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THE HANSA
The gradual expansion of the German people
eastwards, following upon the conquest and Christianisation of the numerous
Slav tribes beyond the Elbe, together with the foundation of towns in the
conquered area, were the two conditions that rendered the rise and development
of the Hansa possible. Initiated by the Saxon Emperors, the building of towns
was continued by their successors and other territorial lords, so that by the
twelfth century many of the later Hansa towns already existed. Among them,
Hamburg and Lubeck, prominent in subsequent history, had arisen upon the site
of older settlements several times destroyed. Both owed their importance to
their situation near the sea and upon rivers that then afforded the easiest and
safest roads to the interior. Henry the Lion must have realised the unique
advantages possessed by Lubeck, when he conferred upon it extensive privileges
of local self-government and invited foreign merchants to trade there absque theloneo et absque hansa, “without tax or toll”. This grant,
confirmed, amplified, and extended by Frederick Barbarossa and his successors,
made Lubeck an imperial city, free from the cramping influences of local feudal
potentates, enabling her subsequently to play that decisive role which earned
her the title of “Queen of the Hansa.”
By
the end of the twelfth century medieval Germany had begun to assume its
familiar features. The imperial power, everywhere declining, was already almost
a negligible factor in the north. Of greater importance was the rapidly rising
commerce along the Baltic shore, Germanised and colonised by the joint efforts
of the Church and the military Orders of the Brethren of the Sword and the
Teutonic Knights. The towns that arose in these regions gave the Germans the
control of the great river mouths, so that commerce, and not conquest or
colonisation, became their goal, until merchant and townsman became synonymous.
Nature had herself marked the course which the fearless energies of the Germans,
when directed to foreign trade, were to take. The rivers, flowing from the
south-east to north-west, from the central European uplands to the North and
Baltic Seas, were the first highways of medieval commerce; and the lands they
drained produced the materials and afforded the markets exploited by the
adventurous trader in search of profit. The first mention of such traders
occurs about the year 1000 a.d. when the “men of the Empire,” who probably came from Cologne, are deemed
“worthy of the good laws of England.” About the same time German merchants had
already created a settlement in the island of Gotland, almost ideally situated
for easy access to Sweden, Finland, and Russia. Quite early, the island had
become a mart for the “peoples of many tongues”, and an interchange of
privileges had taken place between its inhabitants and the Germans. By c. 1163 the latter were sufficiently numerous to enjoy the then coveted right of
being judged by their own officers, administering their own laws. This points to
a permanent settlement of traders, obliged under the conditions then prevailing
to spend a considerable part of the year abroad. The need for companionship in
a strange land, the desire to take part in religious exercises in the mother
tongue and after their own practices, the occasional necessity for performing
the last rites for a colleague, the collection of debts, securing and
safeguarding freedom of trade, were the centripetal forces impelling the
Germans in Gotland to form an association for mutual assistance and protection.
Nor was this an isolated instance of combination for common ends. Almost at the
same time (1157), the “men of Cologne”, and some Westphalian towns associated
with the Rhine city, obtained from Henry II of England protection for themselves
and their hansa in London. From Gotland the Germans had, before the end of the
twelfth century, established a factory, or “Kontor”,
at Novgorod, on Lake Ilmen in Russia, whence later
they reached out to Pskov, Polotsk, Vitebsk, and
Smolensk, where subsidiary factories were afterwards founded. The Russian
settlement, from its earliest days, epitomises both the difficulties of
medieval trade and the methods employed by the German associations and their
successor, the Hansa, to overcome them. To the heavy duties and other obstacles
interposed by the local officials the foreigners replied by a suspension of
trade, lasting a whole decade (1189-99), until the town authorities yielded. In
1199 it concluded a treaty “with all the German sons, with the Goths and the
whole Latin tongue”, which redressed most of the grievances that had arisen,
arranged for uninterrupted trade, regulated the punishments for offences, and
determined the conditions that should govern the arrest of the goods and
persons of the foreigners.
The
close association among German traders which this implied is equally well
illustrated by events in England. Here Lubeck, Hamburg, and Wisby,
the capital of Gotland, obtained various grants from Henry III that placed them
on an equality with Cologne. By 1282 all of them are definitely amalgamated
into one body, described in a document of that year as “the merchants of Almain
trading in England who have their house in London, usually called the Gildhalla Theutonicorum”, responsible,
in return for the freedom of trade conferred upon them, for the watch and
repair of the Bishop’s Gate. About the same time the subsidiary “hansas” at
Boston and King’s Lynn are first mentioned. But both London and Novgorod were
soon out-distanced as centres of German trade by Bruges, already by 1200 the greatest
international emporium of Northern Europe. Conditions of commercial intercourse
in Flanders were at first as uncertain as in Russia, but they improved rapidly
when Hamburg and Lubeck appeared on the scene in 1252 to negotiate on behalf of
themselves and their associates. Describing themselves as “nuncii speciales mercatorum imperii habentes plenam potestatem per quarundam civitatum ipsius imperii patentes litteras super hoc”, the envoys obtained a charter containing
extensive trading privileges. A permanent settlement followed, and Bruges was
made the staple for the furs, wax, copper, herrings, and other commodities
imported from the north-east and exchanged for Flemish cloth and manufactured
articles of the west. German trade in Flanders was thus centralised, and the
weapon already effectively employed against Novgorod, the commercial blockade,
was employed with equal force and success against Bruges whenever the chartered
privileges were infringed. First resorted to in 1307, it extorted from Bruges freedom
from the control of the town brokers and the authority to settle all legal
disputes according to their own customs.
The
circle of foreign depots was completed by the creation of the settlement at
Bergen. Though Norway owing to its economic backwardness had at first failed
to attract the Germans, the grants of freedom to trade made by Hakon IV (1217-63) to Lubeck, Hamburg, and other towns,
soon induced them to enter into commercial relations with the northern kingdom.
The privileges obtained formed the foundation for the superstructure of
commercial supremacy which the Hansa subsequently erected upon them. Thus by
the end of the thirteenth century north German, i.e. Hansa, commerce had staked
out its claims, with London, Bruges, Bergen, and Novgorod as the chief foreign
centres in Northern Europe, the nodal points of the vast region whose trade
they were to dominate for so long.
Simultaneously
with the formation of these foreign settlements, the towns themselves were
beginning to enter into close alliances, impelled by common interests, such as
the protection of trade routes or the adoption of a common legal system or
common currency. The former was the motive for the treaty of 1241 between
Hamburg and Lubeck, which older writers regarded as the foundation of the
Hansa; while by the end of the thirteenth century some nineteen towns had
adopted “das lübische Recht”
as their system of local self-government, and a number of them, “in subsidium omnium mercatorum qui iure Lubicensi gaudent et reguntur”, jointly
devised measures for suppressing piracy. Similar common action deprived Wisby of her leadership in Novgorod, transferred appeals
from the settlement to Lübeck, and decreed that no seal of the “common
merchant” should any longer be kept in Gotland. Even more important was the
alliance of the so-called Wend towns under the leadership of Lubeck, for it was
this group that shaped and directed Hansa policy during its effective existence.
The maintenance of peace, indispensable to trade and industry, became a primary
object of the Wend towns, and to further it they allied themselves with a
number of local potentates in the Landfrieden of 1283.
The
strength of these alliances was soon tested by the ambitions of Denmark.
The early attempts of Waldemar II to obtain control of the southern Baltic
shore had been crushed by the battle of Bornhövede (1227), but they were revived towards the end of the century by Eric VI Menved (1286-1319), who compelled all the Wend towns, except
Stralsund, to accept his overlordship. His timely death, however, saved the
nascent Hanseatic League from being strangled at its birth. Not until it
recovered from the disintegrating anarchy into which it fell was Denmark again
a menace to the Hansa, but by that time it was powerful enough to affront and
defeat its aggressive power. Almost at the same time these towns successfully
blockaded Norway, whose King, Eric II Priesthater (1280-99), and his officials had infringed the trading privileges granted to
them. So effective did this method prove that the king agreed to submit the
dispute to the arbitration of the King of Sweden (31 October 1285), whose
decision was wholly in favour of the towns, though it was not finally settled
until 1294 when the Treaty of Tonsberg was concluded
with Norway. Though containing no new principles, this treaty formed the basis
of all future commercial intercourse between the Hansa and Norway. On this
occasion, too, the towns for the first time resorted to the expulsion of a
member (later called Verhansung) for refusing
to act jointly with its colleagues. For more than half a century Bremen
remained outside the growing organisation. Despite the Treaty of Tonsberg, relations with Norway, dependent largely upon the
relations between Norway and Denmark, always caused the towns great anxiety.
The Hansa now played off the one against the other, but not until the weak
reign of Magnus Smek (1319-55) was it in a position
fully to exploit the privileges it had acquired, create the famous centre, the
“deutsche Brücke” at Bergen, expel its English and Scottish competitors, and
almost entirely monopolise Norwegian trade with the rest of Europe.
These
events reacted upon the movement towards unity among the towns. Terms like the
“ghemeene Koepman”,
“universitas omnium mercatorum”, or “merchants of the
German Hansa”, now occur with increasing frequency in the documents,
especially those relating to Norway. The older privileges, obtained by single
towns, were transformed into Hansa privileges, and those not entitled to them
were rigidly excluded. At the same time the foreign associations were being
more closely organised; thus the Kontor in
Bruges received new statutes (1347). Though its members still styled themselves
“de ghemeenen Koeplude uten Roomischen rike van Almanien,” the term “dudeschen hanse” soon replaced
it. In Bruges too we find the division into “Thirds” which sometimes figures in
Hansa history. These were: a Wend-Saxon group under the leadership of Lubeck, a
Westphalian-Prussian under Cologne, and a Gotho-Swedish-Livonian
under Wisby. Six aidermen,
two from each group, administered the affairs of the Kontor.
The difficulties encountered by the Bruges settlement, partly due to the
economic crisis produced by the Anglo-French war, led to the final step in the
formation of the Hanseatic League. Infringements of the German privileges by
the town authorities, as well as disputes among the Thirds, caused the allied
German towns to intervene. Their representatives, who in 1356 visited Bruges,
compelled the Kontor to accept the towns as the
superior authority, directing the foreign policy, protecting the merchants who
ventured abroad and safeguarding their privileges. The greater solidarity thus
obtained was at once utilised against the town. The staple was transferred to
Dordrecht in Holland and trade with Flanders suspended. This step was the work
of the “stede van der dudeschen hense”, the term by which the League was henceforth
known. The evolution of the Hansa had been slow and halting, but it had at last
emerged as a union of towns organised in the pursuit of trade by land and sea
and prepared to spare no efforts in the attainment of that end. As such, it
soon became a power to be reckoned with in its use of political means for
commercial objects. Bruges was the first to realise the strength of the new
power. It felt the absence of the German merchants most keenly. By 1360 the
town and its overlords yielded to the pressure, and confirmed and extended the
older privileges, with the additional one of exemption from the town brokers
and brokerage. The settlement was made none too soon, for the Hansa was on the
eve of a greater conflict, fraught with far-reaching and enduring consequences
to itself and the whole of Scandinavia.
After
twenty years of successful labour in restoring the royal authority, Waldemar IV
of Denmark felt powerful enough to resume the ambitious schemes of his
predecessors. He began by arranging a marriage between his daughter Margaret
and Hakon, heir to the thrones of Norway and Sweden,
and then wresting the province of Scania from the latter. This immediately
aroused the anxiety of the Hansa, for the herring-fishery of Scania was the
corner-stone of Hansa prosperity. During the fishing season this remote region
of Europe, with its villages of Skanor and Falsterbo, became an international mart of the highest
importance. On account of the rights the Hansa had secured from Sweden, the
trade in herrings and the subsidiary industries associated with it were almost
entirely under Hansa control. At each change of sovereign the Hansa had been
most careful to obtain the confirmation of its extensive privileges. Waldemar,
however, could only be induced to do so after prolonged negotiations and the
payment of a substantial sum of money by the Wend towns, the most directly
interested in the herring trade. The king’s next act was an even more direct
challenge to the Hansa. He attacked Gotland and sacked Wisby.
Though the town was no longer the chief foreign centre of the League, it was
still a staple of the Baltic trade, in which a considerable amount of German
capital was invested, the head of one of the “Thirds” at Bruges, and it shared
with Lubeck the supervision of the settlement at Novgorod. Though Waldemar
restored its former rights, Wisby never recovered
from the blow inflicted upon it. The Hansa reply to the king’s high-handed act
was the immediate suspension of all trade with Denmark and the building up of a
great coalition against the aggressor. Within six weeks of the attack on Wisby, an alliance was concluded between the Hansa, Norway,
Sweden, and the Teutonic Order (31 August 1360), which Holstein joined later.
Preparations for war were made and a poundage upon all exports imposed to meet
its expenses. The Kings of Norway and Sweden agreed to hand over four castles
of Scania to the League until it had reimbursed itself for its outlay, and
confirmed all its privileges in the province when it should be reconquered. In
the first stages of the war, however, the Hansa received but little assistance
from its allies. But the League realised the grave import of the struggle for
its future, “quod nunquam tarn necesse fuit omnibus mercatoribus et mare visitantibus in resistendo, sicut nunc est”. Nevertheless it was severely defeated at Helsingborg
(1362) by Waldemar, who then detached the Kings of Norway and Sweden from his
enemies by concluding the marriage previously arranged between Margaret and Hakon. The Hansa was glad to accept a truce, followed by a
definite peace (22 November 1365) that left many important questions unsettled,
more especially the considerably enhanced dues imposed upon its traders in
Scania and elsewhere. The defeat had broken up the formidable coalition and
caused many towns to waver in their allegiance to the common cause. Waldemar,
continuing to exploit the weakness of his enemy, disturbed Hansa trade in
Scania and upon the sea. Urged by its Dutch and Prussian members, to whom the
freedom of the Sound was indispensable, the Hansa met at Cologne to consider
the situation. The meeting, out of which the famous “Cologne Confederation”
emerged (1367), was fully representative, the envoys describing themselves as “plenipotentes legati suarum et aliarum quarundam civitatum.” Vigorous
prosecution of war was decided upon and preparations made accordingly. Once
more a number of princes joined the coalition, including the Duke of
Mecklenburg whose son sat uneasily upon the throne of Sweden. War was declared
in 1368, trade suspended, and the German merchants recalled from Bergen. But,
prior to the outbreak of hostilities, Waldemar had left Denmark in search of
allies in Germany. Before he could accomplish his aims, the League had won a
signal victory over his forces (1369) and seized Scania. Master of the Sound,
the League was content with its achievement, and readily entered into
negotiations with the Danish Council. Preliminaries, signed at Stralsund (30
November 1369), were converted into a definitive peace on 24 May of the next
year and accepted by the envoys of all the Thirds present.
The
Treaty of Stralsund is epoch-making for Hanseatic and Scandinavian history. On
the economic side the Hansa obtained complete freedom of trade throughout
Denmark, exemption from the laws of wreck, authority to appoint its own
officers at the fishing centres and in all German settlements in Scania, while
matters of currency, retail trade, customs and other dues were also regulated.
As political guarantees for the security of these invaluable concessions, the
Hansa was to hold four of the most important castles in Scania and receive
two-thirds of the revenue of the province for fifteen years. Furthermore, no
successor should ascend the Danish throne without the consent of the Hansa and
without confirming its privileges. This sweeping agreement required the king’s
ratification. Waldemar delayed giving this until, by skilful diplomacy, he had
somewhat softened the drastic character of this remarkable treaty. The victory
over Denmark made the League the dominant power in Scandinavian politics, a
power it utilised for building up its commercial supremacy in the north.
Waldemar,
fortunately for himself, did not long survive his humiliation. By his death, in
1375, he made room for his celebrated daughter Margaret. As regent for her young
son Olaf in Denmark, and from 1380 also in Norway, she now began to play a
decisive and lasting role in northern affairs. Olaf had a rival in Albert of
Mecklenburg, King of Sweden, also a grandson of Waldemar. Both claimants
competed for the support of the Hansa, but Margaret outwitted the League by
securing the election of her son, so that the Hansa had reluctantly to
acquiesce in a fait accompli. On the other hand, it obtained favourable terms
from Hakon of Norway in the Treaty of Kallundborg (14 August 1376) which terminated the war with
that country. Margaret now followed her husband’s example and confirmed the
Hansa privileges, together with the Treaty of Stralsund and all that that
instrument implied, except that the League abandoned its claim to interfere in
Danish royal elections. Peace at last reigned in the north, though
it still rested on insecure bases.
The
position so hardly won required constant vigilance on the part of the Hansa to
maintain. The rivalry between Margaret and Albert of Sweden soon developed into
a war in which the latter, supported by his father the Duke of Mecklenburg,
created a monster—piracy on the grand scale and under the cloak of legitimate
warfare—that became a curse to all peaceful commerce and in particular to that
of the Hansa. Under the pretext of provisioning Stockholm, long besieged by the
Danes, the pirates formed an organisation, notorious for the next half-century
as the Vitalian Brethren, and played an important and
sometimes even decisive role in the events of that period. Hansa trade suffered
enormously from the depredations of the pirates, and the League had at last to
equip patrol ships, so-called “Friedenschiffe”, to
protect its trade. The task was made more difficult by the protection that two
of the Wend towns, Rostock and Wismar, which were subject to Mecklenburg,
openly afforded the sea-robbers. The situation was further complicated by the
efforts of Margaret to obtain the release of the Scanian castles, pledged to
the Hansa for fifteen years by the Treaty of Stralsund, and by the friendliness
of the Prussian members of the League and their overlord, the Grand Master of
the Teutonic Order, to Mecklenburg-Sweden. The conflicting interests of all the
parties were most difficult to reconcile, despite the seemingly endless
negotiations and frequent truces that were arranged, to which the pirates were
sometimes a party. Margaret’s tortuous but skilful diplomacy at last succeeded
in retrieving the Scanian castles, since the Prussian and Dutch sections of the
League which had hitherto opposed their surrender were now threatened by other
dangers: Prussia by the Jagiello succession in Poland, and the Dutch by the
rising power of Burgundy. Piracy was also for a time scotched by the
extraordinary procedure of farming out the task of suppressing it to a private
citizen of Stralsund. He was of the real condottiere type, having no motive but
financial gain; and he achieved a certain measure of success.
But
peace was once more disturbed by a change in the political situation. Olaf died
in 1387 and Margaret, now Queen of Denmark and Norway, also laid claim to
Sweden. Unexampled success crowned her arms. At the battle of Aasle (near Falkoping) on 24
February 1389 she defeated and captured King Albert, his son, and a number of
their leading supporters. This merely led to more embittered warfare, in which
the Hansa, preoccupied by strained relations with England and Flanders, and
weakened by the rise of a democratic revolt against the patrician government in
some of the towns themselves, notably in Lubeck, was obliged to remain neutral.
Only when, in the piracy that inevitably revived with the prolongation of war,
the pirates attacked, burnt, and plundered Bergen did the Hansa abandon its
neutrality. Employing every possible weapon, diplomacy, commercial blockade,
reprisals, and “Friedenschiffe”, the Hansa at last
induced all parties to agree (Lindholm, 17 June 1395) to a peace. King Albert
and his son were to be released for three years, and then they could purchase
their freedom for 60,000 silver marks or return to captivity.
Stockholm, at last freed from its long siege, was to be handed over to the
Hansa as guarantor of the peace. Trade was to be everywhere freely carried on
according to the local laws, and the pirates recalled. Hansa energy had secured
a respite for three years, but the changing politics had prepared the road for
the Kalmar Union, consummated by Margaret two years later (1397). For the time
being piracy was the chief menace to commercial enterprise. Some of the Vitalian Brethren, driven from the Baltic, transferred
their nefarious activities to the North Sea, while others, aided by
Mecklenburg, captured Gotland and converted it into a veritable pirates nest. A joint Hansa-Prussian force recaptured the island from them, but Margaret,
as regent of Sweden, claimed it in the name of the first Union king, Eric of
Pomerania, her kinsman. She likewise demanded the surrender of Stockholm, and
with this the Hansa readily complied in return for the confirmation of their
privileges in all three kingdoms. Margaret, now the undisputed mistress of the
north, further strengthened her position by a permanent peace with the Grand
Master and Mecklenburg (1404). For a time real peace existed around the Baltic,
but the politic Lubeck, looking ahead, constructed the Trave-Elbe canal, which
was to render her trade less dependent upon the Sound and those who controlled
it. For, despite the almost ceaseless disturbances that had plagued this region
since Waldemar IV’s attack on Wisby, the Hansa had tightened
its hold upon the trade of the whole north. In Scania the Wend group, ably led
by Lubeck, was supreme in the herring trade; in Bergen the same section had
ousted all rivals, while the Livonian group dominated the Slav lands and
Lithuania.
Not
only in the north-east but likewise in the west, Hansa trade was expanding in
every direction. In England its progress in the thirteenth century had been
slow but secure. It had obtained trading rights and a domicile in London and
elsewhere, and when Edward I issued his well-known Carta Mercatoria (1303) in favour of foreign merchants, the Hansa by its closer organisation was
able almost to transform this general charter to a particular one in its own
favour. Nevertheless, the German merchants in London had constantly to contend
with their native competitors in the capital, supported by the city
authorities. The strength of the opposition varied with the nature of the
government. Under Edward I it had little force, but under Edward II the
anti-alien agitation assumed serious proportions. This, however, was mainly
directed against the Italians; the Hansa owed its comparative immunity from attack
to its relative obscurity. In fact, in return for some financial
aid, Edward II, before the tragic end of his inglorious reign, granted a number
of Hansa merchants letters of denization that enabled them to trade unmolested.
The position so far won the Hansa was able to develop, since Edward III’s war
with France made him even more dependent upon foreign financiers and merchants.
Upon these he showered constantly increasing favours and the Hansa naturally
shared in them. Their export of English wool increased rapidly, and a
consortium of more wealthy German merchants entered upon the less onerous and
more lucrative business of advancing money to the king. By 1340 he was already
considerably indebted to this group, most of whom came from Dortmund, at this
time head of the Westphalian Third at Bruges. For a time they held the customs
in pledge, which enabled them to export their wool free of all dues until they
had reimbursed themselves for their advances.
Although
these financial transactions never attained the scale of the Italian bankers,
yet the Hansa group rendered Edward valuable services, especially in redeeming
his crown and other jewels from that astute money-lender, the Archbishop of
Treves, and some Cologne merchants. The Black Prince also resorted to the
Germans and pledged his Cornish tin mines with them for three years. In return
for their complaisance, the Hansa merchants reaped a rich reward in the
facilities which Edward granted them for their trade. They enjoyed immunities
denied their competitors, including exemption from the increased dues imposed
in 1347 on cloth and worsteds. England derived substantial benefit from the
Hansa privileges. The market for English wool was widely extended; valuable
commodities, such as furs, potash, pitch, tar, wax, turpentine, iron ores,
copper, timber, wood and wood products including yew bowstaves, cereals,
flour, flax, yam, linen, boots, brass, copper and silver ware, silk, woad,
madder, drugs, etc. were imported by them in exchange for our raw materials.
The trade in herrings and dried cod, indispensable for the numerous fast-days,
was almost entirely in the hands of the Hansa. These commodities were imported
from the Norwegian and Scanian fisheries. The Hansa zealously excluded all
intruders, and even Edward Ill’s intercession on his subjects’ behalf failed to
gain them a footing in it. Nevertheless English traders began to penetrate the
Baltic lands. From the sixties of the fourteenth century they traded directly
with Prussia, claiming privileges in its towns similar to those held by the
Hansa in England, a claim that was to prove an almost ceaseless source of
friction between the League, the Teutonic Order, and England. The friendly relations
between Edward III and the Hansa changed towards the end of the reign with the
ever-increasing demands of the king for subsidies and other contributions, as
for example in 1371, when tonnage and poundage were raised to 4s. and 9d. respectively. The Hansa
resisted these new rates as contrary to its privileges, and when its letters
failed to attain the desired end, it sent an embassy to England for the first
time (in 1375) to negotiate on the question. But the envoys were presented with
a long list of counter-complaints about the treatment of the English merchants
in the Hansa towns and in territories under its control. These the envoys
merely referred to the next meeting of the League. As for their own grievances
they received but little satisfaction.
The
struggle between the English merchants and the Hansa persisted with varying
fortunes throughout the reign of Richard II. A breach of commercial intercourse
might have actually occurred in 1378 but for the divergent interests of the
League and its ally, the Teutonic Order. The English traders, led by London,
presented four demands to the Hansa: (1) freedom of trade for all Englishmen
throughout the Hansa lands, including Prussia; (2) the removal of all
restrictions upon trade with Scania; (3) freedom from arrest for debts for
which a merchant was not personally responsible; (4) the names of all the Hansa
towns. These demands were summarily rejected by a well-attended representative
meeting of the Hansa at Lubeck (24 June 1379), but a fresh embassy was sent to
London. Here an additional demand was made of them, that Englishmen should be
admitted to the Hansa. The Hansa diplomats resisted the Englishmen’s claims so
stubbornly that they were tacitly dropped, but on accepting the insertion of a
clause in the agreement, in vague and uncertain language, assuring English
merchants of fair treatment, they obtained the unconditional confirmation of
their privileges—an undoubted triumph for Hansa diplomacy. Complaints on both
sides, however, did not cease with this settlement, but the Hansa, owing to its
peculiarly loose organisation, was always able to evade responsibility. Thus
there was continual tension between England and the League, frequently aggravated
by attacks upon each other’s shipping, with the consequential reprisals. These
measures led to a suspension of trade in 1386, followed by an English embassy
to the Grand Master. A treaty was arranged in August 1388, which enabled the
Englishmen to return to Danzig and other Prussian towns, where they were
hospitably received, and to enter into closer commercial relations with the
Order itself, which was now a great independent trading concern as well as a
territorial sovereignty. The Englishmen, with the approval of their king, now
tried to imitate the Hansa, and formed an association in Danzig similar to the
Steelyard in London, but as they failed to obtain the consent of the Grand
Master, this body had only a brief, unofficial, precarious existence. The rival
claims of the Hansa, especially of its Prussian group, and the English
merchants were irreconcilable, and before the end of the century the treaty of
1388 was suspended. Even Richard Il’s exemption of the Hansa from the payment
of tenths and fifteenths failed to induce the Prussian towns to remove their
restrictions upon English residents in their midst or their dealings in cloth.
So matters stood when the Lancastrian revolution ushered in a new era and new
policies in England. The Hansa too was busy with Flemish and Scandinavian
affairs, and postponed the English question, declaring that it should be
“adjourned with good patience”.
Within
the Hansa itself there was no harmony. The accession of Jagiello, Grand Duke of
Lithuania, to the Polish throne, brought his duchy into the ranks of commercial
peoples, and the Germans were not slow to take advantage of the new situation.
At Kovno a settlement was established, chiefly under the aegis of Danzig. Riga,
which had for two hundred years monopolised the Lithuanian trade via the river
Dvina, resented this intrusion of a rival. Stettin at the mouth of the Oder
also acquired additional importance. All three towns were pursuing a selfish,
monopolistic policy that brought Lubeck, that stout champion of Hansa rights,
upon the scene. It had itself possessed chartered rights in Riga since 1231 and
in Danzig since 1298. A lively dispute ensued, which, however, was soon
settled, in order not to endanger the valuable trade with Novgorod. The Russian
city ranked next to Bruges in its importance for Hansa trade, and its
settlement was under the control of two aidermen, one
from Lubeck and one from Wisby. The decline of the
latter encouraged Riga to obtain equality with the leader of the League, an
end she ultimately attained in administrative and trading questions. The
Novgorod trade was always liable to disturbances on account of the low
commercial morality of the backward Russians and the peculiar political
relations between the semi-independent town and its princes. Throughout the
sixties and seventies of the fourteenth century there were frequent
disputes—embassies, treaties, and agreements notwithstanding. Finally the
Hansa, in 1388, resorted to its familiar weapon, the commercial blockade, until
Novgorod was almost completely cut off from the rest of Europe. This had the
desired effect. Novgorod yielded and agreed to restore all the old treaties
regulating its trade with the Hansa (1392), and the treaty now
concluded remained as the foundation of all future intercourse until Novgorod’s
independence was destroyed by the Grand Duke of Muscovy.
About
the same time, Hansa trade with Flanders was also encountering fresh
difficulties. It had suffered enormously during the first stages of the Hundred
Years’ War, but revived rapidly and attained unparalleled prosperity after the
Peace of Bretigny. Only the democratic movement of
the Flemish towns under Philip van Artevelde set limits to its profitable development.
Furthermore, the revival of Anglo-French hostility again endangered the safety
of persons and property, for the Norman privateers that infested the Channel
preyed upon neutral as well as enemy commerce. The Hansa seemed helpless,
especially when its embassies to Flanders returned empty-handed. The feeling of
insecurity reacted upon individual towns of the Hansa in opposite directions.
At first it brought them into closer union, but when the steps taken failed to
achieve their object, fissiparous tendencies at once appeared. On this account
it was found impossible to break off relations with Flanders in 1379, since the
Prussian group made terms with the count independently of the rest.
Matters became worse when Philip of Burgundy became Count of Flanders. Only a
rigid commercial blockade with the transfer of the Hansa staple to Dordrecht in
1388 made the Flemings yield. Relations were resumed in 1392 upon the old
bases, and new regulations added that strengthened the authority of the Kontor. Despite this apparent harmony, the rise of the
House of Burgundy and its extension of the ducal power over the Flemish towns
altered the conditions of Hansa trade materially, as the events of the next
century were to prove.
The
dominating commercial and political situation acquired by the Hansa since the
Treaty of Stralsund was to be severely tested in the fifteenth century. Its
monopolising aims naturally found no favour in other countries, while the
vigorous competition between town and town or group and group always tended to
weaken the bond of unity. Only when a grave danger threatened, as in 1367, was
general assent for common action attainable. Divergence of view was not always
due to divergent interests. Not all the towns were free imperial cities like
Lubeck, and those that were not, like Wismar and Rostock or the Prussian towns,
had always to trim their Hansa policy to that of their feudal overlords. And
now a new factor arose that considerably influenced Hansa history. Democratic
movements against the patrician oligarchical rule in the towns began to
manifest themselves. At first the Hansa was strong enough to repress them, as
for instance at Brunswick in 1374, but in 1407 Rostock and Wismar were obliged
to admit representatives of the rebellious gilds into the charmed circle of
the town council. More serious still was the uprising in Lubeck. For a whole
decade (1408-18) the brilliant leader of the League was crippled by its
internal dissensions and the League itself almost dissolved. Not until these
democratic movements had been suppressed could the League revive, but meanwhile
fluid fact had outrun the rigid theory of Hansa policy. In the fifteenth
century the league began to find that its old weapons were blunted, that new
commodities, new trade routes, new political powers were steadily undermining
its position throughout the vast area of its activities. Of the political
changes that affected the Hansa adversely, the most important were the renewal
of the Anglo-French war with its concomitant privateering and piracy, in which
the Scots also took a hand, and the defeat of the Teutonic Order by Poland.
Although this meant the crippling of a commercial rival, it also weakened a
valuable ally. The Grand Master was treated as an equal by the European
sovereigns; his support was invaluable for Hanseatic diplomacy. Moreover the
fall of the Order occurred at the height of the constitutional struggle in
Lubeck, and the attempts made to maintain the authority of the League by
transferring the leadership to Luneburg failed. Even important members refused
obedience to its decrees, notwithstanding the persistent reminders by the
Bruges staple of the damage suffered by the trade of the Hansa through the
continued disturbances.
Eric of
Pomerania and the Holstein War
The
end of the constitutional struggle in Lübeck witnessed the revival of the
League. An unusually large number of towns—35—representative of every group
attended the summer meeting of 1418. Its main purpose was naturally to recover
the lost ground. In fact the statute of 24 June of that year was the first
really united legislative act of the Hansa, binding upon and applicable to all
members. Regulations were also framed to support the established government in
the towns, to guide the conduct of merchant and shippers towards competitors so
as to restore the old-time monopoly. Finally, a close alliance for twelve years
was concluded for mutual defence and safeguarding of the land and sea routes;
Lubeck was formally invested with the leadership, assisted by the other Wend
towns as a kind of executive committee. Recent events had therefore resulted in
closer union, with an embryonic constitution capable of further development to
replace the inchoate organisation. Nevertheless the revived League was not
strong enough to regain its former position abroad. Meanwhile the Scots, the Vitalian Brethren, and a new enemy, Spain, preyed upon its
commerce. Its weakness for the first time led the League to seek the aid of the
Emperor, but Sigismund’s intervention on its behalf in England, Friesland, and
elsewhere merely brought disappointment. It was the attempt of the Kalmar
Union king, Eric, to conquer Schleswig-Holstein that compelled the League once
more to enter the field of international politics and postpone the solution of
many pressing problems in the east and west.
The
Holstein war was accompanied by a recrudescence of piracy by the Vitalian Brethren. Their depredations inflicted enormous
damage upon Hansa trade, and no sea, from the Gulf of Finland to the North Sea,
was safe from them. All efforts to induce Eric to come to terms with his
adversary proved fruitless. He continued to seize strategic points and to prey
upon all commercial shipping within his reach. He even introduced a debased
coinage into Denmark, which reduced all legitimate trading to a gamble. After
many efforts to bring about peace, the League was obliged to equip a fleet in
defence of its interests. This made the obstinate king somewhat more pliable.
He agreed to settle all outstanding questions in return for an alliance with
the Wend towns. But as the Prussian and Livonian towns opposed this policy and
the Grand Master allied himself to Eric, the unity of purpose necessary for
successful action was absent. A temporary cessation of hostilities was,
however, provided by Eric’s pilgrimage to Jerusalem, only to be renewed with
greater ferocity in 1427 after his return. The naval war developed on a large
scale, and both sides recruited ships and men in England. In 1427 the Hansa
suffered several defeats and enormous losses. On one occasion a whole fleet
laden with Bay salt was captured by the Danes. The sea-going trade of the north
was almost brought to a standstill, and old and neglected land routes were
revived. Only by sailing in fleets and under convoy, and then only with great
difficulty, could Hansa ships pass through the Sound. Even neutrals, like the
English and Dutch, suffered from the belligerents as well as from the pirates.
The commercial supremacy of the Hansa was seriously threatened; it became
war-weary. Many towns even discussed the advisability of continuing their
membership. Rostock and Stralsund, two of the Wend towns, actually made
separate terms with Eric. At last the Grand Master’s mediation was so far
successful as to induce Eric to conclude a truce for five years (22 August
1432). This made the resumption of trade possible and the Hansa returned to
Bergen, where the monopoly of the Wends was re-established. The pirate evil
however was not laid; as in 1390 so in the Holstein war, it was easier to raise
the monster than to destroy it.
Permanent
peace was still far off when a rebellion broke out in Sweden, where the Kalmar
Union had never been popular. This uprising at last induced Eric to make peace.
After the usual preliminaries, a treaty was signed at Vordingborg on 17 July 1435. The conditions were brief and simple. Trade was to be resumed
upon the pre-war conditions, while disputes that might arise were to be settled
by an annual meeting of representatives of both parties at Copenhagen just
before the commencement of the Scanian herring-fishing season. Apart from
preparing the way for the break-up of the Kalmar Union, the war had produced
great dearth of certain commodities in the north. Salt reached famine prices,
since none could be imported from the Bay. On the other hand, the Liineburg salines, under the
direct control of Lubeck, revived. The Prusso-Livonian
towns found no direct outlet by sea for their furs, wax, and timber products,
and prices fell considerably. Merchants of the Wend towns bought them up,
transported them westward overland, and reaped huge profits that enabled them
to bear the strain of the war and recover from its ravages.
A
more serious and permanent result was the impetus the war gave to Dutch
competition. Hitherto Holland had only served the Hansa as a stepping-stone to
England or a convenient centre for the Bruges staple when trade with Flanders
was suspended. But the Dutch towns made a great leap forward when Philip of
Burgundy became the ruler of Holland (1433). Their prosperity, like that of the
Hansa itself, was largely founded upon the humble herring. Curing was
introduced in 1400, with the result that Brill became a serious rival to
Scania. Before long the North Sea herring drove the Scanian from the Rhineland
markets, and even began to penetrate the Baltic lands. Dutch progress was
materially assisted by the frequent failure of the Baltic fisheries, in part
due to the migration of the herring. Up to the end of the fourteenth century
the Hansa had ignored these new rivals. The Prussians and Livonians, however,
welcomed them as importers of Bay salt and freighters. Moreover the Dutch
harbours were more suitable for their own larger ships than the shallower ones
of the Zuyder Zee and Flanders, especially when the Zwin, the port of Bruges, was silting up, despite the
strenuous efforts of the Flemings to keep it clear. When at last the Hansa
realised the menace to its supremacy and wished to take measures to cope with
it, a variety of causes led the League to hold its hand. Apart from the war
with Eric, there was the threatened breakup of the Kalmar Union, the tension
with England, the Anglo-Burgundian alliance, and above all the refusal of the
Grand Master and of Cologne to co-operate in a commercial war with Holland,
while Hamburg preferred privateering to a blockade. The war between the Hansa
and the Dutch, conducted mainly by piratical methods with fluctuating fortunes
and interrupted by frequent truces, seemed endless, when a new turn of the
political wheel created a new situation. In the west, the League sharpened the
commercial blockade of Holland, made peace with England (1437), and broke off
relations with Burgundy, now, after the Congress of Arras, the ally of France.
In the north, Eric had been driven from the throne and betaken himself to Gotland, which he converted into a pirates’ stronghold
and whence he preyed upon all commerce indiscriminately. His activities,
together with the Dutch war, had, by 1439, almost destroyed the profitable and
indispensable trade in Bay salt. The losses incurred by the League, more
especially by the leading Wend group, and the difficulty of reconciling the
divergent sectional interests induced the Hansa, after a meeting at Lubeck (12
March 1441), to accept the offer of mediation made by Christopher of Bavaria,
who had not only replaced Eric on the throne of Denmark, but had temporarily
restored the Kalmar Union. The negotiations ended in a ten years’ truce with
the Dutch, the removal of all restrictions upon their trade, and the reference
of all outstanding questions to arbitration. The Dutch had vindicated their
claims to a share in the commerce of Europe, making a wide breach in the wall
of monopoly erected by the Hansa. But the trade in Bay salt fell ever more into
Lubeck’s hands. The seemingly invincible strength of the Hansa attracted new members
to the League, while others who had withdrawn from it began to seek
re-admission. Common hostility led the Dutch and King Christopher to make
common cause against the Hansa. The king was determined to diminish the hold
the League had in his realms, but he had to bide his time on account of the
rising tide of nationalist sentiment in Norway and Sweden, always hostile to
Denmark. Accordingly, after many delays the king, in 1445, confirmed the Hansa
privileges in Scandinavia and granted it exemption from Sound dues for two
years. But the Norwegian officials, especially those of Bergen, still strove
to curtail Hansa activities in the country. Christopher, pursuing two
irreconcilable policies, maintaining the Hansa privileges and securing the
rights of his own subjects, ultimately alienated both parties. His officials
failed in their aims. The Hansa tightened its grip upon Bergen. Lubeck and her
neighbours had complete control of its chief article of export, dried cod,
which they exchanged for corn and manufactured goods. To retain this trade in
their own hands they decreed that cod could only be shipped to their own
harbours, on pain of expulsion from the Hansa. The peace so painfully reached
in the north was again disturbed by the death of Christopher (1448) and the
succession of Christian of Oldenburg in Denmark, and the election of a native
noble, Charles Knutson, to the throne of Sweden, while Eric, from his
stronghold in Gotland, continued to prey upon the commerce of his former
subjects and the Hansa. A clash seemed inevitable, but was staved off by a
temporary arrangement between Christian, Charles, and the League (1450). Yet
Christian still withheld his confirmation of the general privileges of the
Hansa and only confirmed those of the Bergen settlement for one year, at the
same time encouraging the German artisans in the town to resist the authority
of the Hansa aldermen. For the time the League had to acquiesce in this
unfriendly attitude, as the West again claimed its attention.
The
return of the Kontor to Bruges in 1392 had been
followed by a period of peaceful prosperity, which the Hansa exploited for its
ow n ends. After decreeing that Hansa commodities, except herring, wine, and
beer, should, in Bruges, be sold to its own members, it forbade partnerships
between members and non-members and sought to remedy abuses in the cloth trade.
But in face of the development of cloth manufacture in England and in parts of
the Netherlands outside Flanders, the cloth trade in Bruges was declining. This
made the town complaisant towards the Hansa and eager to improve its
communications with the sea, in order to keep the Hansa staple within its
walls. But once more external events proved serious disturbing factors. Of
these the worst were the war between Holland and Friesland at the end of the
fourteenth century, the renewal of Anglo-French hostilities after the
Lancastrian succession, and, above all, the revived activity of the Vitalian Brethren in the North Sea, which not even the
severe defeat inflicted upon them by the Hansa could entirely suppress.
Moreover the League was crippled by the democratic revolution in Lubeck. The
Hansa, though neutral in the Anglo-French war, was attacked by French
privateers and their Scotch allies. Its embargo upon trade with Scotland had to
be withdrawn because the Grand Master and some important Hansa towns refused to
enforce it.
An
even more truculent enemy now appeared on the scene, namely Spain. The
Spaniards resented Hansa competition west of Flanders and with the aid of their
allies, the Bretons, began to attack Hansa shipping, so that many of the Hansa
traders sailed under the Flemish flag. In Flanders itself complaints of the
Hansa were not so readily listened to. The province was now under Burgundian
rule, and the duke could not be coerced to accept the Hansa view in disputed
matters. Nor did the frequent embassies bring any satisfaction. On the
contrary, the expenses entailed by these missions had compelled the League to
impose a levy upon its merchants in Flanders. Many of them, however, refused
payment, and the opposition at one time threatened the very existence of the
Bruges Kontor itself. Matters grew even worse when
the whole of the Netherlands became Burgundian territory (after 1433), and the duke,
on breaking off his alliance with England in 1435,expelled the Merchant
Adventurers, thereby dealing a severe blow at the Hansa trade in cloth.
Protests against the duke’s financial policy met with the reply that he could
not brook any interference with his sovereign authority; and now the Hansa
could no longer exploit the jealousies and rivalries of a number of local
potentates to its own advantage. In fact the Hansa was failing to realise that
the old system was passing, that medieval methods and ideas were giving way before
new strongly-centralised and nationalist States with little respect for
obsolete chartered privileges that hampered their own development. But the
League was still strong enough to struggle against its many enemies, though its
western problems had to wait until it had made peace with King Eric, and
Hamburg had finally destroyed the pirates’ nest in Friesland. The strained
relations with Burgundy were further aggravated by an anti-German riot at Sluys in which nearly a hundred Germans were killed (1436).
Trade with the Netherlands was forthwith suspended and the staple removed to
Antwerp, despite the opposition of the Grand Master and the Prussian towns.
This was a most severe blow at Bruges, for the failure of the harvest in
Western Europe had sent the price of foodstuffs up to famine rates, which the
importation of corn from the Baltic lands might have alleviated. By 1438 the
resistance of Bruges was broken. It conceded all the German demands, including
compensation for damages; and there was great joy when the importation of com
was resumed. The duke remained obdurate, though, after he had made peace with
England and the wild naval war ended, matters improved. Nevertheless the star
of Bruges was setting.
Antwerp
and the Dutch were soon to prove most formidable rivals. Trade between the
Hansa and Antwerp rested upon privileges granted the League by the Duke of
Brabant early in the fourteenth century. It grew steadily as Antwerp, by
encouraging foreign merchants, developed into an international centre of considerable
importance. In 1431 Antwerp granted the Hansa specially wide privileges with
low tolls and customs dues. Sluys also sought to
attract Hansa trade to itself, and succeeded in doing so after it had settled
the disputes that had arisen from the riot previously mentioned (1443). In the
same year an amicable settlement was likewise concluded with Spain. The Duke of
Burgundy was now the only outstanding enemy. In order to negotiate with him,
the Hansa first held a meeting at Lubeck in 1447. It was largely attended and
included representatives of all sections, as well as of the Grand Master, and
the Kontors of London, Bruges, and Bergen. After once
more fixing Bruges as the staple, an embassy was sent to the duke, but although
it remained in Flanders six months, it returned almost empty-handed. The League
did not relax its efforts; a second embassy found the duke more pliable, and he
promised to redress the Hansa grievances. His promises, however, proved
illusory, and the Hansa once more, and for the last time in its history,
removed the staple—this time to Deventer and Kampen,
both outside Burgundian territory. This action was opposed by the Grand Master,
Cologne, and other western members of the League, the former on account of the
unsuitability of the new centres for his trade, the latter on account of Lübeck’s
anti-English policy at this time. Consequently Cologne threatened to split the
League and withdrew its representative from the meeting of 1452 (2 February).
Timely concessions to the Prussians prevented the rift developing. A new
regulation divided the articles of commerce into staple and so-called Vente
commodities. The former, the costly articles such as wax, furs, metals, and
skins, might still only be dealt with in the staple; the latter, mainly
Prussian commodities, such as pitch, tar, com, flax, hemp, etc. might be sold
anywhere.
The trade
in Bay salt
Although
these regulations found general acceptance, Cologne refused compliance, as its
chief trade was in wine; and as it had too many competitors outside the Hansa,
it ran the risk of losing its trade with Flanders as long as the blockade
remained. Bruges was helpless, but Ghent, in open revolt against the Duke of
Burgundy, loudly disapproved of his policy. The Hansa was also not happy at Deventer;
its harbour was too shallow for the large ships used by the Prussians and
Livonians, and the staple was removed to Utrecht with no better results,
despite the extensive privileges granted by the bishop. Attempts to reach an
understanding, several times repeated, failed partly because the Grand Master
was at war with Poland and could not exert his power in favour of peace. Moreover,
trade was not entirely at a standstill; it was still carried on illicitly and
by devious routes through neutral countries. Only when the duke had succeeded
in placing his illegitimate son upon the episcopal throne of Utrecht did the
Hansa yield. A Burgundo-Flemish embassy attended the
League meeting at Lubeck and concluded peace (1457). Reciprocal concessions
were made. The Hansa agreed to accept the jurisdiction of the duke’s officers
instead of those of the Flemish towns, while the duke promised to set up a
permanent commission to deal with future disagreements; the Hansa also
renounced its claim to the free import and export of the precious metals, and
the duke confirmed all privileges granted by him and his predecessors. The
settlement was joyfully acclaimed by Bruges, where special taxes were readily
shouldered to pay the compensation allotted to the Hansa. This last use of the
commercial blockade against Flanders was only a partial success. The western
members of the League had resented it, and so it tended to weaken the
organisation. The Hansa itself had learnt the strength of the Duke of Burgundy,
and realised that its policy afforded a valuable opportunity to its rivals.
Against the most formidable of these rivals, the Dutch, the League, after 1441,
renewed the old restrictions upon their trade, to the entire satisfaction of
its Prusso-Livonian and Zuyder Zee members. But the Dutch were not so readily repressed. Utilising their ten
years’ truce with the Wend towns and the blockade of Flanders, they began to
push their trade with energy in all directions. In Christian I of Denmark they
found a friend anxious to help them, as a set-off to the Hansa. The privileges
he granted them enabled them to use a land route between the Baltic and the
North Seas that rendered them independent of the Hansa. But the Hansa was at
this time too exhausted for further hostilities and was glad to prolong the
truce to 1461. If the Hansa seemed to be losing ground in the north, it had,
since the middle of the fourteenth century, developed the trade in what was
then a new commodity of international commerce, the so-called “Bay” salt. So
great was the demand for salt in Scania during the herring-packing season that
the old salines of Lüneburg were no longer able to
satisfy it. This supply was, in the fifteenth century, under the complete
control of Lubeck; hence the Prusso-Livonians became
keenly interested in the Bay salt trade. The Dutch, too, frequented Bourgneuf, either as dealers or freighters. By the middle
of the fifteenth century this branch of commerce had assumed such proportions
that fleets of a hundred ships or more frequently passed through the Sound en route for various Baltic destinations. To
render it secure, the Hansa entered into relations with Brittany, obtaining the
necessary privileges from 1430 onwards. Search for salt also induced the Hansa
to open up trade with Spain and Portugal. Russia provided a ready market for
it, and Riga was the intermediary. But as Castile was the ally of France and
Henry V of England had Hansa ships in his service, the Spaniards, who resented
the intrusion of the Hansa into their trade, had a ready excuse for attacking
their shipping in the Atlantic. By the efforts of Bruges, the Grand Master, and
other interested parties, a truce was arranged in 1443 and frequently
prolonged. Conditions became more favourable to trade when the English were
finally expelled from France, and when the mean but far-seeing Louis XI
ascended the French throne.
With
England relations were strained from the commencement of the fifteenth century,
despite the fact that Henry IV confirmed the Hansa privileges on his accession.
English attacks on Prussian shipping impelled the Grand Master to suspend trade
and expel the English traders from his dominions. The Hansa followed suit.
Owing to the demand for English cloth on the continent, the blockade was not
rigidly observed, and the Grand Master was himself the first to lift it
partially and to enter into negotiations with Henry. After many delays and
postponements an agreement was at last reached in October 1407 with the Prusso-Livonian groups, followed by another with the Hansa.
Two years later the latter obtained further compensation and the renewal of
their privileges, thanks to the famine which visited Europe in that year and
made England dependent upon imported corn. On account of the Grand Master’s
selfishness and the skill of the English envoys, the Hansa had almost split
during these prolonged negotiations, weakened as it already was by the internal
disorder in Lübeck and the defeat of the Teutonic Order by Poland. This
encouraged Henry to disregard the settlement of 1407 and his subjects to
continue their attacks upon Hansa shipping. Hansa reprisals were rendered
nugatory by the policy of the Grand Master. More than ever Prussia needed the
English trade; even Danzig became more tolerant towards English merchants and
allowed them to form an association of their own with their own alderman. But
this no longer satisfied them. English opinion, as reflected in The Libel of
English Policy, demanded rights in Prussia equal to those enjoyed by the
Hansa in England. As in the time of Richard II, London again took the lead in
this anti-alien agitation, so that when the Germans refused to pay a subsidy in
1423 the Steelyard was closed and its members imprisoned. Still the Hansa
insisted upon its privileges, and gradually prevailed upon Parliament to induce
the city authorities to be more conciliatory. Fresh fuel was added to the
rising flames of passion when the Hansa, at war with Eric of Denmark, tried in
1427 to exclude neutrals from the Sound, and when four years later the English
government increased the rates of tonnage and poundage and altered the bases
of assessment. The energetic protests of the Hansa were so far successful that
the new rates were suspended and the old method of assessment revived. After a
meeting of the Hansa an attempt at a settlement was made in 1431. But the
negotiations dragged on until they were outstripped by the Congress of Arras,
which transformed the whole political situation. Burgundy, now hostile to
England, strove to prevent an understanding, but, thanks to Cardinal Beaufort,
a treaty was concluded in 1437. This was a triumph for Hansa persistence. Not
only were its privileges again confirmed, but it was freed from all dues not
mentioned in the Carta Mercatoria. The only
concession obtained by the English was a vague assurance that they could trade
in all Hansa towns according to the old customs. Even these modest claims
aroused hostility in Prussia, and the Grand Master refused to ratify the
treaty. Henry VI was being urged to withdraw the Hansa privileges, and after
many delays promised to do so if the Grand Master persisted in his attitude.
But neither side was anxious to drive matters to extremes, since the renewal of
the Anglo-French war had closed the Flemish harbours to the English. Henry VI
therefore sent envoys to Lubeck to negotiate with Denmark, the Hansa, and the
Grand Master and, after an adjournment, a truce was concluded at Deventer (June
1451) which once more opened the Sound to English shipping. Prospects of
permanent peace were disturbed by the seizure by the English of a German and
Dutch Bay salt fleet of 110 ships. The Dutch ships were liberated, while those
of the Hansa, mainly belonging to Lubeck and Danzig, were confiscated and their
cargoes sold. Reprisals by the Hansa naturally followed, but more extreme
measures were ruled out by the opposition of Cologne and her western
colleagues, who had no interest in the salt trade. Henry VI, faced by the
growing discontent with his government that burst into Cade’s rebellion, was
ready to settle with Prussia and Lubeck, but the latter demanded compensation
for losses and seized an English ship that was carrying English envoys to the
Grand Master. Lübeck in fact was prepared to force a breach with England, but
receded from her intransigent position and concluded a truce for eight years
(March 1456).
Anti-Hansa
feeling in England. Treaties of Utrecht
The
dynastic struggle which threw England into disorder reacted upon Hansa trade
with England. The redoubtable Warwick, now governor of Calais, against whom
Henry VI was powerless, preyed upon Hansa shipping, with the inevitable
reprisals by the Hansa and its ally Christian I of Denmark, who closed the
Sound to English vessels. Before the questions raised by this piratical act
could be settled, Warwick’s protégé, Edward Earl of March, had ascended the
English throne. But the League, doubting the permanency of his success, did not
at first apply for the confirmation of their privileges. Edward, on his part,
could not afford to alienate the capital, whose merchants and civic authorities
were pressing for the suspension of the Hansa privileges until Englishmen had
obtained similar ones in the Baltic lands. He did, however, grant the League a
temporary confirmation, pending a full investigation of the whole subject. As
the king’s position was still difficult, he was anxious for peace and even sent
envoys to Hamburg to bring it about. The Hansa might now have achieved a real
diplomatic success, but it was hampered by its own want of unity. Cologne and
its associates were pursuing an independent policy, which ultimately led to the
withdrawal of the Rhine city from the League for a whole decade. Meanwhile
Edward prolonged his temporary grant to the Hansa from 1462 to 1468, on
condition that a final settlement of outstanding questions was reached. But
when he had made peace with Burgundy and Anglo-Flemish trade was resumed, he refused
to send further embassies to meet the Hansa negotiators. The latter had for
once shewn lack of wisdom and missed a great opportunity. It had now again to
face English hostility and even to bear the blame for Christian I’s seizure of
English ships in the Sound. The resentment felt in London resulted in an attack
upon the Steelyard, which was partially destroyed, and Germans in England were
arrested and imprisoned. This further encouraged Cologne to pursue its particularist policy. It separated itself from the League
and formed an association of its own such as it had had in the time of Henry
II.
Oil
the other hand, Edward had alienated Warwick and so yielded to the pressure of
the cloth-makers of the western counties, who felt the loss of the Hansa trade
severely, and of his ally, the Duke of Burgundy. On the duke’s mediation Edward
liberated the arrested Germans for 4000 nobles and agreed to resume
negotiations with the Hansa. But before these could be undertaken, Edward was a
fugitive, and Henry VI was again seated on his unstable throne with Warwick in
possession of all real power. The Hansa seemed master of the situation. Its
alliance was courted by both the English parties and their respective allies,
Charles the Bold and Louis XI. After an unusually well-attended meeting of the
League in September 1470, trade with England was suspended and an energetic
privateering war initiated. Edward himself promised full confirmation of the
Hansa privileges in return for assistance to regain his throne. The League as a
whole hesitated, hut Danzig accepted, and its fleet formed a considerable part
of the armada that brought him home. But Edward IV failed to keep his promise
and the war was resumed. All Hansa harbours, as well as those of Denmark and
Poland, were closed to English trade. Danzig naturally resented the royal
ingratitude and exerted itself to the utmost in the naval war that now developed
on a large scale. Edward therefore secretly approached the Bruges Kontor, and this culminated in the negotiations at
Utrecht in 1473. These almost assumed the nature of a European congress. Not
only the League, but its staples at London, Bruges, and Bergen were present as
well as Kampen, Cologne, and some individual Fie mish
towns. England, Burgundy, Brittany, and some minor potentates were the other
principals to the transactions. The discussions lasted nearly a whole year.
Point by point the Hansa diplomats forced the Englishmen to yield, despite the
efforts of Cologne to wreck the proceedings. Finally a series of treaties were
arranged and signed (February 1474). The Hansa privileges were restored and
later received the approval of Parliament; it obtained the ownership of the
Steelyard as well as its warehouses in Boston and King’s Lynn, and London again
agreed to allow it the partial control of the Bishop’s Gate. The English claim
to equality in Hansa towns failed entirely. Though the League had scored an
undoubted victory, Danzig and some other towns still hesitated to ratify the
treaties, so that the League only entered into the possession of its
establishments in London and the eastern ports in the spring of 1475. The
treaty with England was followed by similar agreements with Burgundy and the
Dutch provinces and towns. With Brittany a final settlement was postponed, but
the duke extended his protection to the Hansa until a treaty could be
concluded.
Although
the treaties of Utrecht brought commercial peace in the West, the arrangements
could not last in the face of the rapid dissolution of medieval institutions
now going on. The trade with England was, however, still a factor in Hansa
policy, but it never attained the importance of Bruges except for the Prusso-Livonian groups. Bruges (though never so closely
organised as the other foreign settlements) was the guardian of Hansa interests
in the West, and not infrequently it inspired its policy and guided its action.
It was dominated by Lubeck, since 1418 the official head, and long before then
the directing brain of the League. But the Bruges Kontor,
like the parent organisation, did not always command the obedience of all
sections. The self-seeking policy’ of the Westphalian group has already been mentioned.
Under Cologne’s leadership they had built up a prosperous trade in wine with
England, Holland, and Flanders that reached its apogee in the last quarter of
the fourteenth century. Decline then set in, so that Cologne felt impelled to
oppose the Hansa whenever its action disturbed the peaceful trade between its
members and the best markets of the Rhineland towns. At the same time Bruges
itself was losing its dominant position as an international market, causing
many German merchants to seek trading outlets elsewhere. To arrest the
threatening disintegration the Kontor made efforts to
obtain privileges in other Flemish towns, in Holland, and elsewhere, and to
unify its control by amalgamating the separate funds of each Third into a
common fund under the control of one alderman. But, thanks to the prolonged
resistance of Cologne, it was only in 1447 that this programme was partially
carried out; the funds were amalgamated but the management was not unified. The Kontor was likewise invested with authority over all
German merchants trading throughout the Netherlands, and permitted to tax them
to defray the costs of embassies and of keeping the seas clear of pirates. This
provided a fresh spur to the opposition of Cologne, whose example was imitated
by other towns as well as by individual merchants. Serious results followed.
Already Bruges was declining, partly on account of the competition of rivals,
the gradual silting up of the Zwin, the rise of the
English and Dutch cloth manufacture, and the frequent commercial wars of the
Hansa, including the ten years’ blockade of Flanders itself (1448-58). Prior to
this, the Hansa had, in 1442 and in 1447, issued stringent ordinances that
aimed at compelling its members to purchase cloth only in Bruges and a limited number
of “free” markets in Flanders and Brabant, while the peace of 1458 included a
promise of the League to re-establish the staple at Bruges in all its former
strength. The efforts to do so, as well as to levy the contributions previously
mentioned, proved an endless source of friction. Cologne even went so far as to
invoke the aid of the Duke of Burgundy against the Kontor,
an act that broke one of the strongest bonds of the Hansa, since it had always
resisted the interference of outside authorities in its internal affairs.
Despite all difficulties, the Kontor did not relax
its efforts on behalf of the common good. Thus in 1463 and 1464 it obtained
special privileges from Louis XI, in 1460 it prolonged the truce with Spain, in
1461 with the Dutch, and it continued to enjoy the protection of the Duke of
Brittany. Naturally the Kontor was supported by the
League. An ordinance issued in 1465 that all Hansa merchants were to resort to
Bruges proved ineffective. Cologne definitely withdrew and submitted its case
to the Duke of Burgundy, who, however, failed to give a clear decision on the
points at issue between the protagonists. Breslau likewise threatened
withdrawal, while the Duke of Burgundy, and Antwerp also, resented the action
of the League. Antwerp, therefore, concluded a treaty with the Hansa in 1468 on
such favourable terms to the latter that Bruges was severely hit by it.
If
the ground seemed to be slipping from under the Hansa in the west, in the north
it still continued its monopoly, thanks to the assistance of Christian I of
Denmark. Once more he forbade the Dutch to transport Bay salt through Danish
waters and restricted English trade in Norway. This encouraged the Hansa to
persist in its old methods. The meeting of 1470 renewed all the old regulations
relating to the staples, and threatened Cologne with expulsion if it did not
submit to the traditional arrangements. As it had incurred the hostility of
the Duke of Burgundy and the Treaty of Utrecht threatened its privileged
position in England, Cologne was reconciled to the League in 1476 upon terms
dictated by the latter. This, together with further extensions of the truces
with Holland and Spain for twenty-four years and a grant of freedom of trade by
the Duke of Brittany for seven years, shewed that the Hansa was still a power
in the commerce of Europe. These gains must, however, be set against other
losses. The rapid decline of the Teutonic Order after 1410 deprived the League
of a valuable ally. Many Prussian towns suffered impoverishment and practically
withdrew from the Hansa. Danzig was the only exception. Lubeck also profited by
it, since it annexed the amber trade, formerly a monopoly of the Order, which
had exported it to Bruges to be manufactured into rosaries and thence exported
to all parts of Europe. Prussia’s losses were Poland’s gains, despite the
attempts to destroy its competition. Only one branch of Prussian trade still
flourished—the trade in salt with Lithuania. But this too was mainly in the
hands of Danzig, from the middle of the fifteenth century almost the sole
centre of Prussian overseas trade and shipbuilding. Danzig had established a
depot at Kovno with a branch at Vilna. The attempt of the Order to revive its
waning fortunes was frustrated by a fierce civil war. Its rebellious towns
allied themselves with Poland, receiving valuable privileges in return. Those
granted to Danzig were almost sovereign rights that wellnigh made her an
independent State. These advantages reacted in favour of the Hansa at a time
when they were most useful, when the imbroglio with England and the war between
Denmark and Sweden seriously threatened its commerce.
In
other directions the middle of the fifteenth century was also a testing time
for the Hansa. Christian I was none too friendly until Sweden rebelled against
him. He then (May 1455) made peace with the League and added a new clause which
annulled any grants of his predecessors that conflicted with the privileges of
the Hansa. This, however, found no favour in Norway and could not be exploited
in Bergen in face of the hostility of its governor. The Dano-Swedish
war again jeopardised the trade of the Baltic, especially as Danzig, which had
given shelter to the fugitive King Charles Knutson, was waging a fierce
piratical campaign against Denmark. By Lubeck’s insistence, a brief truce
between the warring parties was arranged, so that the disputed questions might
be submitted to arbitration. Although this failed and old causes of strife were
revived, the ceaseless efforts of the Hansa, which armed its ships trading with
Riga and Novgorod, and the defeat of the Order in the civil war, brought about
a general peace. By the Treaty of Thorn the Order lost all its territory except
East Prussia, and accepted the suzerainty of Poland. Trade was able once more
to resume its interrupted course, but not along its old lines. Important
developments had occurred in the meantime. Thorn lost its pre-eminence as a
regional staple, and Stettin replaced it as the mart for trade in Scania
herrings; Danzig lost its hold over the Lithuanian trade, since Kovno now had a
rival in Vilna; the German merchants withdrew from the interior, preferring to
have their merchandise transported for them to the maritime towns. They had
followed a narrow restrictive policy which could no longer be maintained. Only
Danzig grew in strength as its rivals declined. Denmark, too, required the
constant vigilance of the Hansa. Christian I had, on the whole, been friendly,
but the Hansa became apprehensive after he had acquired Schleswig-Holstein
(1460). Hamburg and Lübeck renewed their old close alliance, since Christian,
desirous of developing his new territories, had granted Amsterdam a favourable
tariff, as well as the use of a land route that threatened the supremacy of the
old one between Hamburg and Lübeck. The king’s hostile attitude even led him to
interfere in the internal affairs of the towns, so the League had to exercise
its power to prevent him from excluding Wismar from the Scanian fisheries, and
brought about a peace between him and Bremen. Christian could not shake himself
free from the Hansa. Financial stringency, partly due to the fall in the value
of money, and partly to the decreasing revenue from the herring-fisheries when
the herring began to exchange the Baltic for the North Sea, had compelled him
to impose higher tolls upon Hansa shipping. But he had to yield to the
protests of the League and withdraw them.
The
Baltic herring trade, though still considerable, was declining rapidly and the
great international fair in Scania during the fishing season had ceased; new
packing centres outside the Hansa influences arose. Danish towns began to compete
with those of the League. These now initiated an anti-foreign policy, and
though Christian maintained the Hansa privileges as long as he needed its
political support, he was obliged also to encourage his own subjects. The new
developments reacted upon the towns in various ways. Stettin had its depot at
Malmo and enjoyed the special protection of the king, while Rostock retained
its supremacy at Oslo and other Norwegian towns. On the other hand, the Wends
were still pre-eminent in the Bergen trade, with Lubeck taking the lion’s
share. Political considerations still compelled Christian to acquiesce in this
situation, though he resented his dependence upon the League. Peace with Sweden
was still far off, so that when the Swedes raised Sten Sture the elder to the throne, Christian had again to
purchase the aid of the League. At its instigation he again restricted
non-Hansa trade in Bergen and forbade the transport of Bay salt through Danish
waters by the Dutch. Meantime the Swedes had inflicted a crushing defeat on the
Danes at Brunkeberg (10 October 1471). They initiated
a strictly nationalist policy that ultimately liberated them from German
influence. The Germans lost their secular right to half the membership of the
Stockholm town council, and the Swedes opened their harbours to the Dutch. A
durable peace between Denmark and Sweden followed, which brought definite
advantages to the Hansa and in particular to its leader Lübeck with its Wend
associates. In return for a loan, Christian pledged a number of towns to Lubeck
which gave it the control of the harbours of Holstein. The king’s efforts to
free himself from the incubus of the Wend towns were frustrated by the peace
which for a time succeeded the stormy period through which Europe had passed
even after the conclusion of the Hundred Years’ War. Thus the commercial
domination of the North by the Hansa remained substantially unimpaired, though
Christian’s bitterness against the League was displayed in a series of decrees
designed to diminish its power. But they remained a dead letter. In Bergen the
Hansa was stronger than ever. The English had ceased to frequent it; the Dutch
were kept within strictly narrow limits. Only in the trade with Iceland did the
Hansa feel the competition of the English, since Christian readily sold permits
to them. Nevertheless the close of the fifteenth century saw the rise of new
forces that ultimately deprived the Hansa and its leaders, the Wend towns, of
the political and economic influence they had so long exercised in the three
northern kingdoms.
But
political and military events were not the only disturbances affecting the
smooth course of trade. Fluctuation of prices, the varying yield of the
herring-fisheries, disputes between different groups of the Hansa itself, as for
example between the Livonian towns and Novgorod, Cologne, and Lübeck,
difficulties that arose from abuses in trade itself, all contributed to create
unstable conditions. Hansa merchants frequently complained of the quality of
the furs and wax delivered to them by Russians and Lithuanians; the latter
retorted in kind and pointed to the falsifications in quality and quantity of
the cloth and other commodities sold them by the Hansa. Nevertheless the Hansa
managed to retain its hold on the Russian trade by its customary measures to
exclude all competitors. It even forbade the Dutch, whose shipping was
indispensable to the Livonians, to learn Russian or to trade directly with
Russians visiting the Livonian towns. Here Riga took the lead in carrying out
the Hansa policy, for the town aimed at attaining a position within its sphere
of influence such as Danzig had reached in Prussia. A conflict with Lubeck,
representing the common interest of the whole League, was inevitable,
especially as Riga’s action again disturbed relations with Novgorod. Peace
between the latter and the Hansa had been concluded in 1392, but Novgorod began
to demand better treatment for its own traders in Livonia and at sea, just as
the English had demanded of Prussia. Though relations were not broken off,
thanks to the mediation of Dorpat (Yuriev), yet the
Russians and Lithuanians began to press their claims with greater insistence,
especially after the fall of the Teutonic Order had lowered German prestige
throughout the Baltic region. Consequently suspensions of trade and reprisals
were frequent, especially as the Hansa was unable to put forward its whole
strength on account of its endless entanglements in the north and west, and
earlier in the century on account of the democratic revolt in Lubeck. This
enabled Riga to obtain an equal share with Lubeck in the administration of the
Novgorod Kontor, since the latter had become ever
more dependent upon its Russian and Livonian trade during the prolonged
disputes and wars with other parts of Europe. By 1459 Riga, thanks to the rapid
decline of Novgorod, was able to prohibit strangers visiting it from trading
with one another; even members of the Hansa were no longer allowed to trade
directly with the Russians. The constant quarrels between Novgorod, the
Livonian towns, and the Livonian Order reacted in favour of Polotsk,
though its trade never reached the proportions of that of the older city. But
Novgorod’s days were numbered. The rising power of the Grand Dukes of Muscovy
was jealous of its independence. In 1471 Ivan III subjected it to his
authority, and as he confirmed all the old privileges and customs of the Hansa
it seemed to promise a period of peaceful, prosperous trade. Ivan was, however,
still hostile to Novgorod. After sacking the town in 1478, he deprived it of
its independence, and the proud old city republic sank to the level of an
ordinary Russian town. In 1494 the German settlement disappeared for ever
before the strong centralised State that had emerged. The history of the Hansa
in Novgorod thus bears a close analogy to that in Bruges.
This
unexpected development induced the Livonian towns to resume closer relations with
the Hansa and to cling more tenaciously to the trade with Polotsk.
But in the new world that was arising there was no room for independent or even
semi-independent towns. Against the new monarchies that ruthlessly destroyed
all those who had formerly withstood the authority of the feudal overlord, the
Hansa failed to hold its own. Medieval systems were disappearing, and with them
the old Hanseatic monopoly of Russian trade with the west was lost for ever. To
this result the Hansa had itself, in a considerable measure, contributed by its
selfish and narrow policy. Its frequent blockades and restrictions upon freedom
of commercial intercourse not only led to evasions of its decrees, but also to
the rise and development of new routes. While the Hansa dominated the Baltic
and certain land routes in North Germany, traders who felt the severity of its
control created new routes that circumvented those which the Hansa had made its
own. These were mainly the work of the South German cities that now became
serious competitors to the Hansa as intermediaries between the north and south,
and the east and west, of Europe, and in the next century Nuremberg, Prague,
Frankfort on the Main, and others outstripped the towns of the League.
Naturally the Hansa endeavoured to erect barriers in the way of their
development. But the old weapons were becoming blunt and rusty. Artificial limitation
and restrictive legislation were giving way to greater freedom and enterprise
in all directions. Even Lübeck itself, the tireless protagonist of Hansa
monopoly, could no longer dispense with the Frankfort market when its famous
fair began to acquire international importance. These South German rivals also
profited by the progress of the Turks in South-eastern Europe. The capture of
Constantinople closed the market in Venice to the Slav lands and they had to
seek new outlets and new routes for their products, and these the south
afforded them. That the League did not immediately succumb to the blows it
received on all sides is indisputable evidence of its inherent strength and of
the political far-sightedness of its leader, Lübeck. Nevertheless the changing
conditions were not without their effect. Inland towns gave up direct overseas
trading, purchasing foreign commodities from the maritime towns. No longer
needing the Hansa, they gradually withdrew from participation in its affairs.
Such towns consequently suffered loss of population and of revenue and gradual
impoverishment. The fifteenth century was for the Hansa a period of depression,
but old systems may long survive unless destroyed by some cataclysmic upheaval.
This the Hansa was spared, and so it lingered on as an effective organisation
for yet another century. But at the close of the Middle Ages its position had
developed somewhat differently from what its earlier days promised. It had
drawn to itself the trade of the northern half of the continent, and later
stretched its tentacles towards Spain and Portugal. It had created a monopoly
in the north, banished the English from the Norwegian trade, and rigidly
circumscribed the activities of the Dutch. Only in Venice did it fail to secure
that exclusive position which it attained in Bergen, Bruges, Novgorod, or
London. Until the accession of the Tudors, it is true, its position in England
was strengthened by the Treaty of Utrecht. Even the rise of Burgundy did not
entirely destroy the trade through Bruges. A more severe blow, however, was the
decentralisation of trade in the Netherlands. This proved fatal to the
authority of the Bruges Kontor and the League whose
spokesman it was. Even the Baltic, at one time almost a Hansa lake, could no
longer be maintained as its special preserve.
Organisation of the Hansa
The
Hansa had developed out of associations of Germans trading abroad. Membership depended
upon the right of the citizens of given towns to enjoy the privileges acquired.
These were the special functions of the early associations, and all Germans
were allowed to participate in them without too close an investigation of their
claims. Later, these unions of individuals influenced the home towns, which
began to form close alliances for furthering common interests. With its growing
strength membership became more valuable and was limited to citizens of Hansa
towns. As the prestige of the League increased, membership was eagerly sought;
expulsion, or “Verhansung” as it was called, became a
severe punishment. But centrifugal forces were not always under control. Many
towns formally withdrew, or allowed their membership to lapse by abstention from
the deliberations of the League. An important city like Cologne was, however,
compelled, against its will, to remain within the fold. Yet so vague and
uncertain were the conditions of membership that no accurate list is extant,
nor can such a list be confidently compiled from the existing records, though
it has been generally assumed to range about the seventies. Around
the larger centres were often grouped smaller towns and even districts that
frequently held local assemblies for common action. Such was the case with the
Livonian group that held its first meeting in 1358 and then annually. In
Prussia only the six largest towns were members, and after the civil war only
Danzig retained any interest in the foreign affairs of the League. It is
doubtful whether the Hansa itself ever knew exactly who were members and who
were not; and if it did know it kept it a close secret, steadfastly refusing
all information on the subject. On several occasions, notably in 1449, 1462,
and 1473, the English demanded the names of the members but were categorically
refused, either because the envoys of the League did not know or because they
would not disclose them. Similarly the League refused to regard itself as a
corporation acting through a common head and possessing a common fund or seal.
It claimed to be no more than an association of towns for safeguarding trading
privileges acquired abroad.
Quite
early in its history the League divided itself into territorial groups—the
well-known “Thirds,” each later subdivided into two Sixths, but this had little
significance outside Bruges and Flanders where it originated. Such importance
as it had was due entirely to the supremacy of Slanders in Hansa commerce. In
the Middle Ages no other division applicable to the whole organisation existed.
Leadership was early assumed by the Wend group, and among them Lubeck was
pre-eminent and generally acknowledged as head long before it was officially
recognised in 1418 and again in 1447. The Wends formed the nucleus, Lübeck the
nerve-centre of the whole system. Yet Lubeck cannot be said to have been the
“head” of the League. The highest authority for all purposes was the meeting of
representatives, or Hansetage, though only such
meetings can be regarded as full Hansetage at which
all the Thirds were present. Such complete assemblies were never very frequent;
from the fifteenth century onwards they were only held at long intervals of 20
to 30 years. At this time the subjects dealt with mainly concerned commercial
and political relations with the north, the monopoly of the Wends. Very few
other towns attended. The direction of Russian affairs passed into the hands of
the Livonians. Lubeck was by far the most frequent meeting-place.
The
number of towns attending was small, rarely exceeding thirty. The smaller towns
usually entrusted their representation to the larger ones and furnished them
with plenary powers. Some towns, such as Cologne, advanced claims to
precedence, but it had to yield to Lübeck and content itself with second place;
Hamburg and Bremen contended for the third place. Similar orders of precedence
were evolved among the groups and the officers in charge of the packing-centres
in Scania. Long notice of meetings had to be given, not only on account of
distances and slow travelling, but also because local groups often met
beforehand to discuss the agenda, decide upon their policy, and draw up
instructions for their envoys. On account of the cost many towns evaded
attendance. After 1430 the League imposed a fine upon absentees, and threatened
arrest of goods and persons as well as “Verhansung”
unless a sufficient excuse, on oath, was furnished; these drastic measures
were, however, not enforced. Fines were also imposed upon late arrivals or
early departures unless the grounds alleged were satisfactory. Decisions were
by majority. Not infrequently members repudiated them; many towns often purposely
withheld full powers from their representatives so as to refuse acquiescence in
resolutions which they did not approve. The decisions of the Hansetage were embodied in a protocol known as a “Recess”
and sealed with the seal of the town where the meeting had been held, since the
League had no common seal. Abroad, Lubeck’s seal was so regarded, as all correspondence
was carried on from there. The Hansa had no permanent diplomatic service, but
the foreign settlements or Kontors, where such
existed, fulfilled admirably the duties of an ambassador. For special purposes
embassies ad hoc were sent, usually consisting of councillors from the leading
towns. Just as it had no common seal, so the League had no common purse. Its
nearest approach to one was the poundage levied in 1361, and subsequently for
the war against Denmark or for freeing the seas from pirates. This was often
collected with great difficulty and under the stress of threats of exclusion
from privileges abroad and cessation of commercial intercourse at home.
Though
it continued far into the seventeenth century, the Hansa had outlived its great
days. It was a purely medieval creation destined to disappear in the modern
world. It could not be transformed into a single State nor amalgamate with a
territorial sovereignty. The geographical discoveries shifted the centre of
gravity of the world’s trade from the inland seas to the great oceans. These
the Hansa could not control as it had once controlled the Baltic and North
Seas. With the change, its disappearance as a world power was inevitable. Its
life in the sixteenth century was but the reflex action, the dying struggles of
a once powerful giant.
1150-1400.
IT is
impossible to write the history of the world with any clearness or success,
unless it is regarded from some central point of view. The central position
adopted in this history has been that of the empire and the papacy, the two
powers which kept the states of Europe together as a single society, and whose
dissolution in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth century brought about a
new epoch and began modern history. We have now reached, roughly speaking, the
end of the thirteenth century, when the empire is receiving a new form under
the house of Hapsburg; the papacy is approaching a time of weakness, by the
removal of the see to Avignon, from which it has never recovered; and the
kingdoms of Europe, in consequence of the loosening of these bonds, are
beginning to assert themselves ; while the crusades and the spirit which
animated them have come to an end by the fall of Acre in 1291. We must now deal
with Spain, England, and France separately, taking the history of each of them
down to the middle of the fourteenth century, leaving the fortunes of the
empire and the papacy to be described later, except so far as they are dealt
with in the annals of the countries we have mentioned. To follow a completely
chronological order is impossible, and we must adopt a compromise.
The
weakening of the central power of Europe produced leagues to insure the mutual
protection which the superior authorities were not able to supply, and we will
give some account of the most powerful and distinguished of them—the
Hansa—which will serve as a specimen of the rest. The inner unity of Europe,
apart from political alliances, was begun by commerce, and its first notable
appearance is found in the connection between England and Germany, or, more
exactly, between the two great commercial cities of Cologne and London. Cologne
was the only seaport of the German empire, and as early as the reign of Aethelred II we find a statute regulating the tolls payable
for German participation in London markets. Henry II, in a decree of 1157, took
the merchants of Cologne under his European special protection, and Richard Coeur-de-Lion,
on Commerce. passing through Cologne after his imprisonment, gave the citizens
the privilege of free commerce in all England, with liberty to visit all fairs.
The Plantagenet kings were favorable to foreign trade, and in the fourteenth
century foreign merchants were useful to English kings for the purposes of
loans, and the English barons, who were in conflict with the monarchy, found it
also to their interest to encourage them. On the other hand, the English towns
and guilds, which had begun to assume an important position, were anxious to
preserve a monopoly. Another important commercial league was formed in Belgium,
where seventeen towns leagued together for mutual protection. The Flemish towns
were chiefly occupied in weaving cloth, for which the raw material came from
England, the English climate being especially suited to the production of pure
wool. The manufactured cloth often came back to England, but we do not find
fine cloth made in England till the time of the Tudors.
The
growth of international commerce made new financial arrangements necessary, and
the Italians were the first financiers. In the fourteenth century they first
adopted the system of companies of shareholders, which had their consuls and
other agents in northern Europe. The financiers also began to frequent certain
quarters in different towns, such as the Rialto in Venice, which may be
regarded as the parent of our modern exchanges. The Lombards became famous as
lenders of money, but their business was regarded as unchristian, and the
taking of usury was forbidden by the church; consequently money-lending fell
into the hands of the Jews. But the Lombards had accumulated a large amount of
capital, and, to some extent, took the place of the Jews, who were expelled
from England under Edward I in 1290. Dante has made us familiar with the hatred
with which the Caorsini, or inhabitants of Cahors in France, were regarded, who were usurers, but the
name was given to all the usurers in southern Europe, just as bankers were
called Lombards. The Caorsini came first into England
in 1285, under the protection of the pope, to whom they lent money. In the next
century, their place was taken by the so-called Lombards, who were chiefly
Florentines, represented by the great houses of Bardi, Varrazzi, and Frescobaldi, and who lent money to
sovereigns, sometimes at a great loss.
In the
thirteenth century, a new set of merchants came from the Baltic, under the name
of Easterlings. The Cologne Hansa opposed them
strongly, and they had to ask for assistance from Frederick II. The
Hamburgers obtained the right to make a separate Hansa in 1266, and the Lübeckers
in the following year. At last Cologne had to give way, and the three Hansas of Hamburg, Lübeck, and Cologne became one. They
established, in 1282, a factory on the Thames, called the Steelyard, and it
remained the property of the Hansa till 1852. Similar factories were founded at
Bruges in Belgium, Bergen in Norway, and Novgorod in Russia. They were
surrounded by walls, and the gates were closed at night.
One of
the principal seats of the Hansa was the town of Wisby, in the Swedish island
of Gothland. It is still worth a visit, but it once
had forty-two towers sixty or seventy feet high, eighteen churches, mighty
walls, and 12,000 citizens. In Russia, Kiev was for many years the great market
for exchanging the products of the East with those of northern Europe. But at
last it was found that an easier passage lay through northern Italy. A
settlement of the Hansa was now established at Great Novgorod, and the
merchants of St. Nicholas’ Hof, in Wisby, transferred themselves to St. Peter's Hof in Novgorod. The river Volkov divided the city into two parts, the trading town
being on the right bank, the municipality on the left. The Novgorod merchants
assembled in the church of St. John, and founded St. John's Guild. The town was
a virtual republic, and was governed by a popular assembly. But it was
difficult of access. Ships bound for it passed from the gulf of Finland up the
Neva, and through Lake Ladoga to the mouth of the Volkov,
and had to tranship their goods into lighter vessels,
for the completion of the journey of eighty miles. Two convoys came from
Germany every year, the winter convoy and the summer convoy. There was also a
land convoy, but it was considered of less importance. The foreign traders were
known as Latins; they were under the special protection of the church, and had
an organization of their own, with a code of laws. St. Peter’s court, as it was
called, was governed by two aldermen, and in cases of difficulty appeal was
made to Wisby, but Lübeck gradually asserted herself, and obtained first a
share and then a supremacy in the government of the Novgorod Hansa. Lübeck did
not secure her power without a struggle. She had to contend with Denmark, who
was ambitious for the control of the Baltic trade. In order to maintain her
position as the staple between East and West, she was always trying to prevent
direct communication between the two, and there was no difficulty in this when
the Sound was impassable from ice.
But in
the earlier times the most important centre of international commerce was Bruges.
It was a place for the exchange of the products of western and southern Europe
for those of the East. The produce of the Levant came from the Rhine and from
France. Ships laden with wine arrived from Gascony, Portugal, and Spain. In the
thirteenth century the Easterlings appeared, though
at first they had no permanent settlement. Bruges owed its mercantile
importance to being a seaport : it was connected by canals with Sluys and Damme, both on the
coast—though transhipment was generally necessary—and
great dykes, built at the end of the twelfth century, protected it from floods.
But, like Ghent and Ypres, it was also a manufacturing town, its chief product
being cloth, which it wove, refined, and dyed.
During
the weakness of the empire which succeeded the fall of the Hohenstauffens,
the commercial towns began to form leagues of mutual protection. There were
three principal groups. The Wendish group, which
formed the kernel of the Hansa league, consisted of Lübeck, Rostock, Stralsund,
Wismar, Greifswald, Hamburg, and Luneburg. Lübeck and Hamburg formed an
alliance in the middle of the thirteenth century, making common cause against
pirates and sharing the expense. There were also the group of the lower Rhine
and Westphalia, and the group of the Netherlands. With other smaller groups,
these principal groups made up the Hansa. But a well
organized confederation of all the commercial towns never existed, and
all attempts to form such a league were failures. Lübeck indeed did her best to
create one by holding meetings, passing statutes, and imposing contributions,
but the meetings were not attended, the statutes were not obeyed, and the contributions
were not paid. No looser confederation is known to history. Lübeck was no
Athens, and the Hansa no Delian League. It had no
powers of armed compulsion : indeed, most of its component towns were subject
to the emperor. The Teutonic Knights exercised jurisdiction over the towns in
their domain, which did not become independent till that Order fell. And,
though at one time or another, some ninety towns paid contributions to the
Hansa, the payment was not continuous and the geographical limits were very
badly defined. Lübeck exercised a supremacy, and summoned meetings, but the
only sanction for their resolutions was amongst themselves the boycott, and
against foreigners the strike; and the use of these weapons at different times
was often the cause of disaster to the towns who employed them. It is difficult
to lead commerce back into paths which it has once deserted. At the close of
the fourteenth century, a body of pirates made their appearance in the North
Sea, known as Vitalian Brothers, a name which is supposed to be connected with
a desire to provide themselves with victuals. They conquered Gothland, passed into the North Sea, and plundered Bergen,
so that the Hansa had to arm themselves against them and summon the southern
towns to their assistance. However, in April 1402, the pirates were defeated,
and their leaders made prisoner. The history of the Hansa after 1400 will be
treated of later.
THE
IBERIAN PENINSULA, A D. c. 1000-1344.
We must
now turn our attention to the Iberian peninsula, where the struggle between the
Christians and the Moors was proceeding with great intensity. The dynasty of the
Omayyad’s died out about the end of the tenth century with Hisham III, a descendant of the great Abdurrahman. The power of the khalifs still continued in Bagdad and Cairo, but in Cordova
it was lost forever. The empire, once so powerful, was broken up into tiny
principalities, each town with its emir, vali, or cadi. Perpetual war
raged between them, the stronger always endeavoring to suppress the weaker. In
this manner, some thirty years later, Cordova fell into the hands of the emir
of Seville, who was the most powerful Mohammedan sovereign in Spain, except the
emir of Toledo. But in May 1085, Alfonso VI, king of Castile, made his
triumphal entry into Toledo. He promised the inhabitants the possession of
their property, the practice of their religion, and the maintenance of their
laws and privileges. But many Christians from the north settled in the town,
and swelled the numbers of the Mozarabian Christians,
whose worship had been tolerated by the Moors. Archbishop Bernard of Sahagun took possession of the great mosque at Toledo for
Christian worship, while Talavera, Madrid, and other towns gradually suffered
the same fate as Toledo.
In 1086
the Almoravids of Morocco, a very powerful tribe,
which from a family of simple Bedouins had gradually become masters of Morocco,
were invited into the peninsula to oppose the encroachments of the Cross. In
the great battle of Solara, not far from Badajoz, Alfonso and the
Castilian knights were severely defeated, and ten thousand Christians’ heads
were sent to deck the battlements of Spanish and African fortresses. The Almoravids soon proved themselves rather masters than
allies, and, by the close of the century, they were ruling over the southern
portion of the peninsula. Seville was conquered by them in 1090; Granada,
Malaga, Jaen, and Cordova fell before their victorious onsets. Saragossa alone
remained independent, and, with its surrounding districts, formed a buffer
state between the Christians and the Moors. To this period belong the exploits
of the great commander, the Cid, Ruy Diaz, the Campeador, praised in Spanish romances as the paragon of the
heroic virtue, the crown of chivalry, the pattern and prototype of the manly
warrior. The last action of his life was the conquest of Valencia in 1095.
After his
death, deeper misfortunes fell upon the banner of Castile. On May 30, 1108, was
fought the battle of Ucles, in which Sancho, the
youthful son of the aged king, Alfonso, hoped to drive the unbelievers from
that mountain city, and to show himself worthy of succession to the crown. But
he was slain on the battlefield, and with him perished the flower of Castilian
chivalry. Alfonso could not survive this disaster, for Sancho had been the hope
of his life. He was the son of his fifth wife, the daughter of the Emir Mohammed
of Seville, who had been converted to Christianity. His first four wives had
only borne him daughters. He died just a year afterwards—the "Shield of
Spain", as he was called, the conqueror of Toledo, the strongest barrier
of his country against the Moors—and his death gave new lustre to the line of the Almoravid rulers. Thus, at the
beginning of the twelfth century, the peninsula was still divided between
Mohammedans and Christians, the Christians being settled in the kingdoms of
Castile, Aragon, and Portugal, and in the marquisate of Barcelona. The
individualism, the spirit of separation, which has, through a large portion of
her history, so fatally weakened Spain, was even then apparent, and a powerful
prince of Navarre, Leon, or Galicia could easily assert his independence
against his feudal sovereign. However, the Moors began to yield ground, and in
1118, Saragossa, so long the abode of Moslem emirs, became the capital of
Alfonso I of Aragon, who reigned from 1104 to 1134. He received the title of Batallador, the fighter of battles.
In the
middle of the century, a rising of the original Spanish Moors against the Almoravids took place in Andalusia, led by Dissensions
Abdel Mumin, the successor of a mahdi who among the had founded a religious sect, and had preached a crusade in Morocco.
Algeciras was conquered; Gibraltar and Xeres opened
their gates; in Seville and Malaga public prayers were offered for the success
of the new prophet. In their distress the Almoravids called to their assistance Alfonso VII, the successor of Alfonso VI, the
"Shield of Spain", whose career we have related. Alfonso was glad to
seize an opportunity which was so much to his advantage, and, with the help of
Count Raymond Berengar of Catalonia and Count William
of Montpellier, wrested Tortona from the Moors, and gained, for a time,
possession of Almeria. To the period immediately preceding his death we owe the
military orders of Calatrava, Alcantara, and Compostella, which for some time defended the frontiers of
the Ebro and the Douro against the Moslems, in spite of the internal
dissensions of the Christian kingdoms. But, since the days of Almanzor, no
prince had fought with such success against the Christians as Almohad Abdel Mumin, the
Commander of the Faithful. In twenty years, he founded an empire which extended
from the edge of the Sahara to the banks of the Guadiana, and from the shore of
the Mediterranean to the coasts of Cyrene. He was equally great as a general
and as a statesman; he gave his empire a firm political organization, and
placed his army and his fleet on a solid foundation of security. In Morocco he
founded an empire for the training of civil servants and officers; in Seville
and Cordova he revived the splendors of Omayyad culture, but without the luxury
and effeminacy which accompanied it. His life was simple, as his aims were
clear. War and conquest were the chief objects of his soul. After a reign of
thirty-three years, he was succeeded in 1163 by his son, the Cid Jusuf, and his son James Almanzor brought the century to a
close. In 1195, the Moors won the victory of Alarcos,
in which the flower of Christian chivalry—not only the knights of Calatrava, Alcantara, and Compostella, but
those of the Temple and St. John—covered with their corpses the stricken field.
But the Cross was at last avenged in the mighty battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, fought on
Monday, July 16, 1212. Pope Innocent III had proclaimed a general crusade
against the infidel. A crowd of ultramontane knights—it is said 110,000 in
number—came from all parts of Europe to assist the Spaniards. Many of them
retired before the battle, but, notwithstanding this, the Christians marched
forth from Toledo on June 21 to meet the Moslem invaders. They found the passes
of the mountains strongly guarded, and were despairing of success when St.
Isidore, the patron saint of Madrid, presented himself in the guise o f a
bearded shepherd, and pointed out a bye-path by which the col could be turned.
The victory was complete : it is said that more than 100,000 Moors were killed.
The Moslem supremacy in Spain received its death-blow. For many years
afterwards was celebrated in Madrid, July 16, the yearly festival of the
triumph of the Cross. After the catastrophe of Las Navas,
the decline of the Moslem rule proceeded with steady progress, only checked by
the dissensions ranks of the Christians
themselves. In 1236, Ferdinand III of Castile, who bore the title of
Saint, became master of Cordova, the capital of the khalifs,
after a long siege. The Moslem inhabitants were compelled to leave the town and
to settle in other cities, and the mosque was turned into a cathedral, now one
of the wonders of the world. In 1248, Seville suffered a similar fate; the
Moors emigrated from Andalusia in thousands, some to Granada, some to the
Moorish settlements in Murcia, and some over the sea to Africa.
To the
loss of Seville is due the rise of the Alhambra. The kingdom of Granada was
tributary to Castile, but the fertility of its soil and its commercial
importance raised it to eminence. Moorish customs, which were dying out in
Murcia, Valencia, and Andalusia, remained unchanged in Granada, where a number
of civilized Moors of good birth were collected together, who preserved
inviolate the traditional culture of their race, the love of science and
education, of poetry and song, of music and architecture. The Alhambra bears
everywhere inscribed upon its walls, “There is no conqueror but Allah”, like the
“Honi soit qui mal y pense” of the English Windsor. The origin of this was that
when Mohammed lbn al Hamah returned to his dominions
after the taking of Seville, he was saluted by his subjects with the Cry of “Garlib” (the conqueror), and he replied, “There is no
conqueror but Allah”. Under him and his successors, the little Saracen kingdom
was able, from time to time, to assert its independence, and to gain a few
precarious triumphs. But in 1340 was fought the battle of Salado, the theme of
many a Spanish song. Here the Moorish power was crushed for
ever, and four years later the harbour of Algeciras, the connecting link
between Africa and Spain, fell into the hands of Alfonso XI of Castile, leaving
the expulsion of the Moors a mere matter of time.
Still, to
the outward eye, the kingdom of Granada presented a proud appearance, and retained
much of its old splendor and
magnificence. It was protected on the sides of the north and east by the lofty range of the Sierra Nevada, rich with mineral treasures, supplying in the heat of summer a refreshing breeze from its snow-covered heights. The valleys, watered by
countless streams, contained pastures on their upper,
and vines and fruits on their lower slopes. The lofty
plateau of the Vega, watered by
the river Xenil, was covered by cornfields and orchards, while the harbors of the coast received
ships from all the nations of the world. In the midst of
this earthly paradise there arose, like a crown of beauty,
the city of Granada, seated on its
double hills, defended by walls and towers, adorned by palaces and mosques, surrounded by pleasure gardens,
filled with splashing fountains and shady arbours. On one of these hills stood the castle of the Alhambra, a jewel which
needs no praise, “shining”, as an Arab poet says, “like
a star through the foliage of olive groves”. Granada had a
sufficient army to defend it,
and, if its inhabitants failed, the warlike hosts of Africa could be summoned to its assistance. Under
pressure, the Moorish prince could place 100,000 armed
soldiers in the field,
comprising formidable archers and light Arabian cavalry. But for more than a hundred years a good understanding
was maintained with the court of Castile, until
the reign of Muled Abul Hassan, which began in 1466. When, in 1476, a tribute was demanded by Queen Isabella, the emir replied that
the mines of Granada no longer yielded gold, but
steel, and in 1481 he attacked, on a stormy winter’s night,
the little mountain fortress of Zahara, on the frontiers of Andalusia. The garrison was cut to pieces, and the inhabitants—men, women, and
children—were carried off as slaves to Granada. When the news reached the
Moorish capital, an aged priest cried out, “The ruins of Zahara will fall upon our own head; the days of the Moslem empire in Spain are
numbered”. We
must now leave this history—the fall of Granada belongs to the
close of the
Middle Ages.
ENGLAND,
A.D. 1087-1189.
The
history of England now claims our attention, but, for the reasons before
mentioned, it will not be treated in detail. On the death of William the
Conqueror in 1087, his second son, William, called Rufus or the Red, was crowned
in Westminster Abbey, eighteen days later, by Archbishop Lanfranc. This
excellent prelate died in 1089. His place as adviser was taken by Ranulf Flambard, the justiciar, an unscrupulous character, who rose to be bishop
of Durham. His great object was to obtain money for the king’s extravagance,
and he did this by putting pressure on the law courts, and exacting more
rigorously the payment of feudal dues. It is said that William neither feared
God nor respected man, but, as he suppressed the power of the barons, he was
popular with the English, who were also gratified by the separation of
Normandy, which had been left by the Conqueror to Robert, his eldest son. Rufus
incorporated Cumberland with England, and fortified Carlisle; he conquered
South Wales, and established his authority in Scotland, so as to make the
English and Norman elements of civilization predominate in the Lowlands. After
the see of Canterbury had been vacant for four years, it was filled by the
appointment of the great Anselm to the archbishopric. But Rufus opposed all
Anselm’s wishes, and quarreled with him so constantly that in 1097 Anselm
withdrew to the continent, and thus in 1099 was present at the Lateran Council,
which decided against lay investitures. In the next year, Rufus was killed by
an arrow in the New Forest, while out hunting.
Rufus was
succeeded by his brother Henry, who reigned for thirty-five years (1100 to
1135). Robert of Normandy had not yet returned from the first crusade, and the English
acknowledged Henry as their king, fearing an interregnum. He was an able man,
and Well educated, as his title “Beauclerc” implies,
but he was willful and immoral. At the same time, he respected the Christian faith,
at least outwardly. On his accession, he issued a charter, which is memorable
in English history. He promised the church freedom in its government and the
abolition of evil customs, such as keeping bishoprics vacant. He also promised
to the barons that he would exact nothing from them beyond what was authorized
by law, that he would not force marriages on heiresses or widows, that he would
render feudal dues less oppressive, and that he would allow the disposal of
personal property by will. He promised to the people that he would enforce the
laws of Edward the Confessor, as improved by William, and that he would
maintain the standard of the coinage. This charter may be regarded as the
foundation of the Great Charter, which was granted in 1215.
In the
first year of his reign, he imprisoned Ranulf Flambard, and married Matilda, daughter of Malcolm III of
Scotland and Margaret, the granddaughter of Edmund Iron-side, thus uniting the
Norman and Saxon dynasties. In the following year, Robert, returning from the
East, with the glamour of a successful crusader, and supported by the Norman
barons, invaded England and attacked Henry, but the church and the people were
too strong for him, and a treaty was made, by which Robert acknowledged his
brother’s right to the crown. Robert of Belesme, the
most stubborn and most powerful of Henry’s antagonists, a monster in human
form, whose savage cruelties were long the subject of poetry and legend, was
conquered by Henry and deprived of his castles. He fled to Normandy, and
stirred up the impetuous Robert to rebel a second time against his brother. At
this time Robert’s Apulian wife died, and he was
deprived of the revenues which she had brought him from southern Italy, so that
he lost the allegiance of his nobles.
Henry
invaded Normandy, and offered Robert favorable terms, but he preferred the arbitrament of arms. On September of 28, 1106, forty years
to a day after the battle of Hastings, the battle of Tenchebrai was fought between the two brothers. The duke was defeated and four hundred of
his knights were taken; Robert of Belesme escaped,
but many years afterwards was captured by Henry and confined at Wareham, where
he died, Robert and Edgar Aetheling, the last male of
the Saxon royal line, the uncle of Queen Matilda, were among the captives.
Robert was detained for twenty-eight years in confinement, dying in 1134 in the
castle of Cardiff, a fiery spirit with a tragic history.
He had a
son, William Clito, whose claims to the duchy of Normandy
were supported by Louis VI of France. This led to repeated wars with France,
until, after the death of Clito in 1128, Normandy and
Maine were secured to England. In 1107, the question of Investitures, long
disputed between Henry and Anselm, was decided by the Concordat of Bec. Bishops and abbots were to be elected by the church,
but in the king's court, and with his sanction; the pope or the archbishop was
to confer spiritual rights by the gift of the ring and the crosier, but the
bishop or abbot elect was first to do homage to the king for the lands of his
see. Anselm died two years later, at the age of seventy-six, a worthy champion
of papal power and of scholastic learning.
Henry now
set himself to give England a strong government. Roger, bishop of Salisbury,
was made justiciar, and with his help Henry organized
the king’s court, the curia regis, and connected the courts of the shire with the
royal court. A ministerial nobility, dependent upon the crown, gradually grew
up in the place of the independent barons, whose power Henry destroyed. Royal
castles, well garrisoned, took the place of the feudal castles, which were
allowed to fall into decay. Queen Matilda died in 1118, a terrible loss for
Henry. She left a son, William, deeply loved by his father, and a daughter,
Matilda, who married the Emperor Henry V of Germany. But on November 25, 1120,
a terrible catastrophe occurred. William was crossing from Normandy to England,
with a throng of noble men and women, who were keeping themselves warm on a
cold winter's night with copious libations. The White Ship, as she was called,
ran upon a rock, and those in her were thrown into the water. William was
drowned in an attempt to save his sister, the Comtesse de la Perche. It is said that Henry never smiled again. A second
marriage brought him no children, so that the crown was left to his daughter
Matilda, known as the Empress Maud, who was recognized as heiress to the
kingdom of England and the duchy of Normandy. After she had lost her husband,
she married Geoffrey of Anjou, the son of the powerful crusader Fulk, who was known as Plantagenet, from the sprig of broom
which he always wore in his cap. Henry died in Normandy, in December 1135, but
his body was brought to England and buried, in the abbey of Reading, which he
had founded. He was a wise and powerful Sovereign, who loved war and the chase,
living mainly in the forests of Windsor and Woodstock. He left a number of
illegitimate children, the best loved of whom was Robert of Gloucester. He favored
science and learning, and encouraged the seminaries of Bec,
Canterbury, Oxford, and Winchester. Under his reign, good historians made their
appearance, and, although Latin was the common tongue amongst learned persons,
Norman-French came into use and took the place of Anglo-Saxon among the upper
classes.
While
Matilda was declared in Normandy to be the successor of Henry, matters took a
different turn in London. The Angevin husband of the empress was unpopular,
whereas Stephen, count of Blois, a son of Adela, the daughter of William the
Conqueror, who was the possessor of great wealth from his marriage with the
heiress of Eustace of Boulogne, was greatly beloved, and was supported by the
seneschal, Hugh of Bigod, by his own brother Henry,
bishop of Winchester, and by the majority of the people. He was crowned by the
archbishop of Canterbury on December 22, even before King Henry was buried. But
he had no capacity for government. It was said of him by a contemporary that he
was the mildest of men upon earth, the slowest to take offence and the readiest
to pardon, very easy of approach to the poor, and liberal of alms. He was
entirely unable to keep his barons in order, so that in his reign anarchy
triumphed and the poor were oppressed. The nobles, whether singly or combined,
were equal in strength to the king, and were therefore able to resist his
authority. As the law courts were impotent, war was the only resource.
The
consequences of this weak government were not long in showing themselves.
David, king of Scotland, Empress Maud’s uncle, invaded England, and was bought
off by the gifts of the earldom of Huntingdon to himself, and of Carlisle to his son. Robert of Gloucester, half-brother of Matilda, although he
took the oath of allegiance to Stephen, maintained an
armed neutrality, fortified by
the possession of the strong castle of Bristol. Stephen allowed the nobles to build castles all over
the country, filled with retainers who were no
better than robbers, who plundered
the country and burned the towns, so that the common people believed that “Christ and His saints
were asleep”. To secure his power, Stephen used the treasure
left by Henry to engage a force of mercenaries, wandering
soldiers, chiefly from Flanders
and Brabant, called Brabançons, assisted by others
from Brittany, commanded by the counts of Penthièvre and Richmond.
In 1137,
King David made another invasion of England, supported by a rising in the
south-west. He was, however, opposed by the aged Thurstan,
archbishop of York, who was carried through the army in a litter and so
inflamed the courage of the soldiers. Also, Walter Espè,
an old warrior with long hair and beard, addressed the host from a platform. A
battle was fought near Northallerton, called the
Battle of the Standard, from the appearance in it of the Italian caroccio. The
Scots were entirely defeated. But, in the treaty of Durham, which closed the
war, signed on April 9, 1138, Henry, the son of David, was invested with the
county of Northumberland. Stephen now alienated the church by his imprisonment
of Roger, bishop of Salisbury, and his nephew Alexander, bishop of Lincoln, who
had offended him by setting themselves up like the barons and building castles
in imitation of them. Even Henry of Winchester took the side of the clergy,
and, as legate of the pope, summoned a council at Winchester, which, however,
came to no conclusion. In 1139, Empress Maud landed, and was allowed by Stephen
to pass freely to Bristol, where she found an army levied by her half-brother,
Robert of Gloucester. In battle at Lincoln in 1141, Stephen was defeated, made
prisoner, and carried off to Bristol. In 1142, Maud was crowned at Winchester.
But she made herself unpopular by her strict government, and was compelled to
fly to Gloucester. Robert was taken prisoner by William of Ypres, and Henry,
who had crowned Maud, now returned to his brother’s side. The civil war
continued for six years with varying fortunes. The empress was nearly captured
at Oxford, and with difficulty escaped over fields covered with snow, and the
king nearly suffered the same fate. In the anarchy which ensued, the west of
England acknowledged Matilda, the east of England Stephen, the north of England
King David of Scotland, and the centre of England was divided amongst the great
earls. In 1147 Robert of Gloucester died, and the empress left England.
The
second crusade diverted the attention of the combatants to other matters;
Frederick Barbarossa became emperor, and Henry, Matilda’s son, married Eleanor
of Aquitaine, the divorced wife of Louis VII of France. Henry now landed in England in 1153,
and by the efforts of Theobald, archbishop of Canterbury, and Henry of
Winchester, a treaty was signed at Wallingford, at which it was arranged that
Stephen should reign for the remainder of his life and be succeeded by Henry.
This was made easier by the fact that Eustace, a son of Stephen, had died in
the previous year. Stephen himself died shortly afterwards, on October 25,
1154.
Henry II
reigned for thirty-five years, from 1154 to 1189. He was a great European
prince, and the founder of the judicial and parliamentary systems of our
country. Of his four sons, two became kings of England, and of his three
daughters, Matilda, the eldest, married Henry the Lion of Saxony; the second,
Eleanor, the king of Castile; and the third, Johanna, William the Second, king
of Sicily. Besides the kingdom of England, Henry ruled over Normandy and Maine,
in right of his mother, Anjou and Touraine in right of his father, and Poitou, Saintonge, Limousin, Guienne, and Gascony in right of his wife, so that he
possessed a large portion of France. He was a man of great ability and untiring
energy. He had the merit, shared by other English kings, of recognizing that
the real foundation of his power was the welfare of the nation which he
governed. His reign may be divided into three periods. In the first, from 1154
to 1162, he succeeded in weakening the feudal government of the nobles and
establishing the royal authority. He destroyed what are called the “adulterine”
castles which had been built in the reign of Stephen; he sent out of the
country the foreign mercenaries whom Stephen had employed; and he resumed the
royal estates which had been alienated by his predecessor. Following a precedent
set by Henry I, he allowed his feudal barons to commute their yearly service
for a pecuniary payment called scutage, which, besides rendering the barons
less warlike, gave the king money with which he could hire mercenaries. He
levied it first in 1159 for the prosecution of a war in Toulouse. At this time
the papal see was held by Nicholas Breakspear, the
only Englishman who ever wore the tiara. He used the authority over islands
supposed to be a prerogative of the pope by investing Henry with Ireland, which
however, he had to conquer.
The
second period of Henry’s reign, which lasted from 1162 to 1172, was occupied by
his struggle with the church, his judicial reforms, and the conquest of
Ireland. In 1162, Thomas Becket was made archbishop of Canterbury, at the age
of forty-four. He was born in London, of Norman descent, and belonged to the
middle classes. He was educated at Merton Priory in Surrey, and at the
University of Paris, and then entered the service of Theobald, archbishop of
Canterbury. He was one of the most remarkable of Englishmen, and deserves the
reverence with which he has always been treated. He was extremely religious, an
able ruler, very lovable, but, at the same time, headstrong and impetuous. He
was made chancellor in 1154, and showed himself a good financier and an able
judge. He succeeded in upholding at the same time the dignity of his office and
the authority of the king. But when he became archbishop he transferred the
zeal which he had displayed for the crown to extend the privileges of the
church. When money was required for the war in Wales, Becket opposed Henry’s
attempt to appropriate a local tax called the “Sheriff's Aid”, the first
instance of opposition to the king's financial measures since the Conquest. In
1164, at the royal palace of Clarendon, near Salisbury, a document was passed,
called the Constitutions of Clarendon, recording in sixteen clauses what Henry
declared to be the English customs, of which the following are the most
important : —(1) The separate trial of the clergy by their own order was forbidden.
Those accused of crime were to answer the charge in the king’s court—to be tried,
indeed, in the ecclesiastical courts, but, if convicted, to be degraded and
sent to the king’s court for sentence. (2) In order to check the appeals of the
clergy to Rome, they were not allowed to leave the kingdom without the king’s licence. (3) All appeals from the ecclesiastical courts
were to go to the king, and were to be finally decided in the archbishop’s
court, unless the king allowed them to be taken to Rome. (4) All elections to
archbishoprics, bishoprics, abbacies, and priories were to be made by the
clergy in the king’s chapel and with his assent, and the person elected was to
do homage to the king before consecration. (5) The sons of villeins were not to be ordained without the consent of their lords. (6) No tenant in
chief of the king or member of his household was to be excommunicated or placed
under an interdict without the king’s knowledge.
After
some hesitation, Becket accepted these articles as binding on the church. But
he soon repented of his action. He shut himself up in his palace at Canterbury,
and refused to perform any priestly functions until Pope Alexander should order
him to resume them. The pope, however, denounced the new constitutions. Whom
was Becket to obey? In a case which now arose, he violated them by appealing to
the Holy See. He was condemned for this and other matters in a council held at Northampton,
and fled to France, carrying with him his pallium and his seal. Crossing from
Sandwich, he at length reached Gravelines on November
2, 1164. After visiting Pope Alexander III, he took up his abode in the
Cistercian abbey of Pontigny, which had been assigned
to him as a residence. From this refuge he was driven by the action of Henry.
After expressing his confidence that God, who fed the birds of heaven and
clothed the lilies of the field, would not desert him and his, he retired to
the monastery of St. Columba at Sens. The quarrel between the archbishop and
the king shook the courts of Europe, and efforts were made in every direction
to reconcile them. We have no space to relate the thrilling story. At length,
in 1170, when the king’s eldest son had been crowned by the archbishop of York,
to the disgust of Becket, who asserted his right to perform the ceremony—when
the French king, Louis VII, was offended that his daughter Margaret, young
Henry’s wife, had not been crowned with him, and there was danger of war—when
the pope threatened Henry with an interdict,—Henry, like a wise statesman,
yielded. A reconciliation took place between the two enemies in a meadow near
Tours, on July 22, and on December 1 Becket returned in triumph to his
cathedral at Canterbury.
But he
had many enemies, who declared that he had not returned in peace, but with fire
and sword, to make his brother bishops a footstool under his feet. Three of the
bishops went to France, found the king at the castle of Bures,
near Bayeux, and told him that he would have no peace so long as Becket was
alive. Henry broke out into wrath against the man who had eaten his bread, and
now trampled him under foot—whom he had covered with benefits, and who now
treated him and his house with scorn. “By what cowards”, he cried, “am I
surrounded! Is there no one who will rid me of this paltry priest?”. Four of
his nobles, fired by these words, immediately left for England by different
roads—Richard Fitzurse, “Son of the Bear”; Hugh of Moreville, a rich baron of Northumberland; William Tracy;
and Richard Brito. The king sent to call them back,
but it was too late. Becket had set out to visit young Henry at Woodstock,
taking with him three valuable horses as a present, but he heard in London that
the young king would not see him. He returned in wrath to Canterbury, preached
on Christmas Day, from the text “Peace on earth, good will towards men”, and
excommunicated all those who stirred up strife between him and the king. He
embittered the feelings of his enemies, and on December 29, 1170, was
barbarously murdered by the four knights in the cathedral. When the body was undressed,
they found it clothed with a hair shirt, and bearing traces of recent penance.
The people streamed to the scene of the murder, the very blood was reverenced
as holy, and Becket was proclaimed a saint by the acclamation of the throng
before he was canonised.
Before
this momentous scene, Henry had effected important constitutional changes. In
1166, the Assize of Clarendon had established in criminal cases the “Jury of
Presentment”, by which twelve men of rank and position swore to reveal all
guilty persons, but to accuse no man falsely, and which was the origin of our
present grand jury. By the Grand Assize, a jury of recognition was introduced
into civil cases, which was the origin of our petty jury. A freeholder who had
been deprived of his land might demand a “Jury of Recognition” to judge his
case. In 1215, when the ordeal was abolished as a method of trial, by the pope,
it became the duty of the Jury of Recognition to judge the cases brought
forward by the Jury of Presentment. Also, in 1169, steps were taken to reduce
to submission the island of Ireland, granted to Henry by the pope, which was
effected Conquest by the labors of Robert FitzStephen,
Richard of Ireland, FitzGilbert, better known as Strongbow, and Maurice FitzGerald. An opportunity had arisen
when Dermot, king of Leinster, was driven from his kingdom and sought help from
Henry. Dermot died in 1171, and Henry went to Ireland to receive the submission
of Strongbow, who had become too powerful. A council
was held at Cashel, by which the church of Ireland, which had hitherto been
independent, was brought under the authority of the pope. After this, the
population of Ireland was divided into three sections—the inhabitants of what
was called the Pale, that is, the district immediately around Dublin, who were
loyal to the English crown; the mixed Anglo-Irish, who dwelt in the open
country; and the wild and rebellious natives in the west. These three sections
were constantly at war with each other. After the conquest of Ireland, Henry
was reconciled with the pope, and was solemnly absolved at Avranches in 1172. He renounced ostensibly all new customs prejudicial to the church, but
in effect a compromise was made—even, at last, on the question of the trial of criminous clerks.
The last
eighteen years of Henry’s reign were clouded with sorrow. In 1173, three of his
sons—Henry, Richard, and Geoffrey—rose against him, assisted by their mother,
the Queen Eleanor, and by the king of France. Young Henry did not care to wear
the crown without having some regal authority; Richard and Geoffrey hoped for appanages in France; Eleanor was enraged against her
husband in consequence of his infidelity; and Louis VII would have been glad to
see the French and English possessions of the British crown in different hands.
Hugh Bigod and several of the earls took the side of
the rebels, and William the Lion, of Scotland, invaded the kingdom from the
north. Civil war raged on both sides of the Channel. Henry called mercenaries
to his aid, including the dreaded Brabançons. Battles
were fought at Dol in Brittany, and at Bury St. Edmund’s
in England. Henry became convinced that the only remedy for these evils, which
he regarded as a punishment for his own misdeeds, was to do penance at the
shrine of the martyr. So, on July 12, 1174, happily in the middle of summer,
after hearing a sermon from Gilbert, bishop of London, he went, clad in the
shirt of penance, into the crypt, was flogged on his naked back by the priests
and monks, and spent the night on the bare stones with prayers and tears. The
next day he heard mass, presented the cathedral with costly gifts, was absolved
from all his sins, and entered London with rejoicings. The penance soon
produced its effect. On the very day that it was completed, William the Lion
was defeated at the battle of Alnwick, and was taken
prisoner. Hugh Bigod submitted. The kings of France
and England made friends at Gisors. William the Lion,
released from prison, acknowledged the supremacy of the English crown over the
Scottish in the treaty of Falaise. Henry, accompanied
by his reconciled son, gave solemn thanks at the shrine of Becket for his
friendly interposition.
In 1176,
Henry set himself to continue his judicial reforms. The Assize of Clarendon was
amended by the Assize of Northampton, which divided England into six circuits and
established a system of travelling judges, which still continues. A famous
treatise on the laws of England was compiled, perhaps by the Chief Justiciar, Ranulf de Glanville.
The old curia regis was reorganized, five judges being separated from the general fisco-judicial staff in 1178, and required to remain always
in the King’s Court, and hear all cases brought before them; the authority of
the sheriffs was strengthened in the counties; and all the departments of
government were reformed. Henry obtained for himself so much reputation by
these reforms that, in 1177, he was chosen as arbitrator between the kings of
Castile and Navarre, who had long been disputing with regard to their
respective frontiers. In 1181, the Assize of Arms made regulations for the
national militia, known by the Saxon name of the Fyrd;
and in 1184 the Assize of the Forest laid down rules for the management of the
forest lands.
In 1183,
the young Henry began to rebel once more against his father, but on June 11 he
died suddenly at Marcel in Querci, the king sending
him the ring from his finger, in token of forgiveness. He was more of a
Frenchman than an Englishman, but was admired by both friend and foe for his
knightly virtues, and praised by the poets of both the south and the north.
After his death Henry liberated his wife Eleanor from prison, in which she had
been confined for ten years, and allowed her to come to Normandy. He might have
looked forward to a few years of happiness, had it not been for his extravagant
affection for his worthless son John, the stubborn temper of his son Richard,
and the treachery of Geoffrey, who joined King Philip Augustus, Louis VII’s
successor on the throne of France, in an attack on Normandy, but died suddenly
in Paris, a posthumous child, Arthur, being born to him on August 19, 1186.
In 1187
occurred the capture of Jerusalem by Saladin, the effect of which we have
already described, and in the same year war broke out again between Henry and
Philip II. The expense of the new crusade was met by the imposition of the Saladin
tithe, already mentioned, which was the first tax on personal property. The war
still continued; Le Mans, Tours, and Samur fell into
the hands of the French; Brittany was in rebellion; John and Richard deserted
their father. Henry lay in the castle of Chinon,
broken in mind and body. He acknowledged himself to be the vassal of the king
of France, but when he saw that his son John was among the rebels he uttered a
curse against him and Richard, and gave up the ghost on July 6 : he was buried
in the monastery of Fontevrault. He was undoubtedly a
great king, as we have learnt from the relation of his life. We have said
nothing of his love for the fair Rosamund Clifford,
whose son Geoffrey became chancellor and bishop of Lincoln.
Notwithstanding
the domestic troubles of his reign, he left England in every respect in a
better condition than he found her. But the court was French, and, in order
that England might acquire her self-consciousness and proceed on the course of
orderly advance, it was necessary that she should lose her possessions in
France.
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