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CHAPTER
V.
Adrian's
Efforts to restore Peace and promote the Crusade. — The Fall of Rhodes and the
Support of Hungary.
Adrian’s attitude towards the complicated
politics of the European States, then involved in a dangerous crisis, through
the rivalry between Francis I and Charles V and the renewed aggressiveness of
the Ottoman power, was inspired by that lofty earnestness and magnanimity which
had directed his treatment of ecclesiastical affairs. As Vicar of the eternal
Prince of Peace the lofty-minded Pope had felt most bitterly the protracted
state of war, with its menace to the future of Christendom. Since the greatest
danger came from without, from the side of the infidel, he deemed it a twofold
duty, towards God and his own conscience, to leave nothing undone to procure
the reconciliation of the two monarchs who confronted one another in deadly
enmity.
The pacification and union of the Christian
powers in presence of the onslaught of Islam, the reform of the Church, and the
restoration of ecclesiastical unity, so especially threatened in Germany, were
the three great ideas dominating his Pontificate.
From the first Adrian had shown a firm
determination, in contrast to his predecessors, not to attach himself to any of
the contending parties, but by all the means in his power to bring about a
peace, or at least a truce, so that all the united forces of Europe might be
turned against the hereditary foe of Christendom. In this sense he had already
written to the Emperor on the 25th of March 1522, urging him to conclude peace
or an armistice with the French King; for identical reasons he despatched
Gabriele Merino, Archbishop of Bari, from Spain to Paris, and Alvaro Osorio,
Bishop of Astorga, to England, to confer with the
Emperor and Henry VIII.
Immediate help was necessary, for it was no
longer doubtful that the Sultan Suleiman I, following up the capture of
Belgrade in August 1521, was preparing to deal another deadly blow by an attack
on Rhodes, the last bulwark of Christendom in the south. Held by the Knights of
St. John, this island, on account of its situation and exceptional strength,
was as great a hindrance to the development of the Turkish sea power as it was
for Christendom a position of incalculable value.3 Suleiman was determined to
capture it at all costs. On the 1st of June 1522 he sent his declaration of war
to the Grand Master; at the same time he moved against Rhodes a powerful fleet
conveying an armament of 10,000 men and all the requisites for a siege. The
Sultan at the head of 100,000 men proceeded through Asia Minor along the coast
of Caria. Although the Grand Master had little over 600 knights and 5000
soldiers, he was yet determined to resist to the last. The preparations for
holding the strongly fortified and well-provisioned fortress were so thorough,
the heroism of the defenders so great, that, at first, all the assaults of the
Osmanli were repulsed, but in spite of serious losses the enemy held on.
Everything depended on the arrival of relief for the besieged, and for this the
conditions of Western Europe were as unfavourable as possible. The spread of
the religious upheaval in the German Empire was the precursor of a social
revolution, so that men feared the overthrow of established order. Things were
no better in Hungary, torn by party strife; while Venice, the mistress of the
seas, seemed now, as always, occupied only in safeguarding her own possessions.
The great powers of central Europe were embroiled in internecine strife; only
an immediate cessation of their quarrels could justify the hope that they would
take part in a defensive movement against the Turk. No one worked for this more
zealously than Adrian VI, for the danger besetting Rhodes occupied him as a
personal concern. Although there was little prospect of his efforts to
reconcile the contending Christian powers being successful, he tenaciously
adhered to his purpose; in spite of all failures he stood firm.
The Pope’s position as the intermediary of
peace was from the first exceptionally difficult. He had to try and convince
Francis I that he was not a partisan of his former pupil, sovereign, and
friend, Charles. From the latter he had, at the same time, to remove the
suspicion that he was too favourably inclined towards Francis. A further
difficulty arose from the decisive turn of affairs on the scene of war in
Italy, when the French, defeated at Bicocca on the 27th of April 1522, soon
after (May 30th) lost Genoa also. The alliance between the Emperor and Henry
VIII was drawn even closer than before; on his journey into Spain, Charles paid
Henry a visit, during which a joint expedition into France was agreed upon both
monarchs confidently hoped to win the Pope as the third confederate against
Francis. While Adrian’s proposals of mediation fell upon deaf ears at the
English as well as at the Imperial Court, Francis, in his humiliation, assumed
a conciliatory mien. This induced Adrian to make a fresh appeal to the Emperor
but Charles, in a letter of the 7th of September 1522, declared himself unable
to make peace without the King of England; he observed that the French terms of
agreement did not admit of acceptance. Adrian called the Emperor’s attention to
the danger of Rhode; adjured him in the most impressive terms to help the
island, to put his private interests in the background, and to consent to a
truce. If Charles were in Rome, Adrian wrote, and were to hear the appeals from
Rhodes and Hungary, he would not be able to keep back his tears. He, the Pope,
was doing what he could; the money he had sent he had been forced to borrow. He
did not ask Charles to conclude a peace without the concurrence of the English
King, but thought that he might at least induce the latter to consent to an
armistice.
The Pope sent to England Bernardo Bertolotti, who, as well as the Spanish Nuncio, was to work
for peace. Besides this, in respect of the Turkish war, Tommaso Negri, Bishop
of Scardona, had already, in August, been entrusted
with a comprehensive mission to the Princes of Christendom. He first of all
betook himself to Venice.
In a letter to Charles V, written in French,
on the 30th of September 1522—an admirable memorial of Adrian’s lofty and truly
Christian disposition—the Pope quiets the Emperor with regard to the report
that he had a greater partiality for Francis than for himself; he then declares
that it is utterly impossible for him to take part in the war as a confederate
of Charles, since he is totally without the material means for so doing. Since
his accession to the Holy See ce siège plein de misère—he has not had enough money to
meet the current expenses of government; but even had the means been his, let
the Emperor himself say whether it would become him to sacrifice his exertions
for the welfare of Christendom in order to hand it over to greater turmoil and
danger. In a second letter of the same date he beseeches the Emperor to come to
the help of Rhodes; willingly would he shed his own blood to rescue this
bulwark of Christendom. On the anniversary of his coronation and on the 1st of
September respectively he had earnestly exhorted the Ambassadors and the
Cardinals in Consistory to raise funds for the support of Rhodes and Hungary,
and on the 4th of September a commission of Cardinals was appointed to attend
exclusively to this matter.
By means of rigid economy Adrian collected a
sufficient sum to provide the equipment of a few ships. He did not disguise
from himself how little this amounted to; but it was impossible for him to do
more. A thousand men, who were landed at Naples in October, deserted because
they had received no pay. To the Imperialists the defence of Lombardy against
the French seemed a much more urgent necessity than the relief of Rhodes. The
Pope, writes the Venetian Ambassador, is in despair, since he sees no
possibility of forwarding to Rhodes the troops he has collected. To crown all,
there was a fresh outbreak of the plague in Rome, and the solemn occupation of
the Lateran, hitherto deferred for want of money, had once more to be
postponed; in the subsequent course of events it did not take place at all.
Together with the Turkish danger, the
quieting of the States of the Church claimed the Pope’s attention at the
beginning of his reign. All recognition is due to the promptitude with which he
met the difficult situation and resolutely carried out what seemed to him the
necessary measures for saving what there was to save.
Since grave charges were made against the
governors appointed by Leo X, a general change in every city of the Papal
States was already under consideration in September 1522. While Adrian was
disposed to leniency towards the Dukes of Ferrara and Urbino, and even suffered
the return of the Baglioni to Perugia, he had determined from the first not to
recognize the usurpation (hitherto vainly opposed by the College of Cardinals)
of Sigismondo Malatesta in Rimini. In December 1522 he ordered Sigismondo’s son to be arrested in Ancona, and at the same
time despatched the Spanish soldiers who had accompanied him into Italy against
Rimini. The undertaking, which had at first appeared difficult proved all the
easier as Malatesta had brought upon himself the bitter hatred of those who had
submitted to him.
As vassals of the Church both Alfonso of
Ferrara and Francesco Maria della Rovere of Urbino,
now fully reconciled to the Holy See, gave Adrian their loyal support. As early
as the 15th of September 1522 Alfonso’s son had come to Rome, where
negotiations had at once been opened for his father’s absolution and reinvestiture. They proceeded with astonishing expedition,
and by the 17th of October everything was arranged. In the investiture with the
Dukedom of Ferrara the fiefs of San Felice and Finale were also included, and
Adrian even showed an inclination to reinstate the Duke in the possession of
Modena and Reggio ; but this did not take effect owing to the opposition of the
Cardinals. According to Contarini, it was also the Pope’s fixed intention to
restore Ravenna and Cervia to the Venetians; in
favour of the credibility of this statement is the circumstance that Adrian
detested the excessive eagerness of the clergy to acquire wealth and property;
from the standpoint of his high ideals an overgrowth of the States of the
Church was an evil likely to divert the Papacy from its true vocation.
The transactions with Francesco Maria della Rovere lasted longer. He had already, on the 11th of
May 1 522, on the recommendation of the Sacred College, been absolved from all
censures, but not until he reached Rome in person, on the 18th of March 1523,
was the definite treaty of peace concluded with him. He was reinstated in the
Dukedom of Urbino, with the exception, however, of Montefeltro;
this fief remained in the hands of the Florentines, to whom it had been ceded
in payment of debts incurred by the Apostolic Chamber.
Adrian’s success in restoring order to the
Papal States could not compensate him for the insurmountable obstacles which
stood between him and his efforts for the union of the chief powers of
Christendom against the Turks. True to his original plan of undertaking the
office of peacemaker, he steadily refused to enter into the league for
offensive purposes, which was the object of the Imperial diplomacy. This led to
a difference with Charles's representative in Rome and to strained relations
with Charles himself, between whom and Adrian in other matters (e.g. with
regard to the retention of Naples as an appanage of the Empire) there had
always been a good understanding.
Seldom was an Ambassador placed in such an
unsuitable position as that of Manuel at the Court of Adrian VI. This
unscrupulous and masterful Spaniard was a man of such one-sided political
understanding that he was quite incapable of comprehending a character such as
Adrian’s, who approached everything from the point of view of his religious
ideals. In Manuel’s estimation the Pope owed everything to the Emperor, and was
therefore under the self-evident obligation to subordinate himself in all
respects to the wishes of Charles. The more he perceived that Adrian was
pursuing his own policy, the greater grew his displeasure. Before Manuel came
really to know the Pope, he had convinced himself that he was a weak and incompetent personality, and Adrian’s part of
peacemaker filled him with anger and mistrust. In his reports he described the
Pope as miserly, ignorant of all the affairs of the world, and weak and
irresponsible as a child he even denounced him, entirely without grounds, to
the Emperor, as carrying on secret intrigues with France.
Adrian, who had at first received Manuel with
friendliness, and indeed with confidence, could not disarm his hostile
feelings. Their mutual relations, already rendered acute by disputes concerning
the appointment to bishoprics in the Milanese, became in a very short time so
strained that Manuel saw how untenable his position had become and applied for
his recall. Half in despair he left Rome on the 13th of October 1522, with the
firm resolve to bring about a breach between the Emperor and the Pope. He at
once advised Charles to pay no obediential, hoping thus to force the
Pope to relinquish his position of neutrality. His place was taken in October
1522 by Luis de Corduba, Duke of Sessa, who, although
he had no hope of success, nevertheless, in his very first audience, invited
the Pope to enter into alliance with the Emperor. The Pope replied that he had
neither the money nor the wish to wage war; all his energies were directed to
procuring an armistice and later on a peace. As Adrian stood firm in his
conviction that, as Father of universal Christendom, it was his paramount duty
to restore peace in Europe, Sessa soon became of the same mind as Manuel. In
addition, disputes arose over territorial claims. The French in their dealings
with the Pope showed themselves cleverer diplomatists than the Imperialists.
While the latter incessantly repeated that Adrian’s love of peace only made the
French more stubborn, and that his one hope of safety lay in the league with
Charles, Francis sent the Cardinal Castelnau de
Clermont to Rome with instructions to praise the Pope’s love of peace and to
assure him that the French King was animated by the same dispositions.
Adrian, who had shown great patience towards
the Emperor’s Ambassadors and the Emperor himself, was, however, at last put
upon his mettle; this is discernible in his two Briefs of the 21st and 22nd of
November 1522. In these he once more urgently calls on Charles to give help to
Rhodes, and complains bitterly of the excesses of the Imperial forces in the
Papal States; the favour shown to him by Charles consists in words and not in
deeds. Under these circumstances he felt it strange that the Imperial
Ambassador should continue to bring forward an inexhaustible series of fresh
wishes and suggestions touching ecclesiastical policy and finance; many of
these requests Adrian was obliged to refuse from a sense of duty. The Spanish
Ambassador now had recourse to bribery in order to gain the ear of the Papal
entourage. He succeeded in learning a good many secrets from the Secretary, Zisterer, but concerning the principal point he learned
nothing, and his surmise that Adrian was a puppet in the hands of his
confidential servants proved to be quite beside the mark.
The general opinion formed of the new Pope at
the Imperial Court was entirely erroneous. There he was looked upon exclusively
as the former subject of Charles, to whom he owed everything, and to whom he
was expected to give unconditional support in fulfilment of his dutiful
allegiance. Gattinara presumed to remind the Head of the Church of these
obligations in the arrogant language of his Court.
The tactless pressure of the Spaniards
confirmed Adrian more than ever in his previous policy of a firm neutrality: not
until Francis I attacked Italy, he declared, would he take a hostile part
against him. About this time the unscrupulous Manuel intervened in a way which
was sure to touch Adrian to the quick. Cardinal Castelnau de Clermont had provided himself, for his journey to Rome, which he reached on
the 6th of December 1522, with a safeconduct from
the Spanish Government as security against the Imperial troops. In spite of
this Manuel allowed the Cardinal’s servants to be made prisoners and their
property to be seized. He thus fell under the penalty of excommunication to
which those who put hindrances in the way of persons travelling to Rome were
liable. Moreover, Castelnau was not only the
Ambassador of the French King, but a Cardinal and Legate of Avignon. Thus a
direct challenge was offered to the Pope. As an amicable settlement proved
futile, Adrian pronounced the sentence of excommunication against Manuel, and
requested the Emperor to repudiate the conduct of his Ambassador. The
transactions over this matter added considerably to the Emperor’s irritation.
Notwithstanding these occurrences, Adrian
persisted in his hopes of a change of mind on the part of his former pupil.
That he might propitiate his interest in the common cause of Christendom, the
Pope had determined to present him with the sword, consecrated on Christmas
Day, which the Popes were accustomed to send to the defenders of the Faith.
This solemnity was disturbed by an unlucky accident; the architrave of the
doorway of the Sixtine Chapel fell down and crushed
one of the Swiss guards standing close to the Pope. Already, on the 10th of
December 1522, Adrian had once more called the attention of the Doge to the
urgency of the Turkish danger and had instructed the Nuncio Altobello to exhort him to levy subsidies for the war.
On the 1st of January 1523 Adrian VI informed
the Emperor that Francis I had given his Ambassador full powers to conclude a
peace. Before this came to pass an armistice was to be entered into for three
years, and the Pope hoped that Charles would be a consenting party; on account
of the Turks the necessity for such a course was greater than ever. The letter
had hardly been despatched before news arrived that the Imperialists had
plundered the town of San Giovanni in the Papal States and had made prisoner
the resident Papal Commissary. Adrian, usually so mild-tempered, was now roused
to an indescribable pitch of excitement. He summoned at once to his presence
Lope Hurtado de Mendoza, and informed him that nothing but his great regard for
the Emperor held him back from an immediate alliance with Francis the authors
of this deed of violence, Juan Manuel and Prospero Colonna, he would lay under
the ban of the Church.
The Imperialists saw that some steps must be
taken to appease the Pope. Accordingly, Sessa invited the Viceroy of Naples,
Charles de Lannoy, who had formerly been a friend of Adrian’s in the
Netherlands, to come to Rome. There was meanwhile another reason for bringing
the Viceroy thither. For some time the most disquieting reports of the fate of
Rhodes had been coming in, and Lannoy brought the announcement that, according
to credible information from private sources, Rhodes had capitulated. On
hearing this Adrian burst into tears. “Still”, he exclaimed, “I cannot believe
it”. Henceforward, so he informed the Cardinals, he could make no more payments
whatsoever; his whole income must be spent on the defence of Christendom, even
if he had to content himself with a linen mitre.
On the 28th of January 1523 a Consistory was
held which the Pope opened with a speech about Rhodes; he declared himself
ready to sell all his valuables for the funds of the Turkish war. It was
decided to appoint a Commission of Cardinals to take measures for the
restoration of peace in Christendom and the collection of money for the
prosecution of the war against the Turks. The Commission met on the following
day. The alarm caused by Lannoy’s intelligence was
all the greater as it coincided with news from Germany announcing a further
advance of the Lutheran errors.
Subsequently different reports came in,
affirming that Rhodes still held out, and even Adrian seems for a long time to
have been loath to believe that the island had fallen. On the 3rd of February
1523 he still wrote, in a most affectionate letter to the Emperor, “As long as
Rhodes was in such great danger he could not under any consideration join the
league, as Lannoy had requested”. But the allocution which Adrian addressed to
the Consistory on the 11th of February shows that he then looked upon the bulwark
of Christendom as lost. In this assembly the Pope informed the Cardinals that
he had determined to enjoin on the Christian Princes a truce of three or four
years’ duration, to levy a tithe on them, and to send Legates, especially to
Hungary. A few days before, King Ferdinand’s embassy to do homage had laid
before the Pope in most urgent terms the danger to which the country was
exposed and had appealed for help against the Turks.
On the 23rd of February another Consistory
was held. The Pope announced that Francis had declared his readiness to make
peace, but that the answers of Charles V and Henry VIII were not yet
forthcoming; he therefore proposed that the Sacred College should again invite
both these princes to agree to a peace or at least to a truce. The nomination
of the Legates to the Christian princes was entrusted to the Pope, and on the
27th of February the first appointment followed, that of Colonna to Hungary.
Adrian was justified in now concentrating his
attention on the defence of Hungary. The fall of Rhodes had long been
disbelieved in Rome; for the most contradictory accounts—even such as the
repulse of the Turks with great loss—had been received. Up to the last it had
been hoped that the island would hold out. All the more overwhelming was the
effect when the truth became known that on the 21st of December 1522 the Grand
Master had been forced to capitulate. The Knights had withstood the enemy with
exemplary valour; twenty times they had victoriously driven back their
assailants, and only when their last ammunition was expended were the
defenders, deserted in their extremity by the rest of Western Christendom,
driven, in spite of Adrian’s most earnest exhortations to consent to a
capitulation, the terms of which, on the whole, were entirely honourable.
When the Venetian envoy was relating fuller
details of the fall of Rhodes, the Pope exclaimed, with tears in his eyes : “Alas
for Christendom! I should have died happy if I had united the Christian princes
to withstand our enemy”.
The Pope saw clearly the far-reaching
significance of the fall of Rhodes and its dependent islands. The passage
between Constantinople and Alexandria, hitherto barred, was now opened to the
Ottoman navy and a wedge driven in between the islands of Cyprus and Crete, still
in the possession of Venice. As the Turks were preparing to seize the mastery
of the Eastern Mediterranean, they had also taken one important step towards
the conquest of Italy. Rumours had already spread of their intention to attempt
a landing in Apulia. The Pope, reported one of Wolsey’s agents, was in mortal
anguish, and so were all men. When Hannibal stood before the gates of ancient
Rome the terror was not half so great, for now men knew that they had to do
with the greatest ruler in the world. Many persons of note made
preparations to leave the city. It was believed that the Pope would retire to
Bologna, the plague having again broken out in Rome, and the dread increased
when several Turkish spies were arrested in the city.
The notable loss which had befallen
Christendom formed a heavy indictment of the negligence of the Western Powers,
and a proportionately weighty justification of Adrian’s policy. As to leaving
Rome, the Pope had no such thoughts. In spite of the dangers from the plague
and the enemy, he remained steadfast at his post, anxiously endeavouring to
save from destruction what could be saved. In the first place, he took a step
of which the secret was so well kept that—as the Imperial Ambassador, with a
watchful eye on everything, reports—neither the Secretary, Zisterer nor anyone else had the slightest knowledge of it. After Adrian, in a letter of
the 2nd of March 1523, had declined to enter into the proposed special league
with Charles V, and had complained of the misdemeanours of Charles’s servants
and of those of Manuel in particular, he addressed, on the following day,
another letter to his former pupil and sovereign, not less candid in
expression. In it he recalled his hitherto fruitless efforts to bring the
Emperor and the other princes to terms of peace and to take active measures
against the Turks. There was no doubt that the Sultan, being in possession of
Belgrade and Rhodes, would prosecute his war of conquest in Hungary, as well as
on the Mediterranean. This danger could only be averted by the conclusion of
peace among the princes. He had been deceived in his hope that the Emperor
would have been the first to do this. If Charles and the Kings of England and
France were still unwilling at least to arrange a truce for three years and to
begin a general war against the Turks, the Emperor was in danger of being
driven out of his hereditary dominions, and this danger was all the greater
because not a few Christian princes ruled their subjects more oppressively than
the Sultan. He, the Pope, in virtue of his office, was compelled to call upon
the contending princes to make a peace or, at least, a truce.
On the same day letters of similar import
were sent to the Kings of France, England, and Portugal, and soon afterwards to
other Christian princes, such as Sigismund of Poland. The Pope reminded Francis
I of the fate of those Asiatic rulers who had been vanquished by the Turks
because they had lulled themselves into a false security. In the name of that
obedience due to Christ’s representative on earth, he adjured him by the
vengeance of God, before whose tribunal he must one day stand, to give his
consent forthwith, on the receipt of the letter, to a truce, and then to take
his part with vigour in war against the Turks. The letter to the King of
Portugal also was couched in most earnest language. “Woe to princes”, so it
ran, “who do not employ the sovereignty conferred upon them by God in promoting
His glory and defending the people of His election, but abuse it in internecine
strife”. The Sacred College was invited to exhort by special letters the Christian
Kings to do their duty. To Cardinal Wolsey Adrian pointed out that Rome would
be the most suitable place for the truce negotiations. Bernardo Bertolotti was also sent back to England as Nuncio, with
instructions to sound Francis on his journey through France. With tears in his
eyes Adrian addressed to the envoys resident in Rome the most urgent
representations. He already saw the Turks in Italy, for they had, it was
believed, on their entrance into Rhodes and Constantinople, shouted “To Rome,
to Rome”.
Along with these earnest remonstrances to the
Christian powers Adrian took decisive measures for the collection of the funds
necessary for the crusade. Owing to the emptiness of his exchequer the Pope was
forced, against his will, to find means of supply by a levy of tithes and
taxes. Before the end of January these measures had been discussed, and Adrian
then told the Cardinals that he was ready to sell his silver plate. Before
taxing other countries for the Turkish war he wished to make a beginning in his
own dominions. His measures were at once put into execution. A Bull of the 11th
of March 1523 laid upon the whole body of the clergy and on all officials of
the Papal States the payment of a Turkish tithe for the next two years,
Cardinal Fieschi being entrusted with its collection.
Adrian justified this ordinance by the danger then menacing Rome and all
Christendom. The immediate publication of this Bull was expected, but the
Cardinals, it seems, still raised objections. They did not give their consent
until the 16th of March, in a Consistory at which the Ban of Croatia appealed
to them for help. On the 18th of March a second Bull was agreed to in which a
hearth-tax was levied at the rate of half a ducat throughout the Papal States.
By these taxes it was hoped to raise a sum
sufficient to equip a force of 50,000 men for the Turkish war; the chief
command was given to the Duke of Urbino. It was an indication of the Pope’s
zeal that, contrary to his usual principles, he accepted payments for offices
and dignities he pleaded the needs of Christendom, which made such methods
permissible. “Adrian”, writes one, “is so beaten down by anxiety that he almost
repents having accepted the tiara”. But he never relaxed his efforts for the
protection of Christendom and, before all, of the kingdom of Hungary, then
exposed to the greatest danger; this formed the subject of lengthy deliberation
in the Consistory held on the 23rd of March. The point of chief importance was
the means of raising the money to be supplied to the Legate appointed to
Hungary. Full power was also given him—but under secret instruction and only to
be used in case of necessity—to alienate church property for the defence of
that kingdom against the Turks. In a Bull of the 11th of March 1523 Adrian,
having the same object in view, granted King Ferdinand I a third of the year's
income of the whole clergy of the Tyrol, secular and regular.
The Portuguese Ambassador, Miguel da Silva,
in a despatch to his sovereign, advances, together with other reasons why he
should contribute ships and money for the war, the eminently holy life of the
Pope, which must arouse in every good Christian feelings of love and the wish
to give him practical help. More impression was made on the princes by the
concessions which Adrian determined to make. Thus he bestowed on the Portuguese
King for life the command of the Order of Christ; to this were afterwards added
other marks of favour.
In order to secure the English King’s support
of the crusade, Adrian made exceptional use of dispensations, thus gratifying,
in various ways connected with the bestowal of benefices, the wishes of Henry’s
all-powerful minister, Cardinal Wolsey; and even at last conferred on the
latter Legatine power in England for life. Wolsey thereupon succeeded in
obtaining from the King the appointment of a special envoy, Dr. Clerk, to attend to the negotiations with regard to the peace and armistice.
Francis I continued the line of action that he had hitherto employed in his
dealings with Adrian. His attitude was apparently most conciliatory, and he
gave verbal assurances of his inclination to peace and his sympathy with the
crusade, but, at the same time, declared frankly that, as a first step, his
rightful inheritance, the Milanese, must be restored to him. After his receipt
of the urgent Brief of the 3rd of March, it was rumoured that Francis had given carte blanche for the terms of peace. But at the end of that month a
letter came from the King again demanding, in haughty language, the aforesaid
restoration of Milan. This was all the more painful to Adrian since Francis I,
on the previous 5th of February, had expressed his desire in the humblest
terms that the Pope would use his authority in taking in hand the peace
negotiations. The Pope lost all self-control when Cardinal Castelnau de Clermont tried to justify the proceedings of Francis. The King, said Adrian
to the Cardinal, was the cause of the obstruction of this indispensable peace.
The Cardinal, who deplored his master’s obstinacy to the Pope, kept saying that
no tree was ever felled at one stroke; Adrian must address him in another Brief.
This advice the Pope followed, always hoping to bring about a change of mind in
the French King.
The Emperor showed more statesmanship. Adrian’s
determination and the circumstance that in Picardy as well as in the Pyrenees
the war with Francis had not been successful, had inclined Charles, before the
middle of February, somewhat to reconsider his position. He then instructed
Sessa to make known the conditions under which he would be ready to accept an
armistice or peace, but without letting this come to the knowledge of the
French or English Ambassadors. By means of this understanding Charles sought
especially to secure the grant of the “Cruzada”
hitherto asked for in vain, and the assignment to his own use of a fourth of
the ecclesiastical revenues in his dominions. The fall of Rhodes had
unquestionably made a deep impression on Charles, but his courtiers were of a
different mind, and Gattinara advised him to send no answer to the Brief of the
3rd of March. Charles, however, determined to give Sessa full powers to
conclude an armistice subject to the clauses agreed to by Adrian. At the same
time he sent a memorandum to Rome intended to justify his previous conduct and
to bring the Pope round to his views. Most of the proposals in this document
were simply nothing else than a list of conditions laid down with a view to
Charles's personal advantage. Simultaneously a wholesale system of bribery was
set in motion amongst those who were in the Pope's immediate confidence.
Affairs having gone thus far an event occurred to change at one blow the whole
situation in Rome.
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