chapter 2 HABSBURG
AND VALOIS
THE
secular struggle between the Houses of Burgundy and Valois reaches a new stage
in the era of the Reformation. The murder of the Duke of Orleans in the streets
of Paris in 1407 involved at first only a junior branch of the French royal
House in the blood feud with Burgundy. The alliance of Orleans and Armagnac in
1410, and of both with Charles the Dauphin in 1418, swept in the senior branch,
and led to the retributive murder of John of Burgundy at Montereau in 1419. Steadily the area of infection widens. A relentless Ate dominates all
the early years of Philip the Good, and then, laid for a while to sleep at
Arras (1435), reappears in the days of Charles the Bold. Not only political and
national aims, but an hereditary dynastic hatred might have inspired Louis XI
in his campaigns of war and intrigue until the crushing blow at Nancy. The
grandson of Charles the Bold, Philip the Fair, seemed, in his jealousy of
Ferdinand and his devotion to the interests of the Netherlands, to have
forgotten the ancestral feud. But his son and heir, whom we know best as
Charles the Fifth, inherited, together with the inconsequent rivalries of
Maximilian, and the more enduring and successful antagonism of Ferdinand, the
old Burgundian duty of revenge. Thus the chronic hostility between the Kings of
Valois-Angoulême and the united line of Burgundy, Austria, Castile, and Aragon
has a dramatic touch of predestined doom, which might find a fitting
counterpart in a Norse Saga or the Nibelungenlied.
But
greater forces than hereditary hate drove Europe to the gulf in which the joy
of the Renaissance was forever extinguished. The territorial consolidation of
the previous age in Europe, though striking, had been incomplete. The union of
the French and Spanish kingdoms had gone on natural lines. But Italy had been
less fortunate. At the death of Ferdinand her fate was still uncertain. The
Spaniards stood firm in Sicily and Naples, the French seemed to stand secure in
Milan. Venice had withstood the shock of united Europe. Florence seemed strengthened
by the personal protection of the Holy Father. But so long as two rival foreign
Powers held their ground in Italy, consolidation had gone too far or not far
enough. Italy must be either Italian or Spanish or French. The equilibrium was
unstable. No amicable arrangement could permanently preserve the status quo.
The issue could only be solved by the arbitrament of arms.
In Germany
the case was different. There consolidation seemed to be out of the question.
Neither the preponderance of any single Power, nor that of any combination of
Powers, held out hopes of successful conquest. And the German nation, inured to
arms, could offer a very different resistance to that which any of the Italian
States could maintain. Thus the history of Europe in this period falls into two
well-marked sections. The Teutonic lands work out their own development under
the influence of the new religious thought, unaffected as a whole by the
competition for supremacy in Europe. They had their own dangers from the Turk
and in civil strife. But the struggle, although ostensibly between the Emperor
and the King of France, was in reality between Spain and France for hegemony in
western Europe, supremacy in Italy. The struggle was dynastic, but dynasties
are the threads about which nations crystallize.
At the
outset the forces were not ill-matched. On the death of Ferdinand in 1516 the
Archduke Charles succeeded by hereditary right to the kingdoms of Castile and
Aragon and their dependencies, to the kingdoms of the two Sicilies,
to the Franche-Comté of Burgundy, and to the provinces of the Netherlands. On
the death of Maximilian in 1519, he added to these the Habsburg inheritance in
eastern Europe, which he wisely resigned before long to his brother Ferdinand.
For soldiers he could rely on his Spanish dominions, on the regular forces
organized by Charles the Bold in the Netherlands, on the less trustworthy
levies of Germany and Italy. The Netherlands and Spain gave him a considerable
revenue, which exceeded in gross the revenue of the French King, but was not
equally available for common dynastic purposes, owing to the difficulty of
exporting and transporting treasure, and the cogent necessities of internal
government. The Sicilies might pay for their own
government, and provide an occasional supplement, but the resources of these
kingdoms hardly compensated for the needs of their defence. The maritime
resources of Spain were considerable, but ill-organized and therefore not
readily available.
The French
King on the other hand, though his dominions were less extensive, had manifest
advantages both for attack and defence. His territory was compact, and almost
all capacity for internal resistance had been crushed out by the vigorous
policy of Louis XI and Anne of Beaujeu. His subjects
were rich and flourishing, and far more industrious than those of Spain. All
their resources were absolutely at his control. Even the clergy could be relied
upon for ample subsidies. His financial system was superior to that of any
other existing State. He could make such laws and impose such taxes as suited
his sovereign pleasure. Since the Concordat of 1516 all-important clerical
patronage was in his hands; and the great ecclesiastical revenues served him as
a convenient means for rewarding ministers, and attaching to himself the great
families whose cadets were greedy of spiritual promotion. His cavalry and
artillery were excellent and well organized. His infantry had not yet been
satisfactorily developed, but his resources permitted him to engage mercenaries,
and Germans and Swiss were still ready to serve the highest bidder. In defence
he could fight upon interior lines. For attack he had a ready road to Italy
through the friendly territories of Savoy. The possession of Milan secured to
him the maritime power of Genoa, a very valuable addition to his own.
In
character the two potentates were less equally matched. Francis was bold, and
vigorous upon occasion, but inconsequent in action; his choice of men was
directed by favoritism; his attention was diverted
from business by the pursuit of every kind of pleasure, the more as well as the
less refined. His extravagance was such as to hamper his public activity. To
the last he never showed any increasing sense of royal responsibility, and
preserved in premature old age the frivolous and vicious habits of his youth.
At the
death of Ferdinand Charles was still a boy, and, until the death of Guillaume
de Croy, Sire de Chièvres (1521), his own individuality did not make itself clearly felt. Chièvres, his old tutor, now his principal minister,
dominated his action. Yet at the election to the Empire it was his own
pertinacity that secured for him the victory when others would have been
content to obtain the prize for his brother Ferdinand. Throughout his life this
pre-eminent trait of manly perseverance marks him with a certain stamp of
greatness. Slow in action, deliberate in council to the point of irresolution,
he yet pursued his ends with unfailing obstinacy until by sheer endurance he
prevailed. Extreme tenacity in the maintenance of his just rights, moderation
in victory, and abstinence from all chimerical enterprise, are the other
qualities to which he owes such success as he obtained. Fortune served him well
on more than one conspicuous occasion; but he merited her favours by
indefatigable patience; and he never made on her exorbitant demands. Of his two
grandfathers he resembles Ferdinand far more than Maximilian. In the course of
his career these characteristics were developed and became more notable; unlike
his rival he learnt from life; but from his youth he was serious, persistent,
sober. In his choice of ministers and judgment of men he showed himself greatly
superior to Francis. He was well served throughout his life; and never allowed
a minister to become his master. Unsympathetic, unimaginative, he lacked the
endearing graces of a popular sovereign; he lacked the gifts that achieve
greatness. But, born to greatness, he maintained unimpaired the heritage he had
received; and, at whatever price of personal and national exhaustion, he left
the House of Habsburg greater than he had found it. When we consider the
ineluctable burden of his several and discrete realms, the perplexing and
multifarious dangers to which he was exposed, the mere mechanical friction
occasioned by distance and boundaries and intervening hostile lands, the
inefficient organization, political, financial, and military, of his countries
at that time, the obstacles opposed by institutions guarding extinct and
impossible local privilege, the world-shaking problems which broke up all
previous settled order, then the conscientious sincerity with which he
addressed his mediocre talents to the allotted work must earn for him at least
a place in our esteem.
On neither
side was the struggle for world-empire. Charles would have been content to
recover Milan in self-defence, and the duchy of Burgundy as his hereditary and
indefeasible right. France had good grounds for claiming Milan and Naples. But
it is doubtful whether Francis would have been as moderate after victory as
Charles.
The
struggle can be considered apart from developments in Germany. But it has its
reaction on German fortunes. Had Charles not been hampered throughout his
career by the contest with France he would not have been forced to temporize
with the Reforming movement until it was too late for effective action. The
Most Christian King was an unconscious ally of Luther, as he was a deliberate
ally of the Turk. Immediately the conflict concerned the fate of Italy.
Indirectly it weakened the resistance of Europe to the Reformed opinions, and
to the Muslim in Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean.
After Marignano (1515) and the Peace of Noyon (1516), which
professed to shelve all outstanding questions and secure perpetual friendship
between Spain and France, Europe had peace for a while. It was arranged at
Noyon that Charles should take Louise, the daughter of the King of France, to
wife, and that the rights over the kingdom of Naples should go with her. Until
this babe-in-arms should become his wife, Charles was to pay 100,000 crowns a
year as rent for Naples, and 50,000 until she bore him a son. If Louise died, some
daughter of a later birth was to be substituted as his affianced bride, and
this clause actually took effect. Charles promised satisfaction with regard to
Spanish Navarre, conquered by Ferdinand in 1512; perhaps he even secretly
engaged himself to restore it to Catharine, its lawful Queen, within six
months. The treaty was concluded under the influence of Flemish counsellors,
who had surrounded Charles, since he had taken up the government of the
Netherlands in the previous year. It was inspired by a desire for peace with
France in interests exclusively Burgundian. But it had also its value for
Spain, for it gave Charles a breathing space in which to settle the affairs of
his new kingdoms. Maximilian, now in isolation, was forced to come to terms
with France and Venice, and surrender Verona; and peace was secured in Italy
for a while. At a subsequent conference at Cambray in
1517 the partition of Italy between Habsburg and Valois was discussed, but
nothing was definitely settled. English diplomatists looked on askance at the
apparent reconciliation, but their hopes of fishing in troubled waters were
soon revived.
Charles
utilized the respite for his visit to Spain in 1517. While here he was not only
occupied with the troublesome affairs of his new kingdoms, but with the
question of the Empire. Maximilian, who, although not yet sixty years of age,
was worn out by his tumultuous life, was anxious to secure the succession to
his grandson. At the Diet of Augsburg, 1518, he received the promise of the
Electors of Mainz, Cologne, the Palatinate, Brandenburg, and Bohemia for the
election of Charles as Roman King. The French King was already in the field,
but the promises and influence of Maximilian, and the money which Charles was
able to supply, overbore for the moment this powerful antagonism. On the
receipt of this news Pope Leo X, who had already been attracted to the side of
France, was seriously alarmed. The union of the imperial power with the throne
of Naples was contrary to the time-honoured doctrines of papal policy.
Thenceforward he declared himself more openly a supporter of the French claims.
Meanwhile, if Charles was to be elected before Maximilian’s death, the latter
must first receive from the Pope the imperial crown. This Leo refused to
facilitate. In all this the Pope showed himself as ever more mindful of the
temporal interests of the Roman See and of his own dynastic profit, than of the
good of Europe or religion. Both in the coming struggle with victorious Islam,
and against the impending religious danger, an intimate alliance with Charles
was of far more value than the support of France. But the meaner motives
prevailed.
On January
19, 1519, Maximilian died, and the struggle broke out in a new form. The
promises of the Electors proved to be of no account. All had to be done over
again. The zeal of his agents, his more abundant supplies of ready cash, the
support of the Pope, at first gave Francis the advantage. Troubles broke out in
the Austrian dominions. Things looked black in Spain. Even the wise Margaret of
Savoy lost hope, and recommended that Ferdinand should be put forward in place
of Charles. Charles showed himself more resolute and a better judge of the
situation. He had friends in Germany, Germans, who understood German politics
better than the emissaries of Francis. The influence of England on either side
was discounted by Henry VIII’s own candidature. German opinion was decidedly in
favour of a German election, and although Charles was by birth, education, and
sympathy a Netherlander, yet the interests of his House in Germany were
important, and it may not have been generally known how little German were his
predilections. The great house of Fugger came courageously to his aid and
advanced no less than 500,000 florins. The advantage of this support lay not
only in the sum supplied, but in the preference of the Electors for Augsburg
bills. The Elector of Mainz refused to accept any paper other than the
obligations of well-known German merchants. At the critical moment Francis
could not get credit. The Swabian League forbade the merchants of Augsburg to
accept his bills. He endeavoured in vain to raise money in Genoa and in Lyons.
It is
needless to pursue the base intrigues and tergiversations of the several
Electors. The Elector of Saxony played the most honourable part, for he refused
to be a candidate himself, and declined all personal gratification. The Elector
of Mainz showed himself perhaps the most greedy and unfaithful. He received
100,000 florins from Charles alone and the promise of a pension of 10,000,
which it is satisfactory to note was not regularly paid. Money on the one hand,
and popular pressure on the other decided the issue. The Rhinelands,
where the possessions of four Electors lay and where the election was to take
place, were enthusiastic for the Habsburg candidature. It was here that the
national idea was strongest, and the humanists were eloquent in their support
of Maximilian’s grandson. The army of the Swabian League, under Franz von Sickingen, the great German condottiere, was ready to act
on behalf of Charles; it had been recently engaged in evicting the Duke Ulrich
of Württemberg from his dominions, and was now secured by Charles for three
months for his own service. Here also money had its value. Sickingen and the Swabian League received 171,000 florins. At the end the Pope gave way
and withdrew his opposition. On June 28, 1519, the Electors at Frankfort voted
unanimously for the election of Charles. The election cost him 850,000 florins.
It is a
commonplace of historians to exclaim at the fruitless waste of energy involved
in this electoral struggle, and to point out that Charles was not richer or
more powerful as Emperor than he was before; while on the other hand his
obligations and anxieties were considerably increased. But so long as prestige
plays its part in human affairs, so long a reasonable judgment will justify the
ambition of Charles. He was still perhaps in the youthful frame of mind which
willingly and ignorantly courts responsibility and faces risks, the frame of
mind in which he entered on his first war with Francis, saying: “Soon he will
be a poor King or I shall be a poor Emperor”. But the imperial’s Crown was in
some sort hereditary in his race. Had he pusillanimously refused it, his
prestige must have suffered severely. As a German prince he could not brook the
interference of a foreign and a hostile power in the affairs of Germany. The
imperial contest was inevitable, and was in fact the peaceful overture to
another contest, equally inevitable, and more enduring, waged over half a
continent, through nearly forty years.
War was in
fact inevitable, and Charles was ill-prepared to meet it. His affairs in Spain
went slowly, and it was not until May, 1520, that Charles was able to sail for
the north, leaving open revolt at Valencia, and discontent in his other
dominions. The fortunate issue of these complications has been related in the
first volume of this History. Diplomacy had already paved the way for an
understanding with Henry VIII, which took more promising shape at Gravelines, after a visit to Henry at Dover and Canterbury,
and the famous interview of Henry VIII and Francis I at the Field of the Cloth
of Gold. Wolsey’s skilful diplomacy had brought it about that both the greatest
monarchs of Europe were bidding eagerly for his and his master’s favour. A
pension and a bishopric for the Cardinal, a renewal for England of the
commercial treaty with the Netherlands were the preliminary price. At Gravelines it was agreed that Charles and Henry should have
the same friends and the same enemies; and that neither Power should conclude
an alliance with any other without the consent of both. If war broke out
between Charles and Francis, Henry was to act against the aggressor. For two
years the agreements for the marriage of the Dauphin with the English Princess
Mary, and of Charles with Charlotte the daughter of Francis (Louise having
died) were to receive no further confirmation. Towards the end of this period
another meeting was to take place at which another agreement should be
concluded. Each Power was to maintain a regular ambassador at the Court of the
other. The pains taken by Wolsey to reassure Francis and to show that Henry had
rejected propositions from Charles for a joint attack on France prove that he was
still anxious to prevent the Roman King from drawing near to France; but the net
result of the interviews was to guarantee Charles against any immediate
adhesion of England to his rival.
1521]
Charles allied with Leo X and Henry VIII.
Fortified
by this belief, and leaving his aunt Margaret of Savoy to govern the
Netherlands with extensive powers, Charles proceeded to his coronation, which
took place at Aachen on October 23, 1520. Meanwhile in Castile and Valencia the
troubles continued, until the rising of the Comuneros was definitely crushed at the battle of Villalar,
April 24, 1521. Charles was thus relieved from one of his worst anxieties,
though the condition of his finances was so bad that he could only look with
alarm on the prospect of war. All his Spanish revenues were pledged and nothing
could be expected from that source. Still the outbreak of war was delayed, and
he was able to bring the Diet of Worms to a close before any decisive step was
needed. And more important still, in the eager hunt for alliances on both
sides, Charles proved the more successful. On May 29, 1521, a secret alliance
had been concluded on his behalf with the Pope.
From the
time of the imperial election Leo had foreseen the consequences, and had turned
his shallow statecraft to the task of considering what could be got for the
Papal See and his own family from the impending war. At first he had urged a
prompt and united attack upon Charles, in which France, Venice, and England
were to join. This might well have succeeded while Charles was still embroiled
in Castile. Then while negotiations with France and England nagged and each
Power was manoeuvring for the weather-gauge, Leo began to see that France and
Venice could never consent to his favourite scheme for the annexation of Ferrara,
the one part of Julius' design which yet remained unexecuted. France was
closely linked with Alfonso d'Este, and Venice
preferred him as a neighbour to the Pope. Then Leo turned to Charles, and
Charles was ready to promise all that he could ask: Parma, Piacenza, Ferrara,
imperial protection for the Medici, the restoration of Francesco Sforza in
Milan and the Adorni in Genoa, and the suppression of
the enemies of the Catholic faith. In return the Pope promised the investiture
of Naples, and a defensive alliance. Leo would have been glad to make the
alliance offensive, but the Emperor was in no hurry for war, and still hoped
that it might be averted.
The
alliance with Leo was valuable to Charles for the resources, material and
spiritual, which the Pope and the Medici controlled, for the protection which
the Papal States afforded against attacks on Naples from the north, and for the
access they gave to Lombardy from the south. Still more valuable appeared the
alliance with England, as securing the Netherlands against a joint attack.
Wolsey at first was anxious to play the part of mediator or arbitrator between
the hostile powers. At length at Bruges the agreement was reached on August 25. Chièvres was dead (May 18, 1521), and Charles took
himself the leading part in these negotiations. Charles was to marry Mary, the
daughter of Henry VIII. The Emperor and King entered the most solemn alliance
not only for the defence of their present possessions, but for the recovery of
all that they could severally claim. The Emperor, who was meditating a visit to
Spain, was to visit England on the way. War was to be openly declared in March,
1523. But if no suspension of hostilities came about between Charles and
France, the declaration of war was to take place on the occasion of Charles'
visit to England. All this was to be secured by the most solemn and public
declarations within four months.
The treaty
of alliance, solemn as it professed to be, left something to be desired. France
was already effectively at war with Charles. Robert de la Marck,
Lord of Bouillon and Sedan, early in the year had invaded the southern
Netherlands, and Duke Charles of Gelders, an old ally
of France and enemy of the Burgundian rulers, had attacked the north. Henri d'Albret had marched into Navarre, and at first had met
with considerable success. These attacks were manifestly supported by France,
and Charles could therefore claim the aid of England by virtue of earlier
treaties as the victim of unprovoked aggression. But for the time being it must
suffice that England was neutralized. In the border warfare which succeeded
Charles could hold his own. Sickingen chastised the
Lord of Bouillon. Henri d'Albret was driven from
Navarre by local levies. And although on the frontier of the Netherlands things
looked black for a while, though Mezières under
Bayard held out against attack and the Emperor himself risked a serious defeat
near Valenciennes, though the Admiral Bonnivet succeeded in occupying Fuenterrabia, the most important position on the western
Pyrenees, all was compensated and more than compensated by the seizure of Milan
on November 19, 1521, by the joint forces of the Emperor and the Pope. Lombardy
with the exception of a few fortresses was easily occupied, and in the north Tournay capitulated. After these astonishing successes the
death of Leo, on December 1, came as an unexpected blow to the imperial hopes.
But his aid had done its work. His support had been the chief instrument in
preventing the Swiss from assisting Francis with their full force; papal and
Florentine money had supplied the needs of the joint expedition. In return he
received before his death the news that Parma and Piacenza had been recovered
for the Holy See.
The
campaign in Lombardy had been conducted by Prospero Colonna, in command of the
papal and imperial forces, among which were 16.000 German infantry, brought by
way of Trent. The French army was commanded by Odet de Foix, Vicomte de Lautrec, who owed his position to his sister's favour with
the French King. They were joined by a considerable contingent from Venice. The
Spanish troops under Antonio de Leyva and the Marquis of Pescara came up slowly
from Naples; operations began badly; no plan of campaign commanded approval;
and when at length the siege of Parma was undertaken, it had to be abandoned
owing to danger from Ferrara. In October, however, on the news of the approach
of a body of Swiss, whom the Pope had induced to serve for the protection of
the Holy See, Colonna crossed the Po. Giovanni de' Medici defeated a Venetian
force, and the Marquis of Ferrara suffered a defeat. Lautrec failed to prevent
the junction of Colonna with the Swiss. There were now Swiss in both armies,
and the orders of the Swiss Diet came to both armies that they were to return.
But the papal contingent held firm, while those in the pay of the French
deserted in great numbers. Colonna forced the passage of the Adda, and Lautrec
retired on Milan, where the exactions and repressive measures of the French
provoked a Ghibelline rising, as soon as the enemy appeared before the walls.
The Venetians led the flight, and Lautrec abandoned the city for Como, whence
he passed to winter in the Venetian territory.
The
strange election of Adrian of Utrecht to the papal throne, which followed on
the death of Leo, appeared at first to favour the imperial side. Adrian had
been the Emperor’s tutor and was left by him as regent in Castile in 1520. But
Adrian’s visionary and unworldly character unfitted him to take the traditional
part of the Popes in Italian politics. It was long before he appeared in Italy,
and after his arrival he long endeavoured to maintain neutrality. At last,
about a month before his death in September, 1523, Adrian was forced to take a
side, and joined the Emperor.
The news
of the successes in Lombardy put an end to the exertions of Wolsey to conclude
an armistice between the Powers, and to secure his own acceptance as
arbitrator. The alliance with England was confirmed, and Charles was free to
sail for Spain (May 26, 1522). On his way he landed at Dover and visited Henry;
and on June 19 the treaty of Windsor was concluded, according to which both
sovereigns were bound to invade France each with a force of 30,000 foot, and
10,000 horse; the date named for this great effort was May, 1524.
1522]
Second campaign in Lombardy.
In July,
1522, Charles reached Spain and the last remnants of rebellion were stamped
out. Meanwhile his armies in Italy had been left almost to their own resources.
The ample supplies voted by the Netherlands in 1521 had been all expended in
the war of that year. No more money was forthcoming from the Pope or Florence.
A great part of the imperial army had to be disbanded. The death of Leo threw
the Swiss entirely on to the side of France. The French King moreover found no
more difficulty in hiring German Landsknechts than did the Emperor himself. In
the Papal State the forces of disorder reigned unchecked, and the old tyrants
reappeared in Urbino, Camerino, Rimini, and Perugia.
Early in
March, 1522, Lautrec moved across the Adda to join the Swiss who were coming to
the number of 16,000 from the passes of the Alps. The junction was effected at
Monza. But the defensive works of Colonna executed during the winter rendered
Milan impregnable to assault. The enthusiastic support of the Milanese provided
garrisons for the principal towns of the duchy. Francesco Sforza entered Milan
on the 4th of April, and the Milanese were now fighting for a duke of their
own. Lautrec, although reinforced by a French force under his brother Thomas de Lescun, could achieve nothing against the defensive
strategy of Colonna. At length the impatience of the Swiss, who demanded battle
or pay, forced the French to attack the enemy in a strong position of their own
choosing, called the Bicocca, three miles from Milan (April 27). Here they were
repulsed with considerable loss, the Milanese militia doing good service side
by side with the Spaniards and the Germans. The Swiss then returned to their
homes, discontented and humiliated, and the French army shortly afterwards
evacuated Lombardy, excepting the three castles of Novara, Milan, and Cremona.
Genoa was stormed and pillaged by the Imperialists on May 30. A new government
was set up in Milan under Francesco Sforza, though the unpaid Spanish and
German soldiers recompensed themselves for their arrears by pillage and
exactions. In Florence the imperial success restored the Medici authority which
had been seriously threatened by malcontents from the Papal States, supported
by hopes of French assistance.
The treaty
of Windsor led to an immediate declaration of war by Henry VIII, and during the
summer of 1522 the English and Spanish fleet raided the coasts of Brittany and
Normandy. Later an invading force under the Earl of Surrey and the Count van
Buren entered Picardy, but little was achieved against the defensive opposition
of the French. A systematic devastation of hostile country took place in this
region.
In spite
of their ill-success in two campaigns the French did not give up their hope of
reconquering Milan. Financial distress had again forced the Emperor to reduce
his forces, and the necessary means were with difficulty collected from the
Italian towns and princes. The Netherlands had up to this time been the only
trustworthy source of revenue, and the expenditure of Charles’ Court had made
great inroads upon his treasury. Money was now coming in to the Castilian
exchequer, but these funds had been pledged in advance. The Italian army was a
year in arrear. Ferdinand was begging for money for
measures against the Turks. The desperate appeal of Rhodes for aid in 1522 had
to pass unregarded, and this outlying bulwark of
Christendom capitulated at the close of 1522. Although Charles was in Spain to
stimulate operations, Fuenterrabia was successfully
defended by the French against all attacks until February, 1524.
On the
other hand, since the autumn of 1522 the allies had been counting on powerful
aid in France itself. The Duke of Bourbon, with his extended possessions in the
centre of France, was almost the only remaining representative of the great appanaged princes of the fifteenth century. Although his
wings had been clipped by legislative and even more by administrative changes,
he still commanded a princely revenue and considerable local support. His
position in the kingdom had been recognized by the gift of the highest of Crown
offices, the post and dignity of Constable of France. But his title to the vast
possessions which he held was not beyond question. The duchy of Bourbon had
been preserved from reunion with the Crown under Louis XII by the influence of
Anne, Duchess of Bourbon, better known as Anne of Beaujeu,
who first procured for her daughter Susanne the right to succeed her father in
the duchy (1498), and then (1505) married her to Count Charles of Montpensier,
her cousin, who represented the rights of a younger branch of the Bourbon
House. By this marriage Charles of Montpensier was elevated to the duchy of
Bourbon, but when his wife Susanne died without issue in 1521 his title became
questionable at law. From motives probably of cupidity, and of cupidity alone,
a double claim was now advanced against him. The Queen Mother, Duchess of
Angoulême, claimed the female fiefs as being more closely related to the main
line of the Bourbon House, and the King claimed the male fiefs as escheating to
the Crown. Against claimants so powerful Charles of Bourbon felt himself unable
to litigate before the Parliament of Paris. The points of law were nice and the
tribunal amenable to royal influence. He turned therefore to the enemies of his
country. He approached Charles V and boldly asked for his sister Eleonora
(widow of the King of Portugal) in marriage, offering in return to raise 500
men-at-arms and 8000 foot-soldiers and to co-operate with an invasion from the
east.
But the
intrigues became known, and although the King hesitated to arrest his Constable
when he had him at Paris in his power, and though again in August, 1523, when
the King passed through Moulins to take part in the great expedition to Italy,
the Constable was allowed to stay behind on a plea of sickness, at length a
peremptory summons was sent ordering him to join the King at Lyons. On this the
Duke, who had been looking in vain for the approach of aid from the east, took
to flight and, after attempting to escape to Spain by way of Roussillon,
succeeded at length in reaching the frontier of Franche-Comté.
The
elaborate plans of the allies, which included the despatch of a force of
10,000 Landsknechts to
Bourbon, an invasion of Picardy by a joint army of 21,000 men, and an attack on
Languedoc with 34,000 men from Spain, were thus defeated. The Constable brought
with him only his name and his sword. But the danger was judged sufficiently
real to prevent Francis from leading his army in person into the Milanese, as
had been intended. Great preparations had been made for an expedition on a
royal scale, but the Admiral Bonnivet was appointed to take command instead of
the King. While Bonnivet was advancing on Italy some attempt was made by the
allies to execute the other parts of the plan. The Duke of Suffolk and the
Count van Buren advanced by Picardy to the neighbourhood of Compiègne and Senlis, the German force threatened the frontier
from the side of Bresse, while a Spanish force
crossed the Pyrenees in October and threatened Bayonne. The delays had
shattered the effect of the combination, but the kingdom was almost undefended,
and even Paris was thought to be insecure. Yet little came of all these
efforts. The Germans from Bresse made an ineffectual
attempt to join with Suffolk and Buren, but were hunted back across the
frontier by the Count of Guise. The leaders of the northern expedition showed
little enterprise, and money as usual was deficient. The Spanish army advanced
upon Bayonne, but was repulsed by the vigorous defence of Lautrec, and retired
ineffective. In spite of a liberal subsidy in August from the Cortes of
Castile, and the seizure in October of gold coming on private account from the
Indies, the great design for the partition of France proved entirely abortive.
Meanwhile
Bonnivet had pursued his path to Lombardy. His army consisted of 1500
men-at-arms and some 25,000 foot, Swiss, Germans, French, and Italians. On the
14th of September he reached the Ticino. Prospero Colonna, who was in command
of the imperial troops, had no adequate resources with which to resist so
powerful a foe in the field. Adrian VI, it is true, had recently announced his
reluctant adhesion to the imperial party, and about the same time Venice had
renounced her French alliance and concluded a league with Charles. But the
value of these accessions had not begun to be felt when Adrian’s death
(September 14) introduced uncertainty afresh at the very moment when Bonnivet
appeared in Italy. Colonna was no longer supported by Pescara, but he had at
his disposition Giovanni de' Medici, the celebrated leader of the Black Italian
Bands, and Antonio de Leyva. The imperial leaders abandoned the western part of
the duchy to the French and retired on Milan. If Bonnivet had pressed on he
would have found the capital unready for defence. But his delay gave time to
improvise protection: and when he arrived an assault appeared impracticable. He
determined to endeavour to reduce the city by famine.
Besides
Milan, Colonna still held Pavia, Lodi, and Cremona, and wisely confined his
efforts to the retention of these important posts. Bonnivet divided his forces
and sent Bayard to attack Lodi and Cremona. Lodi fell, but Cremona held out,
and Bayard had to be recalled. The election of Clement VII on November 19 gave
for the moment strength to the imperial side. Money was sent and the Marquis of
Mantua brought aid. Bonnivet was forced to abandon the siege of Milan, and
retire upon the Ticino. On December 28 Prospero Colonna died, but Charles de Lannoy, the viceroy of Naples, with the Marquis of Pescara,
arrived to take his place, bringing with him a small supply of money and
troops. Reinforcements came from Germany, and the Imperialists, now supported
more effectively by Venice, were able to take the offensive. They drove
Bonnivet from Abbiate-Grasso, then from Vigevano to
Novara. The reinforcements which he was eagerly expecting from the Grisons at
length arrived at Chiavenna, but found neither men
nor money to meet them. Giovanni de' Medici hung upon their flanks and drove
the Grisons levies back over the mountains. At length Bonnivet was forced to
leave Novara and endeavour to effect a junction with a force of 8000 Swiss,
whom he met upon the Sesia. But this relief was too
late. The moral of the army was destroyed. The remnants could only be saved by
retreat. Bonnivet himself was wounded at this juncture, and the task of
conducting the wearied and dispirited troops across the mountains fell upon
Bayard. Bayard took command of the rear-guard, and, in protecting the movements
of his comrades, fell mortally wounded by the ball of an arquebus (April 30,
1524). With him perished the finest flower of the French professional army in
that age, the knight who had raised the ideal of a warrior’s life to the
highest point. But his last task was successfully accomplished. The Swiss
effected their retreat by Aosta, the French by Susa
and Briançon. The last garrison of the French in
Lombardy capitulated.
Adrian’s
successor, Giulio de' Medici, Clement VII, had been supported in his election
by the imperial influence, in spite of Charles’ promises to Wolsey. Giulio had
long controlled the papal policy under Leo, and it was assumed that he would
tread the same path. But Clement had all the defects of his qualities.
Supremely subtle and acute, he had not the constancy to follow up what he had
once come to regard as a mistake. He relied upon his own ingenuity and
duplicity, and endeavored to sail with every wind.
Thus he failed alike to serve his own interests and those of his allies.
Clement
began almost at once to detach himself from the imperial alliance, dangerous in
defeat, oppressive in the event of success. His efforts however to conclude a
truce proved unsuccessful, and on May 25, 1524, a new compact was accepted by
the allies. The Duke of Bourbon was to invade France at the head of the
victorious army of Italy. A joint expedition was to invade Picardy, and a
Spanish army was to attack by way of Roussillon. Henry VIII seemed to see a
chance of making good the pretensions of his ancestors to the French throne,
and exacted from the unwilling Duke of Bourbon an oath of fidelity to himself
as King of France.
1524]
Siege of Marseilles.
In July
the first point of this agreement was carried into effect. The Duke of Bourbon
crossed the Alps in company with Pescara and invaded France (July 1). His
artillery joined him by sea at Monaco. Provence offered little resistance. The
Duke entered Aix on August 9. But the other movements were delayed, and it was
thought dangerous to advance on Lyons without this support. Accordingly it was
determined to lay siege to Marseilles, which was surrounded on August 19.
Francis had here shown unusual foresight, and the town was prepared for defence
under the command of the Orsini captain, Renzo da Ceri, who had shown himself
throughout a passionate friend of France. The breaches in the walls were
immediately protected by earthworks, and the besiegers could not venture an
assault. The French navy, reinforced by Andrea Doria with his galleys, was superior to the invaders on the sea. Meanwhile Francis
was collecting with great energy an army of relief at Avignon. Unexampled tailles were
imposed; the clergy were taxed, the cities gave subsidies, and the nobles
forced loans. Time pressed and the assault of Marseilles was ordered for
September 4, but the troops recoiled before the danger; the Marquis of Pescara,
hostile throughout to the enterprise and its leader, did not conceal his
disapproval; and the project was abandoned. The promised aid from Roussillon
was not sent, and the diversion in Picardy was not made. On September 29, much
against his will, the Duke of Bourbon ordered the retreat. The troops,
ill-clothed, ill-provided, ill-shod, made their way across the mountains,
closely pursued by Montmorency. Francis followed with his whole army and
reached Vercelli on the same day that the retreating army arrived at Alba,
about sixteen miles S.S.W. of Asti.
With
troops humiliated, discontented, exhausted, resistance in the field was
impossible. The imperialists adopted the same strategy that had succeeded so
well against Bonnivet. They determined to hold Alessandria, Pavia, Lodi, Pizzighettone, Cremona. The citadel of Milan was
garrisoned, and it was hoped that the city might be held; but it had suffered
terribly from the plague, and on the approach of Francis with his whole army,
the attempt was given up. Bourbon, Lannoy, and
Pescara retired to Lodi; and the defence of Pavia was entrusted to Antonio de
Leyva. Instead of following up the remnants of the imperial army to Lodi, and
crushing them or driving them east into the arms of their uncertain Venetian
allies, Francis turned aside to make himself master of Pavia. The siege
artillery opened fire on November 6. An early assault having failed, Francis
attempted to divert the course of the Ticino, and by this means to obtain
access to the south side of the town, which relied mainly on the protection of
the river. But the winter rains rendered the work impossible. Francis
determined to reduce the city by blockade. Meanwhile he called up
reinforcements from the Swiss, and took Giovanni de’ Medici into his pay.
Campaign
of Pavia. [1524-5
Italy
prepared to take the side which appeared for the moment stronger. Venice hesitated
in her alliance. Clement, while endeavouring to reassure the Emperor as to his
fidelity, and ostensibly negotiating for an impossible peace, concluded, on
December 12, 1524, a secret treaty with France, in which Florence and Venice
were included. This treaty led both Clement and Francis to their ruin. Clement
paid for his cowardly betrayal at the Sack of Rome, and Francis was encouraged
to detach a part of his army under the Duke of Albany to invade Naples, an
enterprise which weakened his main force without securing any corresponding
advantage. The Duke, after holding to ransom the towns of Italy through which
he passed, reached the south of the papal territory, where he was attacked by
the Colonna and driven back to Rome. It was hoped however that this diversion
would induce the imperial generals to leave Lombardy to its fate and hurry to
the protection of Naples. But reinforcements were coming in from Germany under Frundsberg, and it was Naples that was left to fortune. On
January 24, 1525, the imperial forces moved from Lodi. After a feint on Milan,
they approached Pavia, and encamped towards the east to wait their opportunity.
Thence they succeeded in introducing powder and other most necessary supplies
into the famished city. The seizure of Chiavenna on
behalf of Charles recalled the Grisons levies to the defence of their own
territory. Reinforcements coming to Francis from the Alps were cut off and
destroyed. Giovanni de' Medici was incapacitated by a wound. But the condition
of the beleaguered city and lack of pay and provisions did not permit of
further delay. It was decided to attack Francis in his camp and risk the issue.
On the
night of February 24-25 the imperial army broke into the walled enclosure of
the park of Mirabello. Delays were caused by the
solid walls and day broke before the actual encounter. The news of the attack
induced Francis to leave his entrenchments and to muster his army, which
consisted of 8000 Swiss, 5000 Germans, 7000 French infantry, and 6000 Italians.
He was not much superior in actual numbers, but stronger in artillery and
cavalry. An attempt of the imperialists to join hands with the garrison of
Pavia, by marching past the French army, which had had time to adopt a perfect
order of battle in the park, proved impossible under a flanking artillery fire.
Nor was it possible to throw up earthworks and await assault, as Lannoy had hoped. A direct attack upon the French army was
necessary. In the mêlée which ensued it is almost impossible to disentangle the
several causes of the issue, but it seems clear that the complete victory of
the imperialists was due to the admirable fire-discipline and tactics of the
veteran Spanish arquebusiers, to the attack of Antonio de Leyva with his
garrison from the rear, to an inopportune movement of the German troops of the
French which masked their artillery fire, and perhaps in some measure to the
cowardly example of flight set by the Duke of Alençon. The French army was
destroyed, the French King was captured, and all his most illustrious
commanders were taken prisoners or killed. As Ravenna marks the advent of
artillery as a deciding factor in great battles, so perhaps Pavia may be said
to mark the superiority attained by hand firearms over the pike. The Swiss
pike-men were unable to stand against the Spanish bullets.
Once more
the duchy had been reconquered, and it seemed lost forever to France. Francis
was sent as a prisoner first to Pizzighettone and
then to Spain. Here the unwonted restraint acting on a man so passionately
devoted to field-sports shook his health; he thought at one time of resigning
the crown of France in favour of the Dauphin, in order to discount the
advantage possessed by Charles in the custody of his royal person; but he was
at length constrained to accept the Emperor’s terms. The result was the treaty
of Madrid, signed by Francis on January 14, 1526, and confirmed by the most
solemn oaths, and by the pledge of the King’s knightly honour, but with the
deliberate and secretly expressed intention of repudiating its obligations.
Francis was to marry Eleonora, the Emperor’s sister and the widow of the King
of Portugal. He renounced all his rights over Milan, Naples, Genoa, Asti,
together with the suzerainty of Flanders, Artois, and Tournay.
He ceded to Charles the duchy of Burgundy, in which however the traditional
dependencies of the duchy were not included. The Duke of Bourbon was to be
pardoned and restored to his hereditary possessions. Francis abandoned the Duke
of Gelders, and gave up all claims of d'Albret to Navarre. As a guarantee for the execution of
the treaty the King’s two eldest sons were to be surrendered to the Emperor’s
keeping; and Francis was to return as a prisoner in the event of non-fulfilment.
In spite
of the outcries of historians, the terms of this treaty must be regarded as
moderate. Charles exacted nothing, after his extraordinary success, except what
he must have considered to be his own by right. But how far his moderation was
dictated by policy, and how far by natural feelings of justice, may remain
undecided. The Duke of Bourbon and Henry VIII had pressed upon him the pursuit
of the war, the invasion and dismemberment of France. Had Charles really aimed
at European supremacy this course was open to him. But he did not take it,
whether from a prudent distrust of his English ally, or from an honest dislike
for unjust and perilous schemes of aggrandizement. That he took no pains to use
his own victory for the furtherance of the ends of England, may appear at first
sight surprising. But Henry VIII had had no part in the victory of Pavia, and
almost none in any of Charles’ successes. English subsidies had been a factor,
though not a decisive factor, in the war, but English armed assistance had been
uniformly ineffective. Even before the battle of Pavia Charles had known of
Henry’s contemplated change of side. Moreover, since the rejection of Henry’s
plans for the dismemberment of France, the English King had concluded an
alliance with Louise of Savoy, the regent of France, and profited by his desertion
to the extent of two millions of crowns. Charles owed nothing to Henry at the
time of the treaty of Madrid.
League
of Cognac. [1525-6
Other
considerations of a politic nature may have inclined Charles to moderation. The
Pope, appalled by the disaster of Pavia, had been preparing against the Emperor
an Italian league. Francesco Sforza had been approached and had lent an ear to
proposals of infidelity. Venice was secured. Even Pescara, Charles’ own
servant, had been sounded by Girolamo Morone, the
Chancellor of Milan, with the offer of the Kingdom of Naples. Pescara was
discontented with the favour and good fortune of Lannoy,
with his own position, the conditions of his service, and his rewards. He seems
to have hesitated for a moment, but eventually disclosed all to Charles, and
threw Morone into prison (July-October, 1525). Sforza
was deprived of the chief places in the Milanese, retaining only the citadels
of Milan and Cremona; but all this meant further trouble in Italy, and pointed
to an understanding with France, although Mercurino Gattinara throughout had urged that no reliance should be
placed on French promises. Charles deserves credit for his prudence, if not for
his generosity. The notion that Francis’ permanent friendship could have been
won by any greater liberality can be at once dismissed.
Francis I
was liberated at the French frontier on March 17, 1526, leaving his two little
sons in his place. He at once made known his intentions by delaying and finally
refusing the ratification of the treaty of Madrid; and on May 22, at Cognac, a
League was concluded against the Emperor, in which Francesco Sforza, the Pope,
Florence, and Venice joined with France. Sforza was to receive the duchy of
Milan unimpaired, the States of Italy were to be restored to all their rights,
and the French Princes were to be released for a ransom of 2,000,000 crowns.
Henry VIII gave fair words and encouragement in abundance, but did not join the
League. The aid of France was equally illusory. The allies talked of peace, but
in reality they courted war, and with it all the disasters which followed.
The
adhesion, however vacillating, of Henry VIII to the party of his enemies, set
Charles free from any obligations towards Mary of England, and in March, 1526,
he concluded his marriage with Isabella of Portugal, a union which he had long
desired, securing to him an ample dowry, and promising peace between the two
Iberian kingdoms. The affairs of Italy still occupied his attention. Francesco
Sforza received the first blow. Pescara was dead, but Charles still had able
and devoted servants in Italy. With the troops at their disposal Antonio de
Leyva and Alfonso del Guasto besieged Francesco
Sforza in the citadel of Milan. After the League of Cognac had been concluded
the allies advanced to his relief. The imperialists were in piteous case. Left
without means of support, they were obliged to live upon the country and to
levy money from the citizens of Milan. In consequence they had to deal with an
actual revolt of the inhabitants which was with difficulty repressed, while the
siege of the citadel was still vigorously maintained. Francesco Maria, Duke of
Urbino, moving deliberately and cautiously at the head of the united Venetian
and papal army, after seizing Lodi, advanced to the relief of Sforza, and was
only at a short distance from the town when the Duke of Bourbon opportunely
arrived with a small force (July 5). Bourbon had been named as Duke of Milan to
compensate him for the loss of his French possessions which Francis had refused
to restore. The Duke of Urbino then commenced an attack, which if vigorously
pushed might have resulted in the destruction of the imperialist forces,
between the invaders and the citadel, and among a hostile population. But he
showed neither resolution nor activity, and on July 25 the citadel surrendered.
The Duke of Urbino, now reinforced by some six thousand Swiss, the only aid
which Francis supplied, turned to the siege of Cremona, in which he consumed
his resources and two months of valuable time. The final capture of the city
(September 23) was an inadequate compensation.
The
attitude of Charles towards Clement VII at this juncture was expressed in his
letter of September 17, 1526, in which the misdeeds of the Pope were
systematically set forth. This letter was afterwards printed in Spain, Germany,
and the Netherlands as a manifesto to all Christendom. The arraignment was
severe but not on the whole unjust. In view of his wrongs, real and supposed,
the means used by the Emperor are not surprising. His emissary, Ugo de Moncada,
after vainly endeavouring to win back Clement, had turned to the still powerful
family of Colonna. These nobles, Ghibellines by tradition, soldiers by
profession, and raiders by inclination, after terrifying the Pope by forays in
the south and by the capture of Anagni, concluded with him a treacherous peace
(August 22). The Pope, already overburdened by his efforts in the north, was
thus induced to disarm at home, and on September 20 the Colonna struck at Rome.
They penetrated first into the southern part of the town, and then into the
Leonine city, where they sacked the papal palace, and the dwellings of several
Cardinals. Clement took refuge in the Castle of St Angelo, where he was shortly
forced to conclude a truce of four months with the Emperor, promising to
withdraw his troops from Lombardy and his galleys from before Genoa, and giving
hostages for his good faith. The Emperor disavowed the actions of the allies
but profited by the result, which was indeed only partial, since Giovanni de'
Medici, with the best of the papal troops, continued to fight for the League,
in the name of the King of France. An amnesty promised to the Colonna was
disregarded, and in full Consistory their lands were declared to be
confiscated, and a force was sent to execute this sentence.
Inert as
ever, after the capture of Cremona, the Duke of Urbino allowed three weeks to
pass before, strengthened by the arrival of 4000 French, he moved upon Milan,
not to assault but to blockade. These delays were invaluable to Charles. They
allowed him to win the adhesion of Alfonso, Duke of Ferrara, which was
facilitated by the papal hostility. They allowed him to send troops from Spain
to Naples (December), and to collect German levies, who arrived in Italy under Frundsberg in November. Their presence in the duchy of
Mantua forced the Duke of Urbino to abandon the siege of Milan. He divided his
army, leaving a part at Vauri, on the Adda, and
advanced with the remainder against Frundsberg, whom
he found at Borgoforte near the Po. In the skirmish
which followed Giovanni de' Medici was wounded, and he died shortly afterwards
at Mantua. The Duke of Urbino gave up all further attempt to prevent the
junction of the imperialists, and returned to Mantua. The want of energy
displayed by the Duke of Urbino throughout this campaign is not wholly to be
attributed to his character. He had a well-grounded mistrust of the troops of
which his army was composed, and doubted their competence to face the
Spaniards. Moreover the Venetians were uncertain as to the Pope’s real
intentions and were reluctant to push matters to an extreme. The success of
Charles however was principally due to this policy of inaction. The Duke of
Bourbon now extorted by the extremest measures the
money necessary to enable him to move, requiring, for instance, 20,000 ducats
of Morone as the price of his life and pardon, and at
length the forces met at Fiorenzuola in the territory
of Piacenza (February, 1527). The united army then moved towards the Papal
States, watched at a distance by the Duke of Urbino, while garrisons were sent
to save Bologna and Piacenza. The Pope, in extreme alarm, threatened by Bourbon
from the north and Lannoy with the Colonna from the
south, implored Francis to act, and showed himself willing to make whatever
terms he could with the Emperor. Then on hearing of a small success of his
troops in the south at Frosinone (January, 1527), he determined to pursue the
war.
A sudden
raid by Renzo da Ceri on the Abruzzi seemed at first to promise a welcome diversion,
but very soon the invasions of Naples proved as unprofitable as the campaigns
in the north. The project of conferring the kingdom on Louis, Count of Vaudemont, the brother of the Duke of Lorraine, which
Clement had put forward, faded into the visionary. The Pope shifted his ground
again, and on March 15 concluded a truce of eight months for himself and
Florence.
1527]
The Sack of Rome.
Meanwhile
the imperial army had been long inactive at San Giovanni, N.W. of Bologna.
Destitute of everything, it was not likely that they would accept a truce which
brought them only 60,000 ducats. A meeting had in fact already taken place, and Frundsberg, while endeavouring to pacify his Landsknechte, was
struck by apoplexy; his days of activity were over. Hereupon came the news of
the truce, with its impossible proposals, prolonging the intolerable condition
of inaction and want. The army clamoured to go forward and Bourbon decided to
lead them. The Count del Guasto, Pescara’s nephew,
whose Italian patriotism always competed with his duty to his master, protested
and withdrew, but on March 30 the others set forth, scantily provided with
transport and provisions by the Duke of Ferrara. Clement, on the conclusion of
the truce, had disbanded his troops, and while Lannoy was endeavouring on his behalf to raise the money at Florence to appease the
imperialists, the tumultuous advance continued. On April 21 Lannoy met Bourbon with 100,000 ducats, but he now demanded more than twice that sum,
and the march proceeded down the valley of the Arno, threatening Florence. But
the army of the League was near enough to protect that city, and the only
result was a futile rising of the citizens, and the accession of Florence to
the League. Bourbon then determined to move on Rome, a resolution acceptable
above all to his Lutheran followers. The Pope proclaimed his adhesion to the
confederates, and clamoured for aid. But it was too late. On May 5 the mutinous
army appeared before Rome on the Monte Mario. They had left their artillery on
the road, but the city was almost undefended, except for such measures as Renzo
da Ceri had been able to take on orders given at the last moment. The next day
the Leonine city was assaulted and captured, the Duke of Bourbon being killed
at the moment of escalading the wall. Philibert, Prince of Orange, took the
command. Clement had only just time to seek refuge in St Angelo.
In the
main city Renzo da Ceri endeavoured to persuade the Romans to protect
themselves by breaking down the bridges, and preventing the entry of the
Colonna from the south. But he failed. The Trastevere was easily captured, and the imperialists advanced without opposition across
the bridge of Sixtus. For eight days the Sack
continued, among horrors almost unexampled in the history of war. The Lutherans
rejoiced to burn and to defile what all the world had adored. Churches were
desecrated, women, even the religious, violated, ambassadors pillaged,
cardinals put to ransom, ecclesiastical dignitaries and ceremonies made a
mockery, and the soldiers fought among themselves for the spoil. The population
of Rome had been much reduced by the plague of 1522, and a rough census taken
shortly before the capture gives the number as about 55,000, of whom 4000 are
estimated to have perished in the Sack. All who were able took to flight, and
the deserted city was left to the soldiers.
The Duke
of Urbino came and looked at the city from without, but decided to do nothing,
though the disorder of the imperial troops gave good hopes for an attack, and
the Pope at least might have been rescued. In default of all aid Clement made
terms: the payment of 400,000 ducats, and the surrender of Ostia, Civita Vecchia, Piacenza, and
Modena being stipulated. The Pope was closely guarded in the Castle of St
Angelo. While he was helpless there the imperialists occupied Ostia and Civita Vecchia, but were not able
to obtain possession of the other places. The Duke of Ferrara seized Modena and
Reggio: the Venetians, in spite of their alliance, Ravenna and Cervia. The Papal State was crumbling. From Florence also
the Medici nephews were expelled with their guardian, the Cardinal of Cortona.
A Republic was established, though the city still adhered to the League.
Meanwhile in Rome the Prince of Orange had been forced to relinquish his
command, and Lannoy, who took his place soon
afterwards, died of the plague, which was raging in the army. For nine months
the city and its neighbourhood were at the mercy of the lawless and leaderless
troops.
The
responsibility of Charles for the Sack of Rome cannot be accurately weighed.
That he who wills the act wills also the consequences of the act is a principle
that applies to both sides. Charles willed the advance of Bourbon and the armed
coercion of the Pope; he willed that the Pope should be deceived by truces,
which he did not intend to honour. He could not foresee that Bourbon’s army
would have been completely out of control, but sooner or later such must have
been the case with these Italian armies, among whom destitution was chronic. On
the other hand, Clement brought his fate upon himself. He who observes faith
with none cannot expect that faith will be observed with him. He who takes the
sword must accept what the sword brings. And although an honourable motive, the
desire to liberate Italy, and a natural motive, the desire to preserve the real
independence of Florence and the papal power, may have partly influenced his
actions, it is impossible to acquit Clement of a desire for personal and
pontifical aggrandizement, while in the use of means for the accomplishment of
these ends he showed neither rectitude, nor practical wisdom. Even in his own
game of Italian duplicity he allowed himself to be outwitted.
The Pope
and the Papacy were crushed into the dust, but the struggle was not yet over.
Before the Sack of Rome, Henry VIII and Francis had concluded a new and
offensive alliance at Westminster (April 30, 1527); and after the news had
spread through Europe this was confirmed on May 29, and strengthened still
further by the interview of Amiens (August 4). One more great effort was to be
made in Italy to force the Emperor to accept two million crowns in lieu of
Burgundy, and to release the sons of the French King. The King of England was
to give support with money and with men. His zeal was quickened by a desire to
liberate the Pope from imperial control, and to bring influence to bear on him
for the divorce of Catharine.
In July
Lautrec set forth once more from Lyons for the Milanese with an army of 20,000
foot and 900 men-at-arms, to which Italian additions were expected. Advancing
by the usual route of Susa, he easily made himself master of the western districts,
including Alessandria, and took Pavia by assault. Andrea Doria,
the great Genoese sea-captain, who was in himself almost a European Power, came
again into the King’s service, leaving the Pope, and by his aid the imperialist Adorni were driven from Genoa, and the Fregoso party set up in their place. Teodoro Trivulzio was appointed to govern the city for France.
Francesco Sforza was re-established in the chief part of the Milanese. Milan
alone under Leyva resisted.
But
without completing the conquest of the duchy, Lautrec determined to go south to
deliver the Pope. Prospects were favourable, for Ferrara had changed sides
again, and Federigo da Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua,
abandoning his policy of neutrality, joined the League. But while Lautrec was
still approaching, the Pope was forced on November 26 to accept the Emperor’s
terms, which, except for the promise to convoke a General Council to deal with
the Lutheran heresy, chiefly concerned the payment of money, and the grant of
ecclesiastical privileges of pecuniary value; but provided against future
hostility by the guarantee of Ostia, Civita Vecchia, and Citta Castellana, and the surrender of notable Cardinals as
hostages. Indeed the Pope, though unlikely to turn again to Francis, who had
deserted him in his need, expelled his family from Florence, and was now allied
with the Duke of Ferrara. Before the day appointed for his release the Pope was
allowed to escape to Orvieto (December 6), his original hostages having been
also liberated by the intervention of the Cardinal Pompeo Colonna. He at once
set his influence to work to establish a permanent peace. Both monarchs were
prepared for peace, but the terms were difficult to arrange. In view of the
great expenditure required, whether for the ransom of Burgundy, or for the
alternative of war, Francis called together an assembly of Notables (December
16,1527) to justify the levy of an extraordinary imposition. The Church offered
1,300,000 livres, nobles promised unlimited aid, an offer which they afterwards
unwillingly and grudgingly translated into prose; and those who spoke for the
towns guaranteed 1,200,000 crowns.
But the
terms which were offered to Charles were rejected by him in January, 1628, and
war was solemnly declared on behalf of France and England. Charles in reply
reproached Francis with having cowardly broken his knightly word, and offered
to sustain his contention with his body. Francis took up the challenge, and
asked that time and place should be named. But for one reason or another, this
fantastic and frivolous proposal never came to its accomplishment, and it may
be doubted if either monarch desired to be taken at his word.
Siege
of Naples. Defection of Doria. [1528
Lautrec
was at Bologna when he heard of the liberation of the Pope, and he continued
his march through the Romagna, favoured by the secret friendship of Clement.
Thence he penetrated through the Abruzzi and advanced upon Apulia. This move
drew the imperial army out of Rome, February 17, 1528, which they had sacked
once more, and left deserted. Of the forces which had sacked Rome some 11,000
were left; the Prince of Orange had resumed the command, and taken up his
position at Troja to protect Naples. Lautrec refused
to attack him in this strong position, professing to be waiting for reinforcements,
but when the Florentine troops arrived, the Prince of Orange retired towards
Naples. Meanwhile the Venetians, as in previous wars, occupied the cities on
the Adriatic seaboard.
The Prince
saw that the utmost he could accomplish was to save Naples. But it was with
difficulty that he could collect sufficient provisions for the immediate needs
of the troops and city, while Filippino Doria, cruising off the coast, intercepted supplies from
Sicily. An attempt made by Moncada to surprise and crush the Genoese commander
ended in disaster, with the loss of four galleys, the death of Moncada and of
other captains (April 28, 1528), and almost immediately afterwards Lautrec
appeared before the walls. Naples was now completely blockaded by the Genoese
fleet, soon reinforced by the Venetians, while Lautrec established a siege on
land. Meanwhile Henry the younger, Duke of Brunswick, crossed the Alps with a
German force, and on June 9 joined Leyva on the Adda, unopposed by the Duke of
Urbino; but instead of marching to Naples, Leyva at once proceeded to the
reconquest of the duchy, a part of which, including Pavia, he had previously
recovered, and Lodi was besieged. But the country was bare of all sustenance,
and even when bills arrived there was no one to cash them: so after three weeks
the Germans refused to continue the thankless task, and the chief part of them
went home. The imperial government in Milan about this time was reduced to such
straits that they were driven to impose a ruinous tax on bread to meet their
most necessary expenses. French reinforcements were collecting at Asti under
the Count of Saint Pol. Never had the prospects of Spain in the Peninsula
looked so black. Suddenly, July 4, orders came to Filippino Doria from his uncle Andrea, to withdraw his
blockading force from Naples.
Francis
had made the great mistake of offending the powerful sea captain. In addition
to private slights, Andrea Doria was incensed at the
apparent intention of Francis to develop Savona for war and commerce at the
expense of Genoa, and, when he expostulated with the King, Francis formed the
dangerous design of arresting the captain in his own city, and put a French
commander, without experience, Barbesieux, over his
head. Charles saw his opportunity and, by the advice of the Prince of Orange,
he won Doria for his own service, on favourable terms
of engagement, and with the promise of liberty for Genoa under imperial
protection. In vain, when Francis learnt his danger, he conceded too late
everything that Doria had asked. The Admiral’s
suspicion and resentment had been aroused, and he joined the Emperor once and
for all.
This
defection changed the whole position of affairs. While the French camp before
Naples was ravaged by the plague, abundance succeeded to famine in the city.
The French fleet under Barbesieux arrived on July 17
bringing a few men, but little real assistance. Lautrec clung desperately to
his siege, and endeavoured to collect fresh troops. The besieged became more
and more audacious in their attacks; Doria appeared
at Naples with his galleys; and, when on August 16 Lautrec died, the situation
was hopeless. On August 28 the remnants under the Marquis of Saluzzo retired to Aversa, where they were obliged to
capitulate shortly after. On September 12 Doria entered Genoa, and established a new oligarchical Republic, the French taking
refuge in the Castelletto. The form of government
then set up persisted, with some modification in 1576, until 1796, and Genoa
had internal peace at last. In the North Pavia had been retaken by Saint Pol.
The French commander made an effort to recover Genoa, but without success. The
Genoese soon after occupied Savona, and the Castelletto surrendered (October 28). Finally in the spring of 1529 the combined armies of
Saint Pol and the Duke of Urbino determined to reduce Milan, not by a siege,
but by a combination of posts of observation. This plan, unpromising enough in
itself, was frustrated by the conduct of Saint Pol, who attempted to surprise
Genoa, but allowed himself to be waylaid and defeated on his march by Leyva at Landriano (June 20).
1528-9]
Peace of Cambray.
Francis
and his allies still held some places in the Milanese, and some outlying posts
in the kingdom, as well as the cities of the Adriatic littoral. But
negotiations begun in the winter between Louise of Savoy and Margaret, the
ruler of the Netherlands, had resulted in a project of peace, which was
vehemently desired in the interests of all countries, but especially of the
Netherlands, where public opinion made itself perhaps most felt. Charles was
meditating a great expedition to Italy under his personal command, but he
consented to treat. He sent full powers and instructions, elastic though
precise, to Margaret, who was visited by the King’s mother, Louise, at Cambray, July 5. Here the terms of peace were definitely
concluded, and the treaty was signed on August 3, 1529. The compact of marriage
between Francis and Eleonora was renewed. Francis resigned all pretensions to
Italy, left his allies in the lurch, renounced his suzerainty over Flanders and
Artois, and all the frontier places on the north-east remained in the hands of
the occupant. Robert de la Marck and the Duke of Gelders were abandoned. Two millions of crowns were to be
paid as ransom for the young French princes, and in lieu of the present cession
of Burgundy, to which Charles reserved his right; while the possessions of
Bourbon and of the Prince of Orange were left to the French King.
With this
treaty the first stage in the settlement of the affairs of Western Europe was
reached. To Spain was surrendered the unquestioned supremacy in Italy, while
the territory of France remained practically undiminished. The agreement seemed
stable. Both Powers were thoroughly tired of war. The minor Italian potentates
had begun to learn that nothing could be gained by war except a change of
masters, accompanied by devastation, exaction, plague, and famine. The Pope had
made his choice at last. The influence of Giberti,
which had always been on the French side, was removed. The moderation which
Charles showed in the use of his success confirmed them in this frame of mind.
It was his policy, while changing as little as possible in the government of
the smaller States, to make such order as should secure to him in each
effective supervision and control.
The
expedition which Charles had prepared for war in Italy set forth from
Barcelona, after a treaty had been concluded with the Pope (June 29), and in
the hope of peace from the negotiations at Cambray.
Charles may have received the news of peace on his arrival at Genoa, August 12.
With the troops that he brought with him, with the victorious force from
Naples, the army of Leyva, and fresh German levies from the Tyrol, he was
absolute master of Italy, and could shape it at his will. His dispositions were
made at Bologna, whither Clement came to confer on him the imperial crown.
Peace was
made with Venice, who restored all her conquests, and paid a war indemnity.
Francesco Sforza was restored to Milan: but Charles reserved the right to
garrison the citadel of Milan, and the town of Como, and a Spanish force was
left in the Duchy. Florence was restored to the Medici, an operation which
required a ten months’ siege (October, 1529-August, 1530). Alessandro de'
Medici was appointed as head of the government of the city by the decree of
October 28,1530. The claim of the Duke of Ferrara to Reggio and Modena was
reserved for the future decision of Charles. In all other respects the Pope was
restored to his full rights, and re-entered on the possession of his temporal
power, though his status now resembled that of an inferior and protected
prince. Malta and Tripoli were given to the Knights of St John. A league of the
powers of Italy was formed, to which finally not only the Pope, Venice,
Florence, the Marquis of Mantua now created Duke, but also the Duke of Savoy,
and all the minor States adhered.
The Duke
of Ferrara was to join when he had been reconciled to the Pope. After all was
concluded Charles received at the hands of the Pope the iron crown of Lombardy
and the imperial crown, February 23-24, and left Italy for Germany (April,
1530). All the years of war he had spent in Spain, and this was the first time
he had visited the ill-fated peninsula, where so much of all that is precious
had been expended in supporting and combating his claims. How much had been
sacrificed to these ends may best be indicated by noting that the battle of
Mohacs was fought in 1526, that Ferdinand was elected to the thrones of Bohemia
and Hungary in the same year, and that the Diet of Speier and the Siege of
Vienna are dated in 1529.
The
success of Charles appeared complete and permanent. Far other and even more
difficult tasks awaited him beyond the Alps, but so far as Italy was concerned
he might sleep secure. He seemed to have brought for once in her troubled
history unity to Italy. That so much had been achieved appears at first sight
due more to good fortune than good management. Again and again, above all at
Pavia and at Naples, luck had declared in his favour when everything seemed to
promise disaster. But good fortune seldom comes where it is wholly unmerited.
Though always unequal in intellect and resources to the gigantic tasks that
were imposed upon him, Charles had shown perseverance almost adequate to his
needs. Moreover, the brilliant work of his servants, of Pescara, of Leyva, of Lannoy, of the Prince of Orange, even of the Duke of
Bourbon, seems to argue something in this King which enabled him to choose the
right men and retain their permanent and devoted service. The fidelity of his
Spanish and to a less degree of his German soldiers compares very favourably
with the conduct of other ill-paid mercenaries during this period. The
Emperor's name might count for much, but men may also well have felt that in
serving Charles they were serving one who could always be trusted to do his
best, who would never forget or neglect his duties, even though sheer physical
incapacity might often leave him far below the level of his conscientious
aspiration.
But, not
less than the inexhaustible persistency of Charles, the defects of his rivals
had contributed to the result. Francis’ choice of men was persistently unlucky.
Lautrec and Bonnivet compare ill with the leaders of the imperial army. French
support was never forthcoming at the crisis. When it came it was ineffectively
employed. On the Italian side the leaders and the policy were similarly
deficient. After all excuses have been made for the Duke of Urbino he must be
judged an unenterprising commander. Giovanni de' Medici, though brilliant as a
subordinate, never had a chance to show if he had the capacity to conduct a
campaign. The Venetians never dared to push home the resolution on which they
had for the moment decided. Clement showed all the characteristics of a man of
thought involved in the uncongenial necessity of prompt, continuous, and
definite action. The shadowy figure of Francesco Sforza flits upon the stage
and leaves no clear impression.
Some
features of the war deserve particular notice. It followed the path of least
resistance, and was therefore concentrated on Italy. The invasion of France, of
the Netherlands, of Spain, though occasionally attempted, was always fruitless.
Germany was never touched, though an attack might have been directed upon
Wurttemberg, and the Habsburg possessions in Alsace. In each of these countries
national resistance would be real and vigorous, the population was warlike.
Spain was further protected by its inhospitable country, north-east France and
the Netherlands by the numerous defensible towns. Italy had no effective
feeling of nationality, its inhabitants could fight for others but not for
themselves. The immunity of the county and duchy of Burgundy from attack is
surprising, but their security was mainly due to the guarantee which the Swiss
exacted for their Burgundian friends and neighbours in their French treaty of
1522. Except on this occasion the national action of the Swiss, which for a
brief period had decided the fortunes of Italy, 1512-15, does not reappear.
They fought as mercenaries, rarely for any national interest, and even as
mercenaries their unquestioned military supremacy was past away. The best Spanish foot was probably better; good Germans equally good.
Moreover religious differences were beginning to paralyse the Confederation,
and the Reformers discouraged foreign service. Savoy and Piedmont were the
highway of the French armies, exposed on the other hand to the incursions and
requisitions of the imperialists, when they had for the moment the upper hand
in Milan. German assistance in men was more than might have been expected,
considering the difficulties with which Ferdinand had to contend in the
hereditary Habsburg lands. When the war was against the Pope, Lutheran ardour
facilitated recruiting The English alliance, though eagerly sought for, proved
of little advantage on any occasion. But the outcome of events in Italy decided
the question of Henry’s divorce, and with it the defection of England from the
papal obedience.
The
possession of Milan, on which the struggle chiefly turned, was a luxury to
France, a point of vital importance to Charles, so long as he held the kingdoms
of Naples and Sicily together with the Netherlands. The continued presence of
two first-class Powers in the peninsula was an impossibility. On the other
hand, without the defence afforded by the territory and fortresses of Lombardy,
Italy was constantly open to invasion, and the value of this barbican was shown
in the fact that only once in all these campaigns the kingdom of Naples was
seriously threatened, by the invasion of Lautrec. The other consideration, that
Milan was the door by which the Spanish forces through Genoa, and the Italian
forces from the South, could come to the rescue of the Netherlands in event of
civil war or foreign attack, was not overlooked by Charles and his advisers,
but its full significance was not in fact disclosed until the reign of Philip
II. On the question of right Charles professed to be fighting for a vassal of
the Empire wrongfully deforced; then for an imperial fief forfeited by Sforza’s
treason; and the restitution of Milan to Sforza shows that the plea of right
was not wholly insincere.
We can see
that the whole issue of the struggle centred in the question of finance, but
unfortunately we are unable to follow the details or draw up any budget of
expenses or receipts either for France or the Spanish possessions. During the
years from the election to the Empire until the Conference of Bologna, the
Netherlands were the chief resource of Charles. Year after year the Estates
voted unheard-of subsidies; the total contributions of the Low Countries are
estimated for 1520-30 at no less than 15,000,000 livres tournois;
and though a considerable part of this was consumed in the defence of the
provinces, for the necessities of their government, and the maintenance of the
Court of the Regent, it was to the Netherlands that Charles looked in the
moments of his greatest despair. Castile came next, so soon as the revolt of
the Comuneros had
been crushed. The annual income of Spain may be estimated at about 1,500,000
ducats, in the first years of Charles’ reign. The Empire and the hereditary
Habsburg lands may for this purpose be neglected.
Money was
raised in Castile by pledging the taxes in advance, by issuing juros or bonds
at fixed interest charged upon the national revenues, by mortgaging to financial
houses every possible source of profit. In this way the great House of Fugger
took over in 1524 the estates belonging to the masterships of the three military orders, and later the quicksilver mines of Almaden, and
the silver mines of Guadalcanal. The cruzada, or revenue from indulgences granted on
pretext of a fictitious crusade, became a regular source of revenue, and when,
as in the time of Clement, the papal sanction was refused, the King did not
scruple to raise it on his own authority, and to pledge it for many years in
advance. The fifth on all treasures imported from the Indies was since the
conquest of Mexico becoming a valuable supplement, and as an exceptional
measure the treasure could be seized and juros issued in recompense. But the objection of the Spaniards to the export of
treasure from the peninsula made the use of these resources at a distance a
very difficult operation, which could only be negotiated by the aid of the most
powerful financial houses. From his early years Charles relied greatly on the Fuggers; Genoa from the first, except when it was in French
hands, and in the later years of his reign Antwerp, were mainstays of his
financial power. Charles was very punctilious in defraying at least the
interest if not the capital of his debts, and thus he was at all times able to
borrow upon terms. His juros were sometimes
issued at a price equivalent to a rate of 7 per cent.: but in times of great
need and danger, when time was the dominant factor, he was obliged to pay as
much as 12 and even 16 per cent, for loans. As time went on the revenues of the
Netherlands were similarly pledged in advance.
The
revenues of the Duchy of Milan in time of peace might have been considerable.
In time of war they were whatever the army could raise from the impoverished
inhabitants; and before the war was over the state of the country was such that
not only was there no superfluous wealth, but the army and the inhabitants
alike seemed in a fair way to perish of starvation. The case of Naples and of
Sicily was not quite so desperate, in spite of two rather serious risings in
Sicily which we have not had occasion to mention. But here a considerable army
of occupation had to be kept up and a fleet, if possible, for the protection of
the coast, if not from the French and the Genoese, at any rate from the pirates
of Algiers. The surplus revenues of the southern kingdoms cannot have been
large, and although very often in an emergency Lannoy produced money to content some starving troops or to move some paralysed army,
the sums which are mentioned are almost always small, and give but a poor idea
of the capacity of the kingdoms to assist their King. Here also the same
ruinous policy was pursued as in Castile, of pledging everything in advance, of
selling everything that could be sold; and years of peace would be required
before the kingdoms could recover.
In Italy
another valuable source of occasional revenue was the subsidies raised from the
lesser Italian States, which, unless actually at war with the Emperor, could
generally be coerced into payment, and, if in his alliance, were expected to
contribute handsomely. The Pope was the largest giver, but Venice could
sometimes be bled, and Florence, Lucca, Siena, Ferrara, Mantua, were often in a
condition which made refusal difficult.
The King
of France had a better financial system and was not troubled like the Spanish
King by the necessity of consulting his Estates. His entire revenue was
somewhat less than the joint revenues of Spain and the Netherlands, but on the
other hand he could increase it more rapidly by raising the taille, and it was entirely at his disposal; nor was
he troubled like Charles by the necessity of difficult financial operations
before he could fit out an army. On the other hand, when his army was abroad
these obstacles confronted him also. His financial ministers were not
conspicuous for honesty, and the institution of the Tresor de l'Épargne in 1523, to receive all casual
and unexpected sums of revenue and to build up a reserve fund to be at the
King’s absolute disposal, was not so great a success as was hoped. The deficits
during the years of war reached an alarming figure, and it is difficult to see
how they were met. For the credit system in France was not developed as it was
in Augsburg, Genoa, and Antwerp. The first public loans in France were raised
on the security of the revenues of particular towns; and it was not until 1542
that the King began to build up Lyons as a financial centre to perform for him
the same functions that the bourses of Genoa and Antwerp were fulfilling for
Charles. The attempt had some success, and similar bourses were started at
Toulouse (1556), and at Rouen (1563). Henry II on his accession acknowledged
the debts of his father, and the royal credit sensibly improved. At the outset
the King was obliged to pay 16 per cent, for advances, but by 1550 the rate had
fallen to 12 per cent. But confidence was rudely shaken when in 1557 the King
suspended the payment of interest on the debt, which at that time amounted
perhaps to five million crowns. We can thus get a glimpse of the methods by
which the enormous expenses of these and subsequent wars were liquidated. All
the spare cash of Europe, withdrawn from commerce and industry, flowed at a
crisis into the King's coffers; the road was opened to national bankruptcy,
which was general soon after the treaty of Cateau-Cambresis.
Princes had learnt to borrow, but they had not learnt to pay. The sources of
wealth were diverted from profitable and useful enterprise to destructive war;
and in the long run not even the financiers profited, though in the interval
some capitalists built up fortunes, which are almost comparable with those of
our own day.
chapter 3HABSBURG AND VALOIS (II)
|
1528-9] Peace of Cambray. Francis and his allies still held some places in the Milanese, and some outlying posts in the kingdom, as well as the cities of the Adriatic littoral. But negotiations begun in the winter between Louise of Savoy and Margaret, the ruler of the Netherlands, had resulted in a project of peace, which was vehemently desired in the interests of all countries, but especially of the Netherlands, where public opinion made itself perhaps most felt. Charles was meditating a great expedition to Italy under his personal command, but he consented to treat. He sent full powers and instructions, elastic though precise, to Margaret, who was visited by the King’s mother, Louise, at Cambray, July 5. Here the terms of peace were definitely concluded, and the treaty was signed on August 3, 1529. The compact of marriage between Francis and Eleonora was renewed. Francis resigned all pretensions to Italy, left his allies in the lurch, renounced his suzerainty over Flanders and Artois, and all the frontier places on the north-east remained in the hands of the occupant. Robert de la Marck and the Duke of Gelders were abandoned. Two millions of crowns were to be paid as ransom for the young French princes, and in lieu of the present cession of Burgundy, to which Charles reserved his right; while the possessions of Bourbon and of the Prince of Orange were left to the French King. With this treaty the first stage in the settlement of the affairs of Western Europe was reached. To Spain was surrendered the unquestioned supremacy in Italy, while the territory of France remained practically undiminished. The agreement seemed stable. Both Powers were thoroughly tired of war. The minor Italian potentates had begun to learn that nothing could be gained by war except a change of masters, accompanied by devastation, exaction, plague, and famine. The Pope had made his choice at last. The influence of Giberti, which had always been on the French side, was removed. The moderation which Charles showed in the use of his success confirmed them in this frame of mind. It was his policy, while changing as little as possible in the government of the smaller States, to make such order as should secure to him in each effective supervision and control. The expedition which Charles had prepared for war in Italy set forth from Barcelona, after a treaty had been concluded with the Pope (June 29), and in the hope of peace from the negotiations at Cambray. Charles may have received the news of peace on his arrival at Genoa, August 12. With the troops that he brought with him, with the victorious force from Naples, the army of Leyva, and fresh German levies from the Tyrol, he was absolute master of Italy, and could shape it at his will. His dispositions were made at Bologna, whither Clement came to confer on him the imperial crown. Peace was made with Venice, who restored all her conquests, and paid a war indemnity. Francesco Sforza was restored to Milan: but Charles reserved the right to garrison the citadel of Milan, and the town of Como, and a Spanish force was left in the Duchy. Florence was restored to the Medici, an operation which required a ten months’ siege (October, 1529-August, 1530). Alessandro de' Medici was appointed as head of the government of the city by the decree of October 28,1530. The claim of the Duke of Ferrara to Reggio and Modena was reserved for the future decision of Charles. In all other respects the Pope was restored to his full rights, and re-entered on the possession of his temporal power, though his status now resembled that of an inferior and protected prince. Malta and Tripoli were given to the Knights of St John. A league of the powers of Italy was formed, to which finally not only the Pope, Venice, Florence, the Marquis of Mantua now created Duke, but also the Duke of Savoy, and all the minor States adhered. The Duke of Ferrara was to join when he had been reconciled to the Pope. After all was concluded Charles received at the hands of the Pope the iron crown of Lombardy and the imperial crown, February 23-24, and left Italy for Germany (April, 1530). All the years of war he had spent in Spain, and this was the first time he had visited the ill-fated peninsula, where so much of all that is precious had been expended in supporting and combating his claims. How much had been sacrificed to these ends may best be indicated by noting that the battle of Mohacs was fought in 1526, that Ferdinand was elected to the thrones of Bohemia and Hungary in the same year, and that the Diet of Speier and the Siege of Vienna are dated in 1529. The success of Charles appeared complete and permanent. Far other and even more difficult tasks awaited him beyond the Alps, but so far as Italy was concerned he might sleep secure. He seemed to have brought for once in her troubled history unity to Italy. That so much had been achieved appears at first sight due more to good fortune than good management. Again and again, above all at Pavia and at Naples, luck had declared in his favour when everything seemed to promise disaster. But good fortune seldom comes where it is wholly unmerited. Though always unequal in intellect and resources to the gigantic tasks that were imposed upon him, Charles had shown perseverance almost adequate to his needs. Moreover, the brilliant work of his servants, of Pescara, of Leyva, of Lannoy, of the Prince of Orange, even of the Duke of Bourbon, seems to argue something in this King which enabled him to choose the right men and retain their permanent and devoted service. The fidelity of his Spanish and to a less degree of his German soldiers compares very favourably with the conduct of other ill-paid mercenaries during this period. The Emperor's name might count for much, but men may also well have felt that in serving Charles they were serving one who could always be trusted to do his best, who would never forget or neglect his duties, even though sheer physical incapacity might often leave him far below the level of his conscientious aspiration. But, not less than the inexhaustible persistency of Charles, the defects of his rivals had contributed to the result. Francis’ choice of men was persistently unlucky. Lautrec and Bonnivet compare ill with the leaders of the imperial army. French support was never forthcoming at the crisis. When it came it was ineffectively employed. On the Italian side the leaders and the policy were similarly deficient. After all excuses have been made for the Duke of Urbino he must be judged an unenterprising commander. Giovanni de' Medici, though brilliant as a subordinate, never had a chance to show if he had the capacity to conduct a campaign. The Venetians never dared to push home the resolution on which they had for the moment decided. Clement showed all the characteristics of a man of thought involved in the uncongenial necessity of prompt, continuous, and definite action. The shadowy figure of Francesco Sforza flits upon the stage and leaves no clear impression. Some features of the war deserve particular notice. It followed the path of least resistance, and was therefore concentrated on Italy. The invasion of France, of the Netherlands, of Spain, though occasionally attempted, was always fruitless. Germany was never touched, though an attack might have been directed upon Wurttemberg, and the Habsburg possessions in Alsace. In each of these countries national resistance would be real and vigorous, the population was warlike. Spain was further protected by its inhospitable country, north-east France and the Netherlands by the numerous defensible towns. Italy had no effective feeling of nationality, its inhabitants could fight for others but not for themselves. The immunity of the county and duchy of Burgundy from attack is surprising, but their security was mainly due to the guarantee which the Swiss exacted for their Burgundian friends and neighbours in their French treaty of 1522. Except on this occasion the national action of the Swiss, which for a brief period had decided the fortunes of Italy, 1512-15, does not reappear. They fought as mercenaries, rarely for any national interest, and even as mercenaries their unquestioned military supremacy was past away. The best Spanish foot was probably better; good Germans equally good. Moreover religious differences were beginning to paralyse the Confederation, and the Reformers discouraged foreign service. Savoy and Piedmont were the highway of the French armies, exposed on the other hand to the incursions and requisitions of the imperialists, when they had for the moment the upper hand in Milan. German assistance in men was more than might have been expected, considering the difficulties with which Ferdinand had to contend in the hereditary Habsburg lands. When the war was against the Pope, Lutheran ardour facilitated recruiting The English alliance, though eagerly sought for, proved of little advantage on any occasion. But the outcome of events in Italy decided the question of Henry’s divorce, and with it the defection of England from the papal obedience. The possession of Milan, on which the struggle chiefly turned, was a luxury to France, a point of vital importance to Charles, so long as he held the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily together with the Netherlands. The continued presence of two first-class Powers in the peninsula was an impossibility. On the other hand, without the defence afforded by the territory and fortresses of Lombardy, Italy was constantly open to invasion, and the value of this barbican was shown in the fact that only once in all these campaigns the kingdom of Naples was seriously threatened, by the invasion of Lautrec. The other consideration, that Milan was the door by which the Spanish forces through Genoa, and the Italian forces from the South, could come to the rescue of the Netherlands in event of civil war or foreign attack, was not overlooked by Charles and his advisers, but its full significance was not in fact disclosed until the reign of Philip II. On the question of right Charles professed to be fighting for a vassal of the Empire wrongfully deforced; then for an imperial fief forfeited by Sforza’s treason; and the restitution of Milan to Sforza shows that the plea of right was not wholly insincere. We can see that the whole issue of the struggle centred in the question of finance, but unfortunately we are unable to follow the details or draw up any budget of expenses or receipts either for France or the Spanish possessions. During the years from the election to the Empire until the Conference of Bologna, the Netherlands were the chief resource of Charles. Year after year the Estates voted unheard-of subsidies; the total contributions of the Low Countries are estimated for 1520-30 at no less than 15,000,000 livres tournois; and though a considerable part of this was consumed in the defence of the provinces, for the necessities of their government, and the maintenance of the Court of the Regent, it was to the Netherlands that Charles looked in the moments of his greatest despair. Castile came next, so soon as the revolt of the Comuneros had been crushed. The annual income of Spain may be estimated at about 1,500,000 ducats, in the first years of Charles’ reign. The Empire and the hereditary Habsburg lands may for this purpose be neglected. Money was raised in Castile by pledging the taxes in advance, by issuing juros or bonds at fixed interest charged upon the national revenues, by mortgaging to financial houses every possible source of profit. In this way the great House of Fugger took over in 1524 the estates belonging to the masterships of the three military orders, and later the quicksilver mines of Almaden, and the silver mines of Guadalcanal. The cruzada, or revenue from indulgences granted on pretext of a fictitious crusade, became a regular source of revenue, and when, as in the time of Clement, the papal sanction was refused, the King did not scruple to raise it on his own authority, and to pledge it for many years in advance. The fifth on all treasures imported from the Indies was since the conquest of Mexico becoming a valuable supplement, and as an exceptional measure the treasure could be seized and juros issued in recompense. But the objection of the Spaniards to the export of treasure from the peninsula made the use of these resources at a distance a very difficult operation, which could only be negotiated by the aid of the most powerful financial houses. From his early years Charles relied greatly on the Fuggers; Genoa from the first, except when it was in French hands, and in the later years of his reign Antwerp, were mainstays of his financial power. Charles was very punctilious in defraying at least the interest if not the capital of his debts, and thus he was at all times able to borrow upon terms. His juros were sometimes issued at a price equivalent to a rate of 7 per cent.: but in times of greatneed and danger, when time was the dominant factor, he was obliged to pay as much as 12 and even 16 per cent, for loans. As time went on the revenues of the Netherlands were similarly pledged in advance. The revenues of the Duchy of Milan in time of peace might have been considerable. In time of war they were whatever the army could raise from the impoverished inhabitants; and before the war was over the state of the country was such that not only was there no superfluous wealth, but the army and the inhabitants alike seemed in a fair way to perish of starvation. The case of Naples and of Sicily was not quite so desperate, in spite of two rather serious risings in Sicily which we have not had occasion to mention. But here a considerable army of occupation had to be kept up and a fleet, if possible, for the protection of the coast, if not from the French and the Genoese, at any rate from the pirates of Algiers. The surplus revenues of the southern kingdoms cannot have been large, and although very often in an emergency Lannoy produced money to content some starving troops or to move some paralysed army, the sums which are mentioned are almost always small, and give but a poor idea of the capacity of the kingdoms to assist their King. Here also the same ruinous policy was pursued as in Castile, of pledging everything in advance, of selling everything that could be sold; and years of peace would be required before the kingdoms could recover. In Italy another valuable source of occasional revenue was the subsidies raised from the lesser Italian States, which, unless actually at war with the Emperor, could generally be coerced into payment, and, if in his alliance, were expected to contribute handsomely. The Pope was the largest giver, but Venice could sometimes be bled, and Florence, Lucca, Siena, Ferrara, Mantua, were often in a condition which made refusal difficult. The King of France had a better financial system and was not troubled like the Spanish King by the necessity of consulting his Estates. His entire revenue was somewhat less than the joint revenues of Spain and the Netherlands, but on the other hand he could increase it more rapidly by raising the taille, and it was entirely at his disposal; nor was he troubled like Charles by the necessity of difficult financial operations before he could fit out an army. On the other hand, when his army was abroad these obstacles confronted him also. His financial ministers were not conspicuous for honesty, and the institution of the Tresor de l'Épargne in 1523, to receive all casual and unexpected sums of revenue and to build up a reserve fund to be at the King’s absolute disposal, was not so great a success as was hoped. The deficits during the years of war reached an alarming figure, and it is difficult to see how they were met. For the credit system in France was not developed as it was in Augsburg, Genoa, and Antwerp. The first public loans in France were raised on the security of the revenues of particular towns; and it was not until 1542 that the King began to build up Lyons as a financial centre to perform for him the same functions that the bourses of Genoa and Antwerp were fulfilling for Charles. The attempt had some success, and similar bourses were started at Toulouse (1556), and at Rouen (1563). Henry II on his accession acknowledged the debts of his father, and the royal credit sensibly improved. At the outset the King was obliged to pay 16 per cent, for advances, but by 1550 the rate had fallen to 12 per cent. But confidence was rudely shaken when in 1557 the King suspended the payment of interest on the debt, which at that time amounted perhaps to five million crowns. We can thus get a glimpse of the methods by which the enormous expenses of these and subsequent wars were liquidated. All the spare cash of Europe, withdrawn from commerce and industry, flowed at a crisis into the King's coffers; the road was opened to national bankruptcy, which was general soon after the treaty of Cateau-Cambresis. Princes had learnt to borrow, but they had not learnt to pay. The sources of wealth were diverted from profitable and useful enterprise to destructive war; and in the long run not even the financiers profited, though in the interval some capitalists built up fortunes, which are almost comparable with those of our own day. |