|  BOOK THE FIRST. 
        
        CHAPTER XIII.
              
        FROM
        A.D. 1293 TO 1300.
            
        
         
       Continual wars
        had in some measure repressed the spirit of civil discord in Florence; but as
        outward enemies became weaker and the republic stronger; as trade augmented the
        general wealth, and plunder enriched individuals; the same weapons which had
        been blunted in external conflict were soon readjusted for internal quarrels.
        The mass of people wishing as was their interest to live under the law, while
        the great struggled to get above it, long-continued harmony was impossible:
        hitherto the fear of Ghibeline government had partially stifled all other
        disorders, but the moment that party ceased to be formidable bad blood broke
        loose and scarcely a week passed without some insolence or injury to a weaker
        neighbour.
            
       Proud from
        their wealth, fierce from their warlike habits; sudden and quick with their
        weapon, and careless of blood; wounds and death were common incidents amongst
        nobles whose power defied the law and insulted its ministers: there was no
        individuality in crime when a whole family, its friends and kinsmen, espoused
        the cause of a culprit; not in the tribunals, but armed cap-a-pie, with lance
        in hand and helmet on the head. The penalty of crime was exacted, severely
        exacted, by the private vengeance of noble families, but the hand of law was a
        mere shadow, and public example worse than a nullity. While respect for each
        other produced some show of order amongst themselves it imposed no restraint on
        their insolence or violence to weaker and less opulent citizens; so that
        contumely, outrage, spoliation, and even personal chastisement were common
        occurrences amongst these lordly republicans. The people had frequently tried
        to abate this, and bit by bit some little was accomplished, but more in form
        than substance; for while their political privileges were nominally diminished
        by creating Priors as well as by the recent incorporation of minor trades; the
        anger and insolence of great families were proportionably augmented. Something
        more became necessary to curb the power of clanship and overcome an habitual
        respect for ancient blood, heightened as it was by military services, an
        audacious spirit, and the power of wealth and numbers: few therefore were bold
        enough to accuse a noble, still fewer dared to bear witness against one; and
        even when condemned by the tribunals the judges would rarely venture to execute
        a sentence. Thus while the people cried aloud against this grievance and
        demanded redress, not one was found hardy enough to lead the cause of justice
        against aristocratic tyranny; and even when the question was discussed in
        popular assemblies, the mode of relief was not so easily discovered. The
        nobility ridiculing such scenes of impotent declamation continued to domineer
        over the many; that many dreading aristocratic resentment even more than the
        loss of their own individual property; and abject slavery would probably have
        succeeded if dissensions amongst the nobles themselves had not saved the
        country. Yet that country was called a republic, and was a republic as far as
        this; that the power of choosing the form of government and making their own
        laws was in the hands of the people: but the enacting of good laws, and the
        power of executing them afterwards, are wide asunder; and it was in the latter
        that Florence failed and suffered. She was compelled to be unjust to secure
        justice; cruel to insure humanity; and tyrannical for the enjoyment of liberty.
        The crisis required this, for when men place themselves above the law a power
        beyond the law becomes necessary to restrain them, and the severe but honest
        spirit of the Florentine reformer can scarcely be questioned: extreme cases
        need extreme remedies, and generally produce those who have the head to
        conceive and the hand to administer them. Such was Giano della Bella a
        patrician of ancient race, of some opulence, and a respectable following; but
        enrolled amongst the citizens and devoted to popular government: a gross
        personal insult from Berto Frescobaldi first kindled the spirit of this patriot
        into action, and his sense of human dignity revolted from the imperious
        domination of the nobles, whose pride he resolved to humble while he raised the
        people’s authority to its legitimate standard.
            
       For the sake of
        perspicuity it may be now mentioned that the whole population of Florence was
        at this time separated into two great classes, the “Grandi” and the “Popolo”:
        or the Nobles and People: but as the latter was itself subdivided into “Popolani” and “Plebei” three
        distinct classes really existed, namely “Grandi” “Popolani”
        and “Plebei” or Nobles, People, and Plebians, by
        which names they will for the present be distinguished. The first were
        denominated “Grandi” from a feeling of reproachful envy: the second were rich
        merchants, traders, and other professional men who usually shared in the
        government: the third was the mere “Plebs” for whom every access to public
        honours was virtually closed. These last naturally sided with their immediate
        superiors, more perhaps from common hatred to the nobles than any peculiar
        attachment or cordiality of feeling, as they afterwards proved when
        disappointed in their more sanguine expectations.
  
       In this state
        of things Giano della Bella, who is described by his friend Dino Compagni as a
        “wise, valiant, and good man,” began to accomplish his work: privately
        reasoning with every individual of spirit or influence he dwelt painfully on
        the increasing arrogance of the nobles and corresponding apathy of the people;
        he endeavoured to convince each auditor that tamely bearing such wrongs in his
        own person was a virtual aid to the aristocracy in abasing the whole nation,
        which was rapidly sinking into servitude by the action of this most poisonous
        influence. The evil though augmented had not yet become too inveterate for
        cure, but if one stood idly waiting for another they would all be overtaken by
        irreparable ruin. These words worked silently through different ranks until the
        whole popular mass fermented and a common spirit of resistance agitated the
        commonwealth. Public feeling being thus prepared, Giano, then one of the
        Priors, in conjunction with many powerful citizens assembled the people and
        harangued them on the general ineptitude of Florentine government for
        repressing aristocratic licentiousness which intimidated judges, despised rule,
        scared witnesses, dragged plaintiff and defendant by armed force from the
        tribunals, and with an inflated spirit soared proudly above every law of the
        commonwealth. “If I were not,” said he, “to judge of your condition by my own,
        which notwithstanding my rank, my power, and my following, has not escaped the
        insolence of the great, I certainly would never have meddled with this
        enterprise, because I should have found a fitting opportunity to revenge my
        private injuries; but well knowing your helplessness and unable any longer to
        look calmly on the destruction of our state, which preserving delusive forms,
        has lost all the substance of freedom, and is in a worse condition than those
        miserable cities that are ruled by the caprice of a single tyrant: for instead
        of one, we tremble at the nod of many; and where they have hope that the death
        of a monster may one day end their sufferings, we on the contrary have no such
        consolation, for our tyrants hydra-like are continually sprouting and thus
        rendering our pains immortal. Let us then instantly quit all womanish
        complaining and scotch this serpent ere it gather strength enough to strangle
        us. As all our wo proceeds from evil government, from a combination of weakness
        in the judges and strength in the culprits, we must reinforce the one while we
        diminish the power of the other, for not until we do this will our sufferings
        terminate. I know well the danger of my words, but a citizen’s duty is to speak
        boldly, ay and act so too when the good of his country demands it: Public
        liberty is composed of two ingredients; of good laws and their just
        administration; when these are stronger than individuals then is liberty
        maintained; but when there are citizens powerful enough to defy both, then is
        it abandoned. Such truths will be best appreciated by those who have the great
        for their neighbours either in town or country, for what things have we that
        they have not coveted? And once longed for by what law have they ever been
        restrained from robbing us? Nor are our persons less in danger: have we not
        seen the citizens scourged, and driven barbarously from their homes; have we
        not beheld rapine, fire, wounds, and even death itself inflicted with perfect
        impunity by this dangerous nobility? the culprits are known! Reckless,
        insolent, contemptuous, they ride through our streets dreaded even by the chief
        magistrates of the republic; and this is what some of us call liberty! You have
        numerous laws existing against violence, murder, robbery, and other outrages,
        let these be called into immediate action and let more be added if requisite.
        They will be requisite; for you cannot bind a giant with pack- thread: cords
        therefore for the little, but chains and cables for the great, as our present
        ties are too feeble to restrain them. Be neither cold nor negligent, neither
        make complaints of  your legitimate
        rulers if you will not step forward to support us. Let us bestir ourselves, the
        government requires a head; let us create one to whom the standard of justice
        shall 4be intrusted as well as the power to make it respected. Let a thousand
        citizens be enrolled as his guard, taken in succession from every sesto, who will compel the great to obey those
        long-neglected laws which from time to time have been promulgated to curb their
        insolence and repel their audacity. Let them be deprived of every public honour
        and office, that to their private prepotency may not
        be added the weight of public authority: let public fame be sufficient to
        condemn them who by terror drive every accuser and witness from the courts, and
        let each individual be responsible for the crimes of his kinsman, since all
        unite in opposition to the laws. Such laws would be cruel in any well-ordered
        society but in extreme evils pity is more dangerous than rigour. Would to
        heaven that we could all live amicably; but this proud aristocracy not only
        scorns our society and tramples on our laws, but like some wild ferocious
        animal lashes its own sides and roars with ungovernable fury: look at its own
        fierce conflicts and deadly feuds, struggles for power led on by private hate :
        look at the broils, the wounds, the murders hangs on our frontier to divert attention
        from domestic good, let us therefore improve an occasion the neglect of which
        may doom us to everlasting sorrow.”
  
       This address
        was heard with that deep interest which a common sentiment of danger instils
        into the multitude, filling each individual heart with a general spirit of
        resistance to the oppressors: a commission was immediately appointed to revise
        the statutes and report on the efficiency of existing laws for the maintenance
        of order and prompt execution of justice. Such commissions were not new; by an
        ancient custom of Florence these courts, then called “Ordini d’ Arbitrate” or “courts of arbitration,” were periodically formed with
        complete legislative authority for such a revisal and
        alteration of the laws as the progress of society or other change of
        circumstances rendered necessary. The Podestà Taddeo de’ Bruxati of Brescia and Currado da Soncino of Milan, captain
        of the people, were joined to the Priors in this office and the result of their
        labour was a code of regulations called the “Ordinances of Justice” (Ordinamenti della Giustizia)
        by which the aristocracy was at once reduced from its palmy state of insolence
        to complete subjection. It was decreed that none but real merchants or
        tradesmen should thenceforth be elected priors, and that every nobleman, even
        every family, if any of its members enjoyed the dignity of knighthood, should
        be excluded from the government: the office of prior could not be refused, and
        an oath faithfully to execute its duties was ordered to be taken before the
        Captain of the People who with the old priors, the consuls of the superior
        trades, and the assistance of such respectable citizens as they pleased to call
        in, was to elect a prior from each sesto every
        two months as usual. Two members of the higher trades were joined with the above
        from every sesto and from amongst them was
        elected the gonfalonier of justice, but by secret vote, which became null if
        any of his family were amongst the seignory. Thirty-three of the noblest
        families of Florence were permanently excluded from the office of prior without
        even the power of recovering their civic rights by the exercise of a trade; and
        the government was authorised to add the names of any others who by their
        conduct should render themselves subject to the action of the new law, so that
        the list soon augmented to seventy-two families. This exclusion from political
        power was founded not only on their lawless insolence and contempt for every
        social obligation, but also on their partiality as ministers of the country
        wherever their own order was in question; and it became a common subject of
        complaint with the people that no energy was ever displayed by the priors while
        a nobleman was amongst them.
  
       When a crime
        was committed by one of the aristocracy public fame alone, as Macchiavelli
        seems to assert, or the notoriety of the fact supported by two witnesses as we
        learn from every other writer, were sufficient to condemn him, and his
        relations became answerable for his crime: if fined they were forbidden to aid
        him in discharging the penalty, and a subsequent peace with the offended party
        did not save the culprit. If the punishment were pecuniary five years’
        prohibition from office was added; but if a citizen were killed or badly
        wounded the gonfalonier and podesta with all the civic guard were ordered to
        proceed to the offender’s house and destroy it without mercy.
            
       Finally to
        secure the liberty of accusation without fear of personal consequences, two
        boxes called “Tamburi” were placed at the residences of the podestà and captain
        of the people respectively for the reception of secret charges against the
        great; and the latter in consequence of their own quarrels were unable to
        oppose such injustice.
            
       These laws were
        unjust because they entailed the offences of criminal fathers upon unoffending
        children, and they were impolitic in leaving no room for repentance, but on the
        contrary they exasperated even to desperation a high-spirited and powerful body
        whose faculties might have been employed to the public advantage; still they
        show how sharply the community had been goaded into this course of vengeance
        when a man of Giano’s character became the author of so rigorous a decree.
            
       A sheet of
        parchment filled with even the most admirable regulations is still mere
        parchment unless supported by an armed force, or else by public opinion, of
        which it is or ought to be the concentrated expression; but in this instance
        both were necessary, and one produced the other. The citizens were divided into
        twenty companies of fifty men each, afterwards increased to a hundred, and
        ultimately to two hundred; making a national guard of four thousand men under
        the Gonfalonier of Justice, so called from the “gonfalon” or standard of
        justice by which he was always preceded. This banner was marked with a red
        cross in a white field and was substituted for the two ancient “Vexilli” or flags of justice, as the present guard was for
        the two thousand infantry previously attached to them: each company had smaller
        flags with a similar device, and at the sound of the Campana all were bound to
        assemble in arms (provided at the public charge) under the window of the
        Gonfalonier where the great banner of justice floated.
  
       This magistrate
        was essentially civil, not military, though encompassed by all the circumstance
        of war: his force was the embodied will of the community arrayed against the
        enemies of justice and the disturbers of public tranquillity. It was necessary
        to have attained the age of forty-five before a citizen could be elected to the
        office of gonfalonier of Florence, the highest dignity of the republic: he was
        obliged to live with the priors but had no power beyond them in debate; his
        great authority being at the head of armed citizens in execution of the laws.
        Thus aristocratic vice not only strengthened the freedom it was endeavouring to
        destroy but laid the foundation of its own ruin, for the rank of noble now
        became a positive detriment and almost a mark of infamy: it is possible that
        even the most guilty amongst them may not have deserved such treatment, (yet
        there is an old prejudice in favour of ancient lineage and illustrious birth
        that tells strongly for the people) but it shows how solicitous any privileged
        order should be to conceal those offensive powers which an intelligent public
        only suffers while unmolested by their exercise; when made more prominent by a
        contemptuous demeanour, without any peculiar excellence in parties, they will
        undermine what they are meant to support and ultimately ruin the edifice.
            
       The first
        decided act of the new government was against the powerful family of Galigaj one of whom in France had killed a member of
        the ignoble house of Benivieni: on the news of this
        Dino Compagni the historian, who was the third gonfalonier, immediately
        proceeded to the dwellings of that family and destroyed them. This was a sharp
        beginning and not universally approved of by the capricious spirit of the time,
        so that it became difficult to act; for when property was totally demolished
        according to law, it was exclaimed against as cruelty, and if partially spared the
        gonfalonier was a coward: justice was therefore frequently sacrificed to
        personal fear.
  
       Although the
        great were so reprehensible the people themselves were far from immaculate; the
        former were bold, insolent, tyrannical, but open; many of the latter unjust,
        cunning, selfish and dishonest; as well as turbulent proud and ambitious : the
        legal profession in every department was especially noted for its misdeeds, and
        the judges interpreted the laws as suited their own convenience; the whole
        fraternity of butchers was particularly notorious for its insolence, brutality,
        dishonesty and turbulence. To such people the conscientious and impartial, but
        searching reforms of Giano della Bella were anything but welcome after the
        great aristocratic enemy had once been humbled: many therefore who had joined
        him against the nobles began to tremble when the course of his public measures
        was likely to impinge upon their own peculations; jealous adversaries started
        up on every side and the aristocracy was much too sagacious not to take
        advantage of the occasion. The nobles hated him as a deserter from his order and
        the destroyer of their power, and this hate was augmented by his increasing
        severity; for the people exulted in their humiliation and the biting character
        of the laws against them, the effects of which became so powerful and
        indiscriminate that no accused person could now escape punishment without the
        government being abused for its partiality; thus the simple act of accusation
        was virtually sufficient to condemn a noble.
            
       Indignant at
        this injustice the aristocracy complained that “if a nobleman’s horse happened
        to whisk its tail in the face of a citizen; or if one pushed another by
        accident in a crowd, or even if children of different ranks quarrelled at their
        amusements, accusations were instantly preferred: and were their houses to be
        demolished for such trifles?” But hate had destroyed justice, humanity, and
        sound policy, and their grievances were utterly disregarded: Giano seems to
        have pushed rigour to excess, and it is even asserted that in one instance his
        public authority was made subservient to private and personal revenge : whether
        this charge be just or not is now difficult to prove; he probably was not
        perfect; but he belonged to the unhappy race of reformers and fell a victim to
        the malice of implacable enemies and the treachery of pretended friends: he
        fearlessly attacked abuses that others shrunk from, and defended measures that
        others cowardly abandoned, but all in the cause of justice; wherefore being as
        much feared by his political enemies as he was honoured by the people he pushed
        boldly forward in the cause of freedom and reform.
            
       Thus tormented,
        the great were deep in their threats of vengeance, and these being reported,
        both fear and anger united in giving a keener edge to the sword of retributive
        justice. The Magalotti, a powerful race and kinsmen
        of Giano, were at the head of the Popolani, many of
        whom although unadorned with the title of nobles were ranked amongst the great
        in consequence of their wealth and influence; and some of them as forward as
        the genuine nobility themselves, to ruin Giano and trample on their humbler
        countrymen. These faithless citizens and indignant nobles held separate
        councils for a common object: the first idea of both was to kill the reformer;
        but as bis works were more formidable than his person and their fear of the
        plebeians great, a more effective and subtle course was resolved on in both
        conclaves.
  
       It so happened
        that the principal conspirators amongst the Popolani were united with Giano della Bella in the commission, then sitting in the
        church of Ognissanti, for the revisal and reform of the laws; and there, while absent, it was resolved to make use of
        his public virtue for his own destruction. “He is a just man” they cunningly
        exclaimed, “let us explain to him the wicked actions of the butchers, an
        evil-disposed race and fruitful in villany.” At the
        head of this trade was a rich butcher or cattle-dealer, called Pecora, who
        supported by the Tosinghi family displayed infinite
        arrogance, menaced the priors and openly practised every sort of deceit, to the
        great detriment of the community. These things being brought under the peculiar
        notice of Giano he impatiently exclaimed “Perish the city sooner than tolerate
        such villany”, and immediately devised new laws to
        restrain them. A similar appeal was then made to his sense of justice against
        judges, notaries, and all the legal profession, who intimidated the syndics
        that periodically investigated their official conduct, and menaced those that
        would expose their peculation and punish their misdeeds; who procured new and
        unnecessary appointments, and maintained causes in court for three and four
        years without giving judgment; so that even if wishing to relinquish a suit,
        parties could not do it in consequence of the dexterity with which they
        entangled the proceedings and drew their profits from delay. “Let new laws be
        made to bridle so much iniquity” replied Giano indignantly; whereupon
        information was instantly given to the lawyers and butchers of Florence that he
        was preparing for their destruction. Thus the train was laid.
  
       This eagerness
        of lawyers to reform the very abuses by which they throve, probably excited
        suspicion in their colleague Dino Compagni who quickly detected the conspiracy
        and informed della Bella; at the same time advising him not to play their game
        by pushing these laws further for the moment, but attend to his personal safety.
        “Rather let the city perish than suffer such iniquity to continue”, was still
        the fearless answer of Giano.
            
       Those of the
        commission who were not in the plot wished to examine further ere they
        legislated; but “with more boldness than wisdom,” says Dino Compagni, Giano
        threatened them even with death and imprudently hurried the affair. Meanwhile
        the nobles were discussing this same subject in the church of Saint James
        beyond Amo, Messer Berto Frescobaldi, who had formerly insulted della Bella,
        giving his voice for death. “These dogs of the people” said he, “have deprived
        us of honours and office, and not daring to enter the palace we cannot plead
        our own cause; nay if we even venture to chastise a servant our houses are
        instantly demolished! Wherefore I advise that we should break away at once from
        such disgraceful bondage: let us arm for the attack and slaughter friend and
        foe amongst the people, nor hold our hand as long as we can find any to slay,
        so that neither ourselves nor our children may be overcome by them.” This
        advice although approved and applauded was thought too hazardous and they
        resolved to try and disunite the community by propagating the factious cry of
        “The state being in danger from the Ghibelines ” and the establishment of
        secret agents to corrupt the people and set them against Giano della Bella.
            
       These
        machinations continued working until the beginning of 1295 when a sudden
        movement of the populace brought everything to a crisis: Corso Donati in a
        private feud had killed and wounded some of the followers of Simone Galastrone, and complaints were made to the Podestà by both
        parties; but either from the corruption of that officer or his judge, Corso was
        acquitted and Galastrone whose servant had been
        killed, was condemned. The citizens saw this injustice, attributed it to
        bribery, denounced the Podesta as their enemy, ran to the palace with fire in
        their hands, and cries of “Death, death to the Podestà!”, and soon destroyed
        everything within the building. Corso Donati and the magistrate escaped by the
        roof but the whole tumult is said to have been more the effect of hatred to the
        former than any regard for justice.
  
       Giano della
        Bella who was with the priors when this riot began instantly mounted his horse
        and attempted to save the Podestà, confident that the people would listen to
        him; but on the contrary he too was threatened and compelled to retire: the
        confusion lasted until next day, while nobles, judges, and notaries, with many
        of the more powerful citizens, all detesting Giano, were industriously laying
        the blame entirely to him. New priors were suddenly elected, even before the
        old had finished office, and all enemies of the reformer. No sooner were they
        installed than an accusation was preferred against Giano for insurrection, for
        attacking the Podestà, and other infractions of his own ordinances of justice:
        the populace armed to protect him, and his brother had already put himself at
        their head when Giano perceiving that he was betrayed by those he most trusted,
        urged by his kinsman Magalotti who was secretly
        jealous of his power, and being moreover averse to commence a civil war,
        retired on the fifth of March 1295 not without expectations of being recalled
        by a people for whom he had thus sacrificed himself. He was condemned with all
        his family, and died in exile! His houses were ruined and several other
        citizens shared his fate; whence, says Villani, “Much mischief accrued to our
        city; and especially to the people, because he was a more loyal and
        straightforward ‘Popolano’ and lover of the public
        good than any man in Florence, and one who added to the common prosperity
        without subtracting anything from it. He was presumptuous, and vindictive, and
        revenged himself on the Abati his neighbours with the power of the community:
        and it may be that for these transgressions he was, by his own laws, unfairly
        and without a crime condemned by the unjust. And this is a striking example for
        those citizens who are to come, to beware of attempting to make themselves
        masters over their fellow citizens and of being too presumptuous; let them be
        content with an equality of citizenship. For the same people who assisted them
        to ascend will certainly betray them and try to pull them down: and in ancient
        and modem times it has ever happened at Florence that whosoever made himself
        head of the people has always been humbled by the same people, who are never
        inclined to give due praise or acknowledge merit.”
  
       Many of Giano’s
        friends were fined, others banished like himself for contumacy: he was praised
        and blamed by the citizens as suited their faction or character, but sincerely
        lamented by the poor who in his fall saw the ruin of their own influence and
        the loss of their only disinterested advocate.
            
       From that time
        all the authority of government remained in the hands of the powerful and
        wealthy burgesses or “Popolani Grazzi”
        as they now began to be called, and so bitter was the feeling of the leaders of
        this faction against their exiled countryman that not being content with
        setting a price on the head of him and his adherents, they even included his
        daughter Caterina, wife of Galassino de’ Castellani,
        in her father’s condemnation.
  
       During these
        important transactions the substance of Florentine peace and prosperity seems
        to have been scarcely affected; a few prominent actors opposed by a distinct
        faction, although unsteady in their several parts performed a drama of deep and
        agitating interest; but except at intervals, the great body of the people were
        off the stage, as mere spectators, or following their own private occupations.
        Peace was concluded on favourable terms with Pisa, the war of Arezzo had
        virtually ceased, and Tuscany was once more in profound tranquillity: the
        Guelphs and Count Ugolino’s family were restored,
        Guido of Montefeltro was ungratefully dismissed by the Pisans, and a Podestà or
        captain of the people placed by the members of the Guelphic league for four
        years over that republic. A reciprocal exemption from all tolls and duties
        whether on goods or person (a remarkable feature in all Florentine treaties)
        was agreed to by Pisa and the cities of this confederacy. Thus peace and
        commerce were reestablished, and so little interrupted by the internal broils
        of Florence that its gates were thrown open by day and by night; no tolls were
        demanded; and the government in order to avoid new taxes sold the ancient walls
        and certain lands within and round the town to those whose possessions were
        contiguous. Besides this the republican dominions were increased by the
        submission of Poggibonzi, Certaldo, Gambassi, and Catignano; by
        the capture of seven towns with their respective territories from the Counts
        Guido, and many more in the Mugello unjustly retained by that family, as well
        as the Ubaldini and other rural chieftains. New hospitals were founded, new
        gates opened, new churches erected, aqueducts constructed, the Baptistry
        repaired and beautified, and the convenience of the city improved; all signs of
        a strong current of national prosperity beneath the troubled surface, for the
        new walls alone were a work of exceeding cost and labour, and the enormous
        fabric of Santa Croce was a monument only surpassed by the more splendid cathedral.
        Powerful, energetic, and feared by the neighbouring states Florence led the
        Tuscan chivalry and submitted to no appearance of indignity. A criminal had
        absconded and taken refuge at Prato; upon this a single messenger was sent to
        demand the culprit under the penalty of 10,000 lire for any unnecessary delay:
        the people of Prato, to assert their independence, and probably under some
        secret influence from Florentine faction, showed no sign of obedience, upon
        which the republican troops were rapidly armed and ready to enforce submission
        when the malefactor was delivered up and the fine immediately paid.
  
       Amongst other
        regulations of this period the year 1294 was remarkable for the promulgation of
        a law which forbade women to appear personally in any court of justice, and the
        Podestà, Captain of the People, or any other functionary were prohibited under
        a severe penalty from listening to them, because they were “a sex esteemed to
        be very dangerous in disturbing the course of justice”. But there were other
        impediments besides women; the statutes of the city courts had become so
        numerous and contradictory that under the eleventh Gonfalonier Buonaccino Ottabuoni a committee
        of fourteen citizens was appointed to reduce them to order and perspicuity by
        diminishing their number and reconciling discrepancies.
  
       In July 1291
        the empire became vacant by the death of Rodolph of Habsburg and considerable
        dissension arose between the supporters of his son Albert Duke of Austria and
        those of Wenceslaus King of Bohemia; but the dispute was settled by the
        Archbishop of Metz through whose influence Adolphus Count of Nassau was raised
        to the dignity of King of the Romans in May 1292.
            
       In the month of
        April 1292 while indulging in thoughts of eastern wars and sacred conquests
        like many of his predecessors, Pope Nicholas IV was surprised by death: he is
        represented as attached to the Ghibelines, perhaps because he was less of a
        partisan than other pontiffs, but his actions do not support this assertion.
        The Holy See remained unoccupied until July 1294 when Pietro Moroni a poor
        hermit of the Abruzzi mountains, a man of great sanctity, was chosen and
        assumed the tiara under the name of Celestine V but from his extreme age and
        inexperience, his habits of solitude, and contempt of worldly grandeur; he
        renounced the papacy in the following December and returned to his cell.
        Celestine was succeeded by Benedetto Gaetano a man of learning and sagacity who
        took the name of Boniface VIII played a conspicuous part in Italian story and
        was damned, while yet living, by the bitter pen of Dante.
            
       After the fall
        of Giano della Bella the seignory renewed the Guelphic League principally
        through fear of a French knight of bold and enterprising character called Jean
        de Chalon who .being sent with the Pope’s approval as
          imperial vicar in Tuscany had joined the Ghibelines of Arezzo: he was
          originally introduced by the nobles with five hundred followers into Florence
          to assist them against Giano; but this aid proving unnecessary they attempted
          to defraud him of his reward; he then joined the Aretines and with the Pope’s
          interference ultimately succeeded in gaining the above post: in return he
          agreed to betray the Aretines, but on being discovered retired with all the
          wealth he had amassed into Burgundy.
  
 The nobles were
        now fully convinced of the pernicious effects of disunion and hastened a
        general reconciliation, being determined to vindicate the rights of their
        order: wherefore assembling their retainers, or “Fedeli” as they were then
        called, and adorned in all that pomp and magnificence of arms then so
        prevalent, they demanded as a matter of form some mitigation of the ordinance
        of justice; but having already alienated the plebeians from the “Popolani Grassi” on account of the latter’s desertion and
        betrayal of Giano, they hoped to have the support of the former against a
        government which had so deceived them, and moreover kept all the power to
        themselves. The nobles were too sagacious to believe that the popolani were really inclined without compulsion to
        relax these laws, merely because they had found it convenient to unite with
        them in ruining Giano della Bella; but they entirely mistook the temper of the
        plebeians who though more easily led astray by appearances are yet generally
        correct in their object, and now suspected a coalition of both parties against
        themselves; wherefore having previously sent six trusty men to join in and
        watch the deliberations of the priors, one from each sesto,
        and resolving to withstand the nobles, immediately took to their arms.
  
       The nobles also
        assembled in three divisions: at the Mercato-Nuovo under Geri Spini, at the
        church of San Giovanni under Forese degli Adimari; and under Vanni de’ Mozzi at
        the piazza of that family beyond Arno which commanded the bridge of Rubaconte. The citizens drew up at the palace of the Podestà
        opposite to the Abbey, and at that of the priors who then occupied the houses
        of the Cerchi behind San Brocolo: the nobles were
        superior in cavalry, arms, and military skill; the people in numbers and
        determination, yet both were doubtful of the event. At this crisis some friars
        and other moderate men came forward as the friends of either side and effected
        a reconciliation: the nobles were reminded that they had lost their power; not
        from the presumption of the people but their own crimes which had driven the
        latter to extremities; that the attempt to recover by violence what had been
        forfeited by misconduct was an error worse than the first and would only ruin
        the city without gaining their object; but on the contrary tend to render their
        condition worse: for as nobility was only a name;—a mere opinion,—sustained by
        reputation, not force; the very moment that a people suffering from its misused
        power lose their habitual reverence for its antiquity, it becomes a gaudy
        bubble and breaks with the breath of an infant. The plebeians on the other hand
        were advised to consider the claims of the nobles; to reject any that
        threatened their own liberty, but not to shut their ears to the rights of
        justice and lenity which was all that their adversaries now demanded: the
        former however were not so easily convinced, they had been oppressed by one and
        deceived by the other party, and it was only the authority of the Priors and
        Gonfalonier Veri Baldonini that finally succeeded in
        restoring peace with this slender concession; namely, that for the future three
        witnesses should be necessary to prove the notoriety of aristocratic crime;
        even this was too much for the plebeians and shortly after annulled, yet it
        completely unveiled aristocratic weakness and the growing strength of the
        people. Both parties thenceforward only sought the means of overcoming each
        other, the people being ever uppermost, and for further security partly
        disarmed the nobles by compelling them to sell their large cross-bows, (a very
        expensive and much prized weapon) to the republic.
  
       All this
        induced many of the quieter and less powerful aristocrats to demand admittance
        into the class of popolani, a favour willingly
        granted to those who could be trusted, because it thinned the opposite ranks
        and increased general security. The plebeians, angry and disappointed at any
        compromise haring been made with the great, insulted the seignory when they
        retired from office and called aloud for the return of Giano della Bella : this
        alarmed the Popolani so much that the Pope’s
        interference was implored, and Boniface who hated Giano for some bold
        proceedings against the church when Podestà of Pistoia, threatened every body
        with excommunication who presumed to advocate his cause.
  
       Things however
        generally remained tranquil and the country improved in commerce and prosperity
        until the year 1300 when the spirit of civil discord again spread its sable
        pinions: taking advantage of this calm, and fearful of an alliance between the
        nobles and the potent families of Pazzi and Uberti in the Upper Val d'Arno, the
        government resolved to hold them in check by the erection of two strong towns
        on their frontier; the first between Figgine and
        Monte Varchi which after the tutelar saint was called San Giovanni; the other
        on the Arno over against the states of the Uberti, named Castlefranco:
        to the inhabitants of both was granted an exemption from all public
        contributions for ten years which soon nursed them up into places of
        considerable size and importance.
  
       Troops were
        sent in 1296 to the defence of Bologna which had been for some time in
        hostility with the Marquis of Ferrara, but being fearful of new troubles, with
        the express condition of not being employed in offensive warfare. The next year
        a treaty of alliance was concluded with Perugia; the Guelphic League was
        renewed, and the strong castle called the Palazzo Publico (now Palazzo
        Vecchio) was commenced in 1298 for the residence and security of the seignory,
        which in the late disturbances had been exposed to the attacks of the nobles.
        By demolishing the houses of the Uberti and other Ghibelines, and purchasing
        the dwellings of the Foraboschi, space was gained for
        the present palace and the square before it: the resources of Florence must
        have been at this time immense, when notwithstanding wars and domestic broils
        she was able to carry on nearly at the same time the building of Santa Croce,
        the cathedral, the church of Ortosanmichele, the Palazzo Vecchio and the vast
        circuit of with all their numerous and lofty towers, besides several other
        minor improvements. These walls had been discontinued after 1285 but were now
        resumed with fresh ardour in conjunction with the other great works which still
        remain, to excite our admiration of their grandeur solidity and beauty.
  
       The city, says
        Macchiavelli, was never in a more flourishing state than at this epoch; full of
        people, riches, and reputation; all Tuscany, as friends or subjects, obeyed
        her; thirty thousand citizens able to carry arms in the capital with seventy
        thousand more in the rural districts were ready to take the field at the
        slightest signal from the government: and although anger and suspicion
        separated the nobles and the people, their effects were slight, scarcely even
        perceptible, and the great body of inhabitants lived in peace and unity.
            
       The result of
        this tranquillity was, that literature flourished, men of talent appeared,
        painting revived, the arts were cultivated, the citizens vied with each other
        in the splendour of their domestic architecture, and the name of a Florentine
        merchant became respected throughout the world: Florence feared neither her own
        exiles nor the imperial power, nor any single state in Italy; but strong in her
        democratic rule and free institutions, would have rolled smoothly forward if
        her path had not been once more broken up by the violence of domestic faction.
            
       
         
       Cotemporary
        Monarchs.—England : Edward I.—Scotland : John Baliol, (1292).—Interregnum to 1306.—France:
        Philip IV., (1225).—Castile and Leon : Sancho IV. Ferdinand IV., (1295).—Aragon
        : James II., (1291).— Portugal: Dennis, (1279).-—Germany : Adolphus, (1292).
        Albert I., (1298). Popes: Nicholas IV., (1287). Celestine V., (1294). Boniface
        VIII., (1294). Greek Emperor: Andronicus, (1281).
            
       
         
       
         
       
         
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