| CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' | 
|  | MEDIEVAL HISTORY.THE CONTEST EMPIRE AND PAPACY |  | 
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 CHAPTER XIII.
                 FREDERICK BARBAROSSA AND THE LOMBARD LEAGUE.
            
             When the votes of the Electors called the young Duke
            of Swabia, Frederick of Hohenstaufen, to the throne, men's minds turned to him
            in anxiety yet in the fullness of hope. Germany had need of settled government
            in order to reunite her inherent forces and to raise the fallen dignity of the
            Empire to the high level once attained by Charles and Otto the Great. The
            character of the young monarch who now undertook to direct the destinies of the
            Empire was not unequal to the task, and the manly ambition which glowed within
            him found in the example of those great predecessors a spur and inspiration
            fraught with promise. His person seemed a symbol of domestic peace to the
            Germans who had raised him to his throne. His father had transmitted to him the
            Ghibelline blood of the Hohenstaufen with all the other imperial traditions of
            the Franconian house. On his mother’s side he was related to the Welfs, and thus seemed to form a reuniting link of
            friendship between the two great parties so long at variance. He was a voice
            calling upon the scattered forces of Germany to combine and work in harmony for
            common interests.
             Gifted with a good memory and a keen intelligence,
            Frederick spoke his native language eloquently but was not at home in the Latin
            tongue, although he read Latin authors with pleasure and took a delight in
            those narratives of Roman history which brought before his mind, yearning for
            greatness and fame, memories of that bygone Roman Empire on the restoration of
            which his heart was set. Like all men of a higher cast of character, he opened
            his ears to the spirit of his age and yielded to the influences of the revived
            classical learning. His mind was full of the revived conceptions of the Roman
            imperial law, of which the Italian jurists saw in him the embodiment. They did
            not, however, understand that the Empire transplanted into German soil was not
            the Empire of old, and that in Frederick of Hohenstaufen they had before them
            the most authentic representation of the good and evil of Germanic power
            against which, as by an inevitable antithesis, the free Lombard communes were
            to rise. Frederick was the successor of Charles the Great rather than of
            Augustus, and his counterpart was the new Italy which had taken the place of
            the ancient Rome.
             The crown was hardly on his brow when he sent to Italy
            ambassadors, who presented themselves to the Pope and were well received.
            Eugenius III, in May 1152, had at once written to Frederick from Segni congratulating him on his election and announcing the
            dispatch of a legate who would acquaint him with his intentions. The Pope, in
            expressing his confidence that the king would maintain the promises made by
            Conrad III to himself and the Roman Church, hinted at an early visit to Rome.
            With a bearing on this subject which lay so near his heart, Eugenius wrote on
            20 September 1152 to Wibald, Abbot of Corvey (Stablo), informing him of
            the machinations set on foot in Rome by the popular faction at the instigation
            of the heretic, Arnold of Brescia, unknown to the nobles and leading personages
            of the city.
             About two thousand of the common citizens had met
            secretly to arrange for the election of one hundred senators for life and two
            consuls, and to vest the supreme authority over them and over Rome in one man
            holding the rank of Emperor. The Pope enjoined Wibald to inform Frederick of this secretly in order that he might take steps to meet
            the occasion. Frederick stood in need of no incitement from the Pope to turn
            his thoughts to Italy, and in the very first days of his reign he had discussed
            the matter in council with the princes. His ecclesiastical advisers would have
            liked him to have given effect without further negotiations to the engagements
            made between Conrad III and the Holy See, and then to have proceeded to Rome to
            receive the crown and re-establish the impaired authority of the Pope. But the
            lay princes were opposed to this immediate absence from Germany, either because
            the position of the kingdom was still too unstable or because they thought it
            expedient to wait for a fresh invitation from the Pope. Frederick, although
            anxious to receive the crown and feeling that it was important to do so
            quickly, saw the necessity of first dealing with the affairs of Germany. In the
            case of the election of Wichmann to the archbishopric of Magdeburg the
            interpretation of the Concordat of Worms was involved, and this introduced a
            serious cause of disagreement with the Pope.
             In spite of this incident, friendly relations were
            maintained between the Pope and the king. It was a matter of pressing importance
            for both that the coronation at Rome should not be long deferred. While
            settling the affairs of Germany, Frederick kept his attention steadily fixed on
            Italy, and in giving his decision in favor of the Saxon Henry the Lion, whom he
            liked and wished to reconcile to the Empire, in the dispute between that prince
            and the Duke of Bavaria, he aimed at securing powerful cooperation in his
            expedition into Italy. Invitations to enter upon this expedition were many and
            fervent. The rebel barons of Apulia pictured to him the easiness of an
            enterprise against the King of Sicily; many Italian cities asked his aid
            against other and more powerful cities, especially against the powerful and
            haughty Milanese whom they had not sufficient strength to oppose. Anastasius IV, who had succeeded Eugenius III in July 1153,
            confirmed the proposals of his predecessor, and went so far as to grant the
            pallium to Wichmann for the see of Magdeburg, while urging Frederick to come to
            Rome. The moment had come, and the young restorer of the Empire set out in
            October 1154 from the Tyrol for Italy. In November he encamped near Piacenza,
            on the plains of Roncaglia, in order to hold,
            according to custom, his first Italian diet. A few days afterwards, on 3
            December 1154, Anastasius died at Rome, and with his
            successor a new era opened, in which the story of the House of Swabia up to its
            end was inextricably bound up with that of the Papacy.
             
             Pope Hadrian IV
             
             The new Pontiff was known as Hadrian IV. He was born
            in England, at Langley near St Albans, in poor circumstances, and his name was
            Nicholas Breakspear. He had left his native country
            in youth and wandered through various districts of France in search of
            instruction. After a stay of some duration at Arles, his studies being now
            complete, he was received into the monastery of Saint-Ruf in Provence, where his good looks, well-weighed speeches, and prompt obedience
            made him a favorite. There he was able to turn to account his intellectual
            gifts, and made such advance in his studies and in the esteem of his
            fellow-religious that he was raised to the rank of abbot. In this office,
            however, he did not obtain the same sympathies as before, either because the
            monks found the rule of a foreigner irksome, or that he had heaped up
            resentments against himself by his unflinching severity. Thus disputes arose
            between him and his monks which brought him to Rome to Eugenius III. In this
            way the Pontiff learned to estimate his true worth and, removing him from the
            abbacy, appointed him Cardinal-bishop of Albano and then placed him at the head
            of the Norwegian missions. By carrying the Gospel into these distant regions
            and there organizing the Church, he secured such a reputation at Rome and among
            the cardinals that they, on the day after the death of Anastasius (4 December 1154), soon after his return from his mission, elected him to the
            Papacy.
             A strong man, called upon to face difficult times, he
            entered on his sacred office with a very lofty conception of the supreme
            mission for which this office had been instituted on earth by God. The zeal and
            piety which inspired him were combined with a capacity for public affairs
            bordering on astuteness, while the suavity of his manner was accompanied by a
            strength and tenacity of character which looked straight, forward, without
            swerving, to the end in view. He had scarcely become Pope when an occasion
            arose for displaying his firmness. The Romans, in the last days of the
            pontificate of Eugenius, had consented to a sort of truce which had enabled the
            Pope to re-enter Rome and establish himself in the Vatican within the precincts
            of the Leonine city. But it was a truce which both parties viewed with
            suspicion. Arnold of Brescia with his followers was still in Rome, and his
            presence encouraged the popular faction to contend for communal liberty against
            pontifical supremacy. This new Pope, a foreigner, confident of his
            authority and hostile to the teaching of Arnold, could not be acceptable to the
            Romans, whose discontent reached at last the pitch of violence.
             One day when Cardinal Guido of Santa Pudenziana was returning from the Vatican, he was attacked and
            seriously wounded by Arnold’s followers. Hadrian in return for this grave
            outrage unhesitatingly launched an interdict against the city, declaring that
            it should not be removed until Arnold and his party were banished from Home.
             Never before had this heavy sentence fallen upon the
            city, and the unforeseen event spread terror in men’s minds. Easter was close
            at hand, Holy Week had begun, and the churches were prayerless and shut against the faithful. Hadrian remained unmoved amidst the amazement of
            the panic-stricken people. Urged by the clergy and the populace, the senators
            sought the Pope’s presence and swore to banish Arnold and his followers. While
            wandering in the Campagna he was taken prisoner by members of the papal party,
            but being rescued by some friendly barons who revered him as an apostle he
            found refuge in one of their strongholds. His rebellious adversary having thus
            been got rid of, Hadrian was able at last to issue forth from the Leonine city
            and proceed with great pomp to the Lateran, where he presided at the Easter
            solemnities.
             While things were thus happening in Rome, fresh causes
            of anxiety had arisen in the south, where the quarrel between the Curia and the
            King of Sicily, William I, was once more active. The new king, who had but
            recently succeeded Roger, began his reign under difficult circumstances.
            Harassed by rebellion within and by hostility on the part of the Eastern and
            Western Emperors without his dominions, he thought of reverting to the subtle
            traditional Norman policy by trying to renew friendly relations with the Pope
            and thus separating him from Frederick. On the election of Hadrian he had sent
            ambassadors to discuss terms of peace but without success. Later, towards March
            1155, the Pope, alarmed perhaps by the arrival from Sicily of William at
            Salerno, sent to him, in return, Henry, Cardinal of SS. Nereus and Achilleus, with letters apostolic. In these
            letters, however, William was addressed ambiguously as Lord instead of King of
            Sicily. He therefore sent back the cardinal to Rome without even receiving him,
            a treatment which was greatly resented by the Curia and the Pope. All
            probability of agreement being thus upset, the king, notwithstanding his
            domestic troubles and the movements among the hostile barons who were hoping
            great things from Frederick's approach and were inclining towards him, sent out
            an expedition against the papal territory under his Chancellor, who set siege
            to Benevento, having waste many districts, and burning among other places Ceprano, Bauco, and Frosinone. On
            his return he pulled down the walls of Aquino and Pontecorvo,
            and expelled almost all the monks from Monte Cassino on the suspicion that they were partisans of the papal cause. Hadrian could do
            nothing in his own defense except put William under excommunication and
            place all his hope on Frederick.
             The Pope had pursued steadily the negotiations
            relative to the visit of the future Emperor to Rome. The agreements arrived at
            under Eugenius III were confirmed, and the two potentates entered into a
            close alliance, the terms of which included the submission of the Roman
            Republic to the Pope, hostility towards the King of Sicily, and an embargo on
            the acquisition of any Italian territory by the Emperor of the East. Frederick,
            however, had scarcely set foot in Italy before he perceived that he was walking
            on a volcano. The lofty notions of domination of the Roman-Germanic Emperor
            were met by a burning sentiment of liberty, which was the breath of life to
            those prosperous cities wherein had originated a new phase of civic existence
            and commerce. It was clear that Frederick could never hope to have supremacy in
            Italy and to hold aloft the imperial authority, if he did not first subdue the
            strength of those self-reliant republics which in spite of their intestine
            feuds showed little willingness to submit. At Roncaglia the representatives of the republics had appeared and had shown a certain
            degree of respect for the imperial authority, but it was not difficult to see
            what fire was smoldering under the ashes. Pavia, Lodi, and some other towns
            favored Frederick out of hatred for Milan, to which they were subordinate, but
            Milan was the soul of Lombardy and could not endure the imperial yoke. During
            the diet Frederick had adjudicated and settled terms of peace in the disputes
            between the different cities, especially between Pavia and Milan, but the
            latter gave clear signs of disinclination to bend to his will. It was
            necessary for Frederick to use force and bring his heavy hand to bear. He very
            soon found an opportunity of showing his hostility to Milan. His temper had been
            aroused by the conduct of the Milanese in guiding his army through their
            territory along bad and inconvenient roads. He entered Rosate,
            a strong castello of the Milanese, and, driving oat
            the inhabitants, gave it over to fire and pillage. In the same way the castelli of Trecate and Galliate were entirely destroyed. The cause of the Empire
            in Italy was bound up with that of feudalism, which was waning every
            day before the growth and emancipation of the communes. The city of Asti and
            the castello of Chieri had
            rejected the authority of the Marquess of Montferrat,
            and Frederick, on an appeal from the marquess, put
            them to fire and sword. But these acts of destruction were not sufficient to
            prove his power and determination. The opportunity had not come for carrying
            his power against Milan. That city was too powerful and too well stocked with
            provisions and means of defense. A siege would have exposed the army of
            Frederick to too serious a test and would have delayed too long his coronation.
            It was better to attack some other places faithful to Milan and, by thus
            weakening the strength of her allies, to spread through Lombardy the terror of
            his arms and unbending purpose. Pavia, always a relentless enemy, pointed out
            to him Tortona which, when asked to separate from
            Milan, firmly refused. Frederick, supposing that her subjection, like that of
            other strongholds, would be easy, laid siege, supported by the forces of Pavia
            and of the Marquess of Montferrat, but met with a
            stubborn resistance which gave earnest of obstinate struggles to come. The fury
            of the assaults, the gallows on which Frederick had the prisoners hanged in
            order to strike terror into the besieged, the pangs of hunger, availed nothing
            during two months to shake their determination. It was only at the beginning of
            April that they were compelled to surrender through thirst. The inhabitants’
            lives were spared but they were scattered abroad, and Tortona was razed to the ground and utterly destroyed. All Lombardy rang with the news
            of this event.
             
             Execution of Arnold of Brescia
             
             Frederick had spent so much time on this siege and had
            used up so much of his strength upon it that he had to renounce all thoughts of
            the entire subjugation of Lombardy. In the meantime he had taken steps to
            secure the friendly assistance of the great maritime cities, Venice, Genoa, and
            Pisa, in view of an expedition against the King of Sicily and, after keeping
            Easter with great magnificence at Pavia, he moved towards Rome. His route lay
            through Tuscany, where he intended to meet the Pope, who was then at Sutri. His journey was so rapid that the Curia felt some
            suspicions. Recollections of the violence used scarcely half a century before
            by Henry V to Paschal II in St Peters, in order to wring from him concessions
            in the matter of the investitures, may perhaps have occurred to Hadrian and the
            cardinals at this moment. After consultation with the latter, with Peter,
            prefect of the city, and Otto Frangipane, the Pope sent two cardinals to
            Frederick with special instructions to settle the conditions of their
            interview. The cardinals found Frederick at San Quirico near Siena and were received with marks of honor. They explained the object of
            their mission and among other requests asked that Arnold of Brescia should be
            handed over to the Pope, who felt anxiety at his being a fugitive at large. The
            request was a small one and was at once granted. Frederick caused one of the
            barons friendly to Arnold to be made prisoner and compelled him to surrender
            the unfortunate refugee. The hour of martyrdom had now come for the apostle of
            Brescia. He was condemned to death by the prefect of Rome and fell a victim to
            his consuming zeal for the purity of the Church. His death perhaps occurred at Civita Castellana, but the exact
            day and place are unknown. He encountered the stake without fear; he made no
            recantation; he murmured a silent prayer to God; and committed himself to the
            rope and the flames with such calmness and serenity that even his executioners
            gave way to tears. His ashes were cast into the Tiber lest the Romans should
            preserve them as relics for veneration and as incentives to revenge, but his
            words long re-echoed in the ears of the people. By the martyrdom of Arnold an
            ill-omened seal was set to the compact between Pope and Emperor which was only
            to bear fruit in bloodshed and was soon to be dissolved.
             Frederick had not hesitated to comply with the first
            request of the papal ambassadors, but with regard to their other demands he
            replied that he had already sent to the Pope Archbishop Arnold of Cologne and
            Anselm, Archbishop-elect of Ravenna, to discuss these points, and therefore
            could give no answer until they returned. The dispatch of these ambassadors,
            when made known to the Pope, increased his suspicions. He feared some underhand
            dealing and, giving up his original intention of proceeding to Orvieto, withdrew to Civita Castellana, a strong and well-fortified place. There he
            received the imperial envoys, whom he informed, in his turn, that he could give
            no reply until the cardinals whom he had sent to Frederick should have
            returned. Thus both embassies turned back, leaving things where they were.
            Meeting however on the way, they resolved to return together to the king, who
            had reached Viterbo. There the negotiations were
            concluded, the king swearing to respect the life and liberty of the Pope and to
            observe the stipulations as agreed before. Among those present at the
            conferences was Cardinal Octavian of St Cecilia who, it would appear, was not
            in agreement with the other cardinal-legates of the Pope. Probably already at
            that time he represented in the Curia the leaning towards closer ties with
            Germany and greater compliance with the policy of the Emperor. It is certain
            that he was already on friendly terms with Frederick and an object of suspicion
            to the dominant and stricter party who, as we shall see later on, were not
            without reasons for suspicion. The conditions and place of meeting having been
            settled, the Pope and the king moved forward. Frederick with his court and army
            encamped at Campo Grasso in the territory of Sutri,
            and the Pope, now assured of his personal safety, left Civita Castellana and came down to Nepi,
            where on the following day he was met by a large company of German barons who
            accompanied him in solemn procession along with his bishops and cardinals to
            the tent of the king.
             But here a new surprise awaited him, reviving all his
            doubts and suspicions. Frederick, on the Pope’s arrival, did not advance to
            offer his services as squire to hold Hadrian’s bridle and stirrup. The
            cardinals were thrown into great excitement. The Pope himself, disturbed and
            uncertain what to do, dismounted unwillingly and seated himself on the throne
            prepared for him. The king then knelt before him and kissed his feet and drew
            near to receive the kiss of peace. But the Pope firmly refused. “Thou hast
            denied me”, he said, “the service which, out of reverence for the Apostles
            Peter and Paul, thy predecessors have always paid to mine up to the present
            time, and until thou hast satisfied me I will not give thee the kiss of peace”.
            The king replied that he was not bound to this act of service. Through the
            whole of that day and of the next the dispute on this point of ceremonial went
            on. So obstinate was the contention that some of the cardinals, either from
            exasperation or fear left the camp and returned to Cività Castellana.
             The question was more serious than it seemed to be,
            for Frederick by his refusal wished to shut out even the semblance of homage to
            the Pope, and by so doing implicitly denied that he was in any way indebted to
            the Pontiff for the imperial crown. But the unshakeable firmness of the Pope
            carried the day. The existence of ninth-century precedents for the papal claim
            was a notorious fact, and among the followers of the king the older men could
            remember having seen the Emperor Lothar pay this very
            service to Innocent II. Frederick besides had too many reasons for hastening on
            the coronation to put obstacles in his own way over a matter of form. The camp
            was moved a little farther away to the neighborhood of a lake in the district
            of Nepi, and here, according to arrangement, the king
            and Pope met, coming from different directions; Frederick, in the presence of
            the army, fulfilled the functions of squire, holding the Pope's bridle for about
            a stone’s throw and the stirrup as he dismounted. Agreement having thus been
            secured, Hadrian and the king advanced towards Rome together, journeying and
            halting in company and keeping up friendly conversations, in the course of
            which the Pope reiterated his grievances against the Romans and the King of
            Sicily, calling upon Frederick to give him his promised help in restoring the
            papal authority in Rome, and in providing him with security against his
            powerful and aggressive neighbor in the south. As they drew near to Rome, they
            were met by the ambassadors sent by the senate and people of Rome to greet
            Frederick. The Pope’s presence and his evident alliance with the king had not
            yet quelled the high spirit of the Romans. They still felt conscious of a strength
            real enough to contest the possession of Rome, and, with the glamour of ancient
            Roman greatness before them, they used the language of lords and dispensers of
            the Roman Empire, demanding a tribute and sworn guarantees for the safety and
            liberties of the city. Frederick, in agreement with and at the advice of the
            Pope and the cardinals, haughtily repulsed their audacious requests. The
            ambassadors withdrew to the Capitol in wrath, there to convey the news of the
            rejection, Wounded in their pride and determined not to surrender the liberty
            won after so many years of conflict with the Popes, the Romans made ready to
            avenge this outrage. The Pope, who understood the Roman temper, advised the
            king to act quickly and cautiously. The Leonine city was still the Pope’s. It
            was necessary to keep it in their hands, and therefore a strong band of men was
            at once sent to occupy it by night. In order to reassure Frederick, the Pope
            proposed that Cardinal Octavian, his faithful adherent, should act as their
            leader. Without waiting for the Sunday, on the following day (Saturday, 18 June
            1155), preceded by Hadrian, who went to await him on the steps of St Peter's,
            Frederick came down from Monte Mario at the head of his army and, in great
            pomp, surrounded by his princes and barons, entered the church and went with
            the Pope to worship at the tomb of the Apostles.
             Here, according to the accustomed rites, he received
            at the Pope’s hands the imperial crown amid such loud acclamations from the
            Germans that the roof of the church seemed to send back peals of thunder.
             While Frederick re-entered his camp without the walls
            of the city, the unexpected news of the coronation reached the Capitol, where
            the Romans had assembled to discuss the best means of preventing the ceremony.
            Finding themselves thus over-reached, their indignation knew no bounds, and
            they seized their arms and rushed to the Leonine city in fury. Some German
            soldiers who had remained behind, and some followers of the Pope and of the
            cardinals, were killed by the populace. The tumult was great, and Hadrian and
            the cardinals were in personal danger. The report of the commotion reached the
            camp at the point nearest to the city, where Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony,
            was encamped. He rose in haste and entered by a breach in the walls, which had
            been left open since the days of Henry IV, to meet the Romans, followed quickly
            by the Emperor with all his forces. There followed a terrible struggle which
            lasted persistently throughout the day, accompanied by great slaughter. At last
            towards nightfall the disciplined soldiery of a regular army got the better of
            the stubborn fury of the populace. The Romans were driven back over the Tiber,
            with great loss in killed and wounded and leaving behind them some hundreds of
            prisoners.
             Frederick was boastful of his victory, but, if by
            rapidity of movement he had been able to carry out his coronation undisturbed,
            the bloodshed which followed it did not give him possession of Rome and could
            not secure it for Hadrian. It was out of the question to make his way into the
            city by force, nor was it expedient, even if possible, to remain where he was.
            The infuriated Romans refused all intercourse with him and would not supply him
            with the means of victualling his army. The only course open was to strike his
            camp and, taking with him the Pope and the cardinals, to retire towards the
            Sabina and make for a crossing over the Tiber near Soracte,
            at some distance from Rome. After a brief rest at the monastery of Farfa, he led his army to an encampment in the valley of
            the Tiber on the banks of the Aniene near Ponte Lucano. Here the Pope and the Emperor celebrated the
            festival of SS. Peter and Paul (29 June 1155), and it is said that on this
            occasion the Pope absolved the soldiery from the guilt of the bloodshed in
            Rome, declaring that he was not guilty of murder who slew another in fighting
            for his own sovereign.
             From Ponte Lucano they went
            on to the territory of Albano and Tusculum. Since it was impossible to make an
            immediate attack on Rome and obtain mastery over the city, the Pope urged
            Frederick to seize the favorable opportunity and move against the King of
            Sicily, now that his barons, emboldened by the Emperor’s presence in Italy, had
            risen in open rebellion. Frederick was inclined to listen to him and his
            ecclesiastical advisers were in favor of the design, but fever was already
            making inroads on his army, and the lay barons strongly opposed it and insisted
            on his return to Germany. The Emperor abandoned the expedition, and took leave
            of the Pope with promises of a speedy return with stronger forces to subjugate
            Rome and Sicily. They parted with all the forms of friendship, but the Pope
            felt his disappointment and isolation bitterly. On his way Frederick set fire
            to Spoleto, which had offered him resistance, and at Ancona he met with the
            Byzantine ambassadors of the Emperor Manuel Comnenus, who offered him money and
            help towards the Sicilian expedition, an aid which he was obliged to refuse on
            account of his homeward journey. He continued his march in speed to Verona,
            where he met with an unfriendly reception. At the defile of the Adige he
            encountered obstinate resistance which he overcame with courage and skill,
            leaving traces behind him of his stern severity as a warning to those who were
            inclined to oppose him. In this way he reached Germany with no other gain than
            the imperial crown, but he had learned to know the Italians and had taught the
            Italians to know him. He knew henceforward what kind of obstacles he had to
            expect and what amount of strength would be required to overcome them. The
            crown of Empire was his, but it behoved him to make
            it the symbol of real power and of intrinsic greatness, and to guard it not
            only from the claims of the Papacy as of old but from the rising popular forces
            of the free communes which seemed to have sprung as by enchantment from the
            soil. A conflict there was bound to be, and it was imperative that he should be
            prepared.
             The departure of the Emperor rendered the condition of
            the cities favorable to the Empire more serious, for Milan and the communes in
            alliance with her became increasingly aggressive throughout the cruel and
            incessant warfare waged between the cities of Lombardy. Frederick had scarcely
            turned his back when Tortona, notwithstanding the
            opposition of Pavia, sprang again into life with the help of Milan in money and
            men, and her newly reconstructed walls once more raised a bulwark of defense
            for the citizens who had already shown such a heroic capacity of resistance.
            The hegemony of Milan established itself more firmly than ever, and thanks to
            her well-chosen alliances with other cities this predominance bore with
            increasing weight on the other communes. The cities thus held within her grasp
            looked to the Germanic Emperor as their only means of salvation.
             The Emperor, in the meantime, strengthened by the
            prestige of the imperial crown and the renown of his military exploits in
            Italy, had turned energetically to the restoration in Germany of the imperial
            authority and the organization of the State. Having divorced his first wife, he
            had married Beatrix, the heiress of the County of Burgundy, thereby extending
            his influence towards Provence and bringing the frontiers of his effective rule
            nearer to Italy, never absent from his thoughts. After having received, along
            with the Empress, the homage of Burgundy at Besançon,
            he returned to Germany in January 1158. Scarcely two years had passed since his
            coronation in Rome; the whole of Germany regarded with pride and wonder the
            sovereign who had led her back to the position of the central power in Europe.
             But this conception of universal influence had its
            roots in Italy, and it was in that country that the foundations of the Empire
            must be laid if they were to rest on a stable basis. In northern Italy it was
            necessary to have a firm foothold in order to confront the Papacy, from which
            the Empire could not sever itself but towards which it was yet indispensable to
            assert full independence. It was equally necessary if the imperial influence
            was to be efficacious in the political affairs of southern Italy and in the
            relations between Germany and the Empire of the East. Frederick never lost
            sight of the imperial idea amid all the preoccupations of his German kingdom.
            He knew henceforward what difficulties he would have to struggle against before
            reaching his goal, and made his preparations by keeping a watchful eye on his
            adversaries and combining the forces necessary for their overthrow.
            Difficulties had in fact increased since his return from Italy.
             Milan and the communes friendly to her had renewed
            their strength and were haughtier and more aggressive than ever, while the
            papal policy was moving in a direction the reverse of favorable to the Empire.
            Hadrian IV, bitterly disappointed in the hopes which he had placed in
            Frederick, found himself in a very critical situation. Rome was closed against
            him and the King of Sicily threatened his borders, while he had no aid or
            defense except among the rebel Sicilian barons. The harassing uncertainty of
            his position was aggravated by divided opinions among his councilors. The
            rising divisions among the cardinals had now become sharply accentuated, and
            two parties had been formed in favor of opposite courses of action. One side
            held fast to the continuance of the alliance with the Emperor, the other,
            distrustful of Frederick and mindful of the ancient enmity between Papacy and
            Empire, stood for a renewal of the Hildebrandine policy of close relations with the Norman princes. Each of these two parties
            had a powerful leader. At the head of the first party was Octavian, Cardinal of
            Santa Cecilia, who had powerful family connections in Rome, and on account of
            his intimate personal relations with Frederick had been chosen to conduct his
            advanced guard into the Leonine city at the time of the coronation. The other
            party was led by Roland, Cardinal of St Mark and Chancellor of the Church, a
            learned expert in the canon law, a firm, sagacious man, a sharer in the
            councils and policy of Hadrian, convinced like him of the Church’s supremacy
            and resolved to maintain it. Amidst such conflicting views the Pope, in
            November 1155, yielding to the incitements of the rebel barons of Apulia,
            betook himself to Benevento and there became the chief pivot of the revolt
            against King William. The latter, seeing that the Pope was joining hands on the
            one side with the insurgents and on the other with the Eastern Emperor then
            preparing an expedition against him, was in such difficulties that he reopened
            negotiations, offering very favorable conditions of peace. The Pope was
            inclined to accept them, but the anti-Sicilian party prevailed, and the
            majority of the cardinals would not consent to listen to the advantageous terms
            proposed. The hour of regret came quickly. William made an energetic movement
            against the rebels and the Byzantines, and after defeating them turned back
            against the Pope and threatened Benevento. The Curia had no way of escape and
            was forced to yield. Hadrian sent Roland and two other cardinals to sue for the
            peace which he had just rejected, and obtained it under much less favorable
            conditions than those before offered.
             With this peace began a political estrangement between
            the Pope and the Emperor. The new situation irritated Frederick, and was
            regarded with dislike also by the German clergy. The treaty between the Pope
            and King William seemed a treacherous infraction of the terms agreed upon at
            Constance in 1153, and there certainly seemed to be grounds for believing that
            the Pope had fallen short of that understanding. On the other hand Hadrian had
            as an excuse the Emperor’s abandonment of him and the calamitous situation in
            which he found himself at Benevento without hope of assistance. In every way
            the relations between the Pope and the Emperor had become clouded by suspicion
            and bitterness, when an incident occurred which led to the first open rupture. Eskil, Archbishop of Lund, on returning to his see from
            Italy, was made prisoner in Germany and detained until he paid a ransom. In
            spite of the Pope's entreaties Frederick had done nothing towards liberating
            him. Hadrian was deeply offended, and in October 1157, when the Emperor took
            formal possession of the Burgundian kingdom at Besançon,
            he sent two legates, the Chancellor Roland and Bernard, Cardinal of San
            Clemente, to obtain Eskil’s freedom and to treat of
            the political relations as modified by recent events. Frederick received the
            legates courteously, but their greeting struck him as a strange one. “The Pope
            and cardinals salute you, he as father, they as brethren”. Received in solemn
            audience the next day, they presented the Pope's letter. Its tone was severe
            and haughty. Hadrian rebuked Frederick for having allowed the Archbishop of
            Lund to be despoiled and imprisoned with impunity in German territory, and for
            having consciously connived at this act of sacrilege. The Pope added that such
            dissimulation and negligence he could not understand, since he was quite
            unconscious of having given any cause of offence. The Emperor would do well to
            remember that the Church had received him joyfully and had conferred upon him
            the imperial crown. That step the Pope had never regretted, and would rejoice
            to be able to bestow upon him even greater benefits. He feared lest someone
            were sowing tares of discord between them, and ended by recommending to him the
            two cardinals who had full powers to treat with him.
             On the Chancellor Rainald reading this letter aloud, the princes present rose in a storm of indignation.
            They were especially incensed at the allusion to the imperial dignity as
            conferred by the Pontiff and at the word benefits (beneficia) which the German
            chancellor had evidently translated by fiefs; the sense it bore in feudal law.
            They recalled the rash assertions of Rome that the Empire and the Italian
            kingdom were gifts of the Pontiffs, and remembered the picture in the Lateran
            representing Lothar at the feet of the Pope with the
            humiliating inscription which declared him to be the Pope's liegeman (homo papae), and how Hadrian renouncing such vain pretensions
            had promised to have the picture destroyed. The legates were not intimidated by
            this tumult; indeed it seems that one of them exclaimed: “And from whom does
            the Emperor hold the Empire if not from the Pope?”
             The composure of the legates fanned anger into fury,
            and the Count-Palatine of Bavaria, Otto of Wittelsbach,
            advanced with drawn sword against one of the cardinals. Frederick’s authority,
            however, assuaged the tumult and saved the cardinals from danger. On the
            following morning they were both dismissed with stringent orders to return
            directly, without diverging to right or left into episcopal or abbatial territory.
            Frederick at once wrote to the German clergy to inform them of the incident before
            Rome had time to speak.
             In a circular sent out through the whole kingdom, he
            explained the tenor of the papal manoeuvre and the
            indignation of the princes. He added that the legates had been immediately
            dismissed because blank letters were found in their possession with the papal
            seal to enable them to strip the altars and carry off the treasures of the
            German churches. The Empire was his by the choice of the princes, and he held
            it direct from God. To affirm that the imperial crown came to him as a beneficium from
            the Pope was a lie against an institution of God and a denial of the teaching
            of St Peter. He exhorted the clergy to rally to him against such pretensions,
            since he would without hesitation encounter death rather than submit to such
            contumely. At Rome the legates on relating their bad reception at Besançon were judged in accordance with the different
            opinions prevailing in the parties to which the cardinals belonged. The Pope on
            his part wrote to the German bishops in terms of grave complaint, calling upon
            them to intervene and obtain from the Emperor that Rainald of Dassel and Otto of Wittelsbach, who were the worst
            offenders against the persons of the cardinals, should make satisfaction to the
            Church. But the Pope’s words were not well received by the bishops. They
            replied respectfully but coldly, showing plainly that they took the part of the
            Emperor. It was evident that the answer had been written in agreement with the
            Emperor, whose claims were put forth more firmly than ever along with
            counter-allusions to the papal aggressiveness. The divine institution of the
            Empire was insisted on, and the treaty with the King of Sicily condemned. The
            bishops finally advised the Pope to issue new letters to soothe the angry
            feelings of the Emperor. The Welf Duke Henry the Lion
            made a similar recommendation.
             Hadrian perceived that this was not the time for a
            stubborn obstinacy. Prudence was all the more necessary as the descent of
            Frederick with a formidable army behind him was becoming more imminent day by
            day. Already the Chancellor Rainald and Otto of Wittelsbach had preceded him into Italy to prepare for the
            expedition and to secure the fidelity and aid of the Italian cities. In June
            1158 two other cardinals appeared before Frederick in Augsburg. In much more
            obsequious fashion they handed in the letters in which the Pope explained in
            satisfactory terms the expressions in the previous letters which had aroused
            such wrath. Frederick received the communication with apparent good-will and
            treated the cardinals with every courtesy; but in his heart his distrust still
            rankled, although he did not wish to give the Pope a pretext for joining his
            enemies while he was on the point of entering Italy.
             The Emperor’s two envoys, Rainald of Dassel and Otto of Wittelsbach, had worked hard to
            smooth the way for the expedition. Having taken possession of Rivoli and secured the defile of the Adige, they received
            oaths of fealty from many Italian cities. Beginning at Verona they went down
            the Po to Ferrara, then visited Modena and Bologna, going on from thence to
            Ravenna and Ancona, which latter place they secured for Frederick, ousting the
            Byzantine emissaries who were there trying to obtain a footing. Turning back
            they wrested Piacenza from the league made with Milan. Thus so far as was
            possible all was made ready for the expedition, and the road to Italy lay open
            to the Emperor. In July 1158, accompanied by the King of Bohemia and the flower
            of the German nobility, Frederick crossed the Alps at the head of the greatest
            army seen in Italy for centuries, and turned towards Lombardy with the
            determination to subdue it and stamp out all forces of resistance to the
            Empire. The cities which sided with him rallied to him, but those which were
            hostile he found ready to oppose him in combination, with Milan as their centre of union. His faithful Lodi had been destroyed, and
            not only was Tortona rebuilt but many other
            fortresses were rendered capable of checking the advance of an enemy.
            Hostilities began at Brescia, which was quickly forced to submit by the
            Bohemians who formed the advanced guard. The rebuilding of Lodi was soon set on
            foot, and Frederick, after proclaiming the ban of the Empire against Milan,
            passed the Adda by a bold manoeuvre,
            took possession of the fortress of Trezzo, and laid
            siege to Milan. He was aided by all the cities unfriendly to their powerful
            rival, especially by Pavia and Como. In spite of the great force arrayed
            against her, Milan made a stiff resistance and gave occasion for remarkable
            displays of prowess on both sides. After a siege of a month, the Milanese were
            compelled to surrender, famine having made its ravages quickly felt in so
            populous a city. Frederick offered terms which were relatively lenient. Como
            and Lodi were to be rebuilt without hindrance, many hostages handed over, a
            large indemnity was to be paid, and, worst of all, there was to be a great
            curtailment of their liberties. The Milanese submitted perforce, but in their
            hearts they were resolved to shake off their yoke at the first possible
            opportunity.
             
             The Diet of Roncaglia,
            1158 
             
             On receiving the homage of the Milanese, Frederick
            dismissed a large number of his German barons, and after a short expedition
            into Veronese territory he proceeded to Roncaglia,
            where he had convoked many Italian barons, representatives of the cities, and
            numerous bishops of upper and central Italy to a diet. The presence of the
            bishops and their assent was a matter of considerable importance, because in
            times gone by they had been the foremost representatives and ministers of the
            Empire in Italy. There, before a people who had just witnessed his great power,
            the triumphant monarch proposed to arrange the relations between the Empire
            and the cities of the Italian kingdom. Never perhaps had the imperial rights
            been so proudly proclaimed, and at that moment the authority of the Empire
            appeared absolute in Italy and as if it were to last forever. The jurists, led
            by the celebrated doctors of the Bolognese school, carried away by the memories
            of ancient Rome and the reviving study of the Justinianean code, proclaimed in the monarch’s name his absolute supremacy, appealing as to
            a dogma to the famous axiom “quod principi placuit legis habet vigorem”.
             To the principles extracted from Roman legislation
            were added others which derived from German notions of law and in reality
            formed the basis and the bulk of the constitutions of Roncaglia.
            All the regalia were the Emperor's, his all feudal rights, the mints, the
            customs, the mills, and all other rights, even that of appointing the city
            consuls, the podestà, and other civic magistrates.
            And he who had thus been declared lord over the whole world, and whose will was
            law, dictated in the diet other rules all tending to restrict the rights of the
            communes, and settled differences between various cities, not without a sense
            of justice, yet often diminishing the power of the allies of Milan, from which
            city he also took away the dominion over Monza and the counties of Seprio and Martesana.
             Frederick had reached the summit of his ambition. The
            Lombard cities now had their wings clipped, and could venture no more on any
            dangerous flights. Frederick’s only possible opponent was the Pope, whose sole
            support was the King of Sicily, occupied at home with rebellion and abroad with
            the ambitious schemes of Byzantium. The glory of his power would soon rival
            that of Charlemagne and Otto. But Frederick did not realize that he was
            pursuing the phantom of an irrevocable past. Soon in Lombardy the rights
            claimed at Roncaglia began to appear excessive
            even to the cities which supported the Emperor. Their imperial tendencies
            had sprung principally from hatred of their neighboring enemies, and, when they
            perceived that their interests and municipal liberties were infringed, their
            zeal began to cool and symptoms of discontent to appear. Genoa was the first to
            show resistance to the interference of the Emperor in her domestic affairs and
            the government of the city. Safe on the side of the sea, the Genoese sought to
            gain time by negotiations, while at the same time at great expenditure of labor
            and money, men and women combining in the work, they strengthened the defenses
            on the land side and made themselves safe against a sudden attack. Pavia and
            Cremona as partisans of Frederick accepted obediently the podestà appointed by him to each, and Piacenza, although secretly attached to Milan,
            had not the courage to resist. On the other hand the little city of Crema, in alliance
            with Milan, stoutly refused to dismantle her walls and fill up her trenches as
            Frederick demanded. The latter had been offered a large sum of money from the Cremonese to insist upon this demand. The Milanese, not one
            whit less stubborn, did not feel beaten after their siege. Their irritation was
            still great at the loss of Monza and the territories wrested from them by the
            decrees of Roncaglia, when Frederick sent them two
            legates, the Chancellor Rainald of Dassel and the
            Count-Palatine of Bavaria, Otto of Wittelsbach. The
            authority of these two personages did not intimidate the Milanese, who, knowing
            that they had come to establish officials of imperial appointment, rose against
            them with such fury that they had to make good their escape in secret. Frederick
            felt the insult bitterly, and realized the necessity of striking Milan a deadly
            blow if he were to be supreme in Lombardy. Meanwhile the Milanese declared open
            war, attacked and took possession of Trezzo, making
            prisoners of its German garrison, and tried several times, but in vain, to
            destroy the new city of Lodi which was being built under the auspices of
            the Emperor. Brescia also shook off the imperial authority and joined
            Milan, while Piacenza, which had yielded perforce, left Frederick under no
            delusion as to her aversion. The Emperor, then at Bologna, again proclaimed the
            ban of the Empire against Milan, and wrote to Germany demanding reinforcements,
            which were promptly granted, and which arrived led by Henry the Lion. With him
            came the Empress and Duke Welf VI, uncle of the
            Emperor, who had just been invested with the lands of the Countess Matilda, to
            which the Pope laid claim. Advancing into Lombardy, and aided chiefly by Pavia
            and Cremona, Frederick began to ravage the country, in order to weaken Milan
            and cut off the supply of provisions necessary for her defense.
            Afterwards, in July 1159, he laid siege to Crema with a great force. The heroic
            resistance of this small city for seven months against the great besieging army
            of Frederick has been handed down as an object of admiration to later ages. The
            siege, conducted with obstinacy and savage fury, was endured by the besieged
            with a firmness of mind which nothing could bend, not even the sight of their
            own kindred who had been taken prisoner being bound to the machines with which
            the enemy advanced to make their attacks upon the walls. Undaunted, the Cremaschi repelled their onsets, without compassion for
            their own flesh and blood, and with no other thought than to defend their
            native city to the last. It was only in January 1160, after a six months'
            struggle, when all their forces were exhausted and further resistance was
            impossible, that these valorous citizens surrendered. Their only conditions
            were that their own lives should be spared, and the lives of those Milanese and Brescians who had joined with them in the defense.
            Crema was destroyed, and her rival Cremona was able to exult with unseemly joy
            over her ruins.
             Meanwhile the disputes between the Pope and the
            Emperor had broken out again more hotly than ever. An impassable abyss lay
            between them, for the irreconcilable principle of two supremacies rendered
            their two representatives irreconcilable also, and provided endless subjects of
            disagreement. Frederick, already disposed to take offence, had become hardened
            in his resentment because the Pope refused to confirm the nomination of Guido,
            son of the Count of Biandrate, to the archbishopric
            of Ravenna. Much greater was his indignation when a letter arrived from Hadrian
            carried by a messenger of mean appearance who disappeared immediately after
            consigning it. The letter was marked by a renewal of the bitter tone which for
            some time past had dropped out of their correspondence, and was full of
            complaints against the recent exactions made by the imperial officers on
            ecclesiastical possessions. Frederick, more incensed than before, ordered his
            Chancellor in answering it to place his name before the Pope’s and to address
            him in the second person singular tu instead of by
            the customary plural vos.
            In this way he thought to remind the Pope of the old imperial supremacy. But
            the Pope stiffened himself all the more, in spite of the great but unavailing
            efforts of Eberhard, Bishop of Bamberg, to soothe the two antagonists. The
            bishop writing of Frederick to a cardinal said: “You know what he is. He loves
            those who love him and turns away from others, not having yet thoroughly learned
            to love also his enemies”.
             The exhortations of Eberhard bore no fruit. The Pope,
            it is true, sent four cardinals to the Emperor to discuss the points of
            disagreement between them, but with conditions which seemed too hard. All
            magistracies and regalia of Rome, the Pope affirmed, belonged to St Peter, and
            therefore the Emperor had no right to send his envoys direct to the Romans; the
            estates of the Pope were not to be subject to fodrum except at an imperial coronation; Italian bishops owed the Emperor no homage
            but only an oath of fealty, and were not obliged to entertain imperial envoys
            in their palaces.
             Restitution was to be made to the Pope of the
            possessions of the Roman Church—Tivoli, Ferrara, Massa, Ficarolo,
            the lands of the Countess Matilda, the territory from Acquapendente to Rome, the duchy of Spoleto, and the islands of Sardinia and Corsica.
            Frederick was certainly not the man to submit to such exaggerated claims. He
            repelled them, not without expressions of irony, by saying that he would not
            require homage from the Italian bishops if they would give up those of their
            temporalities which were regalia, further, imperial envoys would have no right
            to be entertained in the bishops’ palaces if these happened not to be built on
            lands held from the Emperor; but normally they were so built, and were imperial
            palaces. Then the Pope’s affirmation that imperial envoys could not be sent
            direct to the Romans, since the magistracies at Rome and the regalia were
            papal, would imply that he, Roman Emperor by right divine, was a mere phantom
            sovereign, bearing an empty name.
             Such was the situation when some ambassadors from the
            city of Rome came to Frederick with offers of recognition of the imperial
            rights in return for his recognition and protection of the Roman Senate.
            Frederick grasped the opportunity, received the Roman envoys with marks of
            honor, and dismissed them not without hope. He then proposed to the legates
            that a committee of arbitration should be formed consisting of six cardinals on
            the Pope’s side and six bishops on his own, and informed them that he would
            send ambassadors to Rome to treat with the Pope and the Roman citizens, thus
            inserting a threat amid the formalities of friendship.
             Ambassadors were sent, but Hadrian absolutely refused
            arbitration, admitting no tribunal above his own, and the Romans themselves
            showed a suspicious temper, fearing that the Emperor, in restoring the banished
            prefect of the city, wished to introduce a magistrate of his own, and while
            retaining the semblance to destroy the reality of an independent senate. Here,
            as on other occasions, Frederick ran counter to the sentiment of municipal
            freedom widespread throughout Italy. Hadrian again, recognizing the power of
            this sentiment, turned his eyes towards Lombardy in the hope of securing the
            assistance of the communes. A first attempt at a league between the citizens of
            Milan, Brescia, and Piacenza agreed at Anagni with
            Hadrian to come to no terms with the Emperor without the consent of the Pontiff
            and that of his successors, and the people of Crema, still besieged within
            their walls, sent their oath to the same effect. The Pope made like promises to
            the leagued cities, and announced to them that he would within forty days place
            Frederick under excommunication. But before he could put into effect such a
            serious resolution, an attack of angina suddenly brought about his death at Anagni on 1 September 1159.
             The election of his successor was bound to be a stormy
            one. The two divergent policies among the cardinals were inevitably brought
            into collision at a moment when the whole future direction of the Church
            depended upon the preponderance of one or other of the two parties. The
            majority of the cardinals favored the election of Cardinal Roland, a supporter
            of Hadrian's policy and of the alliance with Sicily, while a small minority
            gave a stubborn support to Cardinal Octavian, head of the party bent on
            agreement with the Emperor. After Hadrian had been laid to rest in the Vatican,
            the cardinals assembled in the church of St Peter, and on 7 September 1159 the
            majority succeeded, after a sharp struggle, in electing Roland, but the
            opposing party would not admit their defeat, and proclaimed Octavian as
            Pontiff. In the tumult of this double election, while the two Popes-designate
            were struggling for the possession of the papal mantle, the doors of St Peter’s
            were opened to the armed partisans of Octavian who was proclaimed by the name
            of Victor IV.
             
             The papal schism
             
             Roland and his cardinals, fearing personal violence,
            retired into the fortress annexed to the church and remained shut in there for
            several days, unable to move owing to the armed strength of the opposite
            faction. Afterwards Roland, who had managed to be conveyed to Trastevere, made a successful attempt at escape from his
            opponents. But, although on regaining his freedom he was triumphantly acclaimed
            by his own party, he did not feel himself sufficiently strong to remain in
            Rome, and had to betake himself elsewhere. At Ninfa he was consecrated Pope as
            Alexander III, and after a short stay at Terracina he
            went to Anagni.
             Neither could Octavian hold out long at Rome. His
            consecration took place at the monastery of Farfa,
            whence he went to Segni. Thus the two rivals, in near
            touch with Rome and only a few miles distant from each other, began to hurl
            anathemas the one against the other.
             A great schism rent the Church afresh, and rendered
            her path more difficult at a moment when dangers and pitfalls threatened on every
            side. The contending parties lost no time in presenting their cases to the
            tribunal of Christendom, and sent legates and letters to sovereigns and bishops
            relating the story of the election each in his own way.
             In a situation so uncertain, the attitude of Frederick
            might have great weight, not only in Italy and Germany where he exercised
            direct influence, but also throughout the rest of Europe where his name was a
            force and his ideal position as the temporal leader of Christendom was
            recognized. He perceived his advantage. As soon as the news of Hadrian’s death
            reached him, while the siege of Crema was vet in progress, he wrote without
            delay to Eberhard of Salzburg a letter which clearly showed his intentions. In
            it he said that the successor of Hadrian must be one who would reform the
            condition of the Church in the direction of a pacific union, and treat the
            Empire and the loyal subjects of the Empire with greater consideration. He had
            heard with great regret that the election was already the cause of factions; he
            therefore warned him not to give his adhesion precipitately to the Pope-elect,
            whoever he might be, without first consulting him (the Emperor), and enjoined
            him to communicate the same advice to his suffragans. He
            also informed him that he was negotiating for a firm understanding between
            himself and the Kings of France and England, and had instructed his ambassadors
            to come to an agreement with them as to the most suitable candidate for the
            Papacy, so that no election should be accepted without the common consent of
            the three sovereigns. He added in conclusion that letters were being sent on
            this matter to Germany, Burgundy, and Aquitaine, in order that all his subjects
            might know that he would not on any consideration suffer so great a dignity to
            be filled by anyone who was not unanimously chosen by the faithful for the
            upholding of the honor of the Empire and the peace and unity of the Church.
             It was not likely that Roland and his partisans would
            find favor with a prince thus disposed. Even if his grief at the schism were
            sincere, it was only natural that Frederick should have wished for the triumph
            of Octavian, of whom he felt secure. Either acting on secret instructions from
            the Emperor or more probably on their own initiative, the two imperial
            ambassadors who happened to be in Rome at the time showed themselves favorable
            to the election of the imperial cardinal, while the latter and his followers,
            in the letters sent by them to the bishops and princes of the Empire, dwelt
            strongly on the alliance of Roland with the King of Sicily and his antipathy to
            the Empire.
             The letters of Alexander III, more elevated in tone
            and showing greater confidence in his claims, displayed in turn a suspicion of
            the imperial attitude, and the Alexandrine cardinals in writing to Frederick
            did not conceal this, but openly accused Otto of Wittelsbach of opposing their Pope and themselves and of having violently entered the
            Campagna with Octavian, trying to make the territory subject to him. Reminding
            the Emperor that it was a duty incumbent on his office to defend the Church
            against heretics and schismatics, they concluded by
            saying: “Our wish is to honor you as the special defender and patron of the
            Roman Church, and as far as in us lies we desire the increase of your glory.
            Therefore we supplicate you to love and honor the Holy Roman Church your
            mother; to watch over her peace as becomes your imperial excellence and not to
            favor in any way the great iniquity of the invading schismatic”. Their firm
            language and austere admonitions showed that the traditions of Hadrian IV were
            still in force, and that his successor, even in the anxious moments which
            ushered in his pontificate, was not one to bend in face of difficulties.
             The memory of those of his predecessors who, like Otto
            the Great, had brought the imperial authority to bear in all its fullness on
            the Papacy, could not fail to recur to Frederick's mind and dispose him to try
            to become an arbitrator in the contest, thus resuming the ancient claims of the
            Empire from which the Church by slow degrees had become emancipated. He
            therefore decided to convene an assembly of prelates, while inviting the two
            contending parties to be present and submit their reasons to its judgment. Two
            bishops were charged to convey the letters in which Frederick ordered the two
            claimants to appear. Alexander was well aware that a refusal might be taken to
            mean that he was uncertain of his cause, but a refusal was inevitable. Not only
            had Alexander and his followers reason to fear the bias of a council convened
            in the Emperor's name and placed under the aegis of his power, but to
            acknowledge such an assembly and participate in it would be dealing a fatal
            blow at the great principle at stake, the superiority of the Church to every
            earthly authority. In agreement with his cardinals, Alexander rejected the
            proposal, and expressed his sorrowful surprise that the Emperor should have
            overstepped in this manner the limits of his dignity, and presumed, he the
            champion of the Church, to dictate terms to the Pontiff as though he were his
            sovereign. The imperial legates withdrew, ill-content with such an answer, and
            betook themselves to Octavian who, on the other hand, accepted the invitation
            without hesitation and set forth for Pavia.
             
             The Synod of Pavia
             
             Frederick at last had brought Crema to surrender, and
            had given orders for the demolition of the heroic city and the dispersal of the
            citizens. In February 1160 he opened the Synod of Pavia with an oration in
            which, notwithstanding the vagueness of the phraseology, his thoughts
            concerning the relations of the Empire and the Church were transparent enough.
            “Although”, he said, “in my office and dignity of Emperor I can convoke
            councils, especially in moments of peril for the Church, as did Constantine, Theodosius,
            Justinian, and in later times the Emperors Charlemagne and Otto, yet we leave
            it to your prudence and power to decide in this matter. God made you priests
            and gave you power to judge us also. And since it is not for us to judge you in
            things appertaining to God, we exhort you so to act in this matter as though we
            awaited from you the judgment of God”. Thus speaking he retired, leaving the
            Council to their deliberations. At this Council were assembled many abbots and
            lesser ecclesiastics, but only fifty of the rank of bishop and archbishop, the
            majority of whom were Germans or northern Italians. From other countries hardly
            any had come, and some foreign sovereigns had sent in adhesions couched in
            vague terms which were received and registered as if they had a positive value.
            Octavian had no difficulty establishing the validity of his cause, all the more
            so since Alexander was not present, owing to his refusal to recognize the
            synod, and thus did nothing to vindicate his case. Alexander besides had to
            reckon with the accusation of his hostility to the Empire and alliance with the
            Sicilians and the Lombards. Octavian was acknowledged
            to be Pope and honored as such by the Emperor. On the following day he launched
            a fresh, excommunication against Roland and severe admonitions to the King of
            Sicily and the Lombards.
             The schism had now become incurable. Alexander did not
            stagger under the blow. He issued an excommunication against Frederick and
            renewed the ban already laid on Octavian and his party. Thus asserting his authority, he
            released Frederick’s subjects from their obedience, encouraged
            the Lombards to revolt, and fomented the internal
            discords of Germany. Meanwhile he maintained his cause throughout the rest of
            Europe, writing to the bishops at large, and exhorting them to support him
            among their flocks and before their sovereigns. The support of the episcopate
            was in fact of great use to him in the various courts of Europe, and especially
            in those of France and England, two centres of
            influence of the highest importance. Frederick made vain efforts to gain the
            kings of these countries; they maintained a prudent reserve, which after some
            hesitation settled down into an attitude decidedly favorable to Alexander.
             
             Capture and destruction of Milan
             
             The part taken by the Emperor in this struggle for the
            Papacy did not turn him from his fixed resolve to subdue Lombardy to obedience,
            and root out all possibility of resistance by bringing Milan to his feet. The
            calamities and destruction of Crema did not avail to break the spirit of the
            unyielding Lombard towns opposed to the Emperor, and they rose again in arms,
            reinvigorated by their alliance with the Pope. In order to assert his sway it
            was necessary for Frederick to strike a mortal blow at Milan and thus cut out
            the heart of the Lombard resistance. But it was not an easy undertaking, and
            all Barbarossa's power might have been shattered but for the assistance of the
            cities which stood by him faithfully. Their municipal hatred of the great
            sister city waxed ever stronger as the struggle went on, and caused a wretched
            denial in the face of the foreigner of those bonds of unselfishness and of
            blood which ought to have drawn them closely together. With such auxiliaries
            Frederick began operations against Milan, and for a whole year there was
            constant warfare in the surrounding territory, with alternating success and a
            cruel destruction of the great Lombard plain. In the spring of 1161 Germany and
            Hungary sent the reinforcements necessary for the campaign, and the Emperor was
            able to shut in the city more closely. A long siege followed, lasting yet
            another year. The defenders held out as long as was possible with unshaken
            tenacity, but in the end the forces of resistance failed. The flower of the
            garrison had fallen at their posts, disease and hunger were rapidly cutting off
            the remnant, munitions of defense had given out, all resources were exhausted.
            There was nothing to be done but to make terms, and all attempts were vain to
            secure some favorable agreement previous to surrender. In March 1162 the
            vanquished city had to stoop low and submit at the conqueror's discretion. The
            sight of the misery and fall of so great and noble a city aroused pity even in
            her enemies, who could not refrain from appealing to the clemency of Frederick.
            The stern ruler would not bend, but turned a heart of stone to their prayers.
            For him harshness in this case was justice. The imperial majesty must be
            vindicated by a signal example of rigor which should extirpate all hope of
            future conflict. Milan, given over to pillage and fire, seemed buried for ever beneath the mass of her own ruins.
             To those Milanese who survived the siege were assigned
            four localities where they might settle, not very far from the ruined city. It
            was a grievous dispersion, yet a contemporary chronicler accused Frederick at a
            later date of a want of foresight in having allowed the Milanese to remain so
            near to the ashes of their fallen city. But how could it have been possible to
            imagine a speedy resurrection after such a fall, and that Milan might rise
            again, when Frederick’s power had reached such a height and was inspiring
            everywhere both reverence and terror? All opposition gave way before him.
            Piacenza and Brescia had to accept his stern conditions. Their walls were
            demolished; the imperial officials were received; tribute and hostages were
            rendered to the Emperor; the imperial Pope was recognized, while the Bishop of
            Piacenza, whose loyalty to Alexander was untainted, passed into exile. Other
            cities underwent the same ordeal. The imperial claims asserted at Roncaglia held the field. The dissensions of the Lombard cities
            had borne the bitter fruit of misery and servitude, but a fruit destined in its
            bitterness to be one of remedy and healing.
             The victories in Lombardy now strengthened Frederick’s
            projects with regard to Sicily and the East, where the help of maritime forces
            was indispensable. He therefore first offered inducements to Pisa and then to
            Genoa to form an alliance with him. Both consented, although each was
            distrustful of the other, and Genoa in particular gave adhesion from motives of
            expediency rather than from any friendly intention. The position in northern
            Italy being thus secured and a powerful naval connection being established on
            the sea, Frederick might well feel assured that within his grasp lay the
            dominion of all Italy, and that he was on the verge of entering upon the
            lordship of a genuine and incontestable empire. But Alexander III, despite the
            grave anxieties of his position, was keeping a watchful eye on this policy with
            the intention of arresting its achievement. While the war in Lombardy lasted,
            the Pope, unable to keep a footing in Rome, had remained in the Campagna. In
            spite of Frederick, all Europe outside the Empire and the Latin East now
            acknowledged him, but his material resources were such that he was bound to
            quit Italy and throw himself upon the traditional hospitality of the French
            kingdom. He embarked at Capo Circello on a galley of
            the King of Sicily, and after a halt at Genoa entered France through Provence,
            where he was received everywhere with signs of deep devotion. Well aware of
            Frederick's commanding influence, he turned to Eberhard of Salzburg, the
            prelate most loyal to him in Germany, who had brought
            all his authority to bear on Frederick in order that he might relinquish the
            schism and make peace with the Church. But the Pope could only put slender
            trust in these pacific proposals, and within a short month, in May 1162, the
            struggle still continuing, he renewed his excommunications against Octavian and
            the Emperor in a solemn act of promulgation at Montpellier. In the meantime,
            Alexander was keeping up his relations with France and England with a view to
            gaining their decisive adherence to his cause. Nor did he neglect any means of
            attracting German sympathy and that of Italy, and by raising difficulties in
            the path of Octavian of dealing a blow at the policy of Frederick. Octavian, in
            his turn, in two synods held at Lodi and Cremona, had confirmed the decisions
            of the Council of Pavia, but it was not difficult to see that Alexander's
            adherents were gaining in number and that Octavian's party was lukewarm and
            more of a make-believe than a reality. Alexander could only be overcome by
            shattering his foundations and depriving him of the asylum which was at once
            his refuge and his strength.
             While he appeared to be preparing for an expedition in
            the South, Frederick turned back and, leaving his representatives in Lombardy
            charged to keep that province in subjection, he crossed the Alps. Taking
            advantage of the disputes between England and the French King Louis VII, he
            turned to the latter in the hope of making him an ally and separating him from
            the Pope. Louis hesitated; at the instigation of certain councilors who were
            strongly in favor of an alliance with the Emperor, he began to treat with
            Frederick and finally with Octavian, while at the same time he made no break in
            his relations with Alexander, who watched with anxious attention this turn in
            French policy. It was settled that the two sovereigns should meet on 29 August
            1162 at St-Jean-de-Losnes on the frontiers of France and
            the County of Burgundy, now subject to Frederick. Henry of Champagne,
            brother-in-law of King Louis, was the soul of these negotiations, and it suited
            his interests to separate Louis from Henry II of England. The two sovereigns
            were to bring with them the two pretenders to the Papacy and to arrive together
            at a final recognition of the true Pope, but if one of the two rivals refused
            to appear then the other was to be recognized on the spot. Later the king
            asserted that Henry had gone beyond his instructions in accepting this
            condition; but meanwhile Alexander, perceiving the serious danger of such an
            interview, made every effort to prevent its taking place. He was in time to
            have a conversation with Louis, and if he did not succeed in dissuading him from
            the meeting he at least was able to convince him that he, the Vicar of Christ,
            could not bow to the decision of the proposed tribunal. Louis, shaken by the
            Pope's arguments, made his way to the banks of the Saone in an uncertain mood
            and anxious to find a means of extricating himself from the complications in
            which Henry of Champagne had involved him. He was also apprehensive of the show
            of force with which the Emperor came to meet him, and Frederick himself had his
            own suspicions. The latter arrived with his own Pope, Victor IV, at the place
            of meeting, but, not finding the king there, withdrew. Soon afterwards Louis
            arrived, and hearing of the Emperor's withdrawal took his departure without
            waiting to see if he would return. Thus the interview between the two
            sovereigns never took place.
             Perhaps there was no real wish on either side for the
            meeting. But Henry of Champagne in his vexation threatened to transfer his
            allegiance to the Emperor, and so constrained Louis to promise to return in
            three weeks in readiness to accept, along with Frederick, the decisions of a
            congress. This was a mortal blow for Alexander, but he did not lose courage. He
            brought every kind of influence to bear on Louis, and showed great political
            shrewdness in turning to the King of England who was suspicious of an alliance
            between France and the Emperor, even succeeding in bringing about an
            understanding between him and the King of France. Thus when Frederick felt most
            sure of his position he found himself threatened by an unexpected danger, and
            made up his mind to withdraw from the conference. The Emperor’s defection
            caused no regret to Louis. He returned to Dijon freed from the obligations into
            which he had entered almost against his will. Before leaving Burgundy,
            Frederick had held a diet in which Victor IV, while affirming his rights, had
            excommunicated Alexander III. The latter, in the meanwhile, had enjoyed a
            triumph at Coucy-sur-Loire. There the Kings of
            England and of France paid him reverence together and declared him to be the
            valid and legitimate Pope. In the presence of this triumphant success the
            anti-Pope's importance was diminished. The struggle between the Papacy and the
            Empire reverted to great principles and issues, and although the two chief
            litigants were then at a distance, both appealed to the name of Rome, and the
            name of Rome once more localized in Italy the arena of combat.
             In Italy signs were not wanting that Frederick,
            notwithstanding the destruction of Milan and the dismantling of the cities in
            alliance with her, was far from having stamped out all resistance. The heart of
            the people was unconquerable, and beat in expectation of the hour when they
            could rise again for the struggle. The affairs of Germany held the Emperor
            there under weighty responsibilities, while his representatives in Lombardy
            were imposing cruel exactions on the subject populations. These called in vain
            for justice. Day by day their yoke became more galling, and if the terrible
            fate of Milan warned them to endure the burden, still the germs of revolt were
            ripening below the surface. The Chancellor Rainald of
            Dassel was indefatigable in checking disaffection and in preparing the naval
            expedition against Sicily, in the absence of the Emperor, but his adversaries
            were not idle. Alexander III, the Kings of Sicily and France, the Emperor of
            Constantinople, Venice, and the Lombard cities, had come to an agreement among
            themselves. The forces of resistance were quickened into life. When in October
            1163 Frederick with a small army re-entered Lombardy, he was met on all sides
            by complaints of the rapacity of his agents and by appeals to mitigate the
            hardships of the oppressed populations. But Frederick gave little heed to such
            appeals, and the sufferers felt that succor must be sought amongst themselves.
            Venice gave them encouragement. While the Emperor was engaged in appointing one
            of his creatures as king in Sardinia without estranging Genoa and Pisa, who
            were disputing with each other the possession of this island, Verona, Padua,
            and Vicenza rose in joint rebellion to offer a common resistance and to
            maintain the rights which ancient custom had handed down. Frederick was
            suddenly faced by the fact that the league might embrace a wider compass and,
            being without sufficient force to quell the insurgent communes, he made efforts
            to pacify them. In this attempt he failed. He therefore sought aid from Pavia,
            Mantua, and Ferrara, whom he loaded with privileges, trying to move them to
            hostile action against the League. But the allies appeared in such strong force
            that he had temporarily to renounce the hazard of battle.
             
             Beginnings of the Lombard League
             
             In the meanwhile the anti-Pope Victor had died, in
            April 1164, at Lucca. The position of Alexander III being thenceforth secure,
            Frederick might not have been altogether indisposed to renew attempts at
            reconciliation, but the Archbishop of Cologne, Rainald of Dassel, the implacable enemy of Alexander, stood in his way and obtained the
            immediate election of another anti-Pope. This was Guido of Crema, who took the
            name of Paschal III. From the moment of his election the Emperor took him under
            his protection, and, on his return to Germany, tried to make the German and
            Italian bishops acknowledge him, but this scheme met with open opposition in
            the episcopate of both countries. Among the Germans, the Archbishop-elect of Mainz,
            Conrad of Wittelsbach, rather than yield went into
            exile in France, near Alexander. The Archbishops of Treves, Magdeburg, and
            Salzburg, and the Bishop of Brixen held out, refusing
            to accept an election so patently uncanonical; while many others of less
            courage submitted in appearance only to the imperial will.
             This opposition, which augmented Frederick's
            difficulties in Germany, also encouraged the Lombards to shake off their yoke. Alexander III, now that hope of reconciliation with
            Barbarossa had proved fallacious, was doing all in his power to spur on the
            resistance of Lombardy, relying on the determination and love of liberty among
            the communes. Thus by stirring up the cities to rebellion and by devising means
            for drawing together more closely the adverse powers of Europe, the able policy
            of Alexander aimed at isolating Frederick and placing him in a position of
            marked inferiority in his struggle with the Church. The Emperor, wishing to break
            through the ring of hostile influences which encompassed him, turned to Henry
            II of England. This monarch was bound to the King of France by very fragile
            ties, and had deep causes of dissension with the Pope, owing to the struggle
            which had arisen with Thomas Becket. This dispute was undoubtedly the source of
            serious difficulties for Alexander III, difficulties which only came to an end
            on Becket’s tragic death. The Emperor and the King of England took advantage of
            this event to draw closer together, yet without essentially modifying the
            Pope's position towards Frederick. Alexander was now recognized as the
            uncontested head of Christendom. He felt strong enough to reoccupy his see and
            carry on the struggle, which threatened to be renewed with greater tenacity
            than ever. Through the aid of his vicar, the Cardinal of SS. John and Paul, the
            Pope had secured guarantees for his safe residence in Rome, and in October 1165
            he left France where his reception had been so generous. He travelled to
            Messina by sea. From Palermo the King of Sicily sent him gifts and ordered an
            escort of galleys to convey him honorably to Rome, where the Pope made a solemn
            entry on 23 November. He at once took up his residence in the Lateran. From
            Germany, whither he had returned and which he was striving to pacify, the
            Emperor could not fail to perceive that the triumphs of his rival in Rome were
            a source of dangers which it would be necessary to dispel. He felt that the
            loyalty of the Lombard cities was no longer to be reckoned upon, and therefore
            began to recruit an army powerful enough to be confident of success and capable
            of crushing any resistance from one end of Italy to the other. In order to
            conjure back more and more the majesty of the Empire, he had Charlemagne
            canonized by the anti-Pope Paschal III on the Christmas festival of 1165. But
            times had changed and altered situations had arisen for the Papacy, the Empire,
            and the peoples now awakened to a new life. Frederick Barbarossa in his lofty
            aspirations had no conception that he was summoning from the tomb of his great
            predecessor in Aix-la-Chapelle the phantom of a past for which there was no longer
            a place amid the living.
             The absence of Frederick made it more easy for the Lombards to come to agreements preliminary to common
            action. The signs of resistance arose quickly on all sides. In the cities
            tumults frequently broke out and in Bologna the imperial podestà was killed during an uprising of the populace. William I of Sicily had died and
            was succeeded in 1166 by the child William II, whose mother the Regent
            maintained friendly relations with the Pope and an antagonistic policy towards
            the Emperor. She was encouraged by Manuel Comnenus, who aimed at gaining a
            foothold in Italy and showered attentions on the youthful king, while he was
            trying to flatter the Pope by holding out to him the mirage of reunion of the
            two Churches, asking in return the Roman crown of Empire. Alexander placed no
            reliance on this project, but showed himself ready to negotiate in order to add
            to the dangers of Frederick’s position. Venice entered into alliance with
            Sicily and Constantinople, forming thus a joint domination over the Adriatic,
            while Pisa and Genoa, although in league with Frederick, were mutually so
            quarrelsome and jealous of each other that the warmth of their devotion could
            not be safely depended upon. Only one waylay open to Frederick, and that was
            the reconquest of Italy by force.
             
             Frederick’s fourth expedition to Italy
             
             He collected a considerable army, and in October 1166
            set out accompanied by the Empress. By the middle of November he was in
            Lombardy and held a diet at Lodi, but he quickly saw that hostility was greater
            than ever, and that he aroused an atmosphere of hatred to the highest
            intensity. The cities which had at first favored him had turned lukewarm or
            unfriendly, and the two on which he most relied to give effect to the
            expedition against Sicily, Pisa and Genoa, came to Lodi only to dispute rival
            claims, thus emphasizing a discord which was of evil omen. Instead of moving
            directly upon Rome in order to dispatch the business of Alexander and scatter
            the forces of William of Sicily and the Byzantines, Frederick was obliged to
            tarry some time in Lombardy, making destructive raids on the territory of
            Brescia and Bergamo. Thence he advanced on Bologna and compelled that city to
            give hostages before betaking himself to Ancona by the Romagna. He sent a
            portion of his army towards Rome under the command of Rainald,
            Archbishop of Cologne, and another warrior-archbishop, Christian of Buch, whom he had substituted in the see of Mainz for
            Conrad of Wittelsbach, a partisan of Pope Alexander.
            The immediate descent on the south made it necessary that he should have a base
            on the Adriatic and that the approach to Abruzzo by the Marches should be free.
            He therefore determined to invest Ancona in person.
             He met with a stubborn resistance. Lombardy in the
            meantime, determined to throw off his yoke, was emboldened by the League of
            Verona, and one city after another entered into a joint compact to prepare for
            an act of liberation. The confederates resolved, as a symbol of their union, to
            restore Milan from her ruins, construct her moats, and set up her walls anew as
            a bulwark. On 27 April 1167, the allied forces appeared before the fallen city
            bent on the work of reconstruction and of warding off any possible attacks,
            especially from Pavia, always the faithful ally of the Empire. Milan rose again
            as if by enchantment and the spirit of independence seemed to live again within
            her. The cities in their rekindled life built fortifications, and all through
            Lombardy ran the thrill of coming war.
             Alexander III saw in this harmony his greatest hope of
            safety and hailed it with fervor. His position was a very serious one. He had
            succeeded in gaining to a certain extent the favor of the Romans, thanks to
            their hatred of the neighboring cities, who seemed to be biased towards the
            Empire, especially Tusculum. But the two German archbishops at the head of
            their forces were masters of the Campagna, and had reduced that district into
            obedience to the anti-Pope Paschal, who had made Viterbo his headquarters. The Roman militia were sufficiently numerous to place in
            danger Rainald of Dassel, who was occupying Tusculum
            with a slender force, but the Archbishop of Mainz advanced to the succor of Rainald. The Romans, in spite of the Pope's dissuasions,
            advanced against this combined array trusting in their own numbers, but, being
            hemmed in on both sides, suffered a terrible defeat on 29 May 1167 and were
            pursued to the very gates of Rome, leaving in their flight many dead and many
            prisoners behind them. The discouragement in Rome was great. Alexander rallied
            together as many soldiers as he could, and prepared to offer resistance to the
            imperial troops now before the city.
             
             Siege of Rome 
                     
             Frederick, having made peace with Ancona, made a rapid
            march on Rome, and on 24 July 1167 appeared with his army on Monte Mario. The
            day after he made an unsuccessful attempt to storm the walls. Subsequent
            assaults were more fortunate, and opened to him the defenses of St Peter's. The
            neighboring church of Santa Maria in Turn was set fire to by the assailants,
            who amid blood and slaughter forced their way to the sacred basilica itself,
            compelling the papal soldiers to surrender. The anti-Pope being in possession
            of the church renewed the Emperor’s coronation with great solemnity and placed
            the crown on the imperial consort's head.
             Frederick, however, was not yet master of the left
            bank of the Tiber. The Pope had taken refuge in a stronghold of the Frangipani
            near to the Coliseum, and was in constant deliberation with his cardinals and
            other adherents. The King of Sicily had sent him by the Tiber two galleys and a
            sum of money. The money was distributed amongst his defenders, while the
            galleys were sent away with two cardinals. The Pope himself remained in Rome.
            Grave as the situation appeared to be, Alexander did not despair, and thought
            perhaps that some means of understanding with Frederick was not impossible.
            Conrad of Wittelsbach, the dispossessed Archbishop of
            Mainz, who held to the Pope, went to visit the Emperor. The latter enjoined
            upon him the task of proposing to the Alexandrine cardinals and bishops that
            both Pope and anti-Pope should resign in order to make way for a fresh
            election. At the same time he acquainted the Romans with this proposal,
            promising them that, if it were carried out, he would return the prisoners and
            the booty captured on 29 May. The bishops with one voice rejected the imperial
            offer, but the Romans urged the Pope and cardinals with pressing insistence to
            yield and to set them free from their privations. Alexander’s position in Rome
            was no longer endurable, and he suddenly and stealthily disappeared. Three days
            afterwards he was seen near Monte Circello, then at Terracina and Gaeta, and thence he went to Benevento, where
            he was joined by the cardinals whose loyalty had remained unshaken in the hour
            of danger.
             The appearance of eight Pisan galleys on the Tiber and
            the expected approach of a great fleet of ships ready to attack Rome and Sicily
            brought the Romans to make terms with the Emperor and to submit to him the
            nomination of the Senate. Frederick could now look upon himself as supreme
            master of Italy, Rome was his, and the army behind him with the Pisan fleet
            guaranteed to him a victory over the Sicilian king, whose strength was shaken
            by internal discords, and whose defeat would render certain the suppression of
            the revolt of Lombardy. The Empire of Charlemagne was on the point of revival
            in all its pristine majesty. But the decrees of history were otherwise written.
            The scorching August sun was oppressing the German forces in the Campagna when
            a slight rain came to refresh them, but on the following day sudden destruction
            fell upon their encampments. A deadly fever spread through the ranks and those
            attacked by the sudden malady died in crowds. The panic was great, heightened
            by religious terror, for this mysterious and violent destruction appeared to be
            an act of divine vengeance for the profanation of St Peter's. The imperial
            army, decimated, terrified, and demoralized, was routed by an unseen enemy, and
            Frederick was compelled to break up his camp. He led the remnants of his army
            across the Tuscan Apennines, his path of retreat strewn with dead and dying.
            The flower of his army, the pick of his captains, had fallen. In this
            conjuncture Frederick's magnanimous strength of will showed itself in full
            force. He was suddenly bereft of the most valuable and staunchest supporters of
            his throne; his best councilors, his most valiant warriors were wrested from
            his side. His nephew Frederick of Swabia, the Archbishop of Cologne, Rainald of Dassel, the Bishops of Liege, Spires, Ratisbon, Verden, and Duke Welf VII of Tuscany, were all struck down, and hundreds of
            other nobles and churchmen. He dragged behind him as best he could the
            surviving few, and being unable to follow the open roads from Tuscany, since
            the Lombards in arms held the passes, he took to the
            hill paths of Lunigiana and by a difficult circuit
            came down on loyal Pavia. Here he gathered together his available forces, and,
            aided by some cities still faithful, by the Count of Biandrate and the Marquess of Montferrat, he attempted some
            attacks on the Milanese territory, but the Lombards pressed him so closely that it was only with great effort that he could
            extricate himself in safety and get beyond the frontier of Italy. Under the
            protection of Humbert, Count of Maurienne, he reached
            Susa with a small following, but the city displayed such a menacing demeanor
            that he was forced to escape under cover of the darkness of night. The powerful
            monarch who had descended on Italy certain of victory returned to his own
            country alone, disarmed, a fugitive; but his mind was undaunted and his
            ambition was bent more than ever on the reaffirmation of his rights and the
            restoration of lustre to the waning star of Empire.
             The Lombards, who had felt
            so heavily the weight of Barbarossa’s arms, knew that the struggle was not yet
            at an end and that there must be a fierce renewal of the contest if their
            liberties were to be rewon and maintained. They set
            to work. The League added to its numbers, and in a short time the greater part
            of the cities of Venetia, Lombardy, and Piedmont were confederated and ready to
            act on the defensive against the Emperor and those barons and cities, such as
            Pavia, which still stood by him. As a greater safeguard the League decided to
            build a strong city at the confluence of the Tanaro and the Bormida, in such a position as to command
            every point of entrance into the plains of Lombardy. The city rose rapidly, not
            rich indeed in fine buildings but fortified to its utmost capacity, and was
            soon able to reckon a population of 15,000 citizens to man and defend it. As a
            symbol of alliance with the Papacy the name given to the city was Alessandria,
            and the Pope, on his part, aided by the Lombard clergy, did all he could to
            encourage the League and to tighten the bonds between himself and his other
            allies. The Emperor's influence in Italy was steadily losing ground. Genoa, without
            actually joining the League, regarded it with favor, and, when Pisa entered
            into friendly relations with Sicily, did the same. The court of Sicily, at the
            same time, seeing what a safeguard the League might become, gave assistance in
            money, and so did Manuel Comnenus, ever mindful of his own interests and of his
            ambitious hopes regarding Italy.
             
             Growing strength of Alexander III
             
             While the struggle was thus in preparation, the
            shuttle of papal diplomacy was moving incessantly and working to keep France
            and England aloof from Frederick. Alexander III had been recognized by Denmark,
            and little by little this recognition had spread over the greater part of
            northern and eastern Europe. Towards the Byzantine Emperor, who adhered to his
            design of uniting the Eastern and Western Empires, the Pope showed great
            courtesy but maintained an attitude of non-committal friendliness. His strength
            had its foundation in the King of Sicily and the Lombards.
            The latter pre-eminently were his first bulwark against the attacks of
            Frederick. As had always been the case, his weakest point was Rome, where
            permanent habitation was difficult, so much so that he had for several years to
            be contented with Benevento or some town of the Campagna as a settled
            residence. The anti-Pope was always face to face with him, although devoid of
            an authority in Christendom adequate to challenge that of Alexander. On the
            death of Paschal III in September 1168, a successor had been found in Abbot
            John of Struma, called Calixtus III, whom Frederick
            hastened to acknowledge. Although the schism had spent its force, an anti-Pope
            could always be used as a handy instrument against Alexander by an able and
            determined adversary.
             On his return to Germany in 1168, the Emperor bent all
            his energies to the restoration of order in the kingdom distracted by civil
            dissensions and to the establishment of peace between his most powerful
            vassals, the Saxon Henry the Lion and the Margrave Albert the Bear, two
            implacable enemies. While endeavoring to bring them into friendly accord,
            Frederick was inclined to favor Henry, to whom he was attached by old ties of
            friendship, and to whom he looked for support. But the power of these barons
            made him feel the need of making provision for the security of his own house,
            and in April 1169 he caused his son Henry to be elected King of the Romans and
            had him crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle by the new Archbishop, Philip of Cologne,
            the successor of Rainald of Dassel. From the old Duke Welf VI, who now had no heirs, he bought the right of
            succession to his estates in Swabia and Tuscany, but this acquisition, which
            certainly made a notable accession to his power in Germany and Italy, alienated
            from him the sympathy of Henry the Lion, who had himself aspired to the whole Welf inheritance.
             The internal affairs of Germany did not exclusively
            occupy the mind of Frederick, and he was also giving his thoughts to the state
            of Italy and his relations with the Church. If the anti-Pope Calixtus III was an embarrassment and a difficulty to Pope
            Alexander, his force and authority were not to be compared with those which the
            Cardinal Octavian had wielded in the early days of the schism. Prudence also
            kept Frederick from putting difficulties in the way of the barons who were
            summoned to Bamberg to elect his son as King of the Romans. It seemed to him
            wise, at this juncture, to make an attempt at conciliation which, without
            admitting any compromise in regard to the existing dispute, might be a means of
            showing to Germany his good intentions regarding the close of the schism, and
            also of arousing suspicion against the Pope among the Lombards and in Sicily. Eberhard, Bishop of Bamberg, was chosen as the messenger of
            conciliation. His wisdom and moderation were acknowledged by all parties. He
            was under strict obligations to disclose his proposals to the Pope only. The
            latter was not without his misgivings. He foresaw that the negotiations might
            be regarded with suspicion by his Lombard allies, and arranged that certain
            faithful citizens should be deputed by the cities of the League to come
            immediately to Veroli and assist at the conference
            with the imperial envoy. Eberhard, however, insisted on a confidential
            explanation with the Pope of his mission. The Emperor made some concessions,
            but did not make an explicit avowal of his readiness to accept the validity of
            Alexander's election. At the bottom of his heart he probably clung to the
            often-expressed idea of a simultaneous renunciation on the part of the two
            pretenders, followed by the election of a third party to the Papacy. The
            negotiations fell to the ground completely. The Pope in the presence of the
            Lombard delegates rejected the imperial proposals, and all hope of conciliation
            vanished.
             War was once more the arbiter. The alliance of the Lombards with the Pope and with Sicily could only be broken
            up by force. The League was dominant in upper Italy, and Pavia had at last to
            bow to its authority. A fresh expedition into Italy had become a vital
            necessity for the Emperor, though he was still hampered by the complicated
            affairs of Germany. He had to dispatch a first army corps under Christian of Buch, Archbishop of Mainz, whose political and military
            task was to consist in preparing the ground by consolidating friendships and
            inspiring with fear the pride of the rebellious cities. Christian’s principal
            object was to bring Genoa into closer relationship with the Emperor, and to
            gain as much as possible the goodwill of Tuscany. His next endeavour was to secure for the imperial army a base on the Adriatic, and to carry out
            afresh the investment of Ancona. The city held out stoutly for six months until
            the succor of her allies compelled the army to raise the siege.
             
             Frederick’s fifth expedition to Italy
             
             Frederick, as soon as his hands were free in Germany,
            concentrated his army for the Italian expedition and again crossed the Alps at
            its head. He had a strong force at his disposition—a certain number of barons
            and bishops followed him—but it was much inferior to that which he had on the
            previous occasion. The most conspicuous gap was that caused by the absence of
            Henry the Lion, the comrade of his choice. Internal conditions in Germany and
            the disastrous end of the last expedition into Italy had chilled the enthusiasm
            of the Germans and their inclination to carry war beyond the Alps. He opened
            his campaign at the end of September 1174 by the destruction of Susa, an act of
            reprisal for the ignominy of having had to escape from it when he left Italy.
            He then came down through Piedmont and moved on the borders of Lombardy. Asti
            surrendered at once, and the Marquess of Montferrat,
            with the cities of Alba, Acqui, Pavia, and Como,
            finding themselves strengthened by his favor, deserted the League and turned to
            him. Frederick, emboldened by these adhesions, presented himself before
            Alessandria. This town, with its name taken from his enemy, appeared to him as
            the symbol and bulwark of rebellion which must disappear from the face of the
            earth.
             But the determination of the Emperor to crush the Lombards was not greater than their determination to oppose
            him, and to defend their liberty to the last gasp. This stubborn opposition hardened
            into obstinacy Frederick’s resolve to obtain the mastery. The city was
            beleaguered on every side, but held out firmly. The winter, always severe
            around Alessandria, was in this year of exceptional rigor, and increased beyond
            measure the difficulties of the siege and the sufferings of the besiegers. The
            confederates meanwhile were combining their forces in order to fall upon the
            Emperor and destroy the army which was wearing itself out in the attacks on the
            city. Barbarossa, intent on dividing and thwarting the enemy, sent Christian of Buch into the Romagna and the Bolognese territory,
            thus succeeding in diverting and holding in check no inconsiderable portion of
            the allied armies. He redoubled his efforts to carry Alessandria by storm, but
            all his attempts were ineffectual, being repulsed with heavy losses. After six
            months of unsuccessful siege, in April 1175, knowing that the allies were close
            at hand, he tried to penetrate the city by means of mines and take it by
            surprise, but the soldiers employed in the mines were discovered and killed,
            and in a spirited sortie the defenders raided the Emperors camp and destroyed
            by fire his best siege machinery. With his quick resolution Frederick then
            raised the siege without delay, and advanced rapidly against the army of the
            League. The two armies met in the territory of Pavia, and pitched their camps
            between Casteggio and Voghera at three miles distance from one another. Just as a battle appeared imminent,
            negotiations for peace were suddenly begun between the Emperor and the League,
            although it is not clearly known from which side the initiative came. Perhaps
            the Lombards were not entirely confident of their
            strength, and certainly Frederick must have found the moment opportune for a
            truce, in order to reinvigorate his troops, exhausted by the unfortunate
            enterprise against Alessandria. For a moment peace appeared to have been
            concluded, but all at once the negotiations were broken off. Other negotiations
            were opened through three cardinals, in order to see if it were yet possible to
            come to some agreement with the Church, but this attempt also came to nothing,
            and hostilities began anew. For the remainder of the year 1175 the war dragged
            on without any important engagements. The Lombards seemed to keep a watchful attitude, looking for the opportune moment, and
            Frederick stood on the defensive waiting for reinforcements from Germany before
            striking a decisive blow. Germany showed no great willingness to reply to his
            appeals, and when at last in the spring of 1176 the reinforcements did arrive
            they were not accompanied by Henry the Lion. The Emperor had gone in person to Chiavenna in order to confer with him, and to impress upon
            him the supreme importance of his co-operation in the interests of the Empire.
            All was in vain. Henry’s proud spirit was deaf to the voice of an old
            friendship, and refused to recall the acts of kindness of his imperial relative
            spread over many years. Frederick gained nothing from this interview save a
            chilling refusal, and the painful impression that, where he had looked for
            friendship, he had only found the foreshadowing of rebellion.
             
             The battle of Legnano, 1176
             
             Frederick had advanced to meet his fresh supports with
            the determination of opening a vigorous campaign with a battle in the open
            field. Having collected a contingent from Como, he moved on Pavia in order to
            form a conjunction with the remainder of his army before delivering an attack
            on the Lombards. The latter, who had his movements
            under observation, came forward rapidly and cut off his approach. The hour on
            which the issue of the long contest depended had now struck. On 29 May 1176 the
            two armies engaged near Legnano in a battle which was
            keenly contested on both sides. At first the Germans seemed to have the upper
            hand. Their heavy cavalry broke through the front ranks of the Lombards and threw them into confusion. But round the Carroccio the German onset was checked, and was of no avail
            to shatter the desperate resistance of the handful of heroes who defended this
            central point. It became the centre of the battle now
            resumed with fierce determination. Frederick encouraged his troops in vain by
            plunging into the thick of the fight with his wonted courage. In the struggle
            he was unhorsed, and amid the confusion and the groups of combatants vanished
            from sight. The defeat of the Germans was complete and great their slaughter.
            The exultant Milanese wrote to their brethren of Bologna: “Glorious has been
            our triumph over our enemies. Their slain are innumerable as well as those
            drowned and taken prisoners. We have in our hands the shield, banner, cross,
            and lance of the Emperor, and have found in his coffers much gold and silver,
            while the booty taken from the enemy is of great value, but we do not consider
            these things ours, but the common property of the Pope and the Italians. In the
            fight Duke Berthold was taken, as also a nephew of the Empress and a brother of
            the Archbishop of Cologne; the other captives are innumerable and are all in
            custody in Milan”.
             Frederick had no small difficulty in reaching Pavia in
            safety with the remnants of his army which had made good their escape from the
            hands of the victors. He had fought and lost. It would have been folly to
            suppose that Germany would have followed him in any scheme of reconquest. One of his highest qualities as a statesman was
            his ready and intuitive perception of changed situations. He accepted facts and
            determined to consider some other policy which would reconcile the order of
            things created by the Lombard victory of Legnano with
            the dignity and majesty of the Empire. The desire for peace which had gradually
            arisen in his own mind and that of his counselors now ripened, and inclined him
            to open negotiations which would lead finally to an honorable and lasting
            conclusion. Four times he had entered Italy with an armed force, and still the
            Italians met him undaunted face to face. The Pope, now enjoying an uncontested
            authority, by his excommunication was stripping the imperial crown of its halo
            of sanctity. He had failed to carry his arms against the King of Sicily, and
            Constantinople might still become a menace. It was time to make approaches to
            peace while the Empire was yet strong and formidable.
             His first considerations were not in the direction of
            Lombardy. The primary object of reconciliation was the Church. By restoring
            friendly relations with his foremost adversary, he would be in a position at
            once to allay the scruples of Germans disturbed by the papal schism and to
            smooth the way for understandings with Lombardy and Sicily. In October 1176
            Frederick sent to Anagni the Archbishops Wichmann of
            Magdeburg and Christian of Mainz, Conrad Bishop-elect of Worms, and the protonotary Wortwin, with full
            powers to conclude peace. The Pope received them honorably and expressed his
            fervent desire for peace, but declared that it must be extended to his allies
            the King of Sicily, the Lombards, and the Byzantine
            Emperor. To this the ambassadors agreed, but asked that the negotiations might
            be earned on in secret, since there were in both parties persons who were more
            disposed to enmity than to concord. They thus gained the advantage of holding
            the first deliberations privately and solely with the Pope.
             
             Treaty of Anagni. End
            of the Schism
             
             The long and detailed discussion lasted more than two
            weeks, involving the relations between the Empire and the Church, and a variety
            of questions affecting important personages connected with the schism. The
            terms of agreement were at last fixed. The Emperor recognized Alexander as
            Pope, restored to the Church her possessions and the right to appoint the
            prefect of Rome, and promised to all ecclesiastics the restitution of all that
            had been taken from them during the schism. The Empress and King Henry also
            recognized the Pope, and undertook the same obligations as the Emperor. The
            latter and King Henry bound themselves to enter into a fifteen years’ peace
            with the King of Sicily, and also to make peace with the Emperor of
            Constantinople and the other allies of the Pope. Christian of Mainz and Philip
            of Cologne were to be confirmed in their sees, notwithstanding the schismatic
            origin of their elections, while Conrad of Wittelsbach,
            the legitimate Archbishop of Mainz, was to be provided for with the first
            vacant archbishopric in Germany. The anti-Pope Calixtus was to be appointed to an abbacy, and for other ecclesiastics provision was
            made in various ways. The Pope recognized Beatrix as Empress and her son Henry
            as King of the Romans, and promised to crown them either in person or by
            deputy. He undertook to convene a council speedily, in order to promulgate the
            peace with penalty of excommunication against its violators, and to have it
            confirmed on oath by many nobles of Rome and the Campagna, while the Emperor
            and King Henry promised to keep the peace for fifteen years with the King of
            Sicily, and a truce of six years with the Lombards.
             Such were the principal provisions of the Treaty of Anagni. In order to obtain a definite conclusion, the
            participation of the Sicilians and Lombards was
            necessary; it was therefore resolved that the Pope with his cardinals and the
            Emperor should meet in Lombard territory. Bologna was agreed upon as the place
            of meeting, and on 9 March 1177 Alexander and his cardinals betook themselves
            to the Adriatic coast, where they embarked at Vasto on Sicilian galleys waiting to escort them to Venice, along with Roger, Count
            of Andria, Grand Constable of the kingdom, and Romuald,
            Archbishop of Salerno, the historian of these events. They landed at Venice,
            where Alexander was received with great honors. The Emperor, who was then in
            the Romagna, sent messages to the Pope asking him to alter the place of
            meeting. In order to treat better with the Lombards it was important for Frederick to isolate them and separate them from the Pope.
            Bologna, loyal to the League, was suspect to the Emperor. The Pope answered
            that he could not give a decided assent until he had come to an agreement with
            the Lombards, and made his way to Ferrara, in order
            to discuss the matter with the representatives of the League.
             On 17 April 1177, in the church of St George, the Pope
            addressed a solemn discourse to the Lombards, who had
            met him at Ferrara, magnifying the victory of the Papacy over the Empire, and
            declaring that it was not a work of man but a miracle of God that an aged and
            unarmed priest should have been able to resist the fury of the Germans, and
            without striking a blow subdue the power of the Emperor. But, he added, though
            the Emperor had offered peace to him and the King of Sicily, he had declined to
            conclude it without them, and on this account had engaged on a long and
            perilous journey.
             The Lombards, to whom the
            Treaty of Anagni, concluded without their
            participation, had given offence and cause of suspicion, answered respectfully,
            but not without a touch of bitter irony. They thanked him for having come. The
            persecutions of the Emperor were known to them, not by hearsay only, but from
            hard experience. They had been the first to sustain in their own persons the
            fury of the imperial attack in order to avert the destruction of Italy and the
            Church, and for the honor of both they had exposed property and life to extreme
            danger. It was only just and reasonable that he should not have consented to
            terms of peace without their adhesion, seeing that they had often refused to
            listen to proposals which had not been referred to him. The fatigues and
            dangers of his journey were very different from those to which they had exposed
            themselves on behalf of the Church, offering up their substance, themselves,
            and the lives of their children. “Let your Holiness know”, they added, “and let
            it be known to the imperial power that we, so long as the honor of Italy is
            safeguarded, are willing to accept peace and favor from the Emperor provided
            our liberties remain intact. The tribute due to him of old from Italy shall be
            rendered and his ancient rights acknowledged, but the liberty inherited from
            our sires and forefathers can only be surrendered with life itself, and to us a
            glorious death would be preferable to an existence dragged out in wretched
            servitude”.
             When the imperial delegates arrived and the various
            mediators had been chosen, the question as to where the discussion should take
            place broke out afresh. The Imperialists refused to hear of Bologna, while
            Venice was displeasing to the Lombards. In the end
            Venice was accepted, on the condition that the Emperor should not enter the
            city without the consent of the Pope. The disputes over the conditions of peace
            at Venice were long and often bitter. The imperialist claims were obstinately
            resisted by the Lombards. The latter were determined
            not to admit the privileges conceded to the Empire at Roncaglia,
            but to restrict them solely to the rights enjoyed by Lothar and Conrad III. Definite peace with the Lombards ceased to be thought of, and in its place was proposed a preliminary truce for
            six years. In order to expedite matters, Frederick was allowed to come to
            Chioggia, but, taking advantage of a rising of the popular party in Venice, he
            tried to force the doge to allow him to enter the city. The Lombards in anger left Venice and retired to Treviso. The Pope was in a great strait and
            peace seemed once more to be in danger. The Sicilian legates saved the
            situation. Seeing that the doge was wavering, they made ready their galleys
            with great ostentation and then, reproaching the doge with breach of faith,
            they threatened to leave Venice and trust to their king to take his revenge.
            This was tantamount to saying that the many Venetians in the kingdom of Sicily
            would be made prisoners and their goods confiscated. The popular party had to
            give way before the attitude of the rest of the community, and the doge was
            able to keep the Emperor at bay during the period of the negotiations, which
            now were resumed and went on more rapidly. On 23 July 1177 peace was concluded
            with the Pope, a truce of fifteen years with Sicily and of six with the Lombards.
             At the request of the Pope, the Venetian galleys went
            to Chioggia to bring Frederick to San Niccolo del
            Lido, where a commission of cardinals absolved him from excommunication, while
            the imperialist prelates abjured the schism. On 24 July the doge, along with
            the Patriarch of Aquileia, went to the Lido and meeting the Emperor escorted
            him to Venice with great pomp. There in front of St Mark’s, amidst a reverent
            and deeply-moved assemblage, the two champions met after a struggle of eighteen
            years for the ideal supremacy which each deemed granted him by God. The moment
            was full of solemnity. The Emperor, overcome by sentiments of reverence for the
            aged man who received him, threw off his imperial mantle and prostrated himself
            before him. The Pope, in tears, raised and embraced him, and leading him into
            the church gave him his benediction. The next day the Pope said mass in St Mark’s,
            and on his quitting the church the Emperor held his stirrup and made ready to
            conduct the palfrey. The Pope, however, gave him his blessing, at the same time
            dispensing him from accompanying him to his barge.
             
             The Treaty of Venice, 1177
             
             On 1 August the peace between the Church and the
            Empire, and the truce with Sicily and the Lombards,
            were solemnly ratified. The Pope in a council held in St Mark's pronounced
            anathemas against any who should dare to disturb the peace now concluded. The
            Emperor in the meantime displayed particular friendliness to the ambassadors of
            the King of Sicily, and in the conversations with them laid special emphasis on
            the common interests, which bound together the two sovereigns and on the
            possibility of a future alliance. Probably Frederick's active mind was already
            turning over the new direction which might be given to his relations with
            southern Italy and was preparing the way for a new development of his aims.
             After settling some minor points which were still
            pending, the Emperor and the Pope parted company towards the end of September.
            Frederick remained in Italy until the end of 1177, and Alexander returned first
            to Anagni and thence to Rome, where he met with an
            enthusiastic reception. This cordiality, however, was of short duration. The
            old motives of discord were still active, and the opposition between the
            temporal claims of the Pope and those put forward by the party of municipal
            liberty were quickly renewed. The Treaty of Anagni had again given to the Pope the right of investing the prefect of Rome, but the
            prefect in office refused to pay homage and withdrew to Viterbo,
            continuing his support of the anti-Pope. The Archbishop of Mayence,
            who represented the Emperor in Italy, tried ineffectually to recall him to
            obedience. Rut Alexander instead, by more diplomatic means, won him over, and
            thus compelled the anti-Pope to surrender and turn to him as a suppliant. The
            Pope received him and provided for him generously.
             
             Third Lateran Council. The Peace of Constance, 1183
             
             Another anti-Pope lasted for a few months, but having
            been taken prisoner was shut up in the abbey of Cava. The long travail of
            the Church was at an end, and it seemed a first necessity that in the face of
            the world the pacification of consciences should be ratified, the evils of the
            long schism healed, and the recurrence of fresh divisions in the Church of
            Christ checked once and for all. In March 1179 Alexander III summoned the Third
            Lateran Council, which was attended by a great concourse of bishops and
            prelates from all quarters. Many ordinances were proclaimed for regulating the
            lives of the clergy; the rights and privileges of the Church, independent of
            lay authority, were affirmed; abuses and customs contrary to the sanction of
            civilization and the feeling of Christianity were prohibited. All the
            ordinances of the anti-Popes were annulled, and in order to prevent the renewal
            of schismatical elections to the Papacy it was
            decreed that, in the case of a contested election, the candidate who obtained
            two-thirds of the votes should be declared elected. With this council the long
            and laborious work of the pontificate of Alexander III may be said to have come
            to an end. For two years longer he ruled the Church, not without difficulties
            arising from his various relationships with the Lombards,
            the Emperor, and the Romans, who were always jealous of papal authority and
            inclined to revolt. On 30 August 1181 he died at Civita Castellana. His pontificate was without doubt one of
            the most remarkable in the history of the Church. For twenty-two years he had
            guided her in times of singular difficulty with great prudence and firmness
            through a schism of the most serious nature. His enemies were numerous, and he
            was in open conflict with the Empire presided over by one who was among the
            greatest wearers of the imperial crown. The champion of the Emperor and the
            champion of the Papacy each represented in this strife contrasting ideals which
            hardly admitted of reconciliation, and the strife was waged on both sides with
            vigor because both the champions were animated by a profound faith in the
            ideals for which they fought.
             Lucius III, who succeeded Alexander, found a question
            of debate with the Empire still undecided. This was the question of the
            inheritance of the Countess Matilda, which the Treaty of Venice had settled
            only provisionally and in terms lacking in precision. Nor was this his only
            difficulty. The Romans held up their heads more proudly than ever, bent on
            asserting their independence as opposed to the temporal pretensions of the
            Popes. Lucius was soon forced to leave Rome and shift from place to place in
            the Campagna until, his situation in the neighborhood becoming daily more
            precarious, he had to make up his mind to retire still farther, and in July
            1184 he transferred himself to Verona. The principal reason for fixing on this
            place of residence was his desire to regain the friendship of the Lombards who, since the peace of Venice, had kept much
            aloof from the Church. He also wished to discuss with Frederick the questions
            which still remained over for settlement. The Emperor, after the peace of
            Venice, had set himself strenuously to restore order in Germany, and had
            quelled by force of arms the open rebellion of Henry the Lion who, in November
            1181, was compelled to sue for peace at Erfurt and then to seek refuge in
            England as an exile for several years. Frederick, in the meanwhile, was not
            neglecting Italy. His long conflict with that country had brought him gradually
            to recognize both the powers of resistance that the republics possessed, and
            the advantages that might accrue to him from their friendship. He turned over
            in his mind a new scheme of policy. The negotiations for a definite peace with
            Lombardy were facilitated by the discontent of the Lombards with the Pope, while they saw that Frederick and the King of Sicily were at
            peace and that, by the death of Manuel Comnenus, they could no longer count on
            help from Constantinople.
             On these grounds their minds were now occupied in
            securing in a friendly way the liberties so dearly fought for and not in
            meditating fresh hostilities. The peace was first negotiated at Piacenza and
            then concluded at Constance in June 1183. It was an honorable arrangement. The
            high sovereignty of the Empire was admitted without question and its ancient
            rights were recognized, but in such a way as not to interfere with the freedom
            of the republics or with their development. They were invested by the Emperor
            or by their bishop, according to their status, with the regalia. The cities
            were allowed to elect their own consuls or podestàs,
            who were to administer justice according to their laws. They could also raise
            taxes without the Emperors special consent, although an appeal to him was
            conceded. All the ancient customs were recognized. The allies were to fortify
            their towns and castles, and their League was to continue unimpaired with power
            of renewal. All offences were forgiven; the prisoners were exchanged; bans,
            confiscations, and all other penalties were annulled; the city of Alessandria
            was admitted to the imperial favor, under the condition, not of long duration,
            of taking the name of Cesarea. Thus the imperial
            claims put forth at Roncaglia were curtailed at
            Constance, and the proud but sagacious prince became reconciled to the noble
            people who had defended their liberty with such valor and such tenacity.
             With Germany restored to order and Italy pacified,
            Frederick might well look backward over the thirty years of a glorious reign
            and feel pride in the achievements of his career. In order to celebrate the
            termination of so many vicissitudes, he commanded a great festival to be held at
            Mainz on Whitsunday in the year 1184, a festival which long survived in the
            lays of the Minnesingers and the legends of Germany.
             During these festivities, in a tournament in which the
            Emperor himself took part, the young King Henry VI won his spurs. He was a
            young actor making his first entry on the stage of history. Frederick's
            chivalrous designs were henceforward to be turned in a new direction. While
            maturing in his mind the plan of a new and sacred enterprise, he was preparing
            his son to rule the State and testing his capacities in various ways so that
            the lofty Empire to be committed to his charge might be upheld in undiminished
            greatness. With this aim he proposed and concluded the contract of marriage
            between Henry and Constance, the heiress of Sicily, thus hoping to achieve his
            design of linking southern Italy with the Empire. In September 1184 he
            re-entered Italy as a friend, with a great suite of nobles but no army, and was
            received with a cordial welcome from the Lombards. He
            wished to come to a closer understanding with them, and to obtain from the
            Pope the imperial crown for his son Henry. Pope and Emperor met at Verona, both
            in a conciliatory mood, but it soon appeared how difficult would be the process
            of coming to agreement. The Emperor insisted that the Pope should confirm the
            orders conferred by the schismatic bishops, and the Pope, after some
            hesitation, declared that before this step could be taken it would be necessary
            to have conciliar authority, and proposed to summon a synod at Lyons. This
            procrastinating reply did not please Frederick and made more difficult than
            before the solution of the questions relating to the inheritance of the
            Countess Matilda, which Frederick in the meantime held and had no intention of
            giving up. Another source of discord was the archbishopric of Treves, where in
            1183 a double election had occurred, the Pope favoring one candidate and the
            Emperor the other. But the most delicate point of all was the Emperor’s
            persistent demand of. the imperial crown for his son Henry. The Pope objected,
            adducing as his reason that, notwithstanding precedents, the contemporaneous
            existence of two Emperors was incompatible with the very nature of the Empire
            itself. The Pope’s refusal was perhaps not altogether without support from the
            German nobility, who may have seen in such a coronation a tendency to make the
            Empire hereditary. It is probable that the suspicions and fears raised in the
            Curia by the approaching marriage of Henry and Constance had a strong influence
            over the Pope. In spite of the strained situation, the personal relations
            between Lucius and Frederick remained cordial, and in their conversations at
            Verona they had opportunity for enquiring together into the imminent necessity
            of carrying succor to the Christians of the East, exposed to serious danger by
            the enterprises of Saladin. But on 24 November 1185 Lucius III died at Verona,
            and was succeeded by the Archbishop of Milan, who took the name of Urban III.
            He was an unbending and vigorous man, with little friendship for the Emperor
            and ill-disposed to concessions. With him was reopened the quarrel between
            Church and Empire, and the imperial policy was turned more decisively to the
            path on which it had first entered. Thus, as at the end of the struggle of the
            investitures, so now, after a long contest, neither party could claim the full
            victory or acknowledge entire defeat.
             
 CHAPTER XIV
           THE EMPEROR HENRY VI
              
 
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