often disordered.
She doated on Philip with such an excess of childish and indiscreet fondness,
as excited disgust rather than affection. Her jealousy, for which her husband’s
behavior gave her too much cause, was proportioned to her love, and often broke
out in the most extravagant actions. Isabella, though sensible of her defects,
could not help pitying her condition, which was soon rendered altogether
deplorable, by the archduke's abrupt resolution of setting out in the middle of
winter for Flanders, and of leaving her in Spain. Isabella entreated him not to
abandon his wife to grief and melancholy, which might prove fatal to her as she
was near the time of her delivery. Joanna conjured him to put off his journey
for three days only, that she might have the pleasure of celebrating the
festival of Christmas in his company. Ferdinand, after representing the
imprudence of his leaving Spain, before he had time to become acquainted with
the genius, or to gain the affections of the people, who were one day to be his
subjects, besought him, at least, not to pass through France, with which
kingdom he was then at open war. Philip, without regarding either the dictates
of humanity, or the maxims of prudence, persisted in his purpose; and on the
twenty-second of December set out for the Low Countries, by the way of France.
From
the moment of his departure, Joanna sunk into a deep and sullen melancholy, and
while she was in that situation bore Ferdinand her second son, for whom the
power of his brother Charles afterwards cured the kingdoms of Hungary and
Bohemia, and to whom he at last transmitted the imperial scepter. Joanna was the
only person in Spain who discovered no joy at the birth of this prince.
Insensible to that as well as to every other pleasure, she was wholly occupied
with the thoughts of returning to her husband; nor did she, in any degree,
recover tranquility of mind, until she arrived at Brussels next year.
Philip,
in passing through France, had an interview with Louis XII and signed a treaty
with him, by which he hoped that all the differences between France and Spain
would have been finally terminated. But Ferdinand, whose affairs, at that time,
were extremely prosperous in Italy, where the superior genius of Gonsalvo de Cordova, the great captain, triumphed on every
occasion over the arms of France, did not pay the least regard to what his
son-in-law had concluded, and carried on hostilities with greater ardor than
ever.
From
this time Philip seems not to have taken any part in the affairs of Spain,
waiting in quiet till the death either of Ferdinand or Isabella should open the
way to one of their thrones. The latter of these events was not far distant.
The untimely death of her son and eldest daughter had made a deep impression on
the mind of Isabella; and as she could derive but little consolation for the
losses which she had sustained either from her daughter Joanna, whose
infirmities daily increased, or from her son-in-law, who no longer preserved
even the appearance of a decent respect towards that unhappy princess, her
spirits and health began gradually to decline, and after languishing some
months, she died at Medina del Campo on the twenty-sixth of November one
thousand five hundred and four. She was no less eminent for virtue than for
wisdom; and whether we consider her behavior as a queen, as a wife, or as a
mother, she is justly entitled to the high encomiums bestowed on her by the
Spanish historians.
A
few weeks before her death, she made her last will, and being convinced of
Joanna’s incapacity to assume the reins of government into her own hands, and
having no inclination to commit them to Philip, with whose conduct she was
extremely dissatisfied, she appointed Ferdinand regent or administrator of the
affairs of Castile until her grandson Charles should attain the age of twenty.
She bequeathed to Ferdinand likewise one half of the revenues which should arise
from the Indies, together with the grand masterships of the three military
orders; dignities which rendered the person who possessed them almost
independent, and which Isabella had, for that reason, annexed to the crown. But
before she signed a deed so favorable to Ferdinand, she obliged him to swear
that he would not, by a second marriage, or by any other means, endeavor to
deprive Joanna or her posterity of their right of succession to any of his
kingdoms.
Immediately
upon the queen’s death, Ferdinand resigned the title of king of Castile, and
issued orders to proclaim Joanna and Philip the sovereigns of that kingdom.
But, at the same time, he assumed the character of regent, in consequence of
Isabella’s testament; and not long after he prevailed on the Cortes of Castile
to acknowledge his right to that office. This, however, he did not procure
without difficulty, nor without discovering such symptoms of alienation and
disgust among the Castilians as filled him with great uneasiness. The union of
Castile and Aragon, for almost thirty years, had not so entirely extirpated the
ancient and hereditary enmity which subsisted between the natives of these
kingdoms, that the Castilian pride could submit, without murmuring, to the
government of a king of Aragon. Ferdinand’s own character, with which the
Castilians were well acquainted, was far from rendering his authority
desirable. Suspicious, discerning, severe, and parsimonious, he was accustomed
to observe the minute actions of his subjects with a jealous attention, and to
reward their highest services with little liberality; and they were now
deprived of Isabella, whose gentle qualities, and partiality to her Castilian
subjects, often tempered his austerity, or rendered it tolerable. The maxims of
his government were especially odious to the grandees; for that artful prince,
sensible of the dangerous privileges conferred upon them by the feudal
institutions, had endeavored to curb their exorbitant power, by extending the
royal jurisdiction, by protecting their injured vassals, by increasing the
immunities of cities, and by other measures equally prudent. From all these
causes, a formidable party among the Castilians united against Ferdinand, and
though the persons who composed it had not hitherto taken any public step in
opposition to him, he plainly saw, that upon the least encouragement from their
new king, they would proceed to the most violent extremities.
There
was no less agitation in the Netherlands, upon receiving the accounts of
Isabella's death, and of Ferdinand’s having assumed the government of Castile.
Philip was not of a temper tamely to suffer himself to be supplanted by the
ambition of his father-in-law. If Joanna’s infirmities, and the nonage of
Charles, rendered them incapable of government, he, as a husband, was the
proper guardian of his wife, and, as a father, the natural tutor of his son.
Nor was it sufficient to oppose to these just rights, and to the inclination of
the people of Castile, the authority of a testament, the genuineness of which
was perhaps doubtful, and its contents to him appeared certainly to be
iniquitous. A keener edge was added to Philip’s resentment, and new vigour infused into his councils by the arrival of Don John
Manuel. He was Ferdinand’s ambassador at the Imperial court, but upon the first
notice of Isabella's death repaired to Brussels, flattering himself, that under
a young and liberal prince, he might attain to power and honors, which he could
never have expected in the service of an old and frugal master. He had early
paid court to Philip during his residence in Spain, with such assiduity as
entirely gained his confidence; and having been trained to business under
Ferdinand, could oppose his schemes with equal abilities, and with arts not
inferior to those for which that monarch was distinguished.
By
the advice of Manuel, ambassadors were despatched to
require Ferdinand to retire into Aragon, and to resign the government of
Castile to those persons whom Philip should intrust with it, until his own arrival in that kingdom. Such of the Castilian nobles as
had discovered any dissatisfaction with Ferdinand’s administration, were
encouraged by every method to oppose it. At the same time a treaty was
concluded with Louis XII by which Philip flattered himself, that he had secured
the friendship and assistance of that monarch.
Meanwhile,
Ferdinand employed all the arts of address and policy, in order to retain the
power of which he had got possession. By means of Conchillos,
an Aragonian gentleman, he entered into a private
negotiation with Joanna, and prevailed on that weak princess to confirm, by her
authority, his right to the regency. But this intrigue did not escape the
penetrating eye of Don John Manuel. Joanna’s letter of consent was intercepted; Conchillos was thrown into a dungeon; she herself
confined to an apartment in the palace, and all her Spanish domestics secluded
from her presence.
The
mortification which the discovery of this intrigue occasioned to Ferdinand was
much increased by his observing the progress which Philip’s emissaries made in
Castile. Some of the nobles retired to their castles; others to the towns in
which they had influence; they formed themselves into confederacies, and began
to assemble their vassals. Ferdinand’s court was almost totally deserted; not a
person of distinction but Ximenes, archbishop of Toledo, the duke of Alva, and
the marquis of Denia, remaining there; while the houses of Philip’s ambassadors
were daily crowded with noblemen of the highest rank.
Exasperated
at this universal defection, and mortified perhaps with seeing all his schemes
defeated by a younger politician, Ferdinand resolved, in defiance of the law of
nature, and of decency, to deprive his daughter and her posterity of the crown
of Castile, rather than renounce the regency of that kingdom. His plan for
accomplishing this was no less bold, than the intention itself was wicked. He
demanded in marriage Joanna, the supposed daughter of Henry IV on the belief of
whose illegitimacy Isabella’s right to the crown of Castile was founded: and by
reviving the claim of this princess, in opposition to which he himself had
formerly led armies and fought battles, he hoped once more to get possession of
the throne of that kingdom. But Emanuel, king of Portugal, in whose dominions
Joanna resided at that time, having married one of Ferdinand’s daughters by
Isabella, refused his consent to that unnatural match; and the unhappy princess
herself, having lost all relish for the objects of ambition, by being long
immured in a convent, discovered no less aversion to it.
The
resources, however, of Ferdinand’s ambition were not exhausted. Upon meeting
with a repulse in Portugal, he turned towards France, and sought in marriage
Germain de Foix, a daughter of the viscount of Narbonne, and of Mary, the
sister of Louis XII. The war which that monarch had carried on against
Ferdinand in Naples, had been so unfortunate, that he listened with joy to a
proposal, which furnished him with an honorable pretence for concluding peace; and though no prince was ever more remarkable than
Ferdinand for making all his passions bend to the maxims of interest, or become
subservient to the purposes of ambition, yet so vehement was his resentment
against his son-in-law, that the desire of gratifying it rendered him
regardless of every other consideration. In order to be revenged of Philip, by
detaching Louis from his interest, and in order to gain a chance of excluding
him from his hereditary throne of Aragon, and the dominions annexed to it, he
was ready once more to divide Spain into separate kingdoms, though the union of
these was the great glory of his reign, and had been the chief object of his
ambition; he consented to restore the Neapolitan nobles of the French faction
to their possessions and honors; and submitted to the ridicule of marrying in
an advanced age, a princess of eighteen.
The
conclusion of this match, which deprived Philip of his only ally, and
threatened him with the loss of so many kingdoms, gave him a dreadful alarm,
and convinced Don John Manuel that there was now a necessity of taking other
measures with regard to the affairs of Spain. He accordingly instructed the
Flemish ambassadors, in the court of Spain, to testify the strong desire which
their master had of terminating all differences between him and Ferdinand in an
amicable manner, and his willingness to consent to any conditions that would
reestablish the friendship which ought to subsist between a father and a
son-in-law. Ferdinand, though he had made and broken more treaties than any
prince of any age, was apt to confide so far in the sincerity of other men, or
to depend so much upon his own address and their weakness, as to be always
extremely fond of a negotiation. He listened with eagerness to these
declarations, and soon concluded a treaty at Salamanca [Nov. 24]; in which it
was stipulated, that the government of Castile should be carried on in the
joint names of Joanna, of Ferdinand, and of Philip; and that the revenues of
the crown, as well as the right of conferring offices, should be shared between
Ferdinand and Philip, by an equal division.
(1506)
Nothing, however, was farther from Philip’s thoughts than to observe this
treaty. His sole intention in proposing it was to amuse Ferdinand, and to
prevent him from taking any measures for obstructing his voyage into Spain. It
had that effect. Ferdinand, sagacious as he was, did not for some time suspect
his design; and though when he perceived it, he prevailed on the king of France
not only to remonstrate against the archduke’s journey, but to threaten
hostilities if he should undertake it; though he solicited the duke of Gueldres to attack his son-in-law’s dominions in the
Low-Countries, Philip and his consort nevertheless set sail with a numerous
fleet, and a good body of land forces. They were obliged, by a violent tempest,
to take shelter in England, where Henry VII, in compliance with Ferdinand’s
solicitations, detained them upwards of three months; at last they were permitted
to depart, and after a more prosperous voyage, they arrived in safety at
Corunna in Galicia [April 28], nor durst Ferdinand attempt, as he had once
intended, to oppose their landing by force of arms.
The
Castilian nobles, who had been obliged hitherto to conceal or to dissemble
their sentiments, now declared openly in favor of Philip. From every corner of
the kingdom, persons of the highest rank, with numerous retinues of their
vassals, repaired to their new sovereign. The treaty of Salamanca was universally
condemned, and all agreed to exclude from the government of Castile, a prince,
who by consenting to disjoin Aragon and Naples from that crown, discovered so
little concern for its true interests. Ferdinand, meanwhile, abandoned by
almost all the Castilians, disconcerted by their revolt, and uncertain whether
he should peaceably relinquish his power, or take arms in order to maintain it,
earnestly solicited an interview with his son-in-law, who, by the advice of
Manuel, studiously avoided it. Convinced at last, by seeing the number and zeal
of Philip’s adherents daily increase, that it was vain to think of resisting
such a torrent, Ferdinand consented, by treaty, to resign the regency of
Castile into the hands of Philip [June 27], to retire into his hereditary
dominions of Aragon, and to rest satisfied with the masterships of the military
orders, and that share of the revenue of the Indies, which Isabella had
bequeathed to him. Though an interview between the princes was no longer
necessary, it was agreed to on both sides from motives of decency. Philip repaired
to the place appointed, with a splendid retinue of Castilian nobles, and a
considerable body of armed men. Ferdinand appeared without any pomp, attended
by a few followers mounted on mules, and unarmed. On that occasion Don John
Manuel had the pleasure of displaying before the monarch, whom he had deserted,
the extensive influence which he had acquired over his new master: while
Ferdinand suffered, in presence of his former subjects, the two most cruel
mortifications which an artful and ambitious prince can feel; being at once
overreached in conduct, and stripped of power.
Not
long after [July], he retired into Aragon; and hoping that some favorable
accident would soon open the way for his return into Castile, he took care to
protest, though with great secrecy, that the treaty concluded with his
son-in-law, being extorted by force, ought to be deemed void of all obligation.
Philip
took possession of his new authority with a youthful joy. The unhappy Joanna,
from whom he derived it, remained, during all these contests, under the
dominion of a deep melancholy; she was seldom allowed to appear in public; her
father, though he had often desired it, was refused access to her; and Philip’s
chief object was to prevail on the Cortes to declare her incapable of government,
that an undivided power might be lodged in his hands, until his son should
attain unto full age. But such was the partial attachment of the Castilians to
their native princess, that though Manuel had the address to gain some members
of the Cortes assembled at Valladolid, and others were willing to gratify their
new sovereign in his first request, the great body of the representatives
refused their consent to a declaration which they thought so injurious to the
blood of their monarchs. They were unanimous, however, in acknowledging Joanna
and Philip, queen and king of Castile, and their son Charles prince o Asturias.
This
was almost the only memorable event during Philip’s administration. A fever put
an end to his life in the twenty-eighth year of his age [Sept. 25], when he had
not enjoyed the regal dignity, which he bad bee so eager to obtain, full three
months.
The
whole royal authority in Castile ought of course to have devolved upon Joanna.
But the shock occasioned by such a disaster so unexpected as the death of her
husband, completed the disorder of her understanding, and her incapacity for
government. During all the time of Philip’s sickness no entreaty could prevail
on her, though in the sixth month of her pregnancy, to leave him for a moment.
When he expired, however, she did not shed one tear, or utter a single groan.
Her grief was silent and settled. She continued to watch the dead body with the
same tenderness and attention as if it had been alive; and though at last she
permitted it to be buried, she soon removed it from the tomb to her own
apartment. There it was laid upon a bed of state, in a splendid dress; and
having heard from some monk a legendary tale of a king who revived after he had
been dead fourteen years, she kept her eyes almost constantly fixed in the
body, waiting for the happy moment of its return to life. Nor was this
capricious affection for her dead husband less tinctured with jealousy, than
that which she had borne to him while alive. She did not permit any of her female
attendants to approach the bed on which his corpse was laid; she would not
suffer any woman who did not belong to her family to enter the apartment; and
rather than grant that privilege to a midwife, though a very aged one had been
chosen on purpose, she bore the princess Catharine without any other assistance
than that of her own domestics.
A
woman in such a state of mind was little capable of governing a great kingdom;
and Joanna, who made it her role employment to bewail the loss, and to pray for
the soul of her husband, would have thought her attention to public affairs an
impious neglect of those duties which she owed to him. But though she declined
assuming the administration herself, yet by a strange caprice of jealousy, she
refused to commit it to any other person; and no entreaty of her subjects could
persuade her to name a regent, or even to sign such papers as were necessary
for the execution of justice, and the security of the kingdom.
The
death of Philip threw the Castilians into the greatest perplexity. It was
necessary to appoint a regent, both on account of Joanna’s frenzy, and the
infancy of her son; and as there was not among the nobles any person so
eminently distinguished, either by superiority in rink or abilities, as to be
called by the public voice to that high office, all naturally turned their eyes
either towards Ferdinand, or towards the emperor Maximilian. The former claimed
that dignity as administrator for his daughter, and by virtue of the testament
of Isabella; the latter thought himself the legal guardian of his grandson,
whom on account of his mother’s infirmity, he already considered as king of
Castile. Such of the nobility as had lately been most active in compelling
Ferdinand to resign the government of the kingdom, trembled at the thoughts of
his being restored so soon to his former dignity. They dreaded the return of a
monarch, not apt to forgive, and who, to those defects with which they were
already acquainted, added that resentment which the remembrance of their behavior,
and reflection upon his own disgrace, must naturally have excited. Though none
of these objections lay against Maximilian, he was a stranger to the laws and
manners of Castile; he had not either troops or money to support his
pretensions; nor could his claim be admitted without a public declaration of
Joanna’s incapacity for government, an indignity to which, notwithstanding the
notoriety of her distemper, the delicacy of the Castilians could not hear the
thoughts of subjecting her.
Don
John Manuel, however, and a few of the nobles, who considered themselves as
most obnoxious to Ferdinand’s displeasure, declared for Maximilian, and offered
to support his claim with all their interest. Maximilian, always enterprising
and decisive in council, though feeble and dilatory in execution, eagerly
embraced the offer. But a series of ineffectual negotiations was the only
consequence of this transaction. The emperor, as usual, asserted his rights in
a high strain, promised a great deal, and performed nothing.
A
few days before the death of Philip, Ferdinand had set out for Naples, that, by
his own presence, he might put an end, with greater decency, to the viceroyalty
of the great captain, whose important services, and cautious conduct, did not
screen him from the suspicions of his jealous master. Though an account of his
son-in-law's death reached him at Portofino, in the territories of Genoa, he
was so solicitous to discover the secret intrigues which he supposed the great
captain to have been carrying on, and to establish his own authority on a firm
foundation in the Neapolitan dominions, by removing him from the supreme
command there, that rather than discontinue his voyage, he chose to leave
Castile in a state of anarchy, and even to risk, by this delay, his obtaining
possession of the government of that kingdom.
Nothing
but the great abilities and prudent conduct of his adherents could have
prevented the bad effects of this absence. At the head of these was Ximenes,
Archbishop of Toledo, who, though he had been raised to that dignity by
Isabella, contrary to the inclination of Ferdinand, and though he could have no
expectation of enjoying much power under the administration of a master little
disposed to distinguish him by extraordinary marks of attention, was
nevertheless so disinterested as to prefer the welfare of his country before
his own grandeur, and to declare, that Castile could never be so happily
governed as by a prince, whom long experience had rendered thoroughly
acquainted with its true interest. The zeal of Ximenes to bring over his
countrymen to this opinion, induced him to lay aside somewhat of his usual
austerity and haughtiness. He condescended, on this occasion, to court the
disaffected nobles, and employed address, as well as arguments, to persuade
them. Ferdinand seconded his endeavors with great art; and by concessions to
some of the grandees, by promises to others, and by letters full of
complaisance to all, he gained many of his most violent opponents. Though many
cabals were formed, and some commotions were excited, yet when Ferdinand, after
having settled the affairs of Naples, arrived in Castile, Aug. 21, 1507, he
entered upon the administration without opposition. The prudence with which he
exercised his authority in that kingdom, equaled the good fortune by which he
had recovered it. By a moderate, but steady administration, free from
partiality and from resentment, he reconciled the Castilians to his person, and
secured to them, entirely, during the remainder of his life, as much domestic
tranquility as was consistent with the genius of the feudal government, which
still subsisted among them in full vigour.
Nor
was the preservation of tranquility in his hereditary kingdoms the only
obligation which the archduke Charles owed to the wise regency of his
grandfather; it was his good fortune, during that period, to have very
important additions made to the dominions over which he was to reign. On the
coast of Barbary, Oran, and other conquests of no small value, were annexed to
the crown of Castile by Cardinal Ximenes, who, with a spirit very uncommon in a
monk, led in person a numerous army against the Moors of that country; and with
a generosity and magnificence still more singular, defrayed the whole expense
of the expedition out of his own revenues. In Europe, Ferdinand, under pretences no less frivolous than unjust; as well as by
artifices the most shameful and treacherous, expelled John d’Albret,
the lawful sovereign, from the throne of Navarre; and, seizing on that kingdom,
extended the limits of the Spanish monarchy from the Pyrenees on the one hand,
to the frontiers of Portugal on the other.
It
was not, however, the desire of aggrandizing the archduke, which influenced
Ferdinand in this, or in any other of his actions. He was more apt to consider
that young prince as a rival, who might one day wrest out of his hands the
government of Castile, than as a grandson, for whose interest he was intrusted with the administration. This jealousy soon begot
aversion, and even hatred, the symptoms of which he was at no pains to conceal.
Hence proceeded his immoderate joy when his young queen was delivered of a son,
whose life would have deprived Charles of the crowns of Aragon, Naples, Sicily,
and Sardinia; and upon the untimely death of that prince, he discovered, for
the same reason, an excessive solicitude to have other children. This
impatience hastened, in all probability, the accession of Charles to the crown
of Spain. Ferdinand, in order to procure a blessing, of which, from his
advanced age, and the intemperance of his youth, he could have little prospect,
had recourse to his physicians, and by their prescription took one of those
potions, which are supposed to add vigour to the constitution,
though they more frequently prove fatal to it. This was its effect on a frame
so feeble and exhausted as that of Ferdinand; for though he survived a violent
disorder, which it at first occasioned, it brought on such an habitual languor
and dejection of mind, as rendered him averse from any serious attention to
public affairs, and fond of frivolous amusements, on which he had not hitherto
bestowed much time. Though he now despaired of having any son of his own, his
jealousy of the archduke did not abate, nor could he help viewing him with that
aversion which princes often bear to their successors. In order to gratify this
unnatural passion, he made a will, appointing prince Ferdinand, who, having
been born and educated in Spain, was much beloved by the Spaniards, to be
regent of all his kingdoms, until the arrival of the archduke his brother; and
by the same deed he settled upon him the grand-mastership of the three military
orders. The former of these grants might have put it in the power of the young
prince to have disputed the throne with his brother; the latter would, in any
event, have rendered him almost independent of him.
Ferdinand
retained to the last that jealous love of power, which was so remarkable
through his whole life. Unwilling even at the approach of death to admit a
thought of relinquishing any portion of his authority, he removed continually
from place to place, in order to fly from his distemper, or to forget it.
Though his strength declined every day, none of his attendants durst mention
his condition; nor would he admit his father confessor, who thought such
silence criminal and unchristian, into his presence. At last the danger became
so imminent, that it could be no longer concealed.
Ferdinand
received the intimation with a decent fortitude, and touched, perhaps, with
compunction at the injustice which he had done his grandson, or influenced by
the honest remonstrances of Carvajal, Zapata, and Vargas, his most ancient and
faithful counselors, who represented to him, that by investing prince Ferdinand
with the regency, he would infallibly entail a civil war on the two brothers,
and by bestowing on him the grand master ship of the military orders, would
strip the crown of its noblest ornament and chief strength, he consented to alter
his will with respect to both these particulars. By a new deed he left Charles
the sole heir of all his dominions, and allotted to prince Ferdinand, instead
of that throne of which he thought himself almost secure, an inconsiderable
establishment of fifty thousand ducats a year. He died a few hours after signing
this will, on the twenty-third day of January, one thousand five hundred and
sixteen.
(1516)
Charles, to whom such a noble inheritance descended by his death, was near the
full age of sixteen. He had hitherto resided in the Low Countries, his paternal
dominions. Margaret of Austria, his aunt, and Margaret of York, the sister of
Edward IV of England, and widow of Charles the Bold, two princesses of great
virtue and abilities, had the care of forming his early youth. Upon the death
of his father, the Flemings committed the government of the Low Countries to
his grandfather, the emperor Maximilian, with the name rather than the
authority of regent. Maximilian made choice of William de Croy lord of Chievres to superintend the education of the
young prince his grandson. That nobleman possessed, in an eminent degree, the
talents which fitted him for such an important office, and discharged the
duties of it with great fidelity. Under Chievres,
Adrian of Utrecht acted as preceptor. This preferment, which opened his way to
the highest dignities an ecclesiastic can attain, he owed not to his birth, for
that was extremely mean; nor to his interest, for he was a stranger to the arts
of a court: but to the opinion which his countrymen entertained of his
learning. He was indeed no inconsiderable proficient in those frivolous
sciences, which, during several centuries, assumed the name of philosophy, and
had published a commentary, which was highly esteemed, upon The Book of
Sentences, a famous treatise of Petrus Lombardus,
considered at that time as the standard system of metaphysical theology. But
whatever admiration these procured him in an illiterate age, it was soon found
that a man accustomed to the retirement of a college, unacquainted with the
world, and without any tincture of taste or elegance, was by no means qualified
for rendering science agreeable to a young, prince. Charles, accordingly,
discovered an early aversion to learning, and an excessive fondness for those
violent and martial exercises, to excel in which was the chief pride, and
almost the only study, of persons of rank in that age. Chievres encouraged this taste, either from a desire of gaining his pupil by indulgence,
or from too slight an opinion of the advantages of literary accomplishments. He
instructed him, however, with great care in the arts of government; he made him
study the history not only of his own kingdoms, but of those with which they
were connected; he accustomed him, from the time of his assuming the government
of Flanders in the year one thousand five hundred and fifteen to attend to
business; he persuaded him to peruse all papers relating to public affairs; to
be present at the deliberations of his privy-counselors, and to propose to them
himself those matters, concerning which he required their opinion. From such an
education, Charles contracted habits of gravity and recollection which scarcely
suited his time of life. The first openings of his genius did not indicate that
superiority which its maturer age displayed. He did
not discover in his youth the impetuosity of spirit which commonly ushers in an
active and enterprising manhood. Nor did his early obsequiousness to Chièvres,
and his other favorites, promise that capacious and decisive judgment, which
afterwards directed the affairs of one half of Europe. But his subjects,
dazzled with the external accomplishments of a graceful figure and manly
address, and viewing his character with that partiality which is always shown to
princes during their youth, entertained sanguine hopes of his adding luster to
those crowns which descended to him by the death of Ferdinand.
The
kingdoms of Spain, as is evident from the view which I have given of their
political constitution, were at that time in a situation which required an
administration no less vigorous than prudent. The feudal institutions, which
had been introduced into all its different provinces by the Goths, the Suevi,
and the Vandals, subsisted in great force. The nobles, who were powerful and
warlike, had long possessed all the exorbitant privileges which these
institutions vested in their order. The cities in Spain were more numerous and
more considerable, than the genius of feudal government, naturally unfavorable
to commerce and to regular police, seemed to admit. The personal rights, and
political influence, which the inhabitants of these cities had acquired, were
extensive. The royal prerogative, circumscribed by the privileges of the
nobility, and by the pretensions of the people, was confined within very narrow
limits. Under such a form of government, the principles of discord were many;
the bond of union was extremely feeble; and Spain felt not only all the
inconveniences occasioned by the defects in the feudal system, but was exposed
to disorders arising from the peculiarities in its own constitution.
During
the long administration of Ferdinand, no internal commotion, it is true, had
arisen in Spain. His superior abilities had enabled him to restrain the
turbulence of the nobles, and to moderate the jealousy of the commons. By the
wisdom of his domestic government, by the sagacity with which he conducted his
foreign operations, and by the high opinion which his subjects entertained of
both, he had preserved among them a degree of tranquility, greater than was
natural to a constitution, in which the seeds of discord and disorder were so
copiously mingled. But, by the death of Ferdinand, these restraints were at
once withdrawn; and faction and discontent, from being long repressed, were
ready to break out with fiercer animosity.
In
order to prevent these evils, Ferdinand had in his last will taken a most prudent precaution, by appointing cardinal
Ximenes, archbishop of Toledo, to be sole regent of Castile, until the arrival
of his grandson in Spain. The singular character of this man, and the
extraordinary qualities which marked him out for that office at such a
juncture, merit a particular description. He was descended of an honorable, not
of a wealthy family; and the circumstances of his parents, as well as his own
inclinations, having determined him to enter into the church, he early obtained
benefices of great value, and which placed him in the way of the highest
preferment. All these, however, he renounced at once; and after undergoing a
very severe noviciate, assumed the habit of St.
Francis in a monastery of Observantine friars, one of
the most rigid orders in the Romish church. There he soon became eminent for
his uncommon austerity of manners, and for those excesses of superstitious
devotion, which are the proper characteristics of the monastic life. But
notwithstanding these extravagances, to which weak and enthusiastic minds alone
are usually prone, his understanding, naturally penetrating and decisive,
retained its full vigour, and acquired him such great
authority in his own order, as raised him to be their provincial. His
reputation for sanctity soon procured him the office of father-confessor to
queen Isabella, which he accepted with the utmost reluctance. He preserved in a
court the same austerity of manners which had distinguished him in the
cloister. He continued to make all his journeys on foot; he subsisted only upon
alms; his acts of mortification were as severe as ever, and his penances as
rigorous. Isabella, pleased with her choice, conferred on him, not long after,
the archbishopric of Toledo, which, next to the papacy, is the richest dignity
in the church of Rome. This honor he declined with a firmness, which nothing
but the authoritative injunction of the pope was able to overcome. Nor did this
height of promotion change his manners. Though obliged to display in public
that magnificence which became his station, he himself retained his monastic
severity. Under his pontifical robes he constantly wore the coarse frock of St.
Francis, the rents in which be used to patch with his own hands. He at no time
used linen; but was commonly clad in hair-cloth. He slept always in his habit,
most frequently on the ground, or on boards, rarely in a bed. He did not taste
any of the delicacies which appeared at his table, but satisfied himself with
that simple diet which the rule of his order prescribed. Notwithstanding these
peculiarities, so opposite to the manners of the world, he possessed a thorough
knowledge of its affairs; and no sooner was he called by his station, and by
the high opinion which Ferdinand and Isabella entertained of him, to take a
principal share in the administration, than he displayed talents for business,
which rendered the fame of his wisdom equal to that of his sanctity. His
political conduct, remarkable for the boldness and originality of all his
plans, flowed from his real character, and partook both of its virtues and its
defects. His extensive genius suggested to him schemes vast and magnificent.
Conscious of the integrity of his intentions, he pursued these with unremitting
and undaunted firmness. Accustomed from his early youth to mortify his own
passions, he showed little indulgence towards those of other men. Taught by his
system of religion to check even his most innocent desires, he was the enemy of
everything to which he could affix the name of elegance or pleasure. Though
free from any suspicion of cruelty, he discovered, in all his commerce with the
world, a severe inflexibility of mind, and austerity of character, peculiar to
the monastic profession, and which can hardly be conceived in a country where
that is unknown.
Such
was the man to whom Ferdinand committed the regency of Castile; and though
Ximenes was then near fourscore, and perfectly acquainted with the labor and
difficulty of the office, his natural intrepidity of mind, and zeal for the
public good, prompted him to accept of it without hesitation. Adrian of
Utrecht, who had been sent into Spain a few months before the death of
Ferdinand, produced full powers from the archduke to assume the name and
authority of regent, upon the demise of his grandfather; but such was the
aversion of the Spaniards to the government of a stranger, and so unequal the
abilities of the two competitors, that Adrian’s claim would at once have been
rejected, if Ximenes himself, from complaisance to his new master, had not
consented to acknowledge him as regent, and to carry on the government in
conjunction with him. By this, however, Adrian acquired a dignity merely nominal.
Ximenes, though he treated him with great decency, and even respect, retained
the whole power in his own hands.
The
cardinal’s first care was to observe the motions of the infant Don Ferdinand,
who, having been flattered with so near a prospect of supreme power, bore the
disappointment of his hopes with greater impatience than a prince at a period
of life so early could have been supposed to feel. Ximenes, under pretence of providing more effectually for his safety,
removed him from Guadaloupe, the place in which he
had been educated, to Madrid, where he fixed the residence of the court. There
he was under the cardinal’s own eye, and his conduct, with that of his
domestics, was watched with the utmost attention.
The
first intelligence he received from the Low Countries, gave greater disquiet to
the cardinal, and convinced him how difficult a task it would be to conduct the
affairs of an unexperienced prince, under the influence of counselors
unacquainted with the laws and manners of Spain. No sooner did the account of
Ferdinand’s death reach Brussels, than Charles, by the advice of his Flemish
ministers, resolved to assume the title of king. By the laws of Spain, the sole
right to the crowns, both of Castile and Aragon, belonged to Joanna; and though
her infirmities disqualified her from governing, this incapacity had not been
declared by any public act of the Cortes in either kingdom: so that the
Spaniards considered this resolution, not only as a direct violation of their
privileges, but as an unnatural usurpation in a son on the prerogatives of a
mother, towards whom, in her present unhappy situation, he manifested a less
delicate regard than her subjects had always expressed. The Flemish court,
however, having prevailed both on the pope and on the emperor to address
letters to Charles as king of Castile; the former of whom, it was pretended,
had a right, as head of the church; and the latter, as head of the empire, to
confer this title; instructions were sent to Ximenes, to prevail on the
Spaniards to acknowledge it. Ximenes, though he had earnestly remonstrated
against the measure, as no less unpopular than unnecessary, resolved to exert
all his authority and credit in carrying it into execution, and immediately
assembled such of the nobles as were then at court. What Charles required was
laid before them; and when, instead of complying with his demands, they began
to murmur against such an unprecedented encroachment on their privileges, and
to talk high of the rights of Joanna, and their oath of allegiance to her,
Ximenes hastily interposed, and with that firm and decisive tone which was
natural to him, told them that they were not called now to deliberate, but to
obey; that their sovereign did not apply to them for advice, but expected
submission; and “this day”, added he, “Charles shall be proclaimed king of
Castile in Madrid; and the rest of the cities, I doubt not, will follow its
example”. On the spot he gave orders for that purpose [April 13]; and,
notwithstanding the novelty of the practice, and the secret discontents of many
persons of distinction, Charles’s title was universally recognized. In Aragon,
where the privileges of the subject were more extensive, and the abilities as
well as authority of the archbishop of Saragossa, whom Ferdinand had appointed
regent, were far inferior to those of Ximenes, the same obsequiousness to the
will of Charles did not appear, nor was he acknowledged there under any other
character but that of prince, until his arrival in Spain.
Ximenes,
though possessed only of delegated power, which from his advanced age he could
not expect to enjoy long, assumed, together with the character of regent, all
the ideas natural to a monarch, and adopted schemes for extending the regal
authority, which he pursued with as much intrepidity and ardor, as if he
himself had been to reap the advantages resulting from their success. The
exorbitant privileges of the Castilian nobles circumscribed the prerogative of
the prince within very narrow limits. These privileges the cardinal considered
as so many unjust extortions from the crown, and determined to abridge them.
Dangerous as the attempt was, there were circumstances in his situation which
promised him greater success than any king of Castile could have expected. His
strict and prudent economy of his archiepiscopal revenues furnished him with
more ready money than the crown could at any time command; the sanctity of his
manners, his charity and munificence, rendered him the idol of the people; and
the nobles themselves, not suspecting any danger from him, did not observe his
motions with the same jealous attention, as they would have watched those of
one of their monarchs.
Immediately
upon his accession to the regency, several of the nobles fancying that the reins
of government would of consequence be somewhat relaxed, began to assemble their
vassals, and to prosecute, by force of arms, private quarrels and pretensions,
which the authority of Ferdinand had obliged them to dissemble, or to
relinquish. But Ximenes, who had taken into pay a good body of troops, opposed
and defeated all their designs with unexpected vigour and facility; and though he did not treat the authors of these disorders with
any cruelty, he forced them to acts of submission, extremely mortifying to the
haughty spirit of Castilian grandees.
But
while the cardinal’s attacks were confined to individuals, and every act of
rigor was justified by the appearance of necessity, founded on the forms of
justice, and tempered with a mixture of lenity, there was scarcely room for jealousy
or complaint. It was not so with his next measure, which, by striking at a
privilege essential to the nobility, gave a general alarm to the whole order.
By the feudal constitution, the military power was lodged in the hands of the
nobles, and men of an inferior condition were called into the field only as
their vassals, and to follow their banners. A king, with scanty revenues, and a
limited prerogative, depended on these potent barons, in all his operations. It
was with their forces he attacked his enemies, and with them he defended his
kingdom. While at the head of troops attached warmly to their own immediate
lords, and accustomed to obey no other commands, his authority was precarious,
and his efforts feeble. From this state Ximenes resolved to deliver the crown;
and as mercenary standing armies were unknown under the feudal government, and
would have been odious to a martial and generous people, he issued a
proclamation, commanding every city in Castile to enroll a certain number of
its burgesses, in order that they might be trained to the use of arms on
Sundays and holydays; he engaged to provide officers to command them at the
public expense; and, as an encouragement to the private men, promised them an
exemption from all taxes and impositions. The frequent incursions of the Moors
from Africa, and the necessity of having some force always ready to oppose
them, furnished a plausible pretence for this
innovation. The object really in view was to secure the king a body of troops
independent of his barons, and which might serve to counterbalance their power.
The nobles were not slow in perceiving what was his intention, and saw how
effectually the scheme which he had adopted would accomplish his end; but as a
measure which had the pious appearance of resisting the progress of the
infidels was extremely popular, and as any opposition to it, arising from their
order alone, would have been imputed wholly to interested motives, they
endeavored to excite the cities themselves to refuse obedience, and to inveigh
against the proclamation as inconsistent with their charters and privileges. In
consequence of their instigations, Burgos, Valladolid, and several other
cities, rose in open mutiny. Some of the grandees declared themselves their
protectors. Violent remonstrances were presented to the king. His Flemish
counselors were alarmed. Ximenes alone continued firm and undaunted; and partly
by terror, partly by entreaty; by force in some instances, and by forbearance
in others; he prevailed on all the refractory cities to comply. During his
administration, he continued to execute his plan with vigour;
but soon after his death it was entirely dropped.
His
success in this scheme for reducing the exorbitant power of the nobility,
encouraged him to attempt a diminution of their possessions, which were no less
exorbitant. During the contests and disorders inseparable from the feudal
government, the nobles, ever attentive to their own interest, and taking
advantage of the weakness or distress of their monarchs, had seized some parts
of the royal demesnes, obtained grants of others, and having gradually wrested
almost the whole out of the hands of the prince, had annexed them to their own
estates. The titles, by which most of the grandees held these lands, were
extremely defective; it was from some successful usurpation, which the crown
had been too feeble to dispute, that many derived their only claim to
possession. An inquiry carried back to the origin of these encroachments, which
were almost coeval with the feudal system, was impracticable; and as it would
have stripped every nobleman in Spain of great part of his lands, it must have
excited a general revolt. Such a step was too bold, even for the enterprising
genius of Ximenes. He confined himself to the reign of Ferdinand; and beginning
with the pensions granted during that time, refused to make any farther
payment, because all right to them expired with his life. He then called to
account such as had acquired crown lands under the administration of that
monarch, and at once resumed whatever he had alienated. The effects of these
revocations extended to many persons of high rank; for though Ferdinand was a
prince of little generosity, yet he and Isabella having been raised to the
throne of Castile by a powerful faction of the nobles, they were obliged to
reward the zeal of their adherents with great liberality, and the royal
demesnes were their only fund for that purpose. The addition made to the
revenue of the crown by these revocations, together with his own frugal economy,
enabled Ximenes not only to discharge all the debts which Ferdinand had left,
and to remit considerable sums to Flanders, but to pay the officers of his new
militia, and to establish magazines net only more numerous, but better
furnished with artillery, arms, and warlike stores, than Spain had ever
possessed in any former age. The prudent and disinterested application of these
sums, was a full apology to the people for the rigor with which they were
exacted.
The
nobles, alarmed at these repeated attacks, began to think of precautions for
the safety of their order. Many cabals were formed, loud complaints were
uttered, and desperate resolutions taken; but before they proceeded to
extremities, they appointed some of their number to examine the powers in consequence
of which the cardinal exercised acts of such high authority. The admiral of
Castile, the duke de Infantado, and the Conde de
Benevento, grandees of the first rank, were entrusted with this commission.
Ximenes received them with cold civility, and in answer to their demand,
produced the testament of Ferdinand by which he was appointed regent, together
with the ratification of that deed by Charles. To both these they objected; and
he endeavored to establish their validity. As the conversation grew warm, he
led them insensibly towards a balcony, from which they had a view of a large
body of troops under arms, and of a formidable train of artillery. “Behold”,
says he, pointing to these and raising his voice, “the powers which I have
received from his Catholic majesty. With these I govern Castile; and with these
I will govern it, until the king your master and mine takes possession of his
kingdom”. A declaration so bold and haughty silenced them, and astonished their
associates. To take arms against a man aware of his danger, and prepared for
his defence, was what despair alone would dictate.
All thoughts of a general confederacy against the cardinal’s administration
were laid aside; and except from some slight commotions, excited by the private
resentment of particular noblemen, the tranquility of Castile suffered no
interruption.
It
was not only from the opposition of the Spanish nobility that obstacles arose
to the execution of the cardinal’s schemes; he had a constant struggle to
maintain with the Flemish ministers, who, presuming upon their favor with the
young king, aimed at directing the affairs of Spain, as well as those of their
own country. Jealous of the great abilities and independent spirit of Ximenes,
they considered him rather as a rival who might circumscribe their power, than
as a minister, who by his prudence and vigour was
adding to the grandeur and authority of their master. Every complaint against
his administration was listened to with pleasure by the courtiers in the
Low-Countries. Unnecessary obstructions were thrown by their means in the way
of all his measures; and though they could not, either with decency or safety,
deprive him of the office of regent, they endeavored to lessen his authority by
dividing it. They soon discovered that Adrian of Utrecht, already joined with
him in office, had neither genius nor spirit sufficient to give the least check
to his proceedings; and therefore Charles, by their advice, added to the
commission of regency La Chau, a Flemish gentleman, and afterwards Amerstorf, a nobleman of Holland; the former distinguished
for his address, the latter for his firmness. Ximenes, though no stranger to
the malevolent intention of the Flemish courtiers, received these new
associates with all the external marks of distinction due to the office with
which they were invested; but when they came to enter upon business, he abated
nothing of that air of superiority with which he had treated Adrian, and still
retained the sole direction of affairs. The Spaniards, more averse, perhaps,
than any other people, to the government of strangers, approved of all his
efforts to preserve his own authority. Even the nobles, influenced by this
national passion, and forgetting their jealousies and discontents, chose rather
to see the supreme power in the hands of one of their countrymen, whom they
feared, than in those of foreigners, whom they hated.
Ximenes,
though engaged in such great schemes of domestic policy and embarrassed by the
artifices and intrigues of the Flemish ministers, had the burden of two foreign
wars to support. The one was in Navarre, which was invaded by its unfortunate
monarch John d’Albret. The death of Ferdinand, the
absence of Charles, the discord and disaffection which reigned among the
Spanish nobles, seemed to present him with a favorable opportunity of
recovering his dominions. The cardinal’s vigilance, however, defeated a measure
so well concerted. As he foresaw the danger to which that kingdom might be
exposed, one of his first acts of administration was to order thither a
considerable body of troops. While the king was employed with one part of his
army in the siege of St. Jean Pied en Port, Villalva,
an officer of great experience and courage, attacked the other by surprise, and
cut it to pieces. The king instantly retreated with precipitation, and an end
was put to the war. But as Navarre was filled at that time with towns and
castles slightly fortified, and weakly garrisoned, which being unable to resist
an enemy, served only to furnish him with places of retreat; Ximenes, always
bold and decisive in his measures, ordered every one of these to be dismantled,
except Pampeluna, the fortifications of which he
proposed to render very strong. To this uncommon precaution Spain owes the
possession of Navarre. The French, since that period, have often entered, and
have as often overrun the open country; while they were exposed to all the
inconveniences attending an invading army, the Spaniards have easily drawn
troops from the neighboring provinces to oppose them; and the French having no
place of any strength to which they could retire, have been obliged repeatedly
to abandon their conquest with as much rapidity as they gained it.
The
other war which he carried on in Africa, against the famous adventurer Horuc Barbarossa, who, from a private corsair, raised
himself, by his singular valor and address, to be king of Algiers and Tunis,
was far from being equally successful. The ill conduct of the Spanish general,
and the rash valor of his troops, presented Barbarossa with an easy victory.
Many perished in the battle, more in the retreat, and the remainder returned
into Spain covered with infamy. The magnanimity, however, with which the
cardinal bore this disgrace, the only one he experienced during his
administration, added new luster to his character. Great composure of temper
under a disappointment was not expected from a man so remarkable for the
eagerness and impatience with which he urged an the execution of all his
schemes.
This
disaster was soon forgotten; while the conduct of the Flemish court proved the
cause of constant uneasiness, not only to the cardinal, but to the whole
Spanish nation. All the great qualities of Chièvres, the prime minister and
favorite of the young king, were sullied with an ignoble and sordid avarice.
The accession of his master to the crown of Spain, opened a new and copious
source for the gratification of this passion. During the time of Charles’s
residence in Flanders, the whole tribe of pretenders to offices or to favor
resorted thither. They soon discovered that, without the patronage of Chièvres,
it was vain to hope for preferment; nor did they want sagacity to find out the
proper method of securing his protection. Great sums of money were drawn out of
Spain. Everything was venal, and disposed of to the highest bidder. After the
example of Chièvres, the inferior Flemish ministers engaged in this traffic,
which became as general and avowed, as it was infamous. The Spaniards were
filled with rage when they beheld offices of great importance to the welfare of
their country, set to sail by strangers, unconcerned for its honor or its
happiness. Ximenes, disinterested in his whole administration, and a stranger,
from his native grandeur of mind, to the passion of avarice, inveighed with the
utmost boldness against the venality of the Flemings. He represented to the
king, in strong terms, the murmurs and indignation which their behavior excited
among a free and high spirited people, and besought him to set out without loss
of time for Spain, that, by his presence, he might dissipate the clouds which
were gathering all over the kingdom.
Charles
was fully sensible that be had delayed too long to take possession of his
dominions in Spain. Powerful obstacles, however, stood in his way, and detained
him in the Low-Countries. The war which the league of Cambray had kindled in
Italy, still subsisted; though during its course, the armies of all the parties
engaged in it had changed their destination and their objects. France was now
in alliance with Venice, which it had at first combined to destroy. Maximilian
and Ferdinand had for some years carried on hostilities against France, their
original ally, to the valor of whose troops the confederacy had been indebted
in a great measure for its success. Together with his kingdoms, Ferdinand
transmitted this war to his grandson; and there was reason to expect that
Maximilian, always fond of new enterprises, would persuade the had monarch to
enter into it with ardor. But the Flemings, who had long possessed an extensive
commerce, which, during the league of Cambray, had grown to a great height upon
the ruins of the Venetian trade, dreaded a rupture with France; and Chièvres,
sagacious to discern the true interest of his country, and not warped on this
occasion by his love of wealth, warmly declared for maintaining peace with the
French nation. Francis I destitute of allies, and solicitous to secure his late
conquests in Italy by a treaty, listened with joy to the first overtures of
accommodation. Chièvres himself conducted the negotiation in the name of
Charles. Goutlier appeared as plenipotentiary for
Francis. Each of them had presided over the education of the prince whom he
represented. They had both adopted the same pacific system; and were equally
persuaded that the union of the two monarchs was the happiest event for
themselves as well as for their kingdoms. In such hands the negotiation did not
languish. A few days after opening their conferences at Noyon, they concluded a
treaty of confederacy and mutual defence between the
two monarchs [Aug. 13], the chief articles in which were, that Francis should
give in marriage to Charles, his eldest daughter, the princess Louise, an
infant of a year old, and as her dowry, should make over to him all his claims
and pretensions upon the kingdom of Naples; that, in consideration of Charles’s
being already in possession of Naples, he should, until the accomplishment of
the marriage, pay a hundred thousand crowns a-year to the French king; and the
half of that sum annually as long as the princess had no children; that when
Charles shall arrive in Spain, the heirs of the king of Navarre may represent
to him their right to that kingdom; and if, after examining their claim, he
does not give them satisfaction, Francis shall be at liberty to assist them
with all his forces. This alliance not only united Charles and Francis, but
obliged Maximilian, who was unable alone to cope with the French and Venetians,
to enter into a treaty with those powers, which put a final period to the bloody
and tedious war that the league of Cambray had occasioned. Europe enjoyed a few
years of universal tranquility, and was indebted for that blessing to two
princes, whose rivalship and ambition kept it in
perpetual discord and agitation during the remainder of their reigns.
By
the treaty of Noyon, Charles secured a safe passage into Spain. It was not,
however, the interest of his Flemish ministers, that he should visit that
kingdom soon. While he resided in Flanders, the revenues of the Spanish crown were
spent there, and they engrossed, without any competitors, all the effects of
their monarch’s generosity; their country became the seat of government, and
all favors were dispensed by them. Of all these advantages they run the risk of
seeing themselves deprived, from the moment that their sovereign entered Spain.
The Spaniards would naturally assume the direction of their own affairs; the
Low-Countries would be considered only as a province of that mighty monarchy;
and they who now distributed the favors of the prince to others, must then be
content to receive them from the hands of strangers. But what Chièvres chiefly
wished to avoid was, an interview between the king and Ximenes. On the one
hand, the wisdom, the integrity, and the magnanimity of that prelate, gave him
a wonderful ascendant over the minds of men; and it was extremely probable,
that these great qualities, added to the reverence due to his age and office,
would command the respect of a young prince, who, capable of noble and generous
sentiments himself, would, in proportion to his admiration of the cardinal’s
virtues, lessen his deference towards persons of another character. Or, on the
other hand, if Charles should allow his Flemish favorites to retain all the influence
over his councils which they at present possessed, it was easy to foresee that
the cardinal would remonstrate loudly against such an indignity to the Spanish
nation, and vindicate the rights of his country with the same intrepidity and
success, with which he had asserted the prerogatives of the crown. For these
reasons, all his Flemish counselors combined to retard his departure; and
Charles, unsuspicious, from want of experience, and fond of his native country,
suffered himself to be unnecessarily detained in the Netherlands a whole year
after signing the treaty of Noyon.
The
repeated entreaties of Ximenes, the advice of his grandfather Maximilian, and
the impatient murmurs of his Spanish subjects, prevailed on him at last to
embark. He was attended not only by Chièvres, his prime minister, but by a
numerous and splendid train of the Flemish nobles, fond of beholding the
grandeur, or of sharing in the bounty of their prince. After a dangerous
voyage, he landed at Villa-Viciosa, in the province
of Asturias, [Sept. 121], and was received with such loud acclamations of joy,
as a new monarch, whose arrival was so ardently desired, had reason to expect.
The Spanish nobility resorted to their sovereign from all parts of the kingdom,
and displayed a magnificence which the Flemings were unable to emulate.
Ximenes,
who considered the presence of the king as the greatest blessing to his
dominions, was advancing towards the coast, as fast as the infirm state of his
health would permit, in order to receive him. During his regency, and notwithstanding
his extreme old age, he had abated, in no degree, the rigor or frequency of his
mortifications; and to these he added such laborious assiduity in business, as
would have worn out the most youthful and vigorous constitution. Every day he
employed several hours in devotion; he celebrated mass in person; he even
allotted some space for study. Notwithstanding these occupations, he regularly
attended the council; he received and read all papers presented to him, he
dictated letters and instructions; and took under his inspection all business,
civil, ecclesiastical, or military. Every moment of his time was filled up with
some serious employment. The only amusement in which he indulged himself, by
way of relaxation after business, was to canvass, with a few friars and other
divines, some intricate article in scholastic theology. Wasted by such a course
of life, the infirmities of age daily grew upon him. On his journey, a violent
disorder seized him at Bos Equillos, attended with
uncommon symptoms, which his followers considered as the effect of poison, but
could not agree whether the crime ought to be imputed to the hatred of the
Spanish nobles, or to the malice of the Flemish courtiers. This accident
obliged him to stop short, he wrote to Charles, and with his usual boldness
advised him, to dismiss all the strangers in his train, whose numbers and
credit gave offence already to the Spaniards, and would ere long alienate the
affections of the whole people. At the same time he earnestly desired to have
an interview with the king, that he might inform him of the state of the
nation, and the temper of his subjects. To prevent this, not only the Flemings,
but the Spanish grandees, employed all their address, and industriously kept Charles
at a distance from Aranda, the place to which the cardinal had removed. Through
their suggestions, every measure that he recommended was rejected; the utmost
care was taken to make him feel, and to point out to the whole nation, that his
power was on the decline; even in things purely trivial, such a choice was
always made, as was deemed most disagreeable to him. Ximenes did not bear this
treatment with his usual fortitude of spirit. Conscious of his own integrity
and merit, he expected a more grateful return from a prince, to whom he
delivered a kingdom more flourishing than it had been in any former age,
together with authority more extensive and better established than the most
illustrious of his ancestors had ever possessed. He could not, therefore, on
many occasions, refrain from giving vent to his indignation and complaints. He
lamented the fate of his country, and foretold the calamities which it would
suffer from the insolence, the rapaciousness, and ignorance of strangers. While
his mind was agitated by these passions, he received a letter from the king, in
which, after a few cold and formal expressions of regard, he was allowed to
retire to his dioceses; that after a life of such continued labor, he might end
his days in tranquility. This message proved fatal to Ximenes. His haughty
mind, it is probable, could not survive disgrace; perhaps his generous heart
could not bear the prospect of the misfortunes ready to fall on his country.
Whichsoever of these opinions we embrace, certain it is that he expired a few
hours after reading the letter [Nov. 8]. The variety, the grandeur, and the
success of his schemes, during a regency of only twenty months, leave it
doubtful, whether his sagacity in council, his prudence in conduct, or his
boldness in execution, deserve the greatest praise. His reputation is still
high in Spain, not only for wisdom, but for sanctity; and he is the only prime
minister mentioned in history, whom his contemporaries reverenced as a saint,
and to whom the people under his government ascribed the power of working
miracles.
(1518)
The Proclamation of Charles I of Spain
Soon
after the death of Ximenes, Charles made his public entry, with great pomp,
into Valladolid, whither be had summoned the Cortes of Castile. Though he assumed
on all occasions the name of king, that title had never been acknowledged in
the Cortes. The Spaniards considered Joanna as possessed of the sole right to
the crown, and no example of a son's having enjoyed the title of king during
the life of his parents occurring in their history, the Cortes discovered all
that scrupulous respect for ancient forms, and that aversion to innovation,
which are conspicuous in popular assemblies. The presence, however, of their
prince, the address, the artifices, and the threats of his ministers, prevailed
on them at last to proclaim him king, in conjunction with his mother, whose
name they appointed to be placed before that of her son in all public acts. But
when they made this concession, they declared, that if, at any future period,
Joanna should recover the exercise of reason, the whole royal authority should
return into her hands. At the same time, they voted a free gift of six hundred
thousand ducats, to be paid in three years, a sum more considerable than had
ever been granted to any former monarch.
Notwithstanding
this obsequiousness of the Cortes to the will of the king, the most violent
symptoms of dissatisfaction with his government began to break out in the
kingdom. Chièvres had acquired over the mind of the young monarch the
ascendant, not only of a tutor, but of a parent. Charles seemed to have no
sentiments but those which his minister inspired, and scarcely uttered a word
but what he put into his mouth. He was constantly surrounded by Flemings; no
person got access to him without their permission; nor was any admitted to
audience but in their presence. As he spoke the Spanish language very
imperfectly, his answers were always extremely short, and often delivered with
hesitation. From all these circumstances, many of the Spaniards were led to
believe, that he was a prince of a slow and narrow genius. Some pretended to
discover a strong resemblance between him and his mother, and began to whisper
that his capacity for government would never be far superior to hers; and
though they who had the best opportunity of judging concerning his character,
maintained, that notwithstanding such unpromising appearances, he possessed a
large fund of knowledge, as well as of sagacity; yet all agreed in condemning
his partiality towards the Flemings, and his attachment to his favorites, as
unreasonable and immoderate. Unfortunately for Charles, these favorites were
unworthy of his confidence. To amass wealth seems to have been their only aim:
and as they had reason to fear, that either their master’s good sense, or the
indignation of the Spaniards, might soon abridge their power, they hastened to
improve the present opportunity, and their avarice was the more rapacious,
because they expected their authority to be of no long duration. All honors,
offices, and benefices, were either engrossed by the Flemings, or publicly sold
by them. Chièvres, his wife, and Sauvage, whom
Charles, on the death of Ximenes, had imprudently raised to be Chancellor of
Castile, vied with each other in all the refinements of extortion and venality.
Not only the Spanish historians, who, from resentment, may be suspected of
exaggeration, but Peter Martyr Angleria, an Italian,
who resided at that time in the court of Spain, and who was under no temptation
to deceive the persons to whom his letters are addressed, gives a description
which is almost incredible, of the insatiable and shameless covetousness of the
Flemings. According to Angleria’s calculation, which
he asserts to be extremely moderate, they remitted into the Low-Countries, in
the space of ten months, no less a sum than a million and one hundred thousand
ducats. The nomination of William de Croy, Chièvres’
nephew, a young man not of canonical age, to the archbishopric of Toledo,
exasperated the Spaniards more than all these exactions. They considered the
elevation of a stranger to the head of their church, and to the richest
benefice in the kingdom, not only as an injury, but as an insult to the whole
nation; both clergy and laity, the former from interest, the latter from indignation,
joined in, exclaiming against it.
Charles
leaving Castile thus disgusted with his administration, set out for Saragossa,
the capital of Aragon, that he might be present in the Cortes of that kingdom.
On his way thither, he took leave of his brother Ferdinand, who he sent to
Germany on the pretence of visiting their
grandfather, Maximilian, in his old age. To this prudent precaution, Charles
owed the preservation of the Spanish dominions. During the violent commotions
which arose there soon after this period, the Spaniards would infallibly have
offered the crown to a prince, who was the darling of the whole nation; nor did
Ferdinand want ambition, or counselors, that might have prompted him to accept
of the offer.
The
Aragonese had not hitherto acknowledged Charles as king, nor would they allow
the Cortes to be assembled in his name, but in that of the Justiza,
to whom, during an interregnum, this privilege belonged. The opposition Charles
had to struggle with in the Cortes of Aragon, was more violent and obstinate
than that which he had overcome in Castile; after long delay’s, however, and
with much difficulty, he persuaded the members to confer on him the title of
king, in conjunction with his mother. At the same time he bound himself by that solemn oath, which the Aragonese exacted of their kings, never
to violate any of their rights or liberties. When a donative was demanded, the
members were still more intractable; many months elapsed before they would
agree to grant Charles two hundred thousand ducats, and that sum they
appropriated so strictly for paying the debts of the crown, which had long been
forgotten, that a very small part of it came into the king’s hands. What had
happened in Castile taught them caution, and determined them rather to satisfy
the claims of their fellow-citizens, how obsolete soever, than to furnish
strangers the means of enriching themselves with the spoils of their country.
During
these proceedings of the Cortes, ambassadors arrived at Saragossa from Francis
I and the young king of Navarre, demanding the restitution of that kingdom in
terms of' the treaty of Noyon. But neither Charles, nor the Castilian nobles
whom he consulted on this occasion, discovered any inclination to part with
this acquisition. A conference held soon after at Montpelier, in order to bring
this matter to an amicable issue, was altogether fruitless; while the French
urged the injustice of the usurpation, the Spaniards were attentive only to its
importance.
From
Aragon Charles proceeded (1519) to Catalonia, where he wasted as much time,
encountered more difficulties, and gained less money. The Flemings were now
become so odious in every province of Spain by their exactions, that the desire
of mortifying them, and of disappointing their avarice, augmented the jealousy
with which a free people usually conducted their deliberations.
The
Castilians, who had felt most sensibly the weight and rigor of the oppressive
schemes carried on by the Flemings, resolved no longer to submit with a
tameness fatal to themselves, and which rendered them the objects of scorn to
their fellow-subjects in the other kingdoms, of which the Spanish monarchy was
composed. Segovia, Toledo, Seville, and several other cities of the first rank,
entered into a confederacy for the defence of their
rights and privileges; and notwithstanding the silence of the nobility, who, on
this occasion, discovered neither the public spirit, nor the resolution which
became their order, the confederates laid before the king a full view of the
state of the kingdom, and of the maladministration of his favorites. The
preferment of strangers, the exportation of the current coin, the increase of
taxes, were the grievances of which they chiefly complained; and of these they
demanded redress with that boldness which is natural to a free people. These
remonstrances, presented at first at Saragossa, and renewed afterwards at
Barcelona, Charles treated with great neglect. The confederacy, however, of
these cities, at this juncture, was the beginning of that famous union among
the commons of Castile, which not long after threw the kingdom into such
violent convulsions as shook the throne, and almost overturned the
constitution.
Soon
after Charles’s arrival at Barcelona, he received the account of an event which
interested him much more than the murmurs of the Castilians, or the scruples of
the Cortes of Catalonia. This was the death of the emperor Maximilian [Jan.
12]; an occurrence of small importance in itself, for he was a prince conspicuous
neither for his virtues, nor his power, nor his abilities; but rendered by its
consequences more memorable than any that had happened during several ages. It
broke that profound and universal peace which then signed in the Christian
world; it excited a rivalship between two princes,
which threw all Europe into agitation, and kindled wars more general, and of
longer duration, than had hitherto been known in modern times.
The
revolutions occasioned by the expedition of the French king, Charles VIII into
Italy, had inspired the European princes with new ideas concerning the
importance of the Imperial dignity. The claims of the empire upon some of the
Italian states were numerous; its jurisdiction over others was extensive; and
though the former had been almost abandoned, and the latter seldom exercised,
under princes of slender abilities and of little influence, it was obvious,
that in the hands of an emperor possessed of power or of genius, they might be
employed as engines for stretching his dominion over the greater part of that
country. Even Maximilian, feeble and unsteady as his conduct always was, had
availed himself of the infinite pretensions of the empire, and had reaped
advantage from every war and every negotiation in Italy during his reign. These
considerations, added to the dignity of the station, confessedly the first
among Christian princes, and to the rights inherent in the office, which, if
exerted with vigour, were far from being
inconsiderable, rendered the Imperial crown more than ever an object of
ambition.
Charles
V of Germany, King of the Romans
Not
long before his death, Maximilian had discovered great solicitude to preserve
this dignity in the Austrian family, and to procure the king of Spain to be
chosen his successor. But he himself having never been crowned by the pope, a
ceremony deemed essential in that age, was considered only as emperor elect.
Though historians have not attended to that distinction, neither the Italian
nor German chancery bestowed any other title upon him than that of king of the
Romans; and no example occurring in history of any person's being chosen a
successor to a king of the Romans, the Germans, always tenacious of their
forms, and unwilling to confer upon Charles an office for which their
constitution knew no name, obstinately refused to gratify Maximilian in that
point.
By
his death, this difficulty was at once removed, and Charles openly aspired to
that dignity which his grandfather had attempted, without success, to secure
for him. At the same time Francis I, a powerful rival, entered the lists
against him; and the attention of all Europe was fixed upon this competition,
no less illustrious from the high rank of the candidates, than from the
importance of time prize for which they contended. Each of them urged his
pretensions with sanguine expectations, and with no unpromising prospect of
success. Charles considered the Imperial crown as belonging to him of right,
from its long continuance in the Austrian line; he knew that none of the German
princes possessed power or influence enough to appear as his antagonist; he
flattered himself that no consideration would induce the natives of Germany to
exalt any foreign prince to a dignity, which during so many ages had been
deemed peculiar to their own nation; and least of all, that they would confer
this honor upon Francis I, the sovereign of a people whose genius, and laws,
and manners, differed so widely from those of the Germans, that it was hardly
possible to establish any cordial union between them; he trusted not a little
to the effect of Maximilian’s negotiations, which, though they did not attain
their end, had prepared the minds of the Germans for his elevation to the
Imperial throne; but what he relied on as a chief recommendation, was the
fortunate situation of his hereditary dominions in Germany, which served as a
natural barrier to the empire against the encroachments of the Turkish power.
The conquests, the abilities, and the ambition of Sultan Selim II had spread
over Europe, at that time, a general and well-founded alarm. By his victories
over the Mamelukes, and the extirpation of that gallant body of men, he had not
only added Egypt and Syria to his empire, but had secured to it such a degree
of internal tranquility, that he was ready to turn against Christendom the whole
force of his arms, which nothing hitherto had been able to resist. The most
effectual expedient for stopping the progress of this torrent, seemed to be the
election of an emperor, possessed of extensive territories in that country,
where its first impression would be felt, and who, besides, could combat this
formidable enemy with all the forces of a powerful monarchy, and with all the
wealth furnished by the mines of the new world, or the commerce of the Low
Countries. These were the arguments by which Charles publicly supported his
claim; and to men of integrity and reflection, they appeared to be not only
plausible but convincing. He did not, however, trust the success of his cause
to these alone. Great sums of money were remitted from Spain; all the refinements
and artifice of negotiation were employed; and a considerable body of troops,
kept on foot, at that time, by the states of the Circle of Suabia,
was secretly taken into his pay. The venal were gained by presents; the objections
of the more scrupulous were answered or eluded; some feeble princes were
threatened and overawed.
On
the other hand, Francis supported his claim with equal eagerness, and no less
confidence of its being well founded. His emissaries contended that it was now
high time to convince the princes of the house of Austria that the Imperial
crown was elective, and not hereditary; that other persons might aspire to an
honor which their arrogance had accustomed them to regard as the property of
their family; that it required a sovereign of mature judgment, and of approved
abilities, to hold the reins of government in a country where such unknown
opinions concerning religion had been published, as had thrown the minds of men
into an uncommon agitation, which threatened the most violent effects; that a
young prince, without experience, and who had hitherto given no specimens of
his genius for command, was no fit match for Selim, a monarch grown old in the
art of war, and in the course of victory; whereas a king who in his early youth
had triumphed over the valor and discipline of the Swiss, till then reckoned
invincible, would be an antagonist not unworthy the conqueror of the East; that
the fire and impetuosity of the French cavalry, added to the discipline and stability
of the German infantry, would form an army so irresistible, that, instead of
waiting the approach of the Ottoman forces, it might carry hostilities into the
heart of their dominions; that the election of Charles would be inconsistent
with the fundamental constitution, by which the person who holds the crown of
Naples is excluded from aspiring to the Imperial dignity; that his elevation to
that honor would soon kindle a war in Italy, on account of his pretensions to
the duchy of Milan, the effects of which could not fail of reaching the empire,
and might prove fatal to it. But while the French ambassadors enlarged upon
these and other topics of the same kind, in all the courts of Germany, Francis,
sensible of the prejudices entertained against him as a foreigner, unacquainted
with the German language or manners, endeavored to overcome these, and to gain
the favor of the princes by immense gifts, and by infinite promises. As the
expeditious method of transmitting money, and the decent mode of conveying a
bribe, by bills of exchange, were then little known, the French ambassadors
travelled with a train of horses loaded with treasure, an equipage not very
honorable for that prince by whom they were employed, and infamous for those to
whom they were sent.
The
other European princes could not remain indifferent spectators of a contest,
the decision of which so nearly affected every one of them. Their common
interest ought naturally to have formed a general combination, in order to
disappoint both competitors, and to prevent either of them from obtaining such
a preeminence in power and dignity, as might prove dangerous to the liberties
of Europe. But the ideas with respect to a proper distribution and balance of
power were so lately introduced into the system of European policy, that they
were not hitherto objects of sufficient attention. The passions of some
princes, the want of foresight in others, and the fear of giving offence to the
candidates, hindered such a salutary union of the powers of Europe, and rendered
them either totally negligent of the public safety, or kept them from exerting
themselves with vigour in its behalf.
The
Swiss Cantons, though they dreaded the elevation of either of the contending
monarchs, and though they wished to have seen some prince whose dominions were
less extensive, and whose power was more moderate, seated on the Imperial
throne, were prompted, however, by their hatred of the French nation, to give
an open preference to the pretensions of Charles, while they used their utmost
influence to frustrate those of Francis.
The
Venetians easily discerned, that it was the interest of their republic to have
both the rivals set aside; but their jealousy of the house of Austria, whose
ambition and neighborhood had been fatal to their grandeur, would not permit
them to act up to their own ideas, and led them hastily to give the sanction of
their approbation to the claim of the French king.
It
was equally the interest, and more in the power of Henry VIII of England, to
prevent either Francis or Charles from acquiring a dignity which would raise
them so far above other monarchs. But though Henry often boasted that he held
the balance of Europe in his hand, he had neither the steady attention, the
accurate discernment, nor the dispassionate temper which that delicate function
required. On this occasion, it mortified his vanity so much, to think that he
had not entered early into that noble competition which reflected such honor
upon the two antagonists, that he took a resolution of sending an ambassador
into Germany, and of declaring himself a candidate for the Imperial throne. The
ambassador, though loaded with caresses by the German princes and the pope’s
nuncio, informed his master, that he could hope for no success in a claim which
he had been so late in preferring. Henry, imputing his disappointment to that
circumstance alone, and soothed with this ostentatious display of his own
importance, seems to have taken no farther part in the matter, either by
contributing to thwart both his rivals, or to promote one of them.
Leo
X, a pontiff no less renowned for his political abilities, than for his love of
the arts, was the only prince of the age who observed the motions of the two
contending monarchs with a prudent attention, or who discovered a proper
solicitude for the public safety. The imperial and papal jurisdiction
interfered in so many instances, the complaints of usurpation were so numerous
on both sides, and the territories of the church owed their security so little
to their own force, and so much to the weakness of the powers around them, that
nothing was so formidable to the court of Rome as an emperor with extensive
dominions, or of enterprising genius. Leo trembled at the prospect of beholding
the Imperial crown placed on the head of the king of Spain and of Naples and
the master of the new world; nor was he less afraid of seeing a king of France,
who was the duke of Milan and lord of Genoa, exalted to that dignity. He
foretold that the election of either of them would be fatal to the independence
of the holy see, to the peace of Italy, and perhaps to the liberties of Europe.
But to oppose them with any prospect of success, required address and caution
in proportion to the greatness of their power, and their opportunities of
taking revenge. Leo was defective in neither. He secretly exhorted the German
princes to place one of their own number on the Imperial throne, which many of
them were capable of filling with honor. He put them in mind of the
constitution by which the kings of Naples were forever excluded from that
dignity. He warmly exhorted the French king to persist in his claim, not from
any desire that he should gain his end, but as he foresaw that the Germans
would be more disposed to favor the king of Spain, he hoped that Francis
himself, when he discovered his own chance of success to be desperate, would be
stimulated by resentment and the spirit of rivalship,
to concur with all his interest in raising some third person to the head of the
empire; or, on the other hand, if Francis should make an unexpected progress,
he did not doubt but that Charles would be induced by similar motives to act
the same part; and thus, by a prudent attention, the mutual jealousy of the two
rivals might be so dexterously managed, as to disappoint both. But this scheme,
the only one which a prince in Leo’s situation could adopt, though concerted
with great wisdom, was executed with little discretion. The French ambassadors
in Germany fed their master with vain hopes; the pope’s nuncio, being gained by
them, altogether forgot the instructions which he had received; and Francis
persevered so long and with such obstinacy in urging his own pretensions, as
rendered all Leo’s measures abortive.
Such
were the hopes of the candidates, and the views of the different princes, when
the diet was opened according to form at Frankfort [June 17]. The right of
choosing an emperor had long been vested in seven great princes, distinguished
by the name of electors, the origin of whose office, as well as the nature and extent
of their powers, have already been explained. These were at that time, Albert
of Brandenburgh, archbishop of Mentz (Mayence); Herman count de Wied,
archbishop of Cologne; Richard de Grieffenklau,
archbishop of Triers; Lewis, king of Bohemia; Lewis, count palatine of the
Rhine; Frederic, duke of Saxony; and Joachim I, marquis of Brandenburgh.
Notwithstanding the artful arguments produced by the ambassadors of the two
kings in favor of their respective masters, and in spite of all their
solicitations, intrigues, and presents, the electors did not forget that maxim
on which the liberty of the German constitution was thought to be founded.
Among the members of the Germanic body, which is a great republic composed of
states almost independent, the first principle of patriotism is to depress and
limit the power of the emperor; and of this idea, so natural under such a form
of government, a German politician seldom loses sight. No prince of
considerable power, or extensive dominions, had for some ages been raised to
the Imperial throne. To this prudent precaution many of the great families in
Germany owed the splendor and independence which they had acquired during that
period. To elect either of the contending monarchs, would have been a gross
violation of that salutary maxim; would have given to the empire a master
instead of a head; and would have reduced themselves from the rank of being
almost his equals, to the condition of his subjects.
Full
of these ideas, all the electors turned their eyes towards Frederic, duke of
Saxony, a prince of such eminent virtue and abilities, as to be distinguished
by the name of the Sage, and with one voice they offered him the Imperial
crown. He was not dazzled with that object, which monarchs, so far superior to
him in power, courted with such eagerness; and after deliberating upon the
matter a short time, he rejected it with a magnanimity and disinterestedness no
less singular than admirable. “Nothing”, he observed, “could be more impolitic,
than an obstinate adherence to a maxim which, though sound and just in many
cases, was not applicable to all. In times of tranquility (said he) we wish for
an emperor who has not power to invade our liberties; times of danger demand
one who is able to secure our safety. The Turkish armies, led by a gallant and
victorious monarch, are now assembling . They are ready to pour in upon Germany
with a violence unknown in former ages. New conjunctures call for new
expedients. The Imperial scepter must be committed to some hand more powerful
than mine, or that of any other German prince. We possess neither dominions,
nor revenues, nor authority, which enables us to encounter such a formidable
enemy. Recourse must be had, in this exigency, to one of the rival monarchs.
Each of them can bring into the field forces sufficient for our defence. But as the king of Spain is of German extraction;
as he is a member and prince of the empire by the territories which descend to
him from his grandfather; as his dominions stretch along that frontier which
lies most exposed to the enemy; his claim is preferable, in my opinion, to that
of a stranger to our language, to our blood, and to our country; and therefore
I give my vote to confer on him the Imperial crown”.
This
opinion, dictated by such uncommon generosity, and supported by arguments so
plausible, made a deep impression on the electors. The king of Spain’s
ambassadors, sensible of the important service which Frederic had done their
master, sent him a considerable sum of money as the first token of that prince’s
gratitude. But he who had greatness of mind to refuse a crown, disdained to
receive a bribe; and, upon their entreating that at least he would permit them
to distribute part of that sum among his attendants, he replied “that he could
not prevent them from accepting what should be offered, but whoever took a
single florin should he dismissed next morning from his service”.
No
prince in Germany could now aspire to a dignity, which Frederic had declined,
for reasons applicable to them all. It remained to make a choice between the
two great competitors. But besides the prejudice in Charles’s favor arising
from his birth, as well as the situation of his German dominions, he owed not a
little to the abilities of the cardinal de Gurk, and
the zeal of Erard de la Mark, bishop of Liege, two of
his ambassadors, who had conducted their negotiations with more prudence and
address than those entrusted by the French king. The former, who had long been
the minister and favorite of Maximilian, was well acquainted with the art of
managing the Germans; and the latter, having been disappointed of a cardinal’s
hat by Francis, employed all the malicious ingenuity with which the desire of
revenge inspires an ambitious mind, in thwarting the measures of that monarch.
The Spanish party among the electors daily gained ground; and even the pope’s
nuncio, being convinced that it was vain to make any further opposition,
endeavored to acquire some merit with the future emperor, by offering
voluntarily, in the name of his master, a dispensation to hold the Imperial
crown in conjunction with that of Naples.
On
the twenty-eighth day of June, five months and ten days after the death of
Maximilian, this important contest, which had held an Europe in suspense, was
decided. Six of the electors had already declared for the king of Spain; and
the archbishop of Triers, the only firm adherent to the French interest, having
at last joined his brethren, Charles was, by the unanimous voice of the
electoral college, raised to the Imperial throne.
But
though the electors consented, from various motives, to promote Charles to that
high station, they discovered, at the same time, great jealousy of his
extraordinary power, and endeavored, with the utmost solicitude, to provide
against his encroaching on the privileges of the Germanic body. It had long
been the custom to demand of every new emperor a confirmation of these
privileges, and to require a promise that he would never violate them in any
instance. While princes, who were formidable neither from extent of territory,
nor of genius, possessed the Imperial throne, a general and verbal engagement
to this purpose was deemed sufficient. But under an emperor so powerful as
Charles, other precautions seemed necessary. A Capitulation or claim of right
was formed, in which the privileges and immunities of the electors, of the
princes of the empire, of the cities, and of every other member of the Germanic
body, are enumerated. This capitulation was immediately signed by Charles’s
ambassadors in the name of their master, and he himself, at his coronation,
confirmed it in the most solemn manner. Since that period, the electors have
continued to prescribe the same conditions to all his successors; and the
capitulation or mutual contract between the emperor and his subjects, is
considered in Germany as a strong barrier against the progress of the Imperial
power, and as the great charter of their liberties, to which they often appeal.
The
important intelligence of this election was conveyed in nine days from Frankfort
to Barcelona, where Charles was still detained by the obstinacy of the
Catalonian Cortes, which had not hitherto brought to an issue any of the
affairs which came before it. He received the account with the joy natural to a
young and aspiring mind, on an accession of power and dignity. which raised him
so far above the other princes of Europe. Then it was that those vast
prospects, which allured him during his whole administration, began to open,
and from this era we may date the formation, and are able to trace the gradual
progress, of a grand system of enterprising ambition, which renders the history
of his reign so worthy of attention.
The
Spanish Reaction
A
trivial circumstance first discovered the effects of this great elevation upon
the mind of Charles. In all the public writs which he now issued as king of
Spain, he assumed the title of Majesty, and required it from his subjects as a
mark of their respect. Before that time, all the monarchs of Europe were
satisfied with the appellation of Highness or Grace; but the vanity of other
courts soon led them to imitate the example of the Spanish. The epithet of
Majesty is no longer a mark of preeminence. The most inconsiderable monarchs in
Europe enjoy it, and the arrogance of the greater potentates has invented no
higher denomination.
The
Spaniards were far from viewing the promotion of their king to the Imperial
throne with the same satisfaction which he himself felt. To be deprived of the
presence of their sovereign, and to be subjected to the government of a viceroy
and his council, a species of administration often oppressive, and always
disagreeable, were the immediate and necessary consequences of this new
dignity. To see the blood of their countrymen shed in quarrels wherein the
nation had no concern; to behold its treasure wasted in supporting the splendor
of a foreign title; to be plunged in the chaos of Italian and German politics,
were effects of this event almost as unavoidable. From all these
considerations, they concluded, that nothing could have happened more pernicious
to the Spanish nation; and the fortitude and public spirit of their ancestors,
who, in the Cortes of Castile, prohibited Alphonso the Wise from leaving the
kingdom, in order to receive the Imperial crown, were often mentioned with the
highest praise, and pronounced to be extremely worthy of imitation at this
juncture.
But
Charles, without regarding the sentiments or murmurs of his Spanish subjects,
accepted of the Imperial dignity, which the count palatine, at the head of a
solemn embassy, offered him in the name of the electors [November]; and
declared his intention of setting out soon for Germany in order to take
possession of it. This was the more necessary, because, according to the Forms
of the German constitution, he could not, before the ceremony of a public
coronation, exercise any act of jurisdiction or authority.
Their
certain knowledge of this resolution augmented so much the disgust of the
Spaniards, that a sullen and refractory spirit prevailed among persons of all
ranks. The pope having granted the king the tenths of all ecclesiastical
benefices in Castile, to assist him in carrying on war with greater vigor
against the Turks, a convocation of the clergy unanimously refused to levy that
sum, upon pretence that it ought never to be exacted
but at those times when Christendom was actually invaded by the Infidels; and
though Leo, in order to support his authority, laid the kingdom under an
interdict, so little regard was paid to a censure which was universally deemed
unjust, that Charles himself applied to have it taken off. Thus the Spanish
clergy, besides their merit in opposing the usurpations of the pope, and
disregarding the influence of the crown, gained the exemption which they had
claimed.
The
commotions which arose in the kingdom of Valencia, annexed to the crown of
Aragon, were more formidable, and produced more dangerous and lasting effects.
A seditious monk having, by his sermons, excited the citizens of Valencia, the
capital city, to take arms, and to punish certain criminals in a tumultuary
manner, the people, pleased with this exercise of power, and with such a
discovery of their own importance, not only refused to lay down their arms, but
formed themselves into troops and companies, that they might be regularly
trained to martial exercises. To obtain some security against the oppression of
the grandees was the motive of this association, and proved a powerful bond of
union; for as the aristocratical privileges and independence were more complete
in Valencia than in any other of the Spanish kingdoms, the nobles, being
scarcely accountable for their conduct to any superior, treated the people not
only as vassals, but as slaves. They were alarmed, however, at the progress of
this unexpected insurrection, as it might encourage the people to attempt
shaking off the yoke altogether; but as they could not repress them without
taking arms, it became necessary to have recourse to the emperor, and to desire
his permission to attack them. At the same time the people made choice of
deputies to represent their grievances, and to implore the protection of their
sovereign. Happily for the latter, they arrived at court when Charles was
exasperated to a high degree against the nobility. As he was eager to visit
Germany, where his presence became every day more necessary, and as his Flemish
courtiers were still more impatient to return into their native country, that
they might carry thither the spoils which they had amassed in Castile, it was
impossible for him to hold the Cortes of Valencia in person. He had for that
reason empowered the Cardinal Adrian to represent him in that assembly, and in
his name to receive their oath of allegiance, to confirm their privileges with
the usual solemnities, and to demand of them a free gift. But the Valencian nobles,
who considered this measure as an indignity to their country, which was no less
entitled, than his other kingdoms, to the honor of their sovereign’s presence,
declared, that by the fundamental laws of the constitution they could neither
acknowledge as king a person who was absent, nor grant him any subsidy; and to
this declaration they adhered with a haughty and inflexible obstinacy. Charles,
piqued by their behavior, decided in favor of the people, and rashly authorized
them to continue in arms. The deputies returned in triumph, and were received
by their fellow-citizens as the deliverers of their country. The insolence of
the multitude increasing with their success, they expelled all the nobles out
of the city, committed the government to magistrates of their own election, and
entered into an association distinguished by the name of Germanada or Brotherhood, which proved the source not only of the wildest disorders, but
of the most fatal calamities in that kingdom.
Meanwhile,
the kingdom of Castile was agitated with no less violence. No sooner was the
emperor’s intention to leave Spain made known, than several cities of the first
rank resolved to remonstrate against it, and to crave redress once more of
those grievances which they had formerly laid before him. Charles artfully
avoided admitting their deputies to audience; and as he saw from this
circumstance how difficult it would be, at this juncture, to restrain the
mutinous spirit of the greater cities, he summoned the Cortes of Castile to
meet at Compostella, a town in Galicia. His only
reason for calling that assembly, was the hope of obtaining another donative;
for as his treasury had been exhausted in the same proportion that the riches
of his ministers increased, he could not, without some additional aid, appear
in Germany with splendor suited to the Imperial dignity. To appoint a meeting
of the Cortes in so remote a province, and to demand a new subsidy before the
time for paying the former was expired, were innovations of' a most dangerous
tendency; and among a people not only jealous of their liberties, but
accustomed to supply the wants of their sovereigns with a very frugal hand,
excited an universal alarm. The magistrates of Toledo remonstrated against both
these measures in a very high tone; the inhabitants of Valladolid, who expected
that the Cortes should have been held in that city, were so enraged, that they
took arms in a tumultuary manner; and if Charles, with his foreign counselors,
had not fortunately made their escape during a violent tempest, they would have
massacred all the Flemings, and have prevented him from continuing his journey
towards Compostella.
Every
city through which he passed, petitioned against holding a Cortes in Galicia, a
point with regard to which Charles was inflexible. But though the utmost
influence had been exerted by the ministers, in order to procure a choice of
representatives favorable to their designs, such was the temper of the nation,
that, at the opening of the assembly [April] there appeared among many of the
members unusual symptoms of ill-humor, which threatened a fierce opposition to
all the measures of the court. No representatives were sent by Toledo; for the
lot, according to which, by ancient custom, the election was determined in that
city, having fallen upon two persons devoted to the Flemish ministers, their
fellow-citizens refused to grant them a commission in the usual form, and in
their stead made choice of two deputies, whom they empowered to repair to Compostella, and to protest against the lawfulness of the
Cortes assembled there. The representatives of Salamanca refused to take the
usual oath of fidelity, unless Charles consented to change the place of
meeting. Those of Toro, Madrid, Cordova, and several other places, declared the
demand of another donative to be unprecedented, unconstitutional, and
unnecessary. All the arts, however, which influence popular assemblies, bribes,
promises, threats, and even force, were employed, in order to gain members. The
nobles, soothed by the respectful assiduity with which Chièvres and the other
Flemings paid court to them, or instigated by a mean jealousy of that spirit of
independence which they saw rising among the commons, openly favored the
pretensions of the court, or at the utmost did not oppose them, and at last, in
contempt not only of the sentiments of the nation, but of the ancient forms of
the constitution, a majority voted to grant the donative for which the emperor
had applied. Together with this grant, the Cortes laid before Charles a representation
of those grievances whereof his people complained, and in their name craved
redress; but he, having obtained from them all he could expect, paid no
attention to this ill-timed petition, which it was no longer dangerous to
disregard.
As
nothing now retarded his embarkation, he disclosed his intention with regard to
the regency of Castile during his absence, which he had hitherto kept secret,
and nominated cardinal Adrian to that office. The viceroyalty of Aragon he conferred
on Don John de Lanuza; that of Valencia on Don Diego de Mendoza, Conde de Melito. The choice of the two latter was universally
acceptable; but the advancement of Adrian, though the only Fleming who had
preserved any reputation among the Spaniards, animated the Castilians with new
hatred against foreigners; and even the nobles, who had so tamely suffered
other inroads upon the constitution, felt the indignity offered to their own
order by his promotion, and remonstrated against it as illegal. But Charles’s
desire of visiting Germany, as well as the impatience of his ministers to leave
Spain, were now so much increased, that without attending to the murmurs of the
Castilians, or even taking time to provide any remedy against an insurrection
in Toledo, which at that time threatened, and afterwards produced, most
formidable effects, he sailed from Corunna on the 22d of May and by setting out
so abruptly in quest of a new crown, he endangered a more important one of
which he was already in possession.
HENRY
VIII, OF THE UNITED KINGDOMS
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