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CHAPTER
XIII.
Clement
VII in Exile at Orvieto and Viterbo.—The Imperialists leave Rome. — Disaster to
the French Army in Naples.—The Weakness of the Pope’s Diplomacy.—His Return to
Rome.
In the old town of Orvieto, guarded by its
strong citadel on the cone-shaped hill which separates, like a boundary stone,
the Roman and Tuscan territory, the personal freedom of the Pope was secure;
yet his situation must still be described as a deplorable one. His
ecclesiastical rank excepted, he had lost all he could call his own : his
authority, his property, almost all his states, and the obedience of the
majority of his subjects. Instead of the Vatican adorned with the masterpieces
of art, he was now the occupant of a dilapidated episcopal palace in a mean
provincial town. Roberto Boschetti, who visited the
Pope on the 23rd of January 1528, found him emaciated and in the most sorrowful
frame of mind. “They have plundered me of all I possess”, said Clement VII to
him; “even the canopy above my bed is not mine, it is borrowed.” The furniture
of the Papal bedchamber, the English envoys supposed, could not have cost
twenty nobles. They describe with astonishment how they were led through three
apartments bare of furniture, in which the hangings were falling from the
walls. In this inhospitable dwelling Clement was confined to bed with swollen
feet; there were suspicions that poison had been given him by the Imperialists,
but the mischief was caused by his unwonted exertions on horseback on the night
of his flight.
At first only four Cardinals, then, on a
special summons from the Pope, seven betook themselves to Orvieto. Their
position was also a hard one, for no preparations had been made for the
fugitives in the town; provisions could only be got with difficulty and at the
highest prices, and there was such a scarcity of drinking water that the Pope
had at once to give orders for the construction of four wells.
In spite of the distress in Orvieto, little
by little numerous prelates and courtiers made their way thither. The business
of the Curia, for a long time almost wholly suspended, was again resumed. On
the 18th of December 1527 a Bull relating to graces bestowed during the
captivity was agreed to in secret Consistory. The conduct of the more important
affairs lay in the hands of Jacopo Salviati and of the Master of the Household,
Girolamo da Schio, Bishop of Vaison.
The poverty and simplicity of the new court
at Orvieto were such that all who went thither were filled with compassion.
“The court here is bankrupt,” reported a Venetian; “the bishops go about on
foot in tattered cloaks: the courtiers, take flight in despair; there is no
improvement in morals; men here would sell Christ for a piece of gold.” Of the
Cardinals only Pirro Gonzaga was able to live as
befitted his rank; the rest were as poor as the Pope himself, who, in the month
of April, was still without the most necessary ecclesiastical vestments. The
congratulations on his deliverance, addressed to him in writing by the
Cardinals assembled in Parma, personally by the Duke of Urbino, Federigo Bozzolo, and Luigi
Pisani, and in letters or by special envoys from nearly all princes and many
cities, must have seemed to him almost a mockery. As Clement had only a few
troops at his disposal and the neighbourhood of Orvieto was rendered insecure
by the bands of soldiery, he was practically shut up in his mountain fortress.
He had to complain repeatedly that even communication by letter had become
difficult, while any attempt to escape into the surrounding territory was out
of the question. The care-laden Pope, wearing the long beard which he had
allowed to grow during his captivity, was seen passing through the streets of
Orvieto with a small retinue. Rumour exaggerated his poverty still further; he
was compared to the Popes of the infant Church.
In spite of spoliation and exile the Pope
continued to represent a mighty power. This was best seen in the eager
competition of both the forces inimical to him to obtain his patronage. The
attempts of France and England in this direction were well known to the
Emperor, who made it a matter of express reference in the letter of
congratulation addressed to Clement. In his answer of the nth of January 1528
Clement thanked him for the restoration of freedom, assured him that he had
never held him guilty of the occurrences in Rome, and declared himself ready to
do all that lay in his power to aid him in the questions of peace, the Council,
and all other things which Charles desired for the highest good of Christendom;
the Emperor, moreover, would see for himself how powerless the Pope was, as
long as the hostages were retained and the ceded cities still occupied;
Francesco Quiñones would report in detail on all other circumstances under
consideration. To an Imperial envoy who had come to Orvieto as early as
December 1527 to propose a formal alliance with Charles on the basis of the
restoration of the States of the Church, the answer was given that the question
could not be considered until the occupied cities had been given back and the
hostages set at liberty.
Clement was as little willing to give
definite pledges to the League as to the Emperor. In the autograph letter in
which, on the 14th of December 1527, he announced his release to Francis I, he
certainly thanked the King for the help he had rendered, but showed in no
ambiguous terms how insufficient, in reality, it had been. Yet Lautrec’s army
had not hastened a step. It was clear from this letter that the Pope had no
intention of giving pledges to France; he excused his treaty with the Imperialists
as a measure wrung from him by force. “For months, together with our venerable
brethren, we had endured the hardest lot, had seen all our affairs, temporal
and above all spiritual, go to ruin, and your well-intentioned efforts for our
liberation end in failure. Our condition grew worse, indeed, day by day, the
conditions imposed upon us harsher, and we saw our hopes threaten to vanish
away. Under these circumstances we yielded to the pressure of a desperate state
of things. Neither our personal interest nor the peril in which each one of us
stood was the mainspring of our action; for eight long months we suffered
ignominious imprisonment, and stood daily in danger of our lives. But the
misery in Rome, the ruin of the States which had come down to us unimpaired
from our predecessors, the incessant affliction in body and soul, the
diminished reverence towards God and His worship, forced us to take this step.
Personal suffering we could have continued to endure; but it was our duty to do
all in our power to remove public distress. Our brothers, the Cardinals, have
not shrunk from submitting, as hostages, to a fresh captivity in order that we,
restored to freedom, may be in a position to ward off from Christendom a worse
calamity.” The bearer of this letter was Ugo da Gambara,
who together with Cardinal Salviati was to give fuller information by word of
mouth. On the same day (December 14) Clement wrote in similar terms to the Queen,
Louisa of Savoy, to Montmorency, Henry VIII, and Cardinal Wolsey, referring
also in these letters to Gambara’s information.
Ever since January 1528 Clement had been
besieged with the most pressing entreaties to join the League, whose army
persisted in its wonted inactivity. In company with Lautrec, who had advanced
as far as Bologna, were Guido Rangoni, Paolo Camillo Trivulzio, Ugo di Pepoli, and Vaudemont. In February they were joined by Longueville, who
brought the good wishes of Francis I. As envoys of Henry VIII, Gregorio Casale, Stephen Gardiner, and Fox were active; the
last-named was especially occupied with the question of the divorce on which
the English King was bent.
The League made the most tempting promises to
the Pope. Not only should he receive back the Papal States, but also designate
to the kingdom of Naples and be compensated for all damages and costs of the
war. But the events of the past year had made Clement very cautious. Despite
all the pressure brought upon him, he would give no decided answer, and
insisted that he was of more use outside the League than within it. His inmost
sympathies at this time were certainly with the League, for he feared the power
of the Emperor, who, in possession of Naples and Milan, was the “Lord of all things,”
and wished for the expulsion from Italy of those who had done him such
unheard-of wrong. But from any attempt of this kind he was deterred by weighing
closely the actual state of things; a waiting attitude, giving to both parties
a certain amount of hope, appeared to the Pope to be the best, and this policy
was also in accordance with his natural indecision.
Perhaps the conduct of the League itself had
even more influence on Clement than his feeling of helplessness when pitted
against the victorious Spaniard. He could not trust a confederacy, the members
of which, each engrossed in his own interests, had left him to his downfall in
the year of misfortune 1527. Might not this trick be played again at any
moment? Above all—and this was decisive—the League had assumed a character
which made it quite impossible for the Pope to enter into it. Florence, from
which his family had been expelled, was supported by France, Venice had seized
Ravenna and Cervia, the Duke of Ferrara, Modena, and
Reggio. Both were unwilling to give back their plunder, and yet such were the
allies whom Clement was to join against the Emperor!
In view of this situation, the Pope and his
diplomatists directed their efforts towards securing the restoration of the
States of the Church under a guarantee of neutrality.
On New Year’s Day 1528 Cardinal Salviati
informed the French Government that the League must be satisfied with a
benevolent neutrality on the part of the Pope, deprived, as he was, of all
material resources. At the same time he made it clear that Clement insisted on
the restoration of the cities taken by Venice, and would consent to no
dishonourable agreement with the Duke of Ferrara, the originator of all the
misfortunes of the Church. On the 12th of January Gambara arrived in Paris; and, together with Salviati, made the most urgent appeals to
the French Government to compel the Venetians and Ferrara to surrender their
plunder; if they failed to do so, then the Pope would be forced to try some
other means of getting back his possessions. Salviati did not let the matter
drop, but afterwards forcibly renewed his representations. But he gained little
at first, since the French were afraid that Venice might quit the League, and
hesitated to take any steps. It was not until France and England had formally
declared war against the Emperor that a stronger pressure was put on Venice.
It was almost coincident with this turn in
affairs that Clement determined to send a new Nuncio to Spain in the person of
Antonio Pucci, Bishop of Pistoja, who together with
Castiglione was to open up the way to a general peace. If Charles, declared
Sanga, now Clement’s chief adviser in place of
Giberti, would not agree to Pucci’s conditions of peace, then the Pope would
join the League, but only after his own just grievances had been redressed. The
League, so ran the fuller instructions, must undertake to restore Ravenna, Cervia, Modena, and Reggio, settle upon whom Naples should
devolve, and finally bring about a general pacification in Florence. Pucci was to
travel through France, to treat personally with Francis I, and explain why the
Pope was obliged, for the time being, to remain neutral. The French King,
however, was by no means disposed to carry out the wishes of which Pucci was to
be the exponent; the mission of the new Nuncio to the Emperor made him uneasy,
and he made a plan to put obstacles in his way.
Lautrec’s successes certainly encouraged
Francis in his projects. The former had at last left Bologna on the 10th of
January 1528, and was pressing towards Naples through the Romagna. Clement now
recovered Imola, and, somewhat later, Rimini also. On the 10th of February the
French army crossed the Tronto and entered the
kingdom of Naples. In Rome, and throughout Papal circles generally, this
advance of the French was coupled with the hope that a final deliverance from
the dreadful incubus of the landsknechts was at hand. Lautrec gave assurances
on all sides that, after reducing Naples, he would set free the Papal States;
since his whole course of action was only undertaken in the interest of the
Pope, he renewed his insistent entreaties that Clement would now resume his
place in the League.
The Imperialists, at first, had not feared
Lautrec; now they recognized the peril threatening them. If they were unable to
move their army from Rome, then Naples would fall without a blow into the hands
of the enemy. Philibert of Orange, who had been in chief command since January, Bemelberg, and Vasto negotiated with the mutinous troops. Money was scraped together in every
possible way, and even Clement had to raise 40,000 ducats. Thus, on the 17th of
February 1528, the soldiery, who up to the last indulged in acts of violence
and depredation, were induced to move. The army, which eight months previously
had numbered twenty thousand men, had melted down to one thousand five hundred
cavalry, two or three thousand Italians, four thousand Spaniards, and five
thousand Germans; so great had been the ravages of the plague among the troops.
On the 13th of January Melchior Frundsberg fell a
victim; his tomb in the German national church of the Anima recalls one of the
most terrible episodes in the history of Rome. “The troops,” says a German
diarist, “had destroyed and burnt down the city; two-thirds of the houses were
swept away. Doors, windows, and every bit of woodwork even to the roof beams
were consumed by fire. Most of the inhabitants, especially all the women, had
taken flight.” The neighbourhood for fifty miles around was like a wilderness.
The columns of flame, rising up from Rocca Priora and Valmontone, showed the road which the landsknechts
had taken for Naples.
The sufferings of the unfortunate Romans were
even then not yet at an end. On the afternoon of the same day (February the
17th) on which the Imperialists departed, the Abbot of Farfa,
with a leader of a band from Arsoli, accompanied by a
pillaging rabble, who were soon joined even by Romans themselves, entered the
city. The streets rang with shouts of “Church, France, the Bear (Orsini)!” and
plundering began anew, where anything was left to plunder, especially in the
houses of the Jews. All stragglers from the Imperial army were put to death,
even the sick in the hospitals were not spared.
On hearing of these fresh outrages Clement
sent Giovanni Corrado, and afterwards a detachment of
troops under the Roman Girolamo Mattei, to restore
order. At the same time the Pope made strenuous efforts to mitigate the
distress in Rome caused by the scarcity of provisions and to guard against the
danger of plague. The letters of Jacopo Salviati to the Cardinal-Legate
Campeggio, who had remained in Rome, throw light on the difficulties which had
to be encountered in revictualling the city; transport on land as well as by
sea was extremely difficult, and there were those in Rome who did not scruple
to take advantage of the existing necessity to sell corn at prices advantageous
to themselves. But Clement VII persevered; the extortionate sale of corn came
under the sharpest penalties, and to ensure free carriage to Rome Andrea Doria
was appointed to guard the coasts.
In the beginning of March a deputation came
from Rome to Orvieto to invite the Pope to return to his capital, where the
desecrated churches had already been purified. Clement replied that no one
longed more eagerly than he to return to Rome, but the scarcity and disorder
then prevailing, as well as the uncertainty of the issue of the war in Naples,
made any immediate change of residence impossible. Thereupon the Roman
delegates begged that at least the officials of the Rota and Cancelleria might go back. Clement, after long hesitation,
gave way, on the advice of Cardinal Campeggio; but the officials in question
delayed complying with the Papal orders on account of the famine in the city.
But by the end of April the majority of the officials of the Curia had to
return, though the situation in Rome continued to be critical, and Cardinal
Campeggio’s position was beset with difficulties.
The Pope’s own position was so harassing that
Jacopo Salviati wrote to Cardinal Campeggio, “Clement is in such dire necessity
that, like David, he must, perforce, eat the loaves of proposition” (1 Kings XXI.
6). In the beginning of March, Brandano, the prophet
of misfortune of the year 1527, appeared in Orvieto. He foretold for Rome and
Italy new and yet greater tribulations; these would continue until 1530, when
the Turk would take captive the Pope, the Emperor, and the French King and
embrace Christianity; whereupon the Church would enter on a new life. The Papal
censures, the hermit went on to say, were void, inasmuch as Clement, having
been born out of wedlock, was not canonically Pope. When Brandano proceeded to incite the people of Orvieto against the Pope, the latter gave
orders for his arrest. On Palm Sunday (April 5) Clement addressed the Cardinals
and prelates then present in earnest language on the need for a reform of the
Curia, exhorted them to a better manner of life, and spoke emphatically of the
sack of Rome as a chastisement for their sins. On Holy Thursday the customary
censures on the persecutors of the Church were published.
Lautrec, in the meanwhile, had achieved
successes beyond all expectation. The towns of the Abruzzi hailed him as their
deliverer; but after that his operations came to a standstill, for Francis I
sent no money for his troops; besides, this valiant soldier was deficient in
promptness of decision. Consequently, the Imperialists found time to put Naples
in a state of defence; they judged rightly that here the decisive issue must be
fought out. Lautrec did not realize this, and wasted time in reducing the towns
of Apulia, and not until the end of April did he approach Naples from the east.
But the luck of the French did not yet desert them; dissensions, especially
between Orange and Vasto, divided the Imperialist generals,
the landsknechts were as insubordinate as ever, and hated the Spaniards. On the
28th of April the Imperial fleet was totally destroyed by Filippino Doria off Capo d’Orso, between Amalfi and Salerno.
Moncada and Fieramosca fell in the battle; Vasto and
Ascanio Colonna were taken prisoners. The fall of Naples, where great scarcity
of food was already making itself felt, seemed to be only a question of time.
The Emperor’s enemies were already busy with the boldest schemes, and Wolsey,
through the English envoys, called upon the Pope to depose the Emperor without
delay.
Clement VII watched with strained attention
the result of the great contest, on which for him so much depended. The
Neapolitan war filled the unfortunate Romans with renewed alarm; they dreaded a
repetition of the sack; the landsknechts had, in fact, threatened to return and
burn the whole city to the ground. Clement sent Cardinal Cesi to support Campeggio, and later on some troops. The Pope’s anxieties were
increased by the stormy demands of the English envoys insisting on the
dissolution of their King’s marriage, and by the not less stormy entreaties of
the League, especially of Lautrec, to declare immediate war on the Emperor. To
crown all came the pressure of famine in Orvieto, which the Sienese would do
nothing to relieve on account of their enmity towards the house of Medici.
Since a return to the capital, so much desired by the Romans, was impossible,
owing to the insecure state of the country, the Pope was counselled to change
his residence to Perugia, Civita Casteliana,
or Viterbo; it was decided to remove to the last-named place, the fortress
having come into the Pope’s possession at the end of April.
On the 1st of June Clement reached Viterbo
and was received by the pious and aged Cardinal Egidio Canisio;
he first occupied the castle, and afterwards the palace of Cardinal Farnese.
Here too, at first, suitable furniture was wanting, while, at the same time,
there was great scarcity in the town; but a return to Rome seemed impossible
until the Pope should be again master of Ostia and Civita Vecchia. In place of Campeggio, who was under orders
to go to England, Cardinal Farnese was appointed, on the 8th’of June, the
Legate in Rome; three hundred men were to garrison the castle of St. Angelo,
and Alfonso di Sangro, Bishop of Lecce, was sent to
the Emperor to effect the release of the three Cardinals detained as hostages
in Naples.
On the 4th of June Gasparo Contarini, as Venetian envoy, and Giovanni Antonio Muscettola,
commissioned by the Prince of Orange, made their appearance in Viterbo; the
latter was instructed to try and induce Clement to return to Rome. The Pope,
shrinking from thus placing himself in the hands of the Spaniards, laid the
matter before the Cardinals, who were unanimous in declaring the return to Rome
desirable but impossible of execution so long as the Spaniards were masters of
Ostia and Civita Vecchia.
Just then a prospect of recovering these places was opened up; a French fleet
appeared off Corneto, and Renzo da Ceri made an
attempt, but an unsuccessful one, to take Civita Vecchia; the Pope, unmindful of his neutrality, gave
material assistance towards this attempt.
In the meantime Contarini had done all he
could to persuade the Pope to surrender his claims on Ravenna and Cervia, but his endeavours were unsuccessful; Clement stood
firm, and insisted that he was pledged by honour and duty to demand the
restoration of those towns. The support lent by Venice to the Pope’s enemy,
Alfonso of Ferrara, and the provocation given to Clement himself by the
excessive taxation of the clergy of the Republic and the usurpation of his
jurisdiction, did not lessen the difficulties of Contarini’s position. On the 16th of June the Pope complained to Contarini of such actions
as constituting a breach of the treaty made with Julius II; he had bestowed the
bishopric of Treviso on Cardinal Pisani, but the Republic had not allowed the
latter to take possession of his see. His disposal of patronage was entirely
disregarded in Venice, and it seemed as if the Venetians wished to show him how
little he was considered by them. “You treat me,” he said, “with great
familiarity ; you seize my possessions, you dispose of my benefices, you lay
taxes upon me.” The Pope’s irritation was so great that, a few days later, in
the course of another interview with Contarini, he said to himself in a low
voice, but so that the Ambassador could understand him plainly, that, strictly
speaking, the Venetians had incurred excommunication.
All doubt as to Clement’s determination to recover the captured towns vanished in the course of Contarini’s communications with Sanga, Salviati, and other
influential personages of the Papal court. The Master of the household,
Girolamo da Schio, informed the Venetian Ambassador
that he had spoken in vain to the Pope of some compensation in the way of a
money payment; Clement had rejected the suggestion at once with the greatest
firmness and, moreover, had complained not only of the conduct of Venice but
also of France.
Clement VII had good grounds for displeasure
with Francis I, who had supported Alfonso of Ferrara and at last taken overt
measures against the Pope. Seized with alarm lest the new Nuncio, Pucci, should
prepare the way for an understanding between Pope and Emperor, Francis I
determined to detain the Papal envoy by force.
To this, however, his English ally would not
agree; Henry VIII, who had more need than ever of the Pope’s favour in the
matter of his divorce, was doing all in his power to arrive at some
accommodation with Clement in his demands on Venice. The French Chancellor, on
the other hand, told Pucci that Francis I could not permit him to make his
journey to Spain, since he was certain that he would otherwise lose the support
of Venice, Ferrara, and Florence; rather than give up such indispensable
allies, France would sooner dispense with the aid of the Pope and England. The
arrogance of the French increased with the news of Lautrec’s successes.
At the end of April the French Chancellor
gave the Nuncio, Pucci, to understand that the king insisted on an immediate
declaration from the Pope. Salviati replied that his master would make his
intentions known if Ravenna and Cervia were
surrendered at once, and Modena and Reggio after the war. In consequence of the
firm behaviour of the Papal representative the French court at last became
aware that something must be done, at least in the case of Cervia and Ravenna. Strong representations were made to the Venetians but at the same
moment a grievous wound was inflicted upon Clement by the formation of an
alliance of the closest kind with the Pope’s bitterest enemy, Ferrara: Renée,
the daughter of Louis XII, was betrothed to Ercole,
the hereditary Prince of Ferrara.
The French proposals to the Venetian
Government proved futile. Contarini had, as hitherto, to try and justify the
robbery. The Pope, however, prone as he was in other respects to give way,
showed in this instance inflexible determination. He repeated his declaration
that an agreement with the League was impossible while Venice and Ferrara
withheld from him his legitimate possessions. Contarini thought he saw signs
of. a leaning towards the Emperor on the part of Clement, although the latter
feared the power of Charles and placed little trust in him.
A step, however, in this direction was taken
after the opening of hostilities on the scene of war in Naples. The victory of
the 28th of April had destroyed the Imperialist fleet, and since the 10th of
June Naples had been completely cut off at sea by Venetian galleys; the
necessaries of life were hardly procurable in the great city. With the rising
heat of summer came a new enemy with whom not only the besieged but also the
besiegers had to engage. Typhus and a bad form of intermittent fever broke out
and spread daily.
In July, when the disease was at its worst,
an event occurred bringing with it far-reaching results; this was the rupture
between Francis I and his Admiral, Andrea Doria. Charles consented to all Doria’s demands; the Genoese squadron set sail, and Naples,
which the French had looked upon as certain to fall into their hands by the end
of July, was thus set free by sea. Later, Genoa also, so important on account
of its situation, was lost to France.
Lautrec had made the greatest exertions to
bring about the fall of Naples. By the 5th of July it was believed, in the
French camp, that further resistance was impossible. But the Imperialists held
out and defended themselves so skilfully that Philibert of Chalon, Prince of
Orange, who had succeeded on Moncada’s death to his command, was able to report
to his master : “The French in their entrenchments are more closely besieged
than we in the city.” The Imperialists’ best ally, however, was the sickness
which made great strides in the marshy encampment of the French. “God,” said a
German, “sent such a pestilence among the French hosts that within thirty days
they well-nigh all died, and out of 25,000 not more than 4000 remained alive.”
Vaudemont,
Pedro Navarro, Camillo Trivulzio, and Lautrec fell
ill, and on the night following the Feast of the Assumption Lautrec died. As Vaudemont also was carried off by the disorder, the Marquis
of Saluzzo assumed the chief command. He soon
perceived that the raising of the siege had become inevitable, and on the night
of the 29th of August, amid storms of rain, began his retreat. The Imperial
cavalry at once rode out in pursuit; Orange, with his infantry, turned back to
meet them; but the sickly French soldiers could not face the onslaught; quarter
or no quarter, they were forced to yield; they were stripped and disarmed and
then left to the mercy of God and to the peasantry, “who put nearly all of them
to death.” The wretched scattered remnant of the great French army wandered
about in beggary; a few bands made their escape as far as Rome, where they were
compassionately succoured, but forced to depart by the landsknechts. A German
resident in Rome relates how he had supplied the sick and naked with food and
clothing, and how in the streets and environs the corpses of those who had
perished miserably lay exposed.
“Victoria, victoria, victoria,” wrote Morone on
the 29th of August 1528 to the Imperial envoy in Rome. “The French are
destroyed, the remainder of their army is flying towards Aversa.” Cardinal
Colonna and Orange at once informed Clement of the victory, and at the same
time sent more special messages. Orange added that he had tried persistently to
describe as faithfully as possible the position of affairs, and had always
foretold the issue as it had come to pass; he besought the Pope to attach
himself as much as possible to Charles V. The complete triumph of the Emperor
was, in fact, no longer in question. Although the campaign still lingered on in
Apulia and Lombardy, yet, such was the weakness of the French and the lukewarmness
of the Venetians, that the end could be foreseen with certainty.
Clement thanked God that he had not accepted
the baits of the League. “If he had acted otherwise,” wrote Sanga, “in what an
abyss of calamity should we now be.” In the beginning of September Clement VII
and Sanga determined, in spite of Contarini’s warnings, to make serious approaches to the victorious Emperor. “The Pope,” as
Contarini expressed it on the 8th of September 1528, “is accommodating himself
to the circumstances of the hour.” His own position, as well as that of Italy,
left him, in fact, no other choice. In letters and messages Orange expressed
his loyalty to the Pope; he assured Clement, in a letter of the 18th of
September, that he might look upon the Imperial forces as his own and return
without anxiety to Rome: “in case of necessity we are ready to sacrifice our
lives in defence of your Holiness.” Charles also tried to gratify the Pope in
circumstances of a different sort, for he gave a promise, through Orange, to restore
the Medicean rule in Florence. But from Venice came
the tidings through the French envoy, that all his efforts to induce the
Signoria to give back Ravenna and Cervia were
unavailing. So great was the acquisitiveness and lust of possession of the Venetians
that, instead of giving back the Pope his own, they were more likely to make
further aggressions.
In September Clement made up his mind to
return to Rome, in accordance with the Emperor’s strong desire, although Civita Vecchia and Ostia were
still occupied by the Spaniards. Contarini vainly tried to dissuade him. Orange
had given his solemn oath to protect the Pope, if the latter would only go back
to Rome and save the Emperor, who was actually and in intent a faithful son of
the Church, from the contumely which would certainly accrue to him if Clement
VII refused, from distrust, to return to his See. Already, on the 17th of 1528,
the Pope had sent Cardinals Sanseverino and Valle to Rome. His own return was
delayed owing to a violent feud between the Colonna and Orsini, whereby the
neighbourhood of Rome was laid waste.
At the last hour France made an attempt to
thwart this beginning of an understanding between the Pope and the Emperor. On
the 1st of October a messenger from Carpi approached the Pope. He brought a
promise of the immediate restoration of Ravenna and Cervia as soon as Clement gave his adhesion to the League; while Modena and Reggio
would be given back simultaneously with his acting in the interests of France.
The Pope sent a refusal. On the 5th of October he left Viterbo with his whole
court, under the protection of about a thousand soldiers, and on the following
evening, amid torrents of rain, re-entered his capital. He forbade any public
reception on account of the distressing state of the times; he first paid a
visit to St. Peter’s, to make. an act of thanksgiving, and then repaired to the
Vatican.
The city presented a truly horrifying picture
of misery and woe. Quite four-fifths of the houses, according to the
computation of the Mantuan envoy, were tenantless; ruins were seen on every
side—a shocking sight for anyone who had seen the Rome of previous days. The
inhabitants themselves declared that they were ruined for two generations to
come. The same authority, quoted above, emphasizes the fact that of all his
many acquaintances, inmates of or sojourners in Rome, hardly anyone was left
alive. “I am bereft of my senses”, he says, “in presence of the ruins and their
solitude.” The churches were one and all in a terrible condition, the altars
were despoiled of their ornaments, and most of the pictures were destroyed. In
the German and Spanish national churches only was the Holy Sacrifice offered
during the occupation of the city.
A Papal Encyclical of the 14th of October
1528 summoned all Cardinals to return to Rome. Clement wrote in person to
Charles, on the 24th of October, that, relying on the promises of Orange and
the other representatives of his Majesty, to whom this intelligence will be
certainly acceptable, he had returned to Rome, “the one seat ” of the Papacy.
“We too,” he added, “must rejoice on coming safe to shore, after so great a
shipwreck, even if we have lost all things; but our grief for the ruin of
Italy, manifest to every eye, still more for the misery of this city and our own
misfortune, is immeasurably heightened by the sight of Rome. We are sustained
only by the hope that, through your assistance, we may be able to stanch the
many wounds of Italy, and that our presence here and that of the Sacred College
may avail towards a gradual restoration of the city. For, my beloved son,
before our distracted gaze lies a pitiable and mangled corpse, and nothing can
mitigate our sorrows, nothing can build anew the city and the Church, save the
prospect of that peace and undisturbed repose which depends on your moderation
and equity of mind.”
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