THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
BOOK
IV.
THE
ROAD TO PAVIA
THE
expulsion of the French, both out of the Milanese and the republic of Genoa,
was considered by the Italians as the termination of the war between Charles
and Francis; and as they began immediately to be apprehensive of the emperor,
when they saw no power remaining in Italy capable either to control or oppose
him, they longed ardently for the reestablishment of peace. Having procured the
restoration of Sforza to his paternal dominions, which had been their chief
motive for entering into confederacy with Charles, they plainly discovered
their intention to contribute no longer towards increasing the emperor’s
superiority over his rival, which was already become the object of their
jealousy. The pope especially, whose natural timidity increased his suspicions
of Charles's designs, endeavored by his remonstrances to inspire him with
moderation and incline him to peace.
But
the emperor, intoxicated with success, and urged on by his own ambition, no
less than by Bourbon’s desire of revenge, contemned Clement’s admonitions, and declared his resolution of ordering his army to pass the Alps,
and to invade Provence, a part of his rival’s dominions, where, as he least
dreaded an attack, he was least prepared to resist it. His most experienced
ministers dissuaded him from undertaking such an enterprise with a feeble army,
and an exhausted treasury: but he relied so much on having obtained the
concurrence of the king of England, and on the hopes which Bourbon, with the
confidence and credulity natural to exiles, entertained of being joined by a
numerous body of his partisans as soon as the Imperial troops should enter
France, that he persisted obstinately in the measure. Henry undertook to
furnish a hundred thousand ducats towards defraying the expense of the
expedition during the first month, and had it in his choice either to continue
the payment of that sum monthly, or to invade Picardy before the end of July
with an army capable of acting with vigor. The emperor engaged to attack Guienne at the same time with a considerable body of men;
and if these enterprises proved successful, they agreed, that Bourbon, besides
the territories which he had lost, should be put in possession of Provence,
with the title of king, and should do homage to Henry, as the lawful king of
France, for his new dominions. Of all the parts of this extensive but
extravagant project, the invasion of Provence was the only one which was
executed. For although Bourbon, with a scrupulous delicacy, altogether
unexpected after the part which he had acted, positively refused to acknowledge
Henry’s title to the crown of France, and thereby absolved him from any
obligation to promote the enterprise; Charles’s eagerness to carry his own plan
into execution did not in any degree abate. The army which he employed for that
purpose amounted only to eighteen thousand men, the command of which was given
to the marquis de Pescara, with instructions to pay the greatest deference to
Bourbon’s advice in all his operations. Pescara passed the Alps without
opposition, and entering Provence [August 19], laid siege to Marseilles.
Bourbon had advised him rather to march towards Lyons, in the neighborhood of
which city his territories were situated, and where of course his influence was
most extensive; but the emperor was so desirous to get possession of a port,
which would at all times secure him an easy entrance into France, that by his
authority he overruled the constables opinion, and directed Pescara to make the
reduction of Marseilles his chief object.
Francis,
who foresaw, but was unable to prevent this attempt, took the most proper
precautions to defeat it. He laid waste the adjacent country, in order to
render it more difficult for the enemy to subsist their army; he razed the
suburbs of the city, strengthened its fortifications, and threw into it a
numerous garrison under the command of brave and experienced officers. To
these, nine thousand of the citizens, whom their
dread of the Spanish yoke inspired with contempt of danger, joined themselves;
by their united courage and industry, all the efforts of Pescara’s military
skill, and of Bourbon's activity and revenge, were rendered abortive. Francis,
meanwhile, had leisure to assemble a powerful army under the walls of Avignon,
and no sooner began to advance towards Marseilles, than the Imperial troops,
exhausted by the fatigues of a siege which had lasted forty days, weakened by
diseases, and almost destitute of provisions, retired [Sept. 19] with
precipitation towards Italy.
If,
during these operations of the army in Provence, either Charles or Henry had
attacked France in the manner which they had projected, that kingdom must have
been exposed to the most imminent danger. But on this, as well as on many other
occasions, the emperor found that the extent of his revenues was not adequate
to the greatness of his schemes, or the ardor of his ambition and the want of
money obliged him, though with much reluctance, to circumscribe his plan, and
to leave part of it unexecuted. Henry, disgusted at Bourbon's refusing to
recognize his right to the crown of France; alarmed at the motions of the
Scots, whom the solicitations of the French king had persuaded to march towards
the borders of England; and no longer incited by his minister, who was become
extremely cool with regard to all the emperor’s interests, took no measures to
support an enterprise, of which, as of all new undertakings, he had been at
first excessively fond.
If
the king of France had been satisfied with having delivered his subjects from
this formidable invasion, if he had thought it enough to show all Europe the
facility with which the internal strength of his dominions enabled him to
resist the invasion of a foreign enemy, even when seconded by the abilities and
powerful efforts of a rebellious subject, the campaign, notwithstanding the
loss of the Milanese, would have been far from ending ingloriously. But
Francis, animated with courage more becoming a soldier than a general; pushed
on by ambition, enterprising rather than considerate; and too apt to be elated
with success; was fond of every undertaking that seemed bold and adventurous.
Such an undertaking, the situation of his affairs, at that juncture, naturally
presented to his view. He had under his command one of the most powerful and
best appointed armies France had ever brought into the field, which he could
not think of disbanding without having employed it in any active service. The
Imperial troops had been obliged to retire almost ruined by hard duty, and
disheartened with ill success; the Milanese had been left altogether without defence; it was not impossible to reach that country before
Pescara, with his shattered forces, could arrive there; or if fear should add
speed to their retreat, they were in no condition to make head against his
fresh and numerous troops; and Milan would now, as in former instances, submit
without resistance to a bold invader. These considerations, which were not
destitute of plausibility, appeared to his sanguine temper to be of the utmost
weight. In vain did his wisest ministers and generals represent to him the
danger of taking the field at a season so far advanced, with an army composed
chiefly of Swiss and Germans, to whose caprices he would be subject in all his
operations, and on whose fidelity his safety must absolutely depend. In vain
did Louise of Savoy advance by hasty journeys towards Provence, that she might
exert all her authority in dissuading her son from such a rash enterprise.
Francis disregarded the remonstrances of his subjects; and that he might save
himself the pain of an interview with his mother, whose counsels he had
determined to reject, he began his march before her arrival; appointing her,
however, by way of atonement for that neglect, to be regent of the kingdom
during his absence. Bonnivet, by his persuasions, contributed not a little to
confirm Francis in this resolution. That favorite, who strongly resembled his
master in all the defective parts of his character, was led, by his natural
impetuosity, warmly to approve of such an enterprise; and being prompted
besides by his impatience to revisit a Milanese lady, of whom he had been
deeply enamored during his late expedition, he is said, by his flattering descriptions
of her beauty and accomplishments, to have inspired Francis, who was extremely
susceptible of such passions, with an equal desire of seeing her.
The
French passed the Alps at Mount Cenis; and as their success depended on despatch, they advanced with the greatest diligence.
Pescara, who had been obliged to take a longer and more difficult route by
Monaco and Final, was soon informed of their intention; and being sensible that
nothing but the presence of his troops could save the Milanese, marched with
such rapidity, that he reached Alva on the same day that the French arrived at
Vercelli. Francis, instructed by Bonnivet’s error in
the former campaign, advanced directly towards Milan, where the unexpected
approach of an enemy so powerful occasioned such a consternation and disorder,
that although Pescara entered the city with some of his best troops, he found
that the defence of it could not be undertaken with
any probability of success; and having thrown a garrison into the citadel,
retired through one gate, while the French were admitted at another.
These
brisk motions of the French monarch disconcerted all the schemes of defence which the Imperialists had formed. Never, indeed,
did generals attempt to oppose a formidable invasion under such circumstances
of disadvantage. Though Charles possessed dominions more extensive than any
other prince in Europe, and had, at this time, no other army but that which was
employed in Lombardy, which did not amount to sixteen thousand men, his
prerogative in all his different states was so limited, and his subjects,
without whose consent he could raise no taxes, discovered such unwillingness to
burden themselves with new or extraordinary impositions, that even this small
body of troops was in want of pay, of ammunition, of provisions, and of
clothing. In such a situation, it required all the wisdom of Lannoy, the
intrepidity of Pescara, and the implacable resentment of Bourbon, to preserve
them from sinking under despair, and to inspire them with resolution to attempt,
or sagacity to discover, what was essential to their safety. To the efforts of
their genius, and the activity of their zeal, the emperor was more indebted for
the preservation of his Italian dominions than to his own power. Lannoy, by
mortgaging the revenues of Naples, procured some money, which was immediately
applied towards providing the army with whatever was most necessary. Pescara,
who was beloved and almost adored by the Spanish troops, exhorted them to show
the world, by their engaging to serve the emperor in that dangerous exigency,
without making any immediate demand of pay, that they were animated with
sentiments of honor very different from those of mercenary soldiers; to which
proposition that gallant body of men, with an unexampled generosity, gave their
consent. Bourbon having raised a considerable sum by pawning his jewels, set
out for Germany, where his influence was great, that by his presence he might
hasten the levying of troops for the Imperial service.
Francis,
by a fatal error, allowed the emperor’s generals time to derive advantage from
all these operations. Instead of pursuing the enemy, who retired to Lodi on the
Adda, an untenable post, which Pescara had resolved to abandon on the approach
of the French, he, in compliance with the opinion of Bonnivet, though contrary
to that of his other generals, laid siege to Pavia on the Tesino [Oct. 281], a town, indeed, of great importance, the possession of which would
have opened to him all the fertile country lying on the banks of that river.
But the fortifications of the place were strong; it was dangerous to undertake
a difficult siege, at so late a season; and the Imperial generals, sensible of
its consequence, had thrown into the town a garrison composed of six thousand
veterans, under the command of Antonio de Leyva, an officer of high rank, of
great experience, of a patient but enterprising courage, fertile in resources,
ambitious of distinguishing himself, and capable, for that reason, as well as
from his having been long accustomed both to obey and to command, of suffering
or performing anything in order to procure success.
Francis
prosecuted the siege with obstinacy equal to the rashness with which he had
undertaken it. During three months everything known to the engineers of that
age, or that could be effected by the valor of his troops, was attempted, in
order to reduce the place; while Lannoy and Pescara, unable to obstruct his
operations, were obliged to remain in such an ignominious state of inaction,
that a pasquinade was published at Rome, offering a reward to any person who
could find the Imperial army, lost in the month of October in the mountains
between France and Lombardy, and which had not been heard of since that time.
Leyva,
well acquainted with the difficulties under which his countrymen labored, and
the impossibility of their facing, in the field, such a powerful army as formed
the siege of Pavia, placed his only hopes of safety in his own vigilance and
valor. The efforts of both were extraordinary, and in proportion to the
importance of the place, with the defence of which he
was entrusted. He interrupted the approaches of the French by frequent and
furious sallies. Behind the breaches made by their artillery, he erected new
works, which appeared to be scarcely inferior in strength to the original
fortifications. He repulsed the besiegers in all their assaults; and by his own
example, brought not only the garrison, but the inhabitants, to bear the most severe
fatigues, and to encounter the greatest dangers without murmuring. The rigor of
the season conspired with his endeavors in retarding the progress of the
French. Francis attempting to become master of the town, by diverting the
course of the Tesino, which is its chief defence on one side, a sudden inundation of the river
destroyed, in one day, the labor of many weeks, and swept away all the mounds
which his army had raised with infinite toil, as well as at great expense.
Notwithstanding
the slow progress of the besiegers, and the glory which Leyva acquired by his
gallant defence, it was not doubted but that the town
would at last be obliged to surrender. The pope, who already considered the
French arms as superior in Italy, became impatient to disengage himself from
his connections with the emperor, of whose designs he was extremely jealous,
and to enter into terms of friendship with Francis. As Clement’s timid and cautious temper rendered him incapable of following the bold plan
which Leo had formed, of delivering Italy from the yoke of both the rivals, he
returned to the more obvious and practicable scheme of employing the power of
the one to balance and to restrain that of the other. For this reason, he did
not dissemble his satisfaction at seeing the French king recover Milan, as he
hoped that the dread of such a neighbor would be some check upon the emperor’s
ambition, which no power in Italy was now able to control. He labored hard to
bring about a peace that would secure Francis in the possession of his new
conquests; and as Charles, who was always inflexible in the prosecution of his
schemes, rejected the proposition with disdain, and with bitter exclamations
against the pope, by whose persuasions, while cardinal de Medici, he had been
induced to invade the Milanese, Clement immediately concluded a treaty of neutrality
with the king of France, in which the republic of Florence was included.
Francis
having by this transaction deprived the emperor of his two most powerful
allies, and at the same time having secured a passage for his own troops
through their territories, formed a scheme of attacking the kingdom of Naples,
hoping either to overrun that country, which was left altogether without defence, or that at least such an unexpected invasion would
oblige the viceroy to recall part of the Imperial army out of the Milanese; for
this purpose he ordered six thousand men to march under the command of John
Stuart duke of Albany. But Pescara foreseeing that the effect of this diversion
would depend entirely upon the operations of the armies in the Milanese,
persuaded Lannoy to disregard Albany's motions and to bend his whole force
against the king himself, so that Francis not only weakened his army very
unseasonably by this great detachment, but incurred the reproach of engaging
too rashly in chimerical and extravagant projects.
By
this time the garrison of Pavia was reduced to extremity; their ammunition and
provisions began to fail; the Germans, of whom it was chiefly composed, having
received no pay for seven months, threatened to deliver the town into the
enemy’s hands, and could hardly be restrained from mutiny by all Leyva’s
address and authority. The Imperial generals, who were no strangers to his
situation, saw the necessity of marching without loss of time to his relief
[1525]. This they had now in their power: twelve thousand Germans, whom the
zeal and activity of Bourbon taught to move with unusual rapidity, had entered
Lombardy under his command, and rendered the Imperial army nearly equal to that
of the French, greatly diminished by the absence of the body under Albany, as
well as by the fatigues of the siege, and the rigor of the season. But the more
their troops increased in number, the more sensibly did the Imperialists feel
the distress arising from want of money. Far from having funds for paying a
powerful army, they had scarcely what was sufficient for defraying the charges
of conducting their artillery, and of carrying their ammunition and provisions.
The abilities of the generals, however, supplied every defect. By their own
example, as well as by magnificent promises in name of the emperor, they
prevailed on the troops o all the different nations which composed their army,
to take the field without pay; they engaged to lead them directly towards the
enemy; and flattered them with the certain prospect of victory, which would at
once enrich them with such royal spoils as would be an ample reward for all
their services. The soldiers, sensible that, by quitting the army, they would
forfeit the great arrears due to them, and eager to get possession of the promised
treasures, demanded a battle with all the impatience of adventurers, who fight
only for plunder.
The
Imperial generals, without suffering the ardor of their troops to cool,
advanced immediately toward the French camp [Feb. 3]. On the first intelligence
of their approach, Francis called a council of war, to deliberate what course
he ought to take. All his officers of greatest experience were unanimous in
advising him to retire, and to decline a battle with an enemy who courted it
from despair. The Imperialists, they observed, would either be obliged in a few
weeks to disband an army, which they were unable to pay, and which they kept
together only by the hope of plunder; or the soldiers, enraged at the
non-performance of the promises to which they had trusted, would rise in some
furious mutiny which would allow their generals to think of nothing but their
own safety; that, meanwhile, he might encamp in some strong post, and waiting
in safety the arrival of flesh troops from France and Switzerland, might,
before the end of Spring, take possession of all the Milanese, without danger
or bloodshed. But in opposition to them, Bonnivet, whose destiny it was to give
counsels fatal to France during the whole campaign, represented the ignominy
that it would reflect on their sovereign, if he should abandon a siege which he
had prosecuted so long, or turn his hack before an enemy to whom he was still
superior in number; and insisted on the necessity of fighting the Imperialists
rather than relinquish an undertaking, on the success of which the king’s
future fame depended. Unfortunately, Francis's notions of honor were delicate
to an excess that bordered on what was romantic. Having often said that he would
take Pavia, or perish in the attempt, he thought himself bound not to depart
from that resolution; and rather than expose himself to the slightest
imputation, he chose to forego all the advantages which were the certain
consequences of a retreat, and determined to wait for the Imperialists before
the walls of Pavia.
The
Imperial generals found the French so strongly entrenched, that notwithstanding
the powerful motives which urged them on, they hesitated long before they
ventured to attack them; but at last the necessities of the besieged, and the
murmurs of their own soldiers, obliged them to put everything to hazard. Never
did armies engage with greater ardor, or with a higher opinion of the
importance of the battle which they were going to fight [Feb. 24]; never were
troops more strongly animated with emulation, national antipathy, mutual
resentment, and all the passions which inspire obstinate bravery. On the one
hand, a gallant young monarch, seconded by a generous nobility, and followed by
subjects to whose natural impetuosity, indignation at the opposition which they
had encountered, added new force, contended for victory and honor. On the other
side, troops more completely disciplined, and conducted by generals of greater
abilities, fought from necessity, with courage heightened by despair. The
Imperialists, however, were unable to resist the first efforts of the French
valor, and their firmest battalions began to give way. But the fortune of the
day was quickly changed. The Swiss in the service of France, unmindful of the
reputation of their country for fidelity and martial glory, abandoned their
post in a cowardly manner. Leyva, with his garrison, sallied out and attacked
the rear of the French, during the heat of the action, with such fury as threw
them into confusion; and Pescara falling on their cavalry with the Imperial
horse, among whom he had prudently intermingled a considerable number of
Spanish foot, armed with the heavy muskets then in use, broke this formidable
body by an unusual method of attack, against which they were wholly unprovided.
The rout became universal; and resistance ceased in almost every part, but
where the king was in person, who fought now, not for fame or victory, but for
safety. Though wounded in several places, and thrown from his horse, which was
killed under him, Francis defended himself on foot with an heroic courage. Many
of his bravest officers gathering round him, and endeavoring to save his life
at the expense of their own, fell at his feet. Among these was Bonnivet, the
author of this great calamity, who alone died unlamented. The king, exhausted
with fatigue, and scarcely capable of further resistance, was left almost
alone, exposed to the fury of some Spanish soldiers, strangers to his rank, and
enraged at his obstinacy. At that moment came up Pomperant,
a French gentleman, who had entered together with Bourbon into the emperor’s
service, and placing himself by the side of the monarch against whom he had
rebelled, assisted in protecting him from the violence of the soldiers; at the
same time beseeching him to surrender to Bourbon, who was not far distant.
Imminent as the danger was which now surrounded Francis, he rejected with
indignation the thoughts of an action which would have afforded such matter of
triumph to his traitorous subject; and calling for Lannoy, who happened
likewise to be near at hand, gave up his sword to him, which he, kneeling to
kiss the king’s hand, received with profound respect; and taking his own sword
from his side, presented it to him, saying, “That it did not become so great a
monarch to remain disarmed in the presence of one of the emperor’s subjects”.
Ten
thousand men fell on this day, one of the most fatal France had ever seen.
Among these were many noblemen of the highest distinction, who chose rather to
perish than to turn their backs with dishonor. Not a few were taken prisoners,
of whom the most illustrious was Henry d’Albret, the
unfortunate king of Navarre. A small body of the rearguard made its escape,
under the command of the duke of Alençon; the feeble garrison of Milan, on the
first news of the defeat, retired without being pursued, by another road; and
in two weeks after the battle, not a Frenchman remained in Italy.
Lannoy,
though he treated Francis with all the outward marks of honor due to his rank
and character, guarded him with the utmost attention. He was solicitous, not
only to prevent any possibility of his escaping, but afraid that his own troops
might seize his person, and detain it as the best security for the payment of
their arrears. In order to provide against both these dangers, he conducted
Francis the day after the battle, to the strong castle of Pizzichitone near Cremona, committing him to the custody of Don Ferdinand Alarcon, general
of the Spanish infantry, an officer of great bravery and of strict honor, but
remarkable for that severe and scrupulous vigilance which such a trust
required.
FRANCIS
I, THE GOLDEN PRISONER
Francis,
who formed a judgment of the emperor’s dispositions by his own, was extremely
desirous that Charles should be informed of his situation, fondly hoping that,
from his generosity or sympathy, he should obtain speedy relief. The Imperial
generals were no less impatient to give their sovereign an early account of the
decisive victory which they had gained, and to receive his instructions with
regard to their future conduct. As the most certain and expeditious method of
conveying intelligence to Spain, at that season of the year, was by land,
Francis gave the commendador Peñalosa,
who was charged with Lannoy’s dispatches, a passport
to travel through France.
Charles
received the account of this signal and unexpected success that had crowned his
arms, with a moderation, which, if it had been real, would have done him more
honor than the greatest victory. Without uttering one word expressive of
exultation, or of intemperate joy, he retired immediately into his chapel
[March 10], and having spent an hour in offering up his thanksgivings to
Heaven, returned to the presence-chamber, which by that time was filled with
grandees and foreign ambassadors, assembled in order to congratulate him. He
accepted of their compliments with a modest deportment; he lamented the
misfortune of the captive king, as a striking example of the sad reverse of
fortune, to which the most powerful monarchs are subject; he forbade any public
rejoicings, as indecent in a war carried on among Christians, reserving them
until he should obtain a victory equally illustrious over the Infidels; and
seemed to take pleasure in the advantage which he had gained, only as it would
prove the occasion of restoring peace to Christendom.
Charles,
however, had already begun to form schemes in his own mind, which little suited
such external appearances. Ambition, not generosity, was the ruling passion in
his mind; and the victory at Pavia opened such new and unbounded prospects of
gratifying it, as allured him with irresistible force: but it being no easy
matter to execute the vast designs which he meditated, he thought it necessary,
while proper measures were taking for that purpose, to affect the greatest
moderation, hoping under that veil to conceal his real intentions from the
other princes of Europe.
Meanwhile,
France was filled with consternation. The king himself had early transmitted an
account of the rout of Pavia in a letter to his mother, delivered by Peñalosa, which contained only these words, “Madam, all is
lost, except our honor”. The officers who made their escape, when they arrived
from Italy, brought such a melancholy detail of particulars as made all ranks
of men sensibly feel the greatness and extent of the calamity. France, without
its sovereign, without money in her treasury, without an army, without generals
to command it, and encompassed on all sides by a victorious and active enemy,
seemed to be on the very brink of destruction. But on that occasion the great
abilities of Louise the regent saved the kingdom, which the violence of her
passions had more than once exposed to the greatest danger. Instead of giving herself
up to such lamentations as were natural to a woman so remarkable for her
maternal tenderness, she discovered all the foresight, and exerted all the
activity of a consummate politician. She assembled the nobles at Lyons, and
animated them by her example no less than by her words, with such zeal in defence of their country, as its present situation
required. She collected the remains of the army which had served in Italy,
ransomed the prisoners, paid the arrears, and put them in a condition to take
the field. She levied new troops, provided for the security of the frontiers,
and raised sums sufficient for defraying these extraordinary expenses. Her
chief care, however, was to appease the resentment, or to gain the friendship
of the king of England; and from that quarter, the first ray of comfort broke
in upon the French.
Though
Henry, in entering into alliances with Charles or Francis, seldom followed any
regular or concerted plan of policy, but was influenced chiefly by the caprice
of temporary passions, such occurrences often happened as recalled his
attention towards that equal balance of power which it was necessary to keep
between the two contending potentates, the preservation of which he always
boasted to be his peculiar office. He had expected that his union with the
emperor might afford him an opportunity of recovering some part of those
territories in France which had belonged to his ancestors, and for the sake of
such an acquisition he did not scruple to give his assistance towards raising
Charles to a considerable preeminence above Francis. He had never dreamt,
however, of any event so decisive and so fatal as the victory at Pavia, which
seemed not only to have broken, but to have annihilated the power of one of the
rivals; so that the prospect of the sudden and entire revolution which this
would occasion in the political system, filled him with the most disquieting
apprehensions. He saw all Europe in danger of being overrun by an ambitious
prince, to whose power there now remained no counterpoise; and though he
himself might at first be admitted, in quality of an ally, to some share in the
spoils of the captive monarch, it was easy to discern, that with regard to the
manner of making the partition, as well as his security for keeping possession
of what should be allotted him, he must absolutely depend upon the will of a
confederate, to whose forces his own bore no proportion. He was sensible, that
if Charles were permitted to add any considerable part of France to the vast
dominions of which he was already master, his neighborhood would be much more
formidable to England than that of the ancient French kings; while, at the same
time, the proper balance on the continent, to which England owed both its
safety and importance, would be entirely lost. Concern for the situation of the
unhappy monarch cooperated with these political considerations; his gallant
behavior in the battle of Pavia had excited a high degree of admiration, which
never fails of augmenting sympathy; and Henry, naturally susceptible of
generous sentiments, was fond of appearing as the deliverer of a vanquished
enemy from a state of captivity. The passions of the English minister seconded
the inclinations of the monarch. Wolsey, who had not forgotten the
disappointment of his hopes in two successive conclaves, which he imputed
chiefly to the emperor, thought this a proper opportunity of taking revenge;
and Louise, courting the friendship of England with such flattering submissions
as were no less agreeable to the king than to the cardinal, Henry gave her
secret assurances that he would not lend his aid towards oppressing France, its
present helpless state, and obliged her to promise that she would not consent
to dismember the kingdom, even in order to procure her son’s liberty.
But
as Henry’s connections with the emperor made it necessary to act in such a
manner as to save appearances, he ordered public rejoicings to be made in his
dominions for the success of the Imperial arms; and, as it he had been eager to
seize the present opportunity of ruining the French monarchy, he sent
ambassadors to Madrid, to congratulate with Charles upon his victory; to put
him in mind, that he, as his ally, engaged in one common cause, was entitled to
partake in the fruits of it; and to require that, in compliance with the terms
of their confederacy, he would invade Guienne with a
powerful army, in order to give him possession of that province. At the same
time, he offered to send the princess Mary into Spain or the Low-Countries,
that she might be educated under the emperor’s direction, until the conclusion
of the marriage agreed on between them; and in return for that mark of his
confidence, he insisted that Francis should be delivered to him, in consequence
of that article in the treaty of Bruges, whereby each of the contracting
parties was bound to surrender all usurpers to him whose rights they had
invaded. It was impossible that Henry could expect that the emperor would
listen to these extravagant demands, which it was neither his interest, nor in
his power to grant. They appear evidently to have been made with no other
intention than to furnish him with a decent pretext for entering into such
engagements with France as the juncture required.
It
was among the Italian states, however, that the victory of Pavia occasioned the
greatest alarm and terror. That balance of power on which they relied for their
security, and which it had been the constant object of all their negotiations
and refinements to maintain, was destroyed in a moment. They were exposed by
their situation to feel the first effects of the uncontrolled authority which
Charles had acquired. They observed many symptoms of a boundless ambition in
that young prince, and were sensible that, as emperor or king of Naples, he
might not only form dangerous pretensions upon each of their territories, but
might invade them with great advantage. They deliberated, therefore, with great
solicitude concerning the means of raising such a force as might obstruct his
progress. But their consultations, conducted with little union, and executed
with less vigour, had no effect. Clement, instead of
pursuing the measures which he had concerted with the Venetians for securing
the liberty of Italy, was so intimidated by Lannoy’s threats, or overcome by his promises, that he entered into a separate treaty
[April 1], binding himself to advance a considerable sum to the emperor, in
return for certain emoluments which he was to receive from him. The money was
instantly paid; but Charles afterwards refused to ratify the treaty and the
pope remained exposed at once to infamy and to ridicule; to the former, because
he had deserted the public cause for his private interest; to the latter,
because he had been a loser by that unworthy action.
How
dishonorable soever the artifice might be which was employed in order to
defraud the pope of this sum, it came very seasonably into the viceroy’s hands,
and put it in his power to extricate himself out of an imminent danger. Soon
after the defeat of the French army, the German troops, which had defended
Pavia with such meritorious courage and perseverance, growing insolent upon the
fame that they had acquired, and impatient of relying any longer on fruitless
promises, with which they had been so often amused, rendered themselves masters
of the town, with a resolution to keep possession of it as a security for the
payment of their arrears; and the rest of the army discovered a much stronger
inclination to assist, than to punish the mutineers. By dividing among them the
money exacted from the pope, Lannoy quieted the tumultuous Germans; but though
this satisfied their present demands, he had so little prospect of being able
to pay them or his other forces regularly for the future, and was under such
continual apprehensions of their seizing the person of the captive king, that,
not long after, he was obliged to dismiss all the Germans and Italians in the
Imperial service. Thus, from a circumstance that now appears very singular, but
arising naturally from the constitution of most European governments in the
sixteenth century, while Charles was suspected by all his neighbors of aiming
at universal monarchy, and while he was really forming vast projects of this
kind, his revenues were so limited, that, he could not keep on foot his
victorious army, though it did not exceed twenty-four thousand men.
During
these transactions Charles, whose pretensions to moderation and
disinterestedness were soon forgotten, deliberated, with the utmost solicitude,
how he might derive the greatest advantages from the misfortune of his
adversary. Some of his counselors advised him to treat Francis with the
magnanimity that became a victorious prince, and, instead of taking advantage
of his situation, to impose rigorous conditions, to dismiss him on such equal
terms, as would bind him forever to his interest by the ties of gratitude and
affection, more forcible as well as more permanent than any which could be
formed by extorted oaths and involuntary stipulations. Such an exertion of
generosity is not, perhaps, to be expected, in the conduct of political
affairs, and it was far too refined for that prince to whom it was proposed.
The more obvious, but less splendid scheme, of endeavoring to make the utmost
of Francis’s calamity, had a greater number in the council to recommend it, and
suited better with the emperor’s genius. But though Charles adopted this plan,
he seems not to have executed it in the most proper manner. Instead of making
one great effort to penetrate into France with all the forces of Spain and the
Low-Countries; instead of crushing the Italian states before they recovered
from the consternation which the success of his arms had occasioned, he bad
recourse to the artifices of intrigue and negotiation. This proceeded partly
from necessity, partly from the natural disposition of his mind. The situation
of his finances at that time rendered it extremely difficult to carry on any
extraordinary armament; and he himself having never appeared at the head of his
armies, the command of which he had hitherto committed to his generals, was
averse to bold and martial counsels, and trusted more to the arts with which he
was acquainted. He laid, besides, too much stress upon the victory of Pavia, as
if by that event the strength of France had been annihilated, its resources
exhausted, and the kingdom itself, no less than the person of its monarch, bad
been subjected to his power.
Full
of this opinion, he determined to set the highest price upon Francis’s freedom,
and having ordered the count de Roeux to visit the
captive king in his name, be instructed him to propose the following articles
as the conditions on which he would grant him his liberty: that he should
restore Burgundy to the emperor, from whose ancestors it had been unjustly
wrested; that he should surrender Provence and Dauphine, that they might be
erected into an independent kingdom for the constable Bourbon; that he should
make full satisfaction to the king of England for all his claims, and finally
renounce the pretensions of France to Naples, Milan, or any other territory in
Italy. When Francis, who had hitherto flattered himself, that he should be
treated by the emperor with the generosity becoming one great prince towards
another, heard these rigorous conditions, he was so transported with
indignation, that, drawing his dagger hastily, he cried out, “ ’Twere better that a king should die thus”. Alarcon,
alarmed at his vehemence, laid hold on his hand; but though he soon recovered
greater composure, he still declared, in the most solemn manner, that he would
rather remain a prisoner during life, than purchase liberty by such ignominious
concessions.
This
mortifying discovery of the emperor’s intentions greatly augmented Francis’s
chagrin and impatience under his confinement, and must have driven him to absolute
despair, if he had not laid hold of the only thing which could still administer
any comfort to him. He persuaded himself, that the conditions which Roeux had proposed did not flow originally from Charles
himself, but were dictated by the rigorous policy of his Spanish council; and
that therefore he might hope, in one personal interview with him, to do more
towards hastening his own deliverance, than could be effected by long
negotiations passing through the subordinate hands of his ministers. Relying on
this supposition, which proceeded from too favorable an opinion of the
emperor’s character, he offered to visit him in Spain, and was willing to be
carried thither as a spectacle to that haughty nation. Lannoy employed all his
address to confirm him in these sentiments; and concerted with him in secret
the manner of executing this resolution. Francis was so eager on a scheme which
seemed to open some prospect of liberty, that he furnished the galleys
necessary for conveying him to Spain, Charles being at that time unable to fit
out a squadron for that purpose. The viceroy, without communicating his
intentions either to Bourbon or Pescara, conducted his prisoner towards Genoa,
under pretence of transporting him by sea to Naples;
though soon after they set sail, he ordered the pilots to steer directly for
Spain; but the wind happening to carry them near the French coast, the
unfortunate monarch had a full prospect of his own dominions, towards which he
cast many a sorrowful and desiring look. They landed, however, in a few days at
Barcelona, and soon after Francis was lodged [Aug. 24], by the emperor’s
command, in the Alcazar of Madrid, under the care of the vigilant Alarcon, who
guarded him with as much circumspection as ever.
THE
CONSPIRACY OF MORONE
A few
days after Francis’s arrival at Madrid, and when he began to be sensible of his
having relied without foundation on the emperor’s generosity, Henry VIII
concluded a treaty with the regent of France, which afforded him some hope of
liberty from another quarter. Henry’s extravagant demands had been received at
Madrid with that neglect which they deserved, and which he probably expected.
Charles, intoxicated with prosperity, no longer courted him in that respectful
and submissive manner which pleased his haughty temper. Wolsey, no less haughty
than his master, was highly irritated at the emperor’s discontinuing his wonted
caresses and professions of friendship to himself. These slight offences, added
to the weighty considerations formerly mentioned, induced Henry to enter into a
defensive alliance with Louise, in which all the differences between him and
her son were adjusted; at the same time he engaged that he would employ his
best offices in order to procure the deliverance of his new ally from a state
of captivity.
While
the open defection of such a powerful confederate affected Charles with deep
concern, a secret conspiracy was carrying on in Italy, which threatened him
with consequences still more fatal. The restless and intriguing genius of Morone, chancellor of Milan, gave rise to this. His revenge
had been amply gratified by the expulsion of the French out of Italy, and his
vanity no less soothed by the reestablishment of Sforza, to whose interest he
had attached himself in the duchy of Milan. The delays, however, and evasions
of the Imperial court, in granting Sforza the investiture of his new acquired
territories, had long alarmed Morone; these were
repeated so often, and with such apparent artifice, as became a full proof to
his suspicious mind that the emperor intended to strip his master of that rich
country which he had conquered in his name. Though Charles, in order to quiet
the pope and Venetians, no less jealous of his designs than Morone,
gave Sforza, at last, the investiture which had been so long desired; the
charter was clogged with so many reservations, and subjected him to such
grievous burdens, as rendered the duke of Milan a dependent on the emperor,
rather than a vassal of the empire, and afforded him hardly any other security
for his possessions than the good pleasure of an ambitious superior. Such an
accession of power as would have accrued from the addition of the Milanese to
the kingdom of Naples, was considered by Morone as
fatal to the liberties of Italy, no less than to his own importance. Full of
this idea he began to revolve in his mind the possibility of rescuing Italy
from the yoke of foreigners; the darling scheme, as has been already observed,
of the Italian politicians in that age, and which it was the great object of
their ambition to accomplish. If to the glory of having been the chief
instrument of driving the French out of Milan, he could add that of delivering
Naples from the dominion of the Spaniards, he thought that nothing would be
wanting to complete his fame. His fertile genius soon suggested to him a
project for that purpose; a difficult, indeed, and daring one, but for that
very reason more agreeable to his bold and enterprising temper.
Bourbon
and Pescara were equally enraged at Lannoy’s carrying
the French king into Spain without their knowledge. The former, being afraid that
the two monarchs might, in his absence, conclude some treaty, in which his
interests would be entirely sacrificed, hastened to Madrid, in order to guard
against that danger. The latter, on whom the command of the army now devolved,
was obliged to remain in Italy; but in every company, he gave vent to his
indignation against the viceroy, in expressions full of rancor and contempt; he
accused him, in a letter to the emperor, of cowardice in the time of danger,
and of insolence after victory, towards the obtaining of which he had
contributed nothing either by his valor or his conduct; nor did be abstain from
bitter complaints against the emperor himself, who had not discovered, as he
imagined, a sufficient sense of his merit, nor bestowed any adequate reward on
his services. It was on this disgust of Pescara, that Morone founded his whole system. He knew the boundless ambition of his nature, the
great extent of his abilities in peace as well as war, and the intrepidity of
his mind, capable alike of undertaking and of executing the most desperate
designs. The cantonment of the Spanish troops on the frontier of the Milanese
gave occasion to many interviews between him and Morone,
in which the latter took care frequently to turn the conversation to the
transactions subsequent to the battle of Pavia, a subject upon which the
marquis always entered willingly and with passion; and Morone,
observing his resentment to be uniformly violent, artfully pointed out and
aggravated every circumstance that could increase its fury. He painted, in the
strongest colors, the emperor’s want of discernment, as well as of gratitude,
in preferring Lannoy to him, and in allowing that presumptuous Fleming to
dispose of the captive king, without consulting the man to whose bravery and wisdom
Charles was indebted for the glory of having a formidable rival in his power.
Having warned him by such discourses, he then began to insinuate, that now was
the time to be avenged for these insults, and to acquire immortal renown as the
deliverer of his country from the oppression of strangers; that the states of
Italy, weary of the ignominious and intolerable dominion of barbarians, were at
last ready to combine in order to vindicate their own independence; that their
eyes were fixed on him as the only leader whose genius and good fortune could
ensure the happy success of that noble enterprise; that the attempt was no less
practicable than glorious, it being in his power to disperse the Spanish
infantry, the only body of the emperor’s troops that remained in Italy, through
the villages of the Milanese, that, in one night, they might be destroyed by
the people, who, having suffered much by their exactions and insolence, would
gladly undertake this service; that he might then, without opposition, take possession
of the throne of Naples, the station destined for him, and a reward not
unworthy the restorer of liberty to Italy; that the pope, of whom that kingdom
held and whose predecessors had disposed of it on many former occasions, would
willingly grant him the right of investiture; that the Venetians, the
Florentines, the duke of Milan, to whom he had communicated the scheme together
with the French, would be the guarantees of his right; that the Neapolitans
would naturally prefer the government of one of their countrymen, whom they
loved and admired, to that odious dominion of strangers, to which they had been
so long subjected; and that the emperor, astonished at a blow so unexpected,
would find that he had neither troops nor money to resist such a powerful
confederacy.
Pescara,
amazed at the boldness and extent of the scheme, listened attentively to Morone, but with the countenance of a man lost in profound
and anxious thought. On the one hand, the infamy of betraying his sovereign,
under whom he bore such high command, deterred him from the attempt; on the
other, the prospect of obtaining a crown allured him to venture upon it. After
continuing a short space in suspense, the least commendable motives, as is
usual after such deliberations, prevailed, and ambition triumphed over
honor. In order, however, to throw a color of decency on his conduct, he
insisted that some learned casuists should give their opinion, “Whether it was
lawful for a subject to take arms against his immediate sovereign, in obedience
to the lord paramount of whom the kingdom itself was held?”. Such a resolution
of the case as he expected was soon obtained from the divines and civilians
both of home and Milan; the negotiation went forward; and measures seemed to be
taking with great spirit for the speedy execution of the design.
During
this interval, Pescara, either shocked at the treachery of the action that he
was going to commit, or despairing of its success, began to entertain thoughts
of abandoning the engagements which he had come under. The indisposition of
Sforza, who happened at that time to be taken ill of a distemper which was
thought mortal, confirmed his resolution, and determined him to make known the
whole conspiracy to the emperor, deemed it more prudent to expect the duchy of
Milan from him as the reward of this discovery, than to aim at a kingdom to be
purchased by a series of crimes. This resolution, however, proved the source of
actions hardly less criminal and ignominious.
The
emperor, who had already received full information concerning the conspiracy
from other hands, seemed to be highly pleased with Pescara’s fidelity, and
commanded him to continue his intrigues for some time with the pope and Sforza,
both that he might discover their intentions more fully, and that he might be
able to convict them of the crime with greater certainty. Pescara, conscious of
guilt, as well as sensible how suspicious his long silence must have appeared
at Madrid, durst not decline that dishonorable office and was obliged to act
the meanest and most disgraceful of all parts, that of seducing with a purpose
to betray. Considering the abilities of the persons with whom he had to deal,
the part was scarcely less difficult than base; but he acted it with such
address, as to deceive even the penetrating eye of Morone,
who, relying with full confidence on his sincerity, visited him at Novara, in
order to put the last hand to their machinations. Pescara received him in an
apartment where Antonio de Leyva was placed behind the tapestry, that he might
overhear and bear witness to their conversation; as Morone was about to take leave, that officer suddenly appeared, and to his
astonishment arrested him prisoner in the emperor’s name. He was conducted to
the castle of Pavia; and Pescara, who had so lately been his accomplice, had
now the assurance to interrogate him as his judge. At the same time, the
emperor declared Sforza to have forfeited all right to the duchy of Milan, by
his engaging in a conspiracy against the sovereign of whom he held; Pescara, by
his command, seized on every place in the Milanese, except the castles of
Cremona and Milan, which the unfortunate duke attempting to defend, were
closely blockaded by the Imperial troops.
But
though this unsuccessful conspiracy, instead of stripping the emperor of what
he already possessed in Italy, contributed to extend his dominions in that
country, it showed him the necessity of coming to some agreement with the
French king, unless he chose to draw on himself a confederacy of all Europe,
which the progress of his arms and his ambition, now as undisguised as it was
boundless, filled with general alarm. He had not hitherto treated Francis with
the generosity which that monarch expected, and hardly with the decency due to
his station. Instead of displaying the sentiments becoming a great prince,
Charles, by his mode of treating Francis, seems to have acted with the
mercenary art of a corsair, who, by the rigorous usage of his prisoners, endeavors
to draw from them a higher price for their ransom. The captive king was
confined in an old castle, under a keeper whose formal austerity of manners
rendered his vigilance still more disgusting. He was allowed no exercise but
that of riding on a mule, surrounded with armed guards on horseback. Charles,
on pretence of its being necessary to attend the
Cortes assembled in Toledo, had one to reside in that city, and suffered
several weeks to elapse without visiting Francis, though he solicited an interview
with the most pressing and submissive importunity. So many indignities made a
deep impression on a high-spirited prince; he began to lose all relish for his
usual amusements: his natural gayety of temper forsook him; and after
languishing for some time, he was seized with a dangerous fever, during the
violence of which he complained constantly of the unexpected and unprincely
rigor with which he had been treated, often exclaiming, that now the emperor
would have the satisfaction of his dying a prisoner in his hands, without
having once deigned to see his face. The physicians, at last, despaired of his
life, and informed the emperor that they saw no hope of his recovery, unless he
were gratified with regard to that point on which he seemed to be so strongly
bent. Charles, solicitous to preserve a life with which all his prospects of
farther advantage from the victory of Pavia must have terminated, immediately
consulted his ministers concerning the course to be taken. In vain did the
chancellor Gattinara, the most able among them,
represent to him the indecency of his visiting Francis, if he did not intend to
set him at liberty immediately upon equal terms; in vain did he point out the
infamy to which he would be exposed, if avarice or ambition should prevail on
him to give the captive monarch this mark of attention and sympathy, for which
humanity and generosity had pleaded so long without effect. The emperor, less
delicate, or less solicitous about reputation than his minister, set out for
Madrid to visit his prisoner [Sept. 28]. The interview was short; Francis being
too weak to bear a long conversation, Charles accosted him in terms full of
affection and respect, and gave him such promises of speedy deliverance and
princely treatment, as would have reflected the greatest honor upon him if they
had flowed from another source. Francis grasped at them with the eagerness
natural in his situation; and cheered with this gleam of hope, began to revive
from that moment, recovering rapidly his wonted health.
He
had soon the mortification to find, that his confidence in the emperor was not
better founded than formerly. Charles returned instantly to Toledo; all
negotiations were carried on by his ministers; and Francis was kept in as
strict custody as ever. A new indignity, and that very galling, was added to
all those he had already suffered. Bourbon arriving in Spain about this time,
Charles, who had so long refused to visit the king of France, received his
rebellious subject with the most studied respect [Nov. 15]. He met him without
the gates of Toledo, embraced him with the greatest affection, and placing him
on his left hand, conducted him to his apartment. These marks of honor to him,
were so many insults to the unfortunate monarch which he felt in a very sensible
manner. It afforded him some consolation, however, to observe, that the
sentiments of the Spaniards differed widely from those of their sovereign. That
generous people detested Bourbon’s crime. Notwithstanding his great talents and
important services, they shunned all intercourse with him, to such a degree,
that Charles having desired the Marquis de Villena to
permit Bourbon to reside in his palace while the court remained in Toledo, he
politely replied, “That he could not refuse gratifying his sovereign in that
request”; but added, with a Castilian dignity of mind, that “the emperor must
not be surprised if, the moment the constable departed, he should burn to the
ground a house which, having been polluted by the presence of a traitor, became
an unfit habitation for a man of honour”.
Charles
himself, nevertheless, seemed to have it much at heart to reward Bourbon’s
services in a signal manner. But as he insisted, in the first place, on the
accomplishment of the emperor’s promise of giving him in marriage his sister
Eleanora, queen-dowager of Portugal, the honor of which alliance had been one
of his chief inducements to rebel against his lawful sovereign; as Francis, in
order to prevent such a dangerous union, had offered, before he left Italy, to
marry that princess; and as Eleanora herself discovered an inclination rather
to match with a powerful monarch, than with his exiled subject; all these
interfering circumstances created great embarrassment to Charles, and left him
hardly any hope of extricating himself with decency. But the death of Pescara,
who, at the age of thirty-six, left behind him the reputation of being one of
the greatest generals and ablest politicians of that century, happened
opportunely at this juncture [December] for his relief. By that event, the
command of the army in Italy became vacant, and Charles, always fertile in
resources, persuaded Bourbon, who was in no condition to dispute his will, to
accept the office of general in chief there, together with a grant of the duchy
of Milan forfeited by Sforza; and in return for these to relinquish all hopes
of marrying the queen of Portugal.
The
chief obstacle that stood in the way of Francis’s liberty was the emperor’s
continuing to insist so peremptorily on the restitution of Burgundy, as a
preliminary to that event. Francis often declared, that he would never consent
to dismember his kingdom; and that even if he should so far forget the duties
of a monarch, as to come to such a resolution, the fundamental laws of the
nation would prevent its taking effect On his part he was willing to make an
absolute cession to the emperor of all his pretensions in Italy and the
Low-Countries; he promised to restore to Bourbon all his lands which had been
confiscated; he renewed his proposal of marrying the emperor’s sister, the
queen-dowager of Portugal; and engaged to pay a great sum by way of ransom for
his own person. But all mutual esteem and confidence between the two monarchs
were now entirely lost; there appeared, on the one hand, a rapacious ambition
laboring to avail itself of every favorable circumstance; on the other,
suspicion and resentment, standing perpetually on their guard; so that the
prospect of bringing their negotiation to an issue seemed to be far distant.
The duchess of Alençon, the French king’s sister, whom Charles permitted to
visit her brother in his confinement, employed all her address, in order to
procure his liberty on more reasonable terms. Henry of England interposed his
good offices to the same purpose, but both with so little success, that Francis
in despair took suddenly the resolution of resigning his crown, with all its
rights and prerogatives, to his son the dauphin, determined rather to end his
days in prison, than to purchase his freedom by concessions unworthy of a king.
The deed for this purpose he signed with legal formality in Madrid, empowering
his sister to carry it into France, that it might be registered in all the
parliaments of the kingdom; and at the same time intimating his intention to
the emperor, he desired him to name the place of his confinement, and to assign
him a proper number of attendants during the remainder of his days.
This
resolution of the French king had great effect, Charles began to be sensible
that by pushing rigor to excess he might defeat his coin measures; and instead
of the vast advantages which he hoped to draw from ransoming a powerful
monarch, he might at last find in his hands a prince without dominions or
revenues. About the same time, one of the king of Navarre’s domestics happened,
by an extraordinary exertion of fidelity, courage, and address, to procure his
master an opportunity of escaping from the prison in which he had been confined
ever since the battle of Pavia. This convinced the emperor, that the most
vigilant attention of his officers might be eluded by the ingenuity or boldness
of Francis or his attendants, and one unlucky hour might deprive him of all the
advantages which he had been so solicitous to obtain. By these considerations,
he was induced to abate somewhat of his former demands. On the other hand,
Francis’s impatience under confinement daily increased; and having received
certain intelligence of a powerful league forming against his rival in Italy,
he grew more compliant with regard to concessions, trusting that, if he could
once obtain his liberty, he would soon be in a condition to resume whatever he
had yielded.
Such
being the views and sentiments of the two monarchs, the treaty which procured
Francis his liberty was signed at Madrid on the fourteenth of January (1526),
one thousand five hundred and twenty-six. The article with regard to Burgundy,
which had hitherto created the greatest difficulty, was compromised, Francis
engaging to restore that duchy with all it dependencies in full sovereignty to
the emperor; and Charles consenting that this restitution should not be made
until the king was set at liberty; in order to secure the performance of this,
as well as the other conditions in the treaty, Francis agreed that at the same
instant when he himself should be released, he would deliver as hostages to the
emperor, his eldest son the dauphin, his second son the duke of Orleans, or in
lieu of the latter, twelve of his principal nobility, to be named by Charles.
The other articles swelled to a great number, and, though not of such
importance, were extremely rigorous. Among these the most remarkable were, that
Francis should renounce all his pretensions in Italy, that he should disclaim
any title which he had to the sovereignty of Flanders and Artois; that, within
six weeks after his release, he should restore to Bourbon, and his adherents,
all their goods, moveable and immoveable, and make them full reparation for the
damages which they had sustained by the confiscation of them; that he should
use his interest with Henry d’Albret to relinquish
his pretensions to the crown of Navarre, and should not for the future assist
him in any attempt to recover it; that there should be established between the
emperor and Francis a league of perpetual friendship and confederacy, with a
promise of mutual assistance in every case of necessity; that, in corroboration
of this union, Francis should marry the emperor’s sister, the queen-dowager of
Portugal, that Francis should cause all the articles of this treaty to be
ratified by the states, and registered in the parliaments of his kingdom; that
upon the emperor’s receiving this ratification the hostages should be set at
liberty; but in their place, the duke of Angouleme, the king’s third son,
should be delivered to Charles, that, in order to manifest, as well as to
strengthen the amity between the two monarchs, he might be educated at the Imperial
court; and that if Francis did not, within the time limited, fulfill the
stipulations in the treaty, he should promise, upon his honor and oath, to
return into Spain, and to surrender himself again a prisoner to the emperor.
By
this treaty, Charles flattered himself that he had not only effectually humbled
his rival, but that he had taken such precautions as would forever prevent his
re-attaining any formidable degree of power. The opinion, which the wisest
politicians formed concerning it, was very different; they could not persuade
themselves that Francis, after obtaining his liberty, would execute articles
against which he had struggled so long, and to which, notwithstanding all that
he felt during a long and rigorous confinement, he had consented with the
utmost reluctance. Ambition and resentment, they knew, would conspire in
prompting him to violate the hard conditions to which he had been constrained
to submit; nor would arguments and casuistry he wanting to represent that which
was so manifestly advantageous, to be necessary and just. If one part of
Francis’s conduct had been known at that time, this opinion might have been
founded, not in conjecture, but in certainty. A few hours before he signed the
treaty, he assembled such of his counselors as were then in Madrid, and having
exacted from them a solemn oath of secrecy, he made a long enumeration in their
presence of the dishonorable arts, as well as unprincely rigor, which the
emperor had employed in order to ensnare or intimidate him. For that reason, he
took a formal protest in the hands of notaries, that his consent to the treaty
should be considered as an involuntary deed, and be deemed null and void. By
this disingenuous artifice, for which even the treatment that he had met with
was no apology, Francis endeavored to satisfy his honor and conscience in
signing the treaty, and to provide at the same time a pretext on which to break
it.
Great,
meanwhile, were the outward demonstrations of love and confidence between the
two monarchs; they appeared often together in public; they frequently had long
conferences in private; they travelled in the same litter, and joined in the
same amusements. But amidst these signs of peace and friendship, the emperor
still harbored suspicion in his mind. Though the ceremonies of the marriage
between Francis and the queen of Portugal were performed soon after the
conclusion of the treaty, Charles would not permit him to consummate it until
the return of the ratification from France. Even then Francis was not allowed
to be at full liberty; his guards were still continued; though caressed as a
brother-in-law, he was still watched like a prisoner; and it was obvious to
attentive observers, that a union, in the very beginning of which there might
be discerned such symptoms of jealousy and distrust, could not be cordial, or
of long continuance.
About
a month after the signing of the treaty, the regent’s ratification of it was
brought from France; and that wise princess, preferring, on this occasion, the
public good to domestic affection, informed her son, that, instead of the
twelve noblemen named in the treaty, she had sent the duke of Orleans along
with his brother the dauphin to the frontier, as the kingdom could suffer
nothing by the absence of a child, but must be left almost incapable of defence, if deprived of its ablest statesmen and most
experienced generals, whom Charles had artfully included in his nomination. At
last Francis took leave of the emperor, whose suspicion of the king’s sincerity
increasing, as the time of putting it to the proof approached, he endeavored to
bind him still faster by exacting new promises, which, after those he had
already made, the French monarch was not slow to grant. He set out from Madrid,
a place which the remembrance of many afflicting circumstances rendered
peculiarly odious to him, with the joy natural on such an occasion, and began
the long-wished-for journey towards his own dominions. He was escorted by a
body of horse under the command of Alarcon, who, as the king drew near the
frontiers of France, guarded him with more scrupulous exactness than ever. When
he arrived at the river Andaye, which separates the
two kingdoms, Lautrec appealed on the opposite bank with a guard of horse equal
in number to Alarcon’s. An empty bark was moored in the middle of the stream;
the attendants drew up in order on the opposite banks; at the same instant,
Lannoy with eight gentlemen put off from the Spanish, and Lautrec with the same
number from the French side of the river; the former had the king in his boat;
the latter, the dauphin and duke of Orleans; they met in the empty vessel; the
exchange was made in a moment: Francis, after a short embrace of his children,
leaped into Lautrec’s boat, and reached the French shore. He mounted at that
instant a Turkish horse, waved his hand over his head, and with a joyful voice
crying aloud several times, “I am yet a king”, galloped full speed to St. John
de Luz, and from thence to Bayonne. This event, no less impatiently desired by
the French nation than by their monarch, happened on the eighteenth of March, a
year and twenty-two days after the fatal battle of Pavia.
THE
PEASANTS’ WAR
Soon
after the emperor had taken leave of Francis, and permitted him to begin his
journey towards his own dominions, he set out for Seville, in order to
solemnize his marriage with Isabella, the daughter of Emanuel, the late king of
Portugal, and the sister of John III, who had succeeded him in the throne of
that kingdom. Isabella was a princess of uncommon beauty and accomplishments;
and as the Cortes, both in Castile and Aragon, had warmly solicited their
sovereign to marry, the choice of a wife, so nearly allied to the royal blood
of both kingdoms, was extremely acceptable to his subjects. The Portuguese,
fond of this new connection with the first monarch in Christendom, granted him
an extraordinary dowry with Isabella, amounting to nine hundred thousand crowns,
a sum which, from the situation of his affairs at this juncture, was of no
small consequence to the emperor. The marriage was celebrated [March 12] with
that splendor and gayety which became a great and youthful prince. Charles
lived with Isabella in perfect harmony, and treated her on all occasions with
much distinction and regard.
During
these transactions, Charles could hardly give any attention to the affairs of
Germany, though it was torn in pieces by commotions, which threatened the most
dangerous consequences. By the feudal institutions, which still subsisted
almost unimpaired in the empire, the property of lands was vested in the
princes and free barons. Their vassals held of them by the strictest and most
limited tenures; while the great body of the people was kept in a state but
little removed from absolute servitude. In some places of Germany, people of
the lowest class were so entirely in the power of their masters, as to be
subject to personal and domestic slavery, the most rigorous form of that
wretched state. In other provinces, particularly in Bohemia and Lusatia, the
peasants were bound to remain on the lands to which they belonged, and making
part of the state, were transferred like any other property from one hand to
another. Even in Swabia, and the countries on the banks of the Rhine, where their
condition was most tolerable, the peasants not only paid the full rent of their
farms to the landlord, but if they chose either to change the place of their
abode, or to follow a new profession, before they could accomplish what they
desired, they were obliged to purchase this privilege at a certain price.
Besides this, all grants of lands to peasants expired at their death, without
descending to their posterity. Upon that event, the landlord had a right to the
best of their cattle, as well as of their furniture; and their heirs, in order
to obtain a renewal of the grant, were obliged to pay large sums by way of
fine. These exactions, though grievous, were borne with patience, because they
were customary and ancient: but when the progress of elegance and luxury, as
well as the changes introduced into the art of war, came to increase the
expense of government, and made it necessary for princes to levy occasional or
stated taxes on their subjects, such impositions being new, appeared
intolerable; and in Germany, these duties being laid chiefly upon beer, wine,
and other necessaries of life, affected the common people in the most sensible
manner. The addition of such a load to their former burdens, drove them to
despair. It was to the valor inspired by resentment against impositions of this
kind that the Swiss owed the acquisition of their liberty in the fourteenth
century. The same cause had excited the peasants in several other provinces of
Germany to rebel against their superiors towards the end of the fifteenth and
beginning of the sixteenth centuries; and though these insurrections were not
attended with like success, they could not, however, be quelled without much
difficulty and bloodshed.
By
these checks, the spirit of the peasants was overawed rather than subdued; and
their grievances multiplying continually, they ran to arms, in the year one
thousand five hundred and twenty-six, with the most frantic rage. Their first
appearance was near Ulm in Swabia. The peasants in the adjacent country flocked
to their standard with the ardor and impatience natural to men, who having
groaned long under oppression, beheld at last some prospect of deliverance; and
the contagion spreading from province to province, reached almost every part of
Germany. Wherever they came, they plundered the monasteries; wasted the lands
of their superiors; razed their castles, and massacred without mercy all
persons of noble birth, who were so unhappy as to fall into their hands. Having
intimidated their oppressors, as they imagined, by the violence of these
proceedings, they began to consider what would be the most proper and effectual
method of securing themselves for the future from their tyrannical exactions.
With this view, they drew up and published a memorial, containing all their demands,
and declared, that while arms were in their hands, they would either persuade
or oblige the nobles to give them full satisfaction with regard to these. The
chief articles were, that they might have liberty to choose their own pastors;
that they might be freed from the payment of all tithes except those of corn;
that they might no longer be considered as the slaves or bondmen of their
superiors; that the liberty of hunting and fishing might be common; that the
great forests might not be regarded as private property, but be open for the
use of all; that they might be delivered from the unusual burden of taxes under
which they labored; that the administration of justice might be rendered less
rigorous and more impartial; that time encroachments of the nobles upon meadows
and commons might be restrained.
Many
of these demands were extremely reasonable; and being urged by such formidable
numbers, should have met with some redress. But those unwieldy bodies,
assembled in different places, had neither union, nor conduct, nor vigor. Being
led by persons of the lowest rank, without skill in war, or knowledge of what
was necessary for accomplishing their designs; all their exploits were
distinguished only by a brutal and unmeaning fury. To oppose this, the princes
and nobles of Swabia and the Lower Rhine raised such of their vassals as still
continued faithful, and attacking some of the mutineers with open force, and
others by surprise, cut to pieces or dispersed all who infested those
provinces; so that the peasants, after ruining the open country, and losing
upwards of twenty thousand of their associates in the field, were obliged to
return to their habitations with less hope than ever of relief from their
grievances.
These
commotion happened at first in provinces of Germany where Luther’s opinions had
made little progress; and being excited wholly by political causes, had no
connection with the disputed points in religion. But the phrenzy reaching at
last those countries in which the reformation was established, derived new
strength from circumstances peculiar to them, and rose to a still greater pitch
of extravagance. The reformation, wherever it was received, increased that bold
and innovating spirit to which it owed its birth. Men who had the courage to
overturn a system supported by everything which can command respect or
reverence, were not to be overawed by any authority, how great or venerable
soever. After having been accustomed to consider themselves as judges of the
most important doctrines in religion, to examine these freely, and to reject,
without scruple, what appeared to them erroneous, it was natural for them to
turn the same daring and inquisitive eye towards government, and to think of
reciting whatever disorders or imperfections were discovered there. As
religious abuses had been reformed in several places without the permission of
the magistrate, it was an easy transition to attempt the redress of political
grievances in the same manner.
No
sooner, then, did the spirit of revolt break out in Thuringia, a province
subject to the elector of Saxony, the inhabitants of which were mostly converts
to Lutheranism, than it assumed a new and more dangerous form. Thomas Muntzer, one of Luther’s disciples, having established
himself in that country, had acquired a wonderful ascendant over the minds of
the people. He propagated among them the wildest and most enthusiastic notions,
but such as tended manifestly to inspire them with boldness, and lead them to
sedition. “Luther”, he told them, “had done more hurt than service to religion.
He had, indeed, rescued the church from the yoke of popery, but his doctrines
encouraged, and his life set an example of, the utmost licentiousness of
manners. In order to avoid vice, (says he) men must practice perpetual mortification.
They must put on a grave countenance, speak little, wear a plain garb, and be
serious in their whole deportment. Such as prepare their hearts in this manner,
may expect that the Supreme Being will direct all their steps, and by some
visible sign discover his will to them; if that illumination be at any time
withheld, we may expostulate with the Almighty, who deals with us so harshly,
and remind him of his promises. This expostulation and anger will be highly
acceptable to God, and will at last prevail on him to guide us with the same
unerring hand which conducted the patriarchs of old. Let us beware, however, of
offending him by our arrogance; but as all men are equal in his eye, let them
return to that condition of equality in which he formed them, and having all
things in common, let them live together like brethren, without any marks of
subordination or preeminence”.
Extravagant
as these tenets were, they flattered so many passions in the human heart, as to
make a deep impression. To aim at nothing more than abridging the power of the
nobility, was now considered as a trifling and partial reformation, not worth
the contending for; it was proposed to level every distinction among mankind,
and by abolishing property to reduce them to their natural state of equality,
in which all should receive their subsistence from one common stock. Muntzer assured them, that the design was approved of by
Heaven, and that the Almighty had in a dream ascertained him of its success.
The peasants set about the execution of it, not only with the rage which
animated those of their order in other parts of Germany, but with the ardor
which enthusiasm inspires. They deposed the magistrates in all the cities of which
they were masters; seized the lands of the nobles, and obliged such of them as
they got into their hands to put on the dress commonly worn by peasants, and
instead of their former titles, to be satisfied with the appellation given to
people in the lowest class of life. Great numbers engaged in this wild undertaking;
but Muntzer, their leader and their prophet, was
destitute of the abilities necessary for conducting it. He had all the
extravagance, but not the courage, which enthusiasts usually possess. It was
with difficulty he could be persuaded to take the field; and though he soon
drew together eight thousand men, he suffered himself to be surrounded by a
body of cavalry, under the command of the elector of Saxony, the landgrave of
Hesse, and duke of Brunswick. These princes, unwilling to shed the blood of their
deluded subjects, sent a young nobleman to their camp, with the offer of a
general pardon, if they would immediately lay down their arms, and deliver up
the authors of the sedition. Muntzer, alarmed at
this, began to harangue his followers with his usual vehemence, exhorting them
not to trust these deceitful promises of their oppressors, nor to desert the
cause of God, and of Christian liberty.
But
the sense of present danger making a deeper impression on the peasants than his
eloquence, confusion and terror were visible in every face, when a rainbow,
which was the emblem that the mutineers had painted on their colors, happening
to appear in the clouds, Muntzer, with admirable
presence of mind, laid hold of that incident, and suddenly raising. his eyes and
hands towards Heaven, “Behold”, cries he, with an elevated voice, “the sign
which God has given. There is the pledge of your safety, and a token that the
wicked shall be destroyed”. The fanatical multitude set up instantly a great
shout, as if victory had been certain; and passing in a moment from one extreme
to another, massacred the unfortunate nobleman who had come with the offer of
pardon, and demanded to be led towards the enemy. The princes, enraged at this
shocking violation of the laws of war, advanced with no less impetuosity, and
began the attack [May 15]; but the behavior of the peasants in the combat was
not such as might have been expected either from their ferocity or confidence of
success; an undisciplined rabble was no equal match for well-trained troops;
above five thousand were slain in the field, almost without making resistance;
the rest fled, and among the foremost Muntzer their
general. He was taken next day, and being condemned to such punishments as his
crimes had deserved, he suffered them with a poor and dastardly spirit. His
death put an end to the insurrections of the peasants, which had filled Germany
with such terror; but the enthusiastic notions which he had scattered were not
extirpated, and produced, not long after, effects more memorable, as well as
more extravagant.
During
these commotions, Luther acted with exemplary prudence and moderation; like a
common parent, solicitous about the welfare of both parties, without sparing
the faults or errors of either. On the one hand, he addressed a monitory
discourse to the nobles, exhorting them to treat their dependents with greater
humanity and indulgence. On the other, he severely censured the seditious
spirit of the peasants, advising them not to murmur at hardships inseparable from
their condition, nor to seek for redress by any but legal means.
Luther’s
famous marriage with Catharine a Boria, a nun of a
noble family, who, having thrown off the veil, had fled from the cloister,
happened this year, and was far from meeting with the same approbation. Even
his most devoted followers thought this step indecent, at a time when his
country was involved in so many calamities; while his enemies never mentioned
it with any softer appellation than that of incestuous or profane. Luther himself
was sensible of the impression which it had made to his disadvantage; but being
satisfied with his own conduct, he bore the censure of his friends, and the
reproaches of his adversaries, with his usual fortitude.
This
year the reformation lost its first protector, Frederic, elector of Saxony; but
the blow was the less sensibly felt, as he was succeeded by his brother John
[May 5], a more avowed and zealous, though less able patron of Luther and his
doctrines.
THE
TEUTONIC ROOTS OF PRUSSIA
Another
event happened about the same time, which, as it occasioned a considerable
change in the state of Germany, must be traced back to its source. While the
frenzy of the Crusades possessed all Europe during the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, several orders of religious knighthood were founded in defence of the Christian faith against heathens and
infidels. Among these the Teutonic order in Germany was one of the most
illustrious, the knights of which distinguished themselves greatly in all the
enterprises carried on in the Holy Land. Being driven at last from their
settlements in the east, they were obliged to return to their native country.
Their zeal and valor were too impetuous to remain long inactive. They invaded,
on very slight pretences, the province of Prussia,
the inhabitants of which were still idolaters; and having completed the
conquest of it about the middle of the thirteenth century, held it many years
as a fief depending on the crown of Poland. Fierce contests arose during this
period, between the grand masters of the order and the kings of Poland; the
former struggling for independence, while the latter asserted their right of
sovereignty with great firmness. Albert, a prince of the house of Brandenburg,
who was elected grand master in the year one thousand five hundred and eleven,
engaging keenly in this quarrel, maintained a long war with Sigismund king of
Poland; but having become an early convert to Luther’s doctrines, this gradually
lessened his zeal for the interests of his fraternity, so that he took the
opportunity of the confusions in the empire, and the absence of the emperor, to
conclude a treaty with Sigismund, greatly to his own private emolument. By it,
that part of Prussia which belonged to the Teutonic order, was erected into a
secular and hereditary duchy, and the investiture of it granted to Albert, who,
in return, bound himself to do homage for it to the kings of Poland as their
vassal. Immediately after this he made public profession of the reformed
religion, and married a princess of Denmark. The Teutonic knights exclaimed so
loudly against the treachery of their grand master, that he was put under the
ban of the empire; but he still kept possession of the province which he had
usurped, and transmitted it to his posterity. In process of time, this rich
inheritance fell to the electoral branch of the family, all dependence on the
crown of Poland was shaken off, and the margraves of Brandenburg, having
assumed the title of kings of Prussia, have not only risen to an equality with
the first princes in Germany, but take their rank among the great monarchs of
Europe.
Upon
the return of the French king to his dominions, the eyes of all the powers in
Europe were fixed upon him, that, by observing his first motions, they might
form a judgment concerning his subsequent conduct. They were not held long in
suspense. Francis, as soon as he arrived at Bayonne, wrote to the king of
England, thanking him for the zeal and affection wherewith he had interposed in
his favor, to which be acknowledged that he owed the recovery of his liberty.
Next day the emperor’s ambassadors demanded audience, and, in their master’s
name, required him to issue such orders as were necessary for carrying the
treaty of Madrid into immediate and full execution; he coldly answered, that
though, for his own part, he determined religiously to perform all that he had
promised, the treaty contained so many articles relative not to himself alone,
but affecting the interests of the French monarchy, that he could not take any
further step without consulting the states of his kingdom, and that some time
would be necessary, in order to reconcile their minds to the hard conditions
which he had consented to ratify. This reply was considered as no obscure
discovery of his being resolved to elude the treaty; and the compliment paid to
Henry appeared a very proper step towards securing the assistance of that
monarch in the war with the emperor, to which such a resolution would certainly
give rise. These circumstances, added to the explicit declarations which
Francis made in secret to the ambassadors from several of the Italian powers,
fully satisfied them that their conjectures with regard to his conduct had been
just, and that, instead of intending to execute an unreasonable treaty, he was
eager to seize the first opportunity of revenging those injuries which had
compelled him to feign an approbation of it. Even the doubts, and fears, and
scruples, which used, on other occasions, to hold Clement in a state of
uncertainty, were dissipated by Francis’s seeming, impatience to break through
all his engagements with the emperor. The situation, indeed, of affairs in
Italy at that time, did not allow the pope to hesitate long. Sforza was still
besieged by the Imperialists in the castle of Milan. That feeble prince,
deprived now of Morone’s advice, and unprovided with
everything necessary for defence, found means to
inform Clement and the Venetians, that he must soon surrender if they did not
come to his relief. The Imperial troops, as they had received no pay since the
battle of Pavia, lived at discretion in the Milanese, levying such exorbitant
contributions in that duchy, as amounted, if we may rely on Guicciardini’s calculation, to no less a sum than five thousand ducats a-day; nor was it to be
doubted but that the soldiers, as soon as the castle should submit, would
choose to leave a ruined country which hardly afforded them subsistence, that
they might take possession of more comfortable quarters in the fertile and
untouched territories of the pope and Venetians. The assistance of the French
king was the only thing which could either save Sforza, or enable them to
protect their own dominions from the insults of the Imperial troops.
For
these reasons, the pope, the Venetians, and duke of Milan, were equally
impatient to come to an agreement with Francis, who, on his part, was no less
desirous of acquiring such a considerable accession both of strength and
reputation as such a confederacy would bring along with it. The chief objects
of this alliance, which was concluded at Cognac on the twenty-second of May,
though kept secret for some time, were to oblige the emperor to set at liberty
the French king’s sons, upon payment of a reasonable ransom; to reestablish
Sforza in the quiet possession of the Milanese. If Charles should refuse either
of these, the contracting parties bound themselves to bring into the field an
army of thirty-five thousand men, with which, after driving the Spaniards out
of the Milanese, they would attack the kingdom of Naples. The king of England
was declared protector of this league, which they dignified with the name of
Holy, because the pope was at the head of it; and in order to allure Henry more
effectually, a principality in the kingdom of Naples, of thirty thousand ducats
yearly revenue, was to be settled on him; and lands to the value of ten
thousand ducats on Wolsey his favorite.
No
sooner was this league concluded, than Clement, by the plenitude of his papal
power, absolved Francis from the oath which he bad taken to observe the treaty
of Madrid. This right, how pernicious soever in its effects, and destructive of
that integrity which is the basis of all transactions among men, was the
natural consequences of the powers which the popes arrogated as the infallible
vicegerents of Christ upon earth. But as, in virtue of this pretended
prerogative, they had often dispensed with obligations which were held sacred,
the interest of some men, and the credulity of others, led them to imagine,
that the decisions of a sovereign pontiff authorized or justified actions which
would, otherwise, have been criminal and impious.
The
discovery of Francis’s intention to elude the treaty of Madrid, filled the
emperor with a variety of disquieting thoughts. He had treated an unfortunate prince
in the most ungenerous manner; he had displayed an insatiable ambition in all
his negotiations with his prisoner; he knew what censures the former had drawn
upon him, and what apprehensions the latter had excited in every court of
Europe; nor had he reaped from the measures which he pursued, any of those
advantages which politicians are apt to consider as an excuse for the most
criminal conduct, and a compensation for the severest reproaches. Francis was
now out of his hands, and not one of all the mighty consequences, which he had
expected from the treaty that set him at liberty, was likely to take place. His
rashness in relying so far on his own judgment as to trust to the sincerity of
the French king, in opposition to the sentiments of his wisest ministers, was
now apparent; and he easily conjectured, that the same confederacy, the dread
of which had induced him to set Francis at liberty, would now be formed against
him with that gallant and incensed monarch at its head. Self-condemnation and
shame, on account of what was past, with anxious apprehensions concerning what
might happen, were the necessary result of these reflections on his own conduct
and situation. Charles, however, was naturally firm and inflexible in all his
measures. To have receded suddenly from any article in the treaty of Madrid,
would have been a plain confession of imprudence, and a palpable symptom of
fear; he determined, therefore, that it was most suitable to his dignity, to
insist, whatever might be the consequences, on the strict execution of the
treaty, and particularly not to accept of anything which might be offered as an
equivalent for the restitution of Burgundy.
In
consequence of this resolution, he appointed Lannoy and Alarcon to repair, as
his ambassadors, to the court of France, and formally to summon the king,
either to execute the treaty with the sincerity that became him, or to return
according to his oath, a prisoner to Madrid. Instead of giving them an
immediate answer, Francis admitted the deputies of the states of Burgundy to an
audience in their presence. They humbly represented to him, that he had
exceeded the powers vested in a king of France, when he consented to alienate
their country from the crown, the domains of which he was bound by his
coronation oath to preserve entire and un impaired. Francis, in return, thanked
them for their attachment to his crown, and entreated them, though very
faintly, to remember the obligations which he lay under to fulfill his
engagements with the emperor. The deputies, assuming a higher tone, declared,
that they would not obey commands which they considered as illegal; and, if he
should abandon them to the enemies of France, they had resolved to defend
themselves to the best of their power, with a firm purpose rather to perish
than submit to a foreign dominion. Upon which Francis, turning towards the
Imperial ambassadors, represented to them the impossibility of performing what
he had undertaken, and offered, in lieu of Burgundy, to pay the emperor two
millions of crowns. The viceroy and Alarcon, who easily perceived, that the
scene to which they had been witnesses, was concerted between the king and his
subjects in order to impose upon them, signified to him their master’s fixed
resolution not to depart in the smallest point from the terms of the treaty,
and withdrew. Before they left the kingdom, they had the mortification to hear
the holy league against the emperor published with great solemnity [June 11].
THE
SACK OF ROME
Charles
no sooner received an account of this confederacy than he exclaimed, in the
most public manner, and in the harshest terms, against Francis, as a prince
void of faith and of honor. He complained no less of Clement, whom he solicited
in vain to abandon his new allies; he accused him of ingratitude; he taxed him
with an ambition unbecoming his character; he threatened him not only with all
the vengeance which the power of an emperor can inflict, but, by appealing to a
general council, called up before his eyes all the terrors arising from the
authority of those assemblies so formidable to the papal see. It was necessary,
however, to oppose something else than reproaches and threats to the powerful
combination formed against him; and the emperor, prompted by so many passions,
did not fail to exert himself with unusual vigor, in order to send supplies,
not only of men, but of money, which were still more needed, into Italy.
On
the other hand, the efforts of the confederates bore no proportion to that
animosity against the emperor, with which they seemed to enter into the holy
league. Francis, it was thought, would have infused spirit and vigor into the
whole body. He had his lost honor to repair, many injuries to revenge, and the
station among the princes of Europe, from which he had fallen, to recover. From
all these powerful incitements, added to the natural impetuosity of his temper,
a war more fierce and bloody than any that he had hitherto made upon his rival,
was expected. But Francis had gone through such a scene of distress, and the
impression it had made was still so fresh in his memory, that he was become
diffident of himself, distrustful of fortune, and desirous of tranquility. To
procure the release of his sons, and to avoid the restitution of Burgundy by
paying some reasonable equivalent, were his chief objects; and for the sake of
these, he would willingly have sacrificed Sforza, and the liberties of Italy,
to the emperor. He flattered himself, that the dread of the confederacy which
he had formed would of itself induce Charles to listen to what was equitable;
and was afraid of employing any considerable force for the relief of the
Milanese, lest his allies, whom he had often found to be more attentive to
their own interest than punctual in fulfilling their engagements, should
abandon him as soon as the Imperialists were driven out of that country, and
deprive his negotiations with the emperor of that weight, which they derived
from his being at the head of a powerful league. In the meantime the castle of
Milan was pressed more closely than ever, and Sforza was now reduced to the
last extremity. The pope and Venetians, trusting to Francis’s concurrence,
commanded their troops to take the field, in order to relieve him; and an army
more than sufficient for that service was soon formed. The Milanese,
passionately attached to their unfortunate duke, and no less exasperated
against the Imperialists, who had oppressed them so cruelly, were ready to aid
the confederates in all their enterprises. But the duke d’Urbino,
their general, naturally slow and indecisive, and restrained, besides, by his
ancient enmity to the family of Medici, from taking any step that might
aggrandize or add reputation to the pope, lost some opportunities of attacking
the Imperialists and raising the siege, and refused to improve others. These
delays gave Bourbon time to bring up a reinforcement of fresh troops and a
supply of money. He immediately took the command of the army [July 24], and
pushed on the siege with such vigour, as quickly
obliged Sforza to surrender, who retiring to Lodi, which the confederates had
surprised, left Bourbon in full possession of the rest of the duchy, the
investiture of which the emperor had promised to grant him.
The
Italians began now to perceive the game which Francis had played, and to be sensible
that, notwithstanding all their address and refinements in negotiation, which
they boasted of as talents peculiarly their own, they had for once been
over-reached in those very arts by a tramontane prince. He had hitherto thrown
almost the whole burden of the war upon them, taking advantage of their
efforts, in order to enforce the proposals which he often renewed at the court
of Madrid for obtaining the liberty of his sons. The pope and Venetians
expostulated and complained; but as they were not able to rouse Francis from
his inactivity, their own zeal and vigor gradually abated, and Clement, having
already gone farther than his timidity usually permitted him, began to accuse
himself of rashness, and to relapse into his natural state of doubt and uncertainty.
All
the emperor’s motions depending on himself alone, were more brisk and better
concerted. The narrowness of his revenues, indeed, did not allow him to make
any sudden or great effort in the field, but he abundantly supplied that defect
by his intrigues and negotiations. The family of Colonna, the most powerful of
all the Roman barons, had adhered uniformly to the Ghibelline or Imperial
faction, during those fierce contentions between the popes and emperors, which,
for several ages, filled Italy and Germany with discord and bloodshed. Though
the causes which at first gave birth to these destructive factions existed no
longer, and the rage with which they had been animated was in a great measure
spent, the Colonnas still retained their attachment to
the Imperial interest, and by placing themselves under the protection of the
emperors, secured the quiet possession of their own territories and privileges.
The cardinal Pompeo Colonna, a man of a turbulent and ambitious temper, at that
time the head of the family, had long been Clement’s rival, to whose influence in the last conclave he imputed the disappointment of
all his schemes for attaining the papal dignity, of which, from his known connection
with the emperor, he thought himself secure. To an aspiring mind, this was an
injury too great to be forgiven; and though he had dissembled his resentment so
far as to vote for Clement at his election, and to accept of great offices in
his court, he waited with the utmost impatience for an opportunity of being
revenged. Don Hugo de Moncada, the imperial ambassador at Rome, who was no
stranger to these sentiments, easily persuaded him, that now was the time,
while all the papal troops were employed in Lombardy, to attempt something,
which would at once revenge his own wrongs, and be of essential service to the
emperor his patron. The pope, however, whose timidity rendered him
quick-sighted, was so attentive to the operations, and began to be alarmed so
early, that he might have drawn together troops sufficient to have disconcerted
all Colonna’s measures. But Moncada amused him so artfully with negotiations,
promises, and false intelligence, that he lulled asleep all his suspicions, and
prevented his taking any of the precautions necessary for his safety; and to the
disgrace of a prince possessed of great power, as well as renowned for
political wisdom, Colonna at the head of three thousand men, seized one of the
gates of his capital, while he, imagining himself to be in perfect security,
was altogether unprepared for resisting such a feeble enemy. The inhabitants of
Rome permitted Colonna’s troops, from whom they apprehended no injury, to
advance without opposition [Sept. 29]; the pope’s guards were dispersed in a
moment; and Clement himself, terrified at the danger, ashamed of his own
credulity, and deserted by almost every person, fled with precipitation into
the castle of St. Angelo, which was immediately invested. The palace of the
Vatican, the church of St. Peter, and the houses of the pope’s ministers and
servants, were plundered in the most licentious manner; the rest of the city
was left unmolested. Clement, destitute of everything necessary either for
subsistence or defence, was soon obliged to demand a
capitulation; and Moncada, being admitted into the castle, prescribed to him,
with all the haughtiness of a conqueror, conditions which it was not in his
power to reject. The chief of these was, that Clement should not only grant a
full pardon to the Colonnas, but receive them into
favor, and immediately withdraw all the troops in his pay from the army of the
confederates in Lombardy.
The Colonnas, who talked of nothing less than of deposing
Clement, and of placing Pompeo, their kinsman, in the vacant chair of St.
Peter, exclaimed loudly against a treaty which left them at the mercy of a
pontiff justly incensed against them. But Moncada, attentive only to his
master’s interest, paid little regard to their complaints, and, by this
fortunate measure, broke entirely the power of the confederates.
While
the army of the confederates suffered such a considerable diminution, the
Imperialists received two great reinforcements; one from Spain, under the
command of Lannoy and Alarcon, which amounted to six thousand men; the other
was raised in the empire by George Fronsperg, a
German nobleman, who having served in Italy with great reputation, had acquired
such influence and popularity, that multitudes of his countrymen, fond on every
occasion of engaging in military enterprises, and impatient at that juncture to
escape from the oppression which they felt in religious as well as civil
matters, crowded to his standard; so that, without any other gratuity than the
payment of a crown to each man, fourteen thousand enlisted in his service. To
these the archduke Ferdinand added two thousand horse, levied in the Austrian
dominions. But although the emperor had raised troops, he could not remit the
sums necessary for their support. His ordinary revenues were exhausted; the
credit of princes, during the infancy of commerce, was not extensive; and the
Cortes of Castile, though every art had been tried to gain them, and some
innovations had been made in the constitution, in order to secure their
concurrence, peremptorily refused to grant Charles any extraordinary supply; so
that the more his army increased in number, the more were his generals
embarrassed and distressed. Bourbon, in particular, was involved in such
difficulties, that he stood in need of all his address and courage in order to
extricate himself. Large sums were due to the Spanish troops already in the
Milanese, when Fronsperg arrived with sixteen
thousand hungry Germans, destitute of everything. Both made their demands with
equal fierceness; the former claiming their arrears, and the latter the pay
which had been promised them on their entering Lombardy. Bourbon was
altogether incapable of giving satisfaction to either. In this situation, he
was constrained to commit acts of violence extremely shocking to his own
nature, which was generous and humane. He seized the principal citizens of
Milan, and by threats, and even by torture, forced from them a considerable
sum; he rifled the churches of all their plate and ornaments; the inadequate
supply which these afforded, he distributed among the soldiers, with so many
soothing expressions of his sympathy and affection, that, though it fell far
short of the sums due to them, it appeased their present murmurs.
Among
other expedients for raising money, Bourbon granted his life and liberty to Morone, who having been kept in prison since his intrigue
with Pescara, had been condemned to die by the Spanish judges empowered to try
him. For this remission he paid twenty thousand ducats; and such were his
singular talents, and the wonderful ascendant which he always acquired over the
minds of those to whom he had access, that in a few days from being Bourbon’s
prisoner, he became his prime confident, with whom he consulted in all affairs
of importance. To his insinuations must be imputed the suspicions which Bourbon
began to entertain, that the emperor had never intended to grant him the
investiture of Milan, but had appointed Leyva, and the other Spanish generals,
rather to be spies on his conduct, than to cooperate heartily towards the
execution of his schemes. To him likewise, as he still retained, at the age of
fourscore, all the enterprising spirit of youth, may be attributed the bold
and unexpected measure on which Bourbon soon after ventured.
Such,
indeed, were the exigencies of the Imperial troops in the Milanese, that it
became indispensably necessary to take some immediate step for their relief.
The arrears of the soldiers increased daily; the emperor made no remittances to
his generals; and the utmost rigor of military extortion could draw nothing
more from a country entirely drained and ruined. In this situation there was no
choice left, but either to disband the army, or to march for subsistence into
the enemy’s country. The territories of the Venetians lay nearest at hand; but
they, with their usual foresight and prudence, had taken such precautions as
secured them from any insult. Nothing, therefore, remained but to invade the
dominions of the church, or of the Florentines; and Clement had of late acted
such a part as merited the severest vengeance from the emperor. No sooner did
the papal troops return to Rome, after the insurrection of the Colonnas, than, without paying any regard to the treaty
with Moncada, he degraded the cardinal Colonna, excommunicated the rest of the
family, seized their places of strength, and wasted their lands with all the
cruelty which the smart of a recent injury naturally excites. After this, he
turned his arms against Naples, and, as his operations were seconded by the
French fleet, he made some progress towards the conquest of that kingdom; the
viceroy being no less destitute than the other Imperial generals of the money
requisite for a vigorous defence.
These
proceedings of the pope justified, in appearance, the measures which Bourbon’s
situation rendered necessary; and he set about executing them under such
disadvantages, as furnished the strongest proof both of the despair to which he
was reduced, and of the greatness of his abilities which were able to surmount
so many obstacles. Having committed the government of Milan to Leyva, whom he
was not unwilling to leave behind, he began his march in the depth of winter
[Jan. 30, 1527], at the head of twenty-five thousand men, composed of nations
differing from each other in language and manners; without money, without
magazines, without artillery, without carriages; in short, without any of those
things which are necessary to the smallest party, and which seem essential to
the existence and motions of a great army. His route lay through a country cut
by rivers and mountains, in which the roads were almost impracticable; as an
addition to his difficulties, the enemy’s army, superior to his own in number,
was at hand to watch all his motions, and to improve every advantage. But his
troops, impatient of their present hardships, and allured by the hopes of immense
booty, without considering how ill provided they were for a march, followed him
with great cheerfulness. His first scheme was to have made himself master of
Placentia, and to have gratified his soldiers with the plunder of that city;
but the vigilance of the confederate generals rendered the design abortive; nor
had he better success in his project for the reduction of Bologna, which was
seasonably supplied with as many troops as secured it from the insults of an
army which had neither artillery nor ammunition. Having failed in both these
attempts to become master of some great city, he was under a necessity of
advancing. But he had now been two months in the field; his troops had suffered
every calamity that a long march, together with the uncommon rigor of the
season, could bring upon men destitute of all necessary accommodations in an
enemy's country; the magnificent promises to which they trusted, had hitherto
proved altogether vain; they saw no prospect of relief; their patience tried to
the utmost, failed at last, and they broke out into open mutiny. Some officers,
who rashly attempted to restrain them, fell victims to their fury; Bourbon
himself, not daring to appear during the first transports of their rage, was
obliged to fly secretly from his quarters. But this sudden ebullition of wrath
began at last to subside; when Bourbon, who possessed in a wonderful degree the
art of governing the minds of soldiers, renewed his promises with more
confidence than formerly, and assured them that they would be soon
accomplished. He endeavored to render their hardships more tolerable, by
partaking of them himself; he fared no better than the meanest sentinel; he
marched along with them on foot; he joined them in singing their camp ballads,
in which, with high praises of his valor, they mingled many strokes of military
raillery on his poverty; and wherever they came, he allowed them, as a
foretaste of what he had promised, to plunder the adjacent villages at
discretion. Encouraged by all these soothing arts, they entirely forgot their
sufferings and complaints, and followed him with the same implicit confidence
as formerly.
Bourbon,
meanwhile, carefully concealed his intentions. Rome and Florence, not knowing
on which the blow would fall, were held in the most disquieting state of
suspense. Clement, equally solicitous for the safety of both, fluctuated in
more than his usual uncertainty; and while the rapid approach of danger called
for prompt and decisive measures, he spent the time in deliberations which came
to no issue, or in taking resolutions, which, next day, his restless mind, more
sagacious in discerning than in obviating difficulties, overturned, without
being able to fix on what should be substituted in their place. At one time he
determined to unite himself more closely than ever with his allies, and to push
on the war with vigor; at another, he inclined to bring all differences to a
final accommodation by a treaty with Lannoy, who, knowing his passion for
negotiation, solicited him incessantly with proposals for that purpose. His
timidity at length prevailed, and led him to conclude an agreement with Lannoy
[March 15], of which the following were the chief articles: That a suspension
of arms should take place between the Pontifical and Imperial troops for eight
months; That Clement should advance sixty thousand crowns towards satisfying
the demands of the Imperial army; That the Colonnas should be absolved from censure, and their former dignities and possessions be
restored to them; That the viceroy should come to Rome, and prevent Bourbon
from approaching nearer to that city, or to Florence. On this hasty treaty,
which deprived him of all hopes of assistance from his allies, without
affording him any solid foundation of security, Clement relied so firmly, that,
like a man extricated at once out of all difficulties, he was at perfect case,
and in the fullness of his confidence disbanded all his troops, except as many
as were sufficient to guard his own person. This amazing confidence of Clement’s, who on every other occasion was fearful and
suspicious to excess, appeared so unaccountable to Guicciardini, who, being at
that time the pontifical commissary-general and resident in the confederate army,
had great opportunities as well as great abilities, for observing how
chimerical all his hopes were, that he imputes the pope’s conduct, at this
juncture, wholly to infatuation, which those who are doomed to ruin cannot
avoid.
Lannoy,
it would seem, intended to have executed the treaty with great sincerity; and having
detached Clement from the confederacy, wished to turn Bourbon’s arms against
the Venetians, who, of all the powers at war with the emperor, had exerted the
greatest vigor. With this view he detached a courier to Bourbon, informing him
of the suspension of arms, which, in the name of their common master, he had
concluded with the pope. Bourbon had other schemes, and he had prosecuted them
now too far to think of retreating. To have mentioned a retreat to his soldiers
would have been dangerous; his command was independent on Lannoy; he was fond
of mortifying a man whom he had reasons to hate; for these reasons, without
paying the least regard to the message, he continued to ravage the ecclesiastical
territories, and to advance towards Florence. Upon this, all Clement’s terror and anxiety returning with new force, he
had recourse to Lannoy, and entreated and conjured him to put a stop to
Bourbon’s progress. Lannoy accordingly set out for his camp, but durst not
approach it; Bourbon’s soldiers having got notice of the truce, raged and
threatened, demanding the accomplishment of the promises to which they had
trusted; their general himself could hardly restrain them; every person in Rome
perceived that nothing remained but to prepare for resisting a storm which it
was now impossible to dispel. Clement alone, relying on some ambiguous and
deceitful professions which Bourbon made of his inclination towards peace, sunk
back into his former security.
Bourbon,
on his part, was far from being free from solicitude. All his attempts on any
place of importance had hitherto miscarried; and Florence, towards which he had
been approaching for some time, was, by the arrival of the duke d’Urbino’s army, put in a condition to set his power at
defiance. As it now became necessary to change his route, and to take instantly
some new resolution, he fixed without hesitation on one which was no less
daring in itself, than it was impious, according to the opinion of that age.
This was to assault and plunder Rome. Many reasons, however, prompted him to
it. He was fond of thwarting Lannoy, who had undertaken for the safety of that
city; he imagined that the emperor would be highly pleased to see Clement, the
chief author of the league against him, humbled; he flattered himself that, by
gratifying the rapacity of his soldiers with such immense booty, he would
attach them forever to his interest; or (which is still more probable than any
of these) he hoped that, by means of the power and fame which he would acquire
from the conquest of the first city in Christendom, he might lay the foundation
of an independent power; and that, after shaking off all connection with the
emperor, he might take possession of Naples, or of some of the Italian states,
in his own name.
Whatever
his motives were, he executed his resolution with a rapidity equal to the
boldness with which he had formed it. His soldiers, now that they had their
prey full in view, complained neither of fatigue, nor famine, nor want of pay.
No sooner did they begin to move from Tuscany towards Rome, than the pope,
sensible at last how fallacious the hopes had been on which he reposed, started
from his security. But no time now remained even for a bold and decisive
pontiff to have taken proper measures, or to have formed any effectual plan of defence. Under Clement’s feeble
conduct, all was consternation, disorder, and irresolution. He collected,
however, such of his disbanded soldiers as still remained in the city; he armed
the artificers of Rome, and the footmen and train-bearers of the cardinals; he
repaired the breaches in the want; he began to erect new works; he
excommunicated Bourbon and all his troops, branding the Germans with the name
of Lutherans, and the Spaniards with that of Moors. Trusting to these
ineffectual military preparations, or to his spiritual arms, which were still
more despised by rapacious soldiers, he seems to have laid aside his natural
timidity, and, contrary to the advice of all his counselors, determined to wait
the approach of an enemy whom he might easily have avoided by a timely retreat.
Bourbon,
who saw the necessity of dispatch, now that his intentions were known, advanced
with such speed, that he gained several marches on the duke d’Urbino’s army, and encamped in the plains of Rome on the evening of the fifth of May.
From thence he showed his soldiers the palaces and churches of that city, into
which, as the capital of the Christian commonwealth, the riches of all Europe
had flowed during many centuries, without having been once violated by any
hostile hand; and commanding them to refresh themselves at night, as a
preparation for the assault next day, promised them, in reward of their toils
and valor, the possession of all the treasures accumulated there.
Early
in the morning, Bourbon, who had determined to distinguish that day either by
his death or the success of his enterprise, appeared at the head of his troops,
clad in complete armour, above which he wore a vest
of white tissue, that he might be more conspicuous both to his friends and to
his enemies; and as all depended on one bold impression, he led them instantly
to scale the walls. Three distinct bodies, one of Germans, another of
Spaniards, and the last of Italians, the three different nations of whom the
army was composed, were appointed to this service; a separate attack was
assigned to each; and the whole army advanced to support them as occasion
should require. A thick mist concealed their approach until they reached almost
the brink of the ditch, which surrounded the suburbs: basing planted their
ladders in a moment, each brigade rushed on to the assault with an impetuosity
heightened by national emulation. They were received at first with fortitude
equal to their own; the Swiss in the pope’s guards, and the veteran soldiers
who had been assembled, fought with a courage becoming men to whom the defence of the noblest city in the world was entrusted.
Bourbon’s troops, notwithstanding all their valor, gained no ground, and even
began to give way; when their leader, perceiving that on this critical moment
the fate of the day depended, leaped from his horse, pressed to the front,
snatched a scaling ladder from a soldier, planted it against the wall, and
began to mount it, encouraging his men with his voice and band to follow him.
But at that very instant, a musket bullet from the ramparts pierced his groin
with a wound, which he immediately felt to be mortal; but he retained so much
presence of mind, as to desire those who were near him to cover his body with a
cloak, that his death might not dishearten his troops; and soon after he
expired with a courage worthy of a better cause, and which would have entitled
him to the highest praise, if he had thus fallen in defence of his country, not at the head of its enemies.
This
fatal event could not be concealed from the army; the soldiers soon missed
their general, whom they were accustomed to see in every time of danger; but,
instead of being disheartened by their loss, it animated them with new valor;
the name of Bourbon resounded along the line, accompanied with the cry of blood
and revenge. The veterans who defended the walls were soon overpowered by
numbers; the untrained body of city recruits fled at the sight of danger, and
the enemy, with irresistible violence, rushed into the town.
During
the combat, Clement was employed at the high altar of St Peter’s church in
offering up to Heaven unavailing prayers for victory. No sooner was he informed
that his troops began to give way, than he fled with precipitation; and with an
infatuation still more amazing than anything already mentioned, instead of
making his escape by the opposite gate, where there was no enemy to oppose it,
he shut himself up, together with thirteen cardinals, the foreign ambassadors,
and many persons of distinction, in the castle of St. Angelo, which, from his
late misfortune, he might have known to be an insecure retreat. In his way from
the Vatican to that fortress, he saw his troops flying before an enemy who
pursued without giving quarter; he heard the cries and lamentations of the
Roman citizens, and beheld the beginning of those calamities which his own
credulity and ill conduct had brought upon his subjects.
It
is impossible to describe, or even to imagine, the misery and horror of that
scene which followed. Whatever a city taken by storm can dread from military
rage, unrestrained by discipline; whatever excesses the ferocity of the
Germans, the avarice of the Spaniards, or the licentiousness of the Italians
could commit, these the wretched inhabitants were obliged to suffer. Churches,
palaces, and the houses of private persons, were plundered without distinction.
No age, or character, or sex, was exempt from injury. Cardinals, nobles,
priests, matrons, virgins, were all the prey of soldiers, and at the mercy of
men deaf to the voice of humanity. Nor did these outrages cease, as is usual in
towns which are carried by assault, when the first fury of the storm was over;
the Imperialists kept possession of Rome several months; and, during all that
time, the insolence and brutality of the soldiers hardly abated. Their booty in
ready money alone amounted to a million of ducats; what they raised by ransoms
and exactions far exceeded that sum. Rome, though taken several different times
by the northern nations who overran the empire in the fifth and sixth
centuries, was never treated with so much cruelty by the barbarous and heathen
Huns, Vandals, or Goths, as now by the bigoted subjects of a Catholic monarch.
After
Bourbon’s death, the command of the Imperial army devolved on Philibert de Chalons prince of Orange, who with difficulty prevailed on
as many of his soldiers to desist from the pillage as were necessary
to invest the castle of St. Angelo. Clement was immediately sensible of
his error in having retired into that ill-provided and untenable fort. But as
the Imperialists, scorning discipline, and intent only on plunder, pushed the
siege with little vigor, he did not despair of holding out until the duke d’Urbino could come to his relief. That general advanced at
the head of an army composed of Venetians, Florentines, and Swiss, in the pay
of France, of sufficient strength to have delivered Clement from the present
danger. But d’Urbino, preferring the indulgence of
his hatred against the family of Medici to the glory of delivering the capital
of Christendom, and the head of the church, pronounced the enterprise to be too
hazardous; and from an exquisite refinement in revenge, having marched forward
so far, that his army being seen from the ramparts of St. Angelo, flattered the
pope with the prospect of certain relief, he immediately wheeled about and
retired. Clement, deprived of every resource, and reduced to such extremity of
famine as to feed on ass’s flesh, was obliged to capitulate [June 6] on such
conditions as the conquerors were pleased to prescribe. He agreed to pay four
hundred thousand ducats to the army; to surrender to the emperor all the places
of strength belonging to the church; and, besides giving hostages, to remain a
prisoner himself until the chief articles were performed. He was committed to
the care of Alarcon, who, by his severe vigilance in guarding Francis, had
given full proof of his being qualified for that office; and thus, by a
singular accident, the same man had the custody of the two most illustrious
personages who had been made prisoners in Europe during several ages.
The
account of this extraordinary and unexpected event was no less surprising than
agreeable to the emperor. But in order to conceal his joy from his subjects,
who were filled with horror at the success and crimes of their countrymen, and
to lessen the indignation of the rest of Europe, he declared that Rome had been
assaulted without any order from him. He wrote to all the princes with whom he
was in alliance, disclaiming his having had any knowledge of Bourbon’s
intention. He put himself and court into mourning; commanded the rejoicings
which had been ordered for the birth of his son Philip to be stopped; and
employed an artifice no less hypocritical than gross; he appointed prayers and
processions throughout all Spain for the recovery of the pope’s liberty, which,
by an order to his generals, he could have immediately granted.
THE
BATTLE OF MOHACZ
The
good fortune of the house of Austria was no less conspicuous in another part of
Europe. Solyman having invaded Hungary with an army, of three hundred thousand
men, Lewis II, king of that country and of Bohemia, a weak and inexperienced
prince, advanced rashly to meet him with a body of men which did not amount to
thirty thousand. With an imprudence still more unpardonable, he gave the
command of these troops to Paul Tomorri, a Franciscan
monk, archbishop of Golocza. This awkward general, in
the dress of his order, girt with its cord, marched at the head of the troops;
and, hurried on by his own presumption, as well as by the impetuosity of nobles
who despised danger, but were impatient of long service, he fought the battle
of Mohacz [August 29, 1526], in which the king, the
flower of the Hungarian nobility, and upwards of twenty thousand men, fell the
victims of his folly and ill conduct. Solyman, after his victory, seized and
kept possession of several towns of the greatest strength in the southern
provinces of Hungary, and, overrunning the rest of the country, carried near
two hundred thousand persons into captivity. As Lewis was the last male of the
royal family of Jagellon, the archduke Ferdinand
claimed both his crowns. This claim was founded on a double title; the one
derived from the ancient pretensions of the house of Austria to both kingdoms;
the other from the right of his wife, the only sister of the deceased monarch.
The feudal institutions, however, subsisted both in Hungary and Bohemia in such
vigor, and the nobles possessed such extensive power, that the crowns were
still elective, and Ferdinand’s rights, if they had not been powerfully
supported, would have met with little regard. But his own personal merit; the
respect due to the brother of the greatest monarch in Christendom; the
necessity of choosing a prince able to afford his subjects some additional
protection against the Turkish arms, which, as they had recently felt their
power, they greatly dreaded together with the intrigues of his sister, who had
been married to the fate king, overcame the prejudices which the Hungarians had
conceived against the archduke as a foreigner; and though a considerable party
voted for the Vaywode of Transylvania, at length
secured Ferdinand the throne of that kingdom. The states of Bohemia imitated
the example of their neighbor kingdom; but in order to ascertain and secure
their own privileges, they obliged Ferdinand, before his coronation, to
subscribe a deed which they termed a Reverse, declaring that he held that crown
not by any previous right, but by their gratuitous and voluntary election. By
such a vast accession of territories, time hereditary possession of which they
secured in process of time to their family, the princes of the house of Austria
attained that preeminence in power which had rendered them so formidable to the
rest of Germany.
The
dissensions between the pope and emperor proved extremely favorable to the
progress of Lutheranism. Charles, exasperated by Clement’s conduct, and fully employed in opposing the league which he had formed against
him, had little inclination and less leisure, to take any measures for
suppressing the new opinions in Germany. In a diet of the empire held at Spires
[June 25, 1526], the state of religion came to be considered; and all that the
emperor required of the princes was, that they would wait patiently, and
without encouraging innovations, for the meeting of a general council which he
had demanded of the pope. They, in return, acknowledged the convocation of a
council to be the proper and regular step towards reforming abuses in the
church; but contended that a national council held in Germany would be more
effectual for that purpose than what he had proposed. To his advice, concerning
the discouragement of innovations, they paid so little regard, that even during
the meeting of the diet at Spires, the divines who attended the elector of
Saxony and landgrave of Hesse-Cassel thither, preached publicly, and
administered the sacraments according to the rights of the reformed church. The
emperor’s own example emboldened the Germans to treat the papal authority with
little reverence. During the heat of his resentment against Clement, he had
published a long reply to an angry brief, which the pope had intended as an
apology for his own conduct. In this manifesto, the emperor, after having
enumerated many instances of that pontiffs ingratitude, deceit, and ambition,
all which he painted in the strongest and most aggravated colors, appealed from
him to a general council. At the same time he wrote to the college of
cardinals, complaining of Clement’s partiality and
injustice; and requiring them, if he refused or delayed to call a council, to
show their concern for the peace of the Christian church, so shamefully
neglected by its chief pastor, by summoning that assembly in their own name.
This manifesto, little inferior in virulence to the invectives of Luther
himself, was dispersed over Germany with great industry, and being eagerly read
by persons of every rank, did much more than counterbalance the effect of all
Charles’s declarations against the new opinions.
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