CRISTO RAUL.ORG |
POPE LEO X CHAPTER III.
The Conquest of
Milan by the French — The Meeting between Leo X and Francis I at Bologna.
THE army which Francis I concentrated at
Lyons was one of the finest which any King of France had ever led into the
field. It consisted of 35,000 men, 60 cannons, and 100 culverins. The most
prominent among the generals were Trivulzio, Trémouille,
Robert de la Marck, the leader of the formidable
Black Company, Lautrec and Bayard, nearly all of whom had had experience of the
Italian theatre of war. On the 27th of June the French King had renewed the
alliance made by his predecessor with Venice, and Genoa had now also joined
him.
It is obvious that the allies ought to have
united against this force. But the Spanish Viceroy, Cardona, was kept on the
Adige by the Venetians, while the Papal troops had no thought beyond that of
covering Parma and Piacenza. Leo X appealed to Francesco Maria, Duke of
Urbino, to help him in the protection of those cities, but he, regardless of
his fealty, favoured the French. The Swiss, whose headquarters were at Susa,
had occupied the passes so effectually that Francis I. considered it impossible
to force them. By the advice of Trivulzio, who knew
the country well, he chose for his passage across the Alps the Col d'Argentière, leading from Embrun to the valley of the Stura, which had been hitherto considered impassable. The
undertaking was one of extraordinary difficulty, for rocks had to be blasted
and bridges thrown over chasms ; but the warlike zeal of Francis overcame all
obstacles. The surprise of the enemy was complete. Prospero Colonna was taken
prisoner with his corps of Milanese cavalry on the 12th of August, at Villa
Franca, on the Po, whereupon the Swiss, entirely baffled, retreated on Milan.
This retreat cut off the communication between the various Swiss regiments, and
destroyed the discipline of the troops. A spirit of disunion set in among the
contingents from the different cantons.
The unexpected success of the French, who
were ere long completely possessed of the western part of the Duchy of Milan,
not only broke down the confidence of the allies, but renewed their distrust of
each other. That the Papal army was only half-hearted in the part it was
playing is shown by the fact that it did not cross the Po. Leo X, who, after
his long hesitation, had at last joined the anti-French League, more from fear
than by choice, was deeply moved by the unfortunate tidings which reached him
from the theatre of war in Northern Italy. He had trusted to the military skill
of Colonna as much as to the security of the watch kept by the Swiss in the
Alpine passes. However much he might try to conceal his real feelings under
bold words, the truth was that the destruction of his hopes made him lose
courage completely, and he could see the French already occupying Rome, and
spoke of flight to Gaeta or Ischia.
The position in the Vatican was all the
more painful because the news from the scene of war was so scanty and
unreliable. “Write, write, write!”, says Cardinal Bibbiena to Gambara in a letter of the 18th of August. The position of Bibbiena, who was more of a
humanist that a diplomatist, became more difficult each day. He found himself “as
a tyro, making endless compromises between his dependence on the Medici, his
care for the Church's interests, and hard political facts”. His letters afford
a deep insight into the political machinery of the Curia.
On the 22nd of August the news of the loss
of Alessandria reached Rome; for the Swiss had not occupied the town, although
Leo X had pointed out the importance of the place. He now himself specified the
measures which the Cardinal-Legate, Giulio de' Medici, was to take. The first
thing to be done was to see the complete reinstatement of the Bentivogli in Bologna, so as to keep a check on the Duke of
Ferrara, who was longing to possess Modena and Reggio. At all costs Cardinal
Giulio must cover those cities. In vain did Bibbiena seek to remonstrate
against these measures. “Write as I have commanded you”, was the answer of the
Pope.
A few days later Bibbiena had to intercede
with his master for no less a personage than Giulio de' Medici. Every day made
it more clear that the choice of that pusillanimous, irresolute man to be
Cardinal-Legate with the army, had been most unfortunate. “The Cardinal”, said
Leo X, “writes about nothing but the dangers and difficulties which threaten
him; as for the remedies which he holds in his hands, he does not know how to
make use of them”. The defence of the absent Legate, which Bibbiena vainly
attempted to make, was certainly inopportune, for it was through Cardinal
Giulio's fault, as well as Lorenzo’s, that the Papal army had advanced so
slowly, and had then come altogether to a standstill. The letters exchanged
between those two show this only too plainly. On the 27th of August, Giulio
wrote to Lorenzo from Bologna, saying that if the Swiss, in spite of the
enticing offers of Francis I, persisted in carrying on the war against the
French, then he could do the same thing; but should this not be the case,
neither could he venture to advance, and must await the development of events.
Three days later Giulio repeated: “If Cardinal Schinner insists on sending
forward his light cavalry, let him do so; but it will certainly be un
accompanied by the Papal colours”.
It was not extraordinary that Cardinal
Giulio should act in this way, because his master, in spite of his energetic
assertions, was at this time allowing negotiations to be entered on with the
enemy. At length the Pope fell back into a state of indecision even greater than
usual. On the 27th of August he sent word to Lorenzo de' Medici, who wished to
make peace on any terms with the French, that he must not give in so soon; but
in the beginning of September, he
himself, under the influence of the bad news from the Swiss camp, determined to
send the faithful Cintio da Tivoli secretly to
Francis I to excuse the attitude hitherto maintained by the Pope, and open
negotiations with the French King. This precaution seemed to him necessary, in
the not unlikely event of the fortune of war favouring the French arms still
more. A few days later Leo X again yielded to renewed hopes of success and
expressed his hope that Cintio would be detained by
the Legate.
Thus did Leo X vacillate from one side to
the other. One day he spoke with severity against France, and maintained his
confidence in the valour of the Swiss, declaring that he would rather lose his
mitre than Parma and Piacenza; but the next, he was inclining towards coming to
an accommodation with Francis I, and even talked it over with Cardinal Sanseverino. How great were the vacillations of the Pope
can be seen by the fact that on the 2nd of September, 1515, he gave full powers
to Duke Charles of Savoy and Ludovico di Canossa to treat with Francis I, but
recalled these orders on the 13th of September.
As a matter of fact, the Papal and
Florentine troops were now inactive. In order to assure himself of safety in
every event, Leo X resolved to yield to the repeated requests of Henry VIII and
raise Wolsey to the purple. Many objections were made by members of the Sacred
College; nevertheless, the Pope proceeded with the nomination in the Consistory
held on the 10th of September, 1515.
Meanwhile Cintio had been intercepted by the Spaniards. This, added to other circumstances, increased
the mistrust between Spain and the Papal party. To add to the unsettled state
of affairs, the Swiss now wavered, and were inclined to come to an
accommodation with France, a treaty of peace being in fact made between the two
countries on the 8th of September. However, a large portion of the Swiss army
repudiated this agreement and marched on Milan, where Cardinal Schinner was
doing his utmost to stir up his fellow-countrymen to fight.
In the interval, Francis I had approached
the immediate neighbourhood of the capital of Lombardy, and pitched his camp at
Marignano. which he fortified with the greatest skill. His position was
attacked at noon on the 13th of September by 20,000 Swiss, incited by Cardinal
Schinner. A desperate fight ensued, and it was only the darkness of night which
put a temporary end to the bloodshed. In spite of the numerical superiority of
the French, the Swiss had succeeded in driving the enemy from the outposts and
capturing some colours and ordnance; but the battle remained undecided. Both
armies passed the night on the field of battle, Francis I sleeping on a
gun-carriage. With the first glimpse of dawn the terrible struggle recommenced;
and in spite of the heroism of the Swiss the numerical superiority of the
French won the day. The scale was turned by the arrival on the scene of a troop
of Venetian horse, which the Swiss took to be the vanguard of the entire army
of the Republic. Thousands of dead, mostly Swiss, covered the field of battle.
The veteran Trivulzio declared that all the other
eighteen battles in which he had fought were mere child's play to this
tremendous struggle.
On the 16th of September Leo received by a
messenger despatched by Lorenzo, the joyful news that the Swiss had defeated
the French. He at once sent word of this secretly to the Venetian Ambassador
and to Cardinal Cornaro, forbidding them under pain
of excommunication to spread the news. But when a second messenger arrived,
repeating the intelligence, such precautions seemed unnecessary, and permission
was given to publish the news. The French and Venetians living in Rome were
half dead with alarm, whereas the Ambassadors of the Emperor and King of Spain,
as well as the Swiss Guard, and, according to one source, even Cardinal
Bibbiena himself, celebrated the victory by open rejoicings. Though Leo X was
delighted that the French should have been defeated, he knew how to restrain
himself, and the Papal court took no part in the manifestations of joy.
How prudently the Pope had acted was soon
seen ; for next morning he received the news that the second day of the battle
had resulted in a victory for the French—news which the enemies of France
declared to be either invented or grossly exaggerated. The Venetian Ambassador
received the welcome news quite early in the morning of the 6th of September,
and once more breathed freely. He put on his robes of state and went at once to
the Vatican. There he was informed by the private chamberlain, Serapica, that the Pope was still in bed. “His Holiness
must be aroused”, said Marino Giorgi. “That cannot be”, replied Serapica. “I insist on speaking to His Holiness”, returned
the Ambassador. Only then was an audience obtained with the Pope, who had not
time to finish his toilet. “Holy Father”, said Giorgi ironically, “after the
example of Christ, I will return you good for evil. Yesterday Your Holiness
gave me bad and at the same time false news; today I bring in exchange good
news which is also true : the Swiss have been defeated”. “We also have received
this news”, replied Leo X; “but the defeat has been inconsiderable”. “Your
Holiness can see the truth by this despatch”, was the response of the
Ambassador, as he handed to the Pope his own official letter, together with
that of the Venetian representative with the French King. This last letter, the
writer of which was known personally to the Pope, convinced His Holiness of the
real state of things. Full of alarm, he cried out: “What is to become of us?
What, furthermore, will become of you?”. Marino tried to calm him by assuring
him that no bad results could follow for the Holy See. He then took his leave
in order to inform Cardinals Bibbiena, Grimani, and Cornaro of what had occurred. Although the Venetians
refrained from any external manifestations of their joy, the Swiss Guards were
so incensed that Marino Giorgi thought it wise to keep away from the Vatican
for a couple of days At his next audience with Leo X. the Pope thus expressed
himself: “We will throw ourselves into the arms of the Most Christian King, and
beg his mercy.” The Ambassador replied: “Most Holy Father, if you do so it
will be neither to your detriment nor to that of the Holy See. The King is a
true son of the Church.”
The union of the Pope with the victorious
French King was to be effected more quickly and completely than the Venetians
cared for. It is true that for one moment Leo seemed inclined to try the fortune
of war once more in conjunction with the Emperor, Spain, and the Swiss; but he
very soon saw the hopelessness of any such attempt. Immediately after their
defeat, the Swiss had abandoned Lombardy, leaving garrisons only in the
fortresses of Milan and Cremona. It was therefore to be expected that Spain
also would relinquish the struggle, and that the whole burden of hostilities
would fall on the Pope. If Leo X anticipated the very worst, his was far from
being an empty fear; for Francis I was making preparations to cross the Po at
Pavia, and to occupy Parma and Piacenza as belonging to the Duchy of Milan.
Were the Pope to resist him any further, he was prepared to seize Modena and
drive the Medici out of Florence.
All idea of resistance vanished before such
a danger. This was the conclusion arrived at by the immediate entourage of the
Pope, especially by Alfonsina Orsini, who remembered
but too well the eighteen years of exile which she owed to the obstinacy of
Piero. “Bibbiena”, she wrote in a state of great excitement, “will by his
doings ruin us for the second time”. Roberto Acciaiuoli,
the Florentine Ambassador in Rome, and Marino Giorgi worked in the same
direction, exaggerating the actual danger. The Florentines implored the Pope to
come to an agreement with France before the Swiss had made peace with her, or
the Spaniards had accomplished their retreat. Lorenzo was quite ready to make
peace on his own account, and had told Canossa, the Nuncio at the French court,
that such was the Pope’s desire.
Francis I, on his side, was equally
disinclined to a war with the Pope—so much so that as early as the 18th of
September he had told Lorenzo de' Medici that he had delegated an Envoy to take
proposals of peace to Leo X. At one time the French had feared, and not without
cause, that a coalition between the
Emperor, Henry VIII and the Swiss might wrest from him the fruits of his
victory. Besides, he and all the French remembered only too well the great
danger in which his predecessor had been involved by his contest with the Holy
See. Therefore the Duke of Savoy, who had been entrusted by the Pope with his
proposals of peace, found a favourable reception with his royal uncle. Leo X
had to make up his mind to a complete change in his policy, and how difficult he
found this is shown by the excited debates held in the Vatican. In smoothing
the difficulties which came in the way of an arrangement, no one worked harder
than Ludovico di Canossa, who came with all speed to Rome from the King's camp.
Canossa, who arrived in the Eternal City on the 25th of September, brought with
him fourteen articles of a treaty to be agreed to ; and in these the Venetian
Ambassador saw to his dismay that the interests of his Republic were totally
disregarded. By a thorough examination of all objections Canossa succeeded in
overcoming the last hesitations of the Pope, who, however, would have gladly
awaited the result of a Diet assembled by the Swiss at Zurich. The Envoy
pointed out the danger of delay, lest Francis I, encouraged by his own
generals and those of the Venetians, might be induced to take further measures,
such even as an attack on Florence. He showed, moreover, that nothing was to be
hoped for from the Swiss, as indeed was proved to be the case by future events.
The Pope, who yielded mainly on account of the menace to the States of the
Church and to his supremacy in Florence, made a stand on certain points, and
insisted on certain conditions in favour of his native city. He stipulated that
he should be spared a direct surrender of Parma and Piacenza ; though on the
other hand he was willing to recall his officials from them. Finally, the
withdrawal of the Papal troops was to take place at a convenient opportunity,
out of consideration for the Emperor.
On the 27th of September, Leo X sent urgent
letters to the French King and his Chancellor, Du Prat, in which he reiterated
his desire for peace. The decision of the Pope was awaited with feverish
anxiety, especially in Florence. When the terms of the agreement between Rome
and France were made known, the enemies of the French King fell into a state of
great excitement. Even his allies, the Venetians, feared that their
interests had not been sufficiently considered in the treaty.
But the announcement of a complete
agreement was premature; for there were several important points about which an
understanding could not be arrived at at once, and on
account of these Canossa returned to the King on the 31st of September. Francis’
demand for the renunciation of all claims on Parma and Piacenza was the
severest blow to the Pope; though before long, by the purchase of Modena, that
territory was once more united to the States of the Church. But the development
of events in Lombardy was so entirely in favour of the French, that Leo had to
resign himself to the payment of a high price. At the beginning of October
Maximilian Sforza gave up all for lost, and surrendered, not only the
fortresses of Milan and Cremona, but, for the sake of one year's assured
tenure, renounced all further claims on the Duchy. On the 11th of October
Francis I made his triumphal entry into the capital of Lombardy.
Leo X, who had left Rome on the 1st of
October, 1515, and had retired to Viterbo, under the pretext of taking an
autumn holiday, approved, on the 13th of the same month, of the conclusion of
preliminary articles of peace. The conditions were as follows : Francis was to
keep Parma and Piacenza, which were to be once more united to Milan; but on the
other hand he pledged himself to pay for the salt from the salt-mines of Cervia, whereby the Apostolic Exchequer was assured of a
considerable income. The French King, moreover, guaranteed the authority of
Giuliano and Lorenzo de' Medici in Florence, and promised to make no
treaty with any vassal of the Church without the knowledge of the Pope. Both
contracting parties gave mutual security for their possessions. On the 14th of
October the Pope entrusted the learned Giano Lascaris, a man high in the favour of the French King, with a mission to the
victor of Marignano. But the deed of ratification was taken to Francis by
Lorenzo de' Medici in person. He arrived in Milan on the 18th, where an
honourable reception awaited him. Hence forward he placed his future hopes more
than ever on the French King.
The news spread about among the members of
the Curia, that Francis I intended to visit Rome, perhaps with his whole army. That
at the same time his eyes would be turned towards Naples, seemed to them to be
more than probable. But the fact was that Francis I was most desirous of a personal
interview with the Pope. Although the Venetians warned him to be on his guard,
as neither Leo nor Bibbiena would shrink from anything to gain their own ends,
the King persisted in his intention; for he hoped to be able to gain further
concessions by word of mouth. Moreover, by obtaining a meeting with the Supreme
Head of the Church, he hoped to make an impression on the enemies who were
gathering around him.
Leo X thought it necessary to fall in with
the King’s wishes; still, the one thing which he wished to avoid was a visit of
Francis to Rome. He therefore proposed either Florence or Bologna as the place
of meeting. As he was suffering much from his fistula, the Pope would have
preferred to travel no further than Florence; but against this advantage, was
to be placed the fear lest the enemies of the Medici in Florence might
fraternize with the French King. Cardinal Giulio de’ Medici and Lorenzo laid
such stress on this danger, that Leo X decided in favour of Bologna, this
choice being pleasing to Francis for several reasons. It was in vain that
objections were raised, especially by Spain, and by Cardinal Adriano Castellesi, who had the Imperial interests warmly at heart,
as well as by other members of the Sacred College. But the Pope was, in fact, more
prudent than his advisers. No doubt the latter attached too much importance to
appearances, thinking it derogatory to the dignity of the Pope that he should
go so far afield to meet the French King.
On the 3rd of October a meeting of
Cardinals was called at Viterbo, where also Bonnivet arrived as Envoy from
Francis I on the 2nd of November. Fourteen Cardinals arrived in obedience to
the summons; and, in a Consistory held on the 5th of November, they gave their
consent to the Pope’s expedition to Bologna, which was to be made via Siena and
Florence. As Leo X did not wish to return to Rome till Palm Sunday in the
following year, the next session of the Lateran Council was postponed till the
fifteenth day after Easter. The Florentine Cardinal, Soderini,
was appointed Legate in Rome. The Master of Ceremonies, Paris de Grassis, was commissioned to arrange for the suite of the
Pope, in conjunction with Cardinals Accolti and
Pucci; Cardinal Sanseverino was sent to the King.
At Bolsena Leo X,
who had shortly before been instrumental in making peace between Perugia and
Assisi gave up his first idea of travelling to Florence via Siena, because of
disturbances in the last-named city. Instead of this he chose another route,
which would take him to Cortona by Orvieto and Castiglione. At Cortona he
remained for three days, being the guest of one of the members of his court,
Giulio Passerini, and received a deputation of
Florentines sent to welcome him; then, passing through Arezzo, the Pope arrived
at Marignolle, the villa of Jacopo Gianfigliazzi in the neighbourhood of Florence, and there
he remained from the 27th till the 30th of November.
Meanwhile great preparations were being
made in Florence for the reception of the distinguished guest. The Florentines
did everything in their power to prepare a pageant as imposing as had been that
in the Eternal City on the occasion of the "Possesso”.
The most celebrated artists of the day, Jacopo Sansovino, Antonio di Sangallo, Baccio Bandinelli, Andrea del Sarto, Pontorno, Perino del Vaga, Granacci, vied with one
another in the contrivance of decorations which displayed a glorious com
bination of architecture, sculpture, and painting. Twelve triumphal arches,
richly ornamented with sculptures and paintings, were erected, and on these, to
the admiration of all beholders, were to be seen reproductions of the most
famous specimens of the architecture of ancient Rome, as well as colossal
statues, while allegorical paintings and flattering inscriptions conveyed the
praises of the first Florentine Pope. Jacopo Sansovino and Andrea del Sarto had erected a wooden facade to the Duomo, in close
imitation of marble, covered with statues and bas-reliefs, while on the smooth
surface of the facade Andrea del Sarto had painted
pictures in chiaroscuro.
The Pope was greeted by music as he entered
by the Roman gate, and drove through his native city, portions of the walls of
which had been levelled to facilitate the decorations. He enjoyed the spectacle
with the enthusiasm inherent in his race, and several times he bade the
procession come to a halt that he might better examine some of the works of
art. The order of the state entry, which corresponded with that of the “Possesso”, had been arranged with minute attention by Paris
de Grassis. The magnificent spectacle seemed to the
spectators to be like one of the triumphal processions of ancient Rome. Taking
part in it were to be seen eighteen Cardinals, as well as Lorenzo de' Medici
and the Florentine municipality. The procession then went to the Duomo, where
Cardinal Giulio de' Medici said Mass. Leo here laid aside his heavy Papal robes
and tiara, and remained in his rochet and purple cloak, such as we see him in
Raphael’s portrait. In the Duomo the Pope prayed longer than usual, gave his
blessing and indulgence, and then went to the cloister of Santa Maria Novella,
where his predecessors, Martin V and Eugenius IV, had dwelt in former times.
On the 1st of December Leo X took counsel,
first with the Master of Ceremonies, Paris de Grassis,
and then with the Cardinals assembled in Consistory, as to the ceremonies with
which the victor of Marignano should be received. Then there was a present for the King to be
settled on. Paris de Grassis suggested a pax; but the
Pope decided on a cross of pure gold, which had been the property of Cardinal
Ascanio Sforza. This he took from the treasury of Julius II, who had hated the
French so bitterly! Together with the precious stones with which it was set,
the value of this cross amounted to 15,000 ducats. On the first Sunday in
Advent (Dec. 2), Mass was said in S. Lorenzo; after which the Pope was seen in
tears, kneeling before the porphyry sarcophagus in which his father’s body lay.
No less moved was he when he visited his brother Giuliano, who was lying
seriously ill in the family palace.
On the 3rd of December Leo X left his
native city, and on the 7th he arrived before Bologna, which he entered on the
following day. The reception was just the opposite of that at Florence : no
decorations, no acclamations greeted the Pope, who had shown too little
interest in the adherents of the Bentivogli, and too
much in their enemies. Even a portion of the clergy showed animosity. In some
of the streets even the cry of “Sega! Sega!” the motto of the Bentivogli, who carried a saw (sega)
on their arms, was raised. Such as these did but poor service to their patrons,
for after this there could be no question of a complete restoration of the Bentivogli. Not only the Master of Ceremonies, but also the
Cardinals, were incensed by the hostile attitude of the Bolognese. They tried
to persuade the Pope to express his displeasure; but he refused, and maintained
the cheerful demeanour of a true diplomatist, who in cases such as this
prudently appears to notice nothing.
The French King’s Envoys, Odet de Foix and Louis de Trémouille, arrived in Bologna at
almost the same time as the Pope. Francis I, who had been received at Parma by
Lorenzo de’ Medici and four prelates, and on the frontier of the States of the
Church by Cardinals Medici and Fieschi, now hastened
his journey, so that by the 10th of December he was only three miles from
Bologna, on the bridge over the Reno. There he was met by Cardinal Sanseverino and the Master of Ceremonies, Paris de Grassis, with whom all the details of the interview, as
well as the state entry, were arranged. There were difficulties at this meeting
which were not all due to the pedantic Master of Ceremonies, and the wit and
pleasantries to which he treated the King. A difference of opinion soon showed
itself, for the Pope had no intention of prolonging the visit to the extent
which Francis had arranged in his own mind.
According to prearrangement, the French
King arrived at Bologna on the 11th of December, amid the pealing of bells.
Francis I rode a fiery steed, being accompanied by the Legates, and later by
Cardinals Sanseverino and Este. Nineteen other
Cardinals waited to receive him at the Porta San Felice. As senior Cardinal, Riario made a short speech in Latin, during which the
others uncovered their heads. The victor of Marignano answered in French, with
his head also uncovered. Neither Francis nor his suite carried arms. The bold
and masterful bearing of the King, and still more his noble countenance, made
the best of impressions on the susceptible Italians; but his suite and the
whole procession disappointed the thousands of spectators who had thronged to
see it. When the pro cession approached the Palazzo Pubblico,
where Francis I was to be the guest of the Pope, Leo could not refrain from
going to the window to enjoy the rare spectacle.
After the King had dined with Cardinals
Bibbiena, Medici, Sauli, and Cibo,
he was presented to the Pope, who awaited him in the great hall on the second
floor of the Palazzo Pubblico, surrounded by the
Cardinals who had been summoned to the Consistory. So many spectators had
crowded into the great tapestried hall. that there was fear lest the floor might
fall in. There was such a dense crowd that it was only with difficulty that the
King, conducted by the Master of Ceremonies, could reach the throne of Leo X.
Francis I bared his head, made the three customary genuflections, and kissed
the foot and hand of the Pope, who wore a jewelled tiara, and a cloak
embroidered with gold. Leo bade the King rise, and embraced him with the
intimation that he might cover his head.
To a short speech in French by Francis I,
Leo replied with as much courtesy as readiness. Then the Chancellor Du Prat
stepped forward and made the discourse of the obediential He began by an
extravagant eulogy of the wisdom, skill, and state of the family of Medici,
especially of its most famous member, the Pope, to whom God had entrusted the barque
of St. Peter, to steer it through the shoals into the haven of safety. The
Kings of France, continued the Chancellor, had from of old surpassed all other
Christian princes in their devotion to the Holy See. Treading in their
footsteps, His Majesty Francis I, in spite of the disdain of advisers who were
of a different mind from himself, had hastened over mountains and valleys,
forests and rivers, and had run the gauntlet of the Swiss, in order to do
homage to the Pope, as an eldest son to his father, and the Vicar of Christ,
and lay all that he had at his feet. While these words were being said the King
wanted again to uncover his head ; this, however, the Pope would not permit.
Leo replied to the discourse with great skill and elegance.
There followed on this the presentation to
the Pope of the principal members of the King’s suite. After this, Leo X,
taking the King by the hand, led him into another room, from which he retired
for a few moments to remove his heavy robes. He then returned to Francis I.,
whom he found standing at a window with some of the Cardinals,, and spoke to
him alone for two hours. The Master of Ceremonies had warned His Holiness
beforehand against putting his hand to his biretta, as Alexander VI had done to
Charles VIII, before the eyes of the crowd under the windows, as such a mark of
respect was unbefitting the Vicar of Christ, even if paid to the highest of
temporal sovereigns.
On the following day the Pope and King
resumed the subject of their discussion of the previous day, but nothing is
known of what transpired. First Leo X visited the King, who met him on
Bramante's stairs ; and in the evening there followed a longer interview
between them, about which but little or nothing is known. The same process was
repeated on the 13th of December.
On the morning of that day the Pope
celebrated high mass with all possible pomp in San Petronio,
the largest church in Bologna. The spacious building was filled to overflowing,
and at last the doors had to be closed to prevent accidents. Francis I was
lavish in his attentions to the Supreme Head of the Church. He even wished to
carry his train; and when the Pope declined this service, the King responded
that he would gladly wait on the Vicar of Christ in the smallest things. But he
refused to receive Holy Communion at his Mass. Forty of his suite, however,
received the Body of our Lord from the hands of the Pope. A remarkable incident
occurred during the solemnity. A French nobleman cried out suddenly in his
native tongue that he wished to go to confession to the Pope; but that, as this
could not be done secretly, he wished to accuse himself publicly of having
fought with great bitterness against Julius II, and of having disregarded the
ban of excommunication. When the King heard these words, he made no hesitation
in declaring himself guilty of a similar offence. Many other nobles made the
same confession, and begged for absolution, which the Pope, raising his hand,
at once gave. Then Francis said to Leo X : “Your Holiness must not be surprised
that all these men hated Julius II, for he was our greatest enemy; in all our
wars we have had no enemy so terrible as he, for Julius II was indeed a most
capable general, and far better suited to be such than to be Pope”. As on this
occasion, so also on others did the Catholic spirit of the French King’s suite
declare itself. The Imperial Ambassador says that they kissed the Pope’s feet
nearly away! The solemn obedientia of the King
was at once communicated by the Pope to the mother of Francis, as well as to a
number of friendly princes. On the 14th of December the outside world learned
one of the results of the interview between the Pope and the King; for on that
day a Consistory was held, at which Adrian Gouffier de Boissy, Bishop of Coutances,
and brother of the Admiral de Bonnivet, was created Cardinal. It was rumoured
that the King had vainly tried to obtain a like dignity for the brothers of the
Dukes of Bourbon and Vendome. However that might be, Francis seemed very well
pleased and in an amiable mood. He passed the evening with the Pope, who had
invited him, with the Dukes of Bourbon and Vendome, to eat with him. The suite
of the King supped at a special table with Cardinals Medici, Bibbiena, and Cibo.
The friendly intercourse between the Pope
and King was sealed, on the morning of the 15th of December, by the
presentation to Francis of the beautiful jewelled gold cross mentioned above.
The King venerated the relic of the True Cross which it contained, and then
hastened to Leo X to thank him and take leave of him. Their farewell interview
lasted for half an hour. Nothing could exceed the expression of friendship on
both sides. As the King left the Palace, he found some of the Cardinals in
waiting to accompany him as far as the Porta San Felice, as they had done on
his arrival. Many of the French suite remained behind to receive either
absolution or other graces from the Pope, all of which he willingly gave. By
the end of December the French King was back in Milan, and returned to France
at the beginning of the new year. Duke Charles of Bourbon was left behind as
his representative in the capital of Lombardy.
Leo X did not remain a single day longer
than was necessary in Bologna, and on the 18th of December turned his back on
the inhospitable city. On the 22nd he arrived in Florence, where his brother
still lay grievously ill. Leo remained there for some time, and bestowed
generous gifts on his beloved native city. At last, on the 28th of February, 1516, to the great joy of the Romans and the members of the Curia, the Pope
returned to his capital. Owing to its being the season of Lent, his entry was
kept with ecclesiastical solemnities only. The Golden Rose, blessed on Laetare
Sunday, was destined this year for the French King.
The strictest silence was observed as to
the business transacted between Leo X and Francis I. Paolo Giovio,
who, by the Pope’s desire, was working at his contemporary history, says, in a
letter written at Bologna on the 15th of December, 1515, that he could find out
nothing. As time went on, the veil of secrecy was preserved all the more easily
because nothing had been put on paper, and was scarcely raised at all where
politics were concerned. It was Leo’s way to conceal state secrets as far
as he could from even his nearest advisers ; and this time it was also better
for the interests of France that nothing of what had taken place should be
known prematurely. But the less people knew, the more fertile was their
imagination, and their surmises were of the most hazardous description. It is actually
very difficult, and for the most part impossible, to be certain of what was
discussed and decided upon at Bologna. What actually followed on the interview
is all that can throw any light on most points.
From what we know, the victor of Marignano
went to meet the Pope at Bologna, with a full consciousness of his political
supremacy, and prepared to make sweeping demands. Above all, he thought to
persuade Leo X to ally himself formally with France against Spain. But without
directly declining this proposal, the Pope asked for time to decide on a matter
of such importance, pointing out at the same time that his present alliance
with Ferdinand of Spain would bind him for another sixteen months. It is,
moreover, certain that the question of the necessity of a combination among the
Christian princes against the Turks came up between them. Francis I made fair
promises about this, in the same way that he made protestations to the
Ambassadors remaining in Bologna of his desire for peace.
In view of the war against the Turks,
Francis I received, for one year, permission to raise a tithe from the French
clergy. The Pope also complied with the French King’s petition in favour of the
enemy of Cardinal Schinner, Georg Supersaxo, who had
been shut up a prisoner in the Castle of St. Angelo in the autumn of 1514, and
whom the Pope now discharged from prison.
The preliminary articles of peace arranged
at Viterbo on the 3rd of October between Leo X and Francis I, were confirmed at
Bologna. In accordance with this confirmation, the Pope, on December the 28th,
1515, warned the Swiss not to interfere with French property, or, in other
words, with Milan. Soon after this the Swiss Nuncio, Filonardi,
was told to accommodate himself to France in political matters. Schinner was
completely thrown over, though he does not seem to have troubled about the Pope’s
warning not to work against France.
In spite of his covenant with the French
King, Leo was by no means minded to throw himself into the arms of France. The
mission of Egidio Canisio to the Emperor Maximilian
on the 13th of December, is a proof of this; for the object of this mission was
to induce Maximilian to make peace with Venice, with the asseveration on the
part of Leo X that he would remain true to the old League with Germany. An
unreserved agreement with France seemed an impossibility, because of the
ratification by the peace of Viterbo of the secession of Parma and Piacenza. An
equal sacrifice was involved in the promise to give to the Duke of Ferrara not
only Reggio, but also Modena, provided the Duke would pay the purchase money of
Modena and the expenses of the Holy See in regard to both towns. If Francis I
thus, at any rate partially, attained his objects, on the other hand his
intercession for the Duke of Urbino, who had grossly violated his oath of
fealty to the Holy See, failed completely. However, the French King was quite
ready to throw his friend over, all the more because the Pope just then made an
unexpected concession to him in a far more important matter. In prospect of the
death of Ferdinand the Catholic, which was bound, in the course of nature, to
occur before long, Leo put before the French King the hope that he might be
invested with the crown of Naples, on the condition that Francis would protect
the Medici and refrain from interfering with the affairs of Tuscany. When,
however, Ferdinand died on the 23rd of January, 1516, Maximilian’s invasion of
Northern Italy altered the political situation so completely that Francis I was
unable to undertake at once any measures against Naples, though he by no means
gave up his designs on that beautiful country.
Incomparably more important than this, and
accompanied by greater and more lasting consequences, were the negotiations
connected with the ecclesiastical affairs of the French kingdom. Francis I
obtained at once what he had already been promised, namely, the right to levy a
tax on the French clergy. In accordance with his former promise, the Pope,
though with some hesitation, granted the raising of a tithe for the crusade,
first in 1516, and again in 1517. Together, these levies brought in to the
victor of Marignano no less a sum than 400,000 livres. What, however, meant
much more was that the main lines of the famous Concordat were laid down at
Bologna. This important measure has been described as due to the influence of
Leo's ecclesiastical activity. With the Concordat was bound up the abolition of
the Pragmatic Sanction, which had been contested so long and vehemently by the
Holy See. Thus, though not without great sacrifices, an important victory was
gained for the Church, and a dangerous political storm allayed.
CHAPTER IV.
The War of Urbino. —Conspiracy of Cardinal Petrucci —The Great Creation of Cardinals, July 1, 1517.
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