THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
BOOK
3
KINGDOM
OF SPAIN.
THE
REVOLT OF THE COMUNEROS
CHARLES,
having had the satisfaction of seeing hostilities begun between France and
England, took leave of Henry, and arrived in Spain on the seventeenth of June
(1522). He found that country just beginning to recover order and strength
after the miseries of a civil war, to which it had been exposed during his
absence; an account of the rise and progress of which, as it was but little
connected with the other events which happened in Europe, had been reserved to
this place.
No
sooner was it known that the Cortes assembled in Galicia had voted the emperor
a free gift, without obtaining the redress of any one grievance, than it
excited universal indignation. The citizens of Toledo, who considered
themselves, on account of the great privileges which they enjoyed, as the
guardians of the liberties of the Castilian commons, finding that no regard was
paid to the remonstrances of their deputies against that unconstitutional grant,
took arms with tumultuary violence, and seizing the gates of the city, which
were fortified, attacked the alcazar, or castle, which they soon obliged the
governor to surrender. Emboldened by this success, they deprived of all
authority every person whom they suspected of any attachment to the court,
established a popular form of government, composed of deputies from the several
parishes in the city, and levied troops in their own defence.
The chief leader of the people in these insurrections was Don John de Padilla,
the eldest son of the commendator of Castile,
a young nobleman of a generous temper, of undaunted courage, and possessed of
the talents as well as of the ambition which, in times of civil discord, raise
men to power and eminence.
The
resentment of the citizens of Segovia produced effects still more fatal.
Tordesillas, one of the representatives in the late Cortes, had voted for the
donative, and being a bold and haughty man, ventured upon his return, to call
together his fellow-citizens in the great church, that he might give them,
according to custom, an account of his conduct in that assembly. But the
multitude, unable to bear his insolence, in attempting to justify what they
thought inexcusable, burst open the gates of the church, with the utmost fury,
and seizing the unhappy Tordesillas, dragged him through the streets, with a
thousand curses and insults, towards the place of public execution. In vain did
the dean and canons come forth in procession with the holy Sacrament, in order
to appease their rage. In vain did the monks of those monasteries by which they
passed, conjure them on their knees, to spare his life, or at least to allow
him time to confess, and to receive absolution of his sins. Without listening
to the dictates either of humanity or religion, they cried out “That the
hangman alone could absolve such a traitor to his country”; they then hurried
him along with greater violence; and perceiving that he had expired under their
hands, they hung him up with his head downwards on the common gibbet. The same
spirit seized the inhabitants of Burgos, Zamora, and several other cities; and
though their representatives, taking warning from the fate of Tordesillas, had
been so wise as to save themselves by a timely flight, they were burnt in
effigy, their houses razed to the ground, and their effects consumed with fire;
and such was the horror which the people had conceived against them, as
betrayers of the public liberty, that not one in those licentious multitudes
would touch anything, however valuable, which had belonged to them.
Adrian,
at that time regent of Spain, had scarcely, fixed the seat of his government at
Valladolid, when he was alarmed with an account of these insurrections. He
immediately assembled the privy council [June 5, 1520], to deliberate
concerning the proper method of suppressing them. The counselors differed in
opinion; some insisting that it was necessary to check this audacious spirit in
its infancy by a severe execution of justice; others advising to treat with lenity
a people who had some reason to be incensed, and not to drive them beyond all
the bounds of duty by an ill-timed rigor. The sentiments of the former being
warmly supported by the archbishop of Granada, president of the council, a
person of great authority, but choleric and impetuous, were approved by Adrian,
whose zeal to support his master’s authority hurried him into a measure, to
which, from his natural caution and timidity, he would otherwise have been
averse. He commanded Ronquillo, one of the king’s judges, to repair instantly
to Segovia, which had set the first example of mutiny, and to proceed against
the delinquents according to law; and lest the people should be so outrageous
as to resist his authority, a considerable body of troops were appointed to
attend him. The Segovians, foreseeing what they might
expect from a judge so well known for his austere and unforgiving temper, took arms
with one consent, and having mustered twelve thousand men, shut their gates
against him. Ronquillo, enraged at this insult, denounced them rebels and
outlaws, and his troops seizing all the avenues to the town, hoped that it
would soon be obliged to surrender for want of provisions. The inhabitants
however, defended themselves with vigor, and having received a considerable
reinforcement from Toledo, under the command of Padilla, attacked Ronquillo,
and forced him to retire with the loss of his baggage, and military chest.
Upon
this, Adrian ordered Antonio de Fonseca, whom the emperor had appointed
commander in chief of the forces in Castile, to assemble an army, and to
besiege Segovia in form. But the inhabitants of Medina del Campo, where
Cardinal Ximenes had established a vast magazine of military stores, would not
suffer him to draw from it a train of battering cannon, or to destroy their
countrymen with those arms which had been prepared against the enemies of the
kingdom. Fonseca, who could not execute his orders without artillery,
determined to seize the magazine by force; and the citizens standing on their defence, he assaulted the town with great briskness [Aug.
21]; but his troops were so warmly received, that, despairing of carrying the
place, he set fire to some of the houses, in hopes that the citizens would
abandon the walls, in order to save their families and effects. Instead of that
the expedient to which he had recourse served only to increase their fury, and
he was repulsed with great disgrace, while the flames, spreading from street to
street, reduced to ashes almost the whole town, one of the most considerable at
that time in Spain, and the great mart for the manufactures of Segovia and
several other cities. As the warehouses were then filled with goods for the
approaching fair, the loss was immense, and was felt universally. This, added
to the impression which such a cruel action made on a people long unaccustomed
to the horrors of civil war, enraged the Castilians almost to madness. Fonseca
became the object of general hatred, and was branded with the name of
incendiary, and enemy to his country. Even the citizens of Valladolid, whom the
presence of the cardinal had hitherto restrained, declared that they could no
longer remain inactive spectators of the sufferings of their countrymen. Taking
arms with no less fury than the other cities, they burnt Fonseca’s house to the
ground, elected new magistrates, raised soldiers, appointed officers to command
them, and guarded their walls with as much diligence as if an enemy had been
ready to attack them.
The
cardinal, though virtuous and disinterested, and capable of governing the
kingdom with honor, in times of tranquility, possessed neither the courage nor
the sagacity necessary at such a dangerous juncture. Finding himself unable to
check these outrages committed under his own eye, be attempted to appease the
people, by protesting that Fonseca had exceeded his orders, and had by his rash
conduct offended him, as much as he had injured them. This condescension, the
effect of irresolution and timidity, rendered the malcontents bolder and more
insolent; and the cardinal having soon afterwards recalled Fonseca, and
dismissed his troops, which he could no longer afford to pay, as the treasury,
drained by the rapaciousness of the Flemish ministers, had received no supply
from the great cities, which were all in arms, the people were left at full
liberty to act without control, and scarcely any shadow of power remained in
his hands.
Nor
were the proceedings of the commons the effects merely of popular and
tumultuary rage; they aimed at obtaining redress of their political grievances,
and an establishment of public liberty on a secure basis, objects worthy of all
the zeal which they discovered in contending for them. The feudal government in
Spain was at that time in a state more favorable to liberty than in any other
of the great European kingdoms. This was owing chiefly to the number of great
cities in that country, a circumstance I have already taken notice of, and
which contributes more than any other to mitigate the rigor of the feudal
institutions, and to introduce a more liberal and equal form of government. The
inhabitants of every city formed a great corporation, with valuable immunities
and privileges; they were delivered from a state of subjection and vassalage;
they were admitted to a considerable share in the legislature; they had
acquired the arts of industry, without which cities cannot subsist; they had
accumulated wealth, by engaging in commerce; and being free and independent
themselves, were ever ready to act as the guardians of the public freedom and
independence. The genius of the internal government established among the
inhabitants of cities, which, even in countries where despotic power prevails
most, is democratical and republican, rendered the
idea of liberty familiar and dear to them. Their representatives in the Cortes
were accustomed, with equal spirit, to check the encroachments of the king and
the oppression of the nobles. They endeavored to extend the privileges of their
own order; they labored to shake off the remaining encumbrances with which the
spirit of feudal policy, favorable only to the nobles, had burdened them; and,
conscious of being one of the most considerable orders in the state, were
ambitious of becoming the most powerful.
The
present juncture appeared favorable for pushing any new claim. Their sovereign
was absent from his dominions; by the ill conduct of his ministers he had lost
the esteem and affection of his subjects; the people, exasperated by many
injuries, had taken arms, though without concert, almost by general consent;
they were animated with rage capable of carrying them to the most violent
extremes; the royal treasury was exhausted; the kingdom destitute of troops;
and the government committed to a stranger, of great virtue indeed, but of
abilities unequal to such a trust. The first care of Padilla, and the other
popular leaders who observed and determined to improve these circumstances, was
to establish some form of union or association among the malcontents, that they
might act with greater regularity, and pursue one common end; and as the
different cities had been prompted to take arms by the same motives, and were
accustomed to consider themselves as a distinct body from the rest of the
subjects, they did not find this difficult. A general convention was appointed
to be held at Avila. Deputies appeared there in name of almost all the cities
entitled to have representatives in the Cortes. They all bound themselves, by
solemn oath, to live and die in the service of the king, and in defence of the privileges of their order; and assuming the
name of the holy Junta, or association, proceeded to deliberate concerning the
state of the nation, and the proper method of redressing its grievances. The
first that naturally presented itself, was the nomination of a foreigner to be
regent; this they declared with one voice to be a violation of the fundamental
laws of the kingdom, and resolved to send a deputation of their members to
Adrian, requiring him in their name to lay aside all the ensigns of his office,
and to abstain for the future from the exercise of a jurisdiction which they
had pronounced illegal.
Padilla
and the Junta
While
they were preparing to execute this bold resolution, Padilla accomplished an
enterprise of the greatest advantage to the cause. After relieving Segovia, he
marched suddenly to Tordesillas, [Aug. 29], the place where the unhappy queen
Joanna had resided since the death of her husband, and being favored by the
inhabitants, was admitted into the town, and became master of her person, for
the security of which Adrian had neglected to take proper precautions. Padilla
waited immediately upon the queen, and accosting her with that profound
respect, which she exacted from the few persons whom she deigned to admit into
her presence, acquainted her at large with the miserable condition of her
Castilian subjects under the government of her son, who being destitute of
experience himself, permitted his foreign ministers to treat them with such
rigor as had obliged them to take arms in defence of
the liberties of their country. The queen, as if she had been awakened out of a
lethargy, expressed great astonishment at what he said, and told him, that as
she had never heard, until that moment, of the death of her father, or known
the sufferings of her people, no blame could be imputed to her, but that now
she would take care to provide a sufficient remedy; and in the meantime, added
she, let it be your concern to do what is necessary for the public welfare.
Padilla, too eager in forming a conclusion agreeable to his wishes, mistook
this lucid interval of reason for a perfect return of that faculty; and
acquainting the Junta with what had happened, advised them to remove to
Tordesillas, and to hold their meetings in that place. This was instantly done;
but though Joanna received very graciously an address of the Junta, beseeching
her to take upon herself the government of the kingdom, and in token of her
compliance admitted all the deputies to kiss her hand; though she was present
at a tournament held on that occasion, and seemed highly satisfied with both
these ceremonies, which were conducted with great magnificence in order to
please her, she soon relapsed into her former melancholy and sullenness, and
could never be brought, by any arguments or entreaties, to sign any one paper
necessary for the dispatch of business.
The
Junta, concealing as much as possible this last circumstance, carried on all their
deliberations in the name of Joanna; and as the Castilians, who idolized the
name of Isabella, retained a wonderful attachment to her daughter, no sooner
was it known that she had consented to assume the reins of government, than the
people expressed the most universal and immoderate joy; and believing her
recovery to be complete, ascribed it to a miraculous interposition of Heaven,
in order to rescue their country from the oppression of foreigners. The Junta,
conscious of the reputation and power which they had acquired by seeming to act
under the royal authority, were no longer satisfied with requiring Adrian to resign
the office of regent; they detached Padilla to Valladolid with a considerable
body of troops, ordering him to seize such members of the council as were still
in that city, to conduct them to Tordesillas, and to bring away the seals of
the kingdom, the public archives, and treasury books. Padilla, who was received
by the citizens as the deliverer of his country, executed his commission with
great exactness; permitting Adrian, however, still to reside in Valladolid,
though only as a private person, and without any shadow of power.
The
emperor, to whom frequent accounts of these transactions were transmitted while
he was still in Flanders, was sensible of his own imprudence and that of his
ministers, in having despised too long the murmurs and remonstrances of the
Castilians. He beheld, with deep concern, a kingdom, the most valuable of any
he possessed, and in which lay the strength and sinews of his power, just ready
to disown his authority, and on the point of being plunged in all the miseries
of civil war. But though his presence might have averted this calamity, he
could not, at that time, visit Spain without endangering the Imperial crown,
and allowing the French king full leisure to execute his ambitious schemes. The
only point now to be deliberated upon, was, whether he should attempt to gain
the malcontents by indulgence and concessions, or prepare directly to suppress
them by force; and he resolved to make trial of the former, while, at the same
time, if that should fail of success, he prepared for the latter. For this
purpose, he issued circular letters to all the cities of Castile, exhorting
them in most gentle terms, and with assurances of full pardon, to lay down
their arms; he promised such cities as had continued faithful, not to exact
from them the subsidy granted in the late Cortes, and offered the same favor to
such as returned to their duty; he engaged that no office should be conferred
for the future upon any but native Castilians. On the other hand, he wrote to
the nobles, exciting them to appear with vigor in defence of their own rights, and those of the crown, against the exorbitant claims of
the commons; he appointed the high admiral Don Fabrique Enriquez, and the high constable of Castile, Don Iñigo de Velasco, two noblemen of great abilities as well as influence, regents of
the kingdom in conjunction with Adrian; and he gave them full power and
instructions, if the obstinacy of the malcontents should render it necessary,
to vindicate the royal authority by force of arms.
These
concessions, which, at the time of his leaving Spain, would have fully
satisfied the people, came now too late to produce any effect. The Junta, relying
on the unanimity with which the nation submitted to their authority, elated
with the success which had hitherto accompanied all their undertakings, and
seeing no military force collected to defeat or obstruct their designs, aimed
at a more thorough reformation of political abuses. They had been employed for
some time in preparing a remonstrance containing a large enumeration, not only
of the grievances of which they craved redress, but of such new regulations as
they thought necessary for the security of their liberties. This remonstrance,
which is divided into many articles relating to all the different members, of
which the constitution was composed, as well as the various departments in the
administration of government, furnishes us with more authentic evidence
concerning the intentions of the Junta, than can be drawn from the testimony of
the later Spanish historians, who lived in times when it became fashionable and
even necessary to represent the conduct of the malcontents in the worst light,
and as flowing from the worst motives. After a long preamble concerning the
various calamities under which the nation groaned, and the errors and
corruption in government to which these were to be imputed, they take notice of
the exemplary patience wherewith the people had endured them, until
self-preservation, and the duty which they owed to their country, had obliged
them to assemble, in order to provide in a legal manner for their own safety,
and that of the constitution. For this purpose, they demanded: that the king
would be pleased to return to his Spanish dominions and reside there, as all
their former monarchs had done; that he would not marry but with consent of the
Cortes; that if he should be obliged at any time to leave the kingdom, it shall
not be lawful to appoint any foreigner to be regent; that the present
nomination of cardinal Adrian to that office shall instantly be declared void;
that he would not, at his return, bring along with him any Flemings or other
strangers; that no foreign troops shall, on any pretence whatever, be introduced into the kingdom; that none but natives shall be
capable of holding any office or benefice either in church or state; that no
foreigner shall be naturalized; that free quarters shall not he granted to
soldiers, nor to the members of the king’s household, for any longer time than
six days, and that only when the court is in a progress; that all the taxes
shall be reduced to the same state they were in at the death of queen Isabella;
that all alienations of the royal demesnes or revenues since that queen’s death
shall be resumed; that all new offices created since that period shall be
abolished; that the subsidy granted by the late Cortes in Galicia, shall not be
exacted; that in all future Cortes each city shall send one representative of
the clergy, one of the gentry, and one of the commons, each to be elected by
his own order; that the crown shall not influence or direct any city with
regard to the choice of its representatives; that no member of the Cortes shall
receive an office or pension from the king, either for himself or for any of
his family, under pain of death, and confiscation of his goods; that each city
or community shall pay a competent salary to its representative, for his
maintenance during his attendance on the Cortes; that the Cortes shall assemble
once in three years at least, whether summoned by the king or not, and shall
then inquire into the observation of the articles now agreed upon, and
deliberate concerning public affairs; that the rewards which have been given or
promised to any of the members of the Cortes held in Galicia, shall be revoked;
that it shall be declared a capital crime to send gold, silver, or jewels out
of the kingdom; that judges shall have fixed salaries assigned them, and shall
not receive any share of the fines and forfeitures of persons condemned by
them; that no grant of the goods of persons accused shall be valid, if given
before sentence was pronounced against them; that all privileges which the
nobles have at any time obtained, to the prejudice of the commons, shall be
revoked; that the government of cities or towns shall not be put into the hands
of noblemen; that the possessions of the nobility shall be subject to all
public taxes in the same manner as those of the commons; that an inquiry be
made into the conduct of such as have been entrusted with the management of the
royal patrimony since the accession of Ferdinand; and if the king do not within
thirty days appoint persons properly qualified for that service, it shall he
lawful for the Cortes to nominate them; that indulgences shall not be preached
or dispersed in the kingdom until the cause of publishing them be examined and
approved of by the Cortes; that all the money arising from the sale of
indulgences shall be faithfully employed in carrying on war against the
infidels; that such prelates as do not reside in their dioceses six months in
the year, shall forfeit their revenues during the time they are absent; that
the ecclesiastical judges and their officers shall not exact greater fees than
those which are paid in the secular courts; that the present archbishop of
Toledo, being a foreigner, be compelled to resign that dignity, which shall be
conferred upon a Castilian; that the king shall ratify and hold, as good
service done to him and to the kingdom, all the proceedings of the Junta, and
pardon any irregularities which the cities may have committed from an excess of
zeal in a good cause: that he shall promise and swear in the most solemn manner
to observe all these articles, and on no occasion attempt either to elude, or
to repeal them; and that he shall never solicit the pope or any other prelate
to grant him a dispensation or absolution from this oath and promise.
Such
were the chief articles presented by the Junta to their sovereign. As the
feudal institutions in the several kingdoms of Europe were originally the same,
the genius of those governments which arose from them bore a strong resemblance
to each other, and the regulations which the Castilians attempted to establish
on this occasion, differ little from those which other nations have labored to
procure, in their struggles with their monarchs for liberty. The grievances
complained of, and the remedies proposed by the English commons in their
contests with the princes of the house of Stuart, particularly resemble those
upon which the Junta now insisted. But the principles of liberty seem to have
been better understood, at this period, by the Castilians, than by any other
people in Europe; they had acquired more liberal ideas with respect to their
own rights and privileges; they had formed more bold and generous sentiments
concerning government; and discovered an extent of political knowledge to which
the English themselves did not attain until more than a century afterwards.
It
is not improbable, however, that the spirit of reformation among the
Castilians, hitherto unrestrained by authority, and emboldened by success,
became too impetuous, and prompted the Junta to propose innovations which, by
alarming the other members of the constitution, proved fatal to their cause.
The nobles, who, instead of obstructing, had favored or connived at their
proceedings, while they confined their demands of redress to such grievances as
had been occasioned by the king’s want of experience, and by the imprudence and
rapaciousness of his foreign ministers, were filled with indignation when the
Junta began to touch the privileges of their order, and plainly saw that the
measures of the commons tended no less to break the power of the aristocracy,
than to limit the prerogatives of the crown. The resentment which they had
conceived on account of Adrian's promotion to the regency, abated considerably
upon the emperor’s raising the constable and admiral to joint power with him in
that office; and as their pride and dignity were less hurt by suffering the
prince to possess an extensive prerogative, than by admitting the high
pretensions of the people, they determined to give their sovereign the
assistance which he had demanded of them, and began to assemble their vassals
for that purpose.
The
Junta, meanwhile, expected with impatience the emperor’s answer to their
remonstrance, which they had appointed some of their number to present. The
members entrusted with this commission set out immediately for Germany [Oct.
20], but having received at different places certain intelligence from court,
that they could not venture to appear there without endangering their lives,
they stopped short in their Journey, and acquainted the Junta of the
information which had been given them. This excited such violent passions as
transported the whole party beyond all bounds of prudence or of moderation.
That a king of Castile should deny his subjects access into his presence, or
refuse to listen to their humble petitions, was represented as an act of
tyranny so unprecedented and intolerable, that nothing now remained but with
arms in their hands to drive away that ravenous band of foreigners which
encompassed the throne, who, after having devoured the wealth of the kingdom,
found it necessary to prevent the cries of an injured people from reaching the
ears of their sovereign. Many insisted warmly on approving a motion which had
formerly been made, for depriving Charles, during the life of his mother, of
the regal titles and authority which had been too rashly conferred upon him,
from a false supposition of her total inability for government. Some proposed
to provide a proper person to assist her in the administration of public
affairs, by marrying the queen to the prince of Calabria, the heir of the
Aragonese kings of Naples, who had been detained in prison since the time that
Ferdinand had dispossessed his ancestors of their crown. An agreed, that as the
hopes of obtaining redress and security, merely by presenting their requests to
their sovereign, had kept them too long in a state of inaction, and prevented
them from taking advantage of the unanimity with which the nation declared in
their favor, it was now necessary to collect their whole force, and to exert
themselves with vigour, in opposing this fatal
combination of the king and nobility against their liberties.
They
soon took the field with twenty thousand men. Violent disputes arose concerning
the command of this army. Padilla, the darling of the people and soldiers, was
the only person whom they thought worthy of this honor. But Don Pedro de Giron,
the eldest son of the Conde de Uruena, a young
nobleman of the first order, having lately joined the commons out of private
resentment against the emperor, the respect due to his birth, together with a
secret desire of disappointing Padilla, of whose popularity many members of the
Junta had become jealous, procured him the office of general [Nov. 23]; though
he soon gave them a fatal proof that he possessed neither the experience, the
abilities, nor the steadiness, which that important station required.
The
regents, meanwhile, appointed Rioseco as the place of
rendezvous for their troops, which, though far inferior to those of the commons
in number, excelled them greatly in discipline and in valor. They had drawn a
considerable body of regular and veteran infantry out of Navarre. Their
cavalry, which formed the chief strength of their army, consisted mostly of
gentlemen accustomed to the military life, and animated with the martial spirit
peculiar to their order in that age. The infantry of the Junta was formed
entirely of citizens and mechanics, little acquainted with the use of arms. The
small body of cavalry which they had been able to raise was composed of persons
of ignoble birth, and perfect strangers to the service into which they entered.
The character of the generals differed no less than that of their troops. The
royalists were commanded by the Conde de Haro, the
constable’s eldest son, an officer of great experience and of distinguished
abilities.
Giron
marched with his army directly to Rioseco, and
seizing the villages and passes around it, hoped that the royalists would be
obliged either to surrender for want of provisions, or to fight with
disadvantage before all their troops were assembled. But he had not the
abilities, nor his troops the patience and discipline, necessary for the
execution of such a scheme. The Conde de Haro found
little difficulty in conducting a considerable reinforcement through all his
posts into the town; and Giron, despairing of being able to reduce it, advanced
suddenly to Villapanda, a place belonging to the
constable, in which the enemy had their chief magazine of provisions. By this
ill-judged motion, he left Tordesillas open to the royalists, whom the Conde de Haro led thither in the night, with the utmost
secrecy and dispatch; and attacking the town [Dec. 5], in which Giron had left
no other garrison than a regiment of priests raised by the bishop of Zamora,
he, by break of day, forced his way into it after a desperate resistance,
became master of the queen's person, took prisoners many members of the Junta,
and recovered the great seal, with the other ensigns of government.
By
this fatal blow, the Junta lost all the reputation and authority which they had
derived from seeming to act by the queen's commands; such of the nobles as had
hitherto been wavering or undetermined in their choice, now joined the regents
with all their forces; and a universal consternation seized the partisans of
the commons. This was much increased by the suspicions they began to entertain
of Giron, whom they loudly accused of having betrayed Tordesillas to the enemy;
and though that charge seems to have been destitute of foundation, the success
of the royalists being owing to Giron’s ill conduct rather than to his
treachery, he so entirely lost credit with his party, that he resigned his
commission, and retired to one of his castles.
Such
members of the Junta as had escaped the enemy’s hands at Tordesillas, fled to
Valladolid; and as it would have required a long time to supply the places of
those who were prisoners by a new election, they made choice among themselves
of a small number of persons, to whom they committed the supreme direction of
affairs. Their army, which grew stronger every day by the arrival of troops
from different parts of the kingdom, marched likewise to Valladolid; and
Padilla being appointed commander in chief, the spirits of the soldiery
revived, and the whole party forgetting the late misfortune, continued to
express the same ardent zeal for the liberties of their country, and the same
implacable animosity against their oppressors.
What
they stood most in need of, was money to pay their troops. A great part of the
current coin had been carried out of the kingdom by the Flemings; the stated
taxes levied in times of peace were inconsiderable; commerce of every kind
being interrupted by the war, the sum which it yielded decreased daily; and the
Junta were afraid of disgusting the people by burdening them with new
impositions, to which, in that age, they were little accustomed. But from this
difficulty they were extricated by Donna Maria Pacheco, Padilla’s wife, a woman
of noble birth, of great abilities, of boundless ambition, and animated with
the most ardent zeal in support of the cause of the Junta. She, with a boldness
superior to those superstitious fears which often influence her sex, proposed
to seize all the rich and magnificent ornaments in the cathedral of Toledo; but
lest that action, by its appearance of impiety, might offend the people, she
and her retinue marched to the church in solemn procession, in mourning habits,
with tears in their eyes, beating their breasts, and falling on their knees, implored
the pardon of the saints whose shrines she was about to violate. By this
artifice, which screened her from the imputation of sacrilege, and persuaded
the people that necessity and zeal for a good cause had constrained her, though
with reluctance, to venture upon this action, she stripped the cathedral of
whatever was valuable, and procured a considerable supply of money for the Junta.
The regents, no less at a loss how to maintain their troops, the revenues of
the crown having either been dissipated by the Flemings, or seized by the
commons, were obliged to take the queen’s jewels, together with the plate
belonging to the nobility, and apply them to that purpose; and when those
failed, they obtained a small sum by way of loan from the king of Portugal.
The
nobility discovered great unwillingness to proceed to extremities with the
Junta. They were animated with no less hatred than the commons against the
Flemings; they approved much of several articles in the remonstrance; they
thought the juncture favorable, not only for redressing past grievances, but
for rendering the constitution more perfect and secure by new regulations; they
were afraid, that while the two orders, of which the legislature was composed,
wasted each other’s strength by mutual hostilities, the crown would rise to
power on the ruin or weakness of both, and encroach no less on the independence
of the nobles, than on the privileges of the commons. To this disposition were
owing the frequent overtures of peace which the regents made to the Junta, and
the continual negotiations they carried on during the progress of their
military operations. Nor were the terms which they offered unreasonable; for on
condition that the Junta would pass from a few articles most subversive of the
royal authority, or inconsistent with the rights of the nobility, they engaged
to procure the emperor’s consent to their other demands, which if he, through
the influence of evil counselors, should refuse, several of the nobles promised
to join with the commons in their endeavors to extort it. Such divisions,
however, prevailed among the members of the Junta, as prevented their
deliberating calmly, or judging with prudence. Some of the cities which had
entered into the confederacy, were filled with that mean jealousy and distrust
of each other, which rivalship in commerce or in
grandeur is apt to inspire; the constable, by his influence and promises, had
prevailed on the inhabitants of Burgos to abandon the Junta, and other noblemen
had shaken the fidelity of some of the lesser cities; no person had arisen
among the commons of such superior abilities or elevation of mind as to acquire
the direction of their affairs; Padilla, their general, was a man of popular
qualities, but distrusted for that reason by those of highest rank who adhered
to the Junta; the conduct of Giron led the people to view, with suspicion,
every person of noble birth who joined their party; so that the strongest marks
of irresolution, mutual distrust, and mediocrity of genius, appeared in all
their proceedings at this time. After many consultations held concerning the
terms proposed by the regents, they suffered themselves to be so carried away
by resentment against the nobility, that, rejecting all thoughts of
accommodation, they threatened to strip them of the crown lands, which they or
their ancestors had usurped, and to re-annex these to the royal domain. Upon
this preposterous scheme, which would at once have annihilated all the
liberties for which they had been struggling, by rendering the kings of Castile
absolute and independent on their subjects, they were so intent, that they now
exclaimed with less vehemence against the exactions of the foreign ministers,
than against the exorbitant power and wealth of the nobles, and seemed to hope
that they might make peace with Charles, by offering to enrich him with their
spoils.
The
success which Padilla had met with in several small encounters, and in reducing
some inconsiderable towns, helped to precipitate the members of the Junta into
this measure, filling them with such confidence in the valor of their troops,
that they hoped for an easy victory over the royalists. Padilla, that his army
might not remain inactive while flushed with good fortune, laid siege to Torrelobaton, a place of greater strength and importance
than any that he bad hitherto ventured to attack, and which was defended by a
sufficient garrison; and though the besieged made a desperate resistance, and
the admiral attempted to relieve them, he took the town by storm [March 1,
1531], and gave it up to be plundered by his soldiers. If he had marched
instantly with his victorious army to Tordesillas, the headquarters of the
royalists, he could hardly have failed of making an effectual impression on
their troops, whom he would have found in astonishment at the briskness of his
operations, and far from being of sufficient strength to give him battle. But
the fickleness and imprudence of the Junta prevented his taking this step.
Incapable, like all popular associations, either of carrying on war or of
making peace, they listened again to overtures of accommodation, and even
agreed to a short suspension of arms. This negotiation terminated in nothing;
but while it was carrying on, many of Padilla’s soldiers, unacquainted with the
restraints of discipline, went off with the booty which they had got at Torrelobaton; and others, wearied out by the unusual length
of the campaign, deserted. The constable too had leisure to assemble his forces
at Burgos, and to prepare everything for taking the field; and as soon as the
truce expired he effected a junction with the Conde de Haro,
in spite of all Padilla’s efforts to prevent it. They advanced immediately
towards Torrelobaton; and Padilla, finding the number
of his troops so diminished that he durst not risk a battle, attempted to
retreat to Toro, which, if he could have accomplished, the invasion of Navarre
at that juncture by the French, and the necessity which the regents must have
been under of detaching men to that kingdom, might have saved him from danger.
But Haro, sensible how fatal the consequences would
be of suffering him to escape, marched with such rapidity at the head of his
cavalry, that he came up with him near Villalar [April 231], and, without waiting for his infantry, advanced to the attack.
Padilla’s army, fatigued and disheartened by their precipitant retreat, which
they could not distinguish from a flight, happened at that time to be passing
over a ploughed field, on which such a violent rain had fallen, that the
soldiers sunk almost to the knees at every step, and remained exposed to the
fire of some field-pieces which the royalists had brought along with them. All
these circumstances so disconcerted and intimidated raw soldiers, without
facing the enemy, or making any resistance, they fled in the utmost confusion.
Padilla exerted himself with extraordinary courage and activity in order to
rally them, though in vain; fear rendering them deaf both to his threats and
entreaties; upon which, finding matters irretrievable, and resolving not to
survive the disgrace of that day, and the ruin of his party, he rushed into the
thickest of the enemy; but being wounded and dismounted, he was taken prisoner.
His principal officers shared the same fate; the common soldiers were allowed
to depart unhurt, the nobles being too generous to kill men who threw down
their arms.
The
resentment of his enemies did not suffer Padilla to linger long in expectation
of what should befall him. Next day he was condemned to lose his head, though
without any regular trial, the notoriety of the crime being supposed sufficient
to supersede the formality of a legal process. He was led instantly to execution,
together with Don John Bravo, and Don Francis Maldonado, the former commander
of the Segovians, and the latter of the troops of
Salamanca. Padilla viewed the approach of death with calm but undaunted
fortitude; and when Bravo, his fellow-sufferer, expressed some indignation at
hearing himself proclaimed a traitor, he checked hint, by observing, “That
yesterday was the time to have displayed the spirit of gentlemen, this day to
die with the meekness of Christians”. Being permitted to write to his wife and
to the community of Toledo, the place of his nativity, he addressed the former
with a manly and virtuous tenderness, and the latter with the exultation
natural to one who considered himself as a martyr for the liberties of his
country.
The
letter of Don John Padilla to his wife.
“Señora,
If
your grief did not afflict me more than my own death, I should deem myself
perfectly happy. For the end of life being certain to all men, the Almighty
confers a mark of distinguishing favor upon that person, for whom he appoints a
death such as mine, which, though lamented by many, is nevertheless acceptable
unto him. It would require more time than I now have, to write anything that
could afford you consolation. That my enemies will not grant me, nor do I wish
to delay the reception of that crown which I hope to enjoy. You may bewail your
own loss, but not my death, which, being so honorable, ought not to be lamented
by any. My soul, for nothing else is left to me, I bequeath to you. You will
receive it, as the thing in this world which you valued most. I do not write to
my father Pedro Lopez, because I dare not, for though I have shown myself to be
his son in daring to lose my life, I have not been the heir of his good
fortune. I will not attempt to say anything more, that I may not tire the
executioner, who waits for me, and that I may not excite a suspicion, that, in
order to prolong my life, I lengthen out my letter. My servant Sosia, an eyewitness, and to whom I have communicated my
most secret thoughts, will inform you of what I cannot now write; and thus I
rest, expecting the instrument of your grief, and of my deliverance”.
After
this, he submitted quietly to his fate. Most of the Spanish historians,
accustomed to ideas of government and of regal power, very different from those
upon which he acted, have been so eager to testify their disapprobation of the
cause in which he was engaged, that they have neglected, or have been afraid to
do justice to his virtues; and by blackening his memory, have endeavored to
deprive him of that pity which is seldom denied to illustrious sufferers.
Germanadas. End of the Spanish Revolution
The
victory at Villalar proved as decisive as it was
complete. Valladolid, the most zealous of all the associated cities, opened its
gates immediately to the conquerors, and being treated with great clemency by
the regents, Medina del Campo, Segovia, and many other towns, followed its
example. This sudden dissolution of a confederacy, formed not upon slight
disgusts, or upon trilling motives, into which the whole body of the people had
entered, and which had been allowed time to acquire a considerable degree of
order and consistence by establishing a regular plan of government, is the
strongest proof either of the inability of its leaders, or of some secret
discord reigning among its members. Though part of that army by which they had
been subdued was obliged, a few days after the battle, to march towards
Navarre, in order to check the progress of the French in that kingdom, nothing
could prevail on the dejected commons of Castile to take arms again, and to
embrace such a favorable opportunity of acquiring those rights and privileges
for which they had appeared so zealous. The city of Toledo alone, animated by
Doña Maria Pacheco, Padilla’s widow, who, instead of bewailing her husband with
a womanish sorrow, prepared to revenge his death, and to prosecute that cause
in defence of which he had suffered, must be
excepted. Respect for her sex, or admiration for her courage and abilities, as
well as sympathy with her misfortunes, and veneration for the memory of her
husband, secured her the same ascendant over the people which he had possessed.
The prudence and vigor with which she acted, justified that confidence they
placed in her. She wrote to the French general in Navarre, encouraging him to
invade Castile by the offer of powerful assistance. She endeavored by her
letters and emissaries to revive the spirit and hopes of the other cities. She
raised soldiers, and exacted a great sum from the clergy belonging to the
cathedral, in order to defray the expense of keeping them on foot. She employed
every artifice that could interest or inflame the populace. For this purpose
she ordered crucifixes to be used by her troops instead of colors, as if they
had been at war with infidels and enemies of religion; she marched through the
streets of Toledo with her son, a young child, clad in deep mourning, seated on
a mule, having a standard carried before him, representing the manner of his
father’s execution. By all these means she kept the minds of the people in such
perpetual agitation as prevented their passions from subsiding, and rendered
them insensible of the dangers to which they were exposed, by standing alone in
opposition to the royal authority. While the army was employed in Navarre, the
regents were unable to attempt the reduction of Toledo by force with and all
their endeavors, either to diminish Doña Maria’s credit with the people, or to
gain her by large promises and the solicitations of her brother the Marquis de Mondejar, proved ineffectual. Upon the expulsion of the
French out of Navarre, part of the army returned into Castile, and invested
Toledo. Even this made no impression on the intrepid and obstinate courage of
Doña Maria. She defended the town with vigor, her troops in several sallies
beat the royalists, and no progress was made towards reducing the place, until
the clergy, whom she had highly offended by invading their property, ceased to
support her. As soon as they received information of the death of William de Croy, archbishop of Toledo, whose possession of that see
was their chief grievance, and that the emperor had named a Castilian to
succeed him, they openly turned against her, and persuaded the people that she
had acquired such influence over them by the force of enchantments, that she
was assisted by a familiar daemon which attended her in the form of a
Negro-maid, and that by its suggestions she regulated every part of her
conduct. The credulous multitude, whom their impatience of a long blockade, and
despair of obtaining succors either from the cities formerly in confederacy
with them, or from the French, rendered desirous of peace, took arms against
her, and driving her out of the city, surrendered it to the royalists [October
26]. She retired to the citadel, which she defended with amazing fortitude four
months longer; and when reduced to the last extremities, she made her escape in
disguise [February 10], and fled to Portugal, where she had many relations.
Upon
her flight the citadel surrendered. Tranquility was reestablished in Castile;
and this bold attempt of the commons, like all unsuccessful insurrections,
contributed to confirm and extend the power of the crown, which it was intended
to moderate and abridge. The Cortes still continued to make a part of the
Castilian constitution, and was summoned to meet whenever the king stood in
need of money; but instead of adhering to their ancient and cautious form of
examining and redressing public grievances, before they proceeded to grant any
supply, the more courtly custom of voting a donative in the first place was
introduced, and the sovereign having obtained all that he wanted, never allowed
them to enter into any inquiry, or to attempt any reformation injurious to his authority.
The privileges which the cities had enjoyed were gradually circumscribed or
abolished; their commerce began from this period to decline, and becoming less
wealthy and less populous, they lost that power and influence which they had
acquired in the Cortes.
While
Castile was exposed to the calamities of civil war; the kingdom of Valencia was
torn by intestine commotions still more violent. The association which had been
formed in the city of Valencia in the year one thousand five hundred and twenty,
and which was distinguished by the name of the Germanada,
continued to subsist after the emperor’s departure from Spain. The members of
it, upon pretext of defending the coasts against the descents of the corsairs
of Barbary, and under sanction of that permission which Charles bad rashly
granted them, refused to lay down their arms. But as the grievances which the
Valencians aimed at redressing, proceeded from the arrogance and exactions of
the nobility, rather than from any unwarrantable exercise of the royal
prerogative, their resentment turned chiefly against the former. As soon as
they were allowed the use of arms, and became conscious of their own strength,
they grew impatient to take vengeance of their oppressors. They drove the
nobles out of most of the cities, plundered their houses, wasted their lands,
and assaulted their castles. They then proceeded to elect thirteen persons, one
from each company of tradesmen established in Valencia, and committed the
administration of government to them, under pretext that they would reform the
laws, establish one uniform mode of dispensing justice without partiality or
regard to the distinction of ranks, and thus restore men to some degree of
their original equality.
The
nobles were obliged to take arms in sell-defence.
Hostilities began, and were carried on with all the rancor with which
resentment at oppression inspired the one party, and the idea of insulted
dignity animated the other. As no person of honorable birth, or of liberal
education, joined the Germanada, the councils as well
as troops of the confederacy were conducted by low mechanics, who acquired the
confidence of an enraged multitude chiefly by the fierceness of their zeal and
the extravagance of their proceedings. Among such men, the laws introduced in
civilized nations, in order to restrain or moderate the violence of war, were
unknown or despised; and they run into the wildest excesses of cruelty and
outrage.
The
emperor, occupied with suppressing the insurrection in Castile, which more
immediately threatened the subversion of his power and prerogative, was unable
to give much attention to the tumults in Valencia, and left the nobility of
that kingdom to fight their own battles. His viceroy, the Conde de Melito, had the supreme command of the forces which the
nobles raised among the vassals. The Germanada carried on the war during the years one thousand five hundred and twenty and
twenty-one with a more persevering courage than could have been expected from a
body so tumultuary, under the conduct of such leaders. They defeated the
nobility in several actions, which, though not considerable, were extremely
sharp. They repulsed them in their attempts to reduce different towns. But the
nobles by their superior skill in war, and at the head of troops more
accustomed to service, gained the advantage in most of the reencounters. At
length they were joined by a body of Castilian cavalry, which the regents despatched towards Valencia, soon after their victory over
Padilla at Villalar, and by their assistance the
Valencian nobles acquired such superiority that they entirely broke and ruined
the Germanada. The leaders of the party were put to
death almost without any formality of legal trial, and suffered such cruel
punishments as the sense of recent injuries prompted their adversaries to
inflict. The government of Valencia was reestablished in its ancient form.
In
Aragon, violent symptoms of the same spirit of disaffection and sedition which
reigned in the other kingdoms of Spain, began to appear, but by the prudent
conduct of the viceroy, Don John de Lanusa, they were
so far composed, as to prevent their breaking out into any open insurrection.
But in the island of Majorca, annexed to the crown of Aragon, the same causes
which had excited the commotion in Valencia, produced effects no less violent.
The people, impatient of the hardships which they had endured under the rigid
jurisdiction of the nobility, took arms in a tumultuary manner [March 19,
1521]; deposed their viceroy; drove him out of the island; and massacred every
gentleman who was so unfortunate as to fall into their hands. The obstinacy
with which the people of Majorca persisted in their rebellion, was equal to the
rage with which they began it. Many and vigorous efforts were requisite in
order to reduce them to obedience; and tranquility was reestablished in every
part of Spain, before the Majorcans could be brought to submit to their
sovereign.
While
the spirit of disaffection was so general among the Spaniards, and so many
causes concurred in precipitating them into such violent measures, in order to
obtain the redress of their grievances, it may appear strange, that the
malcontents in the different kingdoms should have carried on their operations
without any mutual concert, or even any intercourse with each other. By uniting
their councils and arms, they might have acted both with greater force and with
more effect. The appearance of a national confederacy would have rendered it no
less respectable among the people than formidable to the crown; and the
emperor, unable to resist such a combination, must have complied with any terms
which the members of it should have thought fit to prescribe. Many things,
however, prevented the Spaniards from forming themselves into one body, and
pursuing common measures. The people of the different kingdoms in Spain, though
they were become the subjects of the same sovereign, retained, in all force,
their national antipathy to each other. The remembrance of their ancient rivalship and hostilities was still lively, and the sense
of reciprocal injuries so strong, as to prevent them from acting with
confidence and concert. Each nation chose rather to depend on its own efforts,
and to maintain the struggle alone, than to implore the aid of neighbors whom
they distrusted and hated. At the same time the forms of government in the
several kingdoms of Spain were so different, and the grievances of which they
complained, as well as the alterations and amendments in policy which they
attempted to introduce, so various, that it was not easy to bring them to unite
in any common plan. To this disunion Charles was indebted for the preservation of
his Spanish crowns; and while each of the kingdoms followed separate measures,
they were all obliged at last to conform to the will of their sovereign.
The
arrival of the emperor in Spain filled his subjects who had been in arms
against him with deep apprehensions, from which he soon delivered them by an
act of clemency no less prudent than generous. After a rebellion so general,
scarcely twenty persons, among so many criminals obnoxious to the law, had
been punished capitally in Castile. Though strongly solicited by his council,
Charles refused to shed any more blood by the hands of the executioner; and
published a general pardon [October 28], extending to all crimes committed
since the commencement of the insurrections, from which only fourscore persons
were excepted. Even these he seems to have named, rather with an intention to
intimidate others, than from any inclination to seize them; for when an
officious courtier offered to inform him where one of the most considerable
among them was concealed, he avoided it by a good-natured pleasantry; “Go”,
says he, “I have now no reason to be afraid of that man, but he has some cause
to keep at a distance from me, and you would be better employed in telling him
that I am here, than in acquainting me with the place of his retreat”. By this
appearance of magnanimity, as well as by his care to avoid everything which had
disgusted the Castilians during his former residence among them; by his address
in assuming their manners, in speaking their language, and in complying with
all their humors and customs, he acquired an ascendant over them which hardly
any of their native monarchs had ever attained, and brought them to support him
in all his enterprises with a zeal and valor to which he owed more of his
success and grandeur.
1523.
Francis I and Charles duke of Bourbon
About
the time that Charles landed in Spain, Adrian set out for Italy to take possession
of his new dignity. But though the Roman people longed extremely for his
arrival, they could not, on his first appearance, conceal their surprise and
disappointment. After being accustomed to the princely magnificence of Julius,
and the elegant splendor of Leo, they beheld with contempt an old man of an
humble deportment, and of austere manners, an enemy to pomp, destitute of taste
in the arts, and unadorned with any of the external accomplishments which the
vulgar expect in those raised to eminent stations. Nor did his political views
and maxims seem less strange and astonishing to the pontifical ministers. He acknowledged
and bewailed the corruptions which abounded in the church, as well as in the
court of Rome, and prepared to reform both; he discovered no intention of
aggrandizing his family; he even scrupled at retaining such territories as some
of his predecessors had acquired by violence or fraud, rather than by any legal
title, and for that reason be invested Francesco Maria de Rovere anew in the
duchy of Urbino, of which Leo had stripped him, and surrendered to the duke of
Ferrara, several places wrested from him by the church. To men little
habituated to see princes regulate their conduct by the maxims of morality and
the principles of justice, these actions of the new pope appeared incontestable
proofs of his weakness or inexperience. Adrian, who was a perfect stranger to
the complex and intricate system of Italian politics and who could place no
confidence in persons whose subtle refinements in business suited so ill with
the natural simplicity and candor of his own character, being often embarrassed
and irresolute in his deliberations, the opinion of his incapacity daily
increased, until both his person and government became objects of ridicule
among his subjects.
Adrian,
though devoted to the emperor, endeavored to assume the impartiality which
became the common father of Christendom, and labored to reconcile the
contending princes, in order that they might unite in a league against Solyman,
whose conquest of Rhodes rendered him more formidable than ever to Europe. But
this was an undertaking far beyond his abilities. To examine such a variety of
pretensions, to adjust such a number of interfering interests, to extinguish
the passions which ambition, emulation, and mutual injuries had kindled, to
bring so many hostile powers to pursue the same scheme with unanimity and vigour, required not only uprightness of intention, but
great superiority both of understanding and address.
The
Italian states were no less desirous of peace than the pope. The Imperial army
under Colonna was still kept on foot; but as the emperor's revenues in Spain,
in Naples, and in the Low-Countries, were either exhausted or applied to some
other purpose, it depended entirely for pay and subsistence on the Italians. A
great part of it was quartered in the ecclesiastical state, and monthly
contributions were levied upon the Florentines, the Milanese, the Genoese, and
Lucchese, by the viceroy of Naples; and though all exclaimed against such
oppression, and were impatient to be delivered from it, the dread of worse
consequences from the rage of the army, or the resentment of the emperor,
obliged them to submit.
So
much regard, however, was paid to the pope’s exhortations, and to a bull which
he issued, requiring all Christian princes to consent to a truce for three
years, that the Imperial, the French, and English ambassadors at Rome, were
empowered by their respective courts to treat of that matter; but while they
wasted their time in fruitless negotiations, their masters continued their
preparations for war. The Venetians, who had hitherto adhered with great
firmness to their alliance with Francis, being now convinced that his affairs
in Italy were in a desperate situation, entered into a league against him with
the emperor [June 28]; to which Adrian, at the instigation of his countryman
and friend Charles de Lannoy, viceroy of Naples, who persuaded him that the
only obstacles to peace arose from the ambition of the French king, soon after
acceded. The other Italian states followed their example; and Francis was left
without a single ally to resist the efforts of so many enemies, whose armies
threatened, and whose territories encompassed, his dominions on every side.
The
dread of this powerful confederacy, it was thought, would have obliged Francis
to keep wholly on the defensive, or at least have prevented his entertaining
any thoughts of marching into Italy. But it was the character of that prince,
too apt to become remiss, and even negligent on ordinary occasions, to rouse at
the approach of danger, and not only to encounter it with spirit and
intrepidity, qualities which never forsook him, but to provide against it with
diligence and industry. Before his enemies were ready to execute any of their
schemes, Francis had assembled a numerous army. His authority over his own
subjects was far greater than that which Charles or Henry possessed over
theirs. They depended on their diets, their Cortes, and their parliaments, for
money, which was usually granted them in small sums, very slowly, and with much
reluctance. The taxes he could impose were more considerable, and levied with
greater despatch; so that on this, as well as on
other occasions, he brought his armies into the field while they were only
devising ways and means for raising theirs. Sensible of this advantage, Francis
hoped to disconcert all the emperor’s schemes by marching in person into the
Milanese; and this bold measure, the more formidable because unexpected, could scarcely
have failed of producing that effect. But when the vanguard of his army had
already reached Lyons, and he himself was hastening after it with a second
division of his troops, the discovery of a domestic conspiracy, which
threatened the ruin of the kingdom, obliged him to stop short, and to alter his
measures.
The
author of this dangerous plot was Charles duke of Bourbon, lord high constable,
whose noble birth, vast fortune, and high office, raised him to be the most
powerful subject in France, as his great talents, equally suited to the field
or the council, and his signal services to the crown, rendered him the most
illustrious and deserving. The near resemblance between the king and him in
many of their qualities, both being fond of war, and ambitious to excel in
manly exercises, as well as their equality in age, and their proximity of
blood, ought naturally to have secured to him a considerable share in that
monarch's favor. But unhappily Louise, the king’s mother, had contracted a
violent aversion to the house of Bourbon, for no better reason than because
Anne of Bretagne, the queen of Louis the XII, with whom she lived in perpetual
enmity, had discovered a peculiar attachment to that branch of the royal
family; and had taught her son, who was too susceptible of any impression which
his mother gave him, to view all the constable's actions with a mean and
unbecoming Jealousy. His distinguished merit at the battle of Marignano bad not
been sufficiently rewarded; he had been recalled from the government of Milan
upon very frivolous pretences, and had met with a
cold reception, which his prudent conduct in that difficult station did not
deserve; the payment of his pensions had been suspended without any good cause;
and during the campaign of one thousand five hundred and twenty-one, the king,
as has already been related, had affronted him in presence of the whole army,
by giving the command of the van to the duke of Alençon. The constable, at
first, bore these indignities with greater moderation than could have been
expected from a high-spirited prince, conscious of what was due to his rank and
to his services. Such a multiplicity of injuries, however, exhausted his
patience; and inspiring him with thoughts of revenge, he retired from court,
and began to hold a secret correspondence with some of the emperor’s ministers.
About
that time the duchess of Bourbon happened to die without leaving any children.
Louise, of a disposition no less amorous than vindictive, and still susceptible
of the tender passions at the age of forty-six, began to view the constable, a
prince as amiable as he was accomplished, with other eyes; and notwithstanding
the great disparity of their years, she formed the scheme of marrying him.
Bourbon, who might have expected everything to which an ambitious mind can
aspire, from the doating fondness of a woman who governed her son and the
kingdom, being incapable either of imitating the queen in her sudden transition
from hatred to love, or of dissembling so meanly as to pretend affection for
one who had persecuted him so long with unprovoked malice, not only rejected
the match, but embittered his refusal by some severe raillery on Louise’s
person and character. She, finding herself not only contemned but insulted, her
disappointed love turned into hatred, and since she could not marry, she
resolved to ruin Bourbon.
For
this purpose she consulted with chancellor Du Prat, a man who, by a base
prostitution of great talents and of superior skill in his profession, had
risen to that high office. By his advice, a law-suit was commenced against the
constable, for the whole estate belonging to the house of Bourbon. Part of it
was claimed in the king’s name, as having fallen to the crown; part in that of
Louise, as the nearest heir in blood of the deceased duchess. Both these claims
were equally destitute of any foundation in justice; but Louise, by her
solicitations and authority, and Du Prat, by employing all the artifices and
chicanery of law, prevailed on the judges to order the estate to be sequestered.
This unjust decision drove the constable to despair, and to measures which
despair alone could have dictated. He renewed his intrigues in the Imperial
court, and flattering himself that the injuries which he had suffered would
justify his having recourse to any means in order to obtain revenge, he offered
to transfer his allegiance from his natural sovereign to the emperor, and to
assist him in the conquest of France. Charles, as well as the king of England,
to whom the secret was communicated, expecting prodigious advantages from his
revolt, were ready to receive him with open arms, and spared neither promises nor
allurements which might help to confirm him in his resolution. The emperor
offered him in marriage his sister Eleanor, the widow of the king of Portugal,
with an ample portion. He was included as a principal in the treaty between
Charles and Henry. The counties of Provence and Dauphine were to be settled on
him with the title of king. The emperor engaged to enter France by the
Pyrenees; and Henry, supported by the Flemings, to invade Picardy; while twelve
thousand Germans, levied at their common charge, were to penetrate into
Burgundy, and to act in concert with Bourbon, who undertook to raise six
thousand men among his friends and vassals in the heart of the kingdom. The
execution of this deep-laid and dangerous plot was suspended, until the king
should cross the Alps with the only army capable of defending his dominions;
and as he was far advanced in his march for that purpose, France was on the
brink of destruction.
Happily
for that kingdom, a negotiation which had now been carrying on for several months,
though conducted with the most profound secrecy, and communicated only to a few
chosen confidents, could not altogether escape the observation of the rest of
the constable’s numerous retainers, rendered more inquisitive by finding that
they were distrusted. Two of these gave the king some intimation of a
mysterious correspondence between their master and the count de Roeux, a Flemish nobleman of great confidence with the
emperor. Francis, who could not bring himself to suspect that the first prince
of the blood would be so base as to betray the kingdom to its enemies,
immediately repaired to Moulines, where the constable
was in bed, feigning indisposition that he might not be obliged to accompany
the king into Italy, and acquainted him of the intelligence which he had
received. Bourbon, with great solemnity, and the most imposing affectation of
ingenuity and candor, asserted his own innocence; and as his health, he said,
was now more confirmed, he promised to join the army within a few days.
Francis, open and candid himself, and too apt to be deceived by the appearance
of those virtues in others, gave such credit to what he said, that he refused
to arrest him, although advised to take that precaution by his wisest
counselors; and as if the danger had been over, he continued his march towards
Lyons. The constable set out soon after [September], seemingly with an
intention to follow him; but turning suddenly to the left, he crossed the
Rhone, and after infinite fatigue and peril, escaped all the parties which the
king, who became sensible too late of his own credulity, sent out to intercept
him, and reached Italy in safety.
Francis
took every possible precaution to prevent the bad effects of the irreparable
error which he had committed. He put garrisons in all the places of strength in
the constable’s territories. He seized all the gentlemen whom he could suspect
of being his associates; and as he had not hitherto discovered the whole extent
of the conspirator’s schemes, nor knew how far the infection had spread among
his subjects, he was afraid that his absence might encourage them to make some
desperate attempt, and for that reason relinquished his intention of leading
his army in person into Italy.
He
did not, however, abandon his design on the Milanese, but appointed Admiral
Bonnivet to take the supreme command in his stead, and to march into that
country with an army thirty thousand strong. Bonnivet did not owe this
preferment to his abilities as a general; for of all the talents requisite to
form a great commander, he possessed only personal courage, the lowest and the
most common. But he was the most accomplished gentleman in the French court, of
agreeable manners and insinuating address, and a sprightly conversation; and
Francis, who lived in great familiarity with his courtiers, was so charmed with
these qualities, that he honored him on all occasions, with the most partial
and distinguishing marks of his favor. He was, besides, the implacable enemy of
Bourbon; and as the king hardly knew whom to trust at that juncture, be thought
the chief command could be lodged nowhere so safely as in his bands.
Colonna,
who was entrusted with the defence of the Milanese,
his own conquest, was in no condition to resist such a formidable army. He was
destitute of money sufficient to pay his troops, which were reduced, to a small
number, by sickness or desertion, and had, for that reason, been obliged to neglect
every precaution necessary for the security of the country. The only plan which
he formed was to defend the passage of the river Tesino against the French; and as if he had forgotten how easily he himself had
disconcerted a similar scheme formed by Lautrec, he promised with great
confidence on its being effectual. But in spite of all his caution, it
succeeded no better with him than with Lautrec. Bonnivet passed the river
without loss, at a ford which had been neglected, and the Imperialists retired
to Milan, preparing to abandon the town as soon as the French should appear
before it. By an unaccountable negligence, which Guicciardini imputes to
infatuation, Bonnivet did not advance for three or four days, and lost the
opportunity with which his good fortune presented him. The citizens recovered
from their consternation; Colonna, still active at the age of fourscore, and Morone, whose enmity to France rendered him indefatigable,
were employed night and day in repairing the fortifications, in amassing provisions,
in collecting troops from every quarter; and by the time the French approached,
had put the city in a condition to stand a siege. Bonnivet, after some
fruitless attempts on the town, which harassed his own troops more than the
enemy, was obliged, by the inclemency of the season, to retire into winter
quarters.
During
these transactions, pope Adrian died; an event so much to the satisfaction of
the Roman people, whose hatred or contempt of him augmented every day, that the
night after his decease they adorned the door of his chief physician’s house
with garlands, adding this inscription, TO THE DELIVERER OF HIS COUNTRY. The
cardinal, de Medici instantly renewed his pretensions to the papal dignity, and
entered the conclave with high expectations on his own part, and a general
opinion of the people that they would be successful. But though supported by
the Imperial faction, possessed of great personal interest, and capable of all
the artifices, refinements, and corruption which reign in those assemblies, the
obstinacy and intrigues of his rivals protracted the conclave to the unusual
length of fifty days. The address and perseverance of the cardinal at last
surmounted every obstacle. He was raised to the head of the church [November
281] and assumed the government of it by the name of Clement VII. The choice
was universally approved of. High expectations were conceived of a pope, whose
great talents, and long experience in business, seemed to qualify him no less
for defending the spiritual interests of the church, exposed to imminent danger
by the progress of Luther’s opinions, than for conducting its political operations
with the prudence requisite at such a difficult juncture; and who, besides
these advantages, rendered the ecclesiastical state more respectable, by having
in his hands the government of Florence, together with the wealth of the family
of Medici.
Cardinal
Wolsey, not disheartened by the disappointment of his ambitions views at the
former election, had entertained more sanguine hopes of success on this
occasion. Henry wrote to the emperor, reminding him of his engagements to
second the pretensions of his minister. Wolsey bestirred himself with activity
suitable to the importance of the prize for which he contended, and instructed
his agents at Rome to spare neither promises nor bribes in order to gain his
end. But Charles had either aroused him with vain hopes which he never intended
to gratify, or he judged it impolitic to oppose a candidate who had such a
prospect of succeeding as Medici; or perhaps the cardinals durst not venture to
provoke the people of Rome, while their indignation against Adrian’s memory was
still fresh, by placing another Ultramontane on the papal throne. Wolsey, after
all his expectations and endeavors, had the mortification to see a pope
elected, of such an age, and of so vigorous a constitution, that he could not
derive much comfort to himself from the chance of surviving him. This second
proof fully convinced Wolsey of the emperor’s insincerity, and it excited in
him all the resentment which a haughty mind feels on being at once disappointed
and deceived; and though Clement endeavored to soothe his vindictive nature by
granting him a commission to be legate in England during life, with such ample
powers as vested in him almost the whole papal jurisdiction in that kingdom,
the injury he had now received made such an impression as entirely dissolved
the tie which had united him to Charles, and from that moment he meditated
revenge. It was necessary, however, to conceal his intention from his master,
and to suspend the execution of it, until, by a dexterous improvement of the
incidents which might occur, he should be able gradually to alienate the king’s
affections from the emperor. For this reason he was so far from expressing any
uneasiness on account of the repulse which he had met with, that he abounded on
every occasion, private as well as public, in declarations of his high
satisfaction with Clement’s promotion.
Henry
had, during the campaign, fulfilled, with great sincerity, whatever he was
bound to perform by the league against France, though more slowly than he could
have wished. His thoughtless profusion, and total neglect of economy, reduced
him often to great straits for money. The operations of war were now carried on
in Europe in a manner very different from that which had long prevailed.
Instead of armies suddenly assembled, which under distinct chieftains followed
their prince into the field for a short space, and served at their own cost,
troops were now levied at great charges, and received regularly considerable
pay. Instead of impatience on both sides to bring every quarrel to the issue of
a battle, which commonly decided the fate of open countries, and allowed the
barons, together with their vassals, to return to their ordinary occupations;
towns were fortified with great art, and defended with much obstinacy; war, from
a very simple, became a very intricate science; and campaigns grew of course to
be more tedious and less decisive. The expense which these alterations in the
military system necessarily created, appeared intolerable to nations hitherto
unaccustomed with the burden of heavy taxes. Hence proceeded the frugal, and
even parsimonious spirit of the English parliaments in that age, which Henry,
with all his authority, was seldom able to overcome. The commons, having
refused at this time to grant him the supplies which he demanded, he had
recourse to the ample and almost unlimited prerogative which the kings of
England then possessed, and by a violent and unusual exertion of it, raised the
money he wanted. This, however, wasted so much time, that it was late in the
season [Sept. 20], before his army, under the duke of Suffolk, could take the
field. Being joined by a considerable body of Flemings, Suffolk marched into
Picardy, and Francis, from his extravagant eagerness to recover the Milanese,
having left that frontier almost unguarded, he penetrated as far as the banks
of the river Oyse, within eleven leagues of Paris,
filling that capital with consternation. But the arrival of some troops
detached by the king, who was still at Lyons; the active gallantry of the
French officers, who allowed the allies no respite night or day; the rigor of a
most unnatural season, together with scarcity of provisions, compelled Suffolk
to retire [November]; and La Tremouille, who
commanded in those parts, had the glory not only of having checked the progress
of a formidable army with a handful of men, but of driving them with ignominy
out of the French territories.
The
emperor’s attempts upon Burgundy and Guienne were not
more fortunate, though in both these provinces Francis was equally unprepared
to resist them. The conduct and valor of his generals supplied his want of
foresight; the Germans, who made an irruption into one of these provinces, and
the Spaniards, who attacked the other, were repulsed with great disgrace.
Thus
ended the year 1523, during which Francis’s good fortune and success had been
such as gave all Europe a high idea of his power and resources. He had
discovered and disconcerted a dangerous conspiracy, the author of which he had
driven into exile, almost without an attendant; he had rendered abortive all
the schemes of the powerful confederacy formed against him; he had protected
his dominions when attacked on three different sides; and though his army in
the Milanese had not made such progress as might have been expected from its
superiority to the enemy in number, he had recovered, and still kept possession
of, one half of that duchy.
1524.
Luther’s Reformation Progress
The
ensuing year opened with events more disastrous to France. Fontarabia was lost
by the cowardice or treachery of its governor [Feb. 27]. In Italy, the allies
resolved on an early and vigorous effort, in order to dispossess Bonnivet of
that part of the Milanese which lies beyond the Tesino.
Clement, who, under the pontificates of Leo and Adrian, had discovered an
implacable enmity to France, began now to view the power which the emperor was
daily acquiring in Italy, with so much jealousy, that he refused to accede, as
his predecessors had done, to the league against Francis, and forgetting
private passions and animosities, labored, with the zeal which became his
character, to bring about a reconciliation among the contending parties. But
all his endeavors were ineffectual; a numerous army, to which each of the
allies furnished their contingent of troops, was assembled at Milan by the
beginning of March. Lannoy, viceroy of Naples, took the command of it upon
Colonna’s death, though the chief direction of military operations was
committed to Bourbon and the Marquis de Pescara; the latter the ablest and most
enterprising of the Imperial generals; the former inspired by his resentment
with new activity and invention, and acquainted so thoroughly with the
characters of the French commanders, the genius of their troops, and the
strength as well as weakness of their armies, as to be of infinite service to
the party which he had joined. But all these advantages were nearly lost through
the emperor's inability to raise money sufficient for executing the various and
extensive plans which he had formed. When his troops were commanded to march,
they mutinied against their leaders, demanding the pay which was due to them
for some months; and disregarding both the menaces and entreaties of their
officers, threatened to pillage the city of Milan, if they did not instantly
receive satisfaction. Out of this difficulty the generals of the allies were
extricated by Morone, who prevailing on his countrymen,
over whom his influence was prodigious, to advance the sum that was requisite,
the army took the field.
Bonnivet
was destitute of troops to oppose this army, and still more of the talents
which could render him an equal match for its leaders. After various movements
and encounters, described with great accuracy by the contemporary historians, a
detail of which would now be equally uninteresting and uninstructive, he was
forced to abandon the strong camp in which he had entrenched himself at Biagrassa. Soon after, partly by his own misconduct, partly
by the activity of the enemy, who harassed and ruined his army by continual
skirmishes, while they carefully declined a battle which he often offered them;
and partly by the caprice of 6000 Swiss, who refused to join his army, though
within a day’s march of it; he was reduced to the necessity of attempting a
retreat into France, through the valley of Aost. Just
as he arrived on the banks of the Sessia, and began
to pass that river, Bourbon and Pescara appeared with the vanguard of the
allies, and attacked his rear with great fury. At the beginning of the charge,
Bonnivet, while exerting himself with much valor, was wounded so dangerously,
that he was obliged to quit the field; and the conduct of the rear was
committed to the chevalier Bayard, who, though so much a stranger to the arts
of a court that he never rose to the chief command, was always called, in time
of real danger, to the post of greatest difficulty and importance. He put his
himself at the head of the men at arms, and animating them by his presence and
example to sustain the whole shock of the enemy’s troops, he gained time for
the rest of his countrymen to make good their retreat. But in this service he
received a wound which he immediately perceived to be mortal, and being unable
to continue any longer on horseback, he ordered one of his attendants to place
him under a tree, with his face towards the enemy; then fixing his eyes on the
guard of his sword, which he held up instead of a cross, he addressed his
prayers to God, and in this posture, which became his character both as a
soldier and as a Christian, he calmly waited the approach of death. Bourbon,
who led the foremost of the enemy’s troops, found him in this situation, and
expressed regret and pity at the sight. “Pity not me”, cried the high-spirited
chevalier, “I die as a man of honor ought, in the discharge of my duty; they
indeed are objects of pity, who fight against their king, their country, and
their oath”. The Marquis de Pescara, passing soon after, manifested his
admiration of Bayard’s virtues, as well as his sorrow for his fate, with the generosity
of a gallant enemy; and finding that he could not be removed with safety from
that spot, ordered a tent to be pitched there, and appointed proper persons to
attend him. He died, notwithstanding their care, as his ancestors for several
generations had done, in the field of battle. Pescara ordered his body to be
embalmed, and sent to his relations; and such was the respect paid to military
merit in that age, that the duke of Savoy commanded it to be received with
royal honors in all the cities of his dominions; in Dauphine, Bayard’s native
country, the people of all ranks came out in a solemn procession to meet it.
Bonnivet
led back the shattered remains of his army into France; and in one short
campaign, Francis was stripped of all be had possessed in Italy, and left
without one ally in that country.
While
the war, kindled by the emulation of Charles and Francis, spread over so many countries
of Europe, Germany enjoyed a profound tranquility, extremely favorable to the
reformation, which continued to make progress daily. During Luther’s
confinement in his retreat at Wartburg, Carlostadius,
one of his disciples, animated with the same zeal, but possessed of less
prudence and moderation than his master, began to propagate wild and dangerous
opinions, chiefly among the lower people. Encouraged by his exhortations, they
rose in several villages of Saxony, broke into the churches with tumultuary
violence, and threw down and destroyed the images with which they were adorned.
Those irregular and outrageous proceedings were so repugnant to all the
elector’s cautious maxims, that, if they had not received a timely check, they
could hardly have tailed of alienating from the reformers a prince, no less
jealous of his own authority, than afraid of giving offence to the emperor, and
other patrons of the ancient opinions. Luther, sensible of the danger,
immediately quitted his retreat, without waiting for Frederic’s permission, and
returned to Wittenberg [March 6, 1522]. Happily for the reformation, the
veneration for his person and authority was still so great, that his appearance
alone suppressed that spirit of extravagance which began to seize his party. Carlostadius and his fanatical followers, struck dumb by
his rebukes, submitted at once, and declared that they heard the voice of an
angel, not of a man.
Before
Luther left his retreat, he had begun to translate the Bible into the German
tongue, an undertaking of no less difficulty than importance, of which he was
extremely fond; and for which he was well qualified: he had a competent
knowledge of the original languages; a thorough acquaintance with the style and
sentiments of the inspired writers; and though his compositions in Latin were
rude and barbarous, he was reckoned a great master of the purity of his mother
tongue, and could express himself with all the elegance of which it is capable.
By his own assiduous application, together with the assistance of Melanchthon
and several other of his disciples, he finished part of the New Testament in
the year 1522; and the publication of it proved more fatal to the church of
Rome, than that of all his own works. It was read with wonderful avidity and
attention by persons of every rank. They were astonished at discovering how
contrary the precepts of the Author of our religion are, to the inventions of
those priests who pretended to be his vicegerents; and having now in their hand
the rule of faith, they thought themselves qualified, by applying it, to judge
of the established opinions, and to pronounce when they were conformable to the
standard, or when they departed from it. The great advantages arising from
Luther’s translation of the Bible, encouraged the advocates for reformation, in
the other countries of Europe, to imitate his example, and, to publish versions
of the Scriptures in their respective languages.
About
this time, Nuremberg, Frankfort, Hamburg, and several other free cities in
Germany, of the first rank, openly embraced the reformed religion, and by the
authority of their magistrates abolished the mass, and the other superstitious
rites of popery. The elector of Brandenburg, the dukes of Brunswick and
Lunenburg, and prince of Anhalt, became avowed patrons of Luther’s opinions,
and countenanced the preaching of them among their subjects.
The
court of Rome beheld this growing defection with great concern; and Adrian’s
first care after his arrival in Italy, had been to deliberate with the cardinals,
concerning the proper means of putting a stop to it. He was profoundly skilled
in scholastic theology, and having been early celebrated on that account, he
still retained such an excessive admiration of the science to which he was
first indebted for his reputation and success in life, that he considered
Luther’s invectives against the schoolmen, particularly Thomas Aquinas, as
little less than blasphemy. All the tenets of that doctor appeared to him so
clear and irrefragable, that he supposed every person who called in question or
contradicted them, to be either blinded by ignorance, or to be acting in
opposition to the conviction of his own mind. Of course, no pope was ever more
bigoted or inflexible with regard to points of doctrine than Adrian; he not
only maintained them as Leo had done, because they were ancient, or because it
was dangerous for the church to allow of innovations, but he adhered to them
with the zeal of a theologian, and with the tenaciousness of a disputant. At
the same time his own manners being extremely simple, and uninfected with any
of the vices which reigned in the court of Rome, he was as sensible of its
corruptions as the reformers themselves, and viewed them with no less
indignation. The brief which he addressed to the diet of the empire assembled
at Nuremberg [November, 15221], and the instructions which he gave Cheregato, the nuncio whom he sent thither, were framed
agreeably to these views. On the one hand, he condemned Luther’s opinions with
more asperity and rancor of expression than Leo had ever used; he severely
censured the princes of Germany for suffering him to spread his pernicious
tenets, by their neglecting to execute the edict of the diet at Worms, and
required them, if Luther did not instantly retract his errors, to destroy him
with fire as a gangrened and incurable member, in like manner as Dathan and Abirain had been cut
off by Moses, Ananias and Sapphira by the apostles, and John Huss and Jerome of
Prague by their ancestor. On the other hand, he with great candor, and in the
most explicit terms, acknowledged the corruptions of the Roman court to be the
source from which had flowed most of the evils that the church now felt or
dreaded; he promised to exert all his authority towards reforming these abuses,
with as much dispatch as the nature and inveteracy of the disorders would
admit; and he requested of them to give him their advice with regard to the
most effectual means of suppressing that new heresy which had sprung up among
them.
The
members of the diet, after praising the pope’s pious and laudable intentions,
excused themselves from not executing the edict of Worms, by alleging that the
prodigious increase of Luther’s followers, as well as the aversion to the court
of Rome among their other subjects on account of its innumerable exactions,
rendered such an attempt not only dangerous, but impossible. They affirmed that
the grievances of Germany, which did not arise from imaginary injuries, but
from impositions no less real than intolerable, as his holiness would learn
from a catalogue of them which they intended to lay before him, called now for
some new and efficacious remedy; and in their opinion, the only remedy adequate
to the disease, or which afforded them any hopes of seeing the church restored
to soundness and vigour, was a general council. Such
a council, therefore, they advised him, after obtaining the emperor’s consent,
to assemble without delay in one of the great cities in Germany, that all who
had right to be present might deliberate with freedom, and propose their
opinions with such boldness, as the dangerous situation of religion at this
juncture required.
The
nuncio, more artful than his master, and better acquainted with the political
views and interests of the Roman court, was startled at the proposition of a
council; and easily foresaw how dangerous such an assembly might prove, at a
time when many openly denied the papal authority, and the reverence and
submission yielded to it visibly declined among all. For that reason he
employed his utmost address in order to prevail on the members of the diet to
proceed themselves with greater severity against the Lutheran heresy, and to
relinquish their proposal concerning a general council to be held in Germany.
They, perceiving the nuncio to be more solicitous about the interest of the
Roman court, than the tranquility of the empire, or purity of the church,
remained inflexible, and continued to prepare the catalogue of their grievances
to be presented to the pope. The nuncio, that he might not be the bearer of a
remonstrance so disagreeable to his court, left Nuremberg abruptly, without
taking leave of the diet.
The
secular princes accordingly, for the ecclesiastics, although they gave no
opposition, did not think it decent to join with them, drew up the list (so
famous in the German annals) of a hundred grievances, which the empire imputed
to the iniquitous dominion of the papal see. This list contained grievances
much of the same nature with that prepared under the reign of Maximilian. It
would be tedious to enumerate each of them; they complained of the sums exacted
for dispensations, absolutions, and indulgences; of the expense arising from
the law-suits carried by appeal to Rome; of the innumerable abuses occasioned
by reservations, commendams, and annates; of the
exemption from civil jurisdiction which the clergy had obtained; of the arts by
which they brought all secular causes under the cognizance of the
ecclesiastical judges; of the indecent and profligate lives which not a few of
the clergy led; and of various other particulars, many of which have already
been mentioned, among the circumstances that contributed to the favorable
reception, or to the quick progress of Luther’s doctrines. In the end they
concluded, that if the holy see did not speedily deliver them from those
intolerable burdens, they had determined to endure them no longer, and would
employ the power and authority with which God had entrusted them, in order to
procure relief.
Instead
of such severities against Luther and his followers as the nuncio had
recommended, the recess or edict of the diet [March 6,1523] contained only a
general injunction to all ranks of men to wait with patience for the
determinations of the council which was to be assembled, and in the meantime
not to publish any new opinions contrary to the established doctrines of the
church; together with an admonition to all preachers to abstain from matters of
controversy in their discourses to the people, and to confine themselves to the
plain and instructive truths of religion.
The
reformers derived great advantage from the transactions of this diet, as they
afforded them the fullest and most authentic evidence that gross corruptions
prevailed in the court of Rome, and that the empire was loaded by the clergy
with insupportable burdens. With regard to the former, they had now the
testimony of the pope himself, that their invectives and accusations were not
malicious or ill-founded. As to the latter, the representatives of the Germanic
body, in an assembly where the patrons of the new opinions were far from being
the most numerous or powerful, had pointed out as the chief grievances of the
empire, those very practices of the Romish church against which Luther and his
disciples were accustomed to declaim. Accordingly, in all their controversial
writings after this period, they often appealed to Adrian’s declaration, and to
the hundred grievances, in confirmation of whatever they advanced concerning
the dissolute manners, or insatiable ambition and rapaciousness, of the papal
court.
At
Rome, Adrian’s conduct was considered as a proof of the most childish
simplicity and imprudence. Men trained up amidst the artifices and corruptions
of the papal court, and accustomed to judge of actions not by what was just,
but by what was useful, were astonished at a pontiff, who, departing from the
wise maxims of his predecessors, acknowledged disorders which he ought to have
concealed; and forgetting his own dignity, asked advice of those to whom he was
entitled to prescribe. By such an excess of impolitic sincerity, they were
afraid that, instead of reclaiming the enemies of the church, he would render
them more presumptuous, am instead of extinguishing heresy, would weaken the
foundations of the papal power, or stop the chief sources from which wealth
flowed into the church. For this reason the cardinals and other ecclesiastics
of greatest eminence in the papal court industriously opposed all his schemes
of reformation, and by throwing objections and difficulties in his way,
endeavored to retard or to defeat the execution of them. Adrian, amazed, on the
one hand, at the obstinacy of the Lutherans, disgusted, on the other, with the
manners and maxims of the Italians, and finding himself unable to correct
either the one or the other, often lamented his own situation, and often looked
back with pleasure on that period of his life when he was only dean of Louvain,
a more humble but happier station, in which little was expected from him, and
there was nothing to frustrate his good intentions.
Clement
VII, his successor, excelled Adrian as much in the arts of government, as he
was inferior to him in purity of life, or uprightness of intention. He was
animated not only with the aversion which all popes naturally bear to a
council, but having gained his own election by means very uncanonical, he was
afraid of an assembly that might subject it to a scrutiny which it could not
stand. He determined, therefore, by every possible means to elude the demands
of the Germans, both with respect to the calling of a council, and reforming
abuses in the papal court, which the rashness and incapacity of his predecessor
had brought upon him. For this purpose he made choice of cardinal Campeggio, an
artful man, often entrusted by his predecessors with negotiations of
importance, as his nuncio to the diet of the empire assembled again at
Nuremberg.
Campeggio,
without taking any notice of what had passed in the last meeting, exhorted the
diet [February], in a long discourse, to execute the edict of Worms with vigor,
as the only effectual means of suppressing Luther’s doctrines. The diet, in
return, desired to know the pope’s intentions concerning the council, and the
redress of the hundred grievances. The former, the nuncio endeavored to elude
by general and unmeaning declarations of the pope's resolution to pursue such
measures as would be for the greatest good of the church. With regard to the
latter, as Adrian was dead before the catalogue of grievances reached Rome, and
of consequence it had not been regularly laid before the present pope,
Campeggio took advantage of this circumstance to decline making any definitive
answer to them in Clement’s name; though, at the same
time, he observed that their catalogue of grievances contained many particulars
extremely indecent and undutiful, and that the publishing it by their own
authority was highly disrespectful to the Roman see. In the end he renewed his
demand of their proceeding with vigour against Luther
and his adherents. But though an ambassador from the emperor, who was at that
time very solicitous to gain the pope, warmly seconded the nuncio, with many
professions of his master’s zeal for the honor and dignity of the papal see,
the recess of the diet [April 18] was conceived in terms of almost the same
import with the former, without enjoining any additional severity against
Luther and his party.
Before
he left Germany, Campeggio, in order to amuse and soothe the people, published
certain articles for the amendment of some disorders and abuses which prevailed
among the inferior clergy; but this partial reformation, which fell so far
short of the expectations of the Lutherans, and of the demands of the diet,
gave no satisfaction, and produced little effect. The nuncio, with a cautious
hand, tenderly lopped a few branches; the Germans aimed a deeper blow, and by
striking at the root wished to exterminate the evil.
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