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CHAPTER
II.
Early
Career of Adrian VI. Projects of Peace and Reform.
The new Pope was indeed a remarkable man, who
through untiring diligence and the faithful performance of duty had raised
himself from a very humble condition. Adrian was born on the 2nd of March 1459,
in the chief city of the Archbishopric of Utrecht. At this date Netherlanders,
who did not belong to the nobility, had no family names; they simply added
their baptismal name to that of their fathers. Thus Adrian was called Florisse or Florenz (i.e. Florenssohn) of Utrecht; his father Florenz Boeyens (i.e. Boeyenssohn),
whose occupation has been variously stated, died early. His excellent mother
Gertrude laid deep the foundations of piety in her gifted son. She also took
care that he received solid instruction and training, and for this purpose she
entrusted him to the Brothers of the Common Life, whose community had been
founded in the Netherlands by Gerhard Groot. According to some accounts, Adrian
first went to school with them at Zwolle according to others, at Deventer. The
impressions thus received lasted throughout his whole life. He learned to look
upon religion as the foundation of all true culture, and at the same time
acquired a love for intellectual pursuits. His earnest view of life, his high
ideal of the priesthood, his horror of all profanation of holy things, his
preference for the study of the Bible and the Fathers which he was to display
later on all this was due to the powerful influence of his first teachers.
In his seventeenth year he entered, during
the summer of 1476, the University of Louvain, which, hardly touched by
humanism, enjoyed a high reputation as a school of theology. During his first
two years he studied philosophy with distinguished success and then, for other
ten, theology and canon law. After thus acquiring a thorough knowledge of the
scholastic system, he held a professorship of philosophy at the College at
Eber, to which he had been attached at the beginning of his student period. In
the year 1490 he became a licentiate in theology, and in 1491 took the degree
of Doctor of Theology. Although from the first he had never been in total
poverty, and now held two small benefices, his means were yet so limited that
his promotion was rendered possible only through the protection of the Princess
Margaret, the widow of Charles the Bold. Adrian’s financial position gradually
improved as the number of his benefices increased. He saw nothing reprehensible
in this abuse, which at that time was general, and at a later date accepted
still further preferment. He made, however, the noblest use of the income which
he thus accumulated, for his alms were munificent. It is also worthy of remark
that as parish priest of Goedereede in South Holland
he took pains to secure a substitute of sound character, and yearly, during the
University vacations, undertook the pastoral charge of his parishioners.
Adrian’s theological lectures, which even
Erasmus attended, as well as his able disputations, steadily increased his
reputation; he helped to form such solid scholars as Heeze, Pighius,
Tapper, Latomus, and Hasselius.
One of his pupils published in 1515 a selection of his disputations, another in
1516 his lectures on the sacraments; both works soon went through many
editions. Chosen in 1497 to be Dean of St. Peter’s Church in Louvain, Adrian
had also to fulfil the additional duties of Chancellor of the University; twice
(in 1493 and 1501) he was appointed Rector. In spite of all these official
duties his application to study was as keen as before; he even found time for
preaching, and three of his sermons have been preserved, which show extensive
learning, but are the dry compositions of a bookworm. In his enthusiasm for
study as well as in his strong moral character he showed himself a worthy pupil
of the Brothers of the Common Life. It is related that he inveighed especially
against the relaxation of the rule of celibacy, in consequence of which the
mistress of a Canon tried to take his life by poison. The repute of the
unspotted life, the learning, humility, and unselfishness of the Louvain
Professor continued to extend, and he became the counsellor of persons in all
ranks of life. Monks, clerics, and laymen from all parts of the Netherlands
came to him for help. It was no wonder that the Court also coveted his
services; probably as early as 1507 the Emperor Maximilian chose him as tutor
for his grandson, the Archduke Charles, the future Emperor, to whom he imparted
that deep sense of religion which he never lost amid all the storms of life.
The Duchess Margaret also employed him in other capacities, and in 1515 she
named him a member of her Council.
Alarmed at the growing influence of the
learned Professor, the ambitious Chièvres determined to withdraw him from the
Netherlands upon some honourable pretext. In October 1515 Adrian was entrusted
with a difficult diplomatic mission to Spain. He was there to secure for his
pupil Charles the full rights of inheritance to the Spanish Crown, and on
Ferdinand’s death was to assume the provisional Government. Ferdinand received
the diplomatist, whom Peter Martyr accompanied as secretary, with openly
expressed mistrust, but Adrian found a protector in Cardinal Ximenes.
When the King died on the 23rd of January 15
16 the Cardinal and Adrian entered on a joint administration of affairs until
the arrival of the new King, Charles. Although within the sphere of politics
differences of opinion were not lacking between the two, yet so highly did the
Cardinal value the pious Netherlander that he used his influence to raise the
latter to places of eminence in the Spanish Church. In June 1516 Adrian was made
Bishop of Tortosa; the revenues of the see were not great; nevertheless Adrian
at once resigned all his benefices in the Low Countries, with the exception of
those at Utrecht. Neither then nor afterwards did he
contemplate a permanent residence in Spain. It was long before he was able to
adapt himself to the conditions of life in that country, so entirely different
from those he had known before. As early as April 1517 he expressed his hope to
a friend that the coming of Charles might be his deliverance “from captivity”,
since he did not suit the Spaniards and Spain pleased him still less. In July
1517 he wrote in jest, “Even if I were Pope, it would be my desire to live in
Utrecht”. At this time he had had a house built there, and made no concealment of
his intention, as soon as his Sovereign’s service permitted, of returning to
his native land in order to devote himself wholly to study.
Very different from Adrian’s expectations was
the actual outcome of events; he was never to see his beloved fatherland again.
In the first instance, Spanish affairs detained him Ximenes and Charles
contrived that Adrian should be appointed Inquisitor by the Pope in Aragon and
Navarre on the 14th of November 1516. Adrian’s conduct of affairs in Spain must
have given Charles great satisfaction, for, on the occasion of the great
nomination of Cardinals in the summer of 1517, he was recommended by the
Emperor for the purple; Leo X consented, and on the 1st of July Adrian received
a place and voice in the Senate of the Church; his title was that of St. John
and St. Paul. He was able to write, in truth, that he had never sought this
honour, and that he had only accepted it under pressure from his friends. From
the former tenor of his life, ordered strictly by rule and divided between
prayer and study, this man of ascetic piety and scholastic learning never for
one moment swerved.
During his sojourn in Spain, the pupil of the
Brothers of the Common Life became closely associated with the men who were
throwing all their strength into projects for ecclesiastical reform. In this
connection the first place must be given to the famous Ximenes,
Cardinal-Archbishop of Toledo. Although often of divergent views in politics,
the Spanish and the Netherlander Cardinal were of one heart and soul where the
interests of the Church were concerned; like Ximenes, so also was Adrian (who
during the controversy between Reuchlin and the Dominicans of Cologne, took the
side of the latter) of opinion that the religious and moral renewal must follow
the lines of the old authorized Church principles within the strict limits of
the existing order.
Around Ximenes, the leader of Church reform
in Spain, grouped themselves three men of kindred spirit, with whom the
Cardinal of Tortosa was also on terms of closest intimacy: the Dominican Juan
Alvarez di Toledo, son of the Duke of Alba; the jurist Tommaso Gozzella of Gaeta and the latter's close friend, the Nuncio
Gian Pietro Caraffa.
On the death of Ximenes, on the 8th of
November 1517, the Cardinal of Tortosa carried on the Government alone until
the coming of the King, which took place soon afterwards. Charles placed the
greatest confidence in his former master, and often employed him on difficult
negotiations, and repeatedly lent a willing ear to his counsels. Thus Adrian,
who since the 3rd of March 1518 had also become Inquisitor-General of Castille
and Leon, was successful in restraining the young King from giving his assent
to the demands of the Cortes of Aragon that the existing judicial procedure of
the Inquisition should be essentially altered. Against Luther’s errors Adrian
had pronounced from the first, and when the University of Louvain asked their
former Rector for his opinion of the teaching newly set forth by the Wittenberg
professor, he, in a letter intended for publication, remarked that his heresies
were so crude that they would hardly be attributed to a theological student.
While Adrian encouraged Luther’s condemnation, he at the same time warned the
authorities of Louvain to take care that Luther’s own words were accurately
quoted. During the Diet of Worms he strongly exhorted the Emperor to protect
the Church. Where the faith was in question Adrian was inflexible—in other
respects he showed exceptional kindness of heart, and he gave proof of this in
repeated instances. When one of his servants fell ill of fever on a journey,
the Cardinal gave up his litter to him, and in spite of bodily infirmity made
the rest of the toilsome way on horseback.
Before Charles embarked for the Netherlands
and Germany, on the 20th of May 1520, he appointed the Cardinal of Tortosa to
be his Viceroy in Spain. Charles was justified in thinking that he had chosen
the right man. Adrian’s position as a Cardinal and InquisitorGeneral was a highly important one yet he by no means failed to secure affection. His
independent spirit, as compared with the intrigues of other Netherlanders in
Spain, and his unspotted integrity won for him the respect of many. But he was
a foreigner; that no Spaniard could overlook, least of all the grandees of the
kingdom. Charles had hardly left before the insurrection of the Castilian
Comuneros broke out, and Adrian, on foreign soil and without money, found
himself in the greatest embarrassment. His sensitive nature was not able to
cope with a most difficult situation; moreover, as a foreigner, he
misunderstood the actual circumstances confronting him. The experience was for
him a real martyrdom, for, now in his sixty-first year, his health was
shattered by the dangers and excitement of this time. The full weight of these
responsibilities was still pressing upon Adrian when, on the 24th of January
1522, at Vittoria, in the Basque country, he heard through Blasio Ortiz,
provisor of the Bishop of Calahorra, the wholly
unexpected announcement that a yet heavier burden had been imposed upon him.
The news seemed incredible, although confirmed by letters from other quarters.
Not until the 9th of February, when Antonio de Studillo,
one of Cardinal Carvajal’s chamberlains, who had been delayed by violent
snowstorms, entered Vittoria bearing the official despatch of the Sacred
College declaring the result of the election, could all doubt be allayed as to
the truth of an event of such worldwide importance.
The wish, so often anxiously expressed by the
best representatives of Christendom, for a Pope in whom piety, learning and
sanctity should be combined, was now granted. The custom, which since 1378 had
become an unbroken precedent, of raising only an Italian to the Papal throne,
was now interrupted. A conclave, composed almost exclusively of Italians, had,
against their own inclinations, for the first time after a lapse of 461 years,
elected to this position of great eminence a man of German origin, and one who
was worthy, on account of his virtues, as hardly any other, of so great an
honour.
Immersed in the whirlpool of secular life and
of political affairs, the Popes of the Renaissance and, above all, Leo X, had
too often lost sight of the weightiest of all duties, those inherent in their
ecclesiastical station. Now the call had come to one who stood entirely aloof
from Italian polities, and whose heart was set on the defence of Christendom
and the restoration of the relaxed discipline of the Church. A simple,
sincerely pious, and humble man, who had fled from rather than sought out
titles and honours, had risen from the rank of a poor student to that of
University Professor, to become the tutor of an Emperor, a Spanish Bishop,
Cardinal, Grand Inquisitor, and Viceroy, and finally Chief Pastor of the universal
Church.
On the first reception of the news of his
election, Adrian had displayed that immovable calm which was one of his most
prominent characteristics, and was in keeping with his racial origin, as well
as with his deep piety. All accounts agree that his elevation, so far from
being a source of pleasure to him, distressed him, and although all the letters
announcing the outcome of that crisis in his life have not been preserved, yet
those known to us are sufficient to show the emotions of his soul. On the 2nd
of February 1522 he wrote to Henry VIII that he had neither sought nor wished
for election; his strength was unequal to his task; did he not fear to injure
the cause of God and His Church, he would decline the tiara. In like manner, in
a letter to the Emperor, he dwelt on the sorrow which his accession caused him
when he considered how weak and powerless he was; rest, and not an unbearable
burden, was what he needed.
Adrian also showed imperturbable gravity
when, on the 9th of February, Antonio de Studillo, as
envoy of the Sacred College, handed him the official announcement of his
election. He read the letter without remark, and then, in his dry manner, told Studillo, who was fatigued by the journey, to go and take
some repose. On the same day he composed his answer to the College of
Cardinals; in this he also reiterated his sense of unfitness for his new
dignity and his willingness to have declined it; but, trusting in God, whose
honour alone was his aim in all things, and also out of respect for the
Cardinals, he acquiesced in his election; as soon as the Legates arrived and
the fleet was ready to sail, he would make all haste to reach Rome. But the
letters written by him to an intimate friend in the Netherlands reflect still
more plainly than these official documents the nobleness and purity of his
soul. “Dear friend”, he wrote on the 15th of February 1522 from Vittoria to the
Syndic of Utrecht, Florentius Oem van Wyngarden, “there
can be no one who would not have been surprised and who was not astonished at
the Cardinals’ unanimous choice of one so poor, so well-nigh unknown, and,
moreover, so far removed from them as to fill the position of Vicar of Christ.
To God only is it easy thus suddenly to uplift the lowly. This honour brings me
no gladness, and I dread taking upon me such a burden. I would much rather
serve God in my provostship at Utrecht than as Bishop, Cardinal, or Pope. But
who am I, to withstand the call of the Lord? And I hope that He will supply in
me what is lacking, and continue to grant me strength for my burden. Pray for
me, I beseech you, and through your devout prayers may He vouchsafe to teach me
how to fulfil His commandments, and make me worthy to serve the best interests
of His Church”.
Not until he had received the official notification
of his election did Adrian resign his Viceroyalty and assume the title of
Pope-elect. Contrary to the custom observed for five hundred years, he adhered
to his baptismal name. He was determined, even as Pope, to be the same man as
before.
Although Adrian was now in full possession of
his Papal prerogatives, he yet resolved, in deference to the urgent wish of the
Cardinals, to abstain from using them until the arrival of the Legates. But in
order to be secure in every respect, he ordered, on the 16th of February, a
notarial deed to be executed registering his consent to his election. This was
done in strict secrecy the public declaration was reserved until after the
arrival of the Cardinal-Legates, which was delayed in unexpected ways. From day
to day Adrian increasingly felt the embarrassment of his position, whereby he
seemed to be reconsidering his acceptance of the Papacy. Nor, until he had
publicly given consent to his election, could he act effectively as Pope, use
his influence with the Princes of Europe for the restoration of peace, or for
arbitration. When, in the beginning of March, there were still no tidings of
the departure of the Cardinal-Legates, Adrian made up his mind to wait no
longer, and on the 8th of that month, in the presence of several bishops and
prelates, and before a notary and witnesses, he made the solemn declaration of
his acceptance of the Papacy. With emphasis he expressed, on this occasion, his
trust that the Divine Founder of the Primacy would endow him, though unworthy,
with the strength necessary to protect the Church against the attacks of the
Evil One, and to bring back the erring and deceived to the unity of the Church
after the example of the Good Shepherd.
Adrian’s biographer pertinently remarks: “It
must have been a more than ordinary trust in God which led him to bend his back
to a burden the weight of which was immeasurable, and to take over the colossal
inheritance of all the strifes and enmities which Leo
had been powerless to allay. In the background, apart from the German revolt,
lurked also a schism with France, whose King, through the Concordat with Leo,
had made himself master of the French Church and was in no haste to acknowledge
the German Pope, the creature, as it was asserted, of the Emperor”.
Not less great were the difficulties
presented by the States of the Church, and in particular by the condition of
Rome itself. The ferment among the youth of the city and the divisions among
the Cardinals, many of whom acted quite despotically, gave rise towards the end
of January to the worst apprehensions. As time went on the situation became
more precarious from week to week. The circumstance that the three Cardinals at
the head of affairs changed every month added to the insecurity and brought men
into office who were altogether disqualified. An unparalleled confusion
prevailed; above all, the want of money was pressingly felt, and the Cardinals
were reduced to the pawning of the remainder of the Papal mitres and tiaras;
this led to the discovery that the costly jewels in the tiara of Paul II had
been exchanged for imitation stones. So great was their financial necessity
that on one occasion they could not raise fifty ducats for the expenses of an
envoy who was deputed to ascertain the state of affairs in Perugia : in order
to make up the amount they were obliged to pledge some altar lights.
On the 18th of February the Sacred College
concluded a temporary treaty with the Duke of Urbino; they also hoped to come
to an understanding with the Baglioni in Perugia. But in the Romagna,
especially in Bologna, great unrest was felt ; Ravenna and Foligno showed a readiness to throw off the authority of the Regents appointed by Leo
X. The Marquis of Mantua asked in vain for his pay as Captain-General of the Church.
The plague broke out in Rome, in addition to which great excesses were
committed by the Corsican soldiery; assassinations took place daily with
impunity. Nothing else could be expected, since the discord between the
Cardinals of French and Imperialist sympathies showed no abatement. When
Cardinals Ridolfi and Salviati wished to excuse the Medicean Governor of Loreto, Cardinal Grimani remarked: “Leo X
having ruined the Church, his relations now wish to bring all that is left to
the ground”.
At the beginning of March little was known in
Rome of Adrian’s movements, the report of his death having often been current.
At last, on the 18th of that month, Studillo arrived
with the first authentic information concerning the new Pope. He was described
as a man of middle height, with grey hair, an aquiline nose, and small, lively
eyes his complexion was rather pale than sanguine; he was already a little
bent, but still vigorous in body, being especially a good walker; he still
continued to wear his Cardinal’s dress, kept only a few servants, and loved
solitude. In bearing he was extremely reserved, neither giving way to
impetuosity nor inclined to jocosity; on receiving the news of his election he
had shown no signs of joy, but had sighed deeply; he was in the habit of going
early to bed and of rising at daybreak. He said Mass daily, and was an
indefatigable worker; his speech was slow and generally in Latin, which he
spoke not exactly with polish, but yet not incorrectly he understood Spanish,
and sometimes tried to express himself in that language. His most earnest wish
was to see the Princes of Christendom united in arms against the Turk. In
religious affairs he was very firm, and was determined that no one henceforward
should receive more than one ecclesiastical office, since he adhered to the
principle that benefices should be supplied with priests, and not priests with
benefices.
Such reports made no pleasant impression on
the worldly-members of the Curia. At first they had flattered themselves with
the hope that, out of conscientious scruples, the pious Netherlander would have
declined election; then the opinion gained ground that he would certainly not
come to Rome. Now they realized with what a firm hand he intended to direct
affairs. A total breach with the traditions of government as embodied not only
in the system of Leo X, but in that of all the Renaissance Popes, was to be
expected. With fear and trembling the coming of the stranger was awaited;
everything about him was matter of dislike, even the circumstance that he had
not changed his name.
Studillo handed to the Cardinals Adrian’s letter of thanks dated the 28th of February,
to the effect that he only awaited the arrival of the Legates to begin his
journey to Rome; the College of Cardinals replied forthwith that it was
unnecessary to wait for their coming, but that he ought to hasten with all
possible speed to Rome, his true place of residence. Individual Cardinals, such
as Campeggio, also adjured the Pope in special letters to expedite his journey
in order to bring to an end the confusion and incompetence there prevailing.
How much the Cardinals still feared that he might not permanently establish his
court in Rome is shown by their original hesitation in sending to the Pope the
fisherman’s ring. The longer the Pope’s arrival was delayed, the greater was
the general dissatisfaction and the fear that Spain might prove a second
Avignon; this last alarm was heightened by a forged brief summoning the
Cardinals to Spain.
In reality Adrian had never thought of
remaining in Spain. His repeated assurances that it was his most urgent wish to
come to Rome have been confirmed by unimpeachable testimony; however, obstacles
of various kinds stood in the way of his departure. Adrian had to transfer his
functions as Viceroy, and, owing to the voyage being insecure on account of the
Turkish pirates, it was necessary to levy troops for the protection of the
flotilla to secure them he was forced, owing to his poverty, to rely on
foreign, that is Spanish, support. An overland route through France was out of
the question, since the Emperor would have seen in such a step an open bid for
the favour of his enemy.
The difficulty of the Pope’s position,
confronted as he was by two great rival powers, each of whom wished to secure the
Papal influence for the attainment of his own objects, showed itself also in
other ways. The Imperialists gave the new Pope no rest with their irksome
importunity. The Ambassador Manuel took a delight in offering unasked-for
advice, sometimes tendered in letters which were frankly discourteous, while
Mendoza made attempts to bribe those in Adrian’s confidence. Charles V was
assiduous in approaching the Pope with a host of wishes and business concerns,
but mainly with the request that he should, like his predecessors, join in the
alliance against the French. Adrian’s dealings with his former lord and master
were marked by great shrewdness, caution, and reserve where he could he acted
as the father and friend, but never at the cost of his high office as head of
universal Christendom.
After waiting long, and in vain, in Vittoria
for the arrival of La Chaulx, the Emperor’s envoy,
Adrian, on the 12th of March, betook himself by S. Domingo and Logroño, in the
valley of the Ebro, to Saragossa, which he reached on the 29th of March. Many
Spanish bishops and prelates, with a great number of grandees, had assembled in
the capital of Aragon to pay homage to the new Pope, the first whom Spain had
ever seen. As well as La Chaulx, envoys also soon
arrived from England, Portugal, and Savoy whose chief task it was to induce
Adrian to enter the anti-French League. In one of the letters in Charles’s own
hand which he delivered, the Emperor had permitted himself to remark that
Adrian had been elected out of consideration for himself. In his answer,
animated by great goodwill, the Pope declared with delicate tact that he was
convinced that the Cardinals, in making their choice, had been mindful of the
Emperor’s interests; at the same time, he felt very happy that he had not received
the tiara, the acquisition of which must be pure and spotless, through
Charles's entreaties; thus he would feel himself to be even more the Emperor’s
ally than if he had owed the Papacy to his mediation.
Adrian also showed plainly in other ways
that, with all his personal liking for the Emperor, he would not, on that
account, as Pope, follow the lead of the Imperial policy. He declined
positively to take part in the anti-French League. With all the more insistence
he called upon Charles to forward the cause of peace by the acceptance of
moderate, reasonable, and equitable terms, and provisionally to conclude a
longer armistice. Every day made it clearer that he looked upon his Pontificate
as an apostolate of peace. The interests he was bent on serving were not those
of individual monarchs, but of Christendom in general. On this account he had
from the beginning urged the necessity of restoring peace among the Christian
states and of uniting them in opposition to the oncoming assaults of the
Ottoman power. On behalf of peace it was decided to send at once special envoys
to the Emperor and to the Kings of France, England, and Portugal. Stefano
Gabriele Merino, Archbishop of Bari, was appointed to proceed as Nuncio to
France. Adrian had asked the French King to grant the Nuncio a safe-conduct,
and at the same time exhorted Francis and the most important personages of his
Court to make for peace. This letter was not despatched until after the 8th of
March, when Adrian had publicly and solemnly accepted the Papal office. Francis
I complained of this in very harsh terms, saying that the accession of the Pope
had been communicated to him later than was customary it would even seem that
he went so far as to still address the duly elected Pontiff as Cardinal of Tortosa.
Adrian replied to this calmly in a brief of the 21st of April 1522. The
apostolic gentleness of tone disarmed the French King in such a way that in his
second letter of the 24th of June he evinced a very different temper. Francis
avowed his inclination to conclude an armistice, and even invited the Pope to
make his journey to Rome by way of France.
Adrian declined this invitation, as he did
also that of Henry VIII to pass through England and Germany on his way to
Italy. He wished to avoid every appearance of sanctioning by a visit to the
English King the latter’s warlike bearing towards France. But he was all the
more distrustful of the intentions of Francis, inasmuch as the improved
attitude of the French King was undoubtedly connected with his military
failures in upper Italy. French domination in that quarter was well-nigh at an
end the defeat at Bicocca on the 27th of April was followed on the 30th of May
by the loss of Genoa. To the strange advice of Manuel, that he should travel
through the Netherlands and Germany to Italy, Adrian also sent a refusal.
Towards the College of Cardinals Adrian
maintained the same position of independence with which he had encountered the
sovereign powers. Through his intimate friend, Johannes Winkler, he let the
former understand that they were in nowise to alienate, divide, or mortgage
vacant offices, but that all such must be reserved intact for the Pope's
disposal.
Nor was Adrian long in coming forward as a
reformer. He set to work in earnest, since, to the amazement of the Curia, he
did not simply confine himself to bringing the rules of the Chancery into line
with established usage, but in many instances made changes whereby the
privileges of the Cardinals were specifically curtailed. Jointly with the publication
of these regulations, on the 24th of April 1522 the Pope appointed a special
authority to deal with the petitions which were always coming in in large
numbers.
In the first week of May, Adrian was anxious
to leave Saragossa and to pass through Lerida to Barcelona, but an outbreak of
the plague in both cities caused a fresh hindrance, and another port of
departure had to be found. In the meantime the Pope wrote to the Cardinals and
the Romans on the 19th of May, and at the same time enumerated the difficulties
with which he had to contend before he could get together a flotilla to protect
him on his voyage to Italy across the Gulf of Lyons, then infested by Turkish
pirates. By the 3rd of June he was at last able to inform the Cardinals that
these hindrances had been overcome.
On the 11th of June the Pope left Saragossa,
and reached Tortosa on the eve of Corpus Christi (June 18th). On the 26th of
June he wrote from there that he intended to embark in a few days. As all his
vessels were not yet assembled, new delay
arose; and not until the 8th of July was the Pope able to take ship, in spite
of the excessive heat, in the neighbouring port of Ampolla.
His departure was so unexpected that the greater part of the suite did not
reach the harbour until nightfall. Owing to unfavourable weather it was
impossible to sail for Tarragona before the 10th of July. Here again a stoppage
took place, a sufficient number of ships not being available. At last, on the
evening of the 5th of August, the fleet put out to sea. The hour of departure
was kept a secret. On board were Cardinal Cesarini, representing the Sacred
College, Mendoza on behalf of the Emperor, and nearly two thousand armed men.
The galley which conveyed Adrian was recognizable by its awning of crimson
damask, bearing the Papal escutcheon.
In addition to Marino Caracciolo,
who was already resident at the court of Charles, Adrian VI had, on the 15th of
July, sent to the Emperor another intimate friend in the person of Bernardo
Pimentel. Charles, who had landed at Santander on the 16th of July, despatched
to the Pope as his representative Herr von Zevenbergen, who, among numerous
other matters, was to express the Emperor’s wish to see Adrian in person before
he left Spain. Adrian, however, on various pleas, evaded the fulfilment of this
wish. In a letter of the 27th of July he assured the Emperor of his great
desire to effect a meeting, but that he was reluctant to suggest a rapid
journey in the great heat, and that he himself could not wait longer, as his
departure for Rome had, in other ways, been so long delayed.
Since Adrian, previously, had expressed a
repeated wish to see the Emperor before he left Spain, this excuse was hardly
sufficient to explain the fact, which was everywhere attracting attention, that
the Pope, after a month’s delay, had embarked at the very moment of Charles’s
arrival on Spanish soil. Reasons were not wanting why Adrian should avoid a
personal interview. He knew well that Charles disapproved of his dealings with
France; he also may have feared that Charles would remind him of other wishes
now impossible to gratify. Among the latter was the nomination of new
Cardinals, a point urgently pressed by Charles, and refused in the letter of
excuse above mentioned. But of greater weight than all these considerations was
Adrian’s regard for that position of impartiality which, as ruler of the
Church, he had determined to adopt; he would not give the French King cause to
suppose that by such an interview he was transferring to the side of his
adversary the support of the Holy See. But in order that the Emperor might not
be offended, Adrian wrote again, on the 5th of August, from on board ship, an
affectionate letter, containing, together with valuable advice, a further
apology for his departure; letters from Rome and Genoa had informed him how
necessary his presence in Italy was. Their different ways of looking at the
relations with France were also touched upon: he knew well that the Emperor was
averse to a treaty with France until the French King’s plumage, real or
borrowed, was closely clipped, so that he could not direct his flight wherever
his fancy pleased him; “but we also take into consideration the dangers now
threatening Christendom from the Turk, and are of opinion that the greater
dangers should be first attacked. If we protect and defend the interests of our
faith, even at the loss of our worldly advantage, instead of meeting the evils
of Christendom with indifference, the Lord will be our helper”.
Although the fleet on which Adrian was bound
for Italy consisted of fifty vessels, the coast-line was followed the whole way
for safety. At Barcelona the reception was cordial, but at Marseilles it was
impossible to stop owing to distrust of the French. The Pope kept the feast of
the Assumption at S. Stefano al Mare, near San Remo at Savona the Archbishop Tommaso Riario showed all the splendid hospitality of a prelate of
the Renaissance. From the 17th to the 19th of August Adrian stayed in Genoa
comforting the inhabitants, on whom the visitations of war had fallen heavily.
Here came to greet him the Duke of Milan and the Commanders-in-Chief of the
Imperialists, Prospero Colonna, the Marquis of Pescara, and Antonio da Leyva.
The passage to Leghorn was hindered by stormy
weather, and the Pope was detained for four days in the harbour of Portofino.
Amid incessant fear of attacks from Turkish pirates, Leghorn was reached at
last on the 23rd of August. Here Adrian was received in state by the
representatives of the States of the Church and five Tuscan Cardinals : Medici,
Petrucci, Passerini, Ridolfi, and Piccolomini. The
latter were in full lay attire, wearing Spanish hats and carrying arms; for
this the Pope seriously rebuked them. When he was offered the costly service of
silver with which the banquet table in the citadel had been spread, he replied:
“Here, of a truth, the Cardinals fare like kings; may they inherit better
treasures in heaven”. He disregarded the entreaties of Cardinal Medici and the
Florentines that he should visit Pisa and Florence and at first make Bologna
his residence, on account of the plague. “To Rome, to Rome”, he replied, “I
must needs go”. The presence of the plague there caused him no anxiety; with
the first favourable wind he made haste to embark, without informing the
Cardinals, who were sitting over their dinner.
Late in the evening, on the 25th of August,
Adrian lay off Civita Vecchia,
and on the following morning set foot for the first time on the soil of the
Papal States. A great concourse of persons, among whom were many members of the
Curia, awaited him on the shore; Cardinals Colonna and Orsini were present to
represent the Sacred College. To the greetings of the former the Pope made a
short but suitable reply. Here, as in all other places visited on his journey,
he first made his way to the cathedral; thence he proceeded to the Rocca, where
he took a midday collation and held audiences. By the 27th of August the Pope
was again on board. To the beggars who pressed around him he said : “I love
poverty, and you shall see what I will do for you”. Head-winds made the landing
at Ostia on the 28th of August a matter of difficulty. Adrian, in a small boat,
with only six companions, was the first to gain the land; he sprang ashore
without assistance, and with almost youthful alacrity. Here also he visited the
church without delay and prayed. The Cardinals had prepared a repast in the
Castle, but the Pope declined their invitation. He ate alone, and, at once
mounting a mule, made his way to the cloister of St. Paul without the Walls. The
Cardinals and the others who accompanied him followed in the greatest disorder,
through mud and heat, the rapid progress of the Pontiff, who was met on his way
by sightseers moved by curiosity, and by the Swiss guard carrying a litter.
Into this he got reluctantly, but suddenly quitted it and again mounted his
mule. His vigorous bearing astonished all who saw him, for during the voyage
and even after his arrival Adrian had felt so ill that many were afraid he
would not recover; having reached his journey’s end, he seemed to regain youth
and strength. He rode in front in animated conversation with the Ambassador
Manuel. “His face is long and pale”, writes the Venetian Envoy; “his body is
lean, his hands are snow-white. His whole demeanour impresses one with reverence;
even his smile has a tinge of seriousness”. All who saw the Pope for the first
time were struck by his ascetic appearance. In a letter sent to Venice the
writer says, “I could have sworn that he had become a monk”.
The plague being unabated in Rome, many
advised the Pope to be crowned in St. Paul’s. Adrian refused, and decided that
the ceremony should take place in St. Peter’s with all possible simplicity; the
coronation over, he intended to remain in Rome notwithstanding the plague, since
he desired by his presence to tranquillize his sorely afflicted subjects and to
restore order in the city. Owing to the Pope’s absence and the outbreak of the
pestilence, a majority of the court had left Rome, so that Castiglione compared
the city to a plundered abbey. The state of affairs was utterly chaotic; while
the faithful had recourse to litanies and processions, a Greek named Demetrius
was allowed to go through the farce of exorcising the plague by means of an
oath sworn over an ox, whereupon the Papal Vicar at last interfered, for it was
understood that Adrian was rapidly approaching, and his arrival on the
following day was even looked upon as settled.
On the 29th of August, at a very early hour,
the Pope said a low Mass—as he had never omitted to do even amid the
difficulties of the voyage—and afterwards presented himself to the Cardinals in
the noble transept of St. Paul’s. He received them all with a friendly smile,
but singled out no one for special recognition. Then followed the first adoration
of the Sacred College in the small sacristy adjoining. On this occasion
Carvajal, as Dean and Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia, delivered an address, in which
he frankly bewailed the calamities called down upon the Church by the election
of unworthy and simoniacal Popes, and welcomed Adrian
the more joyfully inasmuch as he had been chosen by other means. Although in
the presence of such a Chief Pastor no special exhortations were necessary, he
would yet ask him to lay seven points to heart : first, to remove simony,
ignorance, and tyranny, and all other vices which deform the Church, while
turning to good counsellors and keeping a firm hand on those in office;
secondly, to reform the Church in accordance with her Councils and Canons, so
far as the times permitted; thirdly, to honour and exalt the good Cardinals and
prelates, and have a care for the poor; fourthly, to see to the impartial
administration of justice and to confer offices on the best men fifthly, to
support the faithful, especially the nobility and the religious orders, in
their necessities; sixthly, the speaker touched on the duty of opposing the
Turks in their threatened attacks on Hungary and Rhodes; to do this an
armistice among the Christian princes and the levy of money for a crusade were indispensable.
In conclusion, Carvajal urged the reconstruction of St. Peter’s, which to his
great grief had been pulled down. If the Pope fulfilled these conditions, his
glory would shine forth before God and men.
In his short reply the Pope thanked the Cardinals
for his election and explained the reasons of his late arrival, at the same
time stating his agreement with the programme of reform so comprehensively
unfolded by Carvajal; he then asked the Cardinals to waive their right to give
asylum to criminals; to this all consented. The second adoration in the
basilica of St. Paul then followed, and in a further speech Adrian impressively
adjured the Cardinals, prelates, envoys, and Roman dignitaries present to help
him with their prayers.
The extraordinary strength of character at
once exhibited by the new Pope aroused attention. Out of the numerous petitions
presented to him he only countersigned those submitted to him by the
conclavists. When Ascanio Colonna ventured to intercede for Lelio della Valle, who had committed a murder, Adrian
replied: “Pardons for cases of murder will not be given except for very weighty
reasons, and after hearing the case of the injured parties. We are determined
to listen to both sides, since it is our intention to see that justice is done,
though we perish in the attempt.” Then a palafreniere whom Adrian had brought with him from Spain asked for a canonry. “Canonries,”
he was told, “will be given only to those who can be residentiary, not to palafrenieri.” Even the Bishop of Pesaro, on applying for a
canonry in St. Peter’s, was met with a flat refusal; to Cardinal Campeggio, who
expressed a similar wish, Adrian replied, “We will see.” All sales of
dispensations the Pope absolutely refused; the favours which were in his power
to bestow he preferred to bestow freely. When, finally, the palafrenieri of Leo X thronged round him in a body, and on their knees begged to be
reinstated in their office, he merely gave a sign with his hand that they might
arise. To the Romans, who intended to set up a triumphal arch in his honour at
the Porta Portese, he intimated his desire that they
would discontinue the works, since such an erection was heathenish and out of
keeping with Christian piety. The deputation of the city magistrates was met
with words of encouragement in view of the prevailing pestilence. “The
inhabitants,” he remarked, “must be of good cheer; he personally would be
satisfied with very little.
Although, at Adrian’s express wish, all
extravagant display was avoided on his entry into Rome, the inhabitants would
not allow themselves to be prevented from decorating their houses with
tapestries. Delighted, at the end of nine long months, to look once again upon
their Pope, they went out to meet him with acclamations of joy. Adrian was carried
as far as the Porta S. Paolo; there he mounted a white charger. At the Church
of S. Celso he was met by a procession of children with the picture of the
Madonna del Portico, which, during thirteen days, had been carried through Rome
on account of the plague, Adrian not only removed his hat, but also his
skull-cap, and bent low before the sacred picture, while the Cardinals only
slightly uncovered. While the cannon thundered from St. Angelo, the procession
wended its way under the burning August sun to the basilica of the Prince of
the Apostles. On the following Sunday, the 31st of August, the coronation took
place in St. Peter’s with the customary ceremonial. On account of the plague
the concourse of people was not so great as usual. The festivities, which were
carried out with economy, passed off quietly, but the coronation banquet,
without being lavish, was not stinted. On rising from table the Pope passed
into an adjoining room and conversed with the Cardinals ; he then withdrew to
his own apartments.
The Pope’s first edict proscribed under heavy
penalties the wearing of arms in the city and banished all disorderly persons
from Rome. A second ordinance forbade ecclesiastics to grow beards, a fashion
which made them look more like soldiers than priests. Such simplicity, piety,
and determination as were displayed by the new Pope had never before been seen
by the members of the Curia. They were in sharp contrast to the excessive
display, the brilliant secularity, and the refined culture which had pervaded
the court of Leo X.
While the Cardinals, prelates, and courtiers
of the last pontificate murmured in secret, unbiassed observers did not refrain
from expressing their approval of the new Pope. His exemplary and holy life,
his great simplicity, piety, and love of justice made a deep impression even on
those who were disposed to watch him with critical eyes. “Adrian”, one of this
class reports, “is a friend of learning, especially theology. He cannot suffer
ignorant priests. His time is divided with strict regularity between prayer and
official work. He has only two personal attendants, Netherlanders and homely
fellows; in other respects his retinue is composed of as few persons as is
possible”. To the Cardinals who begged that he would maintain a household more
befitting his rank, he replied that that was impossible until he had first
discharged his predecessor’s debts. When he was informed that Leo had employed
a hundred palafrenieri, he made the sign of the cross
and said that four would suffice for all his needs, but as it was unseemly that
he should have fewer than a Cardinal, he would appoint twelve. It was the
general opinion that the new Pope’s outward appearance was at once dignified
and agreeable; although he was in his sixty-fourth year he did not look more
than sixty. He always spoke Latin and, as the Italians did not fail to remark,
correctly, seeing that he was a “barbarian”; his guttural pronunciation gave
less satisfaction. In contrast to Leo X’s love of recreation, it was observed
by all that Adrian did not abate, as Pope, his strict mode of living and, as
the Venetian Ambassador remarked, set thereby a thoroughly edifying example.
The Spaniard Blasio Ortiz said that he had
seen nothing bad in the Pope, who was a mirror of all the virtues. A strict
observer of the canonical hours, Adrian rose in the night to say Matins,
returned again to his bed, and was up again by daybreak ready to say Mass and
attend that of his chaplain. That a Pope should offer the holy sacrifice daily
was such an innovation that even chroniclers of a later day call special
attention to this evidence of Adrian’s piety. An hour in the forenoon was
devoted to audiences, which Adrian usually gave in the study, lined with books,
adjoining his bedchamber. His dinner and supper, which he always ate alone,
were of the utmost simplicity; a dish of veal or beef, sometimes a soup,
sufficed: on fast days he had fish only. On his personal wants he spent as
little as possible; it was even said that he ate off small platters like a poor
village priest. An old woman servant, from the Netherlands, looked after the
cooking and washing. After his meal he took a siesta, then finished what
remained to be said of his office, and again gave audiences. Conscientious in
the extreme, circumspect and cautious in his dealings, Adrian, suddenly plunged
into an entirely new set of circumstances, appeared to be wanting in
resolution. It was further deplored that he was disinclined to relax his
studious habits, not only of reading but of writing and composing, for these,
combined with his love of solitude, made him difficult of access. Moreover, his
curt manner of speech was very displeasing to the loquacious Italians. Adrian’s
capital offence, however, in the eyes of the Curia, lay in his being a foreigner.
All Italians of that period prided themselves on their high culture; they
looked down with contempt on the natives of all other countries, and specially
on the coarse “barbarians” of Germany. And now in Rome, hitherto the centre of
the Renaissance of art and letters, one of these barbarians was ruling and
would settle the direction Italian politics should follow.
The antagonism of nationality between Adrian
and the Italians was further intensified by the circumstance that the Pope was
now too far advanced in years to adapt himself to those things around him which
were indifferent in themselves and of minor importance. With the speech and
social habits of those amongst whom he had come to sojourn he never became
familiar; there was even a touch of pedantry in his obstinate clinging to his
former way of living. His long years of professorial duty had cut him off
completely from the charm of manner and social address on which the Italians
set so much value. Even in Rome he remained the same quiet, dry scholar,
devoted to the seclusion of his study and easily put out of humour by the
bustle of general society. The homeliness of Adrian’s person and his austere
asceticism compared with Leo X, presented a contrast a greater than which it is
impossible to conceive. This contrast, conspicuous from every point of view,
was especially noticeable in Adrian’s attitude towards the culture of the
Italian Renaissance.
All persons of culture were then filled with
enthusiasm for the art of antiquity. But Adrian, whose turn of mind was
pre-eminently serious and unimpassioned, was so absolutely insensible to such
forms of beauty that he looked upon them merely as the debris of paganism. To
his exclusively religious temperament the array of gleaming marbles set up by
his predecessors in the Belvedere afforded not the slightest interest. When the
group of the Laocoon, then considered the most remarkable of these works of
art, was pointed out to him, he observed in his dry manner: “After all, they
are only the effigies of heathen idols”. This might be regarded as merely a bit
of gossip if the anecdote were not well authenticated. “He will soon”, said
Girolamo Negri, Cardinal Cornaro’s secretary, “be
doing as Gregory the Great did, and order the antique statuary to be burned
into lime for the building of St. Peter’s”. As a matter of fact, he sold some
antiques, and had all the entrances to the Belvedere walled up save one, the
key of which he kept in his own custody.
The magnificent art of the Renaissance also
seemed to be a closed book to Adrian. The continuation of the paintings in the
Hall of Constantine was stopped, and Raphael’s pupils had to seek employment
elsewhere. And yet Adrian was not totally wanting in artistic culture, but
to his northern taste the Italian art of the Renaissance was unpalatable. He
ordered a Dutch painter, Jan Scorel, to paint his
portrait. Moreover, his interest in the progress of the reconstruction of St.
Peter’s was sincere, although here again his point of view was religious rather
than artistic. Another circumstance which contradicts the notion that Adrian
held uncivilized views about art is the fact that, in spite of his monetary
distress, he redeemed the tapestries of Raphael which had been pledged on the
death of Leo X, and restored them once more to the Sixtine Chapel on the anniversary celebration of his coronation.
Adrian was not at home amidst the splendour
of the Vatican, and from the first had felt disinclined to occupy it. He wished
to have, as a dwelling, a simple house with a garden. The Imperial Ambassador
reports with amazement this strange project of the newly elected Pope to whom
God had given the noblest palaces in Rome. No small astonishment was likewise
caused by Adrian’s abstention from any signs of favour towards the swarm of accomplished
poets and humanists with whom Leo X had been so much associated. Although not
indifferent to the elegance of a fine Latin style, the practical Netherlander
thought little of the gifts of the versifiers; he even sought opportunities for
evincing his contempt for them. On appointing Paolo Giovio to a benefice at Como, the Pope remarked that he conferred this distinction
upon him because Giovio was an historian and not a
poet. What Adrian took especial exception to in the humanist poets of his day was
the lax habit of life of the majority, and their frivolous coquetry with the
spirit of heathen mythology. Leo X, in his enthusiastic admiration of beauty,
had overlooked such excrescences; the serious-minded Teuton rightly judged them
by a standard of much greater severity. Yet his reaction was carried too far.
He discriminated too little between the good and the bad elements in humanism;
even Sadoleto, with his excellence and piety, found
no favour in his eyes. He caused simple amazement by his depreciatory criticism
of the letters, the theme of general admiration, remarking that they were
letters of a poet.
Adrian was completely a stranger in the midst
of the intellectual culture of which Leo’s reign had been the culminating
point. His entrance into Rome was followed by an abrupt transition, all the
more strongly felt since the Medici Pope had flung himself without reserve into
every tendency of the Renaissance. Loud were the laments over the new era and
its transformation of the Vatican, once echoing with the voices of literature
and art, into a silent cloister. All Adrian’s admirable qualities were
forgotten he was looked upon only as a foreigner, alien to the arts, manners,
and politics of Italy, and his detachment from the literati and artists of Italy
was not merely the outcome of a want of intelligent sympathy with the
Renaissance; the shortness of his reign and his financial difficulties hindered
him from the exercise of any liberal patronage. His contemporaries shut their
eyes to this impossibility; they laid all the blame on the “barbarism” of the
foreigner.
Nor was less offence taken at his foreign
surroundings. Adrian at first recruited his bodyguard from the Spaniards as
well as the Swiss. The castellan of St. Angelo was a Spaniard. The Pope’s domestic
servants, whose numbers were reduced within the limits of strict necessity,
were also chiefly composed of non-Italians. Thus the hopes of Leo’s numerous
retainers of all ranks of continuing in busy idleness were disappointed. The
chief objects of complaint and ridicule were the Pope’s servants from the Low
Countries, who contributed not a little to estrange the feelings of those
around them. Even before Adrian’s arrival in Rome, his court was contemptuously
spoken of as a collection of insignificant persons. In reality, the Pope’s
three principal advisers were men of excellent character and no mean
endowments.
This was especially the case with Wilhelm van
Enkevoirt, a native of Mierlo in North Brabant, who,
attached to Adrian by a friendship of many years’ standing, had entered the
Papal Chancery under Julius II. and subsequently became Scriptor apostolic, Protonotary, and Procurator in Rome for Charles V. In character
Enkevoirt presented many points of resemblance with the Pope ; like the latter
he had a warm affection for his native land, his piety was genuine, and he was
of studious habits and gentle disposition. One of Adrian’s first acts was to
bestow the important post of Datary on this old friend, who was of proved
responsibility and thoroughly versed in Roman affairs. Enkevoirt had before
this been described as one with Adrian in heart and soul, and with a zeal which
often overstepped due limits, took pains to assert his position as first and
foremost of the Pope’s confidential advisers. Besides Enkevoirt, Dietrich von
Heeze, Johann Winkler, and Johann Ingenwinkel had
free access to the Pope. The last named, from the lower Rhineland, was a man of
great ability, who knew how to retain office and confidence under Clement VII;
he died as Datary of the second Medici Pope. Johann Winkler was born in
Augsburg; he had already, under Leo X, been notary of the Rota, and died, at
the beginning of Paul III’s pontificate, a rich and distinguished prelate.
If Winkler, like Ingenwinkel,
showed an undue anxiety to take care of his own interests in the matter of
benefices, Dirk (Dietrich) van Heeze, on the contrary, was a thoroughly
unselfish and high-minded personality. Originally a friend of Erasmus, Heeze,
at a later period, did not follow the great scholar on the path which, in some
respects, was so open to question, but took up a decided position on behalf of
reform on strong Catholic lines. Heeze, who was extolled by his contemporaries
for profound learning, modesty, piety, and earnestness of moral character, was
placed by Adrian at the head of the Chancery as private secretary; it cost him
some trouble to make himself at home in the processes of preparing and sending
forth the Papal briefs. After his patron’s early death he left the Curia and
returned to his own country, and died at Liege as Canon of St. Lambert’s. Apart
from these fellow-countrymen, however, Adrian also honoured with his confidence
some Spaniards, such as Blasio Ortiz, and several Italians the Bishops of
Feltre and Castellamare, Tommaso Campeggio, and
Pietro Fiori, and especially Giovanni Ruffo Teodoli,
Archbishop of Cosenza. Girolamo Ghinucci became an
Auditor of the Camera. The Italian, Cardinal Campeggio, was also frequently
selected by the Pope for important transactions. All this the courtiers of Leo
X entirely overlooked in order to vent their dislike of the Netherlanders : “Men
as stupid as stones”. Almost all the Italians were as unfriendly to these
trusted councillors of the Pope, whose names they could never pronounce aright,
as they were to the “foreign” Pontiff himself, whose earnestness and moderation
they would not understand. They distrusted their influence and pursued them
with their hatred. The poet Berni expressed the
general opinion in his satirical lines
Ecco che personaggi, ecco che corte
Che brigate galante cortegiane :
Copis, Vincl, Corizio et Trincheforte!
Nome
di for isbigottir un cane.
The repugnance to the stranger Pope grew into
bitter hatred the further Adrian advanced his plans for a thorough reform of
the secularized Curia. Had it not been for this project, his native origin and
character would have been as readily forgiven him as had once been the Spanish
traits and Spanish surroundings of Alexander VI. Ortiz hit the mark exactly
when he fixed on the efforts at reform as the seed-plot of all the odium
aroused against Adrian VI.
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