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CHAPTER
VI.
The
Intrigues of Cardinal Soderini and the Rupture with France. —Adrian VI joins
the Imperial League. — His Death.
On his arrival in Italy Adrian had found the
College of Cardinals split into factions. The anti-Medicean party brought the heaviest reproaches against him, especially with regard to
the proceedings connected with the conspiracy of Cardinal Petrucci. Adrian
found it impossible to have the case revised a step, moreover, which could not
have led to any result. An attempt to reconcile Cardinal Francesco Soderini,
whose animosity was exceptionally virulent, with the Vice-Chancellor Cardinal
de' Medici, failed completely; this was not surprising, for the latter had
information of Soderini’s complicity in the
conspiracy contrived in Florence.
Medici, who could not console himself for the
loss of his powerful influence in the Curia, had gone back to Florence in
October 1522. This left full scope to his opponent Soderini in Rome. Adrian’s
misunderstandings with the Emperor and the crafty temporizing of Francis I
proved helpful to Soderini, and the former partisan of France gained more and
more influence with the Pope. He managed successfully to conceal from Adrian
his onesided devotion to the interests of Francis.
He appeared to throw himself eagerly into the Pope's endeavours for peace, and
warned him against the warlike and Imperialist leanings of Medici, whom he even
accused of enriching himself dishonestly under Leo X. Meanwhile Sessa and the
Vice-Chancellor were carefully watching the alliance of their enemy with Francis
I. At the end of March 1523 Medici succeeded in securing the person of a
Sicilian, Francesco Imperiale, who had been sent by
Soderini on a commission to his nephew, then residing in Venice and France; on
this man letters of the Cardinals were found to the effect that, if Francis
delayed longer his entrance in person into Italy, he would alienate the
Venetians and all his other friends in the Peninsula; when the cipher, used in
certain passages of the letters, was interpreted, the discovery was made that a
plot was on foot to raise an insurrection in Sicily against the Emperor, which,
when it had taken shape with French connivance, was to be the signal for the
descent of Francis upon Upper Italy. The Pope besides was described in the
letters, quite contrary to the truth, as making common cause with the Emperor.
Medici at once made known his discovery to the Imperial Ambassador at Rome, who
made haste to lay all before the Pope. Medici and the representative of King
Ferdinand were overjoyed at having in their hands clear evidence of French
knavery; they were confident that Adrian would now be led to renounce his
neutrality, and every effort was made to reach this end.
Adrian was, at first, unwilling to believe in
the treachery of his friend, but soon he had to convince himself that Soderini
had not shrunk from thwarting his ardent wishes for peace and, at the moment
when the Turkish danger was at its worst, wantonly stirring up the fury of war
in Italy itself He determined to unmask the guilty party and to visit him with
heavy punishment; it was also no longer doubtful that Soderini had deceived him
as regards Cardinal de' Medici, and before taking any other steps he summoned
the latter, the head of the Imperial party in the Sacred College, to Rome.
Medici, who till now had been living in Florence, expectant and discontented,
obeyed the call with great delight. With an almost royal retinue of more than a
thousand horsemen he made his entry into Rome on the 23rd of April 1523; the
most notable personages, many Cardinals, and even deadly enemies of long
standing such as Francesco Maria della Revere, met
him at the Ponte Molle. He was present in Consistory
on the 25th and 26th of April; on the latter day the Pope received him after
dinner in private audience, and it was said that they both withdrew to the
Belvedere and then to a country-house, spending the whole afternoon in one
another’s company.
On the next day, the 27th of April, about
seven o'clock in the evening, Adrian sent for Cardinal Soderini, who hastened
on horseback to the Vatican accompanied by his retainers. As he passed through
the streets astonishment was roused that a Cardinal should go to an audience at
such an unusual hour. Half an hour later his suite returned without him, and it
was soon understood that he had been arrested; such, in fact, was the case.
When Soderini came into the Pope’s presence
in the Borgia tower he found there Cardinal de' Medici and Sessa. To Adrian’s
inquiry whether he had written to the French King, he answered in the negative;
then the Pope at once placed before him the intercepted letters. As he even
then tried to persist in a denial, Adrian broke out into great excitement and
pronounced him under arrest. Soderini begged in vain to be detained in the
Vatican, but he was conveyed to St. Angelo, whither none of his household were
allowed to follow him, and that same evening all his papers and valuables were
seized. At a Consistory held on the following morning the Pope explained his
action, and entrusted to Cardinals Carvajal Accolti,
and Cesi the superintendence of Soderini’s trial. In prison the Cardinal refused food until the castellan, in pity, first
tasted the dishes in his presence. Even the Pope felt compassion for the aged
man, and subsequently allowed three of his servants to wait upon him and
restored to him his property. He pushed on the judicial process with all the
more expedition because it had become known that, during Adrian’s absence from
Italy, Soderini had, with the help of France, worked for a schism.
The fall of Soderini gave at once a
commanding position in the Curia to the Vice-Chancellor Cardinal de’ Medici.
His palace became a more active centre of life than the Vatican, and his
antechambers were crowded with visitors waiting for an audience. Not a day
passed without four, or even five, Cardinals coming to see him, and before long
he was spoken of as the coming Pope. Henceforward Adrian himself was greatly
influenced by Medici, and the Imperialists saw with satisfaction a change for
the better in the Pope's feelings towards Charles. But they were deceiving
themselves if they believed that Adrian had any intention of identifying
himself with the Spanish party. Even if, in giving his sanction on the 4th of
May to the permanent incorporation of the three grandmasterships of Santiago, Calatrava, and Alcantara in the Spanish Crown, he made a
remarkable concession, yet in the great questions of European politics he
continued steadfast to the neutrality becoming the Father of Christendom, and
to his efforts on behalf of peace. With this aim in view he issued on the 30th
of April a Bull enjoining, in the name of his supreme authority, a truce of
three years' duration for the whole of Christendom, compliance with which was
demanded from the princes under pain of the heaviest penalties of the Church,
immediate interdict and excommunication. There had been enough fraternal
bloodshed he said, the sovereigns had already indulged too much in mutual
enmity; they had every reason for behaving in such a way as not to forfeit that
power which had been lent to them by God.
For Hungary, now in extreme danger, Adrian
did all he could. The despatch of the Legates had been delayed, for the
nominees, first Colonna and then Campeggio, had declined the post; the greatest
difficulties had accompanied the collection of the funds intended for the
support of that kingdom, and in view of the vivid descriptions brought to him
of the perilous situation there, the Pope was deeply grieved that he could not
give immediate help.
Fear was already felt in Rome that the King
of Hungary might make peace with the Turk. When at last, in the person of
Cajetan, a suitable Legate had been found, it cost a great amount of trouble to
raise the 50,000 ducats of which he was to be the bearer. In a Consistory on
the 8th of May Cajetan’s appointment as Legate to Hungary, Poland, and Bohemia
was announced; but on the 27th of the same month the arrangements for getting
in the money were still under consideration. The Romans objected strongly to
the payment of the Turkish tax. Many were bold enough to say, in their ill
humour with the new imposts, that the Pope’s project of a crusade was a
chimera. This lack of self-sacrifice distressed the Pope not less than the
continuance of the plague in Rome. About the 19th of May he had himself been
suffering from fever; by the 27th he had recovered. On the same day he heard
that the ruler of Wallachia had already come to terms of peace with the Turks. “The
Turkish trouble”, reported the Portuguese Ambassador, “is the Pope’s daily
subject of talk”. The Consistory was repeatedly occupied with appeals for help
from Hungary and Croatia. A well-meant suggestion, emanating from the
Franciscans, that troops should be raised from each religious order, had to be
dismissed by the Pope as fantastic. Adrian was in the extremest perplexity, for he could not send out the Legate empty-handed. At last, on the 1st
of July, everything was in order; on that day Cajetan took leave in Consistory,
and on the following morning set out post-haste. On the 9th of July the Pope
sent his chamberlain Pietro with fresh sums of money to the markets to buy
grain for the Hungarian levies. For some time longer fear prevailed in Ragusa,
as well as in Rome, that the Turks, by sending a fleet against Italy, might
attempt to separate the Christian forces and cut off support from Hungary. “The
Pope”, wrote Vianesio Albergati,
“has done all that he could possibly do to restore peace, but the hearts of
Christians are hardened. Francis I will make any sacrifice to get Milan,
Charles V Fuenterrabia, and Henry VIII Brittany. Help
now can come from God alone”.
An event that brought joy to Adrian was the
final reconciliation of Venice with the Emperor. For this, though for long
without success, he had been labouring directly for many months by means of the
Nuncio. On the 12th of June he was informed that the reconciliation was at
hand; but this report was premature. As
late as the 14th of July the Papal Legate Tommaso Campeggio had to use sharp
words to the Doge on account of the little love of peace shown by the Republic.
The Pope himself addressed most pressing representations to the Venetian
Ambassador in Rome and even threatened him with a monitorium; but not until considerable concessions had
been made by the Imperial envoy did the situation change. At the last hour,
though in vain, French diplomacy did all it could to keep the Republic firm. It
was of great importance in this respect that Lodovico di Canossa, who had been
sent into Italy as early as May, fell ill in Geneva and could not reach Venice
until the beginning of July. Thence he wrote to the French Queen, on the 10th
of July, that Venice was of so much importance that Francis I should consent to
everything rather than lose such an ally. The diplomatic Canossa came too late,
for on the 29th of July a treaty was made between the Emperor, his brother
Ferdinand, the Duke Francesco Sforza of Milan, and Venice to defend Italy
against attack from any European power. For this end the Pope had co-operated without
giving up his neutrality; this only gave way owing to the violent behaviour of
the French.
The French party in Rome, like Francis
himself, looked upon the arrest of Soderini as an overt act of hostility on the
part of Adrian, who had unjustly yielded to the wishes of Medici and the
Emperor’s party. Cardinal Trivulzio took the liberty
of saying to the Pope’s face that they had not elected him in order that he
might imprison Cardinals in St. Angelo without cause. Other members of the
Sacred College also complained of the Pope’s action, as showing little respect
for the dignity of their office. These complaints had as little effect on
Adrian as the menaces of Francis I; the trial went on its way. The Pope was
determined that it should be conducted in strict accordance with order. As
Soderini at first denied everything, fell ill in June, and no advocate could be
found to plead for him, the affair was long protracted. The general opinion was
that it would end in the deposition of Soderini, whose high treason was proved,
but that Adrian would not permit the death sentence to be carried out.
Although, on his return from his mission, in
the middle of May, Bernardo Bertolotti brought back
very unfavourable accounts of the disposition of the Christian princes towards
union, Adrian persisted in his pursuit of peace. The French were willing to
suspend hostilities for two months at the utmost, while the Imperialists wished
a truce of at least half a year. The Pope was of opinion that it was of the
greatest importance that at least a beginning should be made; from the mission,
already mentioned, of Canossa to Rome he had hoped favourable things. But that
diplomatist did not come, while the negotiations of the Imperialists with
Cardinal Clermont proved more and more hopeless. The latter, in complete
despair, went back to Avignon on the 23rd of June. On the 15th of June Adrian
had asked the French King to open fresh negotiations with the Nuncio he might,
urged the Pope, in conformity with his high station and with his name of most
Christian King, at last take the step which was so necessary for the protection
of Christendom.
The “most Christian” had not the slightest
intention of giving ear to such representations. The turn in favour of Charles
which had shown itself in the Curia in consequence of Soderini’s treachery had thrown Francis into uncontrollable fury. When Adrian ordered a
truce for the sake of the Turkish war, Francis exclaimed that the real Turk was
the clergy. To the Venetian Ambassador he remarked in the latter half of June
that the Pope was forbidden by Canon Law to impose a truce under penalty of
excommunication. If Adrian persisted in so doing, he, Francis, would set up an
antipope.
To this period must also belong the quite
unprecedented letter in which Francis threatened the Pope with the same fate
that had befallen Boniface VIII in Anagni, i.e. the loss of freedom and
even of life through violent French intervention in the Vatican. At the
beginning of this threatening letter Francis first recounts the services
rendered by his kingdom to the Holy See from the days of King Pepin down to his
own time. The very persons who ought to acknowledge those services have denied
the rights of the French Crown and used their power to prevent the restoration
of Milan to France. He further goes on to remind the Pope in incisive language
that the Roman Pontiffs had always feared the Imperial power in Italy and had
found protection from it on the part of France. The champions of the Papal
States now suffer loss, and the enemies reap the advantage. Even if, at first,
he had had fears that Pope Adrian would allow himself to be drawn into the
policy of Leo X, yet he had become more and more convinced that the Pope’s
sense of honour and goodness, as well as considerations for the safety of his
soul and for his dignity and age, would never allow him to lose sight, as the
common father of Christendom, of impartial justice and equity. Unfortunately
his former fears had not proved groundless, since the arrest of Soderini had
only taken place because the Pope relied on Medici’s information that the
Cardinal was favourable to France; if equal justice prevailed, the enemies of
France ought to receive the same treatment. Francis I characterized as strange
the Pope’s proclamation, under ecclesiastical censures, of a three years’ peace
as if he, the King, were averse to peace. Yet for this very reason he had had
an envoy at Calais, he had sent his secretary to the Pope at Nice, and then
Cardinal Clermont to Rome, and when Adrian had called upon him to conclude a
truce, for the defence of Christendom, he had declared his readiness to comply
provided that Milan, his lawful possession, was restored to him. When the Pope
found this condition excessive, he had sent Ambassadors to Rome to conclude a
peace or a truce for two months or longer. More he could not do. When he became
aware that the Pope was determined to proclaim an unconditional truce, he had
forbidden his representatives to enter into it, and had explained to the Pope
why he considered one lasting for three years useless.
If Adrian ordered a truce under
ecclesiastical censures, without consulting the Christian princes, without
making any stipulation where the crusading contingents were to be sent, the
French army would be attacked on its arrival in Italy. Adrian had given Bulls
to raise money to the enemies of Francis but Francis himself had been
forgotten. When it was such an easy matter for Popes to excommunicate princes,
evil results always followed, and this could be no cause of satisfaction. The
privileges of the French Kings would be defended by their subjects with the
last drop of their blood; moreover, no censure could be pronounced against him
except with the observance of the accompanying forms and ceremonies, Adrian’s
predecessors had always observed this. Pope Boniface, to be sure, had taken
certain steps against Philip the Fair which had miscarried. “You, in your
prudence, will certainly not forget this”. A three years’ truce would tie his,
the King’s, hands and hinder him from protecting his dominions, while Charles,
during this time, could enter Italy on the pretext of his coronation as
Emperor. It was astonishing that the Cardinals, who were now recommending such
a truce, did not recommend to the Emperor the course which Leo X had intended,
namely, to take Milan from the French, although at that moment the Turks were
beleaguering Belgrade. Adrian’s present intentions had certainly the appearance
of being directed against the Turks, but were really aimed at him, the King. May
the Pope be preserved from bringing about, instead of peace, still greater
confusion, which would ill become the part of a good and wise pastor. Ever
since the report of the truce had got abroad his enemies had done nothing but
increase their strength, which he would yet humble. On the other hand he was
ready, if the Turks invaded Hungary or Naples, to take the field against them
in person; if, therefore, his Holiness were willing to grant him Bulls to raise
money similar to those granted to his enemies, the Pope would only be acting in
faithful accordance with his duty.
Simultaneously with this letter of menace the
news reached Rome that Francis I had broken off diplomatic relations with the
Papal Nuncio. What Adrian had endeavoured to prevent by his strictly neutral
attitude he stood, wrote the Ambassador of Henry VIII, as immovable as a rock
in the sea—now came to pass, an incurable rupture with France.
Nothing could have been more gratifying to
the enemies of Francis than his brusque treatment of the Pope. The Ambassadors
of the Emperor and Henry became more urgent than ever in pressing upon Adrian
the conclusion of an offensive and defensive alliance to protect Italy against
France, the common enemy, and to render Francis incapable of continuing the war.
Cardinal de’ Medici, whose influence over Adrian was becoming increasingly
great, took their side; the Pope, nevertheless, still refused to enter into
party combinations of this sort. His conviction that he was thus doing his duty
was strengthened by the knowledge that a final breach with France would be
followed by consequences of incalculable gravity. “I shall not declare myself
against France”, he wrote to Charles de Lannoy, the Viceroy of Naples, “because
such a step would be immediately followed by the stoppage of all supplies of
money from that kingdom, on which I chiefly depend for the maintenance of my
Court, and because I know on good authority that the French King would become a
protector of the Lutheran heresy, and make a resettlement of ecclesiastical
order in his dominions”.
Some of the Cardinals, moreover, who were
interceding on behalf of Soderini, emphatically pointed out to Adrian the
danger of some violent display of French power, prompted by the youthful energy
of Francis and his advisers, unfriendly to the Court of Rome. If counsels such
as these were kept within the bounds of a wise moderation, there were not
wanting others who spoke as open partisans of France. These mischievously
represented to the Pope that he could confer no greater advantage on his
countrymen and those who had helped to raise him to the tiara than by the
strictest observance of his neutrality, otherwise he would make himself
contemptible in the sight of the other sovereigns of Europe. These same
advisers laid it down as an axiom that Lombardy must be a French possession.
Although it was known by the beginning of
July that Francis I had forbidden all payment of money to Rome, Adrian still
put off a final decision. He wished to hear first the opinion of his friend of early
days, Lannoy, and in a Brief of the 18th of July he begged him to pay a secret
visit to Rome without delay .
Lannoy came at once. He, Sessa and Medici, as
well as the English Ambassadors, urged an alliance with the Emperor in the
strongest terms. Medici especially, who visited the Pope at least once a day,
was untiring. The Ambassadors were able to show that Francis I, had vast forces
assembled at the foot of the Pyrenees, in Switzerland, and on the immediate
frontiers of Italy, ready to give effect to his long-standing and repeated
threats and to begin the war for the reconquest of Milan. At an opportune
moment for the Imperialists, a fresh letter from the French King arrived on the
18th of July. This left no room for any further doubt as to his utter want of
conscience in respect of the ever-increasing Turkish danger. The Pope now saw
that he must give up as hopeless the part of peacemaker to which he had
hitherto clung with such tenacity. In so doing he did not believe himself to
be untrue to his previous policy, for he had already made it plainly known
that, in the event of an invasion of Italy by Francis, he would be compelled to
take part against him.
The letter of Francis I threatening Adrian
with the fate of Boniface VIII was present all the more persistently to the
Pope’s mind because the King, in a letter to the Cardinals written in June, had
expressed himself in similar terms. On the 16th of July Adrian appealed for help
to Henry VIII. How much he feared an attack from the French is shown by the
fact that he took precautions for the security of the gates of Rome. He openly
took measures to ensure his own life and freedom, and not until matters had
reached an extremity and he was compelled to bend before the force of
circumstances did he quit the neutral attitude he had hitherto observed. In
spite of the hostile conduct of Francis, he was even now indisposed to make an
offensive treaty such as the Imperialists wished. He declared that he was not
ready to go beyond a treaty of defence; this attitude he considered due to his
position as the common Father of Christendom. The general well-being of Europe,
the peace of Italy, and the repulse of the Ottoman power were now as heretofore
the ruling principles of his policy.
A Consistory was held on the 29th of July;
Adrian opened it with a speech on the Turkish danger and pointed out that the
Christian princes, instead of destroying the peace of Europe, should take
united action against the infidels. In proof of the warlike intentions of
Francis I, the letter, full of threats and complaints, addressed by him to
Adrian, was read as well as the other in the same tone sent to the Cardinals.
Opinions were exchanged as to the conclusion of an alliance for the protection
of Italy in view of the threatened French invasion. When the final vote was
taken only four, out of eight-and-twenty present, said “No”. They were Monte, Fieschi, Orsini, and Trivulzio.
By the terms of the League, signed by Adrian
on the 3rd of August, the Pope, the Emperor, Henry VIII of England, the
Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, Francesco Sforza, Duke of Milan, and Cardinal
de' Medici, on behalf of Florence, Genoa, Siena, and Lucca, undertook jointly
to raise an army to prevent the French from entering Lombardy; Adrian made
himself responsible for a monthly contribution of 15,000 ducats and appointed
Lannoy Commander-in-Chief, Charles V signifying his approval.
The Imperialists were in high glee. The
League and the agreement between Venice and Charles V have, wrote Sessa,
entirely altered European politics. Medici’s influence, it seemed, was now
firmly established. In Rome, as well as
throughout Italy, the new turn of affairs met with almost unanimous approval;
even those who had formerly been Adrian’s enemies now praised the Pope for the
excellence of his dispositions and his conspicuous piety. His behaviour in the
trial of Soderini had also remarkably enhanced his reputation, and many now
realized that the charges of indecision were not justified. It was widely
believed that the danger of a French invasion was over, and that the
possibility of a campaign against the Turks was secured. On the 5th of August,
the Feast of Our Lady of the Snow, the League was solemnly published in S.
Maria Maggiore. For this purpose the Pope went very early to the Basilica; he
seems to have feared some attempts by the French party; for, contrary to the
custom of Julius II and Leo X, he rode thither surrounded by his Swiss guard.
It was the first time he had ridden through Rome in pontifical attire; on his
return to the Vatican he was greatly fatigued. The ride in the blazing August
sun, followed by a chill and still more, the mental excitement, brought on an
attack of illness, and the Pope, whose health for some time had not been of the
best, had to take to his bed immediately after the ceremony. The contest
between the French and Imperial parties had kept him in a state of constant
agitation, and, now that a decision had been reached, he broke down. It was a
heavy burden on his soul that, for all his love of peace, he should have been
forced, even as a measure of necessity, to take part in a war against the
disturber of the peace of Christendom.
Great as was the rejoicing of the Emperor and
his adherents, they do not appear to have been satisfied with a merely defensive
alliance. They hoped to have been able to bring Adrian to decide in favour of
an offensive treaty against Francis I, but for the moment the Pope's condition
made all negotiations impossible all audiences were deferred, and when the
Datary Enkevoirt also became unwell, business was for some time at a complete
standstill. An intolerable heat prevailed, causing much sickness; Cardinal Grimani, among others, was seriously ill.
The Pope’s condition was said to be the
result of a chill which had first settled on his neck and then gone down to the
kidneys. When an abscess in his neck broke, Adrian felt relieved, and on the 12th
of August he was so much better that he was able to receive the Marquis of
Pescara, who had come with all speed to Rome on behalf of the Emperor. Although
the heat continued, the Pope went on improving; he left his bed, said Mass, and
did a certain amount of business; although he had become very thin and still
felt very weak, his complete recovery was believed to be at hand. An unexpected
legacy enabled him at this time to contribute his quota to the funds of the
League.
Cardinal Grimani died in the night of the 27th of August. Adrian, on the other hand, seemed
entirely recovered, although he still suffered from loss of appetite. On the
27th of August he granted an audience to the Ambassador of Venice; peace and the League had been proclaimed
there on the Feast of the Assumption. Greatly rejoiced, he bestowed on the
Signoria two-tenths of the clerical revenues of the Republic; at the same time
he asked the Doge to send troops to places threatened by the French. The
Marquis Federigo Gonzaga of Mantua was ordered to
join the Imperial army at Piacenza and to undertake the defence of Alessandria.
On the 31st, the anniversary of his coronation, the Pope held a Consistory in
his own chamber; he was still too weak to take part in the public function.
On the 1st of September, de Lisle Adam, the
Grand Master of the Knights of St. John, arrived in Rome. Adrian gave him a
residence in the Vatican, and showed him every kind of honour; he took steps to
find a new home for the exiled Order. From the Grand Master’s lips Adrian heard
all the details of the deplorable fall of Rhodes. The narrative could not fail
to tell unfavourably on the aged and weakly man. Not less depressing were the
accounts of the war now beginning in Lombardy, which threw into the background
all his noble designs for the peace of Europe, the Crusade, and the reforming
Council. Feelings of sorrow undoubtedly contributed to the fresh attack of
illness which declared itself on the 3rd of September.
The report of his death was soon spread
through Rome, and the Cardinals began to be busy with the prospects of a Papal
election. Adrian’s strong constitution seemed once more to get the better of
his malady; on the 6th and 7th of September he felt decidedly better. He then
signed the Bull conferring on Charles V and his successors the right to appoint
prelates of their own choice to the bishoprics and consistorial abbacies of the
Spanish Crown, excepting only when a vacancy in Curia occurred. Adrian’s
improvement was deceptive; in the night of the 8th of September he became so
much worse that he had no longer any doubt as to the fatal nature of his
illness. The next morning he summoned the Cardinals to him and asked them to
agree to the nomination of Enkevoirt, consecrated on the 11th of March 1523
Bishop of Tortosa, to the Cardinalate. This request, made by a dying man on
behalf of a most deserving friend, met with opposition, for the Datary was
greatly disliked on account of his rough and downright ways. In the evening the
Pope was so weak that he could hardly speak. On the following morning (the 9th
of September) he was no better, and therefore allowed Heeze to make
representations to the Cardinals, in consequence of which some of them promised
to vote for Enkevoirt’s promotion. On the 10th,
Adrian once more, assembled a Consistory in his sick-room. Referring to the
ancient custom whereby a Pope bestowed his own Cardinalitial title on a confidential friend, he asked the members of the Sacred College to
consent that he should confer this grace on a person of goodness and learning.
When all had given their assent, he named the Datary Enkevoirt, who at once, to
the vexation of the Court, was received into the ranks of the purple.
After the Consistory the Pope took some food;
this was followed by a sharp access of fever. On the next day at noon, the
fever having abated, the invalid could not be prevented from again turning his
attention, with a touching devotion to duty, to the despatch of business. He
sent off some Bulls and Briefs, attached his signature to petitions, and even
gave audiences, although speaking was very trying to him. This improvement only
lasted till the 12th of September; notwithstanding their efforts, the
physicians, who had been assiduous in their attention, held out no hope, since
they could do nothing to check the fever and rapid decline of strength. Worn
out with sorrow and care, age and sickness, a life was running swiftly to its
end, the preservation of which was of the utmost importance to Christendom.
With the consent of the Cardinals the dying Pope now made his last
dispositions, in which he once more clearly showed his horror of nepotism. His
household got only the property which he had brought with him from Spain to
Rome, but nothing that had belonged to him as Pope. His possessions in the
Netherlands, particularly in Louvain and Utrecht, Enkevoirt was to dispose of
for the poor, and for pious purposes for the good of his soul; his house in
Louvain he set apart as a college for poor students, giving it a rich
endowment. Being asked about his burial, he forbade any funeral pomp; he did
not wish more than twenty-five ducats to be spent on his obsequies. He received
Extreme Unction with the greatest devotion; so long as he could speak he
comforted his friends. “He died”, wrote one of them, “even as he had lived—in
peace, piety, and holiness”.
On the 14th of September, at the nineteenth
hour, this noble spirit passed away, the last German and last nonItalian Pope. The greedy Romans suspected him of having
hoarded great treasures in his carefully guarded study in the Borgia tower. But
they found there, together with a few rings and jewels of Leo X, nothing but
briefs and other papers. He left behind him, at the highest estimate, not more
than 2000 ducats.
As the corpse was disfigured and much
swollen, the rumour was at once spread that Adrian had been poisoned, and the
Spaniards accused the Netherlanders of carelessness in allowing Frenchmen to
come into the Pope’s kitchen. The autopsy of the body afforded no ground for
supposing that Adrian had fallen a victim to foul play; nevertheless the
suspicion gained ground with many, especially as Prospero Colonna had died from
poisoning. The diagnosis of Adrian’s illness affords no proof of other than
natural death. In all probability he succumbed to a disease of the kidneys
consequent on the exhaustion of a naturally delicate body through exposure to a
strange climate, and under the pressure of care and excitement. The reports of
poisoning admit of explanation, since the French party and the opponents of
reform pursued Adrian, even in the grave, with their fierce hatred, and since,
during his lifetime, there had been talk of assassination.
Adrian was laid, provisionally, in the chapel
of St. Andrew in St. Peter’s, between Pius II and Pius III, who had been so
closely connected with German affairs. The temporary epitaph ran, “Here lies
Adrian VI, who looked upon it as his greatest misfortune that he was called
upon to rule”.
It was due to the gratitude of Cardinal
Enkevoirt that a monument worthy of his master was erected. This was finished
ten years after Adrian’s death; on the 11th of August 1533 the body was taken
from St. Peter’s and transferred to Santa Maria dell' Anima, the church of the
German nation. The monument was raised on the right hand of the choir.
Baldassare Peruzzi had prepared the plan ; the execution in marble was carried
out by Tribolo, a pupil of Sansovino, and Michelangelo
of Siena. The architecture of this somewhat clumsy construction is copied from
the tombs of prelates and Cardinals with which previous generations had adorned
so many Roman churches, especially that of Santa Maria del Popolo.
In the central niche is seen the over-richly decorated sarcophagus with Adrian’s
coat of arms and the plain inscription, “Adrianus VI. P.
M.”; the supporters are two boys with reversed torches. Above the sarcophagus
lies the life-size statue of the Pope on a bed of state; he is represented in
full pontifical vesture; as if taking his sleep after exhausting labour, with
his left hand he holds on his head the tiara which had been so heavy a burden.
On his noble countenance, with its expression of reverential awe, are deep traces
of earnestness and sorrow. In the lunette above appears, in accordance with
ancient custom, the figure of Our Blessed Lady, the mighty intercessor in the
hour of death, with the Apostles Peter and Paul by her side. On the architrave
hover two angels carrying branches of palm, and the tiara and keys.
In the side niches, between massive
Corinthian columns, are the imposing figures of the four cardinal virtues.
Below the sarcophagus a fine relief represents Adrian’s entry into Rome, where
a helmeted figure symbolizing the city hastens to meet him at the gates. A
broad marble slab on brackets contains the obituary inscription composed by Tranquillus Molossus; on each side, under the niches, boys
hold the Cardinal’s hat and armorial bearings of the founder, Enkevoirt.
Between the sarcophagus and the relief of the entry into Rome a prominent place
is given to the pathetic inscription, “Alas! how much do the efforts, even of
the best of men, depend upon time and opportunity”.
Few more appropriate epitaphs have been
written than these words of resignation and regret to which the dead Pope had
once given utterance respecting himself. In large letters they set forth the
life-work of the last German Pontiff, one so often misunderstood and despised,
who saw with his dying eyes the unity of the Church and of his beloved
Fatherland simultaneously rent asunder. They form the best commentary on the
destiny of his life, and on that short span of government in which misfortune
and failure followed each other in one unbroken chain. Without ever having
sought high place, this humble and devout Netherlander rose, step by step, from
the lowliest circumstances, until it was his lot to attain the tiara; he was
never dazzled by its splendour. The dignity of the Papacy came to him at a
highly critical moment, and he looked upon it as an intolerable burden.
Wherever he turned his glance his eye met some threatening evil; in the North a
dangerous heresy, in the East the onward advance of the Turk, in the heart of
Christendom confusion and war. After an exhausting journey he at last reached
his capital, there to find an empty exchequer, a Court composed of officials
animated by national pride, personal ambition, and the most unfriendly spirit,
and a city ravaged by plague. Moreover, as a thorough northerner, he was
neither by bodily nor mental constitution fitted for the position in which
Providence had suddenly placed him. Heedless of all these difficulties, he did
not flinch, but concentrated all his powers on coping with the almost superhuman
tasks set before him. He entered on his work with the purest intentions, and
never for a moment turned from the path of duty, which he followed with
conscientious fidelity until his wearied eyes were closed in death.
But not one of the objects which he so
honestly pursued was he permitted to achieve. Personally an exemplary priest,
genuinely pious and firmly attached to the ancient principles of the Church, he
threw himself with courage and determination into the titanic struggle with the
host of abuses then disfiguring the Roman Curia and well-nigh the universal
Church. Strong and inflexible as he was, the difficulties confronting him were
so many and so great that at no time was he able to carry out all the reforms
he had decreed, as, for example, the rules concerning benefices. His best
endeavours were unavailing against the insuperable force of circumstances, and
the upshot of his short-lived efforts was that the evils remained as they were
before. The generous appeal to his own people to make open confession of their
guilt, which he had addressed by his Nuncio to the Diet of the German Empire,
was met by the reforming party with scorn and ridicule. So far from checking
the schism brought about at Luther’s evil instigation, Adrian had, perforce, to
realize that the breach was daily growing wider.
As he laboured in vain for the unity and
reform of the Church, so did he also for the protection of Christendom,
threatened by the Ottoman power. Although the exchequer was empty and the Holy
See burdened with debt, he was called upon to give help on every side. If he
saved and taxed in order to help the Knights of Rhodes and the Hungarians, he
was called a miser; if he spent money on the Turkish war instead of pensioning
artists and men of letters, he was called a barbarian. In vain he grieved over
Rhodes and Hungary; in vain he begged, entreated, and threatened the Christian
princes who, instead of uniting against their common enemy and that of Western
civilization, were tearing each other to pieces in unceasing warfare. The young
Emperor, with whom he had so many and such close ties, was unable to understand
the neutral position enforced upon his fatherly friend as Head of the Church,
if the duties of that great office were to be rightly fulfilled. The Ambassadors
of Charles felt nothing but contempt and ridicule for Adrian's actions; their
short-sighted policy was exclusively confined to their master’s immediate
advantage. The crafty French King rewarded Adrian’s advances with treachery,
threats, and deeds of violence. It was the invasion of Italy by Francis which
forced the Pope, true to the last to his principle of neutrality, to join the
Emperor in a league which, although intended by Adrian to be solely defensive,
at length involved him in the war. His death, on the very day on which the
French crossed the Ticino, freed the most peace-loving of all the Popes from
participation in a sanguinary campaign. He was thus spared from experiencing
the shameful ingratitude of those for whose true welfare he had been working.
Few were the Italians who did justice to the
stranger Pope; by far the greater number hailed his death as a deliverance, and
looked back on his Pontificate as a time of trouble. In Rome the detestation of
“barbarians” went hand in hand with the hatred felt by all those whose habits
of life were threatened by Adrian’s moral earnestness and efforts for reform.
To these motives were added the dissatisfaction caused by the introduction of
direct taxation and the withdrawal of the outward splendour to which the
Romans, especially since the accession of Leo X, had become accustomed. That
Adrian’s physician should have been hailed as a liberator was not by any means
the worst insult. The neglected literati took atrocious vengeance in countless
attacks on the dead Pope. The most venomous abuse was written up in all the
public places. The dead man was assailed as ass, wolf, and harpy, and compared
to Caracalla and Nero; Pasquino’s statue was
decorated with ribald verses.
The death of the hated Adrian was acclaimed
with frantic joy every conceivable vice, drunkenness, and even the grossest
immorality were attributed to one of the purest occupants of the Roman See.
Every act of the great Pope, the whole tenor of his life and all his
surroundings, were distorted by a stinging and mendacious wit, and turned into
ridicule with all the refinement of malice. An impudent spirit of calumny, one
of the greatest evils of the Renaissance, pervaded all classes slander and
vilification were incessant. A month after Adrian’s death a Mantuan envoy
reported on the mad excesses of this plague of wits; he sent his master one of
the worst sonnets then in circulation, “not in order to defame Adrian, for I
dislike those who do so, but in order that your Excellency may know how many wicked
tongues there are in this city where everyone indulges in the worst backbiting”.
Adrian with his piety and moral earnestness
had become, in the fullest sense of the words, “the burnt-offering of Roman
scorn”. It was long before the cavillers ceased to talk. There were some,
especially in the literary world, whose hatred was unappeasable. To what extent
it was carried may be seen from the report of Vianesio Albergati on the Conclave of Clement VII. While Leo X
is there belauded as the chief mainstay of Italy and the wonder of his century,
the writer cannot find words enough to depict the greed, the harshness, the
stupidity of Adrian. There was no misfortune, not even the fall of Rhodes, for
which this barbarian and tyrant was not responsible. Even after the visitation
of God on Rome, in the sack of the city, Pierio Valeriano still reviled the “deadly enemy of the Muses, of
eloquence, and of all things beautiful, the prolongation of whose life would
have meant the sure return of the days of Gothic barbarism”. How deep-rooted
was the abhorrence of the foreigner, how habitual it had become to make him
matter of burlesque, is best seen in Paolo Giovio’s biography of Adrian. Written at the command of Cardinal Enkevoirt, it ought to
be essentially a panegyric; but only a superficial reader can receive this
impression. We have scarcely to read between the lines to see that the
ungrateful Giovio introduces, when he has the chance,
piquant and humorous remarks, and tries in a very coarse way to draw a
ludicrous picture of the German Pope, in nervous anxiety for his health,
interrupting the weightiest business when a meal draws near, and at last dying
from too copious potations of beer. Even those Italians who refrained from the
general mockery and abuse of Adrian were not sympathetic. A characteristic
instance is the judgment of Francesco Vettori, who
remarks, “Adrian was undoubtedly a pious and good man, but he was better fitted
for the cloister; moreover, his reign was too short to enable one to form a
correct estimate of his government and character.”
At the beginning of Adrian’s pontificate the
catchword in political circles was that the Pope was no statesman; this was now
repeated. This kind of criticism was uncommonly characteristic of the
Renaissance; the men of that period had become so accustomed to look upon the
Popes as secular princes, politicians, and patrons of art and letters only,
that they had lost the faculty of understanding a Pontiff who placed his
ecclesiastical duties before everything, and aimed at being, above all, the
shepherd of souls. This saintly man from the Netherlands, with his serious
purposes, his indifference to classical and humanist culture, his strict
avoidance of Machiavellian statecraft and his single-hearted anxiety to live
exclusively for duty, was to the Italians of that age like an apparition from
another world, beyond the grasp of their comprehension.
The difficulty of forming a just and thorough
appreciation of Adrian was increased to an extraordinary degree by the removal
from Rome, by his secretary Heeze, of the most important documents relating to
his reign, his correspondence with other princes and with the Nuncios, thus
withdrawing sources of the greatest value for historical research. In this way
even Pallavicini, adhering to the commonly accepted view of the Italians, sums
up Adrian as an admirable priest, bishop, and cardinal, but only a mediocre
Pope.
As early as 1536 a fellow-countryman and
contemporary of Adrian, Gerhard Moring, had passed a sounder judgment in a biography
which found, however, little circulation. Nor did much success attend the
attempts of impartial historians in Italy, such as Panvinio, Raynaldus, Mansi, and Muratori,
to defend the memory of their noble Pope. In Germany the effects of Luther’s
contemptuous depreciation lasted for a long time. Catholic opinions, such as
that of Kilian Leib, that the saintly Pope was too
good for his age, gained no hearing. It was not until 1727, when the jurist Kaspar Burmann, of Utrecht,
dedicated to the Flemish Pope a collection of materials, compiled with much
industry, and full of valuable matter, that an impulse was given to the
formation of a new opinion. This Protestant scholar, whose work is of permanent
value, deserves the credit of having initiated a change in Adrian’s favour.
Subsequently, in the nineteenth century, the labours of Dutch, Belgian, German,
French, English, and also Italian students helped to remove the long-standing misconception.
It is matter for rejoicing that on this point
difference of creed has imposed no limitations. A distinguished scholar, of
strong Protestant convictions, has recently expressed his view of Adrian in the
following terms : “To a judgment unaffected either by his scanty successes or
his overt concessions, Adrian VI will appear as one of the noblest occupants of
the chair of Peter. He will be recognized as a man of the purest motives, who
wished only to promote the welfare of the Church, and, in the selection of
means to serve that sacred end, conscientiously chose those that he believed to
be truly the most fitting. He will have claims on our pity as a victim
sacrificed to men around him immeasurably inferior to himself, tainted by greed
and venality, and to the two monarchs who, caring exclusively for their own
advantage, and thinking nothing of that of the Church, wove around him the
network of their schemes and intrigues”.
The history of Adrian VI is full of tragic
material. Yet it confirms the maxim of experience that, in the long run, no
honest endeavour, however unsuccessful, remains unrecognized and barren of
result. The figure of this great Pope, who had written on his banner the peace
of Christendom, the repulse of Islam, and the reform of the Church, so long
belittled, is once more emerging into the light in full loftiness of stature.
He is numbered today by men of all parties among the Popes who have the highest
claim on our reverence. No one will again deny him his place among those who
serve their cause with a single heart, who seek nothing for themselves, and set
themselves valiantly against the flowing stream of corruption. If within the
limits of his short term of sovereignty he achieved no positive results, he yet
fulfilled the first condition of a healer in laying bare the evils that called
for cure. He left behind him suggestions of the highest importance, and pointed
out beforehand the principles on which, at a later date, the internal reform of
the Church was carried out. In the history of the Papacy his work will always
entitle him to a permanent place of honour.
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