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On the day after his return to Rome, Clement
assembled the Cardinals and conservators in order to confer with them on the
restoration of the city. The Pope’s first care was to provide for the most
pressing necessity, the import of articles of food, of which there was the
greatest scarcity. Steps were also taken to set in order the despoiled
churches, and to repair the destruction wrought on buildings. The business of
the Curia now resumed its regular course; persons belonging to the court tried
to install themselves as best they could. Life in the city showed signs of a
complete change; the luxury and frivolity of previous days had vanished, for
the general poverty stamped an impress of seriousness and gloom on everything.
Instead of the throng of showy equipages, religious processions made their way
through the deserted streets. The unlucky inhabitants were in want not only of
nourishment but of clothing; traders from Venice and other places came in
numbers, but hardly anyone had money to make purchases. Strangers were
especially struck by the wretched plight of most of the Cardinals.
Ecclesiastical ceremonies, even those in which the Pope took a part, were shorn
of their splendour owing to the lack of ornaments and vestments. Yet,
notwithstanding the general misery, the Pope was glad to be back in Rome, his
own See.
While in Viterbo, Clement had published the
nomination of Quiñones, the General of the Franciscans, then at the Emperor’s
court, to the Cardinalate. He awaited his return, with more precise information
as to the Emperor’s intentions, with anxious impatience. In the meanwhile the
agents of the League, led by Contarini, were active in trying to hinder the
advances of the Pope to the Emperor, and a new French envoy was also busy in
the same direction as Contarini. These attempts were not, at the time,
altogether without hope of success, for Charles V, with icy reserve, let the
Pope feel that he was dependent on his favour. The Emperor’s servants in Italy
did not fail their master in keeping up this impression. The return of
Quinones was delayed in such a remarkable manner that the Pope was nearly worn
out with impatience. Expressions made use of by Clement VII and by his advisers
as well, in November and the first half of December, show how heavily the
Emperor’s preponderance weighed upon him, and how gladly he would have seen a
weakening of the Imperial power, whether from the side of Bavaria or from that
of the Voivode of Siebenbürgen.
The Pope had begun to despair of Quiñones’
return when, on the 17th of December 1528, came the intelligence that the
latter had landed at Genoa in the company of Miguel Mai. This was welcome news,
for now there seemed a certainty of ascertaining the Emperor’s position. On the
30th of December Quinones reached Rome, and was immediately provided with a
lodging close to the Papal apartments. The hopes that the Emperor’s attitude
would now be clearly explained proved illusory, for Quinones brought with him
only civil speeches; all matters of detail were to be discussed with the
Viceroy of Naples.
Contarini considered this a favourable moment
for expending all his gifts of eloquence on the Pope in order to persuade him
to renounce his claims on Cervia and Ravenna, and to
win him over to the League. He thought it necessary to show all the more energy
in the matter as a report was current that the Pope had a mind to lay Venice
under an interdict. On the 4th of January 1529 he entered the Papal presence;
he announced that he had come not as the envoy of Venice, but as an Italian, as
a private personage and as a Christian, in order to submit to his Holiness his
opinion on the state of affairs. The Pope having invited him to speak freely,
Contarini set forth, in impressive language, that the whole question resolved
itself into one point, namely, that at that given moment the Head of the Church
should not, like the rulers of secular states, pursue particular interests
only, but fix his eyes on the general welfare of Christendom, and thereby
divert the other princes of Europe also from their purely selfish systems of
policy. Proceeding further, Contarini suggested to the Pope nothing less than
the renunciation of a portion, nay, even of the entirety, of the Papal States.
“Let not your Holiness suppose,” he said, “that the welfare of the Church of
Christ stands or falls with these morsels of worldly dominion. Before their
acquisition the Church existed, and, indeed, existed at her best. She is the
common possession of all Christians; the Papal States are like any other states
of an Italian prince, therefore your Holiness must set in the forefront of your
responsibilities the welfare of the true Church, which consists in the peace of
Christendom, and allow the interests of the temporal states to fall for a time
into the background.” The Pope made answer: “I well perceive that you are
speaking the truth and that I, as one faithful to his trust, ought to act as
you exhort me; but then, those on the other side ought to act in like manner.
Nowadays it has come to pass that the craftiest man is held to be the most
capable, and wins most applause in this world; of anyone who acts otherwise, all
that is said is that he is a good-natured but impracticable fellow, and, with
that, they leave him to himself.” Contarini rejoined:
“If your Holiness were to explore all the contents of Holy Scripture, which
cannot err, you would find that nothing is prized therein more highly than
truth, virtue, goodness, and a noble purpose. On many private occasions I have
tested this standard and found it true. Let your Holiness take courage and go
on your way with a good intention, and God, without doubt, will support you and
give you glory, and you will find the right path without toil and without
intrigue.”
In his reply the Pope kept to his former
standpoint. He referred to the danger of an alliance of the Emperor with
Florence, Ferrara, and Venice. “You,” he added, “would be allowed to keep all
that you have got, while I, as the good-natured man, who has been robbed of all
his belongings, would be left where I am without a chance of recovering one
single thing.” To Contarini’s assurance that Venice
would not conclude a separate treaty with Charles apart from the other members
of the League, the Pope replied with the remark, “With you everything depends
on a single ballot.” All further representations of the Ambassador were in
vain, although his words had not been without a certain effect. “I admit,” said
Clement, “that the course you recommend would be the right one; otherwise Italy
falls entirely into the power of the Emperor, and you will try to get some
advantage from the Turkish danger. But I tell you, we have no common ground to
meet on, and the good-natured man is treated as a simpleton.”
Contarini’s advice certainly sounds like that of an idealist; but a dispassionate critic
will admit that the Venetian was confusing the interests of his native city and
the still unrecovered independence of Italy with the welfare of Christendom.
The Medici Pope did not try to conceal that he was a practical politician to
the core; if, in an age when hardly anything was respected except material
power, when political considerations controlled every question, even the purely
ecclesiastical, he refused to renounce his secular sovereignty, he certainly
was acting intelligibly from a merely human standpoint; but higher and more
Christian conceptions were demanded in one holding the office of the Vicar of
Christ. The pursuit of temporal power was to a certain extent fully justified,
but ought always to have been subordinated to the supreme interest, that of
devotion to the supernatural claims of the Church. That Clement only too often forgot
this, throws a heavy shadow over his pontificate.
In January 1529 Quiñones went to Naples in
order to negotiate on the spot for the surrender of Ostia and Civita Vecchia, the liberation of
the hostages, and an understanding between the Emperor and the Pope. Clement
also appointed Schonberg as his colleague, and sent a token of high distinction
to the Viceroy. At this time Miguel Mai arrived in Rome to represent the
Emperor, “a bold, unscrupulous character, wholly devoted to his master’s
interests.” Mai announced that he had full powers to give back Ostia and Civita Vecchia; the restitution
would take place as soon as he had spoken with the Pope. This was impossible,
for, just at this juncture, Clement was taken with a serious illness, the
consequence, very probably, of the agitation and suffering of the previous
year.
In spite of a cold, contracted on the Feast
of the Epiphany, in the Sixtine Chapel, Clement VII
had held a Consistory on the 8th of January; thereupon he fell ill; on the
evening of the 9th he was in a state of high fever, and the following morning
his life was despaired of. Although an improvement set in, the case seemed to
give so clear a warning of his approaching end that on the night of the 10th of
January the Pope summoned the Cardinals to him and with their approval bestowed
the purple on Ippolito de’ Medici. Somewhat earlier the same honour had been
intended for Girolamo Doria, nephew of Andrea Doria, who had promised to
relieve the scarcity of food in Rome. After some hesitation, all the Cardinals
assented to this nomination also. On this occasion Clement declared to the
Sacred College that if God restored him to health it was his intention to
journey into Spain in order to restore peace to Christendom. During the next
few days the condition of the sick Pontiff continued to be very critical, and
on the. evening of the 15th of January Clement was so weak that it was not
believed he could live through the night.
The sudden assembling of the Cardinals at the
Vatican had already thrown the Romans into dismay, and the excitement was
increased by the spread of more and more alarming accounts of the Pope’s
illness. Not a few believed that he was already dead; the citizens began to
arm. The Cardinals met together in the Palazzo Monte for consultation, as the
doctors had for the moment given Clement up. Since Ostia and Civita Vecchia were still in the
Imperialists’ hands, and the unruly host under Orange was still encamped at
Naples, the freedom of a Papal election seemed in serious danger. The majority
of the Cardinals were therefore of opinion that the conclave ought not to be
held in Rome. Even Quiñones, with his Imperialist sympathies, took this
standpoint, and feared a schism, the responsibility for which would be thrown
on the Emperor. Miguel Mai declared later that Wolsey had roused the anxiety of
the Cardinals as to the freedom of the conclave in order to induce them to
transfer it to Avignon, where this ambitious churchman considered his election
would be sure.
However that may be, it is a fact that the
Cardinals took into consideration the issue of a Bull in which the seat of the
conclave should be assigned to Bologna, Verona, Civita Casteliana, or Avignon. Cardinals Enkevoirt and
Quiñones approached Mai secretly, and told him that if the fortified places
were not given up immediately there would be an uproar in Rome. Almost all the
Sacred College threatened him with dismissal in the event of the Pope’s death.
“The majority of the Cardinals,” Mai was forced to inform the Emperor, “are unfriendly
to me on account of the ruthless havoc committed by our soldiery throughout
Italy, from Piedmont to Apulia.” It was seen on the Imperialist side that
something must be done to allay the excitement. Accordingly, the Cardinals kept
as hostages in Naples were set free, and the order was given for the surrender
of Ostia and Civita Vecchia.
In the meantime Clement had made a remarkably
quick recovery from his illness, although the fever did not wholly leave him;
his condition varied from day to day, but remained so far stationary that it
was impossible for him to grant audiences. It was feared in the Vatican that
the constantly recurring fever would at last wear out the Pope’s strength, and
a commission of Cardinals was appointed to despatch the most pressing business.
On the 18th of February Clement had another bad attack, and the question of the
freedom of election came once more to the front. The negotiations of the
Cardinals over the delivery of Ostia and Civita Vecchia proved as fruitless as ever, for, in spite of the
orders from Orange, communicated by Mai, the commandants of the fortresses
refused to evacuate them until their soldiers’ clamours for pay had been
satisfied. “If the Pope were to die,” reported Quinones to the Emperor, “before
the fortresses belonging to him are given up, a schism will be inevitable.”
By the middle of February the report gained
ground that the Emperor was making serious preparations for his descent upon
Italy. These tidings aroused great excitement among the diplomatists resident
in Rome; the Pope was greatly alarmed, and declared himself ready to visit Spain
and France in person, accompanied by six or seven of the Cardinals, on a
mission of peacemaking, in order to show his
impartiality towards King and Emperor alike.
The Pope’s neutrality was displeasing to the
representatives of the Emperor and of the League. The former saw in the Pope’s
projected journey only an attempt to thwart the expedition of Charles; the
latter hoped that Clement, in his alarm at the Emperor’s coming, might be drawn
to their side. Thus the Pope, not yet wholly recovered from his illness, became
the occasion of a sharp diplomatic struggle in which neither threats nor
enticements were spared on either side.
The Emperor’s agent, Miguel Mai, had been
commissioned to obtain the Pope’s consent to an offensive, or, if this was not
possible, at least to a defensive alliance. The League hoped to attain its
object by inviting Giberti, who had so often already won Clement over to
France, to come to Rome. On the 23rd of February the Bishop of Verona arrived.
He was at once able to corroborate Contarini, that Clement was now more
inclined to a general peace. But, he added, two things are necessary: in the
first place, no one must try to force him to change his views; and, secondly,
no one must give him cause for fresh complaint. This last hint referred to
Ravenna and Cervia, which the Venetians, in spite of
the pressure brought to bear on them, especially by England, had no intention
of giving up.
Giberti was almost all day with the Pope, who
was showing marked improvement. Even though their conversation has not been
reported, it is yet easy to conjecture its import. The Imperialists were fully
aware of the danger threatening them. Miguel Mai wrote angrily to the Emperor
that “these devils of Leaguers are besieging the Pope might and main, and spinning
round him a web of lies and artifices of all sorts.” Andrea da Burgo, the
representative of Ferdinand I, also saw with anxiety how the Pope, in his alarm
and indecision, was being plied with every possible promise by the French and
English, and encouraged in his distrust of the Emperor. Already, on the 2nd of
March 1529, he reported that the French were promising Cervia and Ravenna, and anything else that the Pope wished, if he would only declare
himself for the League. From his timidity, and the wholly French character of
his surrounding influences, Andrea, and many others with him, inferred that
Clement would certainly not make any advances towards the Emperor and Ferdinand
I; they ought to be glad, thought Andrea, if he remained neutral.
In the meantime the Pope’s condition had
improved so much that on the 7th of March he was able to leave his bed, and his
audiences, although on a limited scale, were resumed. On the 9th of March Burgo
sent a report to Ferdinand on Mai’s negotiations with the Pope and Schonberg.
Clement, in his conversation with Charles’s envoy, insisted on his duty of
remaining neutral, and on his poverty, which was so great that he was hardly
able to afford the upkeep of his household. He refused an alliance, offensive
or defensive, with the Emperor. At the same time he again went over his plan of
visiting France and Spain in person, and, with this object in view, he spoke of
sending Schonberg to the Emperor, and Giberti to Francis I. To Burgo the
absence of Schonberg seemed dangerous, for the latter was the Emperor’s most
loyal representative in Rome, and in his audiences with the Pope expressed
himself in the same way.
Miguel Mai was in close communication with
the Cardinals as well as with the Pope: but he found out that the former were
for the most part inclined towards France. Even if Mai, occasionally, had
recourse to threats, yet his chief
endeavour was, by meeting the Pope’s wishes, especially in financial matters,
to induce him to renounce his neutrality and ally himself with Charles. But in
all their efforts to gain the Pope, the Imperialists sought to drive home the
argument that Charles could give assistance towards the restoration of the
Medici as rulers of Florence. To play on Clement’s fears, the League made use of the reports, then taking definite shape, of the
approaching arrival of the Emperor in Italy. He was told that in the end
Charles would make himself master of the whole of the Papal States.
The excitement occasioned by these
transactions and the more threatening aspect of the divorce suit of Henry VIII
brought on a relapse, and Clement was unable to celebrate Mass in St. Peter’s
on Easter Day. On Easter Monday 18,000 ducats were paid into the hands of the
Imperial envoy, whereupon Ostia and Civita Vecchia were restored to the Pope. At the same time came
the sorrowful news of Castiglione’s death; this was a heavy loss for the Pope,
for none stood higher in the Emperor’s favour than this gifted diplomatist.
The repeated promises of the Imperialists to
render service to the Pope both in respect of the restoration of the Medici as
rulers in Florence, and of the restitution of Cervia and Ravenna, could not fail to make a deep impression on Clement. But, amid the
uncertainty of affairs in Italy, nothing was less easy than a decision, and
thus he continued to hesitate. The feeling that, notwithstanding the surrender
of Ostia and Civita Vecchia,
his hands were as much tied as before, weighed heavily in the balance in favour
of procrastination. On the whole, shrewd diplomatist that he was, Clement did
not betray this; but sometimes his emotion had the mastery of him. Thus on the
9th of April he complained to Cardinal Trivulzio,
whose sympathies were French, of the way
in which the Emperor’s agents tried to hurry him into a treaty with Charles. He
would gladly withstand them if he could, but his position in this matter was
still just as bad as it had been during his imprisonment in St. Angelo; the
only difference consisted in this, that now, at least, he had personal liberty;
in the former condition of things he had no other choice left him than to fly
from Rome, leaving the Papal territory to its fate, or to come to the least
disadvantageous terms with those whose troops were so close at hand that they
might at any hour have overwhelmed him. “What the Pope will do in the last
resort, I do not know”, wrote Trivulzio ; “it is
certain that he is in the greatest anxiety and perplexity, and will avoid a
settlement as long as possible. When at last he does make one he will be driven
to it by main force, pulled along, as it were, by the hairs of his head.”
Trivulzio was mistaken, for a few days after his despatch was written, the Pope made up
his mind. He had been greatly influenced by a personal letter from the Emperor,
dated Toledo, the 28th of February, the contents of which were communicated to
Contarini by the Pope on the 12th of April. Charles first of all congratulated
his Holiness on his recovery, and then announced definitely his speedy voyage
to Italy; he wished to start from Toledo as early as the 8th of March, since
personal negotiations with his Holiness could alone conduce to that general
peace for which the initial preparations must begin in Italy, the victim of so
much calamity. Therefore by the 16th of April a new Nuncio to the Imperial
court with full legatine powers was appointed to succeed Castiglione; this was
Girolamo da Schio, Bishop of Vaison,
Master of the Papal Household. This staunchly Imperialist diplomatist, who had
kept up assiduous intercourse with Miguel Mai and Andrea da Burgo, received
secret instructions from the Pope.
The complete reconciliation, the alliance
between Emperor and Pope, was now close at hand, and with good reason, since
the members of the League seemed deliberately to be doing their best to drive
Clement into their adversary’s arms. Venice and Ferrara, now as before, refused
to hand back their spoils, while France kept up a lingering warfare in upper
and lower Italy, encouraged the obduracy of Florence, and even gave trouble to
Clement in his own territory by protecting his enemies Malatesta Baglioni and
the domineering Abbot of Farfa. “The misdeeds which
can be laid to the account of the Leaguers”, said Salviati, “are such that they must force the Pope to
side with the Emperor.”
In addition to these considerations, it had
been known in Rome since the beginning of April that France was prepared to
make, single-handed, conditions of peace with the Emperor. Even Giberti said at
the time, “I am afraid that the French may make a treaty of their own with the
Emperor, and then put off their allies with fair speeches.” Contarini was not
willing to believe this, but it was soon made evident that Giberti had
discerned aright. With a full knowledge of the state of affairs, a further
sojourn in Rome seemed superfluous to this skilled politician; under the
pretext of compliance with the duty of residence in his diocese, he earnestly
begged for permission to return. Contarini and the Pope detained him for some
time longer, but he soon gave up all hope, and on the 26th of April, regardless
of the entreaties of his friend Contarini, left Rome.
Undoubtedly the Pope’s attitude towards the
Emperor was greatly influenced by the hope that, through the help of Charles,
Florence would once more be governed by the Medici. With what dissimulation
Clement tried to disguise this anticipation is described in the reports of
Contarini and other diplomatists. He tried to keep the plan a secret even from
his most trusted and intimate friends, but without success, for in the beginning
of March Girolamo Balbi said to Andrea da Burgo that
Clement wished nothing so much as a change of government in Florence.
Just at this moment news reached Rome of a
turn in Florentine affairs which Clement attributed wholly to the help of
Charles.
For a long time the Pope had hoped to attain
his object in Florence by peaceable means. As long as Capponi, a well-disposed
and moderate man, stood at the head of affairs there, this expectation was by
no means altogether visionary, especially when the timid character of the Pope,
then in such sore distress, is taken into consideration. Capponi formed a
scheme for freeing his native city by means of an arrangement with the Pope;
with Jacopo Salviati as a go-between, he opened up secret communications with
Rome; their discovery led to his fall on the 17th of April 1529. His successor
was Francesco Carducci, a violent partisan, in whose circle Clement was spoken
of only as the tyrant and bastard. The hatred of this democrat towards the
Medici made any accommodation impossible. The fate of Florence was thus
decided; everything was done there to exasperate the Pope to the utmost. The
half-forgotten fact of his illegitimate birth was dragged to light; he was made
the butt of scorn and ridicule in verses and pictures, and his Papal authority
was often repudiated.
On the 18th of April, Clement, as feudal lord
of Perugia, had forbidden all its citizens, under threat of the severest
penalties, to take foreign service. Nevertheless, on the 4th of May the
Florentines appointed as their captain Malatesta Baglioni; further, they paid
two hundred soldiers to occupy Perugia. Clement was carried away by anger, and
declared to the English envoy he would rather be the Emperor’s chaplain or
equerry than allow himself to be insulted by his rebellious subjects and
vassals. To Contarini he declared that the disgraceful mortifications inflicted
on him by the Abbot of Farfa and Baglioni were
instigated by the French and Florentines. They had compelled him to look to his
private interests and no longer to maintain an indeterminate position. He did
not wish to be made prisoner a second time and be carried off to Florence. To
the counter-representations of Contarini the Pope replied, “What ought I, in
your opinion, to do? I have taken no decided course, and thereby given
satisfaction to none; rather have I exposed myself to the contempt of all.” He
feared that the peace negotiations between France and the Emperor would end
badly for Italy, that both one and the other would leave him in the lurch as
one who could not be safely relied on. “For appearance’ sake there will be a
stipulation that I am to be the protector of the peace, and with that they will
rest satisfied. I tell you, Ambassador,” said Clement in conclusion, “I am
forced to act as I do. What do you wish me to do? I cannot act otherwise.”
The decisive step was taken in the first days
of May. On the 7th of that month the Pope sent to the Emperor an autograph
letter of thanks for the restoration of the fortresses. His illness had hindered
him from sending an earlier answer; he now sends to him his Master of the
Household, Girolamo da Schio, Bishop of Vaison, whom his Majesty can trust as he would Clement
himself, since the Nuncio knows all the secrets of his heart. Schio, who carried together with this letter the Bull of
the Cruzada and other tokens of grace, had full
powers to conclude a treaty with the Emperor; he left Rome on the 9th of May.
Two days later, Andrea da Burgo reported to Ferdinand I. this mission of such
decisive importance, and the favourable dispositions of the Pope. Miguel Mai
wrote at the same time to Charles V. that the choice of a Nuncio could not have
fallen on a better man than Schio, since he was a
person of marked distinction, and a good Imperialist at heart.
Schio embarked on the 25th of May at Genoa for Barcelona, where Charles had been
staying since the 30th of April. The Emperor ordered preparations to be made to
receive the Papal Nuncio with every mark of honour. He arrived on the 30th of
May; the negotiations began at once, and ran very smoothly, and on the 10th of
June Charles committed to Mercurino dl Gattinara,
Louis de Praet, and Nicholas Perrenot the necessary powers. By the 23rd of June a compact relating to the marriage of
Alessandro de’ Medici with Margaret, the Emperor’s natural daughter, had been
concluded. There was no longer any possible doubt for whom Florence was
intended. On the 29th the signatures were attached to the treaty, to which the
Emperor on the same day bound himself by oath before the splendid high altar of
the Cathedral of Barcelona.
In view of the Turkish encroachments and the
trouble arising from heresy, a defensive alliance was struck between Pope and
Emperor. The Emperor promised his help towards restoring the Medicean rule in Florence and reinstating the Church in her
temporal possessions, by insisting on the restitution of Ravenna and Cervia on the part of Venice, and of Modena, Reggio, and Rubbiera on the part of Alfonso of Ferrara, the rights of
the Empire being left unimpaired. The Duke of Ferrara was to be declared
forfeited of his duchy, a fief of the Church, and the Emperor’s support was to
be given to the execution of the Papal sentence. In taking possession of the
Duchy of Milan, “the fountain-head of the troubles of Italy,” Charles, in the
event of Sforza being found guilty of felony, would act in conjunction with the
Pope, although not bound to do so legally. All arbitrary usurpation of the
patronage of the Neapolitan bishoprics on the part of the Imperial Government
would cease. All amicable means of dealing with the reform in Germany having
been exhausted, Charles and Ferdinand, his brother, who was included in the
terms of the treaty, were to take forcible measures for the suppression of that
movement. The Pope, on his side, supported these undertakings. In the renewed
assumption of the Neapolitan fief he contents himself with the palfrey tax (chinea, in Spanish hacanea),
hands over to the Emperor and his successors the nomination to four-and-twenty
Neapolitan-bishoprics, and permits the passage of Imperialist troops through
the Papal territory. Two additional articles relate to the Pope’s support of
the war against the Turks. Besides the spiritual means at his disposal, Clement
promises to further the work by guaranteeing to Charles and Ferdinand, for this
purpose, a fourth of the ecclesiastical revenues of their countries, on the
same scale as under Adrian VI, and absolves the Imperial army from all the
ecclesiastical penalties incurred in consequence of the attack on Rome. Lastly,
Clement increases the privileges of the recently issued Bull of the Cruzada.
At the first glance it seems astonishing that
Charles should have conceded such favourable terms to the despoiled and
vanquished Pope. But on closer inspection the leniency of the Emperor admits of
an easy explanation. In spite of all humiliation, the status of the Papacy in
human society was still one of high importance. The friendship of Clement was
an imperative necessity to Charles, unless his interests in England, in
Scandinavia, in Switzerland, in Hungary, and Germany were to suffer the most
grievous injury. Moreover, the exhaustion of the Imperial finances and the
doubtful outlook of the continuation of the campaign in Italy came into
consideration. Lastly, Charles hoped that his alliance with the Pope would deal
a mortal blow to the League; and even if his concessions to Clement were
considerable, his own interests in Italy were not nullified by the treaty.
The treaty of Barcelona accelerated the peace
negotiations between Francis and Charles.
The contradictory reports from Lombardy had
caused the French king to fluctuate between one policy and another. Sometimes
he unfolded before the Italian envoys far-reaching plans of campaign, and spoke
of attacking the Emperor in Spain or of leading in person a great army into
Italy. But these were passing paroxysms of warlike ardour. One look at his
kingdom would have told Francis that the burdens of war were no longer
endurable. Then there was the dissatisfaction of the French Government with
their English allies, who were liberal of critiism but not of money. The scheme for entering on peace negotiations grew in
popularity at the French court. In November 1528 there were thoughts of
appealing to the Pope’s mediation, but the notion was soon given up. There was
a greater leaning towards the Regent of the Netherlands, the Archduchess
Margaret, and the Queen Mother, Louisa of Savoy, entered into direct
communication with the Archduchess in order to bring about a peace. Cardinal
Salviati, in May 1529, was still disinclined to believe in the seriousness of
these negotiations. Nevertheless, these two women, distinguished alike for
intellectual qualities and political experience, succeeded in their difficult
task.
The French Government showed consummate skill
in concealing their transactions from the other members of the League. On the
23rd of June 1529 Francis declared to their envoys that he would sacrifice his
own life and that of his son to save the allied Leaguers; the Queen and the
Admiral, Anne de Montmorency, spoke in the same sense. On the 10th of July the
latter made the most solemn disclaimer of the report that France intended to
desert Venice. Twelve days later the King, with equal solemnity, swore that
Florence would be included in the treaty of peace, and on the 3rd of August
Francis still affirmed that nothing would be concluded without the consent of
his allies. On the 5th the treaty was signed at Cambrai in which he completely
threw them over. Up to the last there were still great difficulties to be
overcome, but matters were brought quickly to a conclusion by the news that de
Leyva’s victory over St. Pol at Landriano (21st of
June) had made Charles master of Lombardy and at one with the Pope.
The treaty concluded by Francis was highly
disadvantageous; he saved nothing except the integrity of his own country. He
had to promise that thenceforward he would abstain from all interference in
Italian and German affairs; within six weeks all his troops were to be withdrawn
from Italy; he was to compel Venice and Ferrara to surrender the stolen cities;
in case of necessity to expel with arms the Venetians from Apulia; he was to
pay Charles for the expenses of his coronation journey 200,000 thalers and
furnish him with twenty galleys, and his son was to be set free at a ransom of
two million crowns.
In Rome the result of the negotiations at
Barcelona and Cambrai had been watched with anxious attention, above all by
Contarini, who, with the tenacity of a born diplomatist, had up to the last
moment urged the cause of the League, but without the least success, on the
Pope, who was still unwell. On the 17th of June Andrea da Burgo could report
that Salviati, by order of the Pope, had told him that the latter rejected all
the offers of the League. Two days earlier Schonberg had left Rome in order to
take part in the negotiations at Cambrai. On the Feast of SS. Peter and Paul
the Pope, in presence of all the Cardinals, received the “Chinea”
from Miguel Mai; on the same day came the news of the overthrow of the French
at Landriano. The reports then current as to the
Emperor’s frame of mind justified Clement in having the best hopes. On the 15th
of July the conclusion of the treaty with the Emperor was made known for
certain in Rome through the Abbate de’ Negri. On the following day came the
decision on the divorce suit of Henry VIII, which the Pope cited before the
court of the Rota in Rome.
The treaty of Barcelona was conveyed to Italy
by the Emperor’s special messenger, Louis de Praet,
who arrived in Rome on the 22nd of July, where he was visited at once, by
command of the Pope, by Salviati, Sanga, Alessandro de’ Medici, and Cardinal
Ippolito. Nor was the remainder of the Sacred College, the majority of whom now
showed Imperialist leanings, wanting in marks of attention. In the afternoon of
the 24th of July, Praet, together with Mai and Burgo,
had an audience of the Pope, whom they saw in bed, bearing evident traces of
his long illness. Clement read the Emperor’s letter, brought to him by Praet, and expressed his delight at the peace, and his hope
that Charles, on his arrival in Italy, would be a protection to the Holy See.
For Florentine affairs he referred the Imperial envoys to Cardinal Pucci. After
a conversation with this Prince of the Church, whose devotion to the Emperor
and the Medici was entire, they had a second audience, on the 25th of July, in
which the Pope, still forced to keep his bed, swore fidelity to the Treaty of
Barcelona Salvos of musketry from the Vatican, St. Angelo, and the palaces of
the Imperialists announced the great event to Rome. Clement’s condition having much improved by the end of July, the envoys were able to
discuss with him personally the Florentine enterprise which Praet had warmly advocated with the Emperor. On Sunday, the 1st of August, the Pope
participated in person at the thanksgiving service in St. Peter’s on the
occasion of the conclusion of peace.
Some days before, Philibert, Prince of
Orange, had made his entry with a body of fifteen hundred foot. The negotiations
concerning the submission of Florence, with which those relating to Perugia
were combined, now reached a definite stage. Since the Treaty of Barcelona
contained no terms relating to the cost of the war with Florence, serious
difficulties were not wanting. It was said that the ambitious Orange demanded
for himself nothing less than the hand of Catherine de’ Medici, the Pope’s
niece—a marriage which would have made him master of Florence. In Clement’s immediate circle it was pointed out to him that
he would be exposing his native city to great peril if he turned against her an
army composed of such different nationalities. Among those who opposed the
Florentine expedition, Jacopo Salviati, Roberto Pucci, and Sanga were
named—those, in fact, who were in the Pope’s confidence.
No wonder that Clement fell back on his usual
vacillation. If there were difficulties in coming to an understanding, the
blame lay to a great extent with the Florentines, who kept up their methods of
provocation towards the Pope. They were not only in the closest alliance with
Malatesta Baglioni, but also with that Abbot of Farfa who had already caused Clement so much trouble.
To this turbulent leader of faction they sent
3000 ducats towards the recruiting of troops; this sum, however, was
intercepted by the Papal party, whereupon the Abbot determined on revenge. In
the beginning of August Clement had sent Cardinals Farnese. Medici, and
Quinones to greet the Emperor on his arrival at Genoa. Quinones was set upon in
the hill forest of Viterbo and kept prisoner until the 3000 ducats were repaid.
How bitterly the Pope must have resented
this unprecedented occurrence1 can easily be understood. An agreement on the
question of the subjection of Florence and Perugia was arrived at by the
special interposition of Cardinal Pucci, who from his private resources
advanced such a considerable sum that Clement was able to dispose of 36,600
scudi. But with this he could only at first clear off a small instalment of his
obligations, for, on the 17th of August, Clement had to concede the demands of
Orange: 80,000 scudi to be paid down, 50,000 to be added after the capture of
Florence, and a final 150000 to be raised by taxation on the city. The Pope,
besides, was to support Orange with artillery and recruits, and once more Rome
and the Papal territory became the scene of active military movements. The
Pope’s thoughts henceforward were absorbed in this unhappy enterprise against
his native city. On the 13th of August Mercurino da
Gattinara received from Clement, now fully restored to health, the long-coveted
rank of Cardinal, as a reward for his services in bringing the Treaty of
Barcelona to a conclusion.
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