READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE HISTORY OF FRANCEFROMITS CONQUEST BY CLOVISTOTHE INVASION OF NAPLES BY CHARLES VIII IN 1494PART I.
Fall of the Roman Empire—Invasion of Clovis—First Race of
French Kings—Accession of Pepin—State of Italy—Charlemagne—His Reign and
Character—Louis the Debonair—His Successors—Calamitous State of the Empire in
the ninth and tenth Centuries—Accession of Hugh Capet—His first
Successors—Louis VII.—Philip Augustus— Conquest of Normandy—War in
Languedoc—Louis IX.—His Character—Digression upon the Crusades—Philip
III.—Philip IV.—Aggrandizement of French Monarchy under his Reign—Reigns of
his Children—Question of Salic Law—Claim of Edward III.
Before the conclusion of the
fifth century the mighty fabric of empire which valor and policy had founded
upon the seven hills of Rome was finally overthrown in all the west of Europe
by the barbarous nations from the north, whose martial energy and whose numbers
were irresistible. A race of men, formerly unknown or despised, had not only dismembered
that proud sovereignty, but permanently settled themselves in its fairest
provinces, and imposed their yoke upon the ancient possessors. The Vandals were
masters of Africa; the Suevi held part of Spain; the Visigoths possessed the
remainder, with a large portion of Gaul; the Burgundians occupied the provinces
watered by the Rhone and Saône; the Ostrogoths almost all Italy. The north-west
of Gaul, between the Seine and the Loire, some writers have filled with an
Armorican republic; while the remainder was still nominally subject to
the Roman empire, and governed by a certain Syagrius, rather with an
independent than a deputed authority.
At this time Clovis, king of
the Salian Franks, a tribe of Germans long connected with Rome, and originally
settled upon the right bank of the Rhine, but who had latterly penetrated
as far as Tournay and Cambray invaded Gaul, and defeated Syagrius at Soissons. [a.d. 486.] The result of this victory
was the subjugation of those provinces which had previously been considered as
Roman. But as their allegiance had not been very strict, so their loss was not
very severely felt; since the emperors of Constantinople were not too proud to
confer upon Clovis the titles of consul and patrician, which he was too prudent
to refuse.
Some years after this, Clovis
defeated the Alemanni, or Swabians, in a great battle at Zulpich, near Cologne. In consequence of a vow, as it is said, made during this engagement, and at
the instigation of his wife Clotilda, a princess of Burgundy, he became a
convert to Christianity, [a.d. 496.] It would be a fruitless inquiry whether he was sincere in this change;
but it is certain, at least, that no policy could have been more successful.
The Arian sect, which had been early introduced among the barbarous nations,
was predominant, though apparently without intolerance, in the Burgundian and
Visigoth courts; but the clergy of Gaul were strenuously attached to the
Catholic side, and, even before his conversion, had favored the arms of Clovis.
They now became his most zealous supporters, and were rewarded by him with
artful gratitude, and by his descendants with lavish munificence. Upon the
pretence of religion, he attacked Alaric, king of the Visigoths, and, by one
great victory near Poitiers overthrowing their empire in Gaul, reduced them to
the maritime province of Septimania, a narrow strip of coast between the Rhone and the Pyrenees, [a.d. 507.] The
last exploits of Clovis were the reduction of certain independent chiefs of his
own tribe and family, who were settled in the neighborhood of the Rhine. All
these he put to death by force or treachery; for he was cast in the true mould
of conquerors, and may justly be ranked among the first of his class, both for
the splendor and the guiltiness of his ambition.
Clovis left four sons; one
illegitimate, or at least born before his conversion; and three by his queen
Clotilda, [a.d. 511.] These four
made, it is said, an equal partition of his dominions, which comprehended not
only France, but the western and central parts of Germany, besides Bavaria, and
perhaps Swabia, which were governed by their own dependent, but hereditary,
chiefs. Thierry, the eldest, had what was called Austrasia, the eastern or
German division, and fixed his capital at Metz; Clodomir, at Orleans;
Childebert, at Paris; and Clotaire, at Soissons, During their reigns the
monarchy was aggrandized by the conquest of Burgundy. Clotaire, the youngest
brother, ultimately reunited all the kingdoms [a.d. 558] ; but upon his death they were again divided among his four sons, and
brought together a second time by another Clotaire, the grandson to the first, [a.d. 613.] It is a weary and
unprofitable task to follow these changes in detail, through scenes of tumult
and bloodshed, in which the eye meets with no sunshine, nor can rest upon any
interesting spot. It would be difficult, as Gibbon has justly observed, to find
anywhere more vice or less virtue. The names of two queens are distinguished
even in that age for the magnitude of their crimes: Fredegonde, the wife of
Chilperic, of whose atrocities none have doubted; and Brunehaut, Queen of
Austrasia, who has met with advocates in modern times, less, perhaps, from any
fair presumptions of her innocence than from compassion for the cruel death
which she underwent.
But after Dagobert, son of
Clotaire II, the kings of France dwindled into personal insignificance, and
are generally treated by later historians as insensati, or idiots. The whole
power of the kingdom devolved upon the mayors of the palace, originally
officers of the household, through whom petitions or representations were laid
before the king The weakness of sovereigns rendered this office important, and
still greater weakness suffered it to become elective; men of energetic talents
and ambition united it with military command; and the history of France for
half a century presents no names more conspicuous than those of Ebroin and
Grimoald, mayors of Neustria and Austrasia, the western and eastern divisions
of the French monarchy. These, however, met with violent ends; but a more
successful usurper of the royal authority was Pepin Heristal, first mayor, and
afterwards duke, of Austrasia; who united with almost an avowed sovereignty
over that division a paramount command over the French or Neustrian provinces,
where nominal kings of the Merovingian family were still permitted to exist.
This authority he transmitted to a more renowned hero, his son, Charles Martel,
who, after some less important exploits, was called upon to encounter a new and
terrible enemy. The Saracens, after subjugating Spain, had penetrated into the
very heart of France. Charles Martel gained a complete victory over them
between Tours and Poitiers, in which 300,000 Mohammedans are hyperbolically
asserted to have fallen. [a.d. 732.] The reward of this victory was the province of Septimania, which the
Saracens had conquered from the Visigoths.
Battle of Tours, 10 October 732Such powerful subjects were not
likely to remain long contented without the crown; but the circumstances under
which it was transferred from the race of Clovis are connected with one of the
most important revolutions in the history of Europe. The mayor Pepin inheriting
his father Charles Martel’s talents and ambition, made, in the name and with
the consent of the nation, a solemn reference to the Pope Zacharias, as to the deposition
of Childeric III, under whose nominal authority he himself was reigning. The
decision was favorable; that he who possessed the power should also bear the
title of king. The unfortunate Merovingian was dismissed into a convent, and
the Franks, with one consent, raised Pepin to the throne, the founder of a more
illustrious dynasty. In order to judge of the importance of this
revolution to the see of Rome, as well as to France, we must turn our eyes upon
the affairs of Italy.
The dominion of the Ostrogoths
was annihilated by the arms of Belisarius and Narses in the sixth century, and
that nation appears no more in history. But not long afterwards, the Lombards,
a people for some time settled in Pannonia, not only subdued that northern part
of Italy which has retained their name, but, extending themselves southward,
formed the powerful duchies of Spoleto and Benevento. The residence of their
kings was in Pavia; but the hereditary vassals, who held those two duchies,
might be deemed almost independent sovereigns. The rest of Italy was governed
by exarchs, — deputed by the Greek emperors, and fixed at Ravenna. In Rome itself neither the people nor the bishops, who had already conceived in part
their schemes of ambition, were much inclined to endure the superiority of Constantinople; yet their disaffection was counterbalanced by the inveterate
hatred as well as jealousy, with which they regarded the Lombards. But an
impolitic and intemperate persecution, carried on by two or three Greek
emperors against a favorite superstition, the — worship of images, excited
commotions throughout Italy, of which the Lombards took advantage, and easily
wrested the exarchate of Ravenna [a.d. 752] from the eastern empire. It was far from the design of the popes to see
their nearest enemies so much aggrandized; and any effectual assistance from
the Emperor Constantine Copronymus would have kept Rome still faithful. But
having no hope from his arms, and provoked by his obstinate intolerance, the pontiffs
had recourse to France; and the service they had rendered to Pepin led to
reciprocal obligations of the greatest magnitude. At the request of Stephen II
the new King of France descended from the Alps, drove the Lombards from their
recent conquests, and conferred them upon the pope. This memorable donation
nearly comprised the modern provinces of Romagna and the March of Ancona.
The state of Italy, which had
undergone no change for nearly two centuries, was now rapidly verging to a
great revolution. [a.d. 768.]
Under the shadow of a mighty name the Greek empire had concealed the extent of
its decline. That charm was now broken: and the Lombard kingdom, which had hitherto
appeared the only competitor in the lists, proved to have lost his own energy
in awaiting the occasion for its display. France was far more than a match for
the power of Italy, even if she had not been guided by the towering ambition
and restless activity of the son of Pepin. It was almost the first exploit of
Charlemagne, after the death of his brother Carloman [a.d. 772] had reunited the Frankish empire under his
dominion, to subjugate the kingdom of Lombardy, [a.d. 774.] Neither Pavia nor Verona, its most considerable
cities, interposed any material delay to his arms: and the chief resistance he
encountered was from the dukes of Friuli and Benevento, the latter of whom
could never be brought into thorough subjection to the conqueror. Italy,
however, be the cause what it might, seems to have tempted Charlemagne far less
than the dark forests of Germany. For neither the southern provinces, nor
Sicily, could have withstood his power if it had been steadily directed
against them. Even Spain hardly drew so much of his attention as the splendor
of the prize might naturally have excited. He gained, however, a very important
accession to his empire, by conquering from the Saracens the territory contained
between the Pyrenees and the Ebro. This was formed into the Spanish March,
governed by the Count of Barcelona, part of which at least must be considered
as appertaining to France till the twelfth century.
But the most tedious and
difficult achievement of Charlemagne was the reduction of the Saxons. The wars
with this nation, who occupied nearly the modern circles of Westphalia and Lower Saxony, lasted for thirty years. Whenever the conqueror withdrew his
armies, or even his person, the Saxons broke into fresh rebellion, which his
unparalleled rapidity of movement seldom failed to crush without delay. From
such perseverance on either side, destruction of the weaker could alone result.
A large colony of Saxons were finally transplanted into Flanders and Brabant,
countries hitherto ill- peopled, in which their descendants preserved the same
unconquerable spirit of resistance to oppression. Many fled to the kingdoms of Scandinavia, and, mingling with the Northmen, who were just preparing to run
their memorable career, revenged upon the children and subjects of Charlemagne
the devastation of Saxony. The remnant embraced Christianity, their aversion to
which had been the chief cause of their rebellions, and acknowledged the
sovereignty of Charlemagne —a submission which even Witikind, the second
Arminius of Germany, after such irresistible conviction of her destiny, did not
disdain to make. But they retained, in the main, their own laws; they were
governed by a duke of their own nation, if not of their own election; and for
many ages they were distinguished by their original character among the
nations of Germany.
The successes of Charlemagne on
the eastern frontier of his empire against the Sclavonians of Bohemia and Huns
or Avars of Pannonia, though obtained with less cost, were hardly less eminent.
In all his wars the newly conquered nations, or those whom fear had made
dependent allies, were employed to subjugate their neighbors, and the
incessant waste of fatigue and the sword was supplied by a fresh population
that swelled the expanding circle of dominion. I do not know that the limits of
the new western empire are very exactly defined by contemporary writers, nor
would it be easy to appreciate the degree of subjection in which the Sclavonian
tribes were held. As an organized mass of provinces, regularly governed by
imperial officers, it seems to have been nearly bounded, in Germany, by the
Elbe, the Saale, the Bohemian mountains, and a line drawn from thence crossing
the Danube above Vienna, and prolonged to the Gulf of Istria. Part of Dalmatia
was comprised in the duchy of Friuli. In Italy the empire extended not much
beyond the modern frontier of Naples, if we exclude, as was the fact, the
duchy of Benevento from anything more than a titular subjection. The Spanish
boundary, as has been said already, was the Ebro.
A seal was put to the glory of
Charlemagne when Leo III, in the name of the Roman people, placed upon his head
the imperial crown, [a.d. 800]. His
father, Pepin, had borne the title of Patrician, and he had himself exercised,
with that title, a regular sovereignty over Rome. Money was coined in his
name, and an oath of fidelity was taken by the clergy and people. But the
appellation of Emperor seemed to place his authority over all his subjects on a
new footing. It was full of high and indefinite pretension, tending to
overshadow the free election of the Franks by a fictitious descent from Augustus.
A fresh oath of fidelity to him as emperor was demanded from his subjects. His
own discretion, however, prevented him from affecting those more despotic
prerogatives which the imperial name might still be supposed to convey.
In analyzing the characters of
heroes it is hardly possible to separate altogether the share of fortune from
their own. The epoch made by Charlemagne in the history of the world, the
illustrious families which prided themselves in him as their progenitor, the
very legends of romance, which are full of his fabulous exploits, have cast a
lustre around his head, and testify the greatness that has embodied itself in
his name. None, indeed, of Charlemagne’s wars can be compared with the Saracenic
victory of Charles Martel; but that was a contest for freedom, his for
conquest; and fame is more partial to successful aggression than to patriotic
resistance. As a scholar, his acquisitions were probably little superior to
those of his unrespected son; and in several points of view the glory of
Charlemagne might be extenuated by an analytical dissection. But rejecting a
mode of judging equally uncandid and fallacious, we shall find that he
possessed in everything that grandeur of conception which distinguishes
extraordinary minds. Like Alexander, he seemed born for universal innovation:
in a life restlessly active, we see him reforming the coinage and establishing
the legal divisions of money; gathering about him the learned of every country;
founding schools and collecting libraries; interfering, but with the tone of a
king, in religious controversies; aiming, though prematurely, at the formation
of a naval force; attempting, for the sake of commerce, the magnificent
enterprise of uniting the Rhine and Danube; and meditating to mould the
discordant codes of Roman and barbarian laws into an uniform system.
The great qualities of
Charlemagne were, indeed, alloyed by the vices of a barbarian and a conqueror.
Nine wives, whom he divorced with very little ceremony, attest the license of
his private life, which his temperance and frugality can hardly be said to
redeem. Unsparing of blood, though not constitutionally cruel, and wholly
indifferent to the means which his ambition prescribed, he beheaded in one day
four thousand Saxons—an act of atrocious butchery, after which his
persecuting edicts, pronouncing the pain of death against those who refused
baptism, or even who ate flesh during Lent, seem scarcely worthy of notice.
This union of barbarous ferocity with elevated views of national improvement
might suggest the parallel of Peter the Great. But the degrading habits and
brute violence of the Muscovite place him at an immense distance from the
restorer of the empire.
A strong sympathy for
intellectual excellence was the leading characteristic of Charlemagne, and this
undoubtedly biassed him in the chief political error of his conduct—that of
encouraging the power and pretensions of the hierarchy. But, perhaps, his
greatest eulogy is written in the disgraces of succeeding times and the
miseries of Europe. He stands alone, like a beacon upon a waste, or a rock in
the broad ocean. His sceptre was the bow of Ulysses, which could not be drawn
by any weaker hand. In the dark ages of European history the reign of
Charlemagne affords a solitary resting-place between two long periods of
turbulence and ignominy, deriving the advantages of contrast both from that of
the preceding dynasty and of a posterity for whom he had formed an empire which
they were unworthy and unequal to maintain.
Pepin, the eldest son of
Charlemagne, died before him, leaving a natural son, named Bernard. Even if he
had been legitimate, the right of representation was not at all established
during these ages; indeed, the general prejudice seems to have inclined against
it. Bernard, therefore, kept only the kingdom of Italy, which had been
transferred to his father; while Louis, the younger son of Charlemagne, inherited
the empire. But, in a short time, Bernard, having attempted a rebellion against
his uncle, was sentenced to lose his eyes, which occasioned his death [a.d. 817]—a cruelty more agreeable to
the prevailing tone of manners than to the character of Louis, who bitterly
reproached himself for the severity he had been persuaded to use.
Under this prince, called by
the Italians the Pious, and by the French the Debonair, or Good-natured, the
mighty structure of his father’s power began rapidly to decay. I do not know
that Louis deserves so much contempt as he has undergone; but historians have
in general more indulgence for splendid crimes than for the weaknesses of
virtue. There was no defect in Louis’s understanding or courage; he was accomplished
in martial exercises, and in all the learning which an education, excellent for
that age, could supply. No one was ever more anxious to reform the abuses of
administration; and whoever compares his capitularies with those of
Charlemagne will perceive that, as a legislator, he was even superior to his
father. The fault lay entirely in his heart; and this fault was nothing but a
temper too soft and a conscience too strict. It is not wonderful that the
empire should have been speedily dissolved; a succession of such men as Charles
Martel, Pepin, and Charlemagne, could alone have preserved its integrity; but
the misfortunes of Louis and his people were immediately owing to the following
errors of his conduct.
Soon after his accession Louis
thought fit to associate his eldest son, Lothaire, to the empire, and to confer
the provinces of Bavaria and Aquitaine, as subordinate kingdoms, upon the two
younger, Louis and Pepin. The step was, in appearance, conformable to his
father’s policy, who had acted towards himself in a similar manner. But such
measures are not subject to general rules, and exact a careful regard to
characters and circumstances. The principle, however, which regulated this
division was learned from Charlemagne, and could alone, if strictly pursued,
have given unity and permanence to the empire. The elder brother was to preserve
his superiority over the others, so that they should neither make peace nor
war, nor even give answer to ambassadors, without his consent. Upon the death
of either no further partition was to be made; but whichever of his children
might become the popular choice was to inherit the whole kingdom, under the
same superiority of the head of the family. This compact was, from the beginning,
disliked by the younger brothers; and an event, upon which Louis does not seem
to have calculated, soon disgusted his colleague Lothaire. Judith of Bavaria,
the emperor’s second wife, an ambitious woman, bore him a son, by name
Charles, whom both parents were naturally anxious to place on an equal footing
with his brothers. But this could only be done at the expense of Lothaire, who
was ill disposed to see his empire still further dismembered for this child of
a second bed. Louis passed his life in a struggle with three undutiful sons,
who abused his paternal kindness by constant rebellions.
These were rendered more formidable
by the concurrence of a different class of enemies, whom it had been another
error of the emperor to provoke. Charlemagne had assumed a thorough control and
supremacy over the clergy; and his son was perhaps still more vigilant in
chastising their irregularities, and reforming their rules of discipline. But
to this, which they had been compelled to bear at the hands of the first, it
was not equally easy for the second to obtain their submission. Louis therefore
drew on himself the inveterate enmity of men who united with the turbulence of
martial nobles a skill in managing those engines of offence which were peculiar
to their order, and to which the implicit devotion of his character laid him
very open. Yet, after many vicissitudes of fortune, and many days of ignominy,
his wishes were eventually accomplished. [a.d. 840.] Charles, his youngest son, surnamed the Bald, obtained, upon his death,
most part of France, while Germany fell to the share of Louis, and the rest of
the imperial dominions, with the title, to the eldest, Lothaire. [a.d. 847.] This partition was the
result of a sanguinary, though short, contest; and it gave a fatal blow to the
empire of the Franks. For the treaty of Verdun, in 843, abrogated the
sovereignty that had been attached to the eldest brother and to the imperial
name in former partitions: each held his respective kingdom as an independent
right. This is the epoch of a final separation between the French and German
members of the empire. Its millenary was celebrated by some of the latter
nation in 1843.
The subsequent partitions made among the children of these brothers are of too rapid succession to be here related. In about forty years the empire was nearly reunited under Charles the Fat, son of Louis of Germany [Emperor A.D. 881; King of France, 885]; but his short and inglorious reign ended in his deposition, [a.d. 887.] From this time the possession of Italy was contested among her native princes; Germany fell at first to an illegitimate descendant of Charlemagne, and in a short time was entirely lost by his family; two kingdoms, afterwards united, were formed by usurpers out of what was then called Burgundy, and comprised the provinces between the Rhone and the Alps, with Franche Comté, and great part of Switzerland. In France the Carolingian kings continued for another century; but their line was interrupted two or three times by the election or usurpation of a powerful family, the counts of Paris and Orleans, who ended, like the old mayors of the palace, in dispersing the phantoms of royalty they had professed to serve. [Kings of France: Eudes, a.d. 887; Charles the Simple, 898; Robert ( ?), 922; Ralph, 923; Louis IV, 936; Lothaire, 954; Louis V, 986; counts of Paris.] Hugh Capet, the representative of this house upon the death
of Louis V, placed himself upon the throne; thus founding the third and most
permanent race of French sovereigns. Before this happened, the descendants of
Charlemagne had sunk into insignificance, and retained little more of France
than the city of Laon. The rest of the kingdom had been seized by the powerful
nobles, who, with the nominal fidelity of the feudal system, maintained its
practical independence and rebellious spirit
These were times of great
misery to the people, and the worst, perhaps, that Europe has ever known. Even
under Charlemagne, we have abundant proofs of the calamities which the people
suffered. The light which shone around him was that of a consuming fire. The
free proprietors who had once considered themselves as only called upon to
resist foreign invasion, were harassed by endless expeditions, and dragged away
to the Baltic Sea, or the banks of the Drave. Many of them, as we learn from
his Capitularies, became ecclesiastics to avoid military conscription. But far
worse must have been their state under the lax government of succeeding times,
when the dukes and counts, no longer checked by the vigorous administration of
Charlemagne, were at liberty to play the tyrants in their several territories,
of which they now became almost the sovereigns. The poorer landholders
accordingly were forced to bow their necks to the yoke; and, either by compulsion
or through hope of being better protected, submitted their independent
patrimonies to the feudal tenure.
But evils still more terrible
than these political abuses were the lot of those nations who had been subject
to Charlemagne. They, indeed, may appear to us little better than ferocious
barbarians; but they were exposed to the assaults of tribes, in comparison of
whom they must be deemed humane and polished. Each frontier of the empire had
to dread the attack of an enemy. The coasts of Italy were continually alarmed
by the Saracens of Africa, who possessed themselves of Sicily and Sardinia, and
became masters of the Mediterranean Sea. Though the Greek dominions in the
south of Italy were chiefly exposed to them, they twice insulted and ravaged
the territory of Rome [a.d. 846-849]; nor was there any security even in the neighborhood of the maritime
Alps, where, early in the tenth century, they settled a piratical colony.
Much more formidable were the
foes by whom Germany was assailed. The Slavonians, a widely extended people
whose language is still spoken upon half the surface of Europe, had occupied
the countries of Bohemia, Poland, and Pannonia, on the eastern confines of
the empire, and from the time of Charlemagne acknowledged its superiority. But
at the end of the ninth century, a Tartarian tribe, the Hungarians,
overspreading that country which since has borne their name, and moving forward
like a vast wave, brought a dreadful reverse upon Germany. Their numbers were
great, their ferocity untamed. They fought with light cavalry and light armor,
trusting to their showers of arrows, against which the swords and lances of the
European armies could not avail. The memory of Attila was renewed in the
devastations of these savages, who, if they were not his compatriots, resembled
them both in their countenances and customs. All Italy, all Germany, and the
south of France felt this scourge till Henry the Fowler, and Otho the Great,
drove them back by successive victories within their own limits [a.d. 934-954], where, in a short time,
they learned peaceful arts, adopted the religion and followed the policy of
Christendom.
If any enemies could be more
destructive than these Hungarians, they were the pirates of the north, known
commonly by the name of Normans. The love of a predatory life seems to have
attracted adventurers of different nations to the Scandinavian seas, from
whence they infested, not only by maritime piracy, but continual invasions, the
northern coasts both of France and Germany. The causes of their sudden
appearance are inexplicable, or at least could only be sought in the ancient
traditions of Scandinavia. For, undoubtedly, the coasts of France and England
were as little protected from depredations under the Merovingian kings, and
those of the Heptarchy, as in subsequent times. Yet only one instance of an
attack from this side is recorded, and that before the middle of the sixth
century till the age of Charlemagne. In 787 the Danes, as we call those
northern plunderers, began to infest England, which lay most immediately open
to their incursions. Soon afterwards they ravaged the coasts of France.
Charlemagne repulsed them by means of his fleets; yet they pillaged a few
places during his reign. It is said that, perceiving one day, from a port in
the Mediterranean, some Norman vessels, which had penetrated into that sea, he
shed tears, in anticipation of the miseries which awaited his empire. In
Louis’s reign their depredations upon the coast were more incessant, but they
did not penetrate into the inland country till that of Charles the Bald. The
wars between that prince and his family, which exhausted France of her noblest
blood, the insubordination of the provincial governors, even the instigation of
some of Charles’s enemies, laid all open to their inroads. They adopted an
uniform plan of warfare both in France and England; sailing up navigable
rivers in their vessels of small burden, and fortifying the islands which they
occasionally found, they made these intrenchments at once an asylum for their
women and children, a repository for their plunder, and a place of retreat from
superior force. After pillaging a town they retired to these strongholds or to
their ships; and it was not till 872 that they ventured to keep possession of Angers, which, however, they were compelled to evacuate. Sixteen years
afterwards they laid siege to Paris, and committed the most ruinous devastations
on the neighboring country. As these Normans were unchecked by religious awe,
the rich monasteries, which had stood harmless amidst the havoc of Christian
war, were overwhelmed in the storm. Perhaps they may have endured some
irrecoverable losses of ancient learning; but their complaints are of monuments
disfigured, bones of saints and kings dispersed, treasures carried away. St.
Denis redeemed its abbot from captivity with six hundred and eighty-five
pounds of gold. All the chief abbeys were stripped about the same time, either
by the enemy, or for contributions to the public necessity. So impoverished was
the kingdom, that in 860 Charles the Bald had great difficulty in collecting
three thousand pounds of silver to subsidize a body of Normans against their
countrymen. The kings of France, too feeble to prevent or repel these invaders,
had recourse to the palliative of buying peace at their hands, or rather
precarious armistices, to which reviving thirst of plunder soon put an end. At length
Charles the Simple, in 918, ceded a great province, which they had already
partly occupied, partly rendered desolate, and which has derived from them the
name of Normandy. Ignominious as this appears, it proved no impolitic step.
Rollo, the Norman chief, with all his subjects, became Christians and Frenchmen; and the kingdom was at once relieved from a terrible enemy, and strengthened
by a race of hardy colonists.
The accession of Hugh Capet had
not the immediate effect of restoring the royal authority over France, [a.d. 987.] His own very extensive fief
was now, indeed, united to the crown; but a few great vassals occupied the
remainder of the kingdom. Six of these obtained, at a subsequent time, the
exclusive appellation of peers of France,—the Count of Flanders, whose fief
stretched from the Scheldt to the Somme; the Count of Champagne; the Duke of
Normandy, to whom Brittany did homage; the Duke of Burgundy, on whom the Count
of Nivernois seems to have depended; the Duke of Aquitaine, whose territory,
though less than the ancient kingdom of that name, comprehended Poitou,
Limousin, and most of Guienne, with the feudal superiority over the Angoumois,
and some other central districts; and lastly the Count of Toulouse, who
possessed Languedoc, with the small countries of Quercy and Rouergue, and the
superiority over Auvergne. Besides these six, the Duke of Gascony, not long
afterwards united with Aquitaine, the counts of Anjou, Ponthieu, and
Vermandois, the Viscount of Bourges, the lords of Bourbon and Coucy, with one
or two other vassals, held immediately of the last Carolingian kings. This was
the aristocracy, of which Hugh Capet usurped the direction; for the suffrage of
no general assembly gave a sanction to his title. On the death of Louis V he
took advantage of the absence of Charles, Duke of Lorraine, who, as the deceased
king’s uncle, was nearest heir, and procured his own consecration at Rheims. At
first he was by no means acknowledged in the kingdom; but his contest with
Charles proving successful, the chief vassals ultimately gave at least a tacit
consent to the usurpation, and permitted the royal name to descend undisputed
upon his posterity. But this was almost the sole attribute of sovereignty
which the first kings of the third dynasty enjoyed. For a long period before
and after the accession of that family France has, properly speaking, no
national history. The character or fortune of those who were called its kings
were little more important to the majority of the nation than those of foreign
princes. [Robert, a.d. 996; Henry
I, 1031; Philip, 1060.] Undoubtedly, the degree of influence which they
exercised with respect to the vassals of the crown varied according to their
power and their proximity. Over Guienne and Toulouse the first four Capets had
very little authority; nor do they seem to have ever received assistance from
them either in civil or national wars. With provinces nearer to their own
domains, such as Normandy and Flanders, they were frequently engaged in
alliance or hostility; but each seemed rather to proceed from the policy of
independent states than from the relation of a sovereign towards his subjects.
It should be remembered that,
when the fiefs of Paris and Orleans are said to have been reunited by Hugh
Capet to the crown, little more is understood than the feudal superiority over
the vassals of these provinces. As the kingdom of Charlemagne’s posterity was
split into a number of great fiefs, so each of these contained many barons,
possessing exclusive immunities within their own territories, waging war at
their pleasure, administering justice to their military tenants and other subjects,
and free from all control beyond the conditions of the feudal compact. At the
accession of Louis VI in 1108, the cities of Paris, Orleans, and Bourges, with
the immediately adjacent districts, formed the most considerable portion of the
royal domain. A number of petty barons, with their fortified castles,
intercepted the communication between these, and waged war against the king
almost under the walls of his capital. It cost Louis a great deal of trouble
to reduce the lords of Montlhery, and other places within a few miles of Paris.
Under this prince, however, who had more activity than his predecessors, the
royal authority considerably revived. From his reign we may date the systematic
rivalry of the French and English monarchies. Hostilities had several times
occurred between Philip I and the two Williams; but the wars that began under
Louis VI lasted, with no long interruption, for three centuries and a half,
and form, indeed, the most leading feature of French history during the middle
ages. Of all the royal vassals, the dukes of Normandy were the proudest and
most powerful. Though they had submitted to do homage, they could not forget
that they came in originally by force, and that in real strength they were
fully equal to their sovereign. Nor had the conquest of England any tendency
to diminish their pretensions.
Louis VII ascended the throne
with better prospects than his father, [a.d. 1137.] He had married Eleanor, heiress of the great duchy of Guienne. But this
union, which promised an immense accession of strength to the crown, was
rendered unhappy by the levities of that princess. Repudiated by Louis, who
felt rather as a husband than a king, Eleanor immediately married Henry II of
England, who, already inheriting Normandy from his mother and Anjou from his
father, became possessed of more than one-half of France, and an overmatch for
Louis, even if the great vassals of the crown had been always ready to maintain
its supremacy. One might venture, perhaps, to conjecture that the sceptre of
France would eventually have passed from the Capets to the Plantagenets, if
the vexatious quarrel with Becket at one time, and the successive rebellions
fomented by Louis at a later period, had not embarrassed the great talents and
ambitious spirit of Henry.
But the scene quite changed
when Philip Augustus, son of Louis VII, came upon the stage, [a.d. 1180.] No prince comparable to
him in systematic ambition and military enterprise had reigned in France since
Charlemagne. From his reign the French monarchy dates the recovery of its
lustre. He wrested from the Count of Flanders the Vermandois (that part of
Picardy which borders on the Isle of France and Champagne), and subsequently,
the county of Artois. But the most important conquests of Philip were obtained
against the kings of England. [Conquest of Normandy, 1203.] Even Richard I,
with all his prowess, lost ground in struggling against an adversary not less
active, and more politic, than himself. But when John not only took possession
of his brother’s dominions, but confirmed his usurpation by the murder, as was
very probably surmised, of the heir, Philip, artfully taking advantage of the
general indignation, summoned him as his vassal to the court of his peers. John
demanded a safe-conduct. Willingly, said Philip; let him come unmolested. And
return? inquired the English envoy. If the judgment of his peers permit him,
replied the king. By all the saints of France, he exclaimed, when further
pressed, he shall not return unless acquitted. The Bishop of Ely still
remonstrated that the Duke of Normandy could not come without the King of
England; nor would the barons of that country permit their sovereign to run the
risk of death or imprisonment. What of that, my lord bishop? cried Philip. It
is well known that my vassal the Duke of Normandy acquired England by force.
But if a subject obtains any accession of dignity, shall his paramount lord
therefore lose his rights ?
It may be doubted whether, in
thus citing John before his court, the King of France did not stretch his
feudal sovereignty beyond its acknowledged limits. Arthur was certainly no immediate
vassal of the crown for Brittany; and, though he had done homage to Philip for
Anjou and Maine, yet a subsequent treaty had abrogated his investiture, and
confirmed his uncle in the possession of those provinces. But the vigor of
Philip, and the meanness of his adversary, cast a shade over all that might be
novel or irregular in these proceedings. John, not appearing at his summons,
was declared guilty of felony, and his fiefs confiscated. The execution of this
sentence was not intrusted to a dilatory arm. Philip poured his troops into
Normandy, and took town after town, while the King of England, infatuated by
his own wickedness and cowardice, made hardly an attempt at defence. In two
years Normandy, Maine, and Anjou were irrecoverably lost. Poitou and Guienne resisted
longer; but the conquest of the first was completed by Louis VIII, successor
of Philip [a.d. 1223], and the
subjection of the second seemed drawing near, when the arms of Louis were
diverted to different but scarcely less advantageous objects.
The country of Languedoc,
subject to the counts of Toulouse, had been unconnected, beyond any other part
of France, with the kings of the house of Capet. Louis VII, having married
his sister to the reigning count, and travelled himself through the country,
began to exercise some degree of authority, chiefly in confirming the rights
of ecclesiastical bodies, who were vain, perhaps, of this additional sanction
to the privileges which they already possessed. But the remoteness of their
situation, with a difference in language and legal usages, still kept the
people of this province apart from those of the north of France.
About the middle of the twelfth
century, certain religious opinions, which it is not easy, nor, for our present
purpose, material to define, but, upon every supposition, exceedingly adverse
to those of the church, began to spread over Languedoc. Those who imbibed them
have borne the name of Albigeois, though they were in no degree peculiar to the
district of Albi. In despite of much preaching and some persecution, these
errors made a continual progress; till Innocent III, in 1198, despatched
commissaries, the seed of the inquisition, with ample powers both to
investigate and to chastise. Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse, whether inclined
towards the innovators, as was then the theme of reproach, or, as is more
probable, disgusted with the insolent interference of the pope and his
missionaries, provoked them to pronounce a sentence of excommunication against
him. [a.d. 1208.] Though this was
taken off, he was still suspected; and upon the assassination of one of the
inquisitors, in which Raymond had no concern, Innocent published a crusade
both against the count and his subjects, calling upon the King of France, and
the nobility of that kingdom, to take up the cross, with all the indulgences
usually held out as allurements to religious warfare. Though Philip would not
interfere, a prodigious number of knights undertook this enterprise, led partly
by ecclesiastics, and partly by some of the first barons in France. It was
prosecuted with every atrocious barbarity which superstition, the mother of
crimes, could inspire. Languedoc, a country, for that age, flourishing and
civilized, was laid waste by these desolators; her cities burned; her
inhabitants swept away by fire and the sword. And this was to punish a
fanaticism ten thousand times more innocent than their own, and errors which,
according to the worst imputations, left the laws of humanity and the peace of
social life unimpaired.
The crusaders were commanded by
Simon de Montfort, a man, like Cromwell, whose intrepidity, hypocrisy, and ambition,
marked him for the hero of a holy war. The energy of such a mind, at the head
of an army of enthusiastic warriors, may well account for successes which then
appeared miraculous. But Montfort was cut off before he could realize his
ultimate object, an independent principality; and Raymond was able to bequeath
the inheritance of his ancestors to his son. Rome, however, was not yet
appeased; upon some new pretence she raised up a still more formidable enemy
against the younger Raymond. Louis VIII suffered himself to be diverted from
the conquest of Guienne, to take the cross against the supposed patron of
heresy. After a short and successful war, Louis, dying prematurely, left the
crown of France to a son only twelve years old. But the Count of Toulouse was
still pursued, till, hopeless of safety in so unequal a struggle, he concluded
a treaty upon very hard terms. By this he ceded the greater part of Languedoc;
and, giving his daughter in marriage to Alphonso, brother of Louis IX, confirmed
to them, and to the king in failure of their descendants, the reversion of the
rest, in exclusion of any other children whom he might have. Thus fell the
ancient house of Toulouse, through one of those strange combinations of
fortune, which thwart the natural course of human prosperity, and disappoint
the plans of wise policy and beneficent government.
The rapid progress of royal
power under Philip Augustus and his son had scarcely given the great vassals
time to reflect upon the change which it produced in their situation. The
crown, with which some might singly have measured their forces, was now an
equipoise to their united weight. And such an union was hard to be accomplished
among men not always very sagacious in policy, and divided by separate
interests and animosities. They were not, however, insensible to the crisis of
their feudal liberties; and the minority of Louis IX, guided only by his
mother, the regent, Blanche of Castile, seemed to offer a favorable opportunity
for recovering their former situation. Some of the most considerable barons,
the counts of Brittany, Champagne, and La Marche, had, during the time of Louis
VIII, shown an unwillingness to push the Count of Toulouse too far, if they did
not even keep up a secret understanding with him. They now broke out into open
rebellion; but the address of Blanche detached some from the league, and her
firmness subdued the rest. For the first fifteen years of Louis’s reign, the
struggle was frequently renewed; till repeated humiliations convinced the
refractory that the throne was no longer to be shaken. A prince so feeble as
Henry III was unable to afford them that aid from England, which, if his
grandfather or son had then reigned, might probably have lengthened these civil
wars.
But Louis IX had methods of
preserving his ascendency very different from military prowess. That excellent
prince was perhaps the most eminent pattern of unswerving probity and Christian
strictness of conscience that ever held the sceptre in any country. There is a
peculiar beauty in the reign of St. Louis, because it shows the inestimable
benefit which a virtuous king may confer on his people, without possessing any
distinguished genius. For nearly half a century that he governed France there
is not the smallest want of moderation or disinterestedness in his actions;
and yet he raised the influence of the monarchy to a much higher point than the
most ambitious of his predecessors. To the surprise of his own and later times,
he restored great part of his conquests to Henry III, whom he might naturally
hope to have expelled from France. It would indeed have been a tedious work to
conquer Guienne, which was full of strong places; and the subjugation of such a
province might have alarmed the other vassals of his crown. But it is the
privilege only of virtuous minds to perceive that wisdom resides in moderate
counsels: no sagacity ever taught a selfish and ambitious sovereign to forego
the sweetness of immediate power. An ordinary king, in the circumstances of the
French monarchy, would have fomented, or, at least, have rejoiced in, the
dissensions which broke out among the principal vassals; Louis constantly
employed himself to reconcile them. In this, too, his benevolence had all the
effects of farsighted policy. It had been the practice of his three last predecessors
to interpose their mediation in behalf of the less powerful classes, the
clergy, the inferior nobility, and the inhabitants of chartered towns. Thus the
supremacy of the crown became a familiar idea; but the perfect integrity of St.
Louis wore away all distrust, and accustomed even the most jealous feudatories
to look upon him as their judge and legislator. And as the royal authority was
hitherto shown only in its most amiable prerogatives, the dispensation of
favor, and the redress of wrong, few were watchful enough to remark the
transition of the French constitution from a feudal league to an absolute
monarchy.
It was perhaps fortunate for
the display of St. Louis’s virtues that the throne had already been
strengthened by the less innocent exertions of Philip Augustus and Louis VIII.
A century earlier his mild and scrupulous character, unsustained by great
actual power, might not have inspired sufficient awe. But the crown was now
grown so formidable, and Louis was so eminent for his firmness and bravery,
qualities without which every other virtue would have been ineffectual, that no
one thought it safe to run wantonly into rebellion, while his disinterested
administration gave no one a pretext for it. Hence the latter part of his reign
was altogether tranquil, and employed in watching over the public peace and the
security of travellers; administering justice personally, or by the best
counsellors; and compiling that code of feudal customs called the
Establishments of St. Louis, which is the first monument of legislation after
the accession of the house of Capet. Not satisfied with the justice of his own
conduct, Louis aimed at that act of virtue which is rarely practised by private
men, and had perhaps no example among kings—restitution. Commissaries were
appointed to inquire what possessions had been unjustly annexed to the royal
domain during the last two reigns. These were restored to the proprietors, or,
where length of time had made it difficult to ascertain the claimant, their
value was distributed among the poor.
It has been hinted already that
all this excellence of heart in Louis IX was not attended with that strength
of understanding, which is necessary, we must allow, to complete the
usefulness of a sovereign. During his minority Blanche of Castile, his mother,
had filled the office of Regent with great courage and firmness. But after he
grew up to manhood, her influence seems to have passed the limit which
gratitude and piety would have assigned to it; and, as her temper was not very
meek or popular, exposed the king to some degree of contempt. He submitted even
to be restrained from the society of his wife Margaret, daughter of Raymond
Count of Provence, a princess of great virtue and conjugal affection. Joinville
relates a curious story, characteristic of Blanche’s arbitrary conduct, and sufficiently
derogatory to Louis.
But the principal weakness of
this king, which almost effaced all the good effects of his virtues, was
superstition. It would be idle to sneer at those habits of abstemiousness and
mortification which were part of the religion of his age, and, at the worst,
were only injurious to his own comfort. But he had other prejudices, which,
though they may be forgiven, must never be defended. No man was ever more
impressed than St. Louis with a belief in the duty of exterminating all enemies
to his own faith. With these he thought no layman ought to risk himself in the
perilous ways of reasoning, but to make answer with his sword as stoutly as a
strong arm and a fiery zeal could carry that argument.” Though, fortunately
for his fame, the persecution against the Albigeois, which had been the
disgrace of his father's short reign, was at an end before he reached manhood,
he suffered an hypocritical monk to establish a tribunal at Paris for the
suppression of heresy, where many innocent persons suffered death.
But no events in Louis’s life
were more memorable than his two crusades, which lead us to look back on the
nature and circumstances of that most singular phenomenon in European history.
Though the crusades involved all the western nations of Europe, without
belonging particularly to any one, yet, as France was more distinguished than
the rest in most of those enterprises, I shall introduce the subject as a sort
of digression from the main course of French history.
Even before the violation of
Palestine by the Saracen arms it had been a prevailing custom among the
Christians of Europe to visit those scenes rendered interesting by religion,
partly Through delight in the effects of local association, partly in obedience
to the prejudices or commands of superstition. These pilgrimages became more
frequent in later times, in spite, perhaps in consequence, of the danger and
hardships which attended them. For a while the Mohammedan possessors of
Jerusalem permitted, or even encouraged, a devotion which they found lucrative;
but this was interrupted whenever the ferocious insolence with which they
regarded all infidels got the better of their rapacity. During the eleventh
century, when, from increasing superstition and some particular fancies, the
pilgrims were more numerous than ever, a change took place in the government of
Palestine, which was overrun by the Turkish hordes from the North. These barbarians
treated the visitors of Jerusalem with still greater contumely, mingling with their
Mohammedan bigotry, a consciousness of strength and courage, and a scorn of the
Christians, whom they knew only by the debased natives of Greece and Syria, or
by these humble and defenceless palmers. When such insults became known
throughout Europe, they excited a keen sensation of resentment among nations
equally courageous and devout, which, though wanting as yet any definite means
of satisfying itself, was ripe for whatever favorable conjuncture might arise.
Twenty years before the first
crusade Gregory VII had projected the scheme of embodying Europe in arms
against Asia—a scheme worthy of his daring mind, and which, perhaps, was never
forgotten by Urban II, who in everything loved to imitate his great
predecessor. This design of Gregory was founded upon the supplication of the
Greek emperor Michael, which was renewed by Alexius Comnenus to Urban with
increased importunity. The Turks had now taken Nice, and threatened, from the
opposite shore, the very walls of Constantinople. Everyone knows whose hand
held the torch to that inflammable mass of enthusiasm that pervaded Europe; the
hermit of Picardy, who, roused by witnessed wrongs and imagined visions,
journeyed from land to land, the apostle of an holy war. The preaching of Peter
was powerfully seconded by Urban. In the councils of Piacenza and of Clermont
the deliverance of Jerusalem was eloquently recommended and exultingly undertaken.
“It is the will of God!” was the tumultuous cry that broke from the heart and
lips of the assembly at Clermont; and these words afford at once the most
obvious and most certain explanation of the leading principle of the crusades.
Later writers, incapable of sympathizing with the blind fervor of zeal, or
anxious to find a pretext for its effect somewhat more congenial to the spirit
of our times, have sought political reasons for that which resulted only from
predominant affections. No suggestion of these will, I believe, be found in
contemporary historians. To rescue the Greek empire from its imminent peril,
and thus to secure Christendom from enemies who professed towards it eternal
hostility, might have been a legitimate and magnanimous ground of
interference; but it operated scarcely, or not at all, upon those who took the
cross. It argues, indeed, strange ignorance of the eleventh century to ascribe
such refinements of later times even to the princes of that age. The Turks were
no doubt repelled from the neighborhood of Constantinople by the crusaders;
but this was a collateral effect of their enterprise. Nor had they any
disposition to serve the interest of the Greeks, whom they soon came to hate,
and not entirely without provocation, with almost as much animosity as the
Moslems themselves.
Every means was used to excite
an epidemical frenzy: the remission of penance, the dispensation from those
practices of self-denial which superstition imposed or suspended at pleasure,
the absolution of all sins, and the assurance of eternal felicity. None doubted
that such as perished in the war received immediately the reward of martyrdom.
False miracles and fanatical prophecies, which were never so frequent, wrought
up the enthusiasm to a still higher pitch. And these devotional feelings, which
are usually thwarted and balanced by other passions, fell in with every motive
that could influence the men of that time; with curiosity, restlessness, the
love of license, thirst for war, emulation, ambition. Of the princes who
assumed the cross, some probably from the beginning speculated upon forming
independent establishments in the East. In later periods the temporal benefits
of undertaking a crusade undoubtedly blended themselves with less selfish
considerations. Men resorted to Palestine, as in modern times they have done to
the colonies, in order to redeem their fame, or repair their fortune. Thus Gui
de Lusignan, after dying from France, for murder, was ultimately raised to the
throne of Jerusalem. To the more vulgar class were held out inducements which,
though absorbed in the overruling fanaticism of the first crusade, might be
exceedingly efficacious when it began rather to flag. During the time that a
crusader bore the cross he was free from suit for his debts, and the interest
of them was entirely abolished; lie was exempted, in some instances at least,
from taxes, and placed under the protection of the church, so that he could not
be impleaded in any civil court, except on criminal charges, or disputes
relating to land.
None of the sovereigns of
Europe took a part in the first crusade; but many of their chief vassals, great
part of the inferior nobility, and a countless multitude of the common people.
The priests left their parishes, and the monks their cells; and though the
peasantry were then in general bound to the soil, we find no check given to
their emigration for this cause. Numbers of women and children swelled the
crowd; it appeared a sort of sacrilege to repel anyone from a work which was
considered as the manifest design of Providence. But if it were lawful to
interpret the will of Providence by events, few undertakings have been more
branded by its disapprobation than the crusades. So many crimes and so much
misery have seldom been accumulated in so short a space as in the three years
of the first expedition. We should be warranted by contemporary writers in
stating the loss of the Christians alone during this period at nearly a
million; but at the least computation it must have exceeded half that number.
To engage in the crusade, and to perish in it, were almost synonymous. Few of
those myriads who were mustered in the plains of Nice returned to gladden
their friends in Europe with the story of their triumph at Jerusalem. Besieging
alternately and besieged in Antioch, they drained to the lees the cup of
misery: three hundred thousand sat down before that place; next year there
remained but a sixth part to pursue the enterprise. But their losses were least
in the field of battle; the intrinsic superiority of European prowess was
constantly displayed; the angel of Asia, to apply the bold language of our
poet, high and unmatchable, where her rival was not, became a fear; and the
Christian lances bore all before them in their shock from Nice to Antioch,
Edessa, and Jerusalem, [a.d. 1099.] It was here, where their triumph was consummated, that it was stained
with the most atrocious massacre; not limited to the hour of resistance, but
renewed deliberately even after that famous penitential procession to the holy
sepulchre, which might have calmed their ferocious dispositions, if, through
the misguided enthusiasm of the enterprise, it had not been rather calculated
to excite them.
The conquests obtained at such
a price by the first crusade were chiefly comprised in the maritime parts of
Syria. Except the state of Edessa beyond the Euphrates, which, in its best
days, extended over great part of Mesopotamia, the Latin possessions never reached
more than a few leagues from the sea. Within the barrier of Mount Libanus their
arms might be feared, but their power was never established; and the prophet
was still invoked in the mosques of Aleppo and Damascus. The principality of
Antioch to the north, the kingdom of Jerusalem with its feudal dependencies of
Tripoli and Tiberias to the south, were assigned, the one to Boemond, a
brother of Robert Guiscard, Count of Apulia, the other to Godfrey of Boulogne,
whose extraordinary merit had justly raised him to a degree of influence with
the chief crusaders that has been sometimes confounded with a legitimate
authority. In the course of a few years Tyre, Ascalon, and the other cities
upon the sea-coast, were subjected by the successors of Godfrey on the throne
of Jerusalem. But as their enemies had been stunned, not killed, by the western
storm, the Latins were constantly molested by the Mohammedans of Egypt and
Syria. They were exposed as the outposts of Christendom, with no respite and
few resources. A second crusade, in which the Emperor Conrad III and Louis VII
of France were engaged, each with seventy thousand cavalry, made scarce any
diversion [a.d. 1147]; and that
vast army wasted away in the passage of Natolia.
The decline of the Christian establishments
in the East is ascribed by William of Tyre to the extreme viciousness of their
manners, to the adoption of European arms by the Orientals, and to the union of
the Mohammedan principalities under a single chief. Without denying the
operation of these causes, and especially the last, it is easy to perceive one
more radical than all the three, the inadequacy of their means of self-defence.
The kingdom of Jerusalem was guarded only, exclusive of European volunteers, by
the feudal service of eight hundred and sixty-six knights, attended each by
four archers on horseback, by a militia of five thousand and seventy-five
burghers, and by a conscription, in great exigencies, of the remaining
population. William of Tyre mentions an army of one thousand three hundred
horse and fifteen thousand foot, as the greatest which had ever been collected,
and predicts the utmost success from it, if wisely conducted. This was a little
before the irruption of Saladin. In the last fatal battle Lusignan seems to have
had somewhat a larger force. Nothing can more strikingly evince the ascendency
of Europe than the resistance of these Frankish acquisitions in Syria during
nearly two hundred years. Several of their victories over the Moslems were
obtained against such disparity of numbers, that they may be compared with
whatever is most illustrious in history or romance. These perhaps were less due
to the descendants of the first crusaders, settled in the Holy Land, than to
those volunteers from Europe whom martial ardor and religious zeal impelled to
the service. It was the penance commonly imposed upon men of rank for the most
heinous crimes, to serve a number of years under the banner of the cross. Thus
a perpetual supply of warriors was poured in from Europe; and in this sense
the crusades may be said to have lasted without intermission during the whole
period of the Latin settlements. Of these defenders the most renowned were the
military orders of the Knights of the Temple and of the Hospital of St. John; instituted, the one in 1124, the other in 1118, for the sole purpose of
protecting the Holy Land. The Teutonic order, established in 1190, when the
kingdom of Jerusalem was falling, soon diverted its schemes of holy warfare to
a very different quarter of the world. Large estates, as well in Palestine as
throughout Europe, enriched the two former institutions; but the pride,
rapaciousness, and misconduct of both, especially of the Templars, seem to have
balanced the advantages derived from their valor. At length the famous
Saladin, usurping the throne of a feeble dynasty which had reigned in Egypt,
broke in upon the Christians of Jerusalem; the king and the kingdom fell into
his hands [a.d. 1187]; nothing
remained but a few strong towns upon the sea-coast.
These misfortunes roused once
more the princes of Europe, and the third crusade was undertaken by three of
her sovereigns, the greatest in personal estimation as well as dignity—by the
Emperor Frederic Barbarossa, Philip Augustus of France, and our own Richard Coeur
de Lion. [a.d. 1189.] But this,
like the preceding enterprise, failed of permanent effect; and those feats of
romantic prowess which made the name of Richard so famous both in Europe and Asia
proved only the total inefficacy of all exertions in an attempt so
impracticable; Palestine was never the scene of another crusade. One great
armament was diverted to the siege of Constantinople [a.d. 1204], and another wasted in fruitless attempts upon
Egypt, [a.d. 1218.] The Emperor
Frederic II afterwards procured the restoration of Jerusalem by the Saracens; but the Christian princes of Syria were unable to defend it, and their
possessions were gradually reduced to the maritime towns. Acre, the last of
these, was finally taken by storm in 1291; and its ruin closes the history of
the Latin dominion in Syria, which Europe had already ceased to protect.
The two last crusades were
undertaken by St. Louis, [a.d. ,
1248.] In the first he was attended by 2,800 knights and 50,000 ordinary
troops. He landed at Damietta in Egypt, for that country was now deemed the key
of the Holy Land, and easily made himself master of the city. But advancing up
the country, he found natural impediments as well as enemies in his way; the
Turks assailed him with Greek fire, an instrument of warfare almost as
surprising and terrible as gunpowder; he lost his brother the Count of Artois,
with many knights, at Massoura, near Cairo; and began too late a retreat
towards Damietta. Such calamities now fell upon this devoted army as have scarce
ever been surpassed; hunger and want of every kind, aggravated by an unsparing
pestilence. At length the king was made prisoner, and very few of the army
escaped the Turkish cimeter in battle or in captivity. Four hundred thousand
livres were paid as a ransom for Louis. He returned to France, and passed
nearly twenty years in the exercise of those virtues which are his best title
to canonization. But the fatal illusions of superstition were still always at
his heart; nor did it fail to be painfully observed by his subjects that he
still kept the cross upon his garment. His last expedition was originally
designed for Jerusalem. But he had received some intimation that the King of
Tunis was desirous of embracing Christianity. That these intentions might be
carried into effect, he sailed out of his way to the coast of Africa, and laid
siege to that city. A fever here put an end to his life, sacrificed to that
ruling passion which never would have forsaken him. But he had survived the
spirit of the crusades; the disastrous expedition to Egypt
had cured his subjects, though not himself, of their folly; his son, after
making terms with Tunis, returned to France; the Christians were suffered to
lose what they still retained in the Holy Land; and though many princes in
subsequent ages talked loudly of renewing the war, the promise, if it were ever
sincere, was never accomplished.
Louis IX had increased the
royal domain by the annexation of several counties and other less important
fiefs; but soon after the accession of Philip III [a.d. 1270] (surnamed the Bold) it received a far more
considerable augmentation. Alphonso, the late king’s brother, had been invested
with the county of Poitou, ceded by Henry III, together with part of Auvergne
and of Saintonge; and held also, as has been said before, the remains of the
great fief of Toulouse, in right of his wife Jane, heiress of Raymond VII. Upon
his death, and that of his countess, which happened about the same time, the
king entered into possession of all these territories, [a.d. 1271.] This acquisition brought the sovereigns of
France into contact with new neighbors, the kings of Aragon and the powers of
Italy. The first great and lasting foreign war which they carried on was that
of Philip III. and Philip IV against the former kingdom, excited by the
insurrection of Sicily, [a.d. 1270.] Though effecting no change in the boundaries of their dominions, this
war may be deemed a sort of epoch in the history of France and Spain, as well
as in that of Italy, to which it more peculiarly belongs.
There still remained five great
and ancient fiefs of the French crown; Champagne, Guienne, Flanders, Burgundy,
and Brittany. But Philip IV [a.d. 1285], usually called the Fair, married the heiress of the first, a little
before his father’s death; and although he governed that county in her name
without pretending to reunite it to the royal domain, it was, at least in a
political sense, no longer a part of the feudal body. With some of his other
vassals Philip used more violent methods. A parallel might be drawn between
this prince and Philip Augustus. But while in ambition, violence of temper and
unprincipled rapacity, as well as in the success of their attempts to
establish an absolute authority, they may be considered as nearly equal, we may
remark this difference, that Philip the Fair, who was destitute of military
talents, gained those ends by dissimulation which his predecessor had reached
by force.
The duchy of Guienne, though
somewhat abridged of its original extent, was still by far the most
considerable of the French fiefs, even independently of its connection with England.
Philip, by dint of perfidy, and by the egregious incapacity of Edmund, brother
of Edward I, contrived to obtain, and to keep for several years, the
possession of this great province. A quarrel among some French and English
sailors having provoked retaliation, till a sort of piratical war commenced
between their respective countries, [a.d. 1292] Edward, as Duke of Guienne, was summoned into the king’s court to answer
for the trespass of his subjects. Upon this he despatched his brother to settle
terms of reconciliation, with fuller powers than should have been intrusted to
so credulous a negotiator. Philip so outwitted this prince, through a fictitious
treaty, as to procure from him the surrender of all the fortresses in Guienne.
He then threw off the mask, and after again summoning Edward to appear,
pronounced the confiscation of his fief. This business is the greatest blemish
in the political character of Edward. But his eagerness about the acquisition
of Scotland rendered him less sensible to the danger of a possession in many
respects more valuable; and the spirit of resistance among the English
nobility, which his arbitrary measures had provoked, broke out very
opportunely for Philip, to thwart every effort for the recovery of Guienne by
arms. [a.d. 1303.] But after
repeated suspensions of hostilities a treaty was finally concluded, by which
Philip restored the province, on the agreement of a marriage between his
daughter Isabel and the heir of England.
To this restitution he was
chiefly induced by the ill success that attended his arms in Flanders, another
of the great fiefs which this ambitious monarch had endeavored to confiscate.
We have not, perhaps, as clear evidence of the original injustice of his
proceedings towards the Count of Flanders as in the case of Guienne; but he
certainly twice detained his person, once after drawing him on some pretext to
his court, and again, in violation of the faith pledged by his generals. The
Flemings made, however, so vigorous a resistance, that Philip was unable to
reduce that small country; and in one famous battle at Courtray they
discomfited a powerful army with that utter loss and ignominy to which the
undisciplined impetuosity of the French nobles was pre-eminently exposed. [a.d. 1302.]
Two other acquisitions of
Philip the Fair deserve notice; that of the counties of Angouleme and La
Marche, upon a sentence of forfeiture (and, as it seems, a very harsh one)
passed against the reigning count; and that of the city of Lyons, and its
adjacent territory, which had not even feudally been subject to the crown of
France for more than three hundred years. Lyons was the dowry of Matilda,
daughter of Louis IV, on her marriage with Conrad, King of Burgundy, and was
bequeathed with the rest of that kingdom by Rodolph, in 1032, to the empire.
Frederic Barbarossa conferred upon the Archbishop of Lyons all regalian rights
over the city, with the title of Imperial Vicar. France seems to have had no
concern with it, till St. Louis was called in as a mediator in disputes
between the chapter and the city, during a vacancy of the see, and took the
exercise of jurisdiction upon himself for the time. Philip III, having been
chosen arbitrator in similar circumstances, insisted, before he would restore
the jurisdiction, upon an oath of fealty from the new archbishop. This oath,
which could be demanded, it seems, by no right but that of force, continued to be taken, till, in 1310, an archbishop
resisting what he had thought an usurpation, the city was besieged by Philip
IV, and, the inhabitants not being unwilling to submit, was finally united to
the French crown.
Philip the Fair left three
sons, who successively reigned in France; Louis, surnamed Hutin [Louis X, a.d. 1314], Philip the Long, and Charles
the Fair; with a daughter, Isabel, married to Edward II of England. Louis, the
eldest, survived his father little more than a year, leaving one daughter, and
his queen pregnant. The circumstances that ensued require to be accurately
stated. Louis had possessed, in right of his mother, the kingdom of Navarre,
with the counties of Champagne and Brie. Upon his death, Philip, his next
brother [Philip V, a.d. 1315],
assumed the regency both of France and Navarre; and not long afterwards entered
into a treaty with Eudes, Duke of Burgundy, uncle of the Princess Jane, Louis’s
daughter, by which her eventual rights to the succession were to be regulated.
It was agreed that, in case the queen should be delivered of a daughter, these
two princesses, or the survivor of them, should take the grandmother’s inheritance,
Navarre and Champagne, on releasing all claim to the throne of France. But this
was not to take place till their age of consent, when, if they should refuse to
make such renunciation, their claim was to remain, and right to be done to
them therein: but, in return, the release made by Philip of Navarre and
Champagne was to be null. In the meantime, he was to hold the government of
France, Navarre, and Champagne, receiving homage of vassals in all these
countries as governor; saving the right of a male heir to the late king, in the
event of whose birth the treaty was not to take effect.
This convention was made on the
17th of July, 1316; and on the 15th of November the queen brought into the
world a 6on, John I (as some called him), who died in four days. The
conditional treaty was now become absolute; in spirit, at least, if any cavil
might be raised about the expression; and Philip was, by his own agreement,
precluded from taking any other title than that of regent or governor, until
the princess Jane should attain the age to concur in or disclaim the provisional
contract of her uncle. Instead of this, however, he procured himself to be
consecrated at Rheims; though, on account of the avowed opposition of the Duke
of Burgundy, and even of his own brother Charles, it was thought prudent to
shut the gates during the ceremony, and to dispose guards throughout the town.
Upon his return to Paris, an assembly composed of prelates, barons, and
burgesses of that city, was convened, who acknowledged him as their lawful
sovereign, and, if we may believe an historian, expressly declared that a woman
was incapable of succeeding to the crown of France. The Duke of
Burgundy, however, made a show of supporting his niece’s interests, till,
tempted by the prospect of a marriage with the daughter of Philip, he
shamefully betrayed her cause, and gave up in her name, for an inconsiderable pension,
not only her disputed claim to the whole monarchy, but her unquestionable right
to Navarre and Champagne. I have been rather minute in stating these details,
because the transaction is misrepresented by every historian, not excepting
those who have written since the publication of the documents which illustrate
it.
In this contest, every way
memorable, but especially on account of that which sprung out of it, the
exclusion of females from the throne of France was first publicly discussed.
The French writers almost unanimously concur in asserting that such an
exclusion was built upon a fundamental maxim of their government. No written
law, nor even, as far as I know, the direct testimony of any ancient writer,
has been brought forward to confirm this position. For as to the text of the
Salic law, which was frequently quoted, and has indeed given a name to this
exclusion of females, it can only by a doubtful and refined analogy be
considered as bearing any relation to the succession of the crown. It is
certain nevertheless that, from the time of Clovis, no woman had ever reigned
in France; and although not an instance of a sole heiress had occurred before,
yet some of the Merovingian kings left daughters, who might, if not rendered
incapable by their sex, have shared with their brothers in partitions then
commonly made. But, on the other hand, these times were gone quite out of
memory, and France had much in the analogy of her existing usages to reconcile
her to a female reign. The crown resembled a great fief; and the great fiefs
might universally descend to women. Even at the consecration of Philip himself,
Maud, Countess of Artois, held the crown over his head among the other peers.
And it was scarcely beyond the recollection of persons living that Blanche had
been legitimate regent of France during the minority of St. Louis.
For these reasons, and much
more from the provisional treaty concluded between Philip and the Duke of
Burgundy, it may be fairly inferred that the Salic law, as it was called, was
not so fixed a principle at that time as has been contended. But however this
may be, it received at the accession of Philip the Long a sanction which
subsequent events more thoroughly confirmed. Philip himself leaving only three
daughters, his brother Charles mounted the throne [Charles IV, a.d. 1322]; and upon his death the rule
was so unquestionably established, that his only daughter was excluded by the
Count of Valois, grandson of Philip the Bold. This prince first took the regency,
the queen-dowager being pregnant, and, upon her giving birth to a daughter,
was crowned king. [a.d. 1328.] No
competitor or opponent appeared in France; but one more formidable than any
whom France could have produced was awaiting the occasion to prosecute his
imagined right with all the resources of valor and genius, and to carry
desolation over that great kingdom with as little scruple as if he was
preferring a suit before a civil tribunal.
From the moment of Charles IV’s
death, Edward III of England buoyed himself up with a notion of his title to
the crown of France, in right of his mother Isabel, sister to the three last
kings. We can have no hesitation in condemning the injustice of this
pretension. Whether the Salic law were or were not valid, no advantage could be
gained by Edward. Even if he could forget the express or tacit decision of all
France, there stood in his way Jane, the daughter of Louis X, three of Philip
the Long, and one of Charles the Fair. Aware of this, Edward set up a
distinction, that, although females were excluded from succession, the same
rule did not apply to their male issue; and thus, though his mother Isabel
could not herself become Queen of France, she might transmit a title to him.
But this was contrary to the commonest rules of inheritance; and if it could
have been regarded at all, Jane had a son, afterwards the famous King of
Navarre, who stood one degree nearer to the crown than Edward.
It is asserted in some French
authorities that Edward preferred a claim to the regency immediately after the
decease of Charles the Fair, and that the States-General, or at least the peers
of France, adjudged that dignity to Philip de Valois. Whether this be true or
not, it is clear that he entertained projects of recovering his right as early,
though his youth and the embarrassed circumstances of his government threw
insuperable obstacles in the way of their execution. He did liege homage,
therefore, to Philip for Guienne, and for several years, while the affairs of
Scotland engrossed his attention, gave no sign of meditating a more
magnificent enterprise. As he advanced in manhood, and felt the consciousness
of his strength, his early designs grew mature, and produced a series of the
most important and interesting revolutions in the fortunes of France. These
will form the subject of the ensuing pages.
PART II.
War of Edward III in France—Causes of his Success—Civil
Disturbances of France—Peace of Bretigni—Its Interpretation Considered—
Charles V.—Renewal of the War—Charles VI.—His Minority and Insanity—Civil
Dissensions of the Parties of Orleans and Burgundy— Assassination of both these
Princes—Intrigues of their Parties with England under Henry IV.—Henry V.
Invades France—Treaty of Troyes—State of France in the First Years of Charles
VII.—Progress and Subsequent Decline of the English Arms—Their Expulsion from
France—Change in the Political Constitution—Louis XI.—His Character—Leagues
Formed against him—Charles Duke of Burgundy— His Prosperity and Fall—Louis
Obtains Possession of Burgundy—His Death—Charles VIII.—Acquisition of
Brittany.
No war had broken out in
Europe, since the fall of the Roman Empire, so memorable as that of Edward III
and his successors against France, whether we consider its duration, its
object, or the magnitude and variety of its events. It was a struggle of one
hundred and twenty years, interrupted but once by a regular pacification, where
the most ancient and extensive dominion in the civilized world was the prize,
twice lost and twice recovered, in the conflict, while individual courage was
wrought up to that high pitch which it can seldom display since the regularity
of modern tactics has chastised its enthusiasm and levelled its distinctions.
There can be no occasion to dwell upon the events of this war, which are familiar
to almost every reader: it is rather my aim to develop and arrange those
circumstances which, when rightly understood, give the clew to its various
changes of fortune.
France was, even in the
fourteenth century, a kingdom of such extent and compactness of figure, such
population and resources, and filled with so spirited a nobility, that the very
idea of subjugating it by a foreign force must have seemed the most extravagant
dream of ambition. Yet, in the course of about twenty years of war, this mighty
nation was reduced to the lowest state of exhaustion, and dismembered of considerable
provinces by an ignominious peace. What was the combination of political causes
which brought about so strange a revolution, and, though not realizing Edward’s
hopes to their extent, redeemed them from the imputation of rashness in the
judgment of his own and succeeding ages ?
The first advantage which
Edward III possessed in this contest was derived from the splendor of his
personal character and from the still more eminent virtues of his son. Besides
prudence and military skill, these great princes were endowed with qualities
peculiarly fitted for the times in which they lived. Chivalry was then in its
zenith; and in all the virtues which adorned the knightly character, in
courtesy, munificence, gallantry, in all delicate and magnanimous feelings,
none were so conspicuous as Edward III and the Black Prince. As later princes
have boasted of being the best gentlemen, they might claim to be the prowest
knights in Europe—a character not quite dissimilar, yet of more high
pretension. Their court was, as it were, the sun of that system which embraced
the valor and nobility of the Christian world; and the respect which was felt
for their excellences, while it drew many to their side, mitigated in all the
rancor and ferociousness of hostility. This war was like a great tournament,
where the combatants fought indeed a outrance, but with all the courtesy
and fair play of such an entertainment, and almost as much for the honor of
their ladies. In the school of the Edwards were formed men not inferior in any
nobleness of disposition to their masters— Manni and the Captal de Buch,
Knollys and Calverley, Chandos and Lancaster. On the French side, especially
after Du Guesclin came on the stage, these had rivals almost equally deserving
of renown. If we could forget, what never should be forgotten, the wretchedness
and devastation that fell upon a great kingdom, too dear a price for the
display of any heroism, we might count these English wars in France among the
brightest periods in history.
Philip of Valois, and John his
son, showed but poorly in comparison with their illustrious enemies. Yet they
both had considerable virtues; they were brave, just, liberal, and the latter,
in particular, of unshaken fidelity to his word. But neither was beloved by his
subjects; the misgovernment and extortion of their predecessors during half a
century had alienated the public mind, and rendered their own taxes and debasement
of the coin intolerable. Philip was made by misfortune, John by nature,
suspicious and austere; and although their most violent acts seem never to have
wanted absolute justice, yet they were so ill-conducted, and of so arbitrary a
complexion, that they greatly impaired the reputation, as well as interests, of
these monarchs. In the execution of Clisson under Philip, in that of the
Connetable d’Eu under John, and still more in that of Harcourt, even in the
imprisonment of the King of Navarre, though every one of these might have been
guilty of treasons, there were circumstances enough to exasperate the
disaffected, and to strengthen the party of so politic a competitor as Edward.
Next to the personal qualities
of the King of England, his resources in this war must be taken into the
account. It was after long hesitation that he assumed the title and arms of
France, from which, unless upon the best terms, he could not recede without
loss of honor. In the meantime he strengthened himself by alliances with the
emperor, with the cities of Flanders, and with most of the princes in the
Netherlands and on the Rhine. Yet I do not know that he profited much by these
conventions, since he met with no success till the scene of the war was changed
from the Flemish frontier to Normandy and Poitou. The troops of Hainault alone
were constantly distinguished in his service.
But his intrinsic strength was
at home. England had been growing in riches since the wise government of his
grandfather, Edward I, and through the market opened for her wool with the
manufacturing towns of Flanders. She was tranquil within; and her northern
enemy, the Scotch, had been defeated and quelled. The parliament, after some
slight precautions against a very probable effect of Edward’s conquest of
France, the reduction of their own island into a province, entered, as warmly
as improvidently, into his quarrel. The people made it their own, and grew so
intoxicated with the victories of this war, that for some centuries the
injustice and folly of the enterprise do gravest of our countrymen.
There is, indeed, ample room
for national exultation at the names of Crecy, Poitiers, and Azincourt. So
great was the disparity of numbers upon those famous days, that we cannot, with
the French historians, attribute the discomfiture of their hosts merely to
mistaken tactics and too impetuous valor. They yielded rather to that intrepid
steadiness in danger which had already become the characteristic of our English
soldiers, and which, during five centuries, has insured their superiority,
whenever ignorance or infatuation has not led them into the field. But these
victories, and the qualities that secured them, must chiefly be ascribed to the
freedom of our constitution, and to the superior condition of the people. Not
the nobility of England, not the feudal tenants won the battles of Crecy and
Poitiers; for these were fully matched in the ranks of France; but the yeomen
who drew the bow with strong and steady arms, accustomed to use it in their
native fields, and rendered fearless by personal competence and civil freedom.
It is well known that each of the three great victories was due to our archers,
who were chiefly of the middle class, and attached, according to the system of
that age, to the knights and squires who fought in heavy armor with the lance.
Even at the battle of Poitiers, of which our country seems to have the least
right to boast, since the greater part of the Black Prince’s small army was
composed of Gascons, the merit of the English bowmen is strongly attested by
Froissart.
Yet the glorious termination to
which Edward was enabled, at least for a time, to bring the contest, was rather
the work of fortune than of valor and prudence. Until the battle of Poitiers he
had made no progress towards the conquest of France. That country was too vast,
and his army too small, for such a revolution. The victory of Crecy gave him
nothing but Calais, a post of considerable importance in war and peace, but
rather adapted to annoy than to subjugate the kingdom. But at Poitiers he
obtained the greatest of prizes, by taking prisoner the King of France. Not
only the love of freedom tempted that prince to ransom himself by the utmost
sacrifices, but his captivity left France defenceless, and seemed to annihilate
the monarchy itself. The government was already odious; a spirit was awakened
in the people which might seem hardly to belong to the fourteenth century; and
the convulsions of our own time are sometimes strongly paralleled by those
which succeeded the battle of Poitiers. Already the States-General had
established a fundamental principle, that no resolution could be passed as the
opinion of the whole unless each of the three orders concurred in its adoption.
The right of levying and regulating the collection of taxes was recognized. But
that assembly, which met at Paris immediately after the battle, went far
greater lengths in the reform and control of government. From the time of
Philip the Fair the abuses natural to arbitrary power had harassed the people.
There now seemed an opportunity of redress; and however seditious, or even
treasonable, may have been the motives of those who guided this assembly of the
States, especially the famous Marcel, it is clear that many of their
reformations tended to liberty and the public good. But the tumultuous scenes
which passed in the capital, sometimes heightened into civil war, necessarily
distracted men from the common defence against Edward. These tumults were excited,
and the distraction increased, by Charles King of Navarre, surnamed the Bad, to
whom the French writers have, not perhaps unjustly, attributed a character of
unmixed and inveterate malignity. He was grandson of Louis Hutin, by his
daughter Jane, and, if Edward’s pretence of claiming through females, could be
admitted, was a nearer heir to the crown; the consciousness of which seems to
have suggested itself to his depraved mind as an excuse for his treacheries,
though he could entertain very little prospect of asserting the claim against
either contending party. John had bestowed his daughter in marriage on the King
of Navarre; but he very soon gave a proof of his character by procuring the assassination of the king’s favorite, Charles de la Cerda. An
irreconcilable enmity was the natural result of this crime. Charles became
aware that he had offended beyond the possibility of forgiveness, and that no
letters of pardon, nor pretended reconciliation, could secure him from the
king’s resentment. Thus, impelled by guilt into deeper guilt, he entered into
alliances with Edward, and fomented the seditious spirit of Paris. Eloquent and
insinuating, he was the favorite of the people, whose grievances he affected to
pity, and with whose leaders he intrigued. As his paternal inheritance, he possessed
the country of Evreux in Normandy. The proximity of this to Paris created a
formidable diversion in favor of Edward III, and connected the English
garrisons of the North with those of Poitou and Guienne.
There is no affliction which
did not fall upon France during this miserable period. A foreign enemy was in
the heart of the kingdom, the king a prisoner, the capital in sedition, a
treacherous prince of the blood in arms against the sovereign authority.
Famine, the sure and terrible companion of war, for several years desolated the
country. In 1348 a pestilence, the most extensive and unsparing of which we
have any memorial, visited France as well as the rest of Europe, and
consummated the work of hunger and the sword. The companies of adventure,
mercenary troops in the service of John or Edward, finding no immediate
occupation after the truce of 1357, scattered themselves over the country in
search of pillage. No force existed sufficiently powerful to check these
robbers in their career. Undismayed by superstition, they compelled the pope to
redeem himself in Avignon by the payment of forty thousand crowns. France was
the passive victim of their license, even after the pacification concluded with
England, till some were diverted into Italy, and others led by Du Guesclin to
the war of Castile. Impatient of this wretchedness, and stung by the insolence
and luxury of their lords, the peasantry of several districts broke out into a
dreadful insurrection, [a.d. 1358.] This was called the Jacquerie, from the cant phrase Jacques Bonhomme,
applied to men of that class; and was marked by all the circumstances of horror
incident to the rising of an exasperated and unenlightened populace.
Subdued by these misfortunes,
though Edward had made but slight progress towards the conquest of the country,
the regent of France, afterwards Charles V, submitted to the peace of Bretigni. [a.d. 1360.] By this treaty, not
to mention less important articles, all Guienne, Gascony, Poitou, Saintonge,
the Limousin, and the Angoumois, as well as Calais, and the county of Ponthieu,
were ceded in full sovereignty to Edward; a price abundantly compensating his
renunciation of the title of France, which was the sole concession stipulated
in return these provinces complete. The first six articles of the treaty
expressly surrender them to the King of England. By the seventh, John and his
son engaged to convey within a year from the ensuing Michaelmas all their
rights over them, and especially those of sovereignty and feudal appeal. The
same words are repeated still more emphatically in the eleventh and some other
articles. The twelfth stipulates the exchange of mutual renunciations; by John,
of all right over the ceded countries; by Edward, of his claim to the throne of
France. At Calais the treaty of Bretigni was renewed by John, who, as a
prisoner, had been no party to the former compact, with the omission only of
the twelfth article, respecting the exchange of renunciations. But that it was
not intended to waive them by this omission is abundantly manifest by
instruments of both the kings, in which reference is made to their future
interchanges at Bruges, on the feast of St. Andrew, 1361. And, until that time
should arrive, Edward promises to lay aside the title and arms of France (an
engagement which he strictly kept), and John to act in no respect as king or
suzerain over the ceded provinces. Finally, on November 15, 1361, two
commissioners are appointed by Edward to receive the renunciations of the King
of France at Bruges on the ensuing feast of St. Andrew, and to do whatever
might be mutually required by virtue of the treaty. These, however, seem to
have been withheld, and the twelfth article of the treaty of Bretigni was never
expressly completed. By mutual instruments, executed at Calais, October 24, it
had been declared that the sovereignty of the ceded provinces, as well as
Edward’s right to the crown of France, should remain as before, although
suspended as to its exercise, until the exchange of renunciations,
notwithstanding any words of present conveyance or release in the treaties of
Bretigni and Calais. And another pair of letters-patent, dated October 26,
contains the form of renunciations, which, it is mutually declared, should have
effect by virtue of the present letters, in case one party should be ready to
exchange such renunciations at the time and place appointed, and the other
should make default therein. These instruments executed at Calais are so
prolix, and so studiously enveloped, as it seems, in the obscurity of technical
language, that it is difficult to extract their precise intention. It appears,
nevertheless, that whichever party was prepared to perform what was required of
him at Bruges on November 30, 1361, the other then and there making default,
would acquire not only what our lawyers might call an equitable title, but an
actual vested right, by virtue of the provision in the letters-patent of
October 26, 1360. The appointment above mentioned of Edward’s commissioners on
November 15, 1361, seems to throw upon the French the burden of proving that
John sent his envoys with equally full powers to the place of meeting, and that
the non-interchange of renunciations was owing to the English government. But
though an historian, sixty years later (Juvenal des Ursins), asserts that the
French commissioners attended at Bruges, and that those of Edward made default,
this is certainly rendered improbable by the actual appointment of
commissioners made by the King of England on the 15th of November, by the
silence of Charles V after the recommencement of hostilities, who would have
rejoiced in so good a ground of excuse, and by the language of some English
instruments, complaining that the French renunciations were withheld? It is
suggested by the French authors that Edward was unwilling to execute a formal
renunciation of his claim to the crown. But we can hardly suppose that, in
order to evade this condition, which he had voluntarily imposed upon himself
by the treaties of Bretigni and Calais, he would have left his title to the
provinces ceded by those conventions imperfect. He certainly deemed it
indefeasible, and acted, without any complaint from the French court, as the
perfect master of those countries. He created his son Prince of Aquitaine, with
the fullest powers over that new principality, holding it in fief of the crown
of England by the yearly rent of an ounce of gold. And the court of that great
prince was kept for several years at Bordeaux.
I have gone something more than
usual into detail as to these circumstances, because a very specious account is
given by some French historians and antiquaries which tends to throw the blame
of the rupture in 1368 upon Edward III. Unfounded as was his pretension to the
crown of France, and actuated as we must consider him by the most ruinous ambition,
his character was unblemished by ill faith. There is no apparent cause to
impute the ravages made in France by soldiers formerly in the English service
to his instigation, nor any proof of a connection with the King of Navarre
subsequently to the peace of Bretigni. But a good lesson may be drawn by
conquerors from the change of fortune that befell Edward III. A long warfare,
and unexampled success, had procured for him some of the richest provinces of
France. Within a short time he was entirely stripped of them, less through any
particular misconduct than in consequence of the intrinsic difficulty of
preserving such acquisitions. The French were already knit together as one
people; and even those whose feudal duties sometimes led them into the field
against their sovereign could not endure the feeling of dismemberment from the
monarchy. When the peace of Bretigni was to be carried into effect, the
nobility of the South remonstrated against the loss of the king’s sovereignty,
and showed, it is said, in their charters granted by Charlemagne, a promise
never to transfer the right of protecting them to another. The citizens of
Rochelle implored the king not to desert them, and protested their readiness to
pay half their estates in taxes, rather than fall under the power of England.
John with heaviness of heart persuaded these faithful people to comply with
that destiny which he had not been able to surmount. At length they sullenly
submitted: we will obey, they said, the English with our lips, but our hearts
shall never forget their allegiance. Such unwilling subjects might perhaps
have been won by a prudent government; but the temper of the Prince of Wales,
which was rather stern and arbitrary, did not conciliate their hearts to his
cause. After the expedition into Castile, a most injudicious and fatal enterprise,
he attempted to impose a heavy tax upon Guienne. This was extended to the lands
of the nobility, who claimed an immunity from all impositions. Many of the
chief lords in Guienne and Gascony carried their complaints to the throne of
Charles V, who had succeeded his father in 1364, appealing to him as the
prince’s sovereign and judge, [a.d. 1368.] After a year’s delay the king ventured to summon the Black Prince to
answer these charges before the peers of France, and the war immediately
recommenced between the two countries.
Though it is impossible to
reconcile the conduct of Charles upon this occasion to the stern principles of
rectitude which ought always to be obeyed, yet the exceeding injustice of Edward
in the former war, and the miseries which he inflicted upon an unoffending
people in the prosecution of his claim, will go far towards extenuating this
breach of the treaty of Bretigni. It is observed, indeed, with some truth by
Rapin, that we judge of Charles’s prudence by the event; and that, if he had
been unfortunate in the war, he would have brought on himself the reproaches of
all mankind, and even of those writers who are now most ready to extol him. But
his measures had been so sagaciously taken, that, except through that
perverseness of fortune, against which, especially in war, there is no
security, he could hardly fail of success. The elder Edward was declining
through age, and the younger through disease; the ceded provinces were eager to
return to their native king, and their garrisons, as we may infer by their easy
reduction, feeble and ill-supplied. France, on the other hand, had recovered
breath after her losses; the sons of those who had fallen or fled at Poitiers
were in the field; a king, not personally warlike, but eminently wise and
popular, occupied the throne of the rash and intemperate John. She was restored
by the policy of Charles V and the valor of Du Guesclin. This hero, a Breton
gentleman without fortune or exterior graces, was the greatest ornament of
France during that age. Though inferior, as it seems, to Lord Chandos in
military skill, as well as in the polished virtues of chivalry, his unwearied
activity, his talent of inspiring confidence, his good fortune, the generosity
and frankness of his character, have preserved a fresh recollection of his
name, which has hardly been the case with our countryman.
In a few campaigns the English
were deprived of almost all their conquests, and even, in a great degree, of
their original possessions in Guienne. They were still formidable enemies,
not only from their courage and alacrity in the war, but on account of the keys
of France which they held in their hands ; Bordeaux, Bayonne, and Calais, by
inheritance or conquest; Brest and Cherbourg, in mortgage from their allies,
the Duke of Brittany and King of Navarre. But the successor of Edward III was
Richard II; a reign of feebleness and sedition gave no opportunity for
prosecuting schemes of ambition. The war, protracted with few distinguished
events for several years, was at length suspended by repeated armistices, not,
indeed, very strictly observed, and which the animosity of the English would
not permit to settle in any regular treaty. Nothing less than the terms
obtained at Bretigni, emphatically called the Great Peace, would satisfy a
frank and courageous people, who deemed themselves cheated by the manner of
its infraction. The war was therefore always popular in England, and the credit
which an ambitious prince, Thomas Duke of Gloucester, obtained in that country,
was chiefly owing to the determined opposition which he showed to all French
connections. But the politics of Richard II were of a different cast; and
Henry IV was equally anxious to avoid hostilities with France; so that, before
the unhappy condition of that kingdom tempted his son to revive the claims of
Edward in still more favorable circumstances, there had been thirty years of
respite, and even some intervals of friendly intercourse between the two
nations. Both, indeed, were weakened by internal discord; but France more
fatally than England. But for the calamities of Charles VI’s reign, she would
probably have expelled her enemies from the kingdom. The strength of that
fertile and populous country was recruited with surprising rapidity. Sir Hugh
Calverley, a famous captain in the wars of Edward III, while serving in
Flanders, laughed at the herald, who assured him that the King of France’s
army, then entering the country, amounted to 26,000 lances; asserting that he
had often seen their largest musters, but never so much as a fourth part of the
number. The relapse of this great kingdom under Charles VI. was more painful
and perilous than her first crisis; but she recovered from each through her
intrinsic and inextinguishable resources.
Charles V, surnamed the Wise,
after a reign, which, if we overlook a little obliquity in the rupture of the
peace of Bretigni, may be deemed one of the most honorable in French history,
dying prematurely, left the crown to his son, a boy of thirteen, under the care
of three ambitious uncles, the dukes of Anjou, Berry, and Burgundy, [a.d. 1380.] Charles had retrieved the
glory, restored the tranquillity, revived the spirit of his country; the severe
trials which exercised his regency after the battle of Poitiers had disciplined
his mind; he became a sagacious statesman, an encourager of literature, a
beneficent lawgiver. He erred, doubtless, though upon plausible grounds, in
accumulating a vast treasure, which the Duke of Anjou seized before he was cold
in the grave. But all the fruits of his wisdom were lost in the succeeding
reign. In a government essentially popular the youth or imbecility of the
sovereign creates no material derangement. In a monarchy, where all the springs
of the system depend upon one central force, these accidents, which are sure in
the course of a few generations to recur, can scarcely fail to dislocate the
whole machine. During the forty years that Charles VI bore the name of king,
rather than reigned in France, that country was reduced to a state far more
deplorable than during the captivity of John.
A great change had occurred in
the political condition of France during the fourteenth century. As the feudal
militia became unserviceable, the expenses of war were increased through the
necessity of taking troops into constant pay; and while more luxurious
refinements of living heightened the temptations to profuseness, the means of
enjoying them were lessened by improvident alienations of the domain. Hence,
taxes, hitherto almost unknown, were levied incessantly, and with all those
circumstances of oppression which are natural to the fiscal proceedings of an
arbitrary government. These, as has been said before, gave rise to the
unpopularity of the two first Valois, and were nearly leading to a complete
revolution in the convulsions that succeeded the battle of Poitiers. The
confidence reposed in Charles V’s wisdom and economy kept everything at rest
during his reign, though the taxes were still very heavy. But the seizure of
his vast accumulations by the Duke of Anjou, and the ill faith with which the
new government imposed subsidies, after promising their abolition, provoked
the people of Paris, and sometimes of other places, to repeated seditions. The
States-General not only compelled the government to revoke these impositions
and restore the nation, at least according to the language of edicts, to all
their liberties, but, with less wisdom, refused to make any grant of money.
Indeed a remarkable spirit of democratical freedom was then rising in those
classes on whom the crown and nobility had so long trampled. An example was
held out by the Flemings, who, always tenacious of their privileges, because
conscious of their ability to maintain them, were engaged in a furious conflict
with Louis Count of Flanders. The court of France took part in this war; and
after obtaining a decisive victory over the citizens of Ghent, Charles VI returned
to chastise those of Paris. Unable to resist the royal army, the city was treated
as the spoil of conquest; its immunities abridged; its most active leaders put
to death; a fine of uncommon severity imposed; and the taxes renewed by
arbitrary prerogative. But the people preserved their indignation for a
favorable moment; and were unfortunately led by it, when rendered subservient
to the ambition of others, into a series of crimes, and a long alienation from
the interests of their country.
It is difficult to name a limit
beyond which taxes will not be borne without impatience, when they appear to be
called for by necessity, and faithfully applied; nor is it impracticable for a
skilful minister to deceive the people in both these respects. But the sting of
taxation is wastefulness. What high-spirited man could see without indignation
the earnings of his labor, yielded ungrudgingly to the public defence, become
the spoil of parasites and speculators? It is this that mortifies the liberal
hand of public spirit; and those statesmen who deem the security of government
to depend not on laws and armies, but on the moral sympathies and prejudices of
the people, will vigilantly guard against even the suspicion of prodigality. In
the present stage of society it is impossible to conceive that degree of
misapplication which existed in the French treasury under Charles VI, because
the real exigencies of the state could never again be so inconsiderable.
Scarcely any military force was kept up ; and the produce of the grievous
impositions then levied was chiefly lavished upon the royal household, or
plundered by the officers of the government. This naturally resulted from the
peculiar and afflicting circumstances of this reign. The Duke of Anjou
pretended to be entitled by the late king’s appointment, if not by the constitution
of France, to exercise the government as regent during the minority;but this period, which would naturally be very short, a law of Charles V.
having fixed the age of majority at thirteen, was still more abridged by
consent; and after the young monarch’s coronation, he was considered as
reigning with full personal authority. Anjou, Berry, and Burgundy together with
the king’s maternal uncle, the Duke of Bourbon, divided the actual exercise of
government.
The first of these soon
undertook an expedition into Italy, to possess himself of the crown of Naples,
in which he perished. Berry was a profuse and voluptuous man, of no great
talents; though his rank, and the middle position which he held between
struggling parties, made him rather conspicuous throughout the revolutions of
that age. The most respectable of the king’s uncles, the Duke of Bourbon, being
further removed from the royal stem, and of an unassuming character, took a
less active part than his three coadjutors. Burgundy, an ambitious and able
prince, maintained the ascendency, until Charles, weary of a restraint which
had been protracted by his uncle till he was in his twenty-first year, took the
reins into his own hands, [a.d. 1387.] The dukes of Burgundy and Berry retired from court, and the administration
was committed to a different set of men, at the head of whom appeared the
Constable De Clisson, a soldier of great fame in the English wars. The people
rejoiced in the fall of the princes by whose exactions they had been plundered;
but the new ministers soon rendered themselves odious by similar conduct. The
fortune of Clisson, after a few years’ favor, amounted to 1,700,000 livres,
equal in weight of silver, to say nothing of the depreciation of money, to ten
times that sum at present.
Charles VI had reigned five
years from his assumption of power, when he was seized with a derangement of
intellect [a.d. 1393], which
continued, through a series of recoveries and relapses, to his death. He passed
thirty years in a pitiable state of suffering, neglected by his family,
particularly by the most infamous of women, Isabel of Bavaria, his queen, to a
degree which is hardly credible. The ministers were immediately disgraced; the
princes reassumed their stations. For several years the Duke of Burgundy
conducted the government. But this was in opposition to a formidable rival,
Louis, Duke of Orleans, the king’s brother. It was impossible that a prince so
near to the throne, favored by the queen, perhaps with criminal fondness, and
by the people on account of his external graces, should not acquire a share of
power. He succeeded at length in obtaining the whole management of affairs;
wherein the outrageous dissoluteness of his conduct, and still more the
excessive taxes imposed, rendered him altogether odious. The Parisians
compared his administration with that of the Duke of Burgundy; and from that
time ranged themselves on the side of the latter and his family, throughout the
long distractions to which the ambition of these princes gave birth.
The death of the Duke of Burgundy,
in 1404, after several fluctuations of success between him and the Duke of
Orleans, by no means left his party without a head. Equally brave and
ambitious, but far more audacious and unprincipled, his son John, surnamed Sans peur, sustained the same contest. A
reconciliation had been, however, brought about with the Duke of Orleans; they
had sworn reciprocal friendship, and participated, as was the custom, in order
to render these obligations more solemn, in the same communion. In the midst of
this outward harmony, the Duke of Orleans was assassinated in the streets of
Paris, [a.d. 1407.] After a slight
attempt at concealment, Burgundy avowed and boasted of the crime, to which he
had been instigated, it is said, by somewhat more than political jealousy. From
this fatal moment the dissensions of the royal family began to assume the
complexion of civil war. The queen, the sons of the Duke of Orleans, with the
dukes of Berry and Bourbon, united against the assassin. But he possessed, in
addition to his own appanage of Burgundy, the county of Flanders as his
maternal inheritance; and the people of Paris, who hated the Duke of Orleans,
readily forgave, or rather exulted in his murder.
It is easy to estimate the
weakness of the government, from the terms upon which the Duke of Burgundy was
permitted to obtain pardon at Chartres, a year after the perpetration of the
crime. As soon as he entered the royal presence, everyone rose, except the
king, queen, and dauphin. The duke, approaching the throne, fell on his knees;
when a lord, who acted as a sort of counsel for him, addressed the king: “Sire,
the Duke of Burgundy, your cousin and servant, is come before you, being
informed that he has incurred your displeasure, on account of what he caused
to be done to the Duke of Orleans your brother, for your good and that of your
kingdom, as he is ready to prove when it shall please you to hear it, and
therefore requests you, with all humility, to dismiss your resentment towards
him, and to receive him into you favor.”
This insolent apology was all
the atonement that could be extorted for the assassination of the first prince
of the blood. It is not wonderful that the Duke of Burgundy soon obtained the
management of affairs, and drove his adversaries from the capital, [a.d. 1410.] The princes, headed by the
father-in-law of the young Duke of Orleans, the Count of Armagnac, from whom
their party was now denominated, raised their standard against him; and the
north of France was rent to pieces by a protracted civil war, in which neither
party scrupled any extremity of pillage or massacre. Several times peace was
made; but each faction, conscious of their own insincerity, suspected that of
their adversaries. The king, of whose name both availed themselves, was only in
some doubtful intervals of reason capable of rendering legitimate the acts of
either. The dauphin, aware of the tyranny which the two parties alternately
exercised, was forced, even at the expense of perpetuating a civil war, to
balance one against the other, and permit neither to be wholly subdued. He gave
peace to the Armagnacs at Auxerre, in despite of the Duke of Burgundy; and,
having afterwards united with them against this prince, and carried a
successful war into Flanders, he disappointed their revenge by concluding with
him a treaty at Arras, [a.d. 1414.]
This dauphin and his next
brother died within sixteen months of each other, by which the rank devolved
upon Charles, youngest son of the king. The Count of Armagnac, now Constable of
France, retained possession of the government. But his severity, and the
weight of taxes, revived the Burgundian party in Paris, which a rigid
proscription had endeavored to destroy. [April, 1417.] He brought on his head
the implacable hatred of the queen, whom he had not only shut out from public
affairs, but disgraced by the detection of her gallantries. Notwithstanding her
ancient enmity to the Duke of Burgundy, she made overtures to him, and, being
delivered by his troops from confinement, declared herself openly on his side. [a.d. 1417.] A few obscure persons stole
the city keys, and admitted the Burgundians into Paris. The tumult
which arose showed in a moment the disposition of the inhabitants; but this
was more horribly displayed a few days afterwards, when the populace, rushing
to the prisons, massacred the Constable d’Armagnac and his partisans. [June 12,
1418.] Between three and four thousand persons were murdered on this day, which
has no parallel but what our own age has witnessed, in the massacre perpetrated
by the same ferocious populace of Paris, under circumstances nearly similar.
Not long afterwards an agreement took place between the Duke of Burgundy, who
had now the king’s person as well as the capital in his hands, and the dauphin,
whose party was enfeebled by the loss of almost all its leaders, [a.d. 1419.] This reconciliation, which mutual interest should
have rendered permanent, had lasted a very short time, when the Duke of Burgundy
was assassinated at an interview with Charles, in his presence, and by the
hands of his friends, though not, perhaps, with his previous knowledge. From
whomsoever the crime proceeded, it was a deed of infatuation, and plunged
France afresh into a sea of perils, from which the union of these factions had
just afforded a hope of extricating her.
It has been mentioned already
that the English war had almost ceased during the reigns of Richard II and
Henry IV. The former of these was attached by inclination, and latterly by
marriage, to the court of France; and, though the French government showed at
first some disposition to revenge his dethronement, yet the new king’s success,
as well as domestic quarrels, deterred it from any serious renewal of the war.
A long commercial connection had subsisted between England and Flanders, which
the dukes of Burgundy, when they became sovereigns of the latter country upon
the death of Count Louis in 1384, were studious to preserve by separate
truces. They acted upon the same pacific policy when their interest predominated
in the councils of France. Henry had even a negotiation pending for the
marriage of his eldest son with a princess of Burgundy, when an unexpected
proposal from the opposite side set more tempting views before his eyes. The
Armagnacs, pressed hard by the Duke of Burgundy, offered, in consideration of
only 4000 troops, the pay of which they would themselves defray, to assist him
in the recovery of Guienne and Poitou. Four princes of the blood—Berry,
Bourbon, Orleans, and Alençon—disgraced their names by signing this treaty.
[May, 1412.] Henry broke off his alliance with Burgundy, and sent a force into
France, which found on its arrival that the princes had made a separate treaty,
without the least concern for their English allies. After his death, Henry V
engaged for some time in a series of negotiations with the French court, where
the Orleans party now prevailed, and with the Duke of Burgundy. He even
secretly treated at the same time for a marriage with Catherine of France
(which seems to have been his favorite, as it was ultimately his successful
project), and with a daughter of the duke—a duplicity not creditable to his
memory. But Henry’s ambition, which aimed at the highest quarry, was not long
fettered by negotiation; and, indeed, his proposals of marrying Catherine were
coupled with such exorbitant demands, as France, notwithstanding all her
weakness, could not admit, though she would have ceded Guienne, and given a
vast dowry with the princess. He invaded Normandy, took Harfleur, and won the
great battle of Azincourt on his march to Calais. [a.d. 1415.]
The flower of French chivalry
was mowed down in this fatal day, but especially the chiefs of the Orleans
party, and the princes of the royal blood, met with death or captivity. Burgundy
had still suffered nothing; but a clandestine negotiation had secured the
duke’s neutrality, though he seems not to have entered into a regular alliance
till a year after the battle of Azincourt, when, by a secret treaty at Calais,
he acknowledged the right of Henry to the crown of France, and his own obligation
to do him homage, though its performance was to be suspended till Henry should
become master of a considerable part of the kingdom. In a second invasion the
English achieved the conquest of Normandy; and this, in all subsequent
negotiations for peace during the life of Henry, he would never consent to
relinquish. After several conferences, which his demands rendered abortive, the
French court at length consented to add Normandy to the cessions made in the
peace of Bretigni; and the treaty, though laboring under some difficulties,
seems to have been nearly completed, when the Duke of Burgundy, for reasons
unexplained, suddenly came to a reconciliation with the dauphin. This event,
which must have been intended adversely to Henry, would probably have broken
off all parley on the subject of peace, if it had not been speedily followed by
one still more surprising, the assassination of the Duke of Burgundy at
Montereau. [Sept, 10, 1419.]
An act of treachery so
apparently unprovoked inflamed the minds of that powerful party which had
looked up to the duke as their leader and patron. The city of Paris,
especially, abjured at once its respect for the supposed author of the murder,
though the legitimate heir of the crown. A solemn oath was taken by all ranks
to revenge the crime; the nobility, the clergy, the parliament, vying with the
populace in their invectives against Charles, whom they now styled only pretended (soi-disant) dauphin. Philip, son of the assassinated duke, who, with
all the popularity and much of the ability of his father, did not inherit all
his depravity, was instigated by a pardonable excess of filial resentment to
ally himself with the King of England. These passions of the people and the
Duke of Burgundy, concurring with the imbecility of Charles VI and the rancor
of Isabel towards her son, led to the treaty of Troyes. [May, 1420.] This
compact, signed by the queen and duke, as proxies of the king, who had fallen
into a state of unconscious idiocy, stipulated that Henry V, upon his marriage
with Catherine, should become immediately regent of France, and, after the
death of Charles, succeed to the kingdom, in exclusion not only of the dauphin,
but of all the royal family. It is unnecessary to remark that these flagitious
provisions were absolutely invalid. But they had at the time the strong
sanction of force; and Henry might plausibly flatter himself with a hope of
establishing his own usurpation as firmly in France as his father’s had been in
England. What not even the comprehensive policy of Edward III, the energy of
the Black Prince, the valor of their Knollyses and Chandoses, nor his own
victories could attain, now seemed, by a strange vicissitude of fortune, to
court his ambition. During two years that Henry lived after the treaty of
Troyes, he governed the north of France with unlimited authority in the name of
Charles VI. The latter survived his son-in-law but a few weeks; and the infant
Henry VI. was immediately proclaimed King of France and England, under the
regency of his uncle the Duke of Bedford.
Notwithstanding the
disadvantage of a minority, the English cause was less weakened by the death
of Henry than might have been expected. The Duke of Bedford partook of the same
character, and resembled his brother in faults as well as virtues; in his
haughtiness and arbitrary temper as in his energy and address. At the accession
of Charles VII. the usurper was acknowledged by all the northern provinces of
France, except a few fortresses, by most of Guienne, and the dominions of
Burgundy, [a.d. 1423.] The Duke of
Brittany soon afterwards acceded to the treaty of Troyes, but changed his party
again several times within a few years. The central provinces, with Languedoc,
Poitou, and Dauphine, were faithful to the king. For some years the war
continued without any decisive result; but the balance was clearly swayed in
favor of England. For this it is not difficult to assign several causes. The
animosity of the Parisians and the Duke of Burgundy against the Armagnac party
still continued, mingled in the former with dread of the king’s return, whom
they judged themselves to have inexpiably offended. The war had brought forward
some accomplished commanders in the English army; surpassing, not indeed in valor
and enterprise, but in military skill, any whom France could oppose to them. Of
these the most distinguished, besides the Duke of Bedford himself, were
Warwick, Salisbury, and Talbot. Their troops, too, were still very superior to
the French. But this, we must in candor allow, proceeded in a great degree
from the mode in which they were raised. The war was so popular in England that
it was easy to pick the best and stoutest recruits, and their high pay allured
men of respectable condition to the service. We find in Rymer a contract of the
Earl of Salisbury to supply a body of troops, receiving a shilling a day for
every man-at-arms, and sixpence for each archer. This is, perhaps, equal to
fifteen times the sum at our present value of money. They were bound, indeed,
to furnish their own equipments and horses. But France was totally exhausted by
her civil and foreign war, and incompetent to defray the expenses even of the
small force which defended the wreck of the monarchy. Charles VII lived in the
utmost poverty at Bourges. The nobility had scarcely recovered from the fatal
slaughter of Azincourt; and the infantry, composed of peasants or burgesses,
which had made their army so numerous upon that day, whether from inability to
compel their services, or experience of their inefficacy, were never called
into the field. It became almost entirely a war of partisans. Every town in
Picardy, Champagne, Maine, or wherever the contest might be carried on, was a
fortress; and in the attack or defence of these garrisons the valor of both
nations was called into constant exercise. This mode of warfare was
undoubtedly the best in the actual state of France, as it gradually improved
her troops, and flushed them with petty successes. But what principally led to
its adoption, was the license and insubordination of the royalists, who,
receiving no pay, owned no control, and thought that, provided they acted
against the English and Burgundians, they were free to choose their own points
of attack. Nothing can more evidently show the weakness of France than the high
terms by which Charles VII was content to purchase the assistance of some
Scottish auxiliaries. The Earl of Buchan was made constable; the Earl of
Douglas had the duchy of Touraine, with a new title, lieutenant-general of the
kingdom. At a subsequent time Charles offered the province of Saintonge to
James I for an aid of 6000 men. These Scots fought bravely for France, though
unsuccessfully, at Crevant and Verneuil; but it must be owned they set a sufficient
value upon their service. Under all these disadvantages it would be unjust to
charge the French nation with any inferiority of courage, even in the most
unfortunate periods of this war. Though frequently panic-struck in the field of
battle, they stood sieges of their walled towns with matchless spirit and
endurance. Perhaps some analogy may be found between the character of the
French commonalty during the English invasion and the Spaniards of the late
peninsular war. But to the exertions of those brave nobles who restored the monarchy
of Charles VII Spain has afforded no adequate parallel.
It was, however, in the temper
of Charles VII that his enemies found their chief advantage. This prince is
one of the few whose character has been improved by prosperity. During the
calamitous morning of his reign he shrunk from fronting the storm, and strove
to forget himself in pleasure. Though brave, he was never seen in war; though
intelligent, he was governed by flatterers. Those who had committed the assassination
at Montereau under his eyes were his first favorites; as if he had determined
to avoid the only measure through which he could hope for better success, a
reconciliation with the Duke of Burgundy. The Count de Richemont, brother of
the Duke of Brittany, who became afterwards one of the chief pillars of his
throne, consented to renounce the English alliance, and accept the rank of
constable, on condition that these favorites should quit the court, [a.d. 1424.] Two others, who successively
gained a similar influence over Charles, Richemont publicly caused to be
assassinated, assuring the king that it was (or his own and the public good.
Such was the debasement of morals and government which twenty years of civil
war had produced! Another favorite, La Tremouille, took the dangerous office,
and, as might be expected, employed his influence against Richemont, who for
some years lived on his own domains, rather as an armed neutral than a friend,
though he never lost his attachment to the royal cause.
It cannot therefore surprise us
that with all these advantages the regent Duke of Bedford had almost completed
the capture of the fortresses north of the Loire when he invested Orleans in
1428. If this city had fallen, the central provinces, which were less furnished
with defensible places, would have lain open to the enemy, and it is said that
Charles VII in despair was about to retire into Dauphine. At this time his
affairs were restored by one of the most marvellous revolutions in history. A
country girl overthrew the power of England. We cannot pretend to explain the
surprising story of the Maid of Orleans; for, however easy it may be to
suppose that a heated and enthusiastic imagination produced her own visions, it
is a much greater problem to account for the credit they obtained, and for the
success that attended her. Nor will this be solved by the hypothesis of a
concerted stratagem; which, if we do not judge altogether from events, must
appear liable to so many chances of failure, that it could not have suggested
itself to any rational person. However, it is certain that the appearance of
Joan of Arc turned the tide of war, which from that moment flowed without
interruption in Charles’s favor. A superstitious awe enfeebled the sinews of
the English. They hung back in their own country, or deserted from the army,
through fear of the incantations by which alone they conceived so extraordinary
a person to succeed. As men always make sure of Providence for an ally,
whatever untoward fortune appeared to result from preternatural causes was at
once ascribed to infernal enemies; and such bigotry may be pleaded as an
excuse, though a very miserable one, for the detestable murder of this heroine.
The spirit which Joan of Arc
had roused did not subside. France recovered confidence in her own strength,
which had been chilled by a long course of adverse fortune. The king, too,
shook off his indolence, and permitted Richemont to exclude his unworthy
favorites from the court. This led to a very important consequence. The Duke of
Burgundy, whose alliance with England had been only the fruit of indignation at
his father’s murder, fell naturally, as that passion wore out, into sentiments
more congenial to his birth and interests. A prince of the house of Capet could
not willingly see the inheritance of his ancestors transferred to a stranger.
And he had met with provocation both from the regent and the Duke of
Gloucester, who, in contempt of all policy and justice, had endeavored, by an
invalid marriage with Jacqueline, Countess of Hainault and Holland, to obtain
provinces which Burgundy designed for himself. Yet the union of his sister with
Bedford, the obligations by which he was bound, and, most of all, the favor
shown by Charles VII to the assassins of his father, kept him for many years
on the English side, although rendering it less and less assistance. But at
length he concluded a treaty at Arras, the terms of which he dictated rather as
a conqueror than a subject negotiating with his sovereign, [a.d. 1435.] Charles, however, refused
nothing for such an end; and, in a very short time, the Burgundians were ranged
with the French against their old allies of England.
It was now time for the latter
to abandon those magnificent projects of conquering France which temporary
circumstances alone had seemed to render feasible. But as it is a natural effect
of good fortune in the game of war to render a people insensible to its gradual
change, the English could not persuade themselves that their affairs were
irretrievably declining. Hence they rejected the offer of Normandy and Guienne,
subject to the feudal superiority of France, which was made to them at the
congress of Arras; and some years afterwards, when Paris, with the adjacent
provinces, had been lost, the English ambassadors, though empowered by their
private instructions to relax, stood upon demands quite disproportionate to the
actual position of affairs. As foreign enemies, they were odious even in that
part of France which had acknowledged Henry; and when the Duke of
Burgundy deserted their side, Paris and every other city were impatient to
throw off the yoke. A feeble monarchy, and a selfish council, completed their
ruin: the necessary subsidies were raised with difficulty, and, when raised,
misapplied. It is a proof of the exhaustion of France, that Charles was unable,
for several years, to reduce Normandy or Guienne, which were so ill-provided
for defence. At last he came with collected strength to the contest, and,
breaking an armistice upon slight pretences, within two years overwhelmed the
English garrisons in each of these provinces. All the inheritance of Henry II
and Eleanor, all the conquests of Edward III and Henry V except Calais and a
small adjacent district, were irrecoverably torn from the crown of England. A
barren title, that idle trophy of disappointed ambition, was preserved with
strange obstinacy to our own age. [a.d. 1449]
In these second English wars we
find little left of that generous feeling which had, in general, distinguished
the contemporaries of Edward III. The very virtues which a state of hostility
promotes are not proof against its long continuance, and sink at last into
brutal fierceness. Revenge and fear excited the two factions of Orleans and
Burgundy to all atrocious actions. The troops serving under partisans on
detached expeditions, according to the system of the war, lived at free
quarters on the people. The histories of the time are full of their outrages,
from which, as is the common case, the unprotected peasantry most suffered.
Even those laws of war, which the courteous sympathies of chivalry had
enjoined, were disregarded by a merciless fury. Garrisons surrendering after a
brave defence were put to death. Instances of this are very frequent. Henry V
excepts Alain Blanchard, a citizen who had distinguished himself during the
siege, from the capitulation of Rouen, and orders him to execution. At the
taking of a town of Champagne, John of Luxemburg, the Burgundian general,
stipulates that every fourth and sixth man should be at his discretion; which
he exercises by causing them all to be hanged. Four hundred English from Pontoise,
stormed by Charles VII in 1441, are paraded in chains and naked through the
streets of Paris, and thrown afterwards into the Seine. This infamous action
cannot but be ascribed to the king.
At the expulsion of the
English, France emerged from the chaos with an altered character and new
features of government. The royal authority and supreme jurisdiction of the
parliament were universally recognized. Yet there was a tendency towards
insubordination left among the great nobility, arising in part from the remains
of old feudal privileges, but still more from that lax administration which, in
the convulsive struggles of the war, had been suffered to prevail. In the south
were some considerable vassals, the houses of Foix, Albret, and Armagnac, who,
on account of their distance from the seat of empire, had always maintained a
very independent conduct. The dukes of Brittany and Burgundy were of a more formidable
character, and might rather be ranked among foreign powers than privileged
subjects. The princes, too, of the royal blood, who, during the late reign, had
learned to partake or contend for the management, were ill-inclined towards
Charles VII, himself jealous, from old recollections, of their ascendency. They
saw that the constitution was verging rapidly towards an absolute monarchy,
from the direction of which they would studiously be excluded. This
apprehension gave rise to several attempts at rebellion during the reign of
Charles VII, and to the war, commonly entitled, for the Public Weal (du Bien
Public'), tinder Louis XI. Among the pretences alleged by the revolters in
each of these, the injuries of the people were not forgotten; y but from
the people they received small support. Weary of civil dissension, and anxious
for a strong government to secure them from depredation, the French had no
inducement to intrust even their real grievances to a few malcontent princes,
whose regard for the common good they had much reason to distrust. Every
circumstance favored Charles VII. and his son in the attainment of arbitrary
power. The country was pillaged by military ruffians. Some of these had been
led by the dauphin to a war in Germany, but the remainder still infested the
highroads and villages. Charles established his companies of ordonnance, the
basis of the French regular army, in order to protect the country from such
depredators. They consisted of about nine thousand soldiers, all cavalry, of whom
fifteen hundred were heavy armed; a force not very considerable, but the first,
except mere body-guards, which had been raised in any part of Europe as a
national standing army. These troops were paid out of the produce of a
permanent tax, called the taille; an innovation still more important than the
former. But the present benefit cheating the people, now prone to submissive
habits, little or no opposition was made, except in Guienne, the inhabitants
of which had speedy reason to regret the mild government of England, and
vainly endeavored to return to its protection.
It was not long before the new
despotism exhibited itself in its harshest character. Louis XI, son of Charles
VII, who, during his father’s reign, had been connected with the discontented
princes, came to the throne greatly endowed with those virtues and vices which
conspire to the success of a king. [a.d. 1461.]
Laborious vigilance in business, contempt of pomp, affability to inferiors,
were his excellences; qualities especially praiseworthy in an age
characterized by idleness, love of pageantry, and insolence. To these virtues
he added a perfect knowledge of all persons eminent for talents or influence in
the countries with which he was connected, and a well-judged bounty, that thought
no expense wasted to draw them into his service or interest. In the fifteenth
century this political art had hardly been known, except perhaps in Italy; the
princes of Europe had contended with each other by arms, sometimes by
treachery, but never with such complicated subtlety of intrigue. Of that
insidious cunning, which has since been brought to perfection, Louis XI may be
deemed not absolutely the inventor, but the most eminent improver; and its
success has led, perhaps, to too high an estimate of his abilities. Like most
bad men, he sometimes fell into his own snare, and was betrayed by his
confidential ministers, because his confidence was generally reposed in the
wicked. And his dissimulation was so notorious, his tyranny so oppressive,
that he was naturally surrounded by enemies, and had occasion for all his craft
to elude those rebellions and confederacies which might perhaps not have been
raised against a more upright sover- eign. At one time the monarchy was on
the point of sinking before a combination which would have ended in dismembering
France. This was the league denominated of the Public Weal, in which all the
princes and great vassals of the French crown were concerned; the dukes of
Brittany, Burgundy, Alençon, Bourbon, the Count of Dunois, so renowned for his
valor in the English wars, the families of Foix and Armagnac; and at the head
of all, Charles Duke of Berry, the king’s brother and presumptive heir. [a.d. 1461.] So unanimous a combination
was not formed without a strong provocation from the king, or at least without
weighty grounds for distrusting his intentions; but the more remote cause of
this confederacy, as of those which had been raised against Charles VII., was
the critical position of the feudal aristocracy from the increasing power of
the crown. This war of the Public Weal was in fact, a struggle to preserve
their independence; and from the weak character of the Duke of Berry, whom they
would, if successful, have placed upon the throne, it is possible that France
might have been in a manner partitioned among them in the event of their
success, or, at least, that Burgundy and Brittany would have thrown off the
sovereignty that galled them.
The strength of the
confederates in this war much exceeded that of the king; but it was not
judiciously employed; and after an indecisive battle at Montlhéry they failed
in the great object of reducing Paris, which would have obliged Louis to fly
from his dominions. It was his policy to promise everything, in trust that
fortune would afford some opening to repair his losses and give scope to his
superior prudence. Accordingly, by the treaty of Conflans, he not only
surrendered afresh the towns upon the Somme, which he had lately redeemed from
the Duke of Burgundy, but invested his brother with the duchy of Normandy as
his appanage.
The term appanage denotes the
provision made for the younger children of a king of France. This always
consisted of lands and feudal superiorities held of the crown by the tenure of
peerage. It is evident that this usage, as it produced a new class of powerful
feudatories, was hostile to the interests and policy of the sovereign, and
retarded the subjugation of the ancient aristocracy. But an usage coeval with
the monarchy was not to be abrogated, and the scarcity of money rendered it
impossible to provide for the younger branches of the royal family by any other
means. It was restrained, however, as far as circumstances would permit. Philip
IV declared that the county of Poitiers, bestowed by him on his son, should
revert to the crown on the extinction of male heirs. But this, though an
important precedent, was not, as has often been asserted, a general law.
Charles V. limited the appanages of his own sons to twelve thousand livres of
annual value in land. By means of their appanages, and through the operation of
the Salic law, which made their inheritance of the crown a less remote
contingency, the princes of the blood royal in France were at all times (for
the remark is applicable long after Louis XI.) a distinct and formidable class
of men, whose influence was always disadvantageous to the reigning monarch,
and, in general, to the people.
No appanage had ever been
granted to France so enormous as the duchy of Normandy. One-third of the whole
national revenue, it is declared, was derived from that rich province. Louis
could not, therefore, sit down under such terms as, with his usual insincerity,
he had accepted at Conflans. In a very short time he attacked Normandy, and
easily compelled his brother to take refuge in Brittany; nor were his enemies
ever able to procure the restitution of Charles’s appanage. During the rest of
his reign Louis had powerful coalitions to withstand; but his prudence and
compliance with circumstances, joined to some mixture of good fortune, brought
him safely through his perils. The Duke of Brittany, a prince of moderate
talents, was unable to make any formidable impression, though generally leagued
with the enemies of the king. The less powerful vassals were successfully crushed
by Louis with decisive vigor; the duchy of Alençon was confiscated; the Count
of Armagnac was assassinated; the Duke of Nemours, and the Constable of St.
Pol, a politician as treacherous as Louis, who had long betrayed both him and
the Duke of Burgundy, suffered upon the scaffold. The king’s brother Charles,
after disquieting him for many years, died suddenly in Guienne, which had
finally been granted as his appanage, with strong suspicions of having been
poisoned by the king’s contrivance. [a.d. 1472.] Edward IV of England was too dissipated and too indolent to be fond of war; and, though he once entered
France with an army more considerable than could have been expected after such
civil bloodshed as England had witnessed, he was induced, by the stipulation of
a large pension, to give up the enterprise. So terrible was still in France the
apprehension of an English war, that Louis prided himself upon no part of his
policy so much as the warding this blow. Edward showed a desire to visit Paris;
but the king gave him no invitation, lest, he said, his brother should find
some handsome women there, who might tempt him to return in a different manner.
Hastings, Howard, and others of Edward’s ministers, were secured by bribes in
the interest of Louis, which the first of these did not scruple to receive at
the same time from the Duke of Burgundy.
This was the most powerful
enemy whom the craft of Louis had to counteract. In the last days of the feudal
system, when the house of Capet had almost achieved the subjugation of those
proud vassals among whom it had been originally numbered, a new antagonist
sprung up to dispute the field against the crown. John King of France granted
the duchy of Burgundy, by way of appanage, to his third son, Philip. By his
marriage with Margaret, heiress of Louis Count of Flanders, Philip acquired
that province, Artois, the county of Burgundy (or Franche-Comte), and the
Nivernois. Philip the Good, his grandson, who carried the prosperity of this
family to its height, possessed himself, by various titles, of the several
other provinces which composed the Netherlands. These were fiefs of the empire,
but latterly not much dependent upon it, and alienated by their owners without
its consent. At the peace of Arras the districts of Macon and Auxerre were
absolutely ceded to Philip, and great part of Picardy conditionally made over
to him, redeemable on the payment of four hundred thousand crowns. These
extensive, though not compact dominions, were abundant in population and
wealth, fertile in corn, wine, and salt, and full of commercial activity.
Thirty years of peace which followed the treaty of Arras, with a mild and free
government, raised the subjects of Burgundy to a degree of prosperity quite
unparalleled in these times of disorder, and this was displayed in general
sumptuousness of dress and feasting. The court of Philip and of his son Charles
was distinguished for its pomp and riches, for pageants and tournaments; the
trappings of chivalry, perhaps without its spirit; for the military character
of Burgundy had been impaired by long tranquility.
During the lives of Philip and
Charles VII each understood the other’s rank, and their amity was little
interrupted. But their successors, the most opposite of human kind in
character, had one common quality, ambition, to render their antipathy more
powerful. Louis was eminently timid and suspicious in policy; Charles intrepid
beyond all men, and blindly presumptuous : Louis stooped to any humiliation to
reach his aim; Charles was too haughty to seek the fairest means of
strengthening his party. An alliance of his daughter with the Duke of Guienne,
brother of Louis, was what the malcontent French princes most desired and the
king most dreaded; but Charles, either averse to any French connection, or
willing to keep his daughter’s suitors in dependence, would never directly
accede to that or any other proposition for her marriage. On Philip’s death in
1467, he inherited a great treasure, which he soon wasted in the prosecution of
his schemes. These were so numerous and vast, that he had not time to live,
says Comines, to complete them, nor would one-half of Europe have contented
him. It was his intention to assume the title of king; and the Emperor Frederic
III. was at one time actually on his road to confer this dignity, when some
suspicion caused him to retire, and the project was never renewed. It is
evident that, if Charles’s capacity had borne any proportion to his pride and
courage, or if a prince less politic than Louis XI. had been his contemporary
in France, the province of Burgundy must have been lost to the monarchy. For
several years these great rivals were engaged, sometimes in open hostility,
sometimes in endeavors to overreach each other; but Charles, though not much
more scrupulous, was far less an adept in these mysteries of politics than the
king.
Notwithstanding the power of
Burgundy, there were some disadvantages in its situation. It presented (I speak
of all Charles’s dominions under the common name, Burgundy) a very exposed frontier
on the side of Germany and Switzerland, as well as France; and Louis exerted a
considerable influence over the adjacent princes of the empire as well as the
United Cantons. The people of Liège, a very populous city, had for a long time
been continually rebelling against their bishops, who were the allies of
Burgundy ; Louis was of course not backward to foment their insurrections,
which sometimes gave the dukes a good deal of trouble. The Flemings, and
especially the people of Ghent, had been during a century noted for their
republican spirit and contumacious defiance of their sovereign. Liberty never
wore a more unamiable countenance than among these burghers, who abused the
strength she gave them by cruelty and insolence. Ghent, when Froissart wrote,
about the year 1400, was one of the strongest cities in Europe, and would have
required, he says, an army of two hundred thousand men to besiege it on every
side, so as to shut up all access by the Lys and Scheldt. It contained eighty
thousand men of age to bear arms; a calculation which, although, as I presume,
much exaggerated, is evidence of great actual populousness. Such a city was
absolutely impregnable at a time when artillery was very imperfect both in its
construction and management. Hence, though the citizens of Ghent were generally
beaten in the field with great slaughter, they obtained tolerable terms from
their masters, who knew the danger of forcing them to a desperate defence.
No taxes were raised in
Flanders, or indeed throughout the dominions of Burgundy, without consent of
the three estates. In the time of Philip not a great deal of money was levied
upon the people; but Charles obtained every year a pretty large subsidy, which
he expended in the hire of Italian and English mercenaries. An almost
uninterrupted success had attended his enterprises for a length of time, and
rendered his disposition still more overweening. His first failure was before
Neuss, a little town near Cologne, the possession of which would have made him
nearly master of the whole course of the Rhine, for he had already obtained the
land-graviate of Alsace, [a.d. 1474.] Though compelled to raise the siege, he succeeded in occupying, next
year, the duchy of Lorraine. But his overthrow was reserved for an enemy whom
he despised, and whom none could have thought equal to the contest. The Swiss
had given him some slight provocation, for which they were ready to atone; but
Charles was unused to forbear; and perhaps Switzerland came within his projects
of conquest. At Granson, in the Pays de Vaud, he was entirely routed, with more
disgrace than slaughter. [a.d. 1476.] But having reassembled his troops, and met the confederate army of Swiss
and Germans at Morat, near Friburg, he was again defeated with vast loss. On
this day the power of Burgundy was dissipated: deserted by his allies, betrayed
by his mercenaries, he set his life upon another cast at Nancy, desperately
giving battle to the Duke of Lorraine with a small dispirited army, and
perished in the engagement, [a.d. 1477.]
Now was the moment when Louis,
who had held back while his enemy was breaking his force against the rocks of
Switzerland, came to gather a harvest which his labor had not reaped. Charles
left an only daughter, undoubted heiress of Flanders and Artois, as well as of
his dominions out of France, but whose right of succession to the duchy of
Burgundy was more questionable. Originally the great fiefs of the crown
descended to females, and this was the case with respect to the two first
mentioned. But John had granted Burgundy to his son Philip by way of appanage;
and it was contended that the appanages reverted to the crown in default of
male heirs. In the form of Philip’s investiture, the duchy was granted to him
and his lawful heirs, without designation of sex. The construction, therefore,
must be left to the established course of law. This, however, was by no means
acknowledged by Mary, Charles’s daughter, who maintained both that no general
law restricted appanages to male heirs, and that Burgundy had always been
considered as a feminine fief, John himself having possessed it, not by
reversion as king (for descendants of the first dukes were then living), but by
inheritance derived through females. Such was this question of succession
between Louis XI and Mary of Burgundy, upon the merits of whose pretensions I
will not pretend altogether to decide, but shall only observe that, if Charles
had conceived his daughter to be excluded from this part of his inheritance, he
would probably, at Conflans or Peronne, where he treated upon the
vantage-ground, have attempted at least to obtain a renunciation of Louis's
claim.
There was one obvious mode of
preventing all further contest and of aggrandizing the French monarchy far
more than by the reunion of Burgundy. This was the marriage of Mary with the
dauphin, which was ardently wished in France. Whatever obstacles might occur to
this connection, it was natural to expect on the opposite side—from Mary’s
repugnance to an infant husband, or from the jealousy which her subjects were
likely to entertain of being incorporated with a country worse governed than
their own. The arts of Louis would have been well employed in smoothing these
impediments.” But he chose to seize upon as many towns as, in those critical
circumstances, lay exposed to him, and stripped the young duchess of Artois and
Franche-Comté. Expectations of the marriage he sometimes held out, but, as it
seems, without sincerity. Indeed he contrived irreconcilably to alienate Mary
by a shameful perfidy, betraying the ministers whom she had intrusted upon a
secret mission to the people of Ghent, who put them to the torture, and
afterwards to death, in the presence and amidst the tears and supplications of
their mistress. Thus the French alliance becoming odious in France, this
princess married Maximilian of Austria, son of the Emperor Frederic—a
connection which Louis strove to prevent, though it was impossible then to
foresee that it was ordained to retard the growth of France and to bias the fate
of Europe during three hundred years, [a.d. 1477.] This war lasted till after the death of Mary, who left one son, Philip,
and one daughter, Margaret. By a treaty of peace concluded at Arras, in 1482,
it was agreed that this daughter should become the dauphin’s wife, with
Franche-Comté and Artois, which Louis held already, for her dowry, to be
restored in case the marriage should not take effect. The homage of Flanders
was reserved to the crown.
Meanwhile Louis was lingering
in disease and torments of mind, the retribution of fraud and tyranny. Two
years before his death he was struck with an apoplexy, from which he never wholly
recovered. As he felt his disorder increasing, he shut himself up in a palace
near Tours, to hide from the world the knowledge of his decline. His solitude
was like that of Tiberius at Capreae, full of terror and suspicion, and deep
consciousness of universal hatred. All ranks, he well knew, had their several
injuries to remember: the clergy, whose liberties he had sacrificed to the see
of Rome, by revoking the Pragmatic Sanction of Charles VII; the princes, whose
blood he had poured upon the scaffold; the parliament, whose course of justice
he had turned aside; the commons, who groaned under his extortion, and were
plundered by his soldiery. The palace, fenced with portcullises and spikes
of iron, was guarded by archers and cross-bow men, who shot at any that approached
by night. Few entered this den; but to them he showed himself in magnificent
apparel, contrary to his former custom, hoping thus to disguise the change of
his meagre body. He distrusted his friends and kindred, his daughter and his
son, the last of whom he had not suffered even to read or write, lest he should
too soon become his rival. No man ever so much feared death, to avert which he
stooped to every meanness and sought every remedy. His physician had sworn that
if he were dismissed the king would not survive a week; and Louis, enfeebled by
sickness and terror, bore the rudest usage from this man, and endeavored to
secure his services by vast rewards. Always credulous in relics, though seldom
restrained by superstition from any crime, he eagerly bought up treasures of
this sort, and even procured a Calabrian hermit, of noted sanctity, to journey
as far as Tours in order to restore his health. Philip de Comines, who attended
him during his infirmity, draws a parallel between the torments he then endured
and those he had formerly inflicted on others. Indeed the whole of his life was
vexation of spirit. “I have known him,” says Comines, “and been his servant
in the flower of his age, and in the time of his greatest prosperity; but never
did I see him without uneasiness and care. Of all amusements he loved only the
chase, and hawking in its season. And in this he had almost as much uneasiness
as pleasure: for he rode hard and got up early, and sometimes went a great way,
and regarded no weather; so that he used to return very weary, and almost ever
in wrath with someone. I think that from his childhood he never had any respite
of labor and trouble to his death. And I am certain that, if all the happy days
of his life, in which he had more enjoyment than uneasiness, were numbered,
they would be found very few; and at least that they would be twenty of sorrow
for every one of pleasure.”
Charles VIII was about thirteen
years old when he succeeded his father Louis, [a.d. 1483.] Though the law of France fixed the majority of her kings at that age,
yet it seems not to have been strictly regarded on this occasion, and at least
Charles was a minor by nature, if not by law. A contest arose, therefore, for
the regency, which Louis had intrusted to his daughter Anne, wife of the Lord
de Beaujeu, one of the Bourbon family. The Duke of Orleans, afterward Louis XII,
claimed it as presumptive heir of the crown, and was seconded by most of the
princes. Anne, however, maintained her ground, and ruled France for several
years in her brother’s name with singular spirit and address, in spite of the
rebellions which the Orleans party raised up against her. These were supported
by the Duke of Brittany, the last of the great vassals of the crown, whose
daughter, as he had no male issue, was the object of as many suitors as Mary of
Burgundy.
The
duchy of Brittany was peculiarly circumstanced. The inhabitants, whether sprung
from the ancient republicans of Armorica, or, as some have thought, from an
emigration of Britons during the Saxon invasion, had not originally belonged
to the body of the French monarchy. They were governed by their own princes
and laws, though tributary, perhaps, as the weaker to the stronger, to the
Merovingian kings. In the ninth century the dukes of Brittany did
homage to Charles the Bald, the right of which was transferred afterward to the
dukes of Normandy. This formality, at that time no token of real subjection,
led to consequences beyond the views of either party. For when the feudal
chains that had hung so loosely upon the shoulders of the great vassals began
to be straightened by the dexterity of the court, Brittany found itself drawn
among the rest to the same centre. The old privileges of independence were
treated as usurpation; the dukes were menaced with confiscation of their fief,
their right of coining money disputed, their jurisdiction impaired by appeals
to the parliament of Paris. However, they stood boldly upon their right, and
always refused to pay liege-homage, which implied an obligation of service to
the lord, in contradistinction to simple homage, which was a mere symbol of
feudal dependence.
About the time that Edward III
made pretension to the crown of France, a controversy somewhat resembling it
arose in the duchy of Brittany, between the families of Blois and Montfort.
This led to a long and obstinate war, connected all along, as a sort of
underplot, with the great drama of France and England. At last Montfort,
Edward’s ally, by the defeat and death of his antagonist, obtained the duchy,
of which Charles V soon after gave him the investiture. This prince and his
family were generally inclined to English connections; but the Bretons would
seldom permit them to be effectual. Two cardinal feelings guided the conduct of
this brave and faithful people; the one, an attachment to the French nation and
monarchy in opposition to foreign enemies; the other, a zeal for their own
privileges and the family of Montfort, in opposition to the encroachments of
the crown. In Francis II, the present duke, the male line of that family was
about to be extinguished. His daughter Anne was naturally the object of many
suitors, among whom were particularly distinguished the Duke of Orleans, who
seems to have been preferred by herself; the lord of Albret, a member of the
Gascon family of Foix, favored by the Breton nobility, as most likely to
preserve the peace and liberties of their country, but whose age rendered him
not very acceptable to a youthful princess; and Maximilian, king of the Romans.
Brittany was rent by factions and overrun by the armies of the regent of
France, who did not lose this opportunity of interfering with its domestic
troubles, and of persecuting her private enemy, the Duke of Orleans. Anne of
Brittany, upon her father’s death, finding no other means of escaping the
addresses of Albret, was married by proxy to Maximilian, [a.d. 1489.] This, however, aggravated
the evils of the country, since France was resolved at all events to break off
so dangerous a connection. And as Maximilian himself was unable, or took not
sufficient pains, to relieve his betrothed wife from her embarrassments, she was
ultimately compelled to accept the hand of Charles VIII. He had long been
engaged by the treaty of Arras to marry the daughter of Maximilian, and that
princess was educated at the French court. But this engagement had not
prevented several years of hostilities, and continual intrigues with the towns
of Flanders against Maximilian. The double injury which the latter sustained in
the marriage of Charles with the heiress of Brittany seemed likely to excite a
protracted contest; but the King of France, who had other objects in view, and
perhaps was conscious that he had not acted a fair part, soon came to an
accommodation, by which he restored Artois and Franche-Comté. Both these
provinces had revolted to Maximilian; so that Charles must have continued the
war at some disadvantage.
France was now consolidated
into a great kingdom: the feudal system was at an end. [a.d. 1492.] The vigor of Philip Augustus, the paternal
wisdom of St. Louis, the policy of Philip the Fair, had laid the foundations of
a powerful monarchy, which neither the arms of England nor seditions of Paris
nor rebellions of the princes were able to shake. Besides the original fiefs
of the French crown, it had acquired two countries beyond the Rhone, which
properly depended only upon the empire, Dauphine, under Philip of Valois, by
the bequest of Humbert, the last of its princes; and Provence, under Louis XI,
by that of Charles of Anjou. Thus having conquered herself, if I may use the
phrase, and no longer apprehensive of any foreign enemy, France was prepared,
under a monarch flushed with sanguine ambition, to carry her arms into other
countries, and to contest the prize of glory and power upon the ample theatre
of Europe.
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