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FLORENCE AND NORTH ITALY
1414-1492.
The death of Ladislas of Naples (6 August 1414), wrote a contemporary Florentine,
“brought release from fear and suspicion to Florence and all other free cities
of Italy.” For the remainder of the century the unification of Italy under one
ruler lay outside the range of practical politics. The treaties by which
Filippo Maria Visconti, in the early years of his rule in Milan, recognised the
rights of Venice over Verona and Vicenza, and fixed the rivers Magra and Panaro
as the boundaries between “Lombard power and Tuscan liberty,” are typical of
the spirit which inspired the relations between the Italian States for the next
eighty years. Florence, Milan, and Venice each pursued a policy of expansion
and consolidation within their respective spheres of influence, strong enough
to check attempts at hegemony on the part of any single power, and at the same
time forced to take account of the clearly defined interests of their
neighbours.
Florence at this time was from many points of view at the
zenith of her power and well-being. Her banking activities permeated the
civilised world; the quantity and quality of her cloth ensured her supremacy in
the wool-trade; the acquisition of Pisa (1406) and Leghorn (1421) opened out to
her new opportunities for maritime commerce; Ghiberti was at work on his first
set of bronze doors for the Baptistery, and Brunelleschi’s dome was rising over
the Cathedral. Confidence in the regime which had made Florence great, and
faith in its capacity to endure, inspired the revision of the statutes which
was carried out in 1415. Nothing in the pages of this document suggests that
the foundations of the republic were, in fact, already undermined, in that the
solidarity of the patrician class, and with it the motive force in the working
of the commune, had vanished from the life of the city. For purposes of
government Florence was divided into Quartieri, which in 1343 had
replaced the earlier Sesti and each Quartiere was further
subdivided into four Gonfaloni; the representation of these fractions of the
commune in equal numbers formed an essential element in the composition of all
councils. The monopoly of political power lay with twenty-one trade-gilds, the
fourteen Arti Minori and the seven Arti Maggiori being
represented on the chief magistracies, from 1387 onwards, in the proportion of
one to four. This further reduction of the power of the lesser gilds, after the
settlement of 1882, is one among several instances of a tendency to
narrow the basis of government, bred of the fear and suspicions of the leading
citizens in whose hands for good or for ill the destinies of Florence lay. The
Signoria, composed of the Gonfaloniere di Giustizia and eight Priori,
were elected by lot from bags (borse) filled from time to time with sets of
names of those qualified for office and representing Quartieri and Arti in their due proportions. Save for the check placed upon it by two advisory
bodies, the Collegia the authority of the Signoria during its
two-months’ tenure of office was practically unlimited, and embraced every
sphere of government. When serious questions were at issue, it was customary to
summon the leading citizens to a pratica, the debates which took place
at these informal gatherings shew that, whoever might hold office at the
moment, the right of a recognised group of ottimati to be consulted on
the policy of the republic was undisputed. The two principal legislative
councils were the Consiglio del Popolo and the Consiglio del Comune,
this last alone among the constitutional bodies not being confined to members
of the gilds; their functions were limited to voting without discussion upon
the proposals laid before them by the Signoria. On rare occasions a Parlamento of all the citizens was summoned to the Piazza by the ringing of the great
bell, but the symbol of democracy had become the means by which the party in
power obtained authority to impose its will upon the community. The consent of
the Parlamento was sought for the erection of a balía , or
commission of reform, and for the delegation to it, for a limited period, of
the full powers inherent in the commune. During the lifetime of the balía the ordinary constitution was suspended; it legislated without recourse to the
Councils, and appointed Accoppiatori, who refilled the election bags and
usually received authority to nominate the Signoria and other magistracies a
mano (i.e. not by lot), for a fixed term of years. Outside the main
framework of the constitution lay numerous committees appointed, for the most
part, by the Signoria. Of these the most important were the Otto della
guardia, a committee of public safety, the Sei della Mercantanzia, a
board of trade and court for commercial cases with wide international
functions, and the Dieci di Guerra e Pace, a temporary committee the
appointment of which was tantamount to a declaration of war.
The constitution of Florence as defined by law was a not
unworthy embodiment of the ideal of liberty and concord and justice which
inspired her citizens. Its most obvious defect, its complication, sprang from
an honest attempt to give due recognition to all classes and interests, and, so
long as the patrician class remained united, its will prevailed amid changing
committees, while short tenure of office enabled each individual popolano to
contribute his share to the work of government. But Florence, in words which
Machiavelli places in the mouth of Rinaldo d’Albizzi, was “a city in which laws
are less regarded than persons.” Despite much lip-service rendered to public
spirit, capitalism was destroying the gild organisation, and rival merchant
groups sought to capture the machinery of government in their own interests.
The ottimati were divided among themselves, and the preservation of
unity depended in practice upon the ability of an individual to substitute the
authority of a single will for that of the citizen class as a whole.
So long as Maso d’Albizzi lived, the quarrels within the
circle of the ottimati were not allowed to come to the surface. Rich,
able, and attractive, and endowed with the spirit of civiltà which
enabled him to cloak the substance of power under the manners of a citizen, he
ruled Florence in the interests of his family and of the Arte della Lana, with which its fortunes were associated. Yet his supremacy was not maintained
without drastic purging of the election bags and prolonged persecution of his
opponents, the Alberti. With his death in 1417, and that of Gino Capponi four
years later, the divisions within the ruling circle became formidable. Niccoló
da Uzzano possessed unrivalled authority in the councils and a true patriotism;
yet he was growing old, and the only method which he advocated for holding the
oligarchy together was to narrow it still further. Of the younger generation,
Rinaldo d’Albizzi was a man of high character and conspicuous talent, but he
lacked the gifts which had enabled his father to control the city without
seeming to do so; an idealist rather than a politician, he disdained to court
popularity or to manipulate the constitutional machinery in order to establish
his authority, and dreamed of a Florence in which all citizens were equal and
offices were awarded according to merit alone. At once touchy and overbearing,
he was inevitably a fomenter of discord, and the friction between himself and
Neri Capponi brought strife into the inmost centre of the oligarchy. In 1423
the outbreak of war with Milan made plain the weaknesses of the government,
its ineffective diplomacy, its failure to provide a revenue commensurate with
its expenses or to convince the majority of citizens that its members were not
deriving personal profit from the war. The institution of the Catasto in
1427 was an important step towards the regularisation of taxation and its
removal from the sphere of party politics. Every citizen was called upon to
make a return of his property, movable and immovable, income being reckoned as
seven per cent, of capital; after an allowance of two hundred florins for each
member of the household and other recognised charges had been deducted, a tax
of one half per cent, was imposed on the capital thus assessed. For all its
merits, the new system became a source of digcord. An attempt to impose it upon
the subject cities produced rebellion in Volterra, and, within Florence, the
rich were aggrieved by the heavy burden laid upon them while the poor were
enraged at the realisation of how lightly wealth had escaped hitherto. During
these years the problem of civic unity was prominent in the deliberations of
responsible citizens. Gino Capponi was not alone in deploring the practice of
carrying on the work of government outside the Palazzo Vecchio, in the
business-houses and at the supper tables of influential men, as derogatory to
the Signoria and an incentive to faction. Groups of citizens were summoned to
the Palazzo to swear on the Gospels that they would lay aside enmity and think
only of the honour of the republic, and it became necessary to suppress the
religious confraternities as centres of political agitation. Eventually the Lex
contra scandalosos (1429) provided for a special committee to undertake a biennial
denunciation of factious citizens, with power, in conjunction with the
Signoria, to impose sentences of exile or disqualification for office. Such a
remedy was worse than the disease; as Giuliano Davanzati truly said, in one of
the numerous pratiche held on the subject, “the root of this evil which
torments us is in our hearts”.
The war with Lucca (1429-33) sealed the fate of the
oligarchy. It began as a military adventure of doubtful honesty in which the
voices of those who would have opposed it were drowned amid the popular clamour
for conquest. It ended in disaster for the Florentine arms, the day of the
final battle being kept by Lucca as the festival of her vindicated liberty so
long as the republic lasted. Rinaldo d’Albizzi had been among the most ardent
promoters of war, and for three months he was actively engaged in the fighting
as one of the Florentine Commissaries. After days spent up to his waist in mud,
the miseries of sleepless nights enhanced by accusing letters addressed to him
by the Died, he returned to Florence to find a scapegoat for his misfortunes in
the person of Cosimo de’ Medici. The precise part played by Giovanni de’ Medici
and his son Cosimo in the years which preceded the Medicean supremacy cannot
easily be determined. It is clear that they were influential, but owing to
their deliberate abstention from politics the direction in which their
influence was exercised is difficult to trace. The democratic traditions of
his family and his own great wealth rendered Giovanni suspect to the oligarchy,
yet they found no cause to attack him; indeed their efforts were chiefly
directed towards securing his co-operation. His attitude towards the Catasto showed unwillingness to oppose a measure which was popular with those less
wealthy citizens who looked on him as their friend, mingled with a natural
absence of enthusiasm for an imposition which, with a single exception, fell
more heavily on himself than on any other citizen. Before his death (1429) he
had won for himself a reputation for wisdom, benevolence, and public spirit,
and by strict attention to business he had laid the economic foundations of
Medicean greatness. In the course of the war with Lucca the prestige which
Cosimo enjoyed in the city became more apparent. His cousin Averardo was a
prominent member of the war party, but Cosimo, on his own showing, only
supported it because he considered that the honour of Florence had become
involved. He won the gratitude of the hard-pressed government by his loans and,
as a member of the Died and of the embassy which negotiated peace, he increased
his reputation for statesmanship. To Rinaldo, eager to be first in Florence,
Cosimo’s seeming indifference to power and popularity, and the ease with which
they came to him, could not fail to be a source of bitterness. After Uzzano’s
death the two stood out as rivals for supremacy, and in September 1433 Rinaldo
launched his attack upon Cosimo in the Signoria. He was accused of being one of
the principal authors of the war, and of endeavouring, as his family had
endeavoured from 1378 onwards, to bring the city under the Medici yoke,
“desiring rather to live according to their own perverse will” than to bow to
the laws of the republic. Cosimo returned to Florence from his estates in the
Mugello on the summons of the Signoria, and on 7 September he found himself a
prisoner in the Palazzo Vecchio. His enemies had the situation in their hands,
but they failed to make use of it. A month of delay and discussion followed, in
which it was hoped that Cosimo’s business would be ruined by his enforced
absence, but which he used to buy himself support. When he exchanged his prison
for exile in Venice, the prompt intercession of the Venetian republic on his
behalf was not without its effect in Florence. Rinaldo took no steps to extend
the power of the balia which had secured his victory, and on its expiry a
Signoria favourable to the Medici was elected. At the eleventh hour Rinaldo
attempted to secure himself by means of a coup d’ètat, but Pope Eugenius IV,
who was resident in Florence at the time, persuaded him to disband his forces.
Meanwhile a Parlamento was summoned and a new balía received authority
to undo the work of its predecessor. The ban on the Medici was removed, Rinaldo
and his sons went into exile, and, on 5 October 1434, Cosimo returned to
Florence amid the acclamations of his fellow-citizens.
When the miserable reign of Giovanni Maria Visconti in Milan
(1402- 12) was cut short by his assassination, the great duchy ruled over by
his father was in fragments. The chief cities had set up despots from among
their own nobility, or had been seized by mercenary captains. Giovanni Vignati
was lord of Lodi and Piacenza, Cabrino Fondulo ruled in Cremona, Benzoni in
Crema, Rusca in Como; one of the late duke’s condottieri, Pandolfo Malatesta,
was in possession of Brescia and Bergamo, while Facino Cane, the
captain-general of the Milanese forces, not only held Alessandria, Tortona, and
Novara, but had made himself arbiter of Milan and its duke. The lack of organic
unity in what had appeared, ten years earlier, to be the most highly
centralised state in Italy received spectacular demonstration. Meanwhile,
internal anarchy was fomented by external enemies who sought to make profit out
of the misfortunes of Milan. The Swiss descended upon the Vai d’Ossola and the
Vai Levantina; the Marquess of Montferrat made himself master of Vercelli, and
the Marquess of Este of Parma and Reggio. Sigismund, King of the Romans,
cherished designs for a revival of imperial power in Lombardy, and as a means
to this end took under his protection the descendants of BemabòVisconti and
other rivals to the authority of the new duke. On his brother’s death, Filippo
Maria Visconti was virtually a prisoner in his castle at Pavia, while the
leading Ghibelline family, the Beccaria, controlled the city in co-operation
with Facino Cane. He was not yet twenty, feeble in health and highly nervous in
temperament; yet this morbid recluse, who was reduced to a state of panic by a
thunderstorm and shunned contact with his fellows, was endowed with strength of
purpose and brain-power which enabled him to perform a feat of statesmanship of
the highest order. Beginning with Pavia and Milan, he extended his authority
over the cities of the duchy one by one, until his dominions stretched from the
Sesia on the west to the Mincio on the east; the recovery of Parma and Piacenza
brought Visconti power south of thePo; on the north the Swiss were forced to
yield up their conquests, and the keys to the Simplon and the St Gotthard
passes were once more in Milanese hands. The conquest of Genoa crowned a decade
of achievement and, in 1426, Sigismund set the seal of imperial approval on
what had been accomplished when he invested Filippo with the duchy of Milan,
renewing the privileges which had been enjoyed by his father.
Ability and good luck, force and diplomacy, fraud and
legality, all played their part in the work of reconstruction. Facino Cane’s
death, coincident with that of Duke Giovanni, was a stroke of fortune of which
Filippo made full use by marrying his widow, and succeeding through her
influence to the control of her late husband’s cities. The military successes
of these years were largely the work of Carmagnola, whose association with
Filippo had begun in Pavia when the former was one of Facino Cane’s captains.
Carmagnola’s part, however, consisted mainly in reaping the fruit of his
master’s diplomacy. The ducal registers of the period show the thoroughness and
variety of Visconti’s diplomatic methods; he treated alternately with the
victim of the moment and with his chief enemies, playing on their fears and ambitions
and luring each in turn into his net. He was never so dangerous, as when he appeared to be conciliatory, and
both Giovanni Vignati and Cabrino Fondulo learned that investiture, with the
title of count, with the city which owned them as lord was the first step towards
the forfeiture not only of their city but of their life. When a city was taken
over, procurators were at once sent to receive oaths of fealty from representatives
of the commune, and from the leading citizens, while the forces of a strong
central organisation were directed towards the conquest of particularism.
Communal liberties and individual rights were over-ridden, but Filippo was wise
enough not to think himself to be infallible, and to take advice on local
questions from those better informed than himself. Although the extent of his
dominions made it imperative to delegate power to local officers, trusted
servants of the duke watched over their proceedings and checked their
extortions. The rural population was protected against the oppressions of
cities and feudatories and, if need be, Filippo found favour with his subjects
by associating himself with their grievances against his own officials. The
party rivalries which were still acute in the majority of Lombard cities often
afforded a means for the establishment of ducal authority. When this was
accomplished, the central government became a mediator between factions,
encouraging marriages between rival families, and providing for the election of
an equal number of Guelfs and Ghibellines to the city Councils. In 1440,
however, mediation gave place to suppression, and a general decree was issued
forbidding the use of party names and ordering elections to be made on
considerations of merit alone. Intimate as was his association with the
dominion, the duke’s first care was for his capital. Under his rule Milan
increased in wealth, population, and industry until she became one of the
leading cities of Italy. Above all he was an excellent financier, and one of
his most conspicuous merits was that of prompt payment for work done. He
introduced salutary reforms in taxation, superseding the capricious and
interested valuations of special commissions and doing much to mitigate the
burden which heavy expenditure and the numerous exemptions, which he found it
necessary to grant, undoubtedly imposed upon his subjects. When the Venetians
invaded the Milanese, in 1446-47, they were struck with the signs of prosperity
which greeted them. Corn, wine, and oil abounded, the people possessed silk and
silver, they fared sumptuously and did not know what war was. The
testimony of his enemies confirms the general impression derived from internal
sources of the beneficence of the rule of the last Visconti.
Amicable relations between Milan and Florence did not long
survive Visconti’s acquisition of Genoa. His ambitions in Liguria ran counter
to the maritime interests of Pisa, and, by an invasion of Romagna, he entered a
sphere which was as vital as the western sea-board to Florentine commerce. In
1423 Florence declared war, and from that time fighting was almost continuous
up to the peace of Lodi in 1454. These years constitute the heroic age of the
Italian condottiere. From the victory of Alberico da Barbiano and his
Compagnia di San Giorgio over the French forces which were threatening Rome in
1379, native Italian companies rapidly established their ascendancy. Alberico’s
camp became the cradle of the condottiere system; here Braccio da Montone and
Muzio Attendolo—nicknamed Sforza—received their military training and formed
one of those soldier friendships which persisted through lifelong rivalry in
the field; from thence they went out to found the two most famous among Italian
schools of soldiery, and to bequeath to future generations of Bracceschi and
Sforzeschi their peculiar loyalties, traditions, and methods. As the native
profession of arms developed, all classes and all parts of Italy contributed to
its ranks. Members of the lesser feudal nobility and younger sons of great
houses made up the larger proportion of the condottieri, but among them
were peasants such as Carmagnola, lords of cities such as Gonzaga of Mantua and
Malatesta of Rimini, and ecclesiastics, among whom Cardinal Giovanni
Vitelleschi is an outstanding example. Umbria produced Braccio, the Piccinini,
and Gattamelata; from Romagna came Sforza, Niccolo da Tolentino, and Agnolo
della Pergola, and as the century advanced there was hardly a Romagnol lord who
did not hold a condotta from one of the larger States. Pacino Cane was a
Piedmontese, dal Verme and Colleone were Lombards; scions of great Roman and
Neapolitan families—Orsini, Colonna, Sanseverini— fought as mercenary captains
in North Italy while retaining their character as southern feudatories. Of
recent years condottiere warfare has been rescued from some of the
contempt which tradition has cast upon it. There is abundant proof that the
Italian soldier of fortune brought to his profession scientific study of the
art of war, technical skill of a high order, and boundless enthusiasm. Among
the battles of the period remarkable both for fierceness and heavy casualties
is the contest between Carmagnola and the Swiss at Arbedo (June 1422), which
demonstrated the superiority of Italian arms over a power whose military
reputation stood high. Pusillanimous captains, campaigns fought only in summer,
bloodless battles are recognised to be the legendary offspring of Machiavelli’s
invective rather than the products of history. Nevertheless the system could
not fail to be expensive and politically unsound. Forces were multiplied for no
other reason than that a ruler could not afford to leave efficient captains
free to be bought up by his enemies, and the payment of condotte taxed
the resources of even the wealthiest of States. Provision of quarters, in the
intervals of campaigns, was a serious problem fox’ prince and captain alike.
Filippo Maria Visconti, who understood the art of shifting the responsibility
for evils which could not be avoided on to the shoulders of others, ordered
that troops should as far as possible be assigned quarters in the fiefs of the condottieri,
in order that they, and not the ducal officers, should have to deal with the
complaints of the inhabitants against the depredations of the soldiery. When a condottiere acquired a State of his own the problem of quarters found a
permanent solution, but from henceforth he had the interests of two States to
serve, and, when these clashed, his first concern wtis not for his employer but
for himself. Apart from political considerations, moreover, the system had
inherent weaknesses which made its disappearance only a question of time. From
the condottiere standpoint war was a fine art, an opportunity for the
exercise of individual virtù; the heavy cavalryman was of its essence
and, until late in the century, the use of fire-arms, save in siege warfare,
was looked upon with something of the disfavour accorded to shooting foxes in
a hunting neighbourhood. Thus the develop- -ment of artillery and the
increasing importance of infantry created a revolution in the art of war to
which the system was incapable of adapting itself. It collapsed with the French
and Spanish invasions, in common with much else that gave character and
distinction to Italian life.
Two campaigns in the Romagna brought disaster to the
Florentine forces. Thereupon embassies were sent to Venice to plead that her
interests, no less than those of Florence, demanded that the course of the
Visconti viper should be checked. Their arguments were reinforced by those of
Carmagnola, who had quarrelled with Visconti, chiefly owing to the
determination of the latter that he would not be saddled with a second Facino
Cane. In the spring of 1425 he came to Venice, there to play what was, in his
own opinion, the determining part in her decision to declare war. The hour had
struck, however, when Venice could no longer ignore the menace to her mainland
dominion created by the growing power of Milan. From the death of Gian Galeazzo
Visconti she had been free to conquer and consolidate her territory east of the
Mincio without hindrance from her western neighbour. But, although advocates of
peace might declare that the hills of the Veronese were the natural frontiers
of Venice, it was unlikely that Visconti, who had not hesitated to break the
terms of his agreement with Florence when it suited him, would acquiesce in
this opinion indefinitely. Thus an extension of Visconti power to the Adriatic
came once more within the bounds of possibility, and this for Venice, with a
nobility which had invested largely in estates round Padua, a commercial system
demanding free access to the Alpine passes, and a population drawing its chief
supplies of corn, wine, wood, and fresh water from the mainland, could only
mean disaster. Moreover, the subjugation of Genoa had brought Visconti into
conflict with Venice in the Levant, where he was active in the promotion of
Genoese commercial interests, in alliance with the Turk, to the detriment of
the Venetians. Under these circumstances the dangers of peace were at least as
great as those of war. The words of the Doge Francesco Foscari turned the scale
against the peace party in the Venetian Senate, and on 3 December 1425 an
offensive league with Florence was signed.
The two first campaigns of the war resulted in important
territorial acquisitions for Venice. In 1426 she won Brescia, and in October
1427 Carmagnola’s victory a Maclodio secured for her Bergamo and a frontier
which touched the upper waters of the Adda. At this point her advance was
checked by Carmagnola’s failure to take Cremona, and the conquest of the whole
line of the Adda to its conjunction with the Po remained an unrealised ambition
for another seventy years. During these campaigns, Niccold Piccinino, the
recognised leader of the Bracceschi, and Francesco Sforza, who had succeeded
his father as head of the rival school, fought side by side in the Milanese
forces. At their close, Francesco Sforza spent two years in a Milanese prison,
while Carmagnola was summoned to Venice for trial and execution as a traitor.
The dispassionate progress of Venetian justice, with its sifting of evidence
and its ruthless judgment, contrasts with the caprice of the despot who threw
Sforza into prison on suspicion, and released him in order to betroth him to
his daughter. In 1438, war between Milan and Venice blazed up again with
peculiar fierceness. Piccinino led the Milanese, Gattamelata and Colleone
fought for Venice, and in 1439 Sforza, twice disappointed of his bride, became
captain-general of the Venetian armies. Visconti had at last succeeded in
winning over the Marquess of Mantua, and hoped, with his aid, to drive the
Venetians from their conquests west of the Mincio. The centre of the fighting
was Lago di Garda, a triangle enclosed on two sides by hills and guarded at its
southern base by the Mantuan fortress of Peschiera. With the southern route
barred to them, the Venetians could only retain contact with Brescia and
Bergamo by crossing the lake or by circuitous marches through the northern
hills. Their exploits and those of their opponents form the sagas of
condottiere biographers, which they tell with a wealth of classical allusion
and infectious enthusiasm. Both sides launched a fleet on the lake, the
Venetian ships being transported on rollers over the hills from the Adige in mid-winter,
a remarkable feat of engineering for which a Venetian naval officer—Niccolò
Sorbolò—was responsible. Piccinino succeeded in destroying the enemy fleet, and
then sailed up the lake to find himself surrounded by Sforza’s army near Riva.
Thereupon he made his escape through the enemy lines, tied up in a sack on the
shoulders of a stalwart German, and carried out a surprise attack on Verona.
Sforza followed in hot pursuit and retook Verona three days after its fall.
In the following year, the Venetian fleet established its
supremacy on the lake, Peschiera fell, and Brescia and Bergamo were relieved.
Meanwhile Piccinino made a diversion on Tuscany in conjunction with the
Florentine exiles, to be defeated by a Florentine-Papal army at Anghiari (29
June 1440). Some sixty years later Leonardo’s art was engaged to celebrate this
victory, which secured Cosimo de’ Medici’s ascendancy in Florence and led to
the incorporation of Borgo San Sepolcro and the Casentino in the Florentine
dominion. Piccinino’s purpose had been to draw Sforza away from Lombardy, and
when this failed he returned to attack him near the Adda. If he had given
himself whole-heartedly to fighting, his victory might have been decisive; but
his chief concern was to force the Duke of Milan to give him Piacenza, as “a
place of his own” in which he might spend his declining years. Other captains
made similar requests until Filippo, in disgust, turned to Sforza, offering him
the hand of Bianca Maria Visconti with Cremona and Pontremoli as dowry towns,
if he would mediate between Milan and Venice. So the long-deferred marriage
took place, and the peace of Cavriana was published (10 December 1441). It
lasted only until Filippo repented of his action and tried to rob Sforza of the
towns which he had recently bestowed upon him. The Venetians rallied in
Sforza’s defence, and in 1446 they crossed the Adda and came within sight of
Milan. Old and ill, with his finances embarrassed, Filippo pleaded for peace;
when this was refused, he sought aid of Alfonso of Aragon and Charles VII of
France in turn, and finally threw himself on the mercy of his son-in-law.
Despite the quarrels and betrayals of twenty years, both Filippo and Francesco
realised that in the last resort their interests were identical. The security and
integrity of the Milanese State was vital to both, and neither would allow the
other to be ruined. So Francesco gave secret orders that no Venetian soldier
was to be allowed inside Cremona, and left his own vanishing dominion in the
March of Ancona to come to his father-in-law’s aid; on his way he heard that
Filippo Maria Visconti was dead (13 August 1447).
The fate of Milan now lay on the knees of the gods. Frederick
III claimed the duchy as a lapsed imperial fief. Aragonese troops were in
possession of the Castello, armed with a document in which Filippo named
Alfonso of Aragon as his successor. Charles VII, eager for Italian adventure,
had responded to Filippo’s appeal for aid by sending troops to occupy Asti;
these proclaimed Charles of Orleans, the son of Valentina Visconti, as the
rightful heir. The hopes of all aspirants to the throne were, however,
frustrated by the proclamation of the Ambrosian Republic. A committee of
twenty-four Captains and Defenders of Liberty were chosen from among the leading
families to rule the city, the ancient Council of Nine Hundred confirming the
election. Within Milan the republic carried all before it. Visconti’s captains
threw in their lot with the citizens and drove the Aragonese from the Castello,
which was itself destroyed together with many of the ducal registers and
tax-books. But the subject cities shewed no inclination to support the new
regime, and Venice belied the professions of friendship which she made to the
sister republic by occupying Piacenza and Lodi. Faced by the necessity of
continuing the war, the Defenders of Liberty invited Francesco Sforza to take
service with them. Sforza was naturally ill-pleased with the turn of events in
Milan, but his power to take life as it comes stood him in good stead now, as
at other crises in his career. He entered the service of the city which he had
hoped would receive him as duke, and for the next fourteen months fought with
conspicuous success against Venice. When the Defenders of Liberty were about to
make peace behind his back, he forestalled them by himself changing sides. Not
quite a year later (September 1449), Venice and Milan combined against Sforza
in the belief that they would thereby force him to accept their terms, but he
defied their expectations and carried on the war single-handed. At
this supreme moment of his career he gambled with fortune. He knew that he
could not fight Milan and Venice together for long, but he also knew that the
Ambrosian Republic was tottering towards its fall. He played high, but he
played with judgment and his good luck did not desert him. The Ambrosian
Republic failed in respect of two problems of outstanding importance, the
maintenance of order and unity within the city and the conduct of the war. A
shrunken dominion and a too hasty abolition of taxes rendered the financial
problem acute, and the necessity of improvising organs of government, in the
place of the ducal council, led to a multiplication of committees which stood
in the way of efficiency. Operations in the field were hampered by the mistrust
with which the republic quite reasonably regarded its captain-general, yet the
reverses which befell Milan after Sforza’s desertion shewed that it could not
do without him. Within Milan, the root cause of difficulty lay in the lack of
cohesion among the citizens. Party feuds divided the nobility; the people were
only united in their opposition to the nobles; although individuals had risen
to wealth and eminence in commerce, there was no dominant merchant aristocracy
or any one group strong and united enough to rule the city. When the tale of
misgovernment was at its height, and Sforza’s besieging army had reduced the
city to the last extremities of want, the mob attacked the Court of Arengo,
where the Defenders of Liberty were in session, and drove them from office. On
25 February 1450 the assembled citizens agreed to invite Sforza to enter the
city as its lord. Thereupon he loaded his soldiers with bread to distribute to
the starving people and rode in at the Porta Nuova to be acclaimed as the
successor of the Visconti.
Francesco Sforza’s establishment of his authority within the
duchy followed naturally and without any real difficulty upon his reception in
Milan; the more urgent problem was to secure peace with his enemies and recognition
by the Italian powers. His accession was the signal for an offensive alliance
between Venice and Alfonso of Aragon, who both saw their ambitions with regard
to Milan vanish with Sforza’s success. Against this he could set the personal
support and friendship of Cosimo de’ Medici. Although a considerable section of
Florentine opinion would have remained faithful to the Venetian alliance,
others, and Cosimo among them, held that during the recent wars Tuscan
interests had been unfairly subordinated to those of Lombardy, and that
Florentine money had been expended in adding to Venetian territory when the
prosperity and security of Florence demanded that the power of Venice should be
checked. Even before Visconti’s death Cosimo had made up his mind that a strong
Milan was the surest guarantee against Venetian domination, and that Sforza
possessed the ability to hold the duchy together; so he secretly advised him to
come to terms with his father-in-law and gave him financial and diplomatic
support throughout his struggle for the throne. The desertion of Venice, to
whom Cosimo’s personal debt was great, exposed him to the vengeance of his late
ally and to the criticism of his fellow-citizens. Yet, in his opinion, the
expulsion of Florentine merchants from Venetian and Neapolitan territory, and
the heavy expenditure incurred on Sforza’s behalf, were not too large a price
to pay for the maintenance of a balance of power in North Italy, and Cosimo’s
opinion was the determining factor in Florentine policy. Owing to Cosimo’s
mediation, an alliance was effected between Sforza and Charles VII of France,
who was persuaded to make the Angevin claims on Naples, rather than those of
Orleans on Milan, the object of French enterprise, and sent Rene of Anjou to
Sforza’s aid. Francesco’s need was too great, at the moment, for him to be able
to choose his allies, but he was opposed on principle to the encouragement of
French intervention. Milan, as he himself said, was destined to serve both as
the gateway of foreign princes into Italy and the barrier which lay across
their path. After the removal of Rene’s disturbing presence he was determined
that the gateway should remain closed. Thus Cosimo and Francesco each made
their individual contribution towards the new orientation of Italian policy
which was effected during these years. Cosimo’s resolve to stand behind Milan
was proof against the war-weariness of Florence and the attempts of Venice to
draw him into a separate peace. Francesco, while at one with Cosimo in his
determination to maintain friendship with France, was primarily responsible for
overcoming the traditional tendency of Florence to combat her Italian rivals by
bringing French princes into the field against them. By loyalty to one another,
and a readiness to be guided by each other’s judgment, they furthered the
propagation of a new ideal of national peace and unity in the face of foreign
enemies, of which the firstfruits were seen in the proclamation of a general
league between the Italian powers in February 1455.
The peace congress which met in Rome during the winter of
1453-4 failed to reach a conclusion, but Venice, to whom freedom to concentrate
her whole strength on the Turkish problem was of vital importance, found,
meanwhile, a more effective means of settling her differences with Milan. It
was apparently at the suggestion of Paolo Morosini, a Venetian Savio di Terraferma,
that Fra Simone da Camerino, Prior of the Augustinians at Padua, was sent
privately to Francesco Sforza to treat of peace. Fra Simone was an enthusiast
in his cause and, as a Venetian subject and the confessor of the Duke and
Duchess of Milan, he was specially qualified for his task. As a result of three
separate visits which he paid to Milan, the vexed question of frontiers was
decided by the cession of Crema to Venice, the only substantial addition to her
territories after over seven years of fighting. These terms were embodied in
the Peace of Lodi (9 April 1454), and in August of the same year a defensive
league between Milan, Florence, and Venice was concluded. On its ratification,
representatives of the three allied powers journeyed south to carry through
the last stage of the negotiations by securing the inclusion of the Papacy and
Naples in the league. Alfonso of Aragon proved the most serious obstacle to
union. His alliance with Visconti in 1435, when a Genoese naval victory brought
him a prisoner to Milan, had been the signal for the revolt of Genoa from
Milanese rule, and from that time he had sought to use north Italian
dissensions for his own advancement. The solidarity of the northern powers
destroyed his hope of becoming in fact what the Milanese ambassador named
him—the cock of Italy; only after repeated efforts on his part to divide them
did he consent to declare his adherence to the league. The treaty, in the final
form in which it was ratified by Nicholas V, bound the five chief States
together for twenty-five years against any power, whether Italian or foreign,
which might attack them. Each was pledged to contribute specified military
forces for mutual defence, and, in case of naval warfare, financial aid was
guaranteed to Venice by her colleagues. The allies each named their adherents,
with the result that, but for Alfonso’s ill-advised refusal to include Genoa
and Sigismondo Malatesta of Rimini, the league would have embraced every power
in Italy. Questions had arisen with regard to the position of the Emperor, and
as to the inclusion of foreign powers, such as France, Burgundy, and the
Spanish princes but in the end the league was expressly limited to Italian
rulers and Italian territory, a provision which adds some interest to the
inclusion of the Swiss Confederation and various Trentino lords among the
adherents. A special machinery was set up for dealing with quarrels within the
league, each of the five principals appointing representatives to act as
conservators of the peace, with power to arbitrate between disputants and to
determine the nature of the help to be given to an offended member, if recourse
to arms could not be avoided. Both as a genuine effort after peace and in view
of its definitely national character the treaty is of considerable
significance. If the system which it elaborated only existed on paper, and the
peace which it secured was neither absolute nor of long duration, it set up a
standard which influenced Italian diplomacy during the next forty years. It
bears witness to a factor in the politics of the century which persisted amid
deep-seated rivalries, territorial and commercial, to a sense of nationality
striving to express itself, and a recognition of common ideals and common
dangers transcending the particularist interests of the several States.
Alfonso of Aragon followed up his insistence upon the
exclusion of Genoa from the league by a declaration of war which had the effect
of throwing his enemy into the arms of France. In spite of Sforza’s efforts to
preserve her independence, Genoa once more recognised French suzerainty and
welcomed John of Anjou as her governor, just a month before the death of Alfonso
raised anew the Neapolitan succession question. With Genoa in his hands,
Charles VII conceived of conquests which should include the establishment of
the Angevin in Naples and the substitution of Orleans for Sforza in Milan. The
failure of his schemes is due in large measure to the adherence of the chief
Italian powers to the principles of the league. Florence cited her obligations
to it, and the fact that her colleagues were pledged to make war on her should
she break them, as the reason of her refusal to send help to Anjou; Venice
turned a deaf ear to French requests for her support, saying that she wished to
be at peace with all the world. Sforza sent his brother to aid Ferrante of
Aragon, and himself lent a hand in the overthrow of French rule in Genoa. Faced
by this solidarity among the Italian powers, Louis XI decided, soon after his
accession, that his path to ascendancy in Italy lay in the conquest not of
territory but of men. Already personally friends with Sforza, he determined to
attach him to France by investing him with Genoa andSavona. In 1464, Sforza,
true to Pius II's conception of him as one who always got what he coveted most,
crowned his victorious career by entering Genoa as lord.
Cosimo de’ Medici died in August 1464, and Francesco Sforza
in March 1466; the disappearance of these two protagonists of Italian peace and
unity could hardly fail to create an atmosphere of unrest, especially as the
latter was succeeded by a self-willed young man with little of his father's
perspicacity and the former by an invalid. The Pope took Galeazzo Maria Sforza
under his protection, but Venice, when challenged on her unfriendly attitude
towards Milan, replied that the Italian league no longer existed—Sforza had
broken it by accepting the lordship of Genoa. In Florence, the question of the
renewal of the Milanese alliance was at issue between Piero de’ Medici and his
opponents, and when Piero vindicated his determination to abide by his
father's policy, the exiles fled to Venice to throw their weight into the
opposite scale. Some ten years earlier Jacopo Piccinino’s attack upon Siena had
shewn the power of the unemployed condottiere to act as a destroyer of the
peace, and the present situation tempted Bartolomeo Colleone to seek a
territory at the expense of Milan and Florence. He was officially dismissed
from the service of Venice in order that he might serve her the better, while
Federigo of Urbino was sent to oppose him in the name of the league. A
spectacular but indecisive contest took place at La Molinella on 25 July 1467,
when after ten hours' fighting the two commanders shook hands and congratulated
each other on coming unhurt out of the conflict. Colleone's ambitions were,
however, foiled by his failure to secure a victory in the field, and the
general peace which followed marked a further success for the policy of the
league. Thereupon Colleone withdrew to his castle of Malpaga to spend the last
years of his life in cultivated splendour.
When, in December 1469, Lorenzo de’ Medici, Piero’s son, assumed
the direction of Florentine politics, he found Italy wrapped in profound peace
to which the underlying hostility between Milan and Venice seemed to be the
only serious menace. In the circumstances, wisdom dictated the cultivation of
friendly relations with the latter power, and in 1474 Lorenzo’s efforts
resulted in a league between Milan, Florence, and Venice, which the Papacy and
Naples were invited to enter. But the precedent of twenty years before was not
earned to its conclusion: instead of a general league, there followed an
alliance between Ferrante and Sixtus IV; Italy was divided into two camps each
viewing the other with suspicion, if not with hostility. It is not easy to
account for this change of atmosphere nor for the fact that, four years later,
a personal quarrel between Sixtus IV and the Medici set all Italy ablaze.
Perhaps the most serious cause of tension was the constant activities of France
in Italian politics. Louis XI was prompt either to sow discord between the
Italian powers or to act as arbiter in their quarrels, if his influence could
thereby be increased or the circle of his adherents enlarged; thus the
temptation to use France as a weapon against enemies at home was irresistible,
and the knowledge that her power lay behind some transitory combination of
Italian rulers gave it an importance which it would not otherwise have
possessed. During these years Louis XI’s relations with Florence, Milan, and
Venice were peculiarly close; this alone was enough to arouse the fears of Naples,
and to incline Ferrante, who had his own rivalries with Venice in the Mediterranean,
to make common cause with the Papacy. For some time past Sixtus IV’s activities
in the Papal States had run counter to Florentine interests, and in particular
the establishment of Girolamo Riario as lord of Imola had been effected against
Lorenzos wishes in a sphere of influence which he looked upon as peculiarly
his own. His retaliation took the form of measures calculated to ruin the Pazzi
bankers, who had financed the sale of Imola, and when to their grievances were
added those of Francesco Salviati, the papal nominee to the archbishopric of
Pisa, whom Lorenzo had prevented from taking possession of his see, the
material for the Pazzi conspiracy was to hand. On Easter Day 1478, in the
cathedral of Florence, Giuliano de’ Medici fell a victim to the conspirators,
but Lorenzo added to his offences against Sixtus IV the crime of not being
murdered, and the hanging of Archbishop Salviati by the infuriated mob
furnished a pretext for ecclesiastical censures against Florence and eventually
for a declaration of war. Although practically every Italian State was involved
and every soldier of repute had a share in the fighting, the real issues were
decided by the diplomats rather than by the soldiers. Ferrante helped to bring
about a change of government in Milan, whereby Ludovico Sforza, the friend of
Naples, supplanted Bona of Savoy and Simonetta as regent for Duke Gian
Galeazzo. Ludovico’s rise to power was hailed by Lorenzo de’ Medici as a
stepping-stone towards the reconciliation with Naples which he had come to
regard as the salvation of Florence. Louis XPs diplomacy had been active
throughout in support of his allies, and in November 1479 his agent in Naples
reported that the king was disposed to yield to his plea for peace.
Thus Lorenzo made his famous journey to Naples when the ground was already
prepared, and his persuasive charm, coupled with the logic of the situation,
turned Ferrante from an enemy into a friend. Sixtus IV could not fight on
alone, and in 1480 peace was restored, only to be broken two years later by the
combined attack of the Papacy and Venice on Ferrara. Once more foreign
intervention exercised a predominating influence on the course of the war. The
Spanish monarchs entered the fray as the allies of their Neapolitan cousins,
who together with Milan and Florence took arms in defence of Ferrara, and their
activities were in part responsible for Sixtus IV’s change of sides. Finding
herself isolated, Venice, who had already taken the Duke of Lorraine into her
service, issued a double invitation to France: Louis of Orleans was sounded on
his intentions with regard to Milan, and the French Crown was urged to
undertake an expedition in support of its claims to Naples. This manoeuvre had
its desired effect. On 7 August 1484 peace was signed at Bagnolo, and the
fertile district of the Polesina passed from Ferrara to Venice.
During the years which followed, the tension between the
Italian powers was seldom if ever relaxed. All were aware that the only means
of averting foreign intervention lay in ceasing to quarrel among themselves,
yet each looked with suspicion on his neighbours and courted opportunities of
advancement afforded by another’s weakness. The strongest influence on the side
of peace was undoubtedly that of Lorenzo de’ Medici. When the allied powers met
at Cremona in 1483, to lay their plans against Venice, his sound judgment and
conciliatory temper won for him golden opinions. Florence, from her character
as a small non-military State dependent on her commerce, had most to gain from
peace, and to the task of smoothing over quarrels, and isolating them when they
could not be prevented, Lorenzo devoted his skill and energy during the years
of life that remained to him. But for him the Barons’ war in Naples might
easily have led to a general conflagration. In 1488, a year of assassinations
in Romagna, he constituted himself the champion of the despots—Caterina
SforzaRiario, Astorre Manfredi, Giovanni Bentivoglio—determined that rebellion
in their cities should not give occasion for the increase of papal or Venetian
power. He established complete ascendancy over the mind of Innocent VIII, and
did his utmost to restrain Ludovico Sforza, restless and untrustworthy, prone
both to give and to take offence. Everywhere and at all times he proved himself
the pivot of the Italian State system. Nevertheless, it is doubtful whether,
had he lived, he could have saved Italy from catastrophe. The divergence of interests
between the chief States was too fundamental to be remedied by diplomacy or to
render the balance of power anything but a transitory substitute for political
unity. Lorenzo himself did not hesitate to excite the anger of Milan by taking
possession of Pietrasanta and Sarzana in the midst of his work for peace. Only
deliberate avoidance of armed intervention on the part of Louis XI and Anne of
Beaujeu had prevented any one of the quarrels of the last twenty years from
culminating in a French invasion, and the breach between Milan and Naples
proved fatal, not because it afforded a unique opportunity for intervention,
but because Charles VIII was now determined to make use of it. In April 1492,
the Florentine agents in Paris and Lyons sent alarming accounts of Charles
VIII’s hostile intentions with regard to Naples and of his secret understanding
with the envoys of Milan. This was a situation with which Lorenzo’s foreign
policy was not framed to deal; a breach with France would defy the tradition of
centuries and deprive the declining Florentine wool-trade of its best market,
yet to aid France in an attack on Naples would be to destroy the unity among
Italian powers which Lorenzo had devoted his best energies to maintaining.
Perhaps fortunately for his reputation as a diplomatist he died a few days
before the letters reached Florence.
With the return of Cosimo de’ Medici to Florence in 1434 the
republic was destroyed as surely as when in some north Italian commune the
citizens, with a semblance of legality, conferred supreme power upon a despot.
Here no official delegation of authority took place, and Cosimo, his son, and
grandson, while they held Florence in the hollow of their hands, lived and died
as private citizens. The task to which they devoted themselves with consummate
success was, on the one hand, the evolution of constitutional forms more nearly
corresponding with the conditions which in fact prevailed, and on the other,
the rendering of their rule acceptable to citizens who gloried in the name of
liberty and hankered after their vanished powers of self-government even while
they consented to their loss. Cosimo’s first care was to break up the
oligarchy, and to create in its place a new governing group composed of no one
class or interest but of his personal adherents. For the next sixty years the
ruling faction in Florence were neither magnati nor popolani Neri nor Bianchi, but Palleschi who made the Medici balls their rallying cry
and, unlike the factions of an earlier age, had little to fear from any
opposing group. The listof proscriptions which followed Cosimo’s return
included the leading families in Florence. Rinaldo d’Albizzi and his sons died
in exile, as did Palla Strozzi who, although a member of the balia which
recalled Cosimo, was banished as a potential rival. Prominent patrician
families were penalised by being made grandi and others of the grandi were granted rights of citizenship. Neri Capponi, who according to Cosimo
possessed the best brain in Florence, remained powerful and independent until
his death; but the murder of his friend Baldaccio d’Anghiari, a captain of
infantry, who was thrown from the window of the Palazzo Vecchio when Neri was
enjoying the full flood of his popularity as conqueror of the Casentino, was
perhaps intended as a warning that he too was dependent upon Cosimo’s goodwill.
Later events added to the number of the exiles who went to seek new homes and
fresh commercial openings in Italy and abroad, cherishing their hostility to
the Medicean regime but impotent to injure it.
Meanwhile, for those who remained in Florence, support of the
Medici brought opportunities for money-making, a system of taxation capable of
adjustment to their interests, and a virtual monopoly of political power. An
increasing number of citizens enlisted whole-heartedly under a leadership which
promised fulfilment of the two ends which lay nearest their hearts, the
exaltation of their family and of their city. Until 1480, the control of the
Medici over the organs of government was maintained through the prolongation,
on one pretext or another, of successive balfe, which provided for the
nomination of the Signoria and other magistracies by a committee. These,
however, were emergency measures of limited duration, and the demand for a
return to the time-honoured system of election by lot was too insistent to be
disregarded. When election by lot was revived, it produced results unfavourable
to the dominant party; names of friends of the exiles and lukewarm supporters
of the Medici were drawn from the election bags, and proposals were brought
forward which hampered despotic control. An attempt to revert to normal
methods, after the Italian league of 1455, culminated in the chief
constitutional crisis of Cosimo’s rule. In 1458 the champions of liberty
secured a renewal of the Catasto, and a proposal sent to the Councils
for the creation of a new balia was thrown out. The movement was
supported by St Antonino, Archbishop of Florence, who wrote a letter in his own
hand, which he caused to be affixed to the door of the cathedral, urging the
citizens to cling to their right of voting in secret. A gathering of leading
citizens thereupon passed a vote of censure on the archbishop and decided to
force through the government proposals. Cosimo, however, contrived to remain in
the background and to leave to Luca Pitti the championship of an unpopular
cause. A balía having been secured by recourse to the Parlamento,
it proceeded to appoint Accoppiatori with the duty of nominating to the
chief magistracies for seven years, and to institute a new Council of a
Hundred, chosen from the supporters of the Medici, to advise on all matters of
State with special responsibility with regard to finance. This victory for the
dominant faction was marked by an attempt to add to the dignity of the
Signoria; the Priori delle arti became Priori di libertà when one
more stage had been reached in the destruction of Florentine liberty. Lorenzo
had to await the reaction which followed the Pazzi conspiracy for his first
real opportunity of modifying the constitution in the direction which he
desired. The reforms of 1480 set up a permanent Consiglio di Settanta,
consisting of thirty members chosen by the Signoria of the day and forty others
chosen by the original thirty; membership was for life and vacancies were
filled by co-optation. Two important committees, the Otto di Pratica which
conducted foreign affairs and supervised the military forces, and the Dodici
Procurators which regulated finance and commerce, were appointed by the
Settanta from their own number, as were the Accoppiatori who selected the
Signoria. These changes, says Rinuccini, himself a member of the balta which
effected them, “contained much that was contrary to the practice of self-government
and to the liberty of the people.” Although respect for republican principles
is reflected in the provision that the powers of the Settanta must be
renewed every five years, its institution marks the final victory of the new
oligarchy; the Signoria itself ceased henceforth to be the most coveted office
in the republic, and served rather as a training school for the Settanta,
which was the sole fount of administrative authority. It remained now for
Lorenzo to emancipate himself from the control of his own supporters by a
further concentration of power. In 1490 the nomination of the Signoria was
entrusted to a committee of seventeen of which Lorenzo was a member, and which
received wide powers to act in the interests of the State. Rumour was
persistent that Lorenzo only awaited his forty-fifth birthday in order to have
himself made Gonfialoniere di Giustizia for life; this would have
placed the coping-stone upon the despotism which had been in process of
evolution since 1434, but he died when he was still within a few months of
becoming eligible for the official headship of the republic.
The financial administration of the Medici was the aspect of
their rule which found least favour with their fellow-citizens. Cosimo’s
progressive income-tax was arranged with great technical skill, and with
respect for small incomes, but the use which he made of it to despoil his
enemies overshadowed its merits. Lorenzo, on the testimony of his great-nephew,
“was not very good at business”; neither the affairs of his own bank nor public
finance held the first place in his interest. His raids upon the state dowry
fund earned for him severe condemnation, and his tampering with the coinage, on
the introduction of white guattrw in 1490, was perhaps the most unpopular act
of his government. The financial problem was, however, aggravated by declining
prosperity. Florentine pre-eminence in the woollen industry was no longer
assured; competition was robbing her of the monopoly of her technical
processes, and new industrial centres rivalled her in commercial enterprise.
The export of cloth fell considerably during the course of the century, and the
Arte della Lana employed less labour. A tendency to play for safety and invest
in land made capital difficult to obtain for business purposes; trade
depression made itself felt in all classes. The acquisition of Pisa and Leghorn
did indeed enable Florence to develop her own mercantile marine. Harbour works
were carried out and galleys equipped, under the auspices of the consoles
maris, and Florentine ships made successful voyages to England and the Levant.
But the opportunity for maritime enterprise in the Mediterranean came too late
to be used with real profit, and foreign trade was hampered by restrictions on
shipping in the interests of Florentine vessels. In these circumstances, and
when the activity of Florence in Italian politics added daily to the expenses
of government, it is not surprising that taxation was both heavy and
insufficient for the requirements of State. The money spent by private
citizens on building and the arts suggests indeed that the burden imposed was
not crushing.
The rule of the Medici not only added to the Florentine
dominion, but did much to weld the territory together. Pisa was wooed from the
contemplation of her economic subjection to Florence by the prospect of winning
fresh laurels as the intellectual centre of the Florentine State and the
official seat of the university. Lorenzo was himself a member of the governing
body of the university and spared neither money nor trouble upon its
development. When a dispute over the ownership of an alum mine goaded Volterra
to revolt, it was Lorenzo’s initiative which seized the opportunity to reduce
the city by force of arms and rob her of the last remnants of communal
autonomy. The sack which followed was a misfortune which his wisdom could only
deplore; more characteristic of his methods of reducing a subject city to
obedience are his purchases of estates in the neighbourhood and the acquisition
of a Volterran abbey for his son Giovanni. Giovanni’s benefices, scattered at
strategic points over the territory, were regarded as a means of accumulating
landed property for the maintenance of the family fortunes, and of creating
centres of Medici influence where they were most needed. His elevation to the
cardinalate, at the age of thirteen, is the crowning instance of the exploitation
of his calling in the interests of State. When the young cardinal took up his
residence in Rome in 1492, the Medici, like the Sforza and the Gonzaga, had
their own representative at the Curia, exhorted by his father to serve as a
chain binding the Papacy to Florence, and to use every opportunity of
benefiting his city and his house. The inclusion of natives of the subject
cities among their personal adherents served a double purpose with regard to
the consolidation of Medici power. Devoted servants, like the Dovizi of
Bibbiena, created a focus of loyalty to the Medici in their own homes, while
they strengthened their control over the governing circle in Florence. The tale
of rebellion and loss of territory which followed the fall of the Medici shews
the value of the personal link which they created in holding the component
parts of the dominion together; at the same time it marks the failure of their
efforts to transform it into a single State.
The prestige enjoyed by the Medici, and their friendly relations
with the princely families of Italy, contributed alike to the pride and the
pleasure of the Florentines. From 1439, when Cosimo as Gonfaloniere di
Giustizia welcomed Pope, Patriarch, and Eastern Emperor to Florence for the
Council, a stream of great people flowed through the city, to lodge for the
most part at the Medici palace and to provide occasions for feasting and
pageantry in which all had their share. The May revels of 1459, when Pius II
stayed in Florence on his way to the Congress of Mantua—the festivities
included a tournament, a wild beast show, and a ball, at which sixty young
couples chosen from the best dancers in Florence disported themselves in the
Mercato Nuovo—helped to dissipate the ill-feeling aroused during the crisis of
the previous year. The tournament which celebrated Lorenzo’s engagement to
Clarice Orsini, and the visit of the Duke and Duchess of Milan to Florence in
1471, which surpassed all previous efforts in magnificence, stand out among a
succession of splendid merry-makings. Yet, while they entertained and were
entertained as princes, the daily life of the Medici was true to the spirit of civiltà.
Franceschetto Cybò was struck with the contrast between the banquets which he
had enjoyed as a guest and the homely fare which he shared with the family as a
son-in-law. The Medici palace in the Via Larga, although already in Lorenzo’s
day a treasure-house which strangers in Florence sought permission to visit,
was not the seat of the government, nor was it a court where men of genius were
brought together at the will of a prince. It was one of several no less
sumptuous homes of citizen families, in which a group of like-minded friends
were given wider opportunities for cultivating the gifts and pursuing the
interests which were common to hosts and guests alike. Niccolo Niccoli,
Marsilio Ficino, Michelozzo, Donatello, and Fra Angelico were Florentine
citizens and Cosimo’s personal friends, and it was with and through them that
he rendered his chief services to the Renaissance. He chose out Marsilio, the
son of his doctor, and provided for his training as the high-priest of
Florentine Platonism; he supplied Donatello with models from the antique which
inspired his sculpture; Michelozzo was the chief agent for the satisfaction of
his passion for building; Niccoli and Fra Angelico represented the scholarship
and the mysticism which made their twin appeal to his mind. The work which
Michelozzo executed at San Marco includes under one roof the library in which
Niccoli’s books were available for public use, and the cell to which Cosimo was
wont to withdraw from the world and where Fra Angelico has painted the figure
of St Cosmas kneeling at the foot of the cross: it is a witness to Cosimo's
identification with the fulness of life in the Florence of his day.
Lorenzo grew up in the atmosphere which his grandfather had
helped to create; he was the pupil of the scholars and philosophers whom Cosimo
delighted to honour. To the men of the Laurentian age, Poliziano, Botticelli,
and their fellows, he was less a patron than one of themselves, inspired by a
common vision and striving to give individual expression to it in his art. His
power lay in the spontaneity and absorption with which he threw himself into
every kind of human activity; his poetry has won for him a place among the
great names of Italian literature; he was foremost alike in a carnival riot or
in a Platonic disputation, a master in the world of imagination no less than in
the world of politics. Moreover, his affections spread beyond the walls of
Florence to the life lived in the Medici villas dispersed over the Tuscan
countryside, where he had his hawks and his horses, where the Medici ladies saw
to the oil and the cheeses, and Cosimo talked of farming as if he never did
anything else but farm. Steeped in the traditions and prejudices of their
fellow-citizens, and sharing their experiences, it was possible for the Medici
to direct the government of Florence with the slightest appearance of despotic
authority; but unfailing tact and ceaseless attention to detail were necessary
in order to keep the balance true. Cosimo must take care that his dearest
schemes were put forward in another’s name; Lorenzo must receive instructions
from the Otto when he set out on a diplomatic mission, and address the
Signoria in language appropriate from a servant of the State to its official
head; Piero’s tactlessness and lack of geniality imperilled his position
during the five years of his ascendancy. In Italy as a whole, Medicean
diplomacy was able, for a time and in a measure, to satisfy the desire for
unity without running counter to separatist instinct. Within Florence, Medicean
personality made possible the rule of an individual under the forms of a
republic. Such a system had in it all the elements of impermanence and
compromise. Its achievement was to give, to Florence and to Italy, an interlude
of peace in which the spirit of man was set free to create for itself a wonderland
of beauty, more enduring than the political framework from which it sprang.
Francesco Sforza and his successors claimed to rule Milan in
virtue of powers conferred on them by the people. At the opening of his reign,
a generalassembly of citizens, composed of one member from each household,
invested Sforza with the duchy, and confirmed the capitulations to which he had
previously pledged himself. Although the right of the commune to delegate its
authority to an individual or group, by the grant of a balía, for a
limited time and purpose, was universally recognised in Italian law, it is
doubtful whether Milan, or any other city, was legally entitled to commit
suicide by a permanent surrender of its functions. Consciousness of a defective
title explains Francesco’s efforts to obtain a renewal of imperial investiture
and, when these failed, his suggestion that the Pope should confirm him in his
possession of Milan, negligente imperatore. His internal government
rested upon a system of monarchical centralisation tending towards the
destruction of the communal institutions which were in theory the source of his
authority. On his accession the two branches of the ducal Council, the Consiglio di giustizia and the Consiglio secreto, were revived, as were
Visconti’s two finance committees. For the conduct of foreign affairs, he
relied chiefly upon Cecco Simonetta, who had been his secretary during his
condottiere days; the confidence enjoyed by this upstart Calabrian in matters
of State was a constant source of grievance to the Milanese nobility. Francesco
was more uncompromising even than the majority of his contemporaries in his
vindication of the sovereignty of the State. The capitulations of 1450 provided
for the suppression of private jurisdictions and immunities within the duchy,
and forbade subjects to accept titles or privileges from Pope or Emperor
without the duke’s consent. With regard to the Church, he did not hesitate to
plead necessities of State as an excuse for helping himself to the revenues of
vacant benefices, and he obtained from successive Popes the right of nominating
to bishoprics and abbeys within his dominions. In 1460, Pius II consented to
the establishment of an office, with its own register and in charge of a bishop
devoted to Sforza’s interests, to examine applications for Milanese benefices
and ensure that the successful candidates were acceptable to the secular power.
In Milan itself and in Pavia and Cremona, cities with which Francesco’s
personal connexion was close, his rule was popular. Benefactions such as the
Ospedale Maggiore and the Martesana canal, together with the simple family life
lived in the midst of their subjects by the duke and duchess and their eight
children, mitigated the discontent caused by high taxation and the building of
the Castello Sforzesco. In the outlying cities of the dominion, however, disaffection
was rife. An inquiry into the state of the duchy made in 1461 shewed that in
the majority of the subject cities the local nobility was definitely hostile,
and that ambitious neighbours, such as Borso d’Este and the Marquess of
Montferrat, were prompt to encourage the malcontents. The fact that Francesco
and his son thought it necessary to maintain an organised system of espionage
upon the daily doings of Bartolomeo Colleone indicates their consciousness of
the instability of their rule. The accession of Galeazzo Maria and his marriage
to Bona of Savoy brought an increase of magnificence to the ducal household,
especially after its migration to the newly built Castello. Galeazzo was a
villain, but he was by no means an inefficient ruler; he spent freely, but he
balanced his budget, and his murder during the Christmas festival of 1476 was
prompted by purely private discontents. The vengeance taken by the citizens
upon his murderers suggests that Milan as a whole had no serious objection to
his rule. His seventy ear-old son was recognised as duke under the guardianship
of his mother, while Simonetta carried on the real work of government.
Simonetta’s tendency to lean on the Guelfs produced a revival of faction within
Milan. The Ghibellines revolted and were supported by the duke’s uncles; from
their exile they intrigued against the government, until Ludovico profited by a
quarrel between Bona and Simonetta to win admission to the Castello and to
become henceforth the arbiter of the duchy (7 September 1479).
The ascendancy of Ludovico il Moro saw the complete
development of princely rule. Within a year of his return, Simonetta was
brought to the scaffold, and his fall cleared Ludovico’s path for the overthrow
of the instruments of his own rise. Prominent Milanese nobles were deprived of
their seats on the ducal council; Bona went into forced retirement; even
Roberto Sanseverino, the companion of Ludovico’s exile, was not permitted to
enjoy the fruits of the victory which he had helped to win. The Consiglio
secreto, which had been active under Simonetta, ceased to be the chief
organ of administration. Its members, while holding office at the pleasure of
the duke, were drawn chiefly from the native aristocracy and possessed some
degree of independence. Their place was taken by secretaries, dependent upon
Ludovico alone, each of whom had charge of one of the various departments of
government—justice, finance, foreign affairs, and the Church. The Council of
Nine Hundred met twice under Galeazzo Maria, and confirmed him in possession of
the duchy, but it had no place in Ludovico’s system. In 1494, when the death of
his nephew from natural causes apparently saved him from the trouble of
murdering him, he produced the diploma of investiture which he had bought from
Maximilian and ascended the throne as a vassal of the Empire. The development
of the duchy during the splendid years of his domination is the measure of the
power of a single will to transform the State. His unfettered authority enabled
him to gather round him the most distinguished of Renaissance courts, and to
stamp every side of life and every corner of his dominion with the impress of
his personality. Repossessed in full measure two of the most outstanding
qualities of the Renaissance, the spirit of scientific enquiry and sureness of
artistic judgment. His peculiar genius is seen in town-planning and irrigation
works, in efforts to stamp out the plague, and in improved methods for the
cultivation ot the vine and the mulberry. It inspired the promotion of
mathematical studies which brought Luca Pacioli of Borgo San Sepolcro to his
court. It guided the choice which he made of Bramante of Urbino and Leonardo
the Florentine to be his friends and fellow-workers.
Under II Moro’s auspices, Milan reaped in full measure the
harvest of her natural resourcesand of the strong government bequeathed toher
by the Visconti. Until the Arte della Seta received its statutes from
Duke Filippo,the silk industry had been carried on by individuals in their own
homes, with a limited output of inferior quality; now it employed 20,000
operatives and formed one of the main sources of revenue. The Milanese
armourers, at the height of their fame and prosperity, celebrated II Moro’s
marriage by lining the principal street of their quarter with a double row of
lay figures clad in specimens of their craft. International commerce was
facilitated by the maintenance of consuls at the chief European centres;
numerous German merchants had establishments in Milan, and Milanese houses were
represented in German cities as well as in London and Bruges. The peculiar
contribution made by Milan to Renaissance art is due in large measure to the
patronage of the Sforza dukes. From 1450, the two great Visconti foundations of
the Cathedral of Milan and the Certosa of Pavia, no less than the Castello
Sforzesco, became schools of architecture and sculpture, where native craftsmen
gained fresh inspiration from the Florentines introduced by Francesco. Ludovico
employed Bramante not only in the capital but throughout the dominion, and in
close association with. Lombard masters whose tradition he absorbed and
transformed. Francesco brought Foppa of Brescia to Milan to become the dominant
influence in painting until the advent of Leonardo. Native artists may have
suffered from the overmastering effects of Leonardo’s genius, but he found here
opportunity for the exercise of his manifold gifts, together with an atmosphere
of understanding criticism which enabled him to work at his ease. The chief
glory of II Moro’s court is that it provided the setting in which Leonardo’s
art was brought to perfection. The marriage of Gian Galeazzo to Isabella of
Aragon in 1489, and that of Ludovico to Beatrice d’Este two years later, while
adding to the gaiety and brilliance of the court, introduced into it a spirit
of faction which was to prove the source of its destruction. The two women were
first cousins and alike clever and self-assertive, yet Isabella’s primacy as
duchess was wrested from her by Beatrice. Gian Galeazzo acquiesced readily in
his uncle’s domination, apparently preferring it to that of his wife, but she,
consumed with the desire to rule, filled the Castello with her lamentations and
urged her relatives in Naples to come to her aid. Meanwhile the Guelf nobility and
all other elements of opposition to Ludovico’s rule found in championship of
the rightful duke the rallying point of their discontents. Gian Giacopo
Trivulzio, a prominent Guelf, had already left Milan for Naples, and his
presence enabled foreign foes to join hands with rebels at home. Conscious of
his vulnerability to attack, Ludovico turned to France, hoping no doubt that a
threat of French intervention would serve, as it had done in the past, to avert
a crisis. In so doing, he destroyed the foundations upon which, from the days
of the last Visconti, the power of Milan had been built. Milan as a barrier
against French invaders was the surest guarantee of Italian liberty. Milan as
the ally of Charles VIII opened the flood-gates to foreign domination.
The development of princely rule in Florence and Milan had
its counterpart in the smaller Italian States. During the course of the
century, Este in Ferrara, Gonzaga in Mantua, Bentivoglio in Bologna,
Montefeltro in Urbino, and other lesser lords of cities, modified their
constitutional position in a monarchical direction, won for themselves a place
in the world of Italian politics by marriage alliances and attention to
diplomacy, and vied with each other in the transformation of their courts into
splendid homes of the Renaissance. Among these the Este lords of Ferrara
occupied the first place. A strategic position, long standing as rulers, and
conspicuous ability, gave them an importance in fifteenth-century politics out
of proportion to the extent of their dominions. Leonello,the pupil of Guarino
and the friend of Pisanello and Leon Battista Alberti, made Ferrara famous in
the history of learning and the arts. Borso obtained investiture of his fiefs
of Modena and Reggio from the Emperor, and in 1471 was made Duke of Ferrara by
Paul II. At home he proved himself a master in the art of government, and won
for himself a reputation for justice and benevolence which enabled him to
concentrate power in his own person amid the enthusiasm of his subjects.
Ercole, through his marriage with Leonora of Aragon and other family
connexions, and the resident envoys whom he kept at the chief courts, wielded
no little influence over the politics of his day. His daughter Isabella, who
went to Mantua as a bride in 1490, was heir to his tradition; there, from her
cabinet filled with the artistic treasures of her choice, she manipulated the
threads of Italian diplomacy and steered her relatives through the troubled
waters of the foreign invasions. The position of the Este was perhaps more
stable than that of other Italian rulers, but their hold upon Ferrara was
menaced by the pretensions of Venice and the Papacy and by rivals within their
own family. Ercole was not sure of his throne until he had sent Leonello’s son
to the scaffold and made the streets of Ferrara run with blood. When the
Castello of Ferrara was at its gayest and most hospitable, the morrow held no
certainty for the best loved among Italian princes. In comparison with Ferrara,
both Mantua and Urbino were small and poor States; their rulers were soldiers
by profession, dependent both tor their revenues and their political importance
upon the power to sell their arms to others. It is significant of the
opportunities for advancement which the profession of arms afforded that the
Gonzaga palace at Mantua, enlarged and beautified out of all recognition by its
fifteenthcentury owners, and the palace built by Federigo of Montefeltro at
Urbino were among the most stately dwelling-houses of the age. Imperial investiture
as Marquesses of Mantua and marriages with German princesses gave to the
Gonzaga lords of the period a close connexion with the Empire, which they used
to augment their authority and influence. Their association with Urbino began
when Federigo was a fellow-pupil with Ludovico Gonzaga and his brothers and
sisters in Vittorino da Feltre s school, and was strengthened by matrimonial
ties and common tastes and interests. Federigo’s high character and gifted
personality, together with the charm of his mountain home, make him the most
perfect representative of the Italian profession of arms; his death during the
war of Ferrara marks the close of condottiere warfare in its most
characteristic phase. The rule of the Bentivoglio in Bologna represented a
despotism of a different kind. Giovanni I was recognised as fymiwus when he
seized supreme power in 1401, but his successors were only the leading members
of a city magistracy; Nicholas V’s capitulations (1447) conferred sovereign
powers upon legate and commune acting jointly. Nevertheless, Sante and Giovanni
II exercised an authority which differed little in practice from that of their
neighbours; they carried on an independent foreign policy, often in direct
opposition to the Papacy, and within Bologna the position of the legate is
summed up in Pius II’s aphorism, “legatus qui verius ligatus appellari
potuit”
Interchange of visits and a steady flow of correspondence
kept the ruling families of Italy in close touch with one another, and they
acted as a unifying force in politics, which served the interests of the
individual citizen. Offices of every kind, from a professorial chair or a post
podesta to a bank-clerkship, favours such as facilities for collecting debts or
release from imprisonment, were solicited by one lord from another on behalf of
his subjects with unremitting energy and eloquence. Although these requests
were as often refused as granted, the citizen who had no lord to plead his
cause must have suffered under grave disabilities in his dealings with other
States. The despot, in short, was an antidote to local exclusiveness, and his
activities fostered a belief in his own existence as necessary to the
well-being of the community. To this belief the tenets of humanism lent their
support. In its reverence for the past and in the homage which it paid to the
authority of the expert, it stood for the principles of discipline rather than
for those of freedom. The pursuit of learning and the arts offered a means
whereby men might be turned from thoughts of self-government, and find fresh
forms of self-expression in place of their stifled political activities.
Princely rule was exalted as the sphere in which man’s manifold powers could
alone find complete development. Thus the teaching of current philosophy, no
less than the trivial incidents of daily life, enabled despotism to strike
fresh roots and to undermine the traditions of liberty. At the same time, the
tendency on the part of the despots to seek investiture from Pope or Emperor
preserved the conception of the medieval Empire, and threw the aegis of feudal
tradition over the evolution of the modem State.
When despotism prevailed throughout Italy, and even the
republics of Siena and Perugia fell beneath the control of a single citizen
before the close of the century, Venice alone remained a strong and
well-ordered republic. Her position at the beginning of the century and her
history during its course have been authoritatively treated by Dr Horatio Browne.
It must suffice here to indicate the characteristics which separate her from
the general trend of Italian political development. Amid the failure of
communal institutions to meet the requirements which circumstances demanded of
them, the Venetian constitution stands out as an example of efficiency and
adaptability which responded to every need as it arose, and allowed no power
outside itself to supplement its shortcomings. The Maggior Consiglio,
since the famous serrata of 1297, was limited to the Venetian
patriciate, numbering at this time some fifteen hundred members; yet no
antagonism existed between its members and those of the plebeian classes, who
found adequate scope'for their political activities in the civil service, and
honoured a government which was earned on in their interests. The Maggior
Consiglio was the source of all authority in the State, but it understood
the art of delegating its powers, and was content to concentrate upon its
elective functions, leaving the work of legislation to the Pregadi or
Senate. The Collegio was the executive and initiative body, consisting
of the heads of government deparments (Savii di Terra Ferma, Savii da Mar)
and of six Savii Grandi, one of whom performed what were practically the
functions of prime minister for a week at a time. Council, Senate, and College
were presided over by the Doge and his six Councillors. The Doge could not act
apart from his Councillors, but he alone among Venetian statesmen held office
for life; thus the advice which he tendered was formed by ripe experience and
his position as visible head of the State ensured him a respectful hearing. In
1310 the Consiglio di Died was instituted “to preserve the liberty and peace of
the subjects of the republic and protect them from the abuses of personal
power.” For all its wide discretionary authority, it did not supersede the
constitution as the creation of a balta superseded it; elected in the Grand
Council for six months at a time, it formed part of the ordinary machinery of
government and was subject to constitutional control. Admirable as were the
constitutional forms of the republic, it was not these which differentiated her
most sharply from her neighbours, but rather the spirit which animated her
political life. When Savonarola instructed the citizens of Florence on the
manner in which they could contribute to the perfecting of popular government,
he bade those called to any magistracy or office “love the common good of the
city, and laying aside all individual and private interests have an eye to this
alone.” It was the glory of Venice that she trained her sons to
obey this precept and that the whole-hearted devotion of every Venetian to the
service of the republic was expected and rendered. The oligarchy was animated
by a common will and purpose, and any signs of independence on the part of an
individual or group were ruthlessly suppressed. Moreover, the peculiar history
and position of Venice contributed to the maintenance of unity between all
classes. Isolation from the main current of Italian politics saved her from
their devastating factions. The temperament of the people, bred of the soft air
of the lagoons and a seafaring life, rendered them amenable to discipline, and
turned their skill and energies towards the practical and the technical rather
than towards agitating problems of politics and philosophy. The Church was
never allowed to become a rival to the authority of the State. The economic
interests of patrician and plebeian were centred in a single commercial system
which it was the chief concern of the government to foster. Thus the republic
drew its strength from the combined energy of its citizens, which constituted a
reserve force from which it could meet the heavy demands made upon its endurance.
At the opening of the fifteenth century Venice had reached
the full measure of her powers; her constitution was fixed and her commercial
and colonial system was elaborated. A period of almost uninterrupted warfare,
with the new responsibilities which her conquests brought, formed the supreme
test of Venetian greatness, and of the principles upon which the republic was
founded. In 1484, the mainland dominion of Venice stretched from the Isonzo and
the Adriatic to the Adda, and from the Alps to the Po. The system of government
established in the subject territory strove to preserve local autonomy and at
the same time to bind the cities to Venice by the benefits which her rule
conferred. Each city retained its own constitution, its council being
presided over by the Venetian rettore or podesta who, together with a military
officer, acted as representatives of the republic. In Vicenza, where the
tradition of liberty was strong, anziani^ elected by the citizens, had the duty
of watching the rettore in order to prevent breaches of Vicentine laws and
custom. Commissions were sent from time to time to all subject cities in order
to enquire into the conduct of the rettore and hear complaints. Taxation was
light and mainly indirect, and Venice won general respect from what Harrington
has termed “her exquisite justice.” If the local nobility chafed under her
control, and the neighbours who were stripped of their territories thirsted for
vengeance, the lower classes were unwavering in their allegiance. The strongest
vindication of Venetian rule is that, with a few exceptions and save for a
brief interval, the cities which fell to her during the fifteenth century
remained under her in peace, prosperity, and contentment for three hundred
years. In addition to her pre-occupation with the mainland, Venice was engaged
in a losing battle for the maintenance of her supremacy in the Levant. Although
her successes in naval warfare against the Turk during the early years of the
century enabled her to secure a respite from hostilities and free trade and
navigation in Turkish dominions, the fall of Constantinople entailed heavy loss
of property and the disappearance of the supremacy which she had hitherto
enjoyed in the Black Sea. From 1463-79 she fought the Turk single-handed with a
courage which refused to be daunted by reverses. She emerged from the struggle
with depleted revenues, and losses of territory for which the acquisition of
Cyprus afforded only partial compensation. Despite the prolonged strain to
which she was subjected, however, Venice had energy to spare for all that
promoted the prestige of the city and the wellbeing of its citizens. She
secured the removal of the seat of the Patriarch from Grado to the capital, and
further strengthened the control of the republic in matters of ecclesiastical
jurisdiction and appointment to benefices. Various improvements were
introduced into the judicial system, and a permanent commission was set up to
visit the prisons and ameliorate the lot of the prisoners; a ministry of public
health was instituted; the arsenal was enlarged. The Venice which Philippe de
Commynes visited in 1494 amazed him by its magnificence. Churches, monasteries,
gardens, set in the midst of the waters, palaces faced with white marble from
Istria, gilded ceilings, carved mantelpieces, gondolas made gay with
tapestries, claimed his admiring attention. “C’est la plus triomphante cité que
j'aye jamais vue, et qui fait plus d’honneurs à ambassadeurs et estrangers, et
qui plus sagement se gouverne, et ou le service de Dieu est le plus
solemnellement fait.” His words bear witness to the worth of Venetian
achievement, and to the power of the spirit of the commune which had not ceased
to animate the life of the city.
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