THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES VA VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF SOCIETY IN EUROPE, FROM THE SUBVERSION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE TO THE BEGINNING OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
SECTION III.
VIEW OF THE POLITICAL CONSTITUTION OF THE PRINCIPAL
STATES IN EUROPE, AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
HAVING thus enumerated the principal causes and
events, the influence of which was felt in every part of Europe, and
contributed either to improve internal order and police in its various states,
or to enlarge the sphere of their activity, by giving them more entire command
of the force with which foreign operations are carried on; nothing farther
seems requisite for preparing my readers to enter, with full information, upon
perusing the History of Charles V but to give a view of the political
constitution and form of civil government in each of the nations which acted
any considerable part during that period. For as the institutions and events
which I have endeavored to illustrate, formed the people of Europe to resemble
each other, and conducted them from barbarism to refinement, in the same path,
and by nearly equal steps; there were other circumstances which occasioned a
difference in their political establishments, and gave rise to those peculiar
modes of government, which have produced such variety in the character and
genius of nations.
It is no less necessary to become acquainted with the
latter, than to have contemplated the former. Without a distinct knowledge of
the peculiar form and genius of civil government in each state, a great part of
its transactions must appear altogether mysterious and inexplicable. The
historians of particular countries, as they seldom extend their views farther
than to the amusement or instruction of their fellow-citizens, by whom they
might presume that all their domestic customs and institutions were perfectly
understood, have often neglected to descend into such details with respect to
these, as are sufficient to convey to foreigners full light and information
concerning the occurrences which they relate. But a history, which comprehends
the transactions of so many different countries, would he extremely imperfect,
without a previous survey of the constitution and political state of each. It
is from his knowledge of these, that the reader must draw those principles,
which will enable him to judge with discernment, and to decide with certainty
concerning the conduct of nations.
A minute detail, however, of the peculiar forms and
regulations in every country, would lead to deductions of immeasurable length.
To sketch out the great lines which distinguish and characterize each
government, is all that the nature of my present work will admit of, and all
that is necessary to illustrate the events which it records.
At the opening of the sixteenth century, the political
aspect of Italy was extremely different from that of any other part of Europe.
Instead of those extensive monarchies, which occupied the rest of the
continent, that delightful country was parceled out among many small states,
each of which possessed sovereign and independent jurisdiction. The only
monarchy in Italy was that of Naples, the dominion of the popes was of a
peculiar species, to which these is nothing similar either in ancient or modern
times. In Venice, Florence, and Genoa, a republican form of government was
established. Milan was subject to sovereigns, who had assumed no higher title
than that of dukes.
The pope was the first of these powers in dignity, and
not the least considerable by the extent of his territories. In the primitive
church, the jurisdiction of bishops was equal and coordinate. They derived,
perhaps, some degree of consideration from the dignity of the see in which they
presided. They possessed, however, no real authority or preeminence, but what
they acquired by superior abilities, or superior sanctity. As Rome had so long
been the seat of empire, and the capital of the world, its bishops were on that
account entitled to respect; they received it; but during several ages they
received, and even claimed, nothing more. From these humble beginnings, they
advanced with such adventurous and well-directed ambition, that they
established a spiritual dominion over the minds and sentiments of men, to which
all Europe submitted with implicit obedience. Their claim of universal
jurisdiction, as heads of the church; and their pretensions to infallibility in
their decisions, as successors of St. Peter, are as chimerical, as they are
repugnant to the genius of the Christian religion. But on these foundations,
the superstition and credulity of mankind enabled them to erect an amazing
superstructure. In all ecclesiastical controversies, their decisions were
received as the infallible oracles of truth. Nor was the plenitude of their
power confined solely to what was spiritual; they dethroned monarchs; disposed
of crowns; absolved subjects from the obedience due to their sovereigns; and
laid kingdoms under interdicts. There was not a state in Europe which had not
been disquieted by their ambition. There was not a throne which they had not
shaken; nor a prince who did not tremble at their power.
Nothing was wanting to render this empire absolute,
and to establish it on the ruins of all civil authority, but that the popes
should have possessed such a degree of temporal power, as was sufficient to
second and enforce their spiritual decrees. Happily for mankind, at the time
when their spiritual jurisdiction was most extensive, and most revered, their
secular dominion was extremely limited. They were powerful pontiffs, formidable
at a distance; but they were petty princes, without any considerable domestic
force. They had early endeavored, indeed, to acquire territory by arts similar
to those which they had employed in extending their spiritual jurisdiction.
Under pretence of a donation from Constantine, and of another from Charlemagne
or his father Pepin, they attempted to take possession of some towns adjacent
to Rome. But these donations were fictitious, and availed them little. The
benefactions, for which they were indebted to the credulity of the Norman
adventurers, who conquered Naples, and to the superstition of the Countess
Matilda, were real, and added ample domains to the Holy See.
But the power of the popes did not increase in
proportion to the extent of territory which they had acquired. In the dominions
annexed to the Holy See, as well as in those subject to other princes in Italy,
the sovereign of a state was far from having the command of the force which it
contained.
The Spiritual Supremacy and Temporal Power of the
Popes
During the turbulence and confusion of the middle
ages, the powerful nobility, or leaders of popular factions in Italy, had
seized the government of different towns; and, after strengthening their fortifications,
and taking a body of mercenaries into pay, they aspired at independence. The
territory which the church had gained was filled with petty lords of this kind,
who left the pope hardly the shadow of domestic authority.
As these usurpations almost annihilated the papal
power in the greater part of the towns subject to the church, the Roman barons
frequently disputed the authority of the popes, even in Rome itself. In the
twelfth century, an opinion began to he propagated: “That as the function of
ecclesiastics was purely spiritual, they ought to possess no property, and to
claim no temporal jurisdiction; but, according to the laudable example of their
predecessors in the primitive church, should subsist wholly upon their tithes,
or upon the voluntary oblations of the people”. This doctrine being addressed
to men, who had beheld the scandalous manner in which the avarice and ambition
of the clergy had prompted them to contend for wealth, and to exercise power,
they listened to it with fond attention. The Roman barons, who had felt most
sensibly the rigor of ecclesiastical oppression, adopted these sentiments with
such ardor, that they set themselves instantly to shake off the yoke. They
endeavored to restore some image of their ancient liberty, by reviving the
institution of the Roman senate [AD 1143], in which they vested supreme
authority; committing the executive power sometimes to one chief senator,
sometimes to two, and sometimes to a magistrate dignified with the name of The
Patrician. The popes exerted themselves with vigor, in order to check this
dangerous encroachment on their jurisdiction. One of them, finding all his
endeavors ineffectual, was so much mortified, that extreme grief cut short his
days. Another, having ventured to attack the senators at the head of some armed
men, was mortally wounded in the fray. During a considerable period, the power
of the popes, before which the greatest monarchs in Europe trembled, was
circumscribed within such narrow limits in their own capital, that they durst
hardly exert any act of authority, without the permission and concurrence of
the senate.
Encroachments were made upon the papal sovereignty,
not only by the usurpations of the Roman nobility, but by the mutinous spirit
of the people. During seventy years of the fourteenth century (1308-1377), the
popes fixed their residence at Avignon. The inhabitants of Rome, accustomed to
consider themselves as the descendants of the people who had conquered the
world, and had given laws to it, were too high-spirited to submit with patience
to the delegated authority of those persons to whom the popes committed the
government of the city. On many occasions, they opposed the execution of the
papal mandates, and on the slightest appearance of innovation or oppression,
they were ready to take arms in defence of their own immunities. Towards the
middle of the fourteenth century, being instigated by Nicolas Rienzo, a man of
low birth and a seditious spirit, but of popular eloquence, and an enterprising
ambition, they drove all the nobility out of the city, established a
democratical form of government, elected Rienzo tribune of the people, and
invested him with extensive authority. But though the frantic proceedings of
the tribune soon overturned this new system; though the government of Rome was
reinstated in its ancient form; yet every fresh attack contributed to weak the
papal jurisdiction: and the turbulence of the people concurred with the spirit
of independence among the nobility, in circumscribing it more and more. Gregory
VII and other domineering pontiffs, accomplished those great things which
rendered them so formidable to the emperors with whom they contended, not by
the force of their arms, or by the extent of their power, but by the dread of
their spiritual censures, and by the effect of their intrigues, which excited
rivals, and called forth enemies against every prince whom they wished to
depress or to destroy.
Many attempts were made by the popes, not only to
humble those usurpers, who lorded it over the cities in the ecclesiastical
state, but to break the turbulent spirit of the Roman people. These were long
unsuccessful. But at last Alexander VI, with a policy no less artful than
flagitious, subdued and extirpated most of the great Roman barons, and rendered
the popes masters of their own dominions. The enterprising ambition of Julius
II added conquests of no inconsiderable value to the patrimony of St. Peter.
Thus the popes, by degrees, became powerful temporal princes. Their
territories, in the age of Charles V, were of greater extent than at present;
their country seems to have been better cultivated as well as more populous;
and as they drew large contributions from every part of Europe, their revenues
far exceeded those of the neighboring powers, and rendered them capable of more
sudden and vigorous efforts.
The genius of the papal government, however, was
better adapted to the exercise of spiritual dominion, than of temporal power.
With respect to the former, all its maxims were steady and invariable. Every
new pontiff adopted the plan of his predecessor. By education and habit,
ecclesiastics were so formed, that the character of the individual was sunk in
that of the profession; and the passions of the man were sacrificed to the
interest and honor of the order. The hands which held the reins of
administration might change; but the spirit which conducted them was always the
same. While the measures of other governments fluctuated, and the objects at
which they aimed varied, the church kept one end in view; and to this
unrelaxing constancy of pursuit, it was indebted for its success in the boldest
attempts ever made by human ambition.
But in their civil administration, the popes followed
no such uniform or consistent plan. There, as in other governments, the
character, the passions, and the interest of the person who had the supreme
direction of affairs, occasioned a variation both in objects and measures. As
few prelates reached the summit of ecclesiastical dignity until they were far
advanced in life, a change of masters was more frequent in the papal dominions
than in other states, and the political system was, of course, less stable and
permanent. Every pope was eager to make the most of the short period, during
which he had the prospect of enjoying power, in order to aggrandize his own
family, and to attain his private ends; and it was often the first business of
his successor to undo all that he had done, and to overturn what he had
established.
As ecclesiastics were trained to pacific arts, and
early initiated in the mysteries of that policy by which the court of Rome
extended or supported its spiritual dominion, the popes in the conduct of their
temporal affairs were apt to follow the same maxims, and in all their measures
were more ready to employ the refinements of intrigue, than the force of arms.
It was in the papal court that address and subtlety in negotiation became a
science; and during the sixteenth century, Rome was considered as the school in
which it might be best acquired.
As the decorum of their ecclesiastical character
prevented the popes from placing themselves at the head of their armies, or
from taking the command in person of the military force in their dominions,
they were afraid to arm their subjects; and in all their operations, whether
offensive or defensive, they trusted entirely to mercenary troops.
As their power and dominions could not descend to
their posterity, the popes were less solicitous than other princes to form or
to encourage schemes of public utility and improvement. Their tenure was only
for a short life; present advantage was what they chiefly studied; to squeeze
and to amass, rather than to meliorate, was their object. They erected,
perhaps, some work of ostentation, to remain as a monument of their pontificate;
they found it necessary at some times, to establish useful institutions, in
order to soothe and silence the turbulent populace of Rome; but plans of
general benefit to their subjects, framed with a view to futurity, were rarely
objects of attention in the papal policy. The patrimony of St. Peter was worse
governed than any part of Europe; and though a generous pontiff might suspend
for a little, or counteract the effects of those vices which are peculiar to
the administration of ecclesiastics; the disease not only remained without
remedy, but has gone on increasing from age to age; and the decline of the
state has kept pace with its progress.
One circumstance, farther, concerning the papal
government, is so singular, as to merit attention. As the spiritual supremacy
and temporal power were united in one person, and uniformly aided each other in
their operations, they became so blended together, that it was difficult to
separate them, even in imagination. The potentates, who found it necessary to
oppose the measures which the popes pursued as temporal princes, could not
easily divest themselves of the reverence which they imagine to be due to them
as heads of the church, and vicars of Jesus Christ. It was with reluctance that
they could be brought to a rupture with the head of the church; they were
unwilling to push their operations against him to extremity; they listened
eagerly to the first overtures of accommodation, and were anxious to procure it
almost upon any terms. Their consciousness of this encouraged the enterprising
pontiffs who tilled the papal throne about the beginning of the sixteenth century,
to engage in schemes seemingly the most extravagant. They trusted, that if
their temporal power was not sufficient to carry them through with success, the
respect paid to their spiritual dignity would enable them to extricate
themselves with facility and with honor. But when popes came to take part more
frequently in the contests among princes, and to engage as principals or
auxiliaries in every war kindled in Europe, this veneration for their sacred
character began to abate; and striking instances will occur in the following
history of its being almost totally extinct.
THE REPUBLIC OF VENICE
Of all the Italian powers, the republic of Venice,
next to the papal see, was most connected with the rest of Europe. The rise of
that commonwealth, during the inroads of the Huns in the fifth century; the
singular situation of its capital in the small isles of the Adriatic gulf; and
the more singular form of its civil constitution, are generally known. If we
view the Venetian government as calculated for the order of nobles alone, its
institutions may be pronounced excellent; the deliberative, legislative, and
executive powers, are so admirably distributed and adjusted, that it must be
regarded as a perfect model of political wisdom. But if we consider it as formed
for a numerous body of people subject to its jurisdiction, it will appear a
rigid and partial aristocracy, which lodges all power in the hands of a few members
of the community, while it degrades and oppresses the rest.
The spirit of government in a commonwealth of this
species, was, of course, timid and jealous. The Venetian nobles distrusted
their own subjects, and were afraid of allowing them the use of arms. They
encouraged among them the arts of industry and commerce; they employed them in
manufactures and in navigation, but never admitted them into the troops, which
the state kept in its pay. The military force of the republic consisted
entirely of foreign mercenaries. The command of these was never trusted to
noble Venetians, lest they should acquire such influence over the army, as
might endanger the public liberty; or become accustomed to the exercise of such
power, as would make them unwilling to return to the condition of private
citizens. A soldier of fortune was placed at the head of the armies of the
commonwealth; and to obtain that honor, was the great object of the Italian
Condottieri, or leaders of bands, who in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
made a trade of war, and raised and hired out soldiers to different states. But
the same suspicious policy, which induced the Venetians to employ these
adventurers, prevented their placing entire confidence in them. Two noblemen,
appointed by the senate, accompanied their army, when it took the field, with
the appellation of Proveditori, and, like the field-deputies of the Dutch
republic in latter times, observed all the motions of the general, and checked
and controlled him in all his operations.
A commonwealth with such civil and military
institutions, was not formed to make conquests. While its subjects were
disarmed, and its nobles excluded from military command, it carried on its
warlike enterprises with great disadvantage. This ought to have taught the
Venetians to rest satisfied with making self-preservation and the enjoyment of
domestic security, the objects of their policy. But republics are apt to be
seduced by the spirit of ambition, as well as kings. When the Venetians so far
forgot the interior defects in their government as to aim at extensive
conquests, the fatal blow, which they received in the war excited by the league
of Cambray, convinced them of the imprudence and danger of making violent
efforts, in opposition to the genius and tendency of their constitution.
It is not, however, by its military, but by its naval
and commercial power, that the importance of the Venetian commonwealth must be
estimated. The latter constituted the real force and nerves of the state. The
jealousy of government did not extend to this department. Nothing was
apprehended from this quarter, that could prove formidable to liberty. The
senate encouraged the nobles to trade, and to serve on board the fleet. They
became merchants and admirals. They increased the wealth of their country by
their industry. They added to its dominions, by the valor with which they
conducted its naval armaments.
Commerce was an inexhaustible source of opulence to
the Venetians. All the nations in Europe depended upon them, not only for the
commodities of the East, but for various manufactures fabricated by them alone,
or finished with a dexterity and elegance unknown in other countries. From this
extensive commerce, the state derived such immense supplies, as concealed those
vices in its constitution which I have mentioned; and enabled it to keep on
foot such armies, as were not only an overmatch for the force which any of its
neighbors could bring into the field, but were sufficient to contend, for some
time, with the powerful monarchs beyond the Alps. During its struggles with the
princes united against it by the league of Cambray, the republic levied sums
which, even in the present age, would be deemed considerable; and while the
king of France paid the exorbitant interest which I have mentioned for the
money advanced to him, and the emperor, eager to borrow, but destitute of
credit, was known by the name of Maximilian the Moneyless, the Venetians raised
whatever sums they pleased, at the moderate premium of five in the hundred.
THE REPUBLIC OF FLORENCE
The constitution of Florence was perfectly the reverse
of the Venetian. It partook as much of democratical turbulence and
licentiousness, as the other of aristocratical rigor. Florence, however, was a
commercial, not a military democracy. The nature of its institutions was
favorable to commerce, and the genius of the people was turned towards it. The
vast wealth which the family of Medici had acquired by trade, together with the
magnificence, the generosity, and the virtue of the first Como, gave him such
an ascendant over the affections as well as the councils of his countrymen,
that though the forms of popular government were preserved, though the various
departments of administration were filled by magistrates distinguished by the
ancient names, and elected in the usual manner, he was in reality the head of
the commonwealth; and in the station of a private citizen, he possessed supreme
authority. Cosmo transmitted a considerable degree of this power to his
descendants; and during the greater part of the fifteenth century, the
political state of Florence was extremely singular. The appearance of
republican government subsisted, the people were passionately attached to it,
and on some occasions contended warmly for their privileges, and yet they
permitted a single family to assume the direction of their affairs, almost as
absolutely as if it had been formerly invested with sovereign power. The
jealousy of the Medici concurred with the commercial spirit of the Florentines,
in putting the military force of the republic upon the same footing with that
of the other Italian states. The troops, which the Florentines employed in
their wars, consisted almost entirely of mercenary soldiers, furnished by the
Condottieri or leaders of bands, whom they took into their pay.
THE KINGDOM OF NAPLES
In the kingdom of Naples, to which the sovereignty of
the island of Sicily was annexed, the feudal government were established in the
same form, and with the same defects, as in the other nations of Europe. The
frequent and violent revolutions which happened in that monarchy had
considerably increased these defects, and rendered them more intolerable. The
succession to the crown of Naples bad been so often interrupted or altered, and
so many princes of foreign blood had, at different periods, obtained possession
of the throne, that the Neapolitan nobility had lost, in a great measure, that
attachment to the family of their sovereigns, as well as that reverence for
their persons, which, in other feudal kingdoms, contributed to set some bounds
to the encroachments of the barons upon the royal prerogative and power. At the
same time, the different pretenders to the crown, being obliged to court the
barons who adhered to them, and on whose support they depended for the success
of their claims, they augmented their privileges by liberal concessions, and
connived at their boldest usurpations. Even when seated on the throne, it was
dangerous for a prince, who held his scepter by a disputed title, to venture on
any step towards extending his own power, or circumscribing that of the nobles.
From all these causes, the kingdom of Naples was the
most turbulent of any in Europe, and the authority of its monarchs the least
extensive. Though Ferdinand I who began his reign in the year 1468, attempted
to break the power of the aristocracy, though his son Alphonse, that he might
crush it at once by cutting off the leaders of greatest reputation and
influence among the Neapolitan barons, ventured to commit one of the most
perfidious and cruel actions recorded in history [AD 1487]; the order of nobles
was nevertheless more exasperated than humbled by their measures. The
resentment which these outrages excited was so violent, and the power of the
malcontent nobles was still so formidable, that to these may be ascribed, in a
great degree, the ease and rapidity with which Charles VIII conquered the
kingdom of Naples.
The event that gave rise to the violent contests
concerning the succession to the crown of Naples and Sicily, which brought so
many calamities upon these kingdoms, happened in the thirteenth century [AD
1254]. Upon the death of the Emperor Frederick II, Manfred, his natural son,
aspiring to the Neapolitan throne, murdered his brother the emperor Conrad (if
we may believe contemporary historians,) and by that crime obtained possession
of it. The popes, from their implacable enmity to the house of Suabia, not only
refused to recognize Manfred’s title, but endeavored to excite against him some
rival capable of wresting the scepter out of his band. Charles, count of Anjou,
the brother of St. Louis king of France, undertook this; and he received from
the popes the investiture of the kingdom of Naples and Sicily as a fief held of
the holy see. The count of Anjou’s efforts were crowned with success; Manfred
fell in battle; and he took possession of the vacant throne. But soon after,
Charles sullied the glory which he had acquired, by the injustice and cruelty
with which he put to death, by the hands of the executioner, Conradin, the last
prince of the house of Suabia, and the rightful heir of the Neapolitan crown.
That gallant young prince asserted his title, to the last, with a courage
worthy of a better fate. On the scaffold, he declared Peter, at that time
prince, and soon after king of Aragon, who had married Manfred’s only daughter,
his heir; and throwing his glove among the people, he entreated that it might
he carried to Peter, as the symbol by which he conveyed all his rights to him.
The desire of avenging the insult offered to royalty, by the death of Conradin,
concurred with his own ambition, in prompting Peter to take arms in support of
the title which he had acquired. From that period, during almost two centuries,
the houses of Aragon and Anjou contended for the crown of Naples. Amidst a
succession of revolutions more rapid, as well as of crimes more atrocious, than
what occur in the history of almost any other kingdom, monarchs, sometimes of
the Aragonese line, and sometimes of the Angevin, were seated on the throne. At
length the princes of the house of Aragon [AD 1434] obtained such firm
possession of this long disputed inheritance, that they transmitted it quietly
to a bastard branch of their family.
The race of the Angevin kings, however, was not
extinct, nor had they relinquished their title to the Neapolitan crown. The
count of Maine and Provence, the heir of this family, conveyed all his rights
and pretensions to Louis XI and to his successors [AD 1494]. Charles VIII, as I
have already related, crossed the Alps at the head of a powerful army, in order
to prosecute his claim with a degree of vigor far superior to that which the
princes from whom he derived it had been capable of exerting. The rapid
progress of his arms in Italy, as well as the short time during which he
enjoyed the fruits of his success, have already been mentioned, and are well
known. Frederick, the heir of the illegitimate branch of the Aragonese family,
soon recovered the throne of which Charles had dispossessed him. Louis XII and
Ferdinand of Aragon united against this prince, whom both, though for different
reasons, considered as a usurper, and agreed to divide his dominions between
them [AD 1501]. Frederick, unable to resist the combined monarchs, each of whom
was far his superior in power, resigned his scepter. Louis and Ferdinand,
though they had concurred in making the conquest, differed about the division
of it; and from allies became enemies. But Gonsalvo de Cordova, partly by the
exertion of such military talents as gave him a just title to the appellation
of the Great Captain, which the Spanish historians have bestowed upon him; and
partly by such shameless and frequent violations of the most solemn
engagements, as leave an indelible stain on his memory; stripped the French of
all that they possessed in the Neapolitan dominions, and secured the peaceable
possession of them to his master. These, together with his other kingdoms,
Ferdinand transmitted to his grandson Charles V, whose right to possess them,
if not altogether incontrovertible, seems, at least, to be as well founded, as
that which the kings of France set up in opposition to it.
THE DUCHY OF MILAN
There is nothing in the political constitution or
interior government of the duchy of Milan, so remarkable, as to require a particular
explanation. But as the right of succession to that fertile province was the
cause or the pretext of almost all the wars carried on in Italy during the
reign of Charles V, it is necessary to trace these disputes to their source,
and to inquire into the pretensions of the various competitors.
During the long and fierce contests excited in Italy
by the violence of the Guelf and Ghibelline factions, the family of Visconti
rose to great eminence among their fellow-citizens of Milan. As the Visconti had
adhered uniformly to the Ghibelline or Imperial interest, they, by way of
recompense, received, from one emperor, the dignity of perpetual vicars of the
empire in Italy [AD 1354]: they were created, by another, dukes of Milan
[1395]; and, together with that title, the possession of the city and its
territories was bestowed upon them as an hereditary fief. John, king of France,
among other expedients for raising money, which the calamities of his reign
obliged him to employ, condescended to give one of his daughters in marriage to
John Galeazzo Visconti, the first duke of Milan, from whom he had received
considerable sums. Valentine Visconti, one of the children of this marriage,
married her cousin, Louis, duke of Orleans, the only brother of Charles VI. In
their marriage-contract, which the Pope confirmed, it was stipulated that, upon
failure of heirs male in the family of Visconti, the duchy of Milan should
descend to the posterity of Valentine and the duke of Orleans. That event took
place. In the year 1497, Philip Maria, the last prince of the ducal family of
Visconti, died. Various competitors claimed the succession. Charles, duke of
Orleans, pleaded his right to it, founded on the marriage contract of his
mother Valentine Visconti. Alfonso king of Naples claimed it in consequence of
a will made by Philip Maria in his favor. The emperor contended that, upon the
extinction of male issue in the family of Visconti, the fief returned to the
superior lord, and ought to be re-annexed to the Empire. The people of Milan,
smitten with the love of liberty which in that age prevailed among the Italian
states, declared against the dominion of any master, and established a
republican form of government.
But during the struggle among so many competitors, the
prize for which they contended was seized by one from whom none of them
apprehended any danger. Francis Sforza, the natural son of Jacomuzzo Sforza,
whom his courage and abilities had elevated from the rank of a peasant to be
one of the most eminent and powerful of the Italian Condottieri, having
succeeded his father in the command of the adventurers who followed his
standard, had married a natural daughter of the last duke of Milan. Upon this
shadow of a title Francis founded his pretensions to the duchy, which he supported
with such talents and valor, as placed him at last on the ducal throne. The
virtues, as well as abilities, with which he governed, inducing his subjects to
forget the defects in his title, he transmitted his dominions quietly to his
son; from whom they descended to his grandson. He was murdered by his
grand-uncle Ludovico, surnamed the Moor, who took possession of the duchy; and
his right to it was confirmed by the investiture of the emperor Maximilian in
the year 1494.
Louis XI, who took pleasure in depressing the princes
of the blood, and who admired the political abilities of Francis Sforza, would
not permit the duke of Orleans to take any step in prosecution of his right to
the duchy of Milan. Ludovico the Moor kept up such a close connection with
Charles VIII that, during the greater part of his reign, the claim of the
family of Orleans continued to lie dormant. But when the crown of France
devolved on Louis XII duke of Orleans, he instantly asserted the rights of his
family with the ardor which it was natural to expect, and marched at the head
of a powerful army to support them. Ludovico Sforza, incapable of contending
with such a rival, was stripped of all his dominions in the space of a few
days. The king, clad in the ducal robes, entered Milan in triumph; and soon
after, Ludovico, having been betrayed by the Swiss in his pay, was sent a
prisoner into France, and shut up in the castle of Loches, where he lay
unpitied during the remainder of his days. In consequence of one of the
singular revolutions which occur so frequently in the history of the Milanese,
his son Maximilian Sforza was placed on the ducal throne, of which he kept
possession during the reign of Louis XII [AD 1512.] But his successor Francis I
was too high-spirited and enterprising tamely to relinquish his title. As soon
as he was seated upon the throne, he prepared to invade the Milanese; and his
right of succession to it appears, from this detail, to have been more natural
and more just than that of any other competitor.
It is unnecessary to enter into any detail with
respect to the form of government in Genoa, Parma, Modena, and the other
inferior states of Italy. Their names, indeed, will often occur in the
following history. But the power of these states themselves was so inconsiderable,
that their fate depended little upon their own efforts; and the frequent
revolutions which they underwent, were brought about rather by the operations
of the princes who attacked or defended them, than by anything peculiar in
their internal constitution.
The United Kingdoms of Spain
Of the great kingdoms on this side of the Alps, Spain
is one of the most considerable; and as it was the hereditary domain of Charles
V as well as the chief source of his power and wealth, a distinct knowledge of
its political constitution is of capital importance towards understanding the
transactions of his reign.
The Vandals and Goths, who overturned the Roman power
in Spain, established a form of government in that country, and introduced
customs and laws, perfectly similar to those which were established in the rest
of Europe, by the other victorious tribes which acquired settlements there. For
some time, society advanced, among the new inhabitants of Spain, by the same
steps, and seemed to hold the same course, as in other European nations. To
this progress a sudden stop was put by the invasion of the Saracens or Moors
from Africa [AD 711.] The Goths could not withstand the efforts of their
enthusiastic valor, which subdued the greatest part of Spain, with the same
impetuous rapidity that distinguishes all the operations of their arms. The
conquerors introduced into the country in which they settled, the Mahometan
religion, the Arabic language, the manners of the East, together with that
taste for the arts, and that love of elegance and splendor, which the caliphs
had begun to cultivate among their subjects.
Such Gothic nobles as disdained to submit to the
Moorish yoke, fled for refuge to the inaccessible mountains of Asturias. There
they comforted themselves with enjoying the exercise of the Christian religion,
and with maintaining the authority of their ancient laws. Being joined by many
of the boldest and most warlike among their countrymen, they sallied out upon
the adjacent settlements of the Moors in small parties; but venturing only upon
short excursions at first, they were satisfied with plunder and revenge,
without thinking of conquest. By degrees, their strength increased, their views
enlarged, a regular government was established among them, and they began to
aim at extending their territories. While they pushed on their attacks with the
unremitting ardor, excited by zeal for religion, by the desire of vengeance,
and by the hope of rescuing their country from oppression; while they conducted
their operations with the courage natural to men who had no other occupation
but war, and who were strangers to all the arts which corrupt or enfeeble the
mind; the Moors gradually lost many of the advantages to which they had been
indebted for their first success. They threw off all dependence on the caliphs;
they neglected to preserve a close connection with their countrymen in Africa;
their empire in Spain was split into many small kingdoms; the arts which they
cultivated, together with the luxury to which these gave rise, relaxed, in some
measure, the force of their military institutions, and abated the vigour of
their warlike spirit. The Moors, however, continued still to be a gallant
people, and possessed great resources. According to the magnificent style of
the Spanish historians, eight centuries of almost uninterrupted war elapsed,
and three thousand seven hundred battles were fought, before the last of the
Moorish kingdoms in Spain submitted to the Christian arms [1492].
As the Christians made their conquests upon the
Mahometans at various periods, and under different leaders, each formed the
territory which he had wrested from the common enemy, into an independent
state. Spain was divided into almost as many separate kingdoms as it contained
provinces; in each city of note, a petty monarch established his throne, and
assumed all the ensigns of royalty. In a series of years, however, by the usual
events of intermarriages, or succession, or conquest, all these inferior
principalities were annexed to the more powerful kingdoms of Castile and of
Aragon. At length, by the fortunate marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella, the
former the hereditary monarch of Aragon, and the latter raised to the throne of
Castile by the affection of her subjects [1481], all the Spanish crowns were
united, and descended in the same line.
From this period, the political constitution of Spain
began to assume a regular and uniform appearance; the genius of its government
may be delineated, and the progress of its laws and manners may be traced with
certainty. Notwithstanding the singular revolution which the invasion of the
Moors occasioned in Spain, and the peculiarity of its fate, in being so long
subject to the Mahometan yoke, the customs introduced by the Vandals and Goths
had taken such deep root, and were so thoroughly incorporated with the frame of
its government, that in every province which the Christians recovered from the
Moors, we find the condition of individuals, as well as the political
constitution, nearly the same as in other nations of Europe. Lands were held by
the same tenure; justice was dispensed in the same form; the same privileges
were claimed by the nobility; and the same power exercised by the Cortes, or
general assembly of the kingdom. Several circumstances contributed to secure
this permanence of the feudal institutions in Spain, notwithstanding the
conquest of the Moors, which seemed to have overturned them. Such of the
Spaniards, as preserved their independence, adhered to their ancient customs,
not only from attachment to them, but out of antipathy to the Moors, to whose
ideas concerning property and government these customs were totally repugnant.
Even among the Christians, who submitted to the Moorish conquerors, and
consented to become their subjects, ancient customs were not entirely
abolished. They were permitted to retain their religion, their laws concerning
private property, their forms of administering justice, and their mode of
levying taxes. The followers of Mahomet are the only enthusiasts who have united
the spirit of toleration with zeal for making proselytes, and who, at the same
time that they took arms to propagate the doctrine of their Prophet, permitted
such as would not embrace it, to adhere to their own tenets, and to practice
their own rites. To this peculiarity in the genius of the Mahometan religion,
as well as to the desire which the Moors had of reconciling the Christians to
their yoke, it was owing that the ancient manners and laws in Spain survived
the violent shock of a conquest, and were permitted to subsist, notwithstanding
the introduction of a new religion and a new form of government into that
country. It is obvious, from all these particulars, that the Christians must
have found it extremely easy to re-establish manners and government on their
ancient foundations in those provinces of Spain which they wrested successively
from the Moors. A considerable part of the people retained such a fondness for
the customs, and such a reverence for the laws, of their ancestors, that,
wishing to see them completely restored, they were not only willing but eager
to resume the former, and to recognize the authority of the latter.
But though the feudal form of government, with all the
institutions which characterize it, was thus preserved entire in Castile and
Aragon, as well as in all the kingdoms which depended on these crowns, there
were certain peculiarities in their political constitutions, which distinguish
them from those of any other country in Europe. The royal prerogative,
extremely limited in every feudal kingdom, was circumscribed, in Spain, within
such narrow bounds, as reduced the power of the sovereign almost to nothing.
The privileges of the nobility were great in proportion, and extended so far,
as to border on absolute independence. The immunities of the cities were
likewise greater than in other feudal kingdoms, they possessed considerable
influence in the Cortes, and they aspired at obtaining more. Such a state of
society, in which the political machine was so ill adjusted, and the several
members of the legislature so improperly balanced, produced internal disorders
in the kingdoms of Spain, which rose beyond the pitch of turbulence and anarchy
usual under the feudal government. The whole tenor of the Spanish history
confirms the truth of this observation; and when the mutinous spirit, to which
the genius of their policy gave birth and vigor, was no longer restrained and
overawed by the immediate dread of the Moorish arms, it broke out into more
frequent insurrections against the government of their princes, as well as more
outrageous insults on their dignity, than occur in the annals of any other
country. These were accompanied at some times with more liberal sentiments
concerning the rights of the people, at other times with more elevated notions
concerning the privileges of the nobles, than were common in other nations.
In the principality of Catalonia, which was annexed to
the kingdom of Aragon, the impatience of the people to obtain the redress of
their grievances having prompted them to take arms against their sovereign,
John II [AD. 1461], they, by a solemn deed, recalled the oath of allegiance
which they had sworn to him, declared him and his posterity to be unworthy of
the throne, and endeavored to establish a republican form of government, in
order to secure the perpetual enjoyment of that liberty, after which they aspired.
Nearly about the same period, the indignation of the Castilian nobility against
the weak and flagitious administration of Henry IV, having led them to combine
against him, they arrogated, as one of the privileges belonging to their order,
the right of trying and of passing sentence on their sovereign. That the
exercise of this power might be as public and solemn, as the pretension to it
was bold, they summoned all the nobility of their party to meet at Avila
[1465]; a spacious theatre was erected in a plain, without the walls of the
town; an image, representing the king, was seated on a throne, clad in royal
robes, with a crown on its head, a scepter in its hand, and the sword of
justice by its side. The accusation against the king was read, and the sentence
of deposition was pronounced, in presence of a numerous assembly. At the close
of the first article of the charge, the archbishop of Toledo advanced, and tore
the crown from the head of the image; at the close of the second, the Conde de
Placentia snatched the sword of justice from its side; at the close of the
third, the Conde de Benevento wrested the scepter from its hand; at the close
of the last, Don Diego Lopes de Stuniga tumbled it headlong from the throne. At
the same instant, Don Alphonso, Henry’s brother, was proclaimed king of Castile
and Leon in his stead.
The most daring leaders of faction would not have
ventured on these measures, nor have conducted them with such public ceremony,
if the sentiments of the people concerning the royal dignity had not been so
formed by the laws and policy to which they were accustomed both in Castile and
Catalonia, as prepared them to approve of such extraordinary proceedings, or to
acquiesce in them.
In Aragon, the form of government was monarchical, but
the genius and maxims of it were purely republican. The kings who were long
elective, retained only the shadow of power; the real exercise of it was in the
Cortes or parliament of the kingdom. This supreme assembly was composed of our
different arms or members. The nobility of the first rank; The equestrian
order, or nobility of the second class; The representatives of the cities and
towns whose right to a place in the Cortes, if we may give credit to the
historians of Aragon, was coeval with the constitution; The ecclesiastical
order, composed of the dignitaries of the church, together with the
representatives of the inferior clergy. No law could pass in this assembly
without the assent of every single member who had a right to vote. Without the
permission of the Cortes, no tax could be impose; no war could be declared; no
peace could be concluded; no money could be coined, nor could any alteration be
made in the current specie. The power of reviewing the proceedings of all
inferior courts, the privilege of inspecting every department of
administration, and the right of redressing all grievances, belonged to the
Cortes. Nor did those who conceived themselves to be aggrieved, address the
Cortes in the humble tone of suppliants, and petition for redress; they demanded
it as the forthright of freemen, and required the guardians of their liberty,
to decide with respect to the points which they laid before them. This sovereign
court was held, during several centuries, every year; but, in consequence of a
regulation introduced about the beginning of the fourteenth century, it was
convoked from that period only once in two years. After it was assembled, the
king had no right to prorogue or dissolve it without its own consent; and the
session continued forty days.
Not satisfied with having erected such formidable
barriers against the encroachments of the royal prerogative, nor willing to
commit the sole guardianship of their liberties entirely to the vigilance and
authority of an assembly, similar to the diets, states-general, and
parliaments, in which the other feudal nations have placed so much confidence,
the Aragonese had recourse to an institution peculiar to themselves, and
elected a Justiza or supreme judge. This magistrate, whose office bore
some resemblance to that of the Ephori in ancient Sparta, acted as the
protector of the people, ant the comptroller of the prince. The person of the justiza was sacred, his power and jurisdiction almost unbounded. He was the supreme
interpreter of the laws. Not only inferior judges, but the kings themselves,
were bound to consult him in every doubtful case, and to receive his responses
with implicit deference. An appeal lay to him from the royal judges, as well as
from those appointed by the barons within their respective territories. Even
when no appeal was made to him, he could interpose by his own authority,
prohibit the ordinary judge to proceed, take immediate cognizance of the court
himself, and remove the party accused to the Manifestation, or prison of the
state, to which no person had access but by his permission. His power was
exerted with no less vigour and effect in superintending the administration of
government, than in regulating the courts of justice. It was the prerogative of
the justiza, to inspect the conduct of the king. He had a title to
review all the royal proclamations and patents, and to declare whether or not
they were agreeable to law, and ought to be carried into execution. He, by his
sole authority, could exclude any of the king’s ministers from the conduct of
affairs, and call them to answer for their maladministration. He himself was
accountable to the Cortes only, for the manner in which he discharged the
duties of this high office; and performed functions of the greatest importance
that could be committed to a subject.
It is evident, from a bare enumeration of the
privileges of the Aragonese Cortes, as well as of the rights belonging to the
justiza, that a very small portion of power remained in the hands of the king.
The Aragonese seem to have been solicitous that their monarchs should know and
feel this state of impotence, to which they were reduced. Even in swearing
allegiance to their sovereign, an act which ought naturally to be accompanied
with professions of submission and respect, they devised an oath, in such a
form, as to remind him of his dependence on his subjects. “We”, said the
justiza to the king, in name of his high-spirited barons, “who are each of us
as good, and who are altogether more powerful than you, promise obedience to
your government, if you maintain our rights and liberties; but if not, not”.
Conformably to this oath, they established it as a fundamental article in their
constitution, that if the king should violate their rights and privileges, it
was lawful for the people to disclaim him as their sovereign, and to elect
another, even though a heathen, in his place. The attachment of the Aragonese
to this singular constitution of government was extreme, and their respect for
it approached to superstitious veneration. In the preamble to one of their
laws, they declare, that such was the barrenness of their country, and the
poverty of the inhabitants, that if it were not on account of the liberties by
which they were distinguished from other nations, the people would abandon it, and
go in quest of a settlement to some more fruitful region.
In Castile there were not such peculiarities in the
form of government, as to establish any remarkable distinction between it and
that of the other European nations. The executive part of government was
committed to the king, but with a prerogative extremely limited. The
legislative authority resided in the Cortes, which was composed of the
nobility, the dignified ecclesiastics, and the representatives of the cities.
The assembly of the Cortes in Castile was very ancient, and seems to have been
almost coeval with the constitution. The members of the three different orders,
who had a right of suffrage, met in one place, and deliberated as one
collective body; the decisions of which were regulated by the sentiments of the
majority. The right of imposing taxes, of enacting laws, and of redressing
grievances, belonged to this assembly; and, in order to secure the assent of
the king to such statutes and regulations as were deemed salutary or beneficial
to the kingdom, it was usual in the Cortes to take no step towards granting
money, until all business relative to the public welfare was concluded. The
representatives of cities seem to have obtained a seat very early in the Cortes
of Castile, and soon acquired such influence and credit, as were very uncommon,
at a period when the splendor and pre-eminence of the nobility had eclipsed or
depressed all other orders of men. The number of members from cities bore such
a proportion to that of the whole collective body, as rendered them extremely
respectable in the Cortes. The degree of consideration, which they possessed In
the state, may be estimated by one event. Upon the death of John I [AD 1390] a
council of regency was appointed to govern the kingdom during the minority of
his son. It was composed of an equal number of noblemen, and of deputies chosen
by the cities; the latter were admitted to the same rank, and invested with the
same powers as prelates and grandees of the first order. But though the members
of communities in Castile were elevated above the condition wherein they were
placed in other kingdoms of Europe; though they had attained to such political importance,
that even the proud and jealous spirit of the feudal aristocracy could not
exclude them from a considerable share in government; yet the nobles,
notwithstanding these acquisitions of the commons, continued to assert the
privileges of their order, in opposition to the crown, in a tone extremely
high. There was not any body of nobility, in Europe more distinguished for
independence of spirit, haughtiness of deportment, and bold pretensions, than
that of Castile. The history of that monarchy affords the most striking
examples of the vigilance with which they observed, and of the vigour with which
they opposed, every measure of their kings, that tended to encroach on their
jurisdiction, to diminish their dignity, or to abridge their power. Even in their
ordinary intercourse with their monarchs, they preserved such a consciousness
of their rank, that the nobles of the first order claimed it as a privilege to
be covered in the royal presence, and approached their sovereigns rather as
equals than as subjects.
The constitutions of the subordinate monarchies, which
depended on the crowns of Castile and Aragon, nearly resembled those of the
kingdoms to which they were annexed. In all of them, the dignity and
independence of the nobles were great; the immunities and power of the cities
were considerable.
An attentive observation of the singular situation of
Spain, as well as the various events which occurred there, from the invasion of
the Moors to the union of its kingdoms under Ferdinand and Isabella, will
discover the causes to which all the peculiarities in its political
constitution I have pointed out, ought to be ascribed.
As the provinces of Spain were wrested from the
Mahometans gradually and with difficulty, the nobles who followed the standard
of any eminent leader in these wars, conquered not for him alone, but for
themselves. They claimed a share in the lands which their valor had won from
the enemy, and their prosperity and power increased, in proportion as the
territory of the prince extended.
During their perpetual wars with the Moors, the
monarchs of the several kingdoms in Spain depended so much on their nobles,
that it became necessary, to conciliate their good-will by successive grants of
new honors and privileges. By the time that any prince could establish his
dominion in a conquered province, the greater part of the territory was parceled
out by him among his barons, with such jurisdiction and immunities as raised
them almost to sovereign power.
At the same time, the kingdoms erected in so many
different corners of Spain, were of inconsiderable extent. The petty monarch
was but little elevated above his nobles. They, feeling themselves to be almost
his equals, acted as such; and could not look up to the kings of such limited
domains with the same reverence that the sovereigns of the great monarchies in
Europe were viewed by their subjects.
While these circumstances concurred in exalting the
nobility, and in depressing the royal authority, there were other causes which
raised the cities in Spain to consideration and power.
As the open country, during the wars with the Moors,
was perpetually exposed to the incursions of the enemy, with whom no peace or
truce was so permanent as to prove any lasting security, self-preservation
obliged persons of all ranks to fix their residence in places of strength. The
castles of the barons, which, in other countries, afforded a commodious retreat
from the depredations of banditti, or from the transient violence of any
interior commotion, were unable to resist an enemy whose operations were
conducted with regular and persevering vigour. Cities, in which great numbers
united for their mutual defence, were the only places in which people could
reside with any prospect of safety. To this was owing the rapid growth of those
cities in Spain of which the Christians recovered possession. All who fled from
the Moorish yoke resorted to them as to an asylum; and in them, the greater
part of those who took the field against the Mahometans established their
families.
Several of these cities, during a longer or shorter
course of years, were the capitals of little states, and enjoyed all the
advantages which accelerate the increase of inhabitants in every place that is
the seat of government.
From those concurring causes, the number of cities in
Spain, at the beginning of the fifteenth century, had become considerable, and
they were peopled far beyond the proportion which was common in other parts of
Europe, except in Italy and the Low Countries. The Moors had introduced manufactures
into those cities, while under their dominion. The Christians, who, by
intermixture with them, had learned their arts, continued to cultivate these.
Trade in several of the Spanish towns appears to have been carried on with
vigor; and the spirit of commerce continued to preserve the number of their
inhabitants. as the sense of danger had first induced them to crowd together.
As the Spanish cities were populous, many of the
inhabitants were of a rank superior to those who resided in towns in other
countries of Europe. That cause, which contributed chiefly to their population,
affected equally persons of every condition, who flocked thither promiscuously,
in order to find shelter there, or in hopes of making a stand against the
enemy, with greater advantage than in any other station. The persons elected as
their representatives in the Cortes by the cities, or promoted to offices of
trust and dignity in the government of the community, were often, as will
appear from transactions which I shall hereafter relate, of such considerable
rank, in the kingdom, as reflected luster on their constituents, and on the
stations wherein they were placed.
As it was impossible to carry on a continual war
against the Moors, without some other military force than that which the barons
were obliged to bring into the field, in consequence of the feudal tenures, it
became necessary to have some troops, particularly a body of light cavalry, in
constant pay. It was one of the privileges of the nobles, that their lands were
exempt from the burden of taxes. The charge of supporting the troops requisite
for the public safety, fell wholly upon the cities; and their kings, being
obliged frequently to apply to them for aid, found it necessary to gain their
favor by concessions, which not only extended their immunities, but added to
their wealth and power.
When the influence of all these circumstances,
peculiar to Spain, is added to the general and common causes, which contributed
to aggrandize cities in other countries of Europe, this will fully account for
the extensive privileges which they acquired, as well as for the extraordinary
consideration to which they attained, in all the Spanish kingdoms.
By these exorbitant privileges of the nobility, and
this unusual power of the cities in Spain, the royal prerogative was hemmed in
on every side, and reduced within very narrow bounds. Sensible of this, and
impatient of such restraint, several monarchs endeavored at various junctures
and by different means, to enlarge their own jurisdiction. Their power,
however, or their abilities, were so unequal to the undertaking, that their efforts
were attended with little success. But when Ferdinand and Isabella found
themselves at the head of the United Kingdoms of Spain, and delivered from the
danger and interruption of domestic wars, they were not only in a condition to
resume, but were now able to prosecute with advantage, the schemes of extending
the prerogative, which their ancestors had attempted in vain. Ferdinand’s
profound sagacity in concerting his measures, his persevering industry in
conducting them, and his uncommon address in carrying them into execution,
fitted him admirably for an undertaking which required all these talents.
As the overgrown power and high pretensions of the nobility
were what the monarchs of Spain felt most sensibly, and bore with the greatest
impatience, the great object of Ferdinand’s policy was to reduce these within
more moderate bounds. Under various pretexts, sometimes by violence, more
frequently in consequence of decrees obtained in the courts of law, he wrested
from the barons a great part of the lands which had been granted to them by the
inconsiderate bounty of former monarchs, particularly during the feeble and
profuse reign of his predecessor Henry IV. He did not give the entire conduct
of affairs to persons of noble birth, who were accustomed to occupy every
department of importance in peace or in war, as if it had been a privilege
peculiar to their order, to be employed as the sole counselors and ministers of
the crown. He often transacted business of great consequence without their
intervention, and bestowed many offices of power and trust on new men, devoted
to his interest. He introduced a degree of state and dignity into his court,
which being little known in Spain, while it remained split into many small
kingdoms, taught the nobles to approach their sovereign with more ceremony, and
gradually rendered him the object of greater deference and respect.
The annexing the masterships of the three military
orders of Santiago, Calatrava, and Alcantara, to the crown, was another
expedient, by which Ferdinand greatly augmented the revenue and power of the
kings of Spain. These orders were instituted in imitation of those of the
Knights Templars and of St. John of Jerusalem, on purpose to wage perpetual war
with the Mahometans, and to protect the pilgrims who visited Compostella, or
other places of eminent sanctity in Spain. The zeal and superstition of the
ages in which they were founded, prompted persons of every rank to bestow such
liberal donations on those holy warriors, that, in a short time, they engrossed
a considerable share in the property and wealth of the kingdom. The masterships
of these orders came to be stations of the greatest power and opulence to which
a Spanish nobleman could be advanced. These high dignities were in the disposal
of the knights of the order, and placed the persons on whom they conferred them
almost on a level with their sovereign. Ferdinand, unwilling that the nobility,
whom he considered as already too formidable, should derive such additional
credit and influence from possessing the government of these wealthy
fraternities, was solicitous to wrest it out of their hands, and to vest it in
the crown. His measures for accomplishing this were wisely planned, and
executed with vigor [AD 1476 and 1493]. By addresses, by promises, and by
threats, he prevailed on the knights of each order to place Isabella and him at
the head of it. Innocent VIII and Alexander VI gave this election the sanction
of papal authority; and subsequent pontiffs rendered the annexation of these
masterships to the crown perpetual.
While Ferdinand, by this measure, diminished the power
and influence of the nobility, and added new luster or authority to the crown,
he was taking other important steps with a view to the same object. The
sovereign jurisdiction, which the feudal barons exercised within their own
territories, was the pride and distinction of their order. To have invaded
openly a privilege which they prized so highly, and in defence of which they
would have run so eagerly to arms, was a measure too daring for a prince of
Ferdinand’s cautious temper. He took advantage, however, of an opportunity
which the state of his kingdoms and the spirit of his people presented him, in
order to undermine what he durst not assault. The incessant depredations of the
Moors, the want of discipline among the troops which were employed to oppose
them, the frequent civil wars between the crown and the nobility, as well as the
undiscerning rage with which the barons carried on their private wars with each
other, filled all the provinces of Spain with disorder. Rapine, outrage, and
murder, became as common as not only to interrupt commerce, but in a great
measure to suspend all intercourse between one place and another. That security
and protection, which men expect from entering into civil society, ceased in a
great degree. Internal order and police, while the feudal institutions remained
in vigour, were so little objects of attention, and the administration of
justice was so extremely feeble, that it would have been vain to have expected
relief from the established laws or the ordinary judges. But the evil became so
intolerable, and the inhabitants of cities, who were the chief sufferers, grew
so impatient of this anarchy, that self-preservation forced them to have recourse
to an extraordinary remedy. About the middle of the thirteenth century (1260),
the cities in the kingdom of Aragon, and after their example, those in Castile,
formed themselves into an association distinguished by the name of the Holy
Brotherhood. They exacted a certain contribution from each of the associated
towns: they levied a considerable body of troops, in order to protect
travelers, and to pursue criminals: they appointed judges, who opened their
courts in various parts of the kingdom. Whoever was guilty of murder, robbery,
or of any act that violated the public peace, and was seized by the troops of
the Brotherhood, was carried before judges of their nomination, who, without
paying any regard to the exclusive and sovereign jurisdiction, which the lord
of the place might claim, tried and condemned the criminals. By the
establishment of this fraternity, the prompt and impartial administration of
justice was restored; and, together with it, internal tranquility and order
began to return. The nobles alone murmured at this salutary institution. They
complained of it, as an encroachment on one of their most valuable privileges.
They remonstrated against it in a high tone; and, on some occasions, refused to
grant any aid to the crown, unless it were abolished. Ferdinand, however, was
sensible not only of the good effects of the Holy Brotherhood with respect to
the police of his kingdoms, but perceived its tendency to abridge, and at
length to annihilate, the territorial jurisdiction of the nobility. He countenanced
it on every occasion. He supported it with the whole force of royal authority;
and besides the expedients employed by him in common with the other monarchs of
Europe, he availed himself of this institution, which was peculiar to his
kingdom, in order to limit and abolish that independent jurisdiction of the
nobility, which was no less inconsistent with the authority of the prince, than
with the order of society.
But though Ferdinand by these measures considerably
enlarged the boundaries of prerogative, and acquired a degree of influence and
power far beyond what any of his predecessors had enjoyed, yet the limitations
of the royal authority, as well as the barriers against its encroachments,
continued to be many and strong. The spirit of liberty was vigorous among the
people of Spain; the spirit of independence was high among the nobility; and
though the love of glory, peculiar to the Spaniards in every period of their
history, prompted them to support Ferdinand with zeal in his foreign
operations, and to afford him such aid as enabled him not only to undertake but
to execute great enterprises; he reigned over his subjects with a jurisdiction
less extensive than that of any of the great monarchs in Europe. It will appear
from many passages in the following history, that during a considerable part of
the reign of his successor Charles V the prerogative of the Spanish crown was
equally circumscribed.
The Kingdom of France
The ancient government and laws in France so nearly
resembled those of the other feudal kingdoms, that such a detail with respect
to them as was necessary, in order to convey some idea of the nature and
effects of the peculiar institutions which took place in Spain, would be
superfluous. In the view which I have exhibited of the means by which the
French monarchs acquired such a full command of the national force of their
kingdom, as enabled them to engage in extensive schemes of foreign operation, I
have already pointed out the great steps by which they advanced towards a more
ample possession of political power, and a more uncontrolled exercise of their
royal prerogative. All that now remains is to take notice of such particulars
in the constitution of France, as serve either to distinguish it from that of
other countries, or tend to throw any light on the transactions of that period,
to which the following history extends.
Under the French monarchs of the first race, the royal
prerogative was very inconsiderable. The general assemblies of the nation,
which met annually at stated seasons, extended their authority to every
department of government. The power of electing kings, of enacting laws, of
redressing grievances, of conferring donations on the prince, of passing
judgment in the last resort, with respect to every person and to every cause,
resided in this great convention of the nation. Under the second race of kings,
notwithstanding the power and splendor which the conquests of Charlemagne added
to the crown, the general assemblies of the nation continued to possess
extensive authority. The right of determining which of the royal family should
be placed on the throne, was vested in them. The princes, elevated to that
dignity by their suffrage, were accustomed regularly to call and to consult
them with respect to every affair of importance to the state, and without their
consent no law was passed, and no new tax was levied.
But, by the time that Hugh Capet, the father of the
third race of kings, took possession of the throne of France, such changes had
happened in the political state of the kingdom, as considerably affected the
power and jurisdiction of the general assembly of the nation. The royal
authority, in the hands of the degenerate posterity of Charlemagne, had
dwindled into insignificance and contempt. Every considerable proprietor of
land had formed his territory into a barony, almost independent of the
sovereign. The dukes or governors of provinces, the counts or governors of
towns and small districts, and the great officers of the crown, had rendered
these dignities, which originally were granted only during pleasure or for
life, hereditary in their families. Each of these had usurped all the rights
which hitherto had been deemed the distinctions of royalty, particularly the
privileges of dispensing justice within their own domains, of coining money,
and of waging war. Every district was governed by local customs, acknowledged a
distinct lord, and pursued a separate interest. The formality of doing homage
to their sovereign, was almost the only act of subjection which those haughty
barons would perform, and that bound them no farther than they were willing to
acknowledge its obligations.
In a kingdom broken into so many independent baronies,
hardly any common principle of union remained; and the general assembly, in its
deliberations, could scarcely consider the nation as forming one body, or
establish common regulations to be of equal force in every part. Within the
immediate domains of the crown, the king might publish laws, and they were
obeyed, because there he was acknowledged as the only lord. But if he had aimed
at rendering these laws general, that would have alarmed the barons as an
encroachment upon the independence of their jurisdiction. The barons, when met
in the great national convention, avoided, with no less care, the enacting of
general laws to be observed in every part of the kingdom, because the execution
of them must have been vested in the king, and would have enlarged that
paramount power, which was the object of their jealousy. Thus, under the descendants
of Hugh Capet, the States General (for that was the name by which the supreme
assembly of the French nation came then to be distinguished) lost their legislative
authority, or at least entirely relinquished the exercise of it. From that
period, the jurisdiction of the States General extended no farther than to the
imposition of new taxes, the determination of questions with respect to the
right of succession to the crown, the settling of the regency when the
preceding monarch had not fixed it by his will, and the presenting
remonstrances enumerating the grievances of which the nation wished to obtain
redress.
As, during several centuries, the monarchs of Europe
seldom demanded extraordinary subsidies of their subjects, and the other
events, which required the interposition of the States, rarely occurred, their
meetings in France were not frequent. They were summoned occasionally by their
kings, when compelled by their wants or their fears to have recourse to the
great convention of their people; but they did not, like the Diet in Germany,
the Cortes in Spain, or the Parliament in England, form an essential member of
the constitution, the regular exertion of whose powers was requisite to give
vigour and order to government.
When the states of France ceased to exercise
legislative authority, the kings began to assume it. They ventured at first on
acts of legislation with great reserve, and after taking every precaution that
could prevent their subjects from being alarmed at the exercise of a new power.
They did not at once issue their ordinances in a tone of authority and command.
They treated with their subjects; they pointed out what was best; and allured
them to comply with it. By degrees, however, as the prerogative of the crown
extended, and as the supreme jurisdiction of the royal courts came to be
established, the kings of France assumed more openly the style and authority of
lawgivers; and, before the beginning of the fifteenth century, the complete
legislative power was vested in the crown.
Having secured this important acquisition, the steps
which led to the right of imposing taxes were rendered few and easy. The
people, accustomed to see their sovereigns issue ordinances, by their sole
authority, which regulated points of the greatest consequence with respect to
the property of their subjects, were not alarmed when they were required, by
the royal edicts, to contribute certain sums towards supplying the exigencies
of government, and carrying forward the measures of the nation. When Charles
VII and Louis XI first ventured to exercise this new power, in the manner which
I have already described, the gradual increase of the royal authority had so
imperceptibly prepared the minds of the people of France for this innovation,
that it excited no commotion in the kingdom, and seems scarcely to have given
rise to any murmur or complaint.
When the kings of France had thus engrossed every
power which can be exerted in government; when the right of making laws, of
levying money, of keeping an army of mercenaries in constant pay, of declaring
war, and of concluding peace, centered in the crown, the constitution of the
kingdom, which, under the first race of kings, was nearly democratical; which,
under the second race, became an aristocracy; terminated, under the third race,
in a pure monarchy. Everything that tended to preserve the appearance or revive
the memory of the ancient mixed government, seems from that period to have been
industriously avoided. During the long and active reign of Francis I the
variety as well as extent of whose operations obliged him to lay many heavy
impositions on his subjects, the States General of France were not once
assembled, nor were the people once allowed to exert the power of taxing
themselves, which, according to the original ideas of feudal government, was a
right essential to every freeman.
Two things, however, remained, which moderated the
exercise of the regal prerogative, and restrained it within such bounds as
preserved the constitution of France from degenerating into mere despotism. The
rights and privileges claimed by the nobility, must be considered as one
barrier against the absolute dominion of the crown. Though the nobles of France
had lost that political power which was vested in their order as a body, they
still retained the personal rights and pre-eminence which they derived from
their rank. They preserved a consciousness of elevation above other classes of
citizens; an exemption from burdens to which persons of inferior condition were
subject; a contempt of the occupations in which they were engaged; the
privilege of assuming ensigns that indicated their own dignity; a right to be
treated with a certain degree of deference during peace; and a claim to various
distinctions when in the field. Many of these pretensions were not founded on
the words of statutes, or derived from positive laws; they were defined and
ascertained by the maxims of honor, a title more delicate, but no less sacred.
These rights, established and protected by a principle equally vigilant in guarding,
and intrepid in defending them, are to the sovereign himself objects of respect
and veneration. Wherever they stand in its way, the royal prerogative is
bounded. The violence of a despot may exterminate such an order of men; but as
long as it subsists, and its ideas of personal distinction remain entire, the
power of the prince has limits.
As in France the body of nobility was very numerous,
and the individuals of which it was composed, retained a high sense of their
own preeminence, to this we may ascribe, in a great measure, the mode of
exercising the royal prerogative which peculiarly distinguishes the government
of that kingdom. An intermediate order was placed between the monarch and his
other subjects; in every act of authority it became necessary to attend to its
privileges, and not only to guard against any real violation of them, but to
avoid any suspicion of supposing it to be possible that they might be violated.
Thus a species of government was established in France, unknown in the ancient
world, that of a monarchy, in which the power of the sovereign, though
unconfined by any legal or constitutional restraint, has certain bounds set to
it by the ideas which one class of his subjects entertain concerning their own
dignity.
The jurisdiction of the parliaments in France,
particularly that of Paris, was the other barrier which served to confine the
exercise of the royal prerogative within certain limits. The parliament of
Paris was originally the court of the kings of France, to which they committed
the supreme administration of justice within their own domains, as well as the
power of deciding with respect to all cases brought before it by appeals from
the courts of the barons. When in consequence of events and regulations which
have been mentioned formerly, the time and place of its meeting were fixed,
when not only the form of its procedure, but the principles on which it
decided, were rendered regular and consistent, when every cause of importance
was finally determined there, and when the people became accustomed to resort
thither as to the supreme temple of justice, the parliament of Paris rose to
high estimation in the kingdom, its members acquired dignity, and its decrees
were submitted to with deference. Nor was this the only source of the power and
influence which the parliament obtained. The kings of France, when they first
began to assume the legislative power, in order to reconcile the minds of their
people to this new exertion of prerogative, produced their edicts and
ordinances in the parliament of Paris, that they might be approved of and
registered there, before they were published and declared to be of authority in
the kingdom. During the intervals between the meetings of the States General of
the kingdom, or during those reigns in which the States General were not
assembled, the monarchs of France were accustomed to consult the parliament of
Paris with respect to the most arduous affairs of government, and frequently
regulated their conduct by its advice, in declaring war, in concluding peace,
and in other transactions of public concern. Thus there was erected in the
kingdom a tribunal which became the great depository of the laws, and by the
uniform tenor of its decrees established principles of justice and forms of
proceeding which were considered so sacred, that even the sovereign power of
the monarch durst not venture to disregard or to violate them.
The members of this illustrious body, though they
neither possess legislative authority, nor can be considered as the representatives
of the people, have availed themselves of the reputation and influence which
they had acquired among their countrymen, in order to make a stand to the utmost
of their ability, against every unprecedented and exorbitant exertion of the
prerogative. In every period of the French history, they have merited the
praise of being the virtuous but feeble guardians of the rights and privileges
of the nation.
The German Empire
After taking this view of state of France, I proceed
to consider that of the German empire, from which Charles V derived his title
of highest dignity. In explaining the constitution of this great and complex
body at the beginning of the sixteenth century, I shall avoid entering into
such a detail as would involve my readers in that inextricable labyrinth, which
is formed by the multiplicity of its tribunals, the number of its members,
their interfering rights, and by the endless discussions or refinements of the
public lawyers of Germany, with respect to all these.
The empire of Charlemagne was a structure erected in
so short a time, that it could not be permanent. Under his immediate successor
it began to totter; and soon after fell to pieces. The crown of Germany was
separated from that of France, and the descendants of Charlemagne established
two great monarchies so situated as to give rise to a perpetual rivalship and
enmity between them. But the princes of the race of Charlemagne who were placed
on the Imperial throne, were not altogether so degenerate, as those of the same
family who reigned in France. In the hands of the former the royal authority
retained some vigor, and the nobles of Germany, though possessed of extensive
privileges as well as ample territories, did not so early attain independence.
The great offices of the crown continued to be at the disposal of the
sovereign, and during a long period, fiefs remained in their original state,
without becoming hereditary and perpetual in the families of the persons to
whom they had been granted.
At length the German branch of the family of
Charlemagne became extinct, and his feeble descendants who reigned in France
had sunk into such contempt, that the Germans, without looking towards them,
exercised the right inherent in a free people; and in a general assembly of the
nation elected Conrad count of Franconia emperor [911]. After him Henry of
Saxony, and his descendants the three Othos, were placed, in succession, on the
Imperial throne, by the suffrages of their countrymen. The extensive
territories of the Saxon emperors, their eminent abilities and enterprising
genius, not only added new vigour to the Imperial dignity, but raised it to
higher power and preeminence. Otho the Great marched at the head of a numerous
army into Italy [952], and after the example of Charlemagne, gave law to that
country. Every power there acknowledged his authority. He created popes, and
deposed them by his sovereign mandate. He annexed the kingdom of Italy to the
German empire. Elated with his success, he assumed the title of Cesar Augustus.
A prince, born in the heart of Germany, pretended to be the successor of the
emperors of ancient Rome, and claimed a right to the same power and
prerogative.
But while the emperors, by means of these new titles
and new dominions, gradually acquired additional authority and splendor, the
nobility of Germany had gone on at the same time, extending their privileges
and jurisdiction. The situation of affairs was favorable to their attempts. The
vigour which Charlemagne had given to government quickly relaxed. The incapacity
of some of his successors was such, as would have encouraged vassals less
enterprising than the nobles of that age, to have claimed new rights, and to have
assumed new powers. The civil wars in which other emperors were engaged,
obliged them to pay perpetual court to their subjects, on whose support they
depended, and not only to connive at their usurpations, but to permit, and even
to authorize them. Fiefs gradually became hereditary. They were transmitted not
only in the direct, but also in the collateral line. The investiture of them
was demanded not only by male but by female heirs. Every baron began to
exercise sovereign jurisdiction within his own domains; and the dukes and
counts of Germany took wide steps towards rendering their territories distinct
and independent states. The Saxon emperors observed their progress, and were
aware of its tendency. But as they could not hope to humble vassals already grown
too potent, unless they had turned their whole force as well as attention to
that enterprise, and as they were extremely intent on their expeditions into
Italy, which they could not undertake without the concurrence of their nobles,
they were solicitous not to alarm them by any direct attack on their privileges
and jurisdictions. They aimed, however, at undermining their power. With this
view, they inconsiderately bestowed additional territories, and accumulated new
honors on the clergy, in hopes that this order might serve as a counterpoise to
that of the nobility in any future struggle.
The unhappy effects of this fatal error in policy were
quickly felt. Under the emperors of the Franconian and Suabian lines, whom the
Germans, by their voluntary election, placed on the Imperial throne, a new face
of things appeared, and a scene was exhibited in Germany, which astonished all
Christendom at that time [1024], and in the present age appears almost
incredible. The popes, hitherto dependent on the emperors, and indebted for
power as well as dignity to their beneficence and protection, began to claim a
superior jurisdiction; and, in virtue of authority which they pretended to
derive from heaven, tried, condemned, excommunicated, and deposed their former
masters. Nor is this to be considered merely as a frantic sally of passion in a
pontiff intoxicated with high ideas concerning the extent of priestly
domination, and the plenitude of papal authority. Gregory VII was able as well
as daring. His presumption and violence were accompanied with political
discernment and sagacity. He had observed that the princes and nobles of
Germany had acquired such considerable territories and such extensive
jurisdiction, as rendered them not only formidable to the emperors, but disposed
them to favor any attempt to circumscribe their power. He foresaw that the
ecclesiastics of Germany, raised almost to a level with its princes, were ready
to support any person who would stand forth as the protector of their
privileges and independence. With both of these Gregory negotiated, and had
secured many devoted adherents among them, before he ventured to enter the
lists against the head of the empire.
He began his rupture with Henry IV upon a pretext that
was popular and plausible. He complained of the venality and corruption with
which the emperor had granted the investiture of benefices to ecclesiastics. He
contended that this right belonged to him as head of the church; he required
Henry to confine himself within the bounds of his civil jurisdiction, and to
abstain for the future from such sacrilegious encroachments on the spiritual
dominion. All the censures of the church were denounced against Henry, because
he refused to relinquish those powers which his predecessors had uniformly exercised.
The most considerable of the German princes and ecclesiastics were excited to
take arms against him. His mother, his wife, his sons, were wrought upon to
disregard all the ties of blood as well as of duty, and to join the party of
his enemies. Such were the successful arts with which the court of Rome
inflamed the superstitious zeal, and conducted the factious spirit of the
Germans and Italians, that an emperor, distinguished not only for many virtues,
but possessed of considerable talents, was at length obliged to appear as a
suppliant at the gate of the castle in which the pope resided, and to stand
there three days, barefooted, in the depth of winter, imploring a pardon, which
at length he obtained with difficulty.
This act of humiliation degraded the Imperial dignity.
Nor was the depression momentary only. The contest between Gregory and Henry
gave rise to the two great factions of the Guelfs and Ghibellines; the former
of which supporting the pretensions of the popes, and the latter defending the
rights of the emperor, kept Germany and Italy in perpetual agitation during
three centuries. A regular system for humbling the emperors and circumscribing
their power was formed, and adhered to uniformly throughout that period. The
popes, the free states in Italy, the nobility and ecclesiastics of Germany,
were all interested in its success: and notwithstanding the return of some
short intervals of vigor, under the administration of a few able emperors, the
Imperial authority continued to decline. During the anarchy of the long
interregnum, subsequent to the death of William of Holland [1256], it dwindled
down almost to nothing. Rudolph of Hapsburg, the founder of the House of
Austria, and who first opened the way to its future grandeur, was at length
elected emperor [1271], not that he might reestablish and extend the Imperial
authority, but because his territories and influence were so inconsiderable as
to excite no jealousy in the German princes, who were willing to preserve the
forms of a constitution, the power and vigor of which they had destroyed.
Several of his successors were placed on the Imperial throne from the same
motive; and almost every remaining prerogative was rescued out of the hands of
feeble princes unable to exercise or to defend them.
During this period of turbulence and confusion, the
constitution of the Germanic body underwent a total change. The ancient names
of courts and magistrates, together with the original forms and appearance of
policy, were preserved; but such new privileges and jurisdiction were assumed,
and so many various rights established, that the same species of government no
longer subsisted. The princes, the great nobility, the dignified ecclesiastics,
the free cities, had taken advantage of the interregnum, which I have
mentioned, to establish or to extend their usurpations. They claimed and
exercised the right of governing their respective territories with full
sovereignty. They acknowledged no superior with respect to any point, relative
to the interior administration and police of their domains. They enacted laws,
imposed taxes, coined money, declared war, concluded peace, and exerted every
prerogative peculiar to independent states. The ideas of order and political
union, which had originally formed the various provinces of Germany into one
body, were almost entirely lost; and the society must have dissolved, if the
forms of feudal subordination had not preserved such an appearance of
connection or dependence among the various members of the community, as
preserved it from falling to pieces.
This bond of union, however, was extremely feeble and
hardly any principle remained in the German constitution, of sufficient force
to maintain public order, or even to ascertain personal security. From the
accession of Rudolph of Hapsburg, to the reign of Maximilian, the immediate
predecessor of Charles V, the empire felt every calamity which a state must
endure, when the authority of government is so much relaxed as to have lost its
proper degree of vigor. The causes of dissension among that vast number of
members, which composed the Germanic body, were infinite and unavoidable. These
gave rise to perpetual private wars, which were carried on with all the
violence that usually accompanies resentment, when unrestrained by superior
authority. Rapine, outrage, exactions, became universal. Commerce was
interrupted; industry suspended; and every part of Germany resembled a country
which an enemy had plundered and left desolate. The variety of expedients
employed with a view to restore order and tranquility, prove that the
grievances occasioned by this state of anarchy had grown intolerable. Arbiters
were appointed to terminate the differences among the several states. The
cities united in a league, the object of which was to check the rapine and
extortions of the nobility. The nobility formed confederacies, on purpose to
maintain tranquility among their own order. Germany was divided into several
circles, in each of which a provincial and partial jurisdiction was
established, to supply the place of a public and common tribunal.
But all these remedies were so ineffectual, that they
served only to demonstrate the violence of that anarchy which prevailed, and
the insufficiency of the means employed to correct it. At length Maximilian
re-established public order in the empire, by instituting the imperial chamber
[1495], a tribunal composed of judges named partly by the emperor, partly by
the several states, and vested with authority to decide filially concerning all
differences among the members of the Germanic body. A few years after [1512] by
giving a new form to the Aulic council, which takes cognizance of all feudal
causes, and such as belong to the emperor’s immediate jurisdiction, he restored
some degree of vigor to the imperial authority.
But notwithstanding the salutary effects of these
regulations and improvements, the political constitution of the German empire,
at the commencement of the period of which I propose to write the history, was
of a species so peculiar, as not to resemble perfectly any form of government
known either in the ancient or modern world. It was a complex body, formed by
the association of several states, each of which possessed sovereign and
independent jurisdiction within its own territories. Of all the members which
composed this united body, the emperor was the head. In his name, all decrees
and regulations, with respect to points of common concern, were issued; and to
him the power of carrying them into execution was committed. But this
appearance of monarchical power in the emperor was more than counterbalanced by
the influence of the princes and states of the empire in every act of
administration. No law extending to the whole body could pass, no resolution
that affected the general interest could be taken, without the approbation of
the diet of the empire. In this assembly, every sovereign prince and state of
the Germanic body had a right to be present, to deliberate, and to vote. The
decrees or recesses of the diet were the laws of the empire, which the emperor
was bound to ratify and enforce.
Under this aspect, the constitution of the empire
appears a regular confederacy, similar to the Achaean league in ancient Greece,
or to that of the United Provinces and of the Swiss Cantons in modern times.
But if viewed in another light, striking peculiarities in its political state
present themselves. The Germanic body was not formed by the union of members
altogether distinct and independent. All the princes and states joined in this
association, were originally subject to the emperors, and acknowledged them as
sovereigns. Besides this, they originally held their lands as Imperial fiefs,
and in consequence of this tenure owed the emperors all those services which
feudal vassals are bound to perform to their liege lord. But though this
political subjection was entirely at an end, and the influence of the feudal
relation much diminished, the ancient forms and institutions, introduced while
the emperors governed Germany with authority not inferior to that which the other
monarchs of Europe possessed, still remained. Thus an opposition was
established between the genius of the government, and the forms of
administration in the German empire. The former considered the emperor only as
the head of a confederacy, the members of which, by their voluntary choice,
have raised him to that dignity; the latter seemed to imply, that he is really
invested with sovereign power. By this circumstance, such principles of
hostility and discord were interwoven into the frame of the Germanic body, as
affected each of its members, rendering their interior union incomplete, and
their external efforts feeble and irregular. The pernicious influence of this
defect inherent in the constitution of the empire is so considerable, that,
without attending to it, we cannot fully comprehend many transactions in the
reign of Charles V or form just ideas concerning the genius of the German
government.
The emperors of Germany, at the beginning of the
sixteenth century, were distinguished by the most pompous titles, and by such
ensigns of dignity, as intimated their authority to be superior to that of all
other monarchs. The greatest princes of the empire attended, and served them,
on some occasions, as the officers of their household. They exercised prerogatives
which no other sovereign ever claimed. They retained pretensions to all the
extensive powers which their predecessors had enjoyed in any former age. But,
at the same time, instead of possessing that ample domain which had belonged to
the ancient emperors of Germany, and which stretched from Basil to Cologne,
along both banks of the Rhine, they were stripped of all territorial property,
and had not a single city, a single castle, a single foot of land, that
belonged to them, as heads of the empire. As their domain was alienated, their
stated revenues were reduced almost to nothing; and the extraordinary aids,
which on a few occasions they obtained, were granted sparingly and paid with
reluctance. The princes and states of the empire, though they seemed to
recognize the Imperial authority, were subjects only in name, each of them
possessing a complete municipal jurisdiction within the precincts of his own
territories.
From this ill-compacted frame of government, effects
that were unavoidable resulted. The emperors, dazzled with the splendor of
their titles, and the external signs of vast authority, were apt to imagine
themselves to be the real sovereigns of Germany, and were led to aim
continually at recovering the exercise of those powers which the forms of the
constitution seemed to vest in them, and which their predecessors, Charlemagne
and the Othos, had actually enjoyed. The princes and states, aware of the
nature as well as extent of these pretensions, were perpetually on their guard,
in order to watch all the motions of the Imperial court, and to circumscribe
its power within limits still more narrow. The emperors, in support of their
claims, appealed to ancient forms and institutions, which the states held to be
obsolete. The states founded their rights on recent practice and modern
privileges, which the emperors considered as usurpations.
This jealousy of the Imperial authority, together with
the opposition between it and the rights of the states, increased considerably
from the time that the emperors were elected, not by the collective body of
German nobles, but by a few princes of chief dignity. During a long period, all
the members of the Germanic body had a right to assemble, and to make choice of
the person whom they appointed to be their head. But amidst the violence and
anarchy which prevailed for several centuries in the empire, seven princes who
possessed the most extensive territories, and who had obtained a hereditary
title to the great offices of the state, acquired the exclusive privilege of
nominating the emperor. This right was confirmed to them by the Golden Bull:
the mode of exercising it was ascertained, and they were dignified with the
appellation of Electors. The nobility and free cities being thus stripped of a
privilege which they had once enjoyed, were less connected with a prince,
towards whose elevation they had not contributed by their suffrages, and came
to be more apprehensive of his authority. The electors, by their extensive
power, and the distinguishing privileges which they possessed, became
formidable to the emperors, with whom they were placed almost on a level in several
acts of jurisdiction. Thus the introduction of the electoral college into the
empire, and the authority which it acquired, instead of diminishing, contributed
to strengthen, the principles of hostility and discord in the Germanic
constitution.
These were further augmented by the various and
repugnant forms of civil policy in the several states which composed the
Germanic body. It is no easy matter to render the union of independent states
perfect and entire, even when the genius and forms of their respective
governments happen to be altogether similar. But in the Germanic empire, which
was a confederacy of princes, of ecclesiastics, and of free cities, it was
impossible that they could incorporate thoroughly. The free cities were small
republics, in which the maxims and spirit peculiar to that species of
government prevailed. The princes and nobles, to whom supreme jurisdiction
belonged, possessed a sort of monarchical power within their own territories,
and the forms of their interior administration nearly resembled those of the
great feudal kingdoms. The interests, the ideas, the objects of states so
differently constituted, cannot be the same. Nor could their common
deliberations be carried on with the same spirit, while the love of liberty,
and attention to commerce, were the reigning principles in the cities; while
the desire of power, and ardor for military glory, were the governing passions
of the princes and nobility.
The secular and ecclesiastical members of the empire
were as little fitted for union as the free cities and the nobility.
Considerable territories had been granted to several of the bishoprics and
abbeys, and some of the highest offices in the empire having been annexed to
them inalienably, were held by the ecclesiastics raised to these dignities. The
younger sons of noblemen of the second order, who had devoted themselves to the
church, were commonly promoted to these stations of eminence and power; and it
was no small mortification to the princes and great nobility, to see persons
raised from an inferior rank to the same level with themselves, or even exalted
to superior dignity. The education of these churchmen, the genius of their profession,
and their connection with the court of Rome, rendered their character as well
as their interest different from those of the other members of the Germanic
body, with whom they were called to act in concert. Thus another source of
jealousy and variance was opened, which ought not to be overlooked when we are
searching into the nature of the German constitution.
To all these causes of dissension may be added one
more, arising from the unequal distribution of power and wealth among the
states of the empire. The electors, and other nobles of the highest rank, not
only possessed sovereign jurisdiction, but governed such extensive, populous,
and rich countries, as rendered them great princes. Many of the other members,
though they enjoyed all the rights of sovereignty, ruled over such petty
domains, that their real power bore no proportion to this high prerogative. A
well compacted and vigorous confederacy could not be formed of such dissimilar
states. The weaker were jealous, timid, and unable either to assert or defend
their just privileges. The more powerful were apt to assume and to become
oppressive. The electors and emperors, by turns, endeavored to extend their own
authority, by encroaching on those feeble members of the Germanic body, who
sometimes defended their rights with much spirit, but more frequently, being
overawed or corrupted, they tamely surrendered their privileges, or meanly
favored the designs formed against them.
After contemplating all these principles of disunion
and opposition in the constitution of the German empire, it will be easy to
account for the want of concord and uniformity, conspicuous in its councils and
proceedings. That slow, dilatory, distrustful, and irresolute spirit, which
characterizes all its deliberations, will appear natural in a body, the
junction of whose members was so incomplete, the different parts of which were
held together by such feeble ties, and set at variance by such powerful
motives. But the empire of Germany, nevertheless, comprehended countries of
such great extent, and was inhabited by such a martial and hardy race of men,
that when the abilities of an emperor, or zeal for any common cause, could
rouse this unwieldy body to put forth its strength, it acted with almost
irresistible force. In the following history we shall find, that as the
measures on which Charles V was most intent, were often thwarted or rendered
abortive by the spirit of jealousy and division peculiar to the Germanic
constitution; so it was by the influence which he acquired over the prices of
the empire, and by engaging them to co-operate with him, that he was enabled to
make some of the greatest efforts which distinguish his reign.
THE TURKISH EMPIRE
The Turkish history is so blended, during the reign of
Charles V with that of the great nations in Europe, and the Ottoman Porte
interposed so often, and with such decisive influence, in the wars and
negotiations of the Christian princes, that some previous account of the state
of government in that great empire is no less necessary for the information of
my readers, than those views of the constitution of other kingdoms which I have
already exhibited to them.
It has been the fate of the southern and more fertile
parts of Asia, at different periods, to be conquered by that warlike and hardy
race of men, who inhabit the vast country known to the ancients by the name of
Scythia, and among the modern by that of Tartary. One tribe of these people,
called Turks or Turcomans, extended its conquests, under various leaders, and
during several centuries, from the Caspian Sea to the straits of the
Dardanelles. Towards the middle of the fifteenth century, these formidable
conquerors took Constantinople by storm, and established the seat of their
government in that imperial city. Greece, Moldavia, Walachia, and the other
provinces of the ancient kingdoms of Thrace and Macedonia, together with part
of Hungary, were subjected to their power.
But though the seat of the Turkish government was
fixed in Europe, and the sultans obtained possession of such extensive
dominions in that quarter of the globe, the genius of their policy continued to
be purely Asiatic; and may be properly termed a despotism, in contradistinction
to those monarchical and republican forms of government which we have been hitherto
contemplating. The supreme power was vested in sultans of the Ottoman race,
that blood being deemed so sacred, that no other was thought worthy of the
throne. From this elevation, these sovereigns could look down and behold all
their subjects reduced to the same level before them. The maxims of Turkish
policy do not authorize any of those institutions, which in other countries,
limit the exercise, or moderate the rigor of monarchical power; they admit
neither of any great court with constitutional and permanent jurisdiction to
interpose, both in enacting laws, and in superintending the execution of them;
nor of a body of hereditary nobles, whose sense of their own pre-eminence,
whose consciousness of what is due to their rank and character, whose jealousy
of their privileges circumscribe the authority of the prince, and serve not
only as a barrier against the excesses of his caprice, but stand as an
intermediate order between him and the people. Under the Turkish government,
the political condition of every subject is equal. To be employed in the
service of the sultan is the only circumstance that confers distinction. Even
this distinction is rather official than personal, and so closely annexed to
the station in which any individual serves, that it is scarcely communicated to
the persons of those who are placed in them. The highest dignity in the empire
does not give any rank or pre-eminence to the family of him who enjoys it. As
every man, before he is raised to any station of authority, must go through the
preparatory discipline of a long and servile obedience, the moment he is
deprived of power, he and his posterity return to the same condition with other
subjects, and sink back into obscurity. It is the distinguishing and odious
characteristic of Eastern despotism, that it annihilates all other ranks of
men, in order to exalt the monarch; that it leaves nothing to the former, while
it gives everything to the latter; that it endeavors to fix in the minds of
those who are subject to it, the idea of no relation between men, but that of a
master and of a slave, the former destined to command and to punish, the latter
formed to tremble and to obey.
But as there are circumstances which frequently
obstruct or defeat the salutary effects of the best regulated governments,
there are others which contribute to mitigate the evils of the most defective
forms of policy. There can, indeed, be no constitutional restraints upon the
will of a prince in a despotic government; but there may be such as are
accidental. Absolute as the Turkish sultans were, they felt themselves
circumscribed both by religion, the principle on which their authority is
founded, and by the army, the instrument which they must employ in order to
maintain it. Wherever religion interposes, the will of the sovereign must
submit to its decrees. When the Koran hath prescribed its religious rite, hath
enjoined any moral duty, or bath confirmed by its sanction any political maxim,
the command of the sultan cannot overturn that which a higher authority hath
established. The chief restriction, however, on the will of the sultans, is
imposed by the military power. An armed force must surround the throne of every
despot, to maintain his authority, and to execute his commands. As the Turks
extended their empire over nations which they did not exterminate, but reduce
to subjection, they found it necessary to render their military establishment
numerous and formidable. Amurath, their third sultan, in order to form a body
of troops devoted to his will, that might serve as the immediate guards of his
person and dignity, commanded his officers to seize annually as the Imperial
property, the fifth part of the youth taken in war [AD 1362]. These, after
being instructed in the Mahometan religion, inured to obedience by severe
discipline, and trained to warlike exercises, were formed into a body
distinguished by the name of Janizaries, or new soldiers. Every sentiment which
enthusiasm can inspire, every mark of distinction that the favor of the prince
could confer, were employed in order to animate this body with martial ardor,
and with a consciousness of its own pre-eminence. The Janizaries soon became
the chief strength and pride of the Ottoman armies; and, by their number as
well as reputation, were distinguished above all the troops whose duty it was
to attend on the person of the sultan.
Thus, as the supreme power in every society is
possessed by those who have arms in their hands, this formidable body of
soldiers, destined to be the instruments of enlarging the sultan’s authority,
acquired at the same time, the means of controlling it. The Janizaries in
Constantinople, like the Praetorian bands in ancient Rome, quickly perceived
all the advantages which they derived from being stationed in the capital; from
their union under one standard; and from being masters of the person of the
prince. The sultans became no less sensible of their influence and importance.
The Capiculy, or soldiery of the Porte, was the only power in the empire that a
sultan or his vizier had reason to dread. To preserve the fidelity and
attachment of the Janizaries, was the great art of government, and the
principal object of attention in the policy of the Ottoman court. Under a
monarch, whose abilities and vigor of mind fit him for command, they are
obsequious instruments; execute whatever he enjoins; and render his power
irresistible. Under feeble princes, or such as are unfortunate, they become
turbulent and mutinous; assume the tone of masters; degrade and exalt sultans
at pleasure; and teach those to tremble, on whose nod, at other times, life and
death depend.
From Mahomet II who took Constantinople, to Solyman
the Magnificent, who began his reign a few months after Charles V was placed on
the Imperial throne of Germany, a succession of illustrious princes ruled over
the Turkish empire. By their great abilities, they kept their subjects of every
order, military as well as civil, submissive to government; and had the
absolute command of whatever force their vast empire was able to exert. Solyman
in particular, who is known to the Christians chiefly as a conqueror, but is
celebrated in the Turkish annals, as the great lawgiver who established order
and police in their empire, governed, during his long reign, with no less
authority than wisdom. He divided his dominions into several districts; he
appointed the number of soldiers which each should furnish; he appropriated a
certain proportion of the land in every province for their maintenance; he
regulated, with a minute accuracy, everything relative to their discipline,
their arms, and the nature of their service. He put the finances of the empire
into an orderly train of administration; and, though the taxes in the Turkish
dominions, as well as in the other despotic monarchies of the East, are far
from being considerable, he supplied that defect by an attentive and severe
economy.
Nor was it only under such sultans as Solyman; whose
talents were no less adapted to preserve internal order than to conduct the
operations of war, that the Turkish empire engaged with advantage in its
contests with the Christian states. The long succession of able princes, which
I have mentioned, had given such vigor and firmness to the Ottoman government,
that it seems to have attained, during the sixteenth century, the highest
degree of perfection of which its constitution was capable. Whereas the great
monarchies in Christendom were still far from that state, which could enable
them to act with a full exertion of their force. Besides this, the Turkish
troops in that age possessed every advantage which arises from superiority in
military discipline. At the time when Solyman began his reign, the Janizaries
had been embodied near a century and a half; and, during that long period, the
severity of their military discipline had in no degree relaxed. The other
soldiers, drawn from the provinces of the empire, had been kept almost
continually under arms, in the various wars which the sultans had carried on
with hardly any interval of peace. Against troops thus trained and accustomed
to service, the forces of the Christian powers took the field with great
disadvantage. The most intelligent as well as impartial authors of the
sixteenth century acknowledge and lament the superior attainments of the Turks
in the military art. The success which almost uniformly attended their arms, in
all their wars, demonstrates the justness of this observation. The Christian
armies did not acquire that superiority over the Turks, which they now possess,
until the long establishment of standing forces had improved military
discipline among the former; and until various causes and events, which it is
not my province to explain, had corrupted or abolished their ancient warlike
institutions among the latter.
Book 11.The Fight of King Ferdinand for his Kingdom. Regency of Cardinal Ximenes
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