READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
VICTORY OF THE PAPACYCHAPTER VIITALY, 1250-1290
At the moment of Frederick II’s death, his power showed little decline in Italy. He held the
Regno (i.e. the kingdom of Sicily and its
provinces on the mainland) in undiminished submission. In the March of Ancona
and Duchy of Spoleto, which owed allegiance to the Holy See, his partisans had
the upper hand: the legate, Cardinal Peter Capocci,
could only act on the defensive. In North Italy the imperialists seemed still
more predominant. The house of Savoy was his ally, its chief, Count Amadeus
IV, commanding the north-western passes, while its cadet, Thomas, ex-Count of
Flanders, ruled Turin and his appanage of Piedmont; and the great city of Asti
was firmly imperialist, so that in the west the only powerful papalist was
Boniface IV, Marquess of Montferrat and regent of Saluzzo for his young kinsman, Marquess Thomas I. If Genoa,
a greater state than these, was for the Pope, her Italian interests were mainly
confined to her Riviera, and there she was busily occupied in subjugating her
lesser neighbours, who of course were imperialist for the nonce. Farther to the
east, Marquess Manfred Lancia was imperial vicar between the river Lambro and
the western Alps; he was podestà of Pavia and Lodi, while Vercelli,
Tortona, and Alessandria also admitted his authority. Whereas Lancia possessed
little personal importance, his fellow-vicar and rival between the Lambro and
the Mincio was the wielder of a kind of tyranny. This personage was the
Marquess Oberto Pelavicini, co-tyrant of Cremona with its faction-chief Buoso da Dovara. Although the only other imperialist
cities really in his vicariate were Bergamo and Reggio, his warlike prowess and
his German mercenaries made him superior at the moment to his antagonists. The leaders of the papalist cities were the two warlike
Cardinal-deacons, Octavian degli Ubaldini and Gregory of Montelongo, both indefatigable, but
hampered by the divergent aims of the towns which, headed by Milan, were on
their side. Piacenza hesitated between Pope and Emperor. Bologna, in concert
with Cardinal Octavian, was preoccupied in establishing her own supremacy in
Romagna on the basis of the reconciliation of both
factions, although she lent a helping hand to the Church’s efforts in Lombardy.
Lastly, in the Trevisan March, the grim Ezzelin da
Romano held sway from his capital at Verona. He was not imperial vicar for the
March, an office which was held by Ansedisio de’ Guidotti, his lieutenant at Padua, but over Verona, Padua,
Vicenza, and Trent he ruled with absolute power. The only enemy he had to fear was Marquess Azzo VII of Este, tyrant of Ferrara, for his brother Alberic da Romano, tyrant of Treviso, was but a nominal
papalist, and, in spite of a seeming quarrel, a tepid
adversary. Thus in northern Italy Frederick’s star was
in the ascendant; it was in Tuscany that his position was doubtful. His vicar
in the south, indeed, Marquess Galvano Lancia, could depend on its principal
city, Siena; but his son Frederick of Antioch, vicar in the north, had ill
success and saw the Ghibelline nobles of Florence obliged to share power with
the traders under the new constitution of the Primo Popolo.
On this promising outlook the news of
Frederick’s death worked a sudden change. The loss of his commanding
personality not only dispirited the imperialists, it disunited them; and the common action we find among them subsequently is rather
the compromise of separate ambitions than any true harmony of purpose. With the
disappearance of the last true Emperor, the Empire itself seems to dissolve.
Frederick’s own testament recognised something of this kind. Besides the bid
for popularity contained in its re-establishment of the customs of the Regno as
they were under William the Good, he tried to conciliate the clashing ambitions
of his sons. The Regno—it was the fatal necessity of Staufen policy—was devised to his eldest son, Conrad IV, King of the Romans, with
succession to his next son, Henry; but the bastard Manfred was not only called
to the throne in case the legitimate line became extinct; he was also given a
vast appanage which included the principality of Taranto, and was nominated Balio or regent of the Regno and all Italy till the
absent Conrad could reach his realm. It was a difficult task which required the
harmonising of four divergent groups of interests. First, there were the
discontented towns and barons of the Regno, irked by the strong centralised
government and harassed by heavy taxation; their disaffection was to be crushed
or cajoled. Then, the national dislike of the German connexion was to be dealt
with; Frederick’s armed strength consisted in German and Saracen soldiery, and
the Regnicoli were averse to the Germans at any rate,
and perhaps wished to be free from the burden of the Empire. With this desire
Manfred’s own ambition to supplant his brothers, bound up as they were with
Germany and the Empire, only too well coincided, and his uncles, Galvano and Frederick Lancia, spurred him on. Lastly, there
were the loyal counsellors of Frederick II, firm partisans of Conrad IV and the Staufen policy. At their head stood the seneschal,
Margrave Berthold of Hohenburg, who had the
confidence of the German troops, the marshal, Peter Ruffo, and the chamberlain,
John the Moor, who disposed of the treasure and the Saracens. They all were
quickly alienated from the young Balio.
For the moment there was little
difficulty in taking over the reins of government. The boy-prince Henry was
sent in charge of Peter Ruffo to rule Sicily and Calabria. Manfred himself
started for the Terra di Lavoro in
order to hold that most disaffected portion of the Regno in check. But
he did not long succeed. Scarcely was the Emperor’s death known when the
imperialist towns in the March of Ancona and Duchy of Spoleto submitted to
Cardinal Peter Capocci, Florence recalled the exiled
Guelfs, and a conspiracy was soon afoot in the Regno itself. Early in March
1251 the Terra di Lavoro, led by the cities of Naples
and Capua and the Counts of Acerra and Caserta, broke into revolt, while the
frontier town of Ascoli in the Abruzzi submitted to the cardinal.
The strings of all these movements
were held by the Pope. “Let the heavens rejoice and let the earth be glad!”
Innocent IV wrote jubilantly when the news came of the Emperor’s death. No one
knew better how much Frederick had meant to the imperial cause, and he gave way
to triumphant hopes. He would not only sever the Regno from the Empire; he
would annex it to the Holy See; and a lax combination of communes and nobles
should rule southern, if not all, Italy under the guidance of the Papacy. His
first act, on 25 January 1251, shewed his confidence. He somewhat airily ordered
his legate Peter to make terms with the magnates of the Regno. Probably
Innocent knew well the character of Margrave Berthold, suspicious of Manfred
and fond of an inept diplomacy, and underrated the inexperienced balio, As for King Conrad, he hoped to detain
him in Germany. North Italy should be won over and brought to peace by himself
in person on his way to Rome and his new realm. Even when the Pope heard of
Manfred’s vigorous proceedings against the rebels in the Regno, he only added a
victorious invasion to his programme.
His preparations were gradually made.
On 15 March he announced his return to Italy and summoned the northern cities
to a conference at his native city of Genoa. On 19 April, after an interview
with the antiCaesar William, he left Lyons, and proceeded down the Rhone and
by sea to Genoa, which he reached on 18 May. There the Lombard congress was
held, and Innocent’s disillusionment began. Instead of crossing straight to
Rome, he decided to make a progress through Lombardy to gain adherents. Some
success he had. Alessandria declared for him; Thomas of Savoy-Piedmont adroitly
changed sides and secured his possessions by marrying the kindred-loving
Pope’s niece. But the politics of Lombardy were decided, not by the claims of
Pope or Emperor, but by the rivalries of the cities and the strife of factions
and classes within them. When Innocent arrived at Milan on 7 July, his long
stay there was embittered by the demands of his hosts for the payment of their
war-expenses, and each papalist town had its terms to make. The subjection of
Lodi by Milan which occurred in August was thus of little profit to the Pope,
while on 24 March Piacenza had gone over to Pelavicini. Nor was Innocent’s
farther journey to Perugia, where he fixed his headquarters from 5 November,
marked by success. He quarrelled with Bologna, and had the mortification of
seeing her set Buoso da Dovara, the co-tyrant of Cremona, at
liberty. The fact was that the power of Ezzelin and of Pelavicini was
increasing, not diminishing, for the loss of Lodi and Alessandria was a blow to
Manfred Lancia, not to them; while even in west Lombardy the progress that Asti
made in subduing her smaller neighbours counterbalanced the party-change of
Thomas of Savov. Innocent’s perception of facts is, perhaps,
shown in his nomination of a single moderate agent on reaching Perugia.
Octavian degli Ubaldini was
reappointed sole legate for Lombardy and Romagna, while Gregory of Montelongo received the patriarchate of Aquileia, so that
he could control Friuli in the papal interest.
In the meantime the favourable moment had passed in the Regno. On the outbreak of the revolt in
the Terra di Lavoro, Manfred had retired to Apulia,
only to meet and to suppress an ephemeral rebellion of the towns there. Then he
joined forces with Margrave Berthold, and they invaded the Terra di Lavoro. Here, however, though Nola was captured, Naples and
the rest resisted his efforts. His position grew more insecure, for Cardinal
Peter had incited the Abruzzan coastland to insurrection.
His own ambition had further weakened Manfred. Peter Ruffo had refused to
execute his grants in favour of the Lancia in Sicily, and had driven off Galvano Lancia who was sent to replace him. So Manfred and Berthold towards the end of June turned to the Pope, with what
ulterior purpose on the part of either or both it is impossible to say. In any
case Innocent’s offers were too low, and Manfred in September retired to Apulia
to await his brother’s coming. The youth had at least checked the papal
progress. Innocent’s means were exhausted, and he confined himself to keeping
the revolt alive. His dreams of conquest had been thwarted by the strongly
organised bureaucracy left by Frederick II, and by his own lack of troops and
money.
Frederick’s heir, Conrad IV, now came
to give unity to his party. In November he held a congress of the imperialist
tyrants and cities at Goito near Cremona, and then
crossed by sea to Siponto in the Regno in mid-January
1252. Conrad had the great advantage of knowing exactly his own views. He
worked for the traditional Staufen policy: he would
rule the Regno, and use its wealth to rule the Empire.
On this basis he was anxious for an accord with the Pope, and on no other. In
the Regno, too, he was strong, since the officials, and the Germans and
Saracens, were for him, and there was no conflict of wills. Margrave Berthold
had met him in Istria and gained, perhaps justifiably, his ear. He soon showed
his disapproval of his brother Manfred’s conduct as Balio, while Berthold’s share in the negotiations with the Pope was forgiven or explained. So Manfred was deprived of part of his appanage, and
during the rest of the reign he was under suspicion. His relatives, the Lancia,
were deprived of his lavish grants, but Berthold and Peter Ruffo received fresh
donations. A parliament was held at Foggia, in which the abolition of the hated
general tax, the collecta, was used to
gain favour for the German king; and then Conrad set to work. In February he
opened negotiations with the Pope, but their result was utter failure, for
Innocent would not hear of a union of the Regno with the Empire. Meantime
Conrad was warring down the rebellion in the Terra di Lavoro,
which, a significant fact, had spread since his arrival. Gradually he conquered
the rebels, Capua surrendering in January and Naples on 10 October 1253. As the
Abruzzi were slowly won back during these operations, Conrad was now at last
master of his kingdom.
Outside the Regno the omens were also
in favour of the Staufen. Rome itself had become
imperialist. Wearied of the anarchy of the nobles, the popolo, led by the Colonna, adopted a constitution on the Lombard model with a foreign podestà, in Roman style a Senator. In November 1252 they obtained for the post one of
the most eminent Italians of the day, Brancaleone degli Andalò. He was a Bolognese, one of the chief of the imperialist faction in his native city, and
came of a family already noted for its energetic podestàs. His safety
secured by hostages, his rule was a righteous tyranny.
Stern justice was dealt to the disturbers of the public peace, and so powerful
did the Senator become that he was able to take a haughty tone to the Pope, while
he also negotiated with Conrad.
Meanwhile Innocent, who vainly
attempted to counteract the Senator by spending the winter in Rome, did not
prosper in Lombardy either. He was naturally anxious to isolate Conrad and cut
off his communications with Germany. For that the ruin or the party-change of
Oberto Pelavicini and of Ezzelin was necessary. A league of the papalist cities
seemed the most feasible plan, and it was carried through at Brescia by
Cardinal Octavian on 8 March 1252, but it remained almost a dead letter.
Bologna, the only really prosperous commune, although
she sent occasional aid, was absorbed in her Romagnol policy. Milan and the rest were crippled by financial embarrassment due to long
years of war. Still more fatal to the scheme was the prevalence of heresy,
which Innocent was seriously determined to suppress. On 19 April the Dominican
inquisitor, Peter Martyr, was slaughtered at Milan, and the murderer went free.
Brescia and Mantua were other centres of heretical opinions, and the influence
of the sects, together with the toleration they enjoyed under Ezzelin and
Pelavicini, tended to make the cities where they had many adherents disinclined
to proceed against the two imperialist tyrants. Ezzelin was too savage to
attract fresh communes to his rule, but the milder Pelavicini profited. The two
despots quickly replied to the new papal league by one of their own on 31
March, and soon scored an important success by the subjugation of the Piacenzan papalists who held out in the countryside. Cardinal
Octavian, whose military incapacity and reconciling tendency made him suspected
as an imperialist, although lack of means and men was the main cause of his
failure, was recalled; but matters were not mended thereby. Parma was isolated
by the submission of the Piacenzan papalists. She
accepted a native tyrant, and on 20 May 1253 made peace with Pelavicini.
Innocent IV’s only consolation was that the imperial vicar gained merely a
suspicions ally. Yet Pelavicini’s direct domain was
increasing. Manfred Lancia’s loyalty to Conrad had been dubious ever since his
nephew Prince Manfred and his other relatives had been disgraced. His cities,
west of the River Lambro, had held aloof from the league of Ezzelin and
Pelavicini. Finally, he changed sides and in 1253 became podestà of
Milan. Conrad at once declared all the Lancia traitors, and made Pelavicini sole vicar of Lombardy on 22 February 1253. He even hunted his
new foes from Constantinople where they took refuge. It was soon seen, however,
that Manfred Lancia’s slackness was partly due to the lassitude of his cities.
Even with Pelavicini as lord, Pavia carried on the weary petty warfare
languidly, and showed her anxiety for peace. Further west, again, the outlook
was little more encouraging for Innocent. Boniface IV of Montferrat did not
long endure being on the same side as his rival Thomas of Savoy-Piedmont, and joined the imperialists in 1252. Thomas,
indeed, grew more powerful: in 1253 he became regent of Savoy on the death of
his brother, Amadeus IV. But Asti continually increased her dominion, and even
Thomas became her vassal on 28 July 1252 as the price of peace.
Only in Tuscany could the Pope look
for better things, and that, curiously enough, was against his will. In Tuscany
there were no dreaded tyrants who were indissolubly connected with the Staufen, and perpetuated the might of the Empire by linking Germany with Italy and the
Regno. There were republics fighting for their own territorial and commercial
interests, which at this time had little effect on the main struggle of Pope
and Emperor. Here Frederick II’s officials faded away on his death, and the
domains he had collected were promptly annexed by the cities. Here therefore
Innocent appears as a fatherly pontiff and short-sighted politician. He did not
realise the importance of Florence for the Papacy. Florence had readmitted her
exiled Guelfs on 7 January 1251, immediately on the news of Frederick’s death,
and her leading Ghibellines went into exile in July. War had already broken out
with the still Ghibelline cities, Pisa, Siena, and their allies, and in the
conflict Florence, seconded by her natural Guelf allies, Lucca, Genoa, and
Umbrian Orvieto, was emerging triumphant. The Pope’s attempts at mediation did
not hamper her; a series of victories marked the year 1252, and on 1 February 1254
Pistoia surrendered and became a Guelf town.
In spite of the poor success that crowned his efforts, and the steadily growing
danger that surrounded him in the papal lands, Innocent IV pursued the policy
he had most at heart with an admirable tenacity. But it was clear that neither
his temporal nor his spiritual resources were equal to the uprooting of the Staufen from the Regno, and his petty efforts to keep alive
the rebellion among the Regnicoli only emphasised his
impotence. If he wished to conquer, he must find a champion. After a suggestion
that Conrad’s brother Henry should take the Regno and marry the Pope’s niece
had been firmly refused by Conrad in June 1552, he took the final decision to
call in a new dynasty for the Regno, which in the end was to bring so many
troubles on Italy. At the end of August he obtained
the consent of the cardinals to offer the Regno to Richard, Earl of Cornwall,
the wealthy younger brother of King Henry III of England, if he would come and
conquer it at his own expense. Charles, Count of Anjou and Provence, the
youngest brother of King Louis IX of France, was to be approached if Richard
refused. Accordingly the Pope’s envoy, Master Albert
of Parma, reached England in November 1252 to negotiate; but Richard was
cautious and haggled shrewdly, and the Pope could not meet his reasonable
demands. So by March 1253 the Earl had finally
refused. Unlike his brother, however, Henry III greedily swallowed the bait and
begged the crown for his own younger son Edmund. For the moment his proffer
seems to have come too late, since Master Albert crossed to France and began to
angle for the second candidate, Charles of Anjou. Charles, too, was ready to
snatch the crown; but he also was shrewd, and Innocent’s terms were high. His
relatives were against the scheme, the dangers of which were obvious while
Conrad’s success continued; and, in spite of the
bargain being all but struck in July 1553, Charles had withdrawn his
candidature by 30 October. It was then that Henry III’s folly renewed Edmund’s
candidature. On 20 December Innocent authorised Master Albert to treat again,
and on 6 March 1254 an arrangement was made at Vendome, although some revision
of it was necessary before Innocent would ratify it on 14 May. This
ratification, however, was not imparted by Master Albert, and Conrad’s death
caused it to be withheld altogether.
Henry III’s scruples at attacking his
own kith and kin had been alleviated by the death in December 1253 of his
nephew Henry of Staufen, which was at once attributed
by rumour and the Pope to poison at the hands of his jealous elder brother King
Conrad. Conrad on his part had not ceased to hope for an accommodation with his
adversary. He was probably willing to give all but Innocent’s indispensable
condition, the separation of the Regno and the Empire. He knew that
reconciliation with the Papacy was needful if he were to recover Germany, and
Innocent’s position seemed so hazardous that he might after all give way. In
October 1253 he made fresh overtures to the Pope, perhaps on the suggestion of
his ally, the Roman Senator Brancaleone. Innocent,
whose negotiations with Charles of Anjou were just collapsing and who dreaded
an immediate attack, gave favourable ear, and envoys met at Rome. But Innocent
probably never intended to do more than win time and appear placable to the world. He deceived his blunt antagonist and held him in hand through the
winter. No real progress was made, and Conrad was answering a series of flimsy
charges, such as heresy and usurpation, in January 1254. Then he must have
discovered the Pope’s negotiations with Henry III, for on 4 February Innocent IV gave him till 22
March to appear in Rome to exculpate himself, and thus broke off the parley.
Conrad, excommunicated anew on 9 April, could only look for war.
He did so, however, with confidence.
He had a fine army; his exhausted treasure was replenished by heavy taxes on
the Regno; and he was prepared to march north to reconquer Germany. Then it
was that his luck gave out. He had become infected, like so many German
invaders, with a southern fever, most naturally malaria, and, although at one
time his recovery seemed certain, he relapsed. On 21 May 1254 he died in his
camp at Lavello. There is something attractive in the
indomitable courage with which the last Staufen King
of the Romans endeavoured to revivify the obsolete. Yet Conrad was opposing the
necessary march of events. Frederick II at least had aspired to unite Italy by
German and Saracen arms and the Regno’s subsidies, which perhaps was
practicable. Conrad looked on the ecumenical idea of the Empire from another
side: Italy was a subject province and source of revenue, which should enable
him to maintain the Empire in Germany and elsewhere. That it could not be done
in the long run, that it gave the Popes a continuous support in Italy for their
struggles for independence, he never saw. He had little alternative under the
circumstances of his accession, needing as he did the Regno’s wealth to
overcome his foes in Germany; and the heir of the Staufen could hardly be the forerunner of Rudolf of Habsburg.
How much Conrad’s German outlook and
his exactions had alienated the Regnicoli from his
house appeared immediately after his death. He dreaded a usurpation of the
Regno by its native, Manfred, and almost in despair recommended his infant son,
the ill-fated Conrad II or Conradin as he was universally
called, to the Pope’s protection. For Balio or regent he named the German, Margrave Berthold of Hohenburg,
the chief of all who desired the German connexion. An obvious ruin now impended
over the Staufen. Disloyalty had grown among the Regnicoli, and such favour as existed for the royal house
was mostly engrossed by Prince Manfred. The child Conradin was far away in
Germany, and even the Saracens of Lucera, though
controlled by the loyal chamberlain, John the Moor, really preferred the brilliant
youth whom they knew. Manfred himself desired at least the regency, but what
with towns and nobles hankering after the liberty promised by the Pope, with
the fighting force and the chiefs of the bureaucracy siding with the Balio, he only headed the strongest faction
among three.
The elated Innocent was master of the
game. He was urging the unready Henry III to immediate action when the news of
Conrad’s death arrived. Thereat he hastened to Anagni by 9 June 1254 to be near the frontier, and all his old hopes revived. Disunion
and treason were sapping his adversaries’ strength, and in July Prince Manfred
appeared to treat for peace on behalf of the Balio. A treaty was all but made, which included an adjudication on Conradin’s rights when, years later, he should come of age.
But the Pope was wily and demanded immediate possession of the Regno; and this
was refused. It seems as if Berthold was willing to take the risk of papal rule
on the chance of restoring Conradin at the last; Manfred on the other hand held out, while the party which desired annexation to
the Papal State gained ground. Berthold accordingly resigned and Manfred was
declared Ballot but he was as weak as Berthold,
and, unlike Berthold, could not depend on the soldiery. Meantime Innocent raked
together an army with all haste, pledging Henry III’s credit and disregarding
his son’s claims on the Regno. On 8 September he could besiege San Germano on the frontier. Manfred was helpless, and on 27
September accepted the Pope’s terms: Innocent was to be ruler, saving the
future adjudication on Conradin’s rights; Manfred
obtained his appanage under his father’s will, and was made vicar of the
mainland south of the rivers Sele and Trigno; the Lancias, now again
beside him, recovered the grants he had made them.
Innocent seemed at the goal for which
he had striven through so many anxious years. But the same faithlessness which
made him ignore the claims of Henry III led to his downfall. He knew—and events
proved him right—that no Staufen could abandon the
imperial dream. He meant to annex the Regno once for all: Manfred was far too
powerful a subject and a possible claimant; his power should be diminished.
When the Pope’s army preceded him into the Regno, its commander, his nephew,
Cardinal-deacon William de’ Fieschi, began to demand
oaths of allegiance without the stipulated salvo in Conradin’s favour; on 7 October the Pope himself offered to Peter Ruffo, vicar of Sicily
and Calabria since 1252, to make his Calabrian property an immediate fief of
the Holy See, thus exempting it from Manfred’s vicariate. None the less Manfred
met his future suzerain at the frontier and led his horse over the Garigliano on 11 October. But when Innocent reached Teano, the inevitable discord broke out. Manfred found that
his rights over his barony of Monte Sant’ Angelo were to be brought in question, and left the town to consult Berthold. Scarcely
was he out of Teano, when he met his supplanter in
Monte Sant’ Angelo, Borrello d’Anglona,
and in the chance affray Borrello was killed. It was
unfortunate for Innocent, since the event and the
impossibility of trusting himself to the Pope steeled Manfred’s wavering
decision to resist. He had no other chance even of safety, for Berthold
renounced him and made full submission to the Pope at Capua on 19 October; and
next day Innocent came to final terms with Peter Ruffo, by which he was made
vicar of Sicily and Calabria, now formally annexed to the Papal State. Thus both Conradin’s claims and
Manfred’s treaty rights of 27 September were put aside. The desperate prince
fled, to Apulia, still perhaps hoping to bargain through John the Moor who
ruled Lucera and its Saracens. But John was deciding
for the Pope; Berthold’s brothers were holding Apulia; and Cardinal William had
already reached Ariano with the papal army on his way
to occupy Lucera. Among romantic adventures Manfred’s
spirit awoke. On 2 November 1254 he entered Lucera,
which John the Moor had quitted, seized the royal treasure, rallied the
Saracens, and began a revolt. On the same day Berthold returned to Loggia and
Cardinal William and his army encamped at Troia.
The tables were now suddenly turned.
Innocent IV could still depend on the towns to which he granted communal
autonomy and on a few ambitious nobles; but, by his breach of the treaty with regard to Conradin, he had united the cause of the
rightful king with that of Manfred in one national and loyalist movement.
Berthold might still persist in his blundering plan of
submitting to the Pope in order to help Conradin another day; he could not now
carry with him the German soldiery, since he could not pay them, and his
jealousy of Manfred and his greed were manifest. Manfred was Conradin’s only hope; he had the treasure, and the Germans
flocked to him. The Saracens, 400, were all for the tolerant Staufen they knew, while the barons, irrespective of former
party-divisions, proceeded to go over to the native prince. The decisive action
soon came. Berthold loved negotiating, and he was fully aware of the wretched
quality of the cardinal’s hireling troops. During long pourparlers—no
truce is mentioned—Manfred routed Berthold’s brother Otto and his detachment
near Foggia on 2 December. The moment the news reached Troia,
both the Cardinal and his men fled in wild panic across the snow-covered hills
to Ariano. In a few days Manfred ruled Apulia save a
few towns, the Lancia and other barons had joined him, and even Peter Ruffo, in spite of justifiable suspicions, accepted him as Conradin’s Balio, on condition, however, of his own independent regency in Sicily and Calabria.
When the news reached Innocent, the
Pope was on his death-bed. He had fallen ill at Teano, but none the less he had kept at work during his
residence at Capua, and on 27 October had entered Naples in triumph. He perceived
gradually that his expectation of annexing the Regno was vain, and coolly began
again to treat with Henry III, whom he yet hoped to cheat of some or all of the booty. Henry’s slackness, indeed, might fairly be
held to diminish his gains under the treaty. Meantime the parliament that had
been summoned was put off, for the Pope was confined to his bed. Then the news
of the cardinal’s rout came as a parting stroke. The sick man’s conscience
smote him; he was continually murmuring: “Domine, propter iniquitatem corripuisti hominem.” On 7 December 1254 he died.
It is hardly a just reproach to
Innocent IV that he introduced foreign rule into Italy by his negotiations with
Henry III, for the foreigner was already there. The Staufen and their subsidiary tyrants depended on German or Saracen levies. And, in
defence of his policy, it is true that he stood for a milder rule against often
ferocious tyrants. The free communes, with all allowance made, were juster and more humane than Ezzelin and Pelavicini or even
than the Staufen. Innocent was profoundly convinced
that the independence of the Papacy was impossible so long as the Empire and
the Regno were under the same sovereign, and indeed so long as the Emperor
claimed a real dominion in North Italy. The solution of his choice was to make
all Italy a land of petty states, to the south in subordination to the Roman
See, to the north in allegiance to the Empire, yet really
also guided by the Pope. Then the Papacy would be free and could direct
Europe through obedient kings and magistrates. And his conception of the Papacy
was more secular than any Pope’s before him. He viewed his weakness as political and his remedies were political. He used his
spiritual powers constantly to raise money, buy friends, injure foes, and by
his unscrupulousness he roused a disrespectful hostility to the Papacy
everywhere. His dispensations were a scandal. In contempt of his spiritual
duties and of local rights, he used the endowments of the Church as papal
revenue and means of political rewards: there would be four papal nominees
waiting one after another for a benefice. Bad appointments were a natural
consequence of such a system; and, further, legates chosen for war and
diplomacy would more likely than not be thoroughly worldly in character, like
such Cardinal-deacons as Octavian and Gregory of Montelongo,
or the truculent elect of Ravenna, Philip della Fontana. Of the loss of prestige and spiritual influence occasioned by him
Innocent was unconscious. He had good intentions but not good principles.
Endowed with courage, with invincible resolution, with astuteness, his cold
equanimity was seldom shaken by disaster or good-fortune, and he patiently
pursued his ends with a cunning faithlessness which lowered the standards of
the Church. His influence on events was enormous. He wrecked the Empire; he
started the Papacy on its decline; he moulded the destinies of Italy.
The election of a new Pope followed
quickly. The natural desire of the cardinals was for some
one without Innocent’s faults, and on 12 December 1254 they concurred in
the promotion of Gregory IX’s nephew Rinaldo Conti, Cardinal-bishop of Ostia.
Alexander IV was, indeed, the opposite of his predecessor. He was a pious,
learned prelate, protector of the Franciscan Friars, easy-tempered and easily
led. “He did not care for the affairs of princes and kingdoms”,
but would select a manager for a business and then leave all to him. He
was honestly anxious for peace and right, the suppression of heresy, and the
reform of abuses in the Church; yet his weakness threw him into the hands of
Innocent’s advisers, and he tremblingly followed his ways. In the matter of
the Regno Cardinal Octavian, able and moderate, became his oracle, being
appointed legate in January 1255, with the dubious Berthold by his side. It was
resolved to carry through the treaty with Henry III, after overtures to Conradin’s German guardian, Duke Louis of Bavaria, had come
to nothing, and Manfred had kept firm to his demand for the recognition of
Conradin and his own regency. Edmund’s investiture was now confirmed on 9 April
1355, and Henry’s envoy agreed that Innocent’s expenditure should be paid, and
that an array should come by Michaelmas 1256.
Active preparations, meanwhile, were
made to crush Manfred. By a curious combination he had ousted Ruffo from
Calabria, while the Sicilian towns had gone over to the Pope. But the prince
was finding it hard to subdue the papalist Apulian communes. The time seemed
propitious for a vigorous effort, and at the end of May 1355 Cardinal Octavian
marched on Lucera with a large and inefficient army.
He was advised by Berthold, and this was his ruin, for the news came that Conradin’s guardian had allied with Manfred. It seems most
likely that Berthold could not endure to fight against the heir of the Staufen, and lured on the legate to break a temporary truce with Manfred and to march on to
Foggia. There during the deadly summer months he was blockaded by the prince,
while Berthold with the best of his troops was making a long tour for supplies
in Apulia. At last the margrave drew near, letting
Manfred know his movements. One night he tried, or feigned to try, to break
through the blockading lines, and was utterly defeated. The legate and his
starving army could hold out no longer. Early in September he made a treaty
with the victor, by which Conradin’s and Manfred’s
rights were acknowledged, while all papalists, including the Hohenburg brothers, were restored, and the Terra di Lavoro was ceded to the Pope. Then he was allowed to retreat
to Alexander IV, who disowned the bargain.
Manfred could now gather the fruits of
victory. Most of the Regno went over to his side. In 1256 he conquered the
Terra di Lavoro, while his adherents won Sicily for
him. The last embers of revolt were stamped out in 1257, and he could then
pursue his own ambitions. Already in 1256 he had
blinded his enemies, the Hohenburgs, and had procured
the murder of Peter Ruffo in exile. It only remained to usurp the throne. A
false report of Conradin’s death was spread, whereat
the Balio held a Parliament at Palermo, and of
course was begged to assume the crown, which he did on 10 August 1258. Perhaps
he might have founded a lasting dynasty if he could have kept up a policy of
nonintervention in Northern Italy. He was secure in the Regno with the
support of the bureaucracy; his German and Saracen troops were good and loyal;
his own indolent temper made inaction pleasant. But the son of Frederick II
could with difficulty renounce the Emperor’s projects and the attempt to unite
all Italy under his sway, while his Lombard kinsmen urged him on and were ready
to take the trouble of business off his hands. They might argue that it was
necessary to establish barriers against a fresh invasion, for Alexander IV
persisted in his refusal to ratify Cardinal Octavian’s treaty. The Pope, in
fact, perseveringly attempted to bring Henry III with an army against the
Regno, although the English king, weary of his bargain and tethered by his
Parliaments, broke his promises and endeavoured to escape
from the expedition altogether. Even so, however, the weak Pope, crippled by
debts, could be dangerous. He had done his part in diminishing the power of
Ezzelin and Pelavicini. The Romans, whose countryman he was, had expelled the
imperialist Brancaleone from office in November 1255,
and he could now reside alternately in Anagni and at
the Lateran. His allies and faithful creditors, the Guelfs of Florence, ruled
Pistoia, Arezzo, and Volterra, had brought Siena to unwelcome terms, and had
twice overthrown the rival Ghibelline city of Pisa, in 1254 and 1256. Their
commerce had taken on a vast extension through the banking business of the
indebted Papacy and Innocent IV’s financial expedients. Lastly, on the death of
King William, once anti-Caesar to Frederick II, on 28 January 1256, two rival
Kings of the Romans had been elected, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, and Alfonso X,
King of Castile; and Conradin’s indignant guardian,
Louis of Bavaria, had acknowledged Richard, whose imperial claims in Italy
seemed a possible danger to Manfred.
In 1257 Manfred began his policy of
expansion, which was a combination of Frederick II’s designs for dominion over
all Italy and of the old oriental schemes of the Norman dynasty. While
remaining neutral in the war in progress between Venice and Genoa in the
Levant, he renewed their ancient privileges in the Regno and thus gained their
friendship. We can hardly doubt that he also had a share in the new revolution
in May 1257 at Rome, where Brancaleone was reinstated
and ruled as strongly as ever. An alliance was at once made between the Senator
and Manfred, whose treasure began to flow in Rome. He also negotiated with the
Central Italian towns, and drew many to his side. In
October 1258 he was able to appoint a vicar for the March of Ancona and Duchy
of Spoleto, who acquired most of the March. In Tuscany, Siena declared for King
Manfred in 1259. Events in western Lombardy, too, were in his favour. Thomas of
Savoy had tried conclusions with Asti, and after a defeat had been captured by
his revolted city of Turin in 1255. Although he was released in 1257, he died
in February 1259 restricted to his ancient appanage of Piedmont, and
imperialist Asti was momentarily predominant.
In east Lombardy, however, Manfred’s
intervention was necessary if he wished to lead the imperialists, for the power
both of Ezzelin and of Pelavicini was shaken, although for very different
reasons. Pelavicini did certainly represent one of the factors of the Italian
city-tyranny which was coming into existence in his day. He was a warlike noble
to whom his imperial vicariate gave influence and, what was more important, a
body of German troops. But he had no real root in any of his cities,
and shared his authority with the local faction-chiefs who had called him
in and could drive him out. His own native city of Parma never admitted him.
These faction-chiefs, like Buoso da Dovara at
Cremona, were the product of the rise of the middle-class of traders to power
in the towns. Amid endless divergencies of detail the main lines of development
were the same. The middle-class in their gilds had claimed and were obtaining
a separate organisation as the popolo alongside of the older governing body, the Commune, where the nobles were
preponderant. The popolani, as they were
called, were usually abetted by a minority of the nobles who were at
faction-strife with the others of their order. Unfortunately in the Lombard towns the popolo as a rule
proved incapable of working their organisation so as to secure internal peace and
to govern their city, or even to overcome the main body of the city’s nobles.
For one thing, they had neither sufficient support from nor control of the
petty tradesmen and employees beneath them. Part of their failure was due to
the struggle of Pope and Emperor. The factions of the nobles took sides as
papalists or imperialists, for which as the thirteenth century drew to its
close the Tuscan names of Guelf and Ghibelline became general. The struggle
rarely appealed to the popolani, who
were far more influenced in their action by the rivalry of city with city and
the attitude of their nobles towards themselves. Thus a multitude of cross-currents prevented all stability. If Bergamo became
papalist, the popolo of Brescia would veer
round to the imperialist faction of its nobles. The whole strife was embittered
by the custom of exiling the defeated faction of nobles, which was a
consequence of their irreconcilable feuds, and was almost rendered necessary to
a victorious popolo if any sort of peace was
to be kept within the city. Sometimes, indeed, a well-knit popolo, like that of Bologna, could keep both factions of nobles in check for a term of
years and pursue a consistent practical policy within and without. But as a rule the distracted popolani would entrust the government for longer or shorter periods to a noble
faction-chief, generally the chief of the smaller faction, whether papalist or
imperialist. He would hold, at first, however absolute his real power, one or
more of the city-offices, usually podestà as head of the Commune or
Captain as head of the popolo, or
sometimes Captain of the militia. As time wore on, new enactments would
increase his powers, especially after he had been elected for life, till at
length he would be Captain-General with absolute authority, and signore or lord, i.e, no longer an official, and finally an hereditary
sovran. Each city indeed had its own series of changes, its own variations from
the type, but in the gross the development was in curious parallel to Roman
history with its co-ordinate assemblies of the centuries and tribes and its
evolution of the Principate.
Such a variation was Ezzelin. In
essence his position resembled that, of the full-fledged tyrant, in that he was
a local faction-chief of Verona allied with the popolo. He was akin, also, to Pelavicini, in that he owed his absolutism to German
troops, obtained at first through his alliance with Frederick II. But he was
singular in that his power was extra-legal and he held
no office. None the less he was despot of his territory: the imperial vicar, Ansedisio de’ Guidotti, was his
humble instrument to rule Padua; the magistrates of Verona and Vicenza were his
creatures. He fell, however, not owing to his usurpations, but owing to the
streak of insanity in his character. His German guards lifted him above public
opinion. Harshness towards faction-rivals became mad cruelty in him, and his
thirst for blood was mingled with a perverse hatred of his species, which
perhaps was the real ground of the intangible reputation for heresy which clung
to him. Thus lashed with scorpions, his popolani grew disaffected, especially in the
miserable city of Padua. Innocent IV had coolly parleyed with him, but the
kindly Alexander IV really acted against him. In December 1255 he appointed the
adventurous and more than secular Philip da Pistoia, the elect of Ravenna,
legate to lead a crusade against the tyrant who was also the mainstay of the
imperialists in Lombardy. It was a task far beyond the power of the Lombard
papalists, disunited and preoccupied with their own city-interests, but Philip
gained the aid of Venice, who added to his exiles and crusading riff-raff
soldiers, ships, and victuals. On 20 June 1256 he captured Padua, while Ezzelin
was ravaging the Mantuan contado. Ezzelin could not recover the town, and this first intervention of Venice in
her hinterland was an unalloyed success. Ezzelin, however, if mad, was both a
ruler and a general. In spite of the slow weakening of
the Lombard imperialists, he seized Brescia in 1258 with the aid of Pelavicini,
after they had defeated and captured Philip of Ravenna at Gambara.
But he cheated his ally of his share in the conquest, and thus produced a
temporary league against himself of all his neighbours, including Azzo of Este, Milan, and Bologna, led by Pelavicini, who in
1258 had become Manfred’s representative. Ezzelin took the offensive in August
1259 by invading the Milanese; he was outgeneralled, outnumbered, defeated, and
taken prisoner at Cassano by the passage of the river
Adda, to die by tearing the bandages from his wounds on October 1. His brother Alberic of Treviso, latterly his ally, next year was
horribly put to death. In many ways Ezzelin had been a prototype of the
degenerate despots of the fourteenth century but his maniacal cruelty had been
wreaked on a wider circle than those of his imitators: he had held an army of
opponents in his prisons.
By this victory of Pelavicini,
Manfred, at least by proxy, had become powerful in Lombardy. Mastino della Scala, an imperialist,
obtained the tyranny of Verona; and the papalist Martin della Torre, since 1258 tyrant of Milan, was for the time being Pelavicini’s ally. Year after year the royal vicar’s power increased: he directed the
politics of most of central Lombardy, and he began to plan out a commercial
policy which should further the recovery of the cities after so many broils.
Yet he was bound to continue war to maintain his position. In the end his
strength decayed, not from misgovernment, but owing to the death of his ally,
Martin della Torre.
The establishment of a tyranny was not
the only way out from the strife of the popolo with the nobles. In Genoa the nobles were also the chief shipowners and
capitalists, and thus doubly entrenched in power and identified with the city’s
prosperity. When even there a dictatorial Captain of the popolo, William Boccanera, was placed in power by a
revolution in 1257, he gained no lasting support, and his ill-conduct of the
naval war—Genoa being driven from the Syrian coast and from Sardinia by Venice
and Pisa—in spite of the all-important Treaty of Nymphaeum with Michael
Palaeologus in 1261, which was to give Genoa almost a monopoly of the Black Sea
trade, led to a renewal of aristocratic government in 1262. Feuds then led to
a resurgence of the popolo in 1270; yet the
two joint Captains, a Doria and a Spinola, were
Ghibellines and aristocrats and their strong government, supported by the
yearly plebeian “Abbot of the popolo”, was in no way akin to a Lombard tyranny. The most successful constitution,
however, was that of Tuscan Florence. In the Primo Popolo, as it was later called, which was set up in 1250, the popolo was organised in a militia of local companies. It was commanded by the Captain
of the popolo, who, roughly speaking, possessed
coordinate powers with the podestà of the commune, and advised with
Councils of his own, corresponding to those of the podestà. By his side,
too, stood the twelve anziani (ancients) who supervised finance. In spite of its cumbrousness and the mutual suspicion which
pervaded it, this constitution worked well in practice, for the rich bankers
and merchants who controlled it were well backed by the general opinion of the popolo. Their ability was shown in the
prosperous wars by which Pisa was vanquished and their small neighbour-towns
subjugated. Finance, however, showed them at their best, as it was the source
of their predominance. In 1252 they usurped an imperial prerogative by coining
the famous gold florin, and their wisdom kept it undebased, so that it became
the standard coin of Western Europe. They were chief bankers to the Pope, and
his and Henry III’s debts increased their trade, especially in England, where
the wool export was largely pledged to them. They were strong enough to defeat
in 1258 an attempt of their countryman, Cardinal Octavian, to seize a tyranny
over Florence in concert with the exiled Ghibellines, and they were dreaming of
a mid-Italian dominion for their city when they were overthrown by Manfred’s
intervention.
It was Siena, the steady foe of
Florence, who opened the way for the Sicilian king. In May 1259 she accepted
his overlordship, and Manfred sent in return bodies of German horse to her aid.
This was the decisive factor in the struggle that followed. True, Pisa’s recent
recovery as against Genoa in the Levant and Sardinia counted for something;
true, that the repulse of the ambitious reconciler, Cardinal Octavian, had
alienated the Curia—it was then, not earlier, that he “lost his soul for the
Ghibellines”. But Florence was strong and well led; her defect lay in the fact
that the burghers, excellent against like troops to themselves, had neither the
training nor the delight in sword-play which could
resist the German men-at-arms in the open field. The nobles of the countryside
were more capable of fighting the Transalpines, but
they were largely Ghibelline and at war with their native city. So on 4 September 1260 the Florentine host was overthrown
with fearful slaughter, 10,000 out of 33,000, at Montaperto.
Submission followed at once; the Guelf nobles and some leading popolani went into exile, and Florence herself might
have been razed to the ground, had not her Ghibelline leader, Farinata degli Uberti, withstood
her envenomed foes a viso aperto.
Thus Manfred through his vicar at the head of a Ghibelline league of cities
ruled all Tuscany, even Lucca submitting in 1264. It was not a harsh
government, although the Primo Popolo in
Florence was abolished, and the Ghibelline nobles controlled the Commune; the popolo still had to be humoured, if made
subordinate. The king’s weakness partly lay in the restiveness of the cities,
all pressing their separate interests which were not his, and still more in
economic circumstances. The bankers and merchants of Florence and Siena were
irretrievably bound up with the Popes, whose bankers and creditors they wore, and whose revenues they largely collected. The Popes,
too, wielded a deadly weapon; they could forbid the overjoyed debtors of the
bankers abroad to pay their debts. Hence Siena lost, for instance, the English
trade. Subterfuges, like a concealed partnership with Guelf firms, were of no
avail in the long run, and one by one the leading bankers, secretly or openly,
became Guelfs, as the new Pope, Urban IV, put steady pressure upon them. They
had watched without flinching the tragic procession of the Flagellants, who in
1260 pervaded Italy. That melancholy spasm of revivalism—city after city
stirred by the nameless self-scourging penitents and adding to their number,
unless a stem despot like Pelavicini warded off the infection—did not indeed
create a return to godliness. It was only, as was said by Gregorovius, the
funeral dirge over the magnificent conceptions of the Empire and the Papacy.
Men did not, save in the mystic expectations of Joachism,
recognise the beginnings of a newer world.
We may guess that the policy of
Cardinal Octavian, who led the Curia, was not unlike that of the later Pope,
Nicholas III: that he wished a strictly local King of Sicily, and a peaceable
Papal State in Central Italy, within which the old factions should be
reconciled. But the scheme had failed. Although Rome had again become
uncertainly papalist in 1259 some months after Brancaleone’s death, Manfred conquered Tuscany and made progress in the papal lands.
Naturally, when the Pope died on 25 May 1261 at Viterbo,
the Cardinals recurred to a more worldly pontiff. On 29 August they elected
James Pantaleon, Patriarch of Jerusalem, the son of a shoemaker of Troyes, who
took the name of Urban IV. A born despot, who “did what he willed”, he was the first
non-Italian, now that national feeling was strongly developed, to sit in St
Peter’s chair, and he at once gave the papal policy a pro-French direction. Fourteen
new cardinals, several of them French, created for him a majority in the Sacred
College, and increased his freedom of action. Vigorous measures and new men did
much to restore his authority in the papal lands and to alleviate the papal
debts. Like Innocent IV he saw that Staufen rulers in
Empire or Regno must aim at a unification of Italy, since even Manfred openly
claimed the Empire. A champion, then, must be called in to light against them,
and Urban was resolved that the champion should be French. First, however, he
must convert the righteous Louis IX of France to aggression on the Regno; for
that Conradin’s claims must be dismissed and Manfred
must be proved an irreconcilable enemy. A further complication was introduced
by the efforts of the ex-Emperor Baldwin of Constantinople to obtain the
restoration of the Latin Empire and the expulsion of the schismatic Palaeologus
by means of Manfred as champion, an object sure to appeal to the crusading
French-king. Manfred must then be proved useless to Christendom. So negotiations were opened with him which lasted through 1262,
and in which Urban contrived to make demands such as the Sicilian king would
not grant. On 29 March 1263 Manfred was excommunicated anew, this time with
Louis IX’s approval.
Urban IV had never intended a
reconciliation. He had long been in treaty with Charles of Anjou, once the
alternative candidate of Innocent, Edmund of England being deservedly
cashiered. A prolonged haggling took place over the terms of the agreement, for
Urban had no intention of founding a new prepotent dynasty in Italy, and
Charles meant to be no catspaw. In March 1264 mutters were furthered by Charles
finally taking over the senatorship of Rome, offered
him since August by the papalist faction there, and sending a deputy. The Pope
may not have been pleased at seeing his hand forced, but was too hard-pressed by Manfred to be unbending to Charles, and the bargain was
all but concluded when he died worn out at Perugia on 2 October 1264. The
strong-willed, keen-sighted Frenchman had set on foot a great work, the
exclusion of the Germans from Italy and the introduction of the French. His
successor was to see the accomplishment of the design and to feel its effect,
the renewed subjugation of the Papacy to a lay power, this time French.
His successor after a four months’
conclave was another Frenchman, an ex-chancellor of Louis IX. This was Guy Foulquoi “le Gros”, a native of Languedoc and
Cardinal-bishop of Sabina; he was an exemplar of the pagan virtues, with
asceticism added. Clement IV, as he was styled, was crowned on 15 February, and
at last concluded the treaty with Charles in April 1265. Its principal
provisions were: the separation of the Regno from the Empire; the Sicilian king
was to hold no office nor land in the papal territory, nor any dominion in
Lombardy or Tuscany; for three years, however, Charles might be Senator of
Rome, unless he obtained the Regno in a shorter period; Charles was to pay
50,000 marks down on conquest, and a tribute of 8000 gold ounces yearly, and
was to furnish 300 knights for three months yearly, if called upon to do so;
the clergy were to be tax-free and subject to ecclesiastical tribunals only;
the Regnicoli were to enjoy their customs as under
William the Good. Both allies were in desperate need of money. Still they borrowed, begged, and taxed; the affair was a
crusade, and the French clergy gave a tenth of their possessions to it. The
Tuscan Guelf bankers were cajoled and coerced to lend with the prospect of the
exploitation of the Regno to requite them. Charles had equipped a fleet from
his county of Provence, and crusaders flocked together from all France, eager
for booty and spiritual benefits.
The leading characteristic of diaries
of Anjou, who thus became the Pope’s champion, was a devouring ambition, which
stopped at no obstacle and was never satisfied. He was a statesman strong and
cold, ruthless and crafty. Unweariedly active, he had
no liking for any sort of diversion, and with this dour activity went a love of
despotic rule. Of an orthodox nature, heresy vanished before him. Without being
in any way a monster, he was singularly unloveable,
and the narrowness of his sympathies, confined to Frenchmen who were noble,
made him a harsh governor. In 1246 he had obtained the county of Provence in
the Arelate by his marriage with Beatrice, youngest daughter and heiress of Raymond Berengar IV, Count of
Provence, who died in 1245. In spite of revolts, he
had succeeded in turning his dominion there into a complete despotism and had
begun fresh conquests. Between 1258 and 1264 he had made himself lord or count
of southern Piedmont, composed of the little communes which had recently been
subject to Asti, and thus he had a foothold in Italy. Now he was to be the
defender of Holy Church, and doubted neither the
righteousness of his hire nor that of any of his subsequent proceedings. He convinced
himself that his own exaltation was the chief need of Christendom.
By 1265 immediate action was
essential. Manfred was head of a great confederation, made victorious by his
Germans and Saracens. He ruled Tuscany; his ally Pelavicini was the greatest
power in Lombardy; he had much authority in the papal March of Ancona where his
vicar had won a victory in 1264; the Trevisan March
was at least neutral; and Venice and Genoa were his friends. Tunis was his
tributary; his father-in-law was Despot of Epirus; his son-in-law was heir to
Aragon. He seemed to aim at uniting Italy, seizing the Empire, and keeping a
supremacy in the East. But the wielder of this dominion was himself weak. In spite of his courage and ability and his many adventures,
Manfred yet remained a child of the harem, which Frederick II, like his Norman
predecessors, had fatally adopted. Indolent and undecided, prone to act through
confidential officials, and loving the imagination of his own greatness, the
“Sultan of Lucera”, as his insulting enemies called
him, spent his days in his delicious country-palaces among the Apennines,
dictating his adroit, vainglorious manifestoes, and unable to brace himself up
to the pleasureless activity necessary for his ambitions and even for his
safety. He now showed the same oriental mixture of self-confidence and
enervation. James de Gantelme, a Provençal, came to
Rome as Charles’ vicar in the spring of 1264. It was necessary to expel him, if Charles was not to have a basis of operations. But
Manfred only made two ineffective, if clever, campaigns which left things as
they were. He could not resolve to press the attack home in person,
and seized the occasion of Pope Urban’s death to give up the enterprise.
Very different were the actions of his adversaries. Penniless and surrounded,
the Pope and Gantelme held out dauntlessly in Perugia
and Rome.
Charles’ plan was simple. He would go
himself to Rome to hold and prepare his base. His crusading army, unable to
cross the sea which Manfred commanded, should take a circuit through Lombardy
and Romagna and so reach him. This scheme was possible
owing to the change which had occurred in Lombardy. In December 1264 Philip della Torre succeeded his brother Martin as tyrant of Milan.
He at once broke with Pelavicini, and formed in
February 1265 in concert with Marquess Obizzo of Este
a new papalist league, which in its turn allied with Charles, and kept gaining
over fresh cities, while Pelavicini lost Modena and Parma. To its progress the
succession of Napoleon della Torre in October 1265
made no difference. In November 1265 Charles’ crusading army crossed the Alps
and assembled at his town of Alba. It consisted of 5000 French men-at-arms and
25,000 foot, and was of fine fighting quality. By
Vercelli, which a revolution took from Pelavicini and gave to the Torriani,
through Milan, Mantua, and Bologna they went—Pelavicini, now much diminished in
power, not daring to attack—gained the Flaminian Way, and reached Rome in
January 1266. Meanwhile Charles with a smaller force had taken ship on 14 May 1265, and favoured by the weather and the general
paralysis of Manfred’s side, had entered Rome. He was invested as king and
crusading chief on 28 June.
Manfred was awaking to his danger.
After a further unreal campaign against Rome in the summer of 1265, during
which Charles seemed to offer battle in vain, he made earnest preparations for
defence. He recalled his Germans from the north, he massed his Saracens, he
summoned in December the feudal levies. Treason, however, was already at work.
The Norman barons of the Regno had never submitted willingly to their kings,
and the German conquest had further alienated them. Heavy taxation, also, made
the Regnicoli only too ready to listen to the Pope’s
glowing prophecies. Manfred knew it, and showed too
late the energy of despair. Charles stormed the frontier town of San Germano on 10 February 1266, and the Terra di Lavoro began to declare for him; so Manfred retreated to the inner line of defence in the pass of the Apennines,
and encamped at Benevento, whither Charles followed. They joined battle on 26
February with nearly equal forces, but the French troopers were too strong for
Manfred’s fighting men, Germans, Lombards, and Saracens, and the Regnicoli fled without a blow. Manfred saw his fate and
charged into the fray to fell by an unknown hand. With him the glory of the
Regno departed. Like Frederick II he had fostered its rich culture, the most
advanced in Europe; he was himself an author. In spite of indolence, revengefulness, and faithlessness, he had been a merciful, indulgent
prince. Now the Regnicoli were to fell under an utterly selfish, greedy ruler, and to expiate their own fickle
treason. True it is, that it was time that European civilisation should find
its centre to the north away from the semi-oriental influences of Sicily. It
was time, too, that the now unfruitful connexion of Italy and Germany should
give place to independent development. And these necessities were effected by the victory of the
French knights over German and Saracen at Benevento.
A kaleidoscopic change took place all
over Italy on Manfred’s fall. The Regno accepted its new master. Almost all the
March of Ancona submitted to the Rope. At Florence, after an intricate series
of compromises, the Ghibelline nobles left the town, and the was revived; the
Guelfs of course came back throughout Tuscany and took the load. In Lombardy
there followed a number of revolutions, as the
imperialist towns turned papalist. Pelavicini lost all his dominions and
retired to his estates, where he died in 1269; Buoso da Bovara was similarly relegated to his possessions
in the Cremonese contado. Societies were formed in many towns to secure peace and orthodoxy, and they
soon became actively papalist bodies. Of all the cities, only tyrant-ruled
Verona and republican Pavia retained their imperial party standpoint.
It seemed for a moment as if the aims
of the Popes were fully brought about. That they were not, was due partly to
King Charles’ ambition and partly to his necessities, but also to the rivalries
of the north Italian towns, the policy of which was only partially and
unwillingly concerned with the strife of Pope and Emperor, and not at all
fulfilled by the mere victory of Clement IV. Charles’ government of the Regno
rapidly became a public scandal. The Staufen had
ruled through the Regnicoli themselves; but Charles,
who had seen their treason and who knew that such, loyalty as existed was for
the Staufen, governed them as he governed the Provençals, by foreigners. Only the tax-farmers were
native, and these men soon earned a hatred which their predecessors had
avoided. The French officials, on their side, were oppressive aliens. The
Tuscan merchants and bankers absorbed the country’s trade, once in native
hands. The promised Parliament was not held. The taxes themselves were as heavy
as of old, and harder to bear, for the general collectae were still levied, in spite of Charles’ promises to
the Pope, and the clergy were now exempt from them, Charles’ promise being kept
on that head. Charles might justly claim that he could not abolish the collectae had he wished, since the bureaucratic
State needed heavy taxes for its support, and he had soldiers and debts to pay,
among which the debt and tribute to the Pope were prominent. This argument,
however, did not convince the Pope, and no wonder, for Charles embarked at once
on great schemes which meant costly preparations. “What do you wish me to
rejoice at?” he said after Benevento; “to a valiant man the whole world would
not suffice”. The capture of Constantinople in 1261 by the Greek Emperor
Michael VIII gave him a pretext for subduing the schismatic Greeks, and he
formed a comprehensive maritime policy like that of the Norman kings, which
included the conquest of the Balkans and the supremacy in the trade of the
Levant. The Regnicoli, thus made his stepping-stones,
became eager for revolt, and looked in their turn for a champion.
Clement IV was well-informed, and his
angry reproaches were justified, but his own measures did little good. He
insisted on Charles resigning the senatorship of Rome
according to the treaty; but the subsequent rule of the papalist nobility
roused the Romans to revolution, and in June 1267 a new Senator was appointed,
Don Henry of Castile. Although a younger brother of Alfonso X, he was
practically a wealthy adventurer, and he had recently become mortal enemy to
Charles over his disappointed hopes for a kingdom in Sardinia. Once Senator, he
soon fell out with the Pope and joined the imperialist faction. In Tuscany Clement’s intervention had been equally unhappy. He was an
aristocrat and disliked the rule of the popolo;
he wished his dependents, the Guelf nobles and bankers, to be untrammelled
masters of Florence; he was jealous for the papal authority, and he dreaded
with reason a new storm coming from Germany, to which even a partly Ghibelline
Florence might give free ingress, for the exiled Ghibellines kept their ground
in the contado, as was usual with a
defeated city-faction, and possessed a formidable force of German troopers.
When the Florentine popolo pursued a
reconciling system and disregarded the Pope’s wishes, the angry Clement
resolved to abandon a main security of the Papacy and bring King Charles into
Tuscany. With remarkable blindness he showed himself more patient to Ghibelline
Pisa, and attempted to make her peace with Charles, who had abolished her
toll-freedom in the Regno and was aggrieved by her consequent hostile attitude
to him.
The main reason for all these Tuscan
proceedings was the imminent invasion of Italy by Conradin. The last heir of
the Staufen was in 1267 a boy of fifteen, precocious,
bold, and ambitious; he was the only hope of the malcontent Regnicoli and the Italian imperialists. Early in the year relatives of Manfred and
ex-officials, like the Lancia, came flocking to his court in Swabia; and a plan
was struck out by which he should march to Tuscany and thence invade the Regno,
while the Regnicolo, Conrad Capece,
should attack Sicily from Tunis. Some vague notion of the scheme must have been
known to the Pope and Charles, and they resolved to gain Tuscany first.
Charles met Clement at Viterbo in April 1267. However unwillingly, the Pope
appointed him Paciarius—pacifier—of
Tuscany for three years, a grant which enabled him shortly after to usurp the
vicariate of the Holy Roman Empire in that province. The king’s troops preceded
him to Florence, whence the remaining Ghibellines fled. He was at once made Signore and Podestà with a vicar to represent
him. In a new constitution the popolo’s organisation and Captain were abolished, and the Guelf nobles and bankers
placed in exclusive power. A new magistracy was recognised, that of the Parte Guelfa, governed by the
usual apparatus of Captains and Councils; and its function was to keep the
Guelfs in power, analogously to the action of the peace-societies in Lombardy.
For this purpose one-third of the confiscated property
of the Ghibelline exiles was handed over to it. Not all of Tuscany, however, showed
the submissiveness of Florence; Siena and Pisa, the latter now at open war
with Charles, held out along with the Ghibellines in the Florentine contado. In the course of the war 800 Ghibellines and Germans were shut up in Poggibonsi,
and Charles who came north in August 1267 set about its siege. The task was
hard, for the town only surrendered on 30 November, and this delay gave the
Ghibellines their chance. Pisa allied with Conradin, who also gained over Don
Henry and Rome; while Conrad Capece obtained the
alliance of the Emir of Tunis, and with Don Frederick, brother to Don Henry,
raised a formidable revolt in Sicily at the end of August 1267.
Meanwhile Conradin entered Verona with
a German army on 21 October. Now excommunicated by the Pope, he gained no
result from his diplomacy in Lombardy, and he decided to make a dash for
Tuscany. By a circuit southward he reached Pavia safely with 3000 troopers on
20 January 1268. Charles intended to march to fight him, but his better
judgment was overruled by the Pope—his treasure was exhausted and Clement was paymaster. On 2 February the Saracens of Lucera had revolted, and the Pope insisted on Charles’ return to quell them and hold
the Regno. So the king moved south and began another
weary unsuccessful siege. Conradin immediately slipped to Pisa by sea, and his
army, avoiding the customary Via Francigena, blocked
by Charles at Pontremoli, was adroitly led over the
unguarded westerly pass of Cento Croci above Varese
to the same point on 2 May. The Sienese popolo had come to power in March and were ardent Ghibellines. Thus supported, the
young Staufen, who took the attitude, half of
Sicilian King and half of Emperor, could march south, routing Charles’
lieutenants on his way. Rome was reached on 24 of July and the Regno entered at Carsoli on 20 August. Conradin was avoiding the Terra
di Lavoro and aiming by the unguarded northerly
route, the Via Valeria, at Lucera, but Charles met
him ready for battle. He had abandoned the siege of Lucera and awaited the invader in the Campi Palentini. Behind him the Regno rose in rebellion, barons and townsmen together over two-thirds of the land;
only French-garrisoned towns and the Staufen-hating
Terra di Lavoro and Principato stood on his side. The two armies fought their battle on 23 August 1268 close
to Albe; Conradin’s 7000
horse were composed of Germans, Don Henry’s Spaniards, and Italians; Charles’
much inferior force, hurried north in haste, was French and Italian only. It
was Charles’ generalship in employing a reserve in
ambush and the staunchness of his French knights which won the day; even the
unyielding Spaniards were routed, and the devout conqueror could write to the
Pope “to arise and eat of his son’s venison”. It was, indeed, a feast of
vengeance, which eclipsed Conradin’s unchivalrous
murder of his prisoner, Charles’ Tuscan vicar, John de Braiselve.
Executions, mutilations, burning alive, were the order of the day. Don Henry
was soon captured, to suffer imprisonment for many years; Conradin all but
escaped by sea from the Roman Cam, to be brought to a mock and formal
trial at Naples. He was beheaded with his boy-friend,
Frederick of Austria, on 29 October 1268, although European opinion was shocked
by the slaughter of a royal rival in cold blood. Charles’motives were
those of policy, he could not reign securely while the rightful heir survived.
The Pope gave consent by silence; his aims at least were achieved, for, despite
later transitory changes, any real intervention of Germany in Italy, or danger
to the Papacy from the Empire, came to an end. The prepotence he had now to fear was that of his French countrymen.
It remained to gather in the spoils. Charles
promptly re-obtained the Senatorship of Rome,
although his tenure of the office was limited to ten years by the Pope. As for
the rebels in the Regno, they largely submitted at once, while the obstinate
were warred down. On 27 August 1269 Lucera surrendered,
and the revolt in Sicily came to an end with the capture and execution of
Conrad Capece in July 1270. Sporadic risings indeed
took place almost yearly, but their importance was slight save as an indication
of Charles’ misrule. The king’s methods were thorough: the rebel baronage was
replaced by a loyal French nobility by means of wholesale confiscation.
Otherwise, after the first vengeance, only ringleaders and obstinate rebels
were put to death. He moved the capital to loyal Naples in the Terra di Lavoro, no great grievance to Palermo, for the Staufen, too, had preferred the mainland; but his absolutism
was more pronounced than theirs, since he ceased to assemble the Parliaments
which they had occasionally convoked, and the burden of his taxation steadily
grew, since he needed money to realise his ambitious dreams.
For those dreams his hands had been
freed by the death of Pope Clement IV on 29 November 1268. Although the Pope
had been all in his favour during the war with Conradin, and had even on 17 April 1268 appointed him indefinitely imperial vicar of Tuscany,
it was not likely that he would suffer Charles’ continued intervention in the
north for long. Charles too obviously was imitating the Staufen scheme of rule over all Italy. Then, like all Popes, he must press on the
project of a genuine crusade in Palestine, while Charles was bent on the
conquest of the schismatic Greeks of Constantinople and on peace with the
Mamluk Sultan Baibars, ruler of Palestine, while he
effected it. Now that the Holy See was vacant, Charles knew that the
papalist—Guelf we may now say—majority of the cardinals by no means desired a
new lay and French master, however convinced they might be that Ghibellinism
was to be suppressed and the Germans and their Emperor practically excluded
from Italy. It was his cue, therefore, to exploit the political, national, and
personal divisions among the cardinals so as to prevent the formation of the two-thirds majority which would suffice to elect a
fresh Pope. He could thus utilise the interval to affirm his power in Italy,
and to take irremediable action in the East.
In Italy success on
the whole awaited him. After a year’s warfare in Tuscany he forced Pisa to a peace in 1270, and the same year Siena made submission,
became Guelf, and expelled the Ghibellines. Save in Pisa, Charles acted in
concert with the Guelf nobles and bankers to whom he was so closely bound. His
rule was mild and, so to say, constitutional; he gave the harassed country
peace and prosperity. In Lombardy he extended his Piedmontese territory by the
submission of Turin and Alessandria in 1270, while further east he became Signore of Brescia in 1270, and attempted to gain the like position in the other Guelf cities. But his demand
was refused in 1269, although he obtained a kind of oath of allegiance. It was
a serious mistake to claim it, for the house of Della Torre, which held the
tyranny of Milan and its dependent towns, was alarmed and inclined to look for new allies.
Charles’ attention, however, during
the vacancy of the papal see was mainly directed to his brother King Louis’
unwelcome crusade. Had he been able, perhaps, he would have stopped it
altogether; yet he at least managed to make it less harmful than it might have
been. Time, indeed, in which he hoped to master Constantinople, was wasted, but
money was got. In August 1269 he had refused to re-establish the Staufens’ treaty with Mustansir, the Emir of Tunis, and the
latter’s envoys had gone on to Paris. An idea of beginning his crusade at Tunis
appears thenceforward to have taken root in the French king’s mind, although it
was not finally decided to do so until the crusading fleet reached Cagliari in
Sardinia by 11 July 1270. Charles’ share in this decision remains doubtful;
yet he was due to meet his brother in Sicily, and seems to have planned to join in the Tunisian expedition, take his profit out
of it, and then proceed with his Grecian war. He never met Louis IX either in Sicily
or Tunis; for, when he had wrung out of the Regnicoli sufficient means to arrive at Carthage on 25 August 1270, he found his brother
just dead. He at once became leader of the Crusade, and used it for his interest. On 1 November a treaty was made with the Emir. By it Charles obtained the ancient status quo under the Staufen, but with doubled tribute, payment of some arrears,
and a large share of the war indemnity which the Emir had to pay. Another
important clause prescribed the expulsion from Tunis of the dangerous fugitive Regnicoli. The genuine crusaders might be wroth, but Charles, with debts paid and a little money in
hand, could proceed with his oriental project. He had long prepared for it. In
1269 his alliance with Baldwin, the Latin ex-Emperor, was cemented by a
marriage arranged between his daughter and Baldwin’s heir, Philip. In the same
year a further match, carried out in 1271, between Charles’ own son Philip and
the heiress of William de Villehardouin, Prince of Achaia, gave Charles a
prospect of direct dominion in the Morea. Already in 1267 he had gained possession of Corfu and of the dowry of Manfred’s captured queen
in Epirus, which in 1272 was to grow into a kingdom of Albania. If Venice in
1269 refused her co-operation, he secured the friendship of Hungary by a double
marriage-treaty, owing to which his grandson, Charles Martel, long after
mounted the Hungarian throne. In short, all seemed going well, in spite of the delay over the Tunisian Crusade, till
Charles on 22 November 1270 landed at Trapani. The next day a sudden hurricane
arose and shattered the fleet in harbour. The ships and treasure for the Greek
war went to the bottom; possible troops, from Charles’ point of view, were lost
in the thousands of drowned crusaders; and the conquest of New Rome was fatally
deferred.
It was now clear that the election of
a Pope could no longer be avoided. Not only was the outcry of Western
Christendom against the vacancy growing, but the Ghibellines wore using the
time to work in Lombardy. King Richard of Cornwall had long ceased to pay
attention to Italy; his rival Alfonso X of Castile seemed at last to be taking
his title of King of the Romans in earnest, and the Lombard Ghibellines with
little hesitation turned to him. A Pope was required to resist him, if possible a French Pope. Charles, therefore, accompanied his
docile nephew, Philip III of France, to the unending conclave at Viterbo; but their joint efforts to obtain the election of
a French Pope were unavailing. When the cardinals some months after agreed to
accept the nomination of six of their number, it was found that the moderates
had triumphed. An Italian, not a Frenchman, was chosen, a friend of Charles,
who was yet no puppet, and chiefly—what would satisfy the Ghibellines—a man who
believed in the old order of Papacy and Empire and who longed to unite all
Christendom for a crusade. Tedald Visconti of
Piacenza, Archdeacon of Liege, was far away in Palestine when he became Pope
Gregory X on 1 September 1271. He only reached Rome on 12 March 1272,
accompanied by bis disillusioned royal vassal. He saw his policy with perfect
clearness: there was to be a real Emperor, now that he
could only be useful and not dangerous; and the reunion with the schismatic
Greek Church should be carried through as the indispensable preliminary for a
crusade in the Holy Land. While reunion was aimed at, Charles’ war of conquest
in Greece must remain in abeyance; he was the Pope’s creature,
and could not resist an obviously justified command. But he should not
be uncompensated. Within due limits he should be supported in his Italian
greatness, which was after all his first interest.
For the Union with the Greek Church
and the settlement of the new order of things in the West, a General Council
was necessary, which should seal the treaty of peace after the war begun
between Papacy and Empire at the Council of Lyons in 1245. Gregory’s Council
was summoned for Lyons also, and in June 1273 the Pope set out from his
residence at Orvieto. He hoped io leave reconciled factions behind him in
Italy, but in this he was thwarted. The accord he decreed in Florence on his
journey was wrecked by Charles, to whom its execution fell, and no better
success attended him in Lombardy. Charles’ behaviour was due to his estrangement
from his suzerain. On the death of Richard of Cornwall on 2 April 1272, the
election of a new King of the Romans loomed nearer, Alfonso X being impossible
from a German or a papal point of view. Charles quickly schemed to utilise the
election. The French were now the leading nation; his nephew, the colourless
Philip III, should obtain the Empire and the titular leadership of Europe, and
this would settle at once the matter of Charles’ position in North Italy, where
his nephew would certainly not oppose him. Here Gregory put his foot down.
While exerting strong pressure on the German Electors to create a new King of
the Romans, he refused, in spite of Charles’ wrath, to
recommend Philip III for their choice. The result was that Rudolf of Habsburg
was elected on 1 October 1273, he sent his envoys to
the Council of Lyons when it was opened on 7 May 1274, and was gladly
recognised. In return, he accepted the moderate Guelf views: he renounced all
rights over the papal territory; and he admitted the permanent separation of
the Regno and the Empire. The good Pope’s object was thus attained, and he
could undertake the pious task of promoting friendship between Charles and
Rudolf.
A still greater triumph rewarded
Gregory’s brilliant diplomacy on the Reunion question. He used Charles’
ambitions for the conquest of Constantinople as pressure to induce the Greek
Emperor Michael Palaeologus to submit to the Roman see and Western creed. At
the same time he made it clear that Charles would not
be allowed to attack the Eastern Empire, if the schism were healed in time.
Michael’s convictions took rapid shape under these threats and promises. A
Greek Synod gave a forced approval, and accredited Greek envoys accepted the
Western “Filioque” and the papal supremacy at the Council on 6 July. It was
only a screen spread over the chasm of dissidence; but it sufficed to baffle
Charles, and Gregory could hope for a true crusade of all Christendom.
One more decree, passed on 16 July,
was to prevent the scandal of a long vacancy in the Popedom. After ten days of
ineffectual conclave the hesitating cardinals were to be placed under
progressive austerities. Only with a Pope elected could they return to even
tolerable comfort. It was an honest endeavour to meet a public need, yet it
marked Gregory’s weakness: he put all his trust in the appearances of things,
and thought that, with an Emperor, with some sort of Pope, with a nominal Union,
all would go well; but the heavy feet of his contemporaries soon trod through
his painted panorama.
The good intentions, however, of an
able, high-minded man bore fruit, humbler, perhaps, but more useful than his
worldwide schemes. The Spanish danger in North Italy had increased. Marquess
William VII of Montferrat had become the son-in-law of Alfonso X, and could begin a revolt from Charles in Piedmont and a
Ghibelline resurgence all over Lombardy. More important was a consequence of
Charles’ own aggressive ambition. The revolution of 1270 in Genoa had placed in
power the Ghibelline nobles supported by the popolo. Charles needed the city and its fleet, and therefore allied with the exiled
Guelfs. He then forced on a war in 1273, but by sea and land was signally
defeated. Now Genoa could admit the Spaniards into Lombardy, and she used her
opportunity. She allied on 26 October 1274 with the west Lombard Ghibellines,
William VII of Montferrat and Asti, who were losing to
Charles’ attacks, and transported 1000 Spanish troopers to Lombardy. All the
Ghibelline cities promptly acknowledged Alfonso X’s title, and their number
grew. Finally, the victory of Marquess Thomas of Saluzzo over Charles’ seneschal at Roccavione on 10 November
1275 caused the Sicilian king to lose Piedmont. His allies, the Della Torre,
had been at least luke-warm, and his supremacy in
North Italy was vanishing and being replaced by a less effectual dominion of
Alfonso.
But Gregory X resolved that the
Spanish dominion should not be. In May 1275 he intercepted Alfonso, who was
coming to lead his Lombard partisans, at Beaucaire at the frontier of
Provence, and, after months of negotiation, obtained in August his renunciation
of the Roman kingship. It was a great surrender, but Alfonso’s deserted realm
of Castile was becoming restive, and the difficulty of reaching Italy by the
route he had chosen was manifest. That done, the Pope could meet King Rudolf at
Lausanne in October 1276. The King of the Romans, too, was pliable. He again
confirmed all his concessions; he at once sent German troopers to Milan to
resist the Alfonsist Ghibellines; he himself would,
come to be crowned Emperor next year. Gregory could re-enter Italy full of hope
for an interview with Charles, who as well as Alfonso was checkmated in
Lombardy. In December he learnt that Rudolf’s envoys were demanding the oaths
of allegiance not only from the Lombard cities but also from Romagna, according
to ancient custom. The Pope, however, was determined to require the literal
observance of the ancient charters which secured Romagna to the Papacy, and he
demanded at once the renunciation of Romagna from the king. The answer never
reached him, for he died at Arezzo on 12 January 1276.
Two ephemeral Popes succeeded Gregory
X. The Savoyard Innocent V, who reigned from 21 January to 22 June 1276, did
little save refuse to sanction Charles’ Grecian war and to arrange a peace
between him and Genoa. The Genoese Hadrian V, who reigned from 11 July to 18
August, had only time to suspend Gregory’s conclave decree, which had worked
havoc on the cardinals in the conclave at Rome which elected him. Charles thus
lost not only two favourable Popes but their and
others’ votes in the next conclave. Accordingly, on 15 September 1276 Peter Juliani, a Portuguese cardinal, was elected at Viterbo as John XXI. He was a cheerful dilettante and left
the conduct of affairs to the leading moderate Guelf in the Sacred College,
Cardinal John Gaetan Orsini. Charles in vain urged the Pope to induce the
rupture of the Union, which might indeed be justified on account of its proved
unreality. He only obtained the Pope’s sanction for his acquisition of the
shadowy kingdom of Jerusalem, now confined to Acre. Then John XXI, too, died
suddenly on 20 May 1277. A prolonged struggle began in the conclave between
the moderate Guelfs and the pro-French party, in which the moderate Guelfs won
by the election on 25 November of Cardinal John Gaetan as Nicholas III.
Like so many of the Popes of Roman
birth, Nicholas possessed that ruler’s nature, statesmanlike, patient, and
masterful, which seemed to revive the ancient Roman spirit. His temperament was
thoroughly secular; he was splendour-loving and a great builder. His most
patent fault was nepotism, which led him easily to simony. Although special
favour to his own relatives was natural to a Pope when each cardinal belonged
to a political party and was prone to independent action, and although Innocent
IV and Gregory X had set him an example, Nicholas III’s desire to exalt the
Orsini went far beyond older limits and has branded him as the introducer of a
new disease in the Western Church. It affected the schemes he inherited from
Gregory X: the checking, yet the compensation of, Charles of Sicily, the
alliance with, yet the precautions against, the King of the Romans, the
neutral independent Papal State. For these aims the clearsighted, nepotistic
Pope struck out his plan of the four kingdoms. Charles was to keep the Regno
and be allied to Rudolf, but was to be excluded from
the rest of Italy and to receive the kingdom of Arles for his grandson Charles
Martel in exchange. Rudolf, likewise, was to lose North Italy and Arles, but in
return Germany and the imperial title should be made hereditary in the
Habsburgs. The kingdom of North Italy should be conferred on the house of
Orsini. Thus the principle of nationality would be in
a way admitted. In this secular interpretation of Gregory’s ideas, the crusade
of course took a subordinate place, although the Pope had no notion of giving
up the ecumenical activities of his office.
The first step was to make sure of
Romagna for the Papal State. He at once demanded from Rudolf the renunciation
of dominion there. The king made no resistance. He was fighting for his
kingship with Ottokar of Bohemia, and, as we shall see, his Lombard proteges
were fallen. But he found it difficult to make the renunciation formal and
irrevocable enough to satisfy the Pope, who remembered that the ancient
donation had been treated as unmeaning for three hundred years, and it was not
till February 1279 that every possible guarantee was given. Still Nicholas was
convinced of the reality of the surrender in May 1278, and could proceed with his further design of ousting Charles from Rome and Tuscany
and of making him the ally of Rudolf. In addition to the power any
strong-willed Pope was bound to have over Charles, Nicholas enjoyed other
advantages. He had mastered the cardinals by a large creation,
and was thus freer than most recent Popes; he was a native Roman, and
could rely on his fellow-countrymen; imperialism in the old sense was extinct
as a political force; and lastly, Charles’ power had waned after his loss of
Piedmont and his defeat by Genoa.
Lombardy, in fact, had at last become
independent with the fall of the house of Della Torre which had ruled Milan.
The Ghibellines had regained much favour in their cities, now that they were
dissociated from any foreign ruler, while the Della Torre, who employed King
Rudolf’s Germans, had made themselves hateful by misgovernment. The lead
against the Milanese tyrant was taken by the Archbishop of Milan, Otto
Visconti, whom he had always kept in exile. The Archbishop rallied the Ghibelline
exiles who formed the majority of the Milanese
nobility, and, in spite of a defeat, seized on Como in November 1277. Thence he
attacked his foes with the support of most of the countryside,
and overthrew them on 21 January 1278 at Desio.
The tyrant Napoleon and many of his kin fell into Otto’s hands, and next day
Milan received the Archbishop as her despot. A new grouping of towns at once
followed, in which Milan headed the Ghibelline, and Cremona the Guelf league,
and indecisive fighting continued for some years, chiefly concerning the
possession of Lodi, which the remaining Della Torre made their headquarters. It
was dangerous enough to induce the archbishop to submit to call in William VII
of Montferrat in 1278 as Captain-General of Milan for four years.
With Lombardy really lost, Charles was
weaker than before in Tuscany. He had, against his wish, helped his Guelf
allies to reconquer and further depress Pisa in 1275-6; he had also seen in
Florence a new single Captain instituted for the Parte Guelfa, who had in practice equal powers with
Charles’ vicar, while the feuds springing up among the Guelfs were impairing
the stability of the whole régime. Nicholas had thus the opportunity to insist on mediating. On 24 May 1278 in a
personal interview he ordered Charles to quit the Roman senatorship on 16 September when his term of office expired, and also to resign the vicariate of Tuscany eight days later. His commands were obeyed,
and, in reward, the Pope took up the question of Charles’ alliance with Rudolf
with such zeal that in the summer of 1280 the treaty was all but ready.
Meanwhile Nicholas was eagerly
contriving peace, papal suzerainty, and Orsini domination in Central Italy. At
Rome, his action was immediate and characteristic. He issued a new constitution
forbidding a nonRoman Senator; he obtained from his countrymen the direct
rule of the Eternal City for life, becoming in this way both suzerain and
grantee; and then he promoted his brother to the senatorial office. This had
been an easy task, but that of reconciling the Tuscan factions and of annexing
Romagna was hard. Formally, indeed, Bologna and the Romagnol towns made no great objection to the oath of allegiance to the Pope, but they
were not anxious for his effective government and were torn by faction. The
days had gone by when Bologna had dominated Romagna and compelled the factions
to endure one another. Her trade was rapidly declining and she had lost in a three years’ war with Venice. Then her nobles got out of
hand, and in 1274 the Guelfs or Geremei had driven out
the Ghibellines or Lambertazzi. War broke out over all Romagna, in which the
Ghibellines led by Count Guido of Montefeltro had a
decided advantage over the Guelfs in spite of the aid
given to the latter by Guelfic Florence. Matters were
in this stage when on 25 September 1278 Nicholas appointed one nephew, the
worthy Cardinal Latino Malabranca, legate for Tuscany and Romagna, and another
nephew, Bertold Orsini, Rector or “Count” of Romagna
under him. The two patched up a general peace with infinite trouble, and on 8
October 1279 Cardinal Latino was able to arrive at Florence for his mission
there. But in December the Ghibellines were again driven from Bologna, and
neither Bertold nor Latino had been able to quench
the resulting war or to restore the short-lived papal rule, when Nicholas III
died on 22 August 1280.
In Florence, however, Cardinal Latino
ameliorated the state of the city permanently, although, curiously enough, his
actual scheme proved a fleeting mirage. Nicholas was made Signore on 19 November 1279, and a general reconciliation and a new constitution were
promulgated on 18 January 1280. Almost all the Ghibellines returned and
re-obtained a portion of their lost property. The popolo again received an organisation and a Captain. The Parte Guelfa and its Captain remained as a partisan body,
while the Ghibellines were given a similar status. If the Ghibellines were soon
edged out of political power, they had been repatriated for good. Further, a
Council of Fourteen was set up for general supervision and finance. In 1282
they were replaced by the Priors of the Arts, who, being based on the gilds,
were far more successful and became the true rulers of the city. Thus Florence passed under the control of the wealthy
middle-class. She, at any rate, produced a government by the popolo which could work. As if to signalise the new
era, shrewd King Rudolf sent a vicar to Tuscany, whose vain efforts ended in
small payments to his exchequer. The destruction of the Empire in Italy was
illustrated by the trifling price which its claims could fetch.
Nicholas filled a small place in
history compared with his ambitions. His four kingdoms’ scheme, nebulous
always, quite vanished at his death. Still he had
helped to wind up several insolvent ideals, and had maintained the Papacy in
complete independence. His successor was to lose that independence, and to
declare an open bankruptcy.
After his recent experience, Charles
was determined to secure a pro-French Pope. A timely riot of the Viterbans terrorised the moderate Guelf cardinals, and on
22 February 1281 the college elected Cardinal Simon de Brie Pope as Martin IV.
Their choice was a representative of the rising national feeling of his day.
This ancient councillor of St Louis and negotiator between Charles and Urban IV
hated Germans and loved his French countrymen. He was both able and irresolute,
and thus a fit tool for Charles. His pontificate was a foretaste of Avignon.
His subservience, indeed, proved the ruin of Charles, who had the rein given to
his passionate ambition, for he immediately threw himself into the king’s arms.
On obtaining the direct rule of Rome for life, he made his patron Senator for
that period in contempt of Nicholas III’s constitution; and the whole Papal
State was quickly officered by Charles’ functionaries. In Romagna some success
was gained by this method, for, in spite of the
crushing defeat of the papal representative, John d’Eppe,
at the head of the Guelfs, on 1 May 1282 at Forli, the outwearied Ghibellines
laid down their arras in 1283. It seemed as if Italy was safe, although on 25
May 1281, near Vaprio, Archbishop Otto Visconti
overthrew the Della Torre for a generation, and soon recaptured Lodi. Lombardy
might after all be left to itself, with Milan, William VII, Asti, and the other
states to quarrel as they would.
But Charles’ chief wish was freedom of
action in the East. Under Nicholas III the unreality of the Union and the
insincerity of Michael VIII’s adherence to it had grown very clear, but the
Pope held Charles firmly in leash, while himself unbending in his demands on
Constantinople. The more pliant Martin, however, immediately declared a breach
by excommunicating the Greeks on 10 April 1281. No doubt he destroyed a sham;
yet his motive was chiefly to open the way for Charles’ resurrection of the
Franco-Latin Empire. The Papacy in his hands had lost its ecumenical spirit.
Charles could now prepare in earnest once more. He gained the alliance of
Venice for a campaign in 1283, and the Regno was astir with the coming war. In the long desultory border conflict with Michael in
Albania and Greece, he had on the whole been a loser,
but victory seemed sure now that he could bend all his powers to its
attainment.
The knowledge of his plans roused his
foes to strike in time. Charles’ rule in the Regno had been a bitter experience
for its population. His foreign officials and troops were insolent, his native
tax-farmers uncontrollably extortionate. His attempts at remedies were
fruitless, for he kept adding to the burden of taxation, and was bound to
foster the French and such as would serve them. Besides, he had no sympathy
with the commonalty, and thought that, if he gave them peace and order, and
endeavoured, as he truly endeavoured, to dispense justice, he had done. The
occasional Parliaments were no longer assembled, the collectae he had sworn to abolish were yearly levied. Not only so, but in
spite of clerical exemption the amount raised in each collecta was nearly doubled, by 1282. And all was
for an undesired war.
The long-gathering storm burst from
Aragon. Its king, Peter III, was the husband of Manfred’s daughter Constance,
and had long nourished plans for reconquering her inheritance. He knew of the
hatred felt by the Regnicoli against Charles, and the
withdrawal of Alfonso X and the independence of Lombardy and Tuscany all
increased his chances. He had for advisers two exiles from the Regno of
commanding ability, John of Procida and Roger Loria.
A wealthy ally, the chief need of the moneyless warrior-king, was at hand in
the person of Michael VIII, now in the utmost danger, and John of Procida contrived the treaty between the two at
Constantinople late in 1281. So King Peter proclaimed
a crusade against Africa and feverishly pushed on his armaments. He was in
close touch with the malcontents in the Regno, and especially in Sicily, where
he meant to land. Then in 1282 he heard that he had been anticipated by a
popular explosion. The Sicilian Vespers had taken place on 30 March, and
Charles, his great schemes blown to air, had lost Sicily, as it turned out, for
ever.
It was on Easter Monday that the
Sicilian revolution, more singular perhaps in its successful sequel and its
historical significance than in its immediate circumstance, began. Long
sufferance had confirmed the French soldiery in the
island in their opinion of the fatalistic submission and only fitful wrath of
the Sicilians, and men-at-arms mingled with coarse insolence among the
festival-makers before the church of Santo Spirito built by the English
Archbishop Offamil outside Palermo. A crowning
insult, the mishandling of a young married woman on her way with her family to
the church, roused a bystander to strike the culprit down. On all sides arose
the cry of “Death to the French!”; the riot spread to the city and continued
through the night; no one who spoke French, man, woman or child, was spared. The insurrection and the massacre travelled with
extraordinary speed and with the same atrocious vengeance throughout the
island, and some 3000 to 4000 of the hated foreigners were slaughtered. Before
the end of the month Messina had joined the revolt and compelled the royal
vicar to leave the island. A carious experiment followed; the general wish was
not to receive another ruler, but to copy Innocent IV’s idea of vassal communes
subject to the Papacy. Such were set up in Palermo, Messina, and elsewhere,
ranged in an embryonic federation. But their envoys and prayers were sternly
repulsed by Pope Martin, and Charles, astounded and enraged, diverted his
armament of conquest to suppress this domestic revolt.
On 25 July the king crossed to Sicily
and began the siege of Messina, the key to the island. The same exaltation of
hatred which had produced the Vespers now led the untrained townsmen under Alaimo da Lentini to repair their
ruinous walls and to repulse again and again Charles’ attacks. But the failure
of the mediation of the cardinal-legate Gerard of Cremona, Bishop of Sabina, showed
that there was no choice between conquest and foreign aid. This was ready; for
Peter III had landed in Barbary on his simular crusade on 18 June, and was demanding tithes and the
like concessions from the wary Pope. In his African camp envoys from Sicily
offered him the crown he had plotted for, and on 30 August he landed at Trapani
with 600 men-at-arms and 8000 almugaveri, the guerilla infantry whose courage and cruelty were
to be known far and wide. His arrival and his fleet, one of the best in the
Mediterranean, rendered Charles’ position untenable. After a last vain assault the Angevin abandoned the siege of Messina and
crossed to Calabria about 26 September 1282.
Beyond carrying the war into Calabria,
which was to suffer for years from the guerilla exploits of the almugaveri, soon a
mixed force of Catalans and Sicilians, Peter I of Sicily did little in the
local war. His rule was arbitrary and unpopular, and he left for Aragon in May 1283
to arrange for the singular ordeal by battle with 100 knights a side, in which
Charles and he had pledged themselves to engage at Bordeaux on 1 June. Obvious
insincerity marked both the exponents of this histrionic chivalry, and a beau geste of chicanery was all that they seemed to
achieve. But probably to gain time was their strongest motive: Charles was
gathering fresh forces from France; Peter wished to stave off a French invasion
of Aragon and to win ground in the Regno during the delay. He had left his
queen Constance regent in Sicily and Roger Loria as admiral of the joint
Sicilian and Catalan fleet. In Roger he possessed a born naval commander, a
tactician and a hard-bitten fighter, a victor in every battle he engaged. It
was Loria who deferred a new Angevin invasion by destroying a part of their
fleet at Malta in July 1283. The new invasion,
however, was to be most formidable, nor was the war to be in Sicily alone. Pope
Martin deposed Peter from Aragon, proclaimed a crusade and interdict against
him, declared Charles of Valois, the younger son of Philip III of France, King
of Aragon, and arranged for the conquest of the country by the French king in
1285. Meantime he poured money into Charles of Anjou’s hands and relentlessly
used his spiritual weapons in the crusade against Sicily: Venice was placed
under interdict for refusing to hire out her ships. Every resource was drained
for this in 1284: a motley army of French and Italians was gathered; some 30
galleys at Naples, others from Brindisi, were to meet at Ustica and convoy the transports; to lead them Charles himself set sail from Provence.
But now came the unexpected. His son and heir, Charles the Lame, Prince of
Salerno, left as regent in the Regno, had busily carried out the preparations
there, but was not to move till his father came. On 5 June 1284, however, Loria
appeared with seemingly few galleys in the Bay of Naples, ravaging the islands
and tempting an attack. Salerno fell into the trap and rowed out to fight a
stronger fleet. The battle ended in his capture with many nobles, and Charles
of Anjou arrived at Gaeta to find an immediate invasion impossible and Naples
rioting. He could call his son “a cowardly priest, a fool who always chose the
worse part”, but he could not undo the event. Indeed he himself wasted men and money in a vain siege of Reggio, and then withdrew,
with forces disaffected and thinned by desertions, to Apulia for fresh
preparations and exactions, blended with schemes of reform to gain the loyalty
of what we may now call the kingdom of Naples. His days, however, were numbered;
his strength was exhausted by a slow fever, and he died on 7 January 1285 at
Foggia. He appointed his kinsman Robert, Count of Artois, as Balio, to whom the Pope gave as colleague
Cardinal Gerard of Cremona.
Charles of Anjou had failed not only
in his wider ambitions of an Eastern Empire, but in his attempt to rule or
guide Italy as a papal champion, to be a kind of inverted Hohenstaufen, and in
the mere maintenance of his conquest of Sicily. His failure was perhaps not
merely his own fault; for it was not in the power of man, not of Frederick II,
to unite the Italy of the thirteenth century, and the national evolution was
working towards another end. Yet his fame has suffered irredeemably and
deservedly. He had prospered only when his own way was in some degree denied him, and fell a victim to his overweening ambition and inconsiderate
pride. A bold knight and a forceful autocrat, his immense efforts to subdue
Sicily all miscarried largely through the disaffection and desertion which his
government of the Regno had provoked, and he was unaware or contemptuous of
national feeling outside France and of the strength of the bourgeois trader. He
exhausted the Regno; in North Italy he had ruled by faction and violence; his
attempt to found a Mediterranean empire was a
greed-begotten chimaera. Thus, in spite of many great
qualities, his lasting work, fit for the grim face of his effigy on the
Capitol, was that of a destroyer. He ruined the Hohenstaufen; he crippled the
Papacy. In South Italy he only left a new dynasty, a worse government, and a
degenerating people.
Although Charles II was in captivity,
and soon transferred to the safer imprisonment of Aragon, the two regents took
firm hold of the government. The insurrectionary movements on the mainland
never amounted to much, and the guerilla warfare in
the south made little progress beyond Calabria. The two colleagues were
steadily upheld by the Pope, for when Martin IV died at Perugia on 28 March
1285 his successor, the Roman Cardinal-deacon Jacopo Savelli, now Honorius IV,
continued inevitably the fixed policy of the Curia. Sicily was to return to
submission; the reforms in the Regno, promised and enacted by Charles the Lame
in 1283, were confirmed; the collectae beyond
the four feudal aids were forbidden in September 1285. These concessions were
perhaps the more ample owing to the events of the war. In May the great French
invasion of Aragon began, and it seemed that Peter, at odds with his own
people, must go down before it. Yet it proved a miserable failure. The
crusading army was smitten by pestilence in the long summer siege of Girona,
while the fleet was completely disabled by a victory of Roger Loria. Philip III
retreated to die on 6 October 1285 at Perpignan. His adversary, however, did
not long outlive him, for Peter the Great died too on 11 November. His eldest
son Alfonso III succeeded, to Aragon, while his second son James became King of
Sicily. The change was momentous, for though the two brothers remained allied
their interests drifted apart, and it became clearer every year that the
Sicilians must save themselves. Fortunately they held
the sea; a surprise invasion which captured Agosta in
May 1287 could be stifled by King James on 23 June, the same day on which the
admiral Loria with smaller forces routed the Angevin fleet at Castellammare and
bore off 42 captured galleys. What with truce and exhaustion, the war lapsed
now for two years in spite of the renewed ban from
Pope Nicholas IV. It flamed up again on the return of Charles the Lame. By the
mediation of Edward I of England, Alfonso of Aragon at last bought peace and
security by releasing him. A first bargain made at Oleron in 1287 was quashed
by the Pope because it ceded Sicily to James; a vaguer second treaty at Campofranco on 27 October 1288 was allowed, and, leaving
three sons as hostages, Charles returned to be crowned by the Pope at Rieti on
19 June 1289, to the joy, the very transitory joy, of the Guelfs, who thought
they had gained a leader. Even the inconvenient obligations of Campofranco had been annulled by the Pope, and war had been
renewed in the Regno by James. It was only the imminent danger of Acre from the
Mamluks which induced the combatants to a two years'truce in
August 1289; and even that excepted Calabria and the almugaveri. Thus no question was settled, although much was
foreshadowed; the Regno in fact was split up into two hostile kingdoms whose
separate character remained until 1816. That of Sicily enjoyed a parting gleam
of prosperity before it fell into turbid isolation. James’ brief rule was good;
sea-power gave wealth; the circumstances of the revolution and the influence
of Aragon provided a remarkable stimulus to the island parliament, with its
three estates, and the Statuti di Giacomo formed a basis for national liberties which were in the future to prove barren.
As for Naples, ravaged, oppressed, and overtaxed, with foreign nobles, foreign
troops, and the combined evils of excessive feudalism and corrupt bureaucracy,
all exacerbated by the incurable ambitions of its dynasty, it was leaving the
days of Frederick II further and further behind.
It is a testimony to the failure of
Charles of Anjou that it is not his death but the Sicilian Vespers which mark
an epoch. His predominance and his alliance with the Pope had given some sort
of unity to Italian history, but now each province seems to work out its own
destiny with little effective influence, if much interference, from the others.
Rome itself soon slipped from Charles’ grasp owing to a revolt of the Orsini in
January 1284, which led to the appointment of Roman senators. Pope Honorius IV
could keep order because he was a native Roman, but when he died on 3 April
1287 the apostolic see remained vacant for a year owing to dissensions among
the cardinals in conclave, due perhaps more to the mutual hatred of the Orsini
and Colonna factions who dominated the election than because they had settled
policies to promote. Their eventual choice on 22 February 1288 was a pious,
unselfish friar. Jerome of Ascoli, the Cardinal-bishop of Palestrina, and once
General of the Franciscans, now Nicholas IV, had dared and survived the Roman
fever which had struck down six of his colleagues and put to flight the rest, but brave as he was, he was soon
notoriously in the hands of the Colonna, who under him ruled, in name at least,
the congeries of towns and nobles which formed the Papal States. The Papacy,
with its ecumenic claims as vigorously asserted as ever, was getting once more
dangerously entangled in purely local broils and family interests.
If disunion was the chief
characteristic of the Papal States, signs of future consolidation were visible
in the next natural area to the north, in Tuscany. Immediately after the peace
of Cardinal Latino, when Charles of Anjou was preparing to concentrate all his
efforts in the East, Florence and her friends assured their safety and trade by
putting the Tuscan Guelf League on a permanent basis. Florence and Lucca were
the chiefs; Siena, Volterra, and others the secondary allies. On the military
side the League maintained a permanent force of 500 professional and
non-Italian men-at-arms to replace the occasional assistance of Charles’
troopers. This was a notable step in the decline of the citizen soldier and the
citizen nobility, for they were out-classed and in the
end replaced by these trained competitors. In matters of trade, goods destined
for, or coming from, any ally passed toll-free through the territory of the
others. Here was a customs’ union of a sort, from which industrial Florence
gained most. But Martin IV increased the prosperity of all by the financial
arrangements which bound the Papacy to Tuscany, for the collection of papal
tithes was carefully apportioned among the Tuscan banking firms. It was the
question of free transit which first led the League to join Genoa in harrying
defeated Pisa; Pisan concessions made it languid and obedient to a papal
prohibition; complete free transit was a chief condition of the peace of Fucecchio in 1293. So, too, one motive for the war over
Arezzo was the security of the road to Rome.
Pisa was fatally hampered by her
situation in Tuscany, but her true interests were seaward, and her deadliest
enemy Genoa, whom she had the misfortune to rival not only in the Levant but in
the rich islands they wished to exploit at their doors. Neither city wished to
do more than stand profitably neutral in the war pf the Vespers; in these years
they fought their own quarrel to a finish. Genoa under her two aristocratic
Ghibelline Captains was more united, less exposed to attack, and won. On 6
August 1284 the Captain Ober to Doria lured out the Pisan fleet to fight
against odds by the island of Meloria, and there
destroyed it. Over 9000 prisoners were taken to Genoese dungeons; Pisa was
ruined, for, if fresh galleys could be built, the loss in men was
irreplaceable. None the less she fought gallantly against the ring of foes. The
bitter terms of peace wrung from her semi-tyrant, Count Ugolino, were among the
causes in 1288 of his fall and tragic end. The temporary autocracy of Count
Guido of Montefeltro which followed could show his
brilliant talents, but could not avert the inevitable
loss of Sardinia and decline. Thus the third
competitor among the maritime states fell out of the running, and Venice and
Genoa were left to struggle, while Italy was the poorer of a centre of her civilisation.
The tendency to form larger
territorial units, dictated in some degree by geography, and the ever-growing
inclination to tyranny, which might give peace, efficiency, and equality, were
clearly visible among the Lombard cities, which wished for liberty and autonomy
but could neither keep nor give them. The first instance of composite dominions
had been given by the soi-disant imperial
deputies like Pelavicini, followed by the smaller coagulation of towns under
the Della Torre; now we find a great independent war-lord attempting the same thing. William VII “Longsword” of Montferrat was much in
request and much dreaded for his force of warlike vassals; and with the fall of
the Torriani in 1278, combined with the fact that they remained strong and dangerous,
his day seemed to have come. He ruled Ivrea, Turin, Alessandria, Tortona, Acqui, and Casale in his native
West Lombardy; he became Captain-General of Milan, Pavia, Vercelli, Novara,
Como, Verona, and Mantua. But this dominion was more apparent than real. He was
a baron with no roots even in his own towns, while in most he was merely an
ally of the true tyrant or native faction. Add to this that he was more of an
intriguer than a warrior, and that his campaigns were games of bluff, and the
temporary character of his state becomes clear. In 1280 he was kidnapped by
Thomas, the heir of Savoy, in the course of an attempt to partition the
Savoyard lands in Piedmont, and was forced to
surrender Turin to his captor. At Christmas 1282 the Archbishop Otto Visconti
suddenly turned him out of Milan, and the eastern cities followed suit. In the
consequent hostilities the Torriani played a fighting part, but not so the
marquess, who preferred raids on the powerful coalition of Milan, Pavia,
Brescia, Piacenza, Cremona, Genoa, and Asti arrayed against him.
His most striking success was the
acquisition of Pavia in 1289 by ingeniously gaining over her army to his side.
Then in 1290 he himself was treacherously seized by the Alessandrians,
and like Napoleon della Torre was only released by
death from the iron cage which was his prison. His dominion at once broke up
and his young son was deprived of Montferrat by Matteo Visconti. City-tyrannies
were now the order of the day, yet with a tendency of Milan, the natural metropolis,
to encroach on and overawe the others. At Milan itself the Archbishop contrived
the election of his great-nephew, the Aviso Matteo, as Captain of the popolo, and Novara and Vercelli gave him the
same office. Alberto Scotti ruled over Piacenza; Pinamonte Bonaccolsi over Mantua. Incurable faction-strife induced first Modena and then
Reggio to elect the tyrant of Ferrara, Obizzo,
Marquess of Este, as their signore; thus the natural outlets of the Po valley to the east were
altogether in the same hands. It was beginning to need exceptional
circumstances to maintain a city free.
Italy thus presented in 1290 a mosaic
of diverse states. The efforts of the Emperors, of Manfred, and of Charles of
Anjou to unite the land had all alike failed. That of
the Popes to divide and supervise it was likewise no success, although defeat
was yet to come; and this political enterprise was proving ever more disastrous
to their spiritual influence over Europe. The Sicilians had given an example of
revolt against their secular pretensions, and for the time the prestige of the
Papacy was bound up with the dubious subjection of the island. Meantime
anarchic communes in the Papal State, prosperous republics in Tuscany,
city-tyrants in Lombardy, feudal monarchies in Naples and beneath the Western
Alps, European sea-powers in Venice and Genoa, all jostled one another. The
last period of the Italian Middle Age, that of independent national development
round sharply differentiated provincial centres, had begun.
CHAPTER
VII
ENGLAND: RICHARD I AND JOHN
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