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CHAPTER
XVIII.
Clement
VII’s Efforts to protect Christendom from the Turks.
From the beginning of his pontificate,
Clement VII, like his predecessors, was repeatedly occupied with the Eastern
question.
Already, in his first Consistory, on the 2nd
of December 1523, the Pope dealt with the dangerous position of Hungary, of
which kingdom he had, when Cardinal, been the Protector. A special Commission
of Cardinals was appointed to deal with the conduct of Turkish affairs and the
restoration of peace. In view of the prevailing financial distress, it was
exceptionally difficult to raise the sums necessary for the Turkish war.
Clement VII, in extreme disquietude on account of the powerful military
preparations of the enemy, did what lay in his power. When he learned that the
garrison of Clissa in Dalmatia was hard pressed, he
sent thither considerable help, thus rendering possible the relief of that
important frontier stronghold. To the Hungarian King Louis he gave the
assurance that he would continue to do all that his predecessors had done in
the interests of his kingdom. The Cardinal-Legate for Germany, Campeggio, also
accredited to Hungary, was commissioned to urge upon the Diet of Nuremberg the
community of interests between these two countries and to work for the sanction
of a liberal grant towards the expenses of the Turkish war. Clement also sent a
special Nuncio to Hungary in the person of Giovanni Antonio Puglioni,
Baron of Burgio, in place of Cardinal Cajetan,
recalled on the 28th of January 1524. This accomplished diplomatist knew the
country from former residence there, and was accurately informed on the
extremely difficult circumstances of the situation.3 Clement, like previous Popes,
also formed an alliance with Achmed of Egypt, one of
the intestine enemies of the Turk.
Burgio was instructed to convey to the King of Hungary the subsidy, collected with
difficulty by Clement, and the Papal permission to sell Church property in
order to maintain the war against the infidel. In the beginning of April 1524
he reached Ofen, and was at once successful in
dissuading the King from his scheme of making peace with the Turks. For his
remaining task, the organization of the defensive forces of the Hungarian
kingdom, circumstances could not possibly have been less favourable. The
country was torn by fierce party strife, and her ruler, youthful,
pleasure-seeking, and empty-headed, was the personality the least fitted to
counteract the elements of disruption working in the kingdom. The saying
applied by his contemporaries to the last of the Jagellons,
“Woe to the country whose sovereign is a child!” was about to receive a
frightful fulfilment. But among the magnates there was none who could have
superseded the King. Party spirit, want of patriotism, combined with widespread
corruption, held sway everywhere. On his arrival at Zengg,
where Burgio first set foot in Hungarian territory,
he found that of all the stores of grain sent by Adrian VI. for the provisioning
of the Croatian border castles, only the scantiest portion of each had reached
the place of its destination, for the Captain of Zengg and his officials had sold the greater part and spent the proceeds on
themselves. In Ofen the Papal representative had no
better experience; during his sojourn there of four months, he had convinced
himself that neither from the King nor from the magnates at the head of the
Government was the deliverance of the country to be looked for. Therefore in
the beginning of July he left for Cracow in order to obtain help from Sigismund
of Poland, the King’s uncle. This mission also was a complete failure, for
Poland was suffering from the same conditions of internal dissolution and decay
as Hungary.
In August 1524 Burgio returned to Ofen. There he found utter chaos; the
nobility were in vehement opposition to the King and his associates, and were
busy with the scheme of invoking, on their own authority, the intervention of a
Diet. Meanwhile the danger in southern Hungary grew apace: the Turks were
already besieging the fortress of Severin, the last bulwark of the kingdom on
the lower Danube. Burgio did all he could to obtain
relief for the besieged, but he appealed to deaf ears. The King referred him to
his council; the council sent him back to the King; everywhere the most shortsighted selfishness prevailed. Burgio,
during the Diet held on the Rakosfeld at Ofen, with emotion adjured the nobility to lay aside their
old dissensions and come to the rescue of the kingdom in the hour of trouble.
On this occasion he promised, if the Estates would do their duty, to place at
once at the disposal of the kingdom the Papal subsidies deposited in the
banking house of the Fuggers at Ofen.
His words died away in a storm of party hatred, and thus Severin was lost, a
calamity which only gave rise in Hungary to an outburst of mutual
recrimination.
On Burgio’s invitation the Cardinal-Legate, Campeggio, left Vienna for Ofen in the beginning of December 1524. There he was received by King Louis with
marks of friendship on the 18th of the same month. Both the Papal
representatives worked together to induce the King and the magnates to take
steps to equip the border fortresses and to raise an army; but in Paul Tomori alone, the excellent Archbishop of Kalocsa and commandant of the troops in the southern
division of the kingdom, did they find a faithful and self-sacrificing ally.
When the latter, in the beginning of January 1525, came in despair to Ofen, bent on his resignation, they prevented him from
taking this step, and also insisted on his receiving support in money from the
Government. Campeggio, at his own cost, raised three hundred foot-soldiers for
the defence of Peterwardein. These Papal troops were
the only force which Tomori was able to take back
with him from Ofen in the beginning of February 1525
to the hard-pressed fortress. As they marched out, the populace gathered on the
banks of the Danube raised their voices in praise of the Pope who had not
forsaken their country in its extremity.
In the Diet also, held in May 1525, it was
recognized that Clement VII and his Ambassadors were doing all they could to
help the kingdom. Stephen Verboczy, the head of the
national party among the nobles, praised in enthusiastic terms the services
rendered to Hungary by the Holy See. But Burgio’s summons to war against the Turks, in obedience to the mandate of Clement VII.,
was uttered in vain. The Diet could attend to nothing but the complaints
against the Palatine Stephan Bathory, the Primate Ladislaus Szalkay, the Treasurer Emmerich Szerencses,
and the hated German courtiers. The removal of the latter was angrily demanded
by the followers of Johann Zapolya, the richest and most powerful of all the
magnates. As the King’s answer to this request was to some extent evasive, the
resolution was passed that the combined nobility should meet in arms on the
24th of June at Hatvan, to the north-east of Ofen, to take counsel for the interests of the kingdom. On
the 2nd of July King Louis appeared in person at this gathering; he was
accompanied by Burgio, now, on the recall of
Campeggio, the sole representative of the Pope. The assembly, in which Zapolya’s adherents had a majority, overthrew the whole
existing government; the disloyal councillors were deposed, and Verboczy acclaimed as Palatine.[148] With regard to the
most pressing need of all, the defence of the kingdom against the Turks,
nothing was done then or even subsequently—only the Pope sent sums of money for
the pay of the troops upon the frontier. In Hungary itself the bitterness of
party strife continued.
While this political chaos, productive of the
gravest crisis in the State, prevailed, the Sultan Suleiman continued his
offensive preparations on the most comprehensive scale. Burgio sent reports on these to Rome, on the 18th of January 1526, while at the same
time deploring the deficiencies in the Hungarian defences. Not even the
garrisons of the border strongholds could be paid; the King was so poor that he
even often suffered from want of food; the great as well as the lesser nobility
were split into factions. Moreover, there was little prospect of assistance
from the powers abroad, or of a federation of the Christian princes. “Thus,”
said Burgio in conclusion, “your Holiness alone can
give help; yet I know full well the hardships of the Church and that there is
but little in her power to do, deserted as she is by all. My intelligence
cannot fail to depress your Holiness; but it is my duty to write truthfully;
willingly would I forward to you more favourable reports.”
In Rome, throughout the whole year (1525),
the anxiety caused by the Sultan’s preparations was intensified by the danger
to which the Italian coasts had for some time been exposed from the attacks of
Turkish pirates. In November it was determined to send to Hungary fresh support
in the form of liberal supplies of money, provisions, and ammunition. On
receiving Burgio’s alarming reports, Clement called
together the Sacred College in the beginning of February, 1526, and received on
this occasion the representatives of the Christian princes. He communicated to
them the reports that had reached him, and called upon them to urge their
rulers to come to the aid of Hungary; as the time of year no longer permitted
the despatch of troops, they might forward supplies of money for recruiting.
The Pope set in this respect a good example; he addressed invitations to the
Emperor, to the King of France, and to many other Christian princes to come to
the assistance of Hungary. Clement VII informed King Louis of these steps taken
on his behalf and exhorted him to perseverance and a vigorous resistance. When Burgio, on the 4th of March 1526, informed the Council of
State, assembled round the King, of the Pope’s proceedings, many of his hearers
were moved to tears; they vied with each other in expressions of gratitude and
passed excellent resolutions to defend their country. But this conversion to
patriotism soon proved to be only a short-lived flare of excitement; the
resolutions were never more than a dead letter. Even when there was no longer
any possible doubt of the imminent approach of the Turks, no decisive measures
of resistance were taken. In the Council of State, which met in the afternoon,
when the King had thrown off his slumbers, nothing was done save to indulge in
mutual accusations. Burgio, who reports this, adds:
“Here there is neither preparation for defence nor obedience; the magnates are
afraid of each other, and all are against the King; some even are unwilling to
take precautions against the Turk.” No wonder that the Nuncio repeatedly begged
to be recalled. Of what use was he to a country that was rushing headlong to
its ruin? “The spirit of faction grows more bitter every day,” reported Burgio; “the King, in spite of my remonstrances, has gone hunting
as if we were living in the midst of profound peace.
On the day after the King’s departure, on the
13th of April, Tomori arrived with the alarming news
that the Sultan had left Constantinople with the intention of making himself
master of the capital of Hungary. The Nuncio thereupon betook himself at once
to the King, and, representing to him the greatness of the danger, induced him
to return to his capital. There a Council of State was at once held and Tomori, who had to defend Peterwardein,
was promised ample help. The Nuncio supplied him with fifteen hundred infantry,
two hundred hussars, and thirty small pieces of artillery : but his example
produced little effect; the Council relapsed into their previous indolence. “If
the Sultan really comes,” wrote Burgio on the 25th of
April 1526, ‘'then I repeat what I have so often said before: your Holiness may
look on this country as lost. Here the confusion is without bounds; every
requisite for the conduct of a war is wanting; the Estates are given over to
hatred and envy; and if the Sultan were to emancipate the subject classes, they
would rise against the nobles in a bloodier insurrection than that of the
Crusade (the Hungarian peasants’ war of 1514): but if their emancipation were
to come from the King, he would then alienate from himself the nobility.”
Some still hoped that a remedy would be found
in the Diet then about to assemble. Here the victory of the court party was
complete; Verboczy was deposed and fined; Bathory was
restored to the office of Palatine; the resolutions of Hatvan were annulled and a sort of dictatorship conferred on the King. But Louis had
no means of enforcing obedience, for the authority of the Crown had fallen into
desuetude, and the finances of the country were as bankrupt as its defences.
How could absolute power be wielded by a king whom nobody obeyed, whose credit
was gone, and who, in the presence of overwhelming danger, slept undisturbed
until midday?
Neither the Diet nor the King brought
deliverance. The foreign powers also, to whom the country had turned, did
nothing; the Pope alone made the affairs of Hungary his own. He turned anew to
the princes of Europe, gave his consent to a Crusade indulgence, sent 50,000
ducats, and permitted the taxation of ecclesiastical benefices and the sale of
a large amount of Church property. Had the King and the Estates of Hungary
shown the same ready self-sacrifice and energetic action, the catastrophe then
threatening might perhaps have been yet averted. Unfortunately, this was not the
case; thus the doom drew nearer every day, and on the 28th of July 1526 Peterwardein fell. The garrison, half of whom were Papal
troops, died like heroes. The Pope’s representative continued up to the last to
do all that was possible, and raised 4000 soldiers. The forces of the King,
with the reinforcements brought in at the last hour, amounted to 28,000 men.
With them he moved southwards to the plain of Mohacs. Here a battle was fought
on the 29th of August which decided in an hour and a half the fate of the
Hungarian kingdom. Many magnates, five bishops, and the Archbishops of Gran and Kalocsa, were left lying on the field of battle. Two
thousand heads were ranged as trophies of victory before the tent of the
Sultan; on the following day fifteen hundred prisoners were slaughtered. King
Louis was one of the few who succeeded in saving their lives by
flight; but in crossing a small brook swollen by heavy
rains his horse stumbled from exhaustion and buried
the King in the watery morass.
On the 10th of September 1526
the Sultan made his entry into the Hungarian capital; far and wide, as far as Raab and Gran, his hordes swarmed over the unhappy kingdom,
and there was already a fear lest they should attack Vienna also. But the
approach of the colder season and the tidings of revolts in Asia Minor caused
Suleiman to retire at the end of September, without leaving a garrison behind
him in a single place.
The forward advance of the Turks and the
catastrophe of Mohacs caused the greatest alarm in Rome, as in the rest of
Christendom. Clement VII gave expression to his grief in a Consistory held on
the 19th of September, when he called on all Christian princes to recover their
unity and give their aid, and declared himself ready to go to Barcelona to
negotiate in person for peace. On the following day the Pope saw himself
plundered in his own capital by the troops of the Emperor!
If the dissensions between the two heads of
Christendom had hitherto reacted most injuriously on the project of a Crusade
against the Turks, so now the danger from the latter was almost entirely
forgotten amid the raging flames of the present conflict between Pope and
Emperor. But in Hungary civil war was raging. The brother-in-law of Louis,
Ferdinand I, and the Voivode Zapolya were rival competitors for the crown; the
Sultan soon found himself the recipient of solicitations from both parties. All
the enemies of the Hapsburgs, especially France and Bavaria, favoured Zapolya,
who also lost no time in making strenuous efforts to gain the Pope. Clement
cannot be absolved from the reproach of having been drawn for a time into
transactions of doubtful import with this man; but the statement of one of his
bitterest enemies, that he had given pecuniary support to the Voivode, is
without confirmation; on the contrary, there exists a Papal letter, of the 30th
of August 1528, in which Clement refuses a request of this kind.
The warlike condition of Italy and the
contest for the throne in Hungary, whereby the spread of Protestantism in that
country was promoted, encouraged the Sultan to mature his plan of striking a
blow at the heart of Christian Europe. In the beginning of May 1529 “the ruler
of all rulers,” as Suleiman styled himself, left Constantinople at the head of
a mighty host, bent on the capture of Vienna and the subjugation of Germany.
Fortunately his advance was so slow, owing to heavy rainfalls and the
consequent inundations, that he did not reach Belgrade until the 17th of July.
Ferdinand I, whose forces were quite
inadequate to cope with those of the Turks, looked round on every side for
help. His Ambassador in Rome and that of the Emperor made the most urgent
representations on the pressing danger. Clement VII therefore determined to
send Vincenzo Pimpinella, Archbishop of Rossano, as permanent
Legate to the court of Ferdinand. The subsidies in money, subsequently approved
by the Pope and Cardinals, were perforce slender owing to the limited means at
their disposal. On the other hand, it was of importance that in the Treaty of
Barcelona (29th June 1529) the Pope agreed to give the Emperor, for the
expenses of the Turkish war, a fourth of the incomes of the ecclesiastical
benefices to the extent already conceded to him by Adrian VI. A Bull of the
27th of August 1529 gave full authority to Pimpinella to dispose, in upper
Germany, of the treasures, and, in case of necessity, even of the landed
property of churches and convents, in order to levy an army to meet the Turks,
who, welcomed by Zapolya, had captured Ofen on the 8th
of September, and before the end of the month had invested Vienna. But all
their attempts to take possession of this bulwark of Christendom were
frustrated by the heroic spirit of the defenders. After a final ineffectual
assault on the 14th of October, the Sultan withdrew, warned by the approach of
adverse seasons and the news that relief was close at hand. For the first time
he saw an enterprise, on which all his resources had been brought to bear,
broken by an enemy whom he had likened to “the dust.” Hungary, certainly, was
still in his power, and to the Venetians, who had done him service continually
as spies, Suleiman wrote on the 10th of November : “I have overcome this
kingdom and bestowed its crown upon Zapolya.”
After the disasters of the year 1529, a
cessation of the Turkish lust of conquest was not to be thought of; the capture
of Vienna was only postponed. In the West there were no illusions on this
score. During the conferences between the Pope and Emperor at Bologna, the
Turkish question played an important part. Clement VII. promised, on this
occasion, to pay a subsidy of 40,000 ducats, a sum which certainly could not be
raised without great difficulty. Another and not less important result of the
Imperial policy was the sentence of excommunication passed on Zapolya on the
21st of December 1529.
As the consultations at Bologna on the
comprehensive measures of defence to be taken against the Turks had led to no
final result, it was determined to pursue the matter further at Rome. This was
all the more necessary as in the spring of 1530 news had arrived of increased
military preparations on the part of the Turks. A congregation of six Cardinals
was entrusted, in the beginning of June, with the consideration of the whole
matter. On the 24th of that month the Pope assembled these six Cardinals and
the Ambassadors, all of whom, including even the Venetian envoy, were present.
Clement VII made an opening speech, in which he insisted upon the necessity for
taking steps to meet the attack which the Sultan was making vast preparations
to deliver in the coming year. To the question of the Pope, whether the
Ambassadors were furnished with the requisite mandates, only the
representatives of Charles V and Ferdinand I replied in the affirmative.
Cardinal Gramont and the English envoys announced
that they had none; the Portuguese Ambassador made excuses for his sovereign,
who was actively engaged in Africa; the Milanese envoy assured Clement that it
would be impossible for his master to raise any extra taxes this year. When the
envoy of Ferdinand, Andrea da Burgo, observed that three things were necessary:
money, money, and always money, Cardinals Farnese and del Monte agreed, with
the remark that unity among the Christian powers was equally essential. It was
resolved that the Pope should address himself to all the Christian princes and
call upon them to support the holy war with all their might and supply their
envoys with the fullest powers. Briefs to this effect were drawn up on the 27th
of June. Since the answers of the princes were long in coming, Andrea da Burgo
asked the Pope to make up his mind at once as to the sums to be guaranteed to
Ferdinand I.
Clement VII was obliged to insist that his
resources had been so drained by the war with Florence that he had no means
left at his disposal. He made sanguine representations to the Ambassador as to
the time when Florentine affairs would be settled; once the city had fallen,
the Turkish Crusade would be taken up again with energy. By the 9th of August
fresh Briefs had been despatched to the princes of Christendom; it was proposed
that a monthly levy of 80.000 ducats should be paid towards the war; of this
the Pope and Cardinals were to raise 10,000, the Emperor and Francis I 20,000
each, Henry VIII 10,000, the Kings of Portugal, Scotland, and Poland jointly
15,000, the Italian States 5000. All these efforts were unavailing; on the 23rd
of August not one of the Ambassadors, except those of Charles and Ferdinand,
had received full powers from their sovereigns. Neither the Italian powers,
England or France were willing to support the Crusade; the Pope alone gave
Ferdinand assistance. At a later date the Turkish war and the proceedings
against the Lutherans were combined—but still no results were obtained. The
Pope, da Burgo reported from Rome on the nth of December 1530, wished to raise
funds for the Turkish war, but he had no means of so doing. His relations with
Ferdinand I remained friendly, and it was of great value to the latter that
Clement VII promoted in every way the Hapsburg candidature for the kingship of
the Romans and gave his recognition ungrudgingly. In he sent the King a
consecrated sword and hat1 by the hands of Albertus Pighius.
Of late the Pope had been repeatedly occupied
with the affairs of the Knights of St. John. Clement VII gave them hearty
support in their efforts to reinstate themselves in the possession of Rhodes;
on their failure to do so he asked the Emperor to bestow Malta on the Knights
as a residence. It was an excellent suggestion, for the central situation of
the island made it a place of high strategical importance. Charles V was
favourable to the Pope’s request; on his return journey from Bologna, on the
23rd of March 1530, at Castelfranco, he issued the document by which he
bestowed on the Knights of St. John, Malta and its adjacent islands as a Sicilian
fief. The Order, now known as that of the Knights of Malta or the Maltese
Order, fortified the new bulwark of Christendom in accordance with all the
rules of military science as then known, and defended it with the utmost
valour. Through the Knights the Pope was kept closely informed of the
intentions of the Turks.
In 1530 Clement VII found the Turkish
difficulty even more engrossing than in the previous year. For a time this
filled the foreground of affairs so completely that all other considerations,
even the threatening aspects of the Lutheran movement, seemed to become of
minor importance. “This is the only topic of conversation here,” wrote an envoy
on the 20th of February 1531. In March all preachers within the Papal States
were directed to explain to the people the dangers to which they were exposed
from the Turks. The perils of the Mahommedan attack on Christendom were felt
all the more keenly in middle and lower Italy, for the navigation of the
Mediterranean was so insecure owing to the corsairs of Barbary that in many
places, even in Rome, the difficulty of importing provisions was beginning to
cause distress. As a measure of relief the Pope was planning the despatch of a
fleet under the command of Andrea Doria.
Clement was assiduous in taking counsel with
the Ambassadors and Cardinals on the subject of the Crusade. The question was
especially considered whether the war should be carried out on defensive or
offensive lines. Francis I let it be understood that he would take part only in
operations of the former class; thereupon the Genoese and others withdrew from
their previous agreements concerning the support to be given to the Emperor’s
forces. “The Pope alone,” wrote Andrea da Burgo, “adheres to his promise to pay
12,000 ducats per month; in this case,” he added, “I certainly cannot see how,
wanting money as he does, he can give any help to your Majesty.”
In spite of the pretensions of Francis I,
Clement was never weary of making plans to utilize the power of France on
behalf of the common undertaking, as well as to raise the necessary sums for
the protection of the Italian seaboard and the support of Charles and
Ferdinand. He met with not a little opposition on the part of some of the
Cardinals. When the Pope urged the necessity of raising funds in presence of
the common danger, it was put forward in reply that the princes had very often
expended such levies for totally different purposes, and that, on that account,
no one in Italy was willing to contribute. Clement VII proposed that the sums
intended for the protection of the coasts of Italy against the attacks of
Mohammedan pirates should be collected and then forwarded to the spot where the
most immediate succour was required. All the Cardinals were unanimous that the
funds for the Crusade should not be raised by the creation of new Cardinals or
the sale of Church property. It was at last agreed that there should be a tax
on grain.
The enemies of the Hapsburgs pointed to the
general policy of Charles V and the increase of his brother’s power by the
acquisition of the Hungarian and Bohemian crowns, as standing in the way of the
aggrandizement of Italy and of the Pope in particular. It was said plainly that
the empire and monarchy of the Hapsburgs threatened to establish a world-power
even more dangerous than that of Turkey: their agents in Italy were, it was
alleged, on the one hand, always asking the Pope for money and, on the other,
by their incessant demands for a Council, frustrated the very means by which money
could be raised, and sowed the seeds of endless difficulties for the Holy See
in Italy. In addition, there was also the Emperor’s decision in the dispute
with Ferrara, which must have offended the Pope in the highest degree. Since
Charles V, in spite of the counter-representations of Ferdinand I, clung
obstinately to this determination, the negotiations over the subsidy against
the Turks came to a standstill.
Andrea da Burgo, Ferdinand’s Ambassador, was
in a difficult position. Repeatedly in the course of these negotiations he had
been made to understand by the Pope that no serious arrangement could be come
to in this matter unless the Emperor consented to some relaxation of the too
rigid conditions of the treaties of Madrid and Cambrai. In spite, however, of
the imprudence of the Imperialists and the constant intrigues of the French,
this indefatigable diplomatist achieved a great success in the autumn of 1531.
In a Brief of the 16th of September of that year, Clement VII promised
Ferdinand, in view of the menacing reports of Turkish preparations, the payment
of 100,000 ducats in six months in the case of invasion, unless Italy itself
were visited by a like calamity.
Contradictory as the reports often were
concerning the Turkish plans, yet in the second half of December they all
agreed in announcing for the coming spring a fresh attack from the Sultan, for
which he was making preparations in force. On the first receipt of this
information Clement showed great zeal. On the 16th of December he informed a full
Consistory of Cardinals that, according to most trustworthy intelligence, a
Turkish fleet of three hundred ships, with forty thousand men on board, would
in the early spring set sail for Italy, while at the same time the Sultan, at
the head of a hundred and fifty thousand, would advance on Hungary. On the 26th
of December the Cardinals again met to deliberate on the Turkish question.
Two days later the Pope assembled the
Cardinals and Ambassadors; of the latter none were absent except the Venetian
envoy, whose Government was determined not to break the peace with Turkey, and
the envoy of Ferrara. The Pope made a long speech, showing that a combined
attack by sea and land was in preparation by the Turks for the coming spring,
and urging the necessity of speedy assistance. The representatives of the
Emperor and King Ferdinand gave the strongest assurances; those of Henry VIII
and Francis I only proffered fair speeches, although the Pope had been urgent
and even threatening in his appeal. In his closing words Clement again warned
his hearers that not a moment should be lost, and declared himself ready to do
his utmost.
In the beginning of January 1532 the Pope’s
calls for help addressed in the preceding August to the Christian princes were
emphatically renewed. At the same time it was resolved to fortify the Papal
sea-ports, especially Ancona, the most exposed to danger, and to support with
ample supplies of money the two Hapsburg brothers, whose extremity was the
greatest. A commission of twelve Cardinals was appointed with full powers to
deal with the whole Turkish question. The coming invasion of the Turks seemed
all the more perilous as there were three opposing parties at strife in
Hungary; Ferdinand and his adherents, Zapolya, and a party of independence led
by Peter Perenyi. The friends of Francis I in Rome, including many of the
Cardinals, had been trying for a long time to obtain from Clement the repeal of Zapolya’s excommunication. In spite of all the
pressure brought to bear on him by the French party, Clement refused to give
way, but, on the other hand, he told several Cardinals that Ferdinand, who was
not in a position to subjugate Hungary, might hand over that kingdom to the
Voivode, as the latter, once in tranquil possession of the country, would
willingly break with the Turk and ally himself with the Christians. But the
Pope took no decided step in favour of Zapolya. His intervention in the
troubles of Hungary was confined to the despatch of a letter on the 17th of
February 1532 exhorting all the inhabitants of the country to unite in their
own defence against the infidels; their danger had reached the present pitch,
he said expressly, owing to some among themselves having courted the favour of
the Turks ; but they must not allow themselves to be deceived, only
dishonourable subjection awaited them if they did not at once put aside their
delusions.
It would have been of exceptional importance
if Venice had taken a part in the Turkish war. In January 1532 Clement had
already instructed Giberti to make representations in this sense to the
Signoria. The answer given to the Papal agent cut off all hope; Venice had no
intention of interrupting the peace with the Turks. The tension between Venice
and Rome on the question of the bishoprics was thus strained much further, and
the Signoria went the length of imposing war taxes on the clergy without asking
for the approval of the Pope. Clement felt himself deeply aggrieved by such
conduct; he issued a Brief threatening excommunication to all rulers who
demanded taxes of the clergy on their own sole authority. Attempts were made in
vain on the part of the Republic to move Clement; he often said that the
Republic had never shown respect to the Apostolic See. Once before, on an
earlier occasion, he had remarked that the God of Venice was their own
aggrandizement, they always tried to fish in troubled waters. How steady he was
in his enmity to the overweening policy of Venice is shown by the fantastic
schemes propounded by him in May 1532 to Andrea da Burgo, concerning the
reconstruction of political conditions in Hungary and Italy.
The intentions of the infidels continued to
be the subject of the most varying reports in Rome during the spring of 1532.
The Imperialists declared that all the rumours of Turkish invasion were
inventions of the Venetians and French in their own interests. They gave this
as their opinion until a letter arrived from the Emperor which left no further
doubt as to the gravity of the situation.[203] A Turkish fleet of two hundred
vessels was bound for Sicily and Apulia and a large army was to attack Hungary.
The result of this news was a regular panic in Rome. The Pope declared on the
13th of March that he intended to levy taxes at the rate of 80,000 ducats a
month for three months; it was matter of daily consultation how this sum was to
be raised. Although at the Pope’s command processions passed through the
streets offering up prayers of intercession, the fickle-minded Romans very soon
recovered their tranquillity.
In the beginning of April Clement received
letters from Constantinople dated the 18th of February; according to these an
attack on Hungary was certainly impending; from the fleet, further reports
declared, there was nothing to fear, as the ships would only make a demonstration.
In May these reports were confirmed; nevertheless, Clement declared that all
the measures of defence must be taken; he wished nothing to be omitted. He was
active in three directions. In the first place, he pushed on the equipment of a
fleet at Genoa under the command of Doria to ensure the safety of the
Mediterranean. At the same time he was anxious for the protection of the coasts
of Italy; Ancona in particular was to be strongly fortified. Lastly, the
Emperor and his brother were to receive 40,000 ducats monthly as a subsidy. All
this demanded an immense outlay of money, and innumerable difficulties arose
in obtaining it.
The situation was still further complicated
by the bad behaviour of King Francis, whose intentions with regard to Italy
scarcely admitted of doubt. He had demanded from the Pope, under a threat of
apostasy, the grant of a double tithe on the Church revenues in consideration
of the danger from the Turks. Clement gave his consent, but added the condition
that ten French galleys should join the Imperial fleet under the command of
Doria. The French King replied that this would be inconsistent with his honour.
He had likewise, on first hearing of the Pope’s naval undertaking, launched out
against Clement in very violent terms, in the presence of the Nuncio; he, the
Pope, allowed himself to be plundered by the Emperor, who, under the cloak of
the Turkish war, concealed designs against France; when the proper time came
he, Francis, would come down on Italy with such a power that he would be able
to drive thence Pope and Emperor. Let Clement look to it lest his protection of Genoa did not one day cost him the loss of Florence. All the
Pope’s attempts to make Francis give way were unavailing. Urged and harassed by
the Imperialists, distrusting the French, Clement at last had no other course
open to him than to withdraw his consent, already given, to the appropriation
by France of the ecclesiastical tithes.
The Pope addressed himself with all his
energy to the fortification of Ancona, Ascoli, and Fano. Antonio da Sangallo
was appointed master of the works; his plans for the fortification of Ancona
are still to be seen in the Uffizi; a huge citadel arose manned in September by
Papal troops. To the extreme dissatisfaction of Venice, the independence of
Ancona was thus brought to an end, and the direct Papal authority established.
This proceeding was uncommonly characteristic of the Pope; not less so was the
sale of the legatine government of the marches of Ancona to Cardinal Benedetto Accolti for the sum of 19,000 ducats.
All manner of proposals were made to raise
money for the Turkish war, but no one showed any readiness to make sacrifices
for the cause, and the Cardinals refused to hear of a reduction of their
incomes. But Clement on this point stood firm, and in a Consistory held on the
21st of June 1532, carried a resolution that the Cardinals should be included
in the Bull imposing on the whole body of the Italian clergy the payment of
half their yearly incomes. Later on a hearth-tax of one ducat was levied
throughout the Papal States.
In the same Consistory of the 21st of June
the despatch of Cardinal Ippolito de’ Medici to the Emperor and Ferdinand I was
agreed to; the latter received 50,000 ducats for the pay of troops. The
preparations for his journey were hurried on as quickly as possible. The
Cardinal, who had always lived in the most secular manner, now assumed the
Hungarian dress ; he has thus been painted in a masterpiece of Titian’s, now
one of the ornaments of the Pitti Gallery. A robust
figure clad in a reddish-brown garment with gold buttons; on the head a red
biretta with peacocks’ feathers; the left hand grasps a scimitar, with the
right he rests a Hungarian mace upon his knee. Ippolito de’ Medici, whose
mission gave rise to various conjectures, left Rome on the 8th of July, and
travelled by rapid stages to Regensburg, which he reached on the 12th of
August.
A few days before, the Sultan with the bulk
of his army had arrived before Guns, a few miles distant from the Austrian
frontier. He at once opened the siege, but met with a very stout resistance.
Nicholas Jurischitsch defended the small town with
heroic determination and held out against the enemy until the 30th of August.
The Sultan, who had set forth in true oriental pomp, reckoned on an easy
victory on account of the divisions in Germany. On closer consideration he did
not deem it advisable to risk a decisive battle at so advanced a season of the
year and at such a distance from home; the accounts he had received of the
strength of the Imperial army did not justify him in expecting a swift and
certain triumph. Therefore the Turkish forces, after having made a rush forward
as far as Oedenburg, fell back through Styria on
Slavonia and Belgrade, suffering terrible losses on their way. In the Wienerwalde the army corps commanded by Kasimbeg was almost annihilated.
Misfortune also overtook the Turks by sea;
for Andrea Doria was successful in sweeping the Ottoman fleet from the Ionian
waters as well as in capturing Koron and Patras. To
both these successes the Pope had materially contributed by his aid.
Unfortunately, the hopes thus raised came to nothing; Doria did not think his
forces sufficient for further enterprises, and returned to Genoa after
plundering the territory of Corinth. Charles V also, notwithstanding the
exhortations of Clement and Loaysa to follow up the
advantages of the fortunate opening of the campaign, remained inactive. The
accounts that reached him of the unruly and undisciplined spirit of his army,
composed as it was of the most incongruous elements, made it appear to him
inadvisable to persevere in the war except under the most urgent necessity. Not
merely the Italian soldiers but many troops of the Empire refused to go into
Hungary; the Protestants took up the cry that the aid supplied by the Empire
was intended exclusively for the defence of Germany; they objected to
strengthen the Catholic Ferdinand. Above all there was the danger threatening
the Emperor from France and England, as well as the unfavourable condition of
Italian affairs. The latter as well as the question of the Council seemed to
call imperatively for a personal discussion with the Pope. Therefore Charles
made up his mind that on his journey to Spain he would take Italy on his way.
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