|  BOOK THE FIRST.CHAPTER
        XVIII.
            
      FROM
        A.D. 1329 TO A.D. 1336.
            
      
         
       The general
        tranquillity which followed these popular reforms enabled government to turn
        its attention almost exclusively to war, as all good Guelphs were indignant at
        the conduct of the Bavarian “who called himself emperor,” for he had not only
        introduced his Anti pope Nicholas V with almost divine honours into Pisa; on
        the third of January; but soon after formally deposed and excommunicated the
        reigning pontiff along with Robert King of Naples and the Florentine republic.
        The Pisans also shared this indignation because they had assisted, though very
        unwillingly, in so sacrilegious a proceeding, wherefore the new general Count
        Beltram del Balzo, then stationed at San Miniato, was
        ordered to waste their country; and this he accomplished without any opposition
        from Louis who under the mask of listlessness was secretly engaged in
        organising a dangerous conspiracy against Florence. It was conducted by Ugolino
        de’ Ubaldini with whom some citizens of little note had agreed to betray the
        city and set fire to the more distant quarters; while all were busy with the
        flames, two hundred soldiers previously introduced under a certain Giovanni del
        Sega, were to rush from their concealment, occupy the Prato Gate, admit the
        exiles and also a thousand imperial horse with a foot-soldier behind each. All
        these were under a German marshal’s command who was immediately to “correr la terra” an operation already
        described as the mark of military possession and supremacy. The plot was
        revealed by two of Sega s accomplices, and this conspirator who had been
        selected for his dexterity in such matters, was executed with characteristic
        cruelty by being “planted” alive in the earth, head downwards; but not until
        after his flesh had been torn from the bones with red-hot pincers. His
        betrayers were rewarded with a donation of 2000 florins and the right of
        earning offensive and defensive arms; a privilege of no small importance, and
        just denied to all the rest of the community in consequence of frequent
        robberies and other disorders. Amongst these the practice of natural heirs
        habitually murdering their own relations the sooner to enjoy an inheritance,
        appears to have been frequent; but against such offenders a more severe and
        ignominious punishment was directed.
  
       The effect of
        this conspiracy was to add new flame to Florentine rage against Louis whose
        unpopularity was so great that one powerful rallying-point was deemed
        sufficient to unite many places in rebellion against him. A commissioner was
        therefore appointed with full authority to make alliances between the
        Florentine republic and every person place or community that would revolt; and
        a further promise of unmodified indemnity for any previous injury or other
        offences committed against the commonwealth. To give it greater weight and
        solemnity thirteen citizens were afterwards joined in the commission, while
        Count Beltram was commanded again to ravage the Pisan territory and with
        greater severity in consequence of the antipope’s recent anathemas. The  Company of Cerruglia’
        as the German mutineers were now called, being still unsatisfied, Azzo Visconti
        who was then in the imperial court, offered Louis a large subsidy to liquidate
        these claims provided he were reinstated in the government of Milan for which
        he had been long a supplicant: the conditions being accepted an officer was
        sent in the middle of January with Visconti to receive 30,000 florins for the
        company; but this man absconded with the greater part, and Azzo intent on
        establishing his own authority made no haste about the remainder, so that
        Louis seeing himself thus slighted immediately marched to Lombardy.
  
       After the
        expulsion of Castruccio’s wife and children he had sold Lucca to their kinsman
        Francesco Castracani for 22,000 florins, but his Italian influence was waning
        fast: the house of Este hitherto his friends were disgusted, especially at the
        creation of an antipope, and reconciled themselves to the church; Pisa was soon
        after pardoned by Pope John as a reward for treacherously delivering the
        antipope Nicholas into his hands; Azzo Visconti also, stung by his own and his
        father’s wrongs and angry at the treatment of Castruccio’s children, was deep
        in negotiations with the court of Avignon, and a general coolness pervaded
        Lombardy. Louis marched from Pisa on the eleventh of April and the mutineers
        seeing no hopes of an accommodation chose the hostage Marco Visconti; who was
        one of the most popular and boldest warriors of the day; as their leader and
        resolved to shift for themselves. Partly stimulated by the intrigues of Pino
        della Tosa and the Bishop of Florence who promised them a large sum of money,
        they conspired with Castruccio’s old German garrison of L’Agosta,
        the citadel-palace of Lucca, and being secretly admitted, soon drove Francesco
        Castracani from the town. Marco then sent to demand payment of Florence and at
        the same time offered to sell the city for 80,000 florins on the sole condition
        of pardoning Castruccio’s sons and allowing them to live as private citizens.
  
       This proposal
        filled Florence with quarrels in consequence of the violent opposition of
        Simone della Tosa a relation but jealous enemy of Pino’s: it was finally, and
        would have been wisely rejected, if the system of non-interference had been
        afterwards rigidly pursued; but as the mutability of the Florentines was
        proverbial, opinions soon changed, and that which might at this time have been
        had for little, was afterwards vainly attempted at the expense of blood,
        treasure, national honour, and almost of national liberty. They managed better
        in their transactions with Pistoia the loss of which was more keenly felt than
        any other of Castruccio’s conquests: Filippo Tedici and other friends of that
        celebrated chief laid just made a partially successful attempt to recover
        possession of the town in the name of his sons; but their enemies the
        Panciatichi, Muli, Gualfreducci, and Vergellesi, although Ghibelines, resolved
        to reestablish the old alliance between Pistoia and Guelphic Florence. A treaty
        was therefore concluded in May, by which the latter remained in possession of
        Carmignano, Montemurlo, Artimino, Tizzana and other strongholds to which in common with Pistoia all exiles were restored:
        moreover the Pistoians voluntarily intrusted the custody of their city to n
        Florentine guard and governor appointed by that republic. Jacopo Strozzi was
        therefore made commissioner with orders to create several knights of the
        leading Ghibeline families in the name of the commonwealth and make them a
        present of 2000 florins each; a very popular act which excited much friendly
        feeling and was accompanied with great public rejoicings in both capitals; but
        ever after this although nominally independent Pistoia really ceased to be any
        longer a free community.
  
       To the recovery
        of Pistoia succeeded the pacification of Val-di-Nievole which with Florentine assistance had been conquered by Lucca in 1281. In this
        romantic district the ancient walls and castles of those restless times now add
        new beauties to the quiet scenery where they once appeared as bold and
        formidable actors; for after Castruccio’s death that people made a confederacy
        called the “League of the Val-di-Nievole” composed of
        Montecatini, Buggiana, Uzzano,
        Colle, Il Cozzile, Massa, Montesommano, Montevettolino, and Pescia; who seeing the reduced
        condition of Lucca, and the present tranquillity of Pistoia under Florentine
        protection quickly followed her example and acknowledged its supremacy.
  
       About the same
        period Pisa with the aid of Marco Visconti expelled the imperial vicar
        Tarlatino da Pietramala and once more recovered her liberty, to the great joy
        of Florence; but more from hatred to Louis than sympathy for Pisa, with which
        however she soon made peace: in the interim Marco Visconti anxious to return
        home attempted again to dispose of Lucca and repaired to Florence for that
        purpose, but the same patriotic or factious opposition still prevailed and
        defeated all his plans. After wasting a month in vain negotiation he was
        presented with 1000 florins and immediately proceeded to Milan where being
        received with enthusiasm by the people, Azzo’s jealousy was roused and he had
        him strangled after a banquet, his body being subsequently thrown out of the
        palace window.
            
       The dread of
        being thus shouldered by so powerful a neighbour as Florence induced Pisa to
        take up this negotiation and precipitately offer 60,000 florins for the state
        of Lucca; but in her eagerness to close the bargain she paid the money without
        tiny hostages or other security for possession and was defrauded of both. This
        audacious attempt to supersede Florence and subjugate a neighbouring state by
        one scarcely emerged from long years of bondage exasperated every one and
        caused a third devastation of the Pisan district, which in the month of August
        enforced a disadvantageous peace, while about the same
          period a third and final offer was unsuccessfully made by the German soldiers
          to dispose of Lucca. Upon this some opulent citizens, and amongst them the
          historian Giovanni Villani, indignant at what they thought an unprincipled
          opposition to this tempting offer, came boldly forward and proposed to advance
          the money themselves if the state would only engage to reimburse them from the
          ordinary revenue of Lucca: but this did not prevail against the party of Simone
          della Tosa; wherefore the soldiers anxious to return home sold the same city,
          which only twelve months before was dominant in Tuscany and dreaded by all
          Italy, to an exiled Ghibeline of Genoa for the paltry sum of 30,000 florins!
          Yet Gherardino Spinola had hardly completed his
          purchase when Florence, who like the dog in the fable would neither have the
          place herself nor allow others to touch it, flared up at this bargain and
          although Spinola immediately offered her either peace or truce, both were
          disdainfully rejected and in the midst of strong political excitement the war
          of Lucca commenced.
  
 In relating
        these events Villani indignantly exclaims against all the hypocritical excuses
        alleged by the governing party opposed to this purchase, who declared they had
        before objected to it from an honest feeling lest reports should be spread
        through the world that Florence from mere love of aggrandisement had purchased
        the city of Lucca. “But in our own opinion,” says this author, “and in that of
        many wiser citizens who have examined the question, that as a compensation for
        all the defeats, injuries and expenses suffered by Florence from Lucca in the
        Castruccian war, no other vengeance could be taken by the Florentines, nor
        greater praise, nor more glorious fame could spread through the world than the
        being able to say, that the merchants and private citizens of Florence with
        their own money had purchased Lucca and their sometime enemies, her citizens
        and subjects, as their bond-slaves. “But whom God hates he deprives of reason
        and will not permit to act wisely; for perhaps, or without a perhaps, their
        sins were not yet purged, nor their pride humbled, nor the usury nor ill-gotten
        gains of the Florentines sufficiently diminished to prevent their spending and
        consuming more in war by pursuing their quarrel with the Lucchese, when for
        every birthing that Lucca would have cost, a hundred or more, nay we may say an
        infinity was spent afterwards by the Florentines in the said war as we shall
        mention in its place. Whereas with the above-named loan, neither spent nor
        lost, such high and honourable vengeance might have been taken on the people of
        Lucca by having purchased them as slaves, and more than slaves, with their
        possessions; and afterwards at their own expense, and under our yoke bestowed
        on them both peace and pardon and made them freemen and companions, as they
        were in ancient times with the Florentines”.
            
       The strong
        fortress and pass of Serravalle which Pistoia voluntarily surrendered for three
        years to Florence gave a free entrance to the Lucchese states, and together
        with the league of Val-di-Nievole enabled her to push
        on the siege of Montecatini more vigorously which, though a member of that
        confederacy, had been incited by Spinola to revolt: but it was large, strong,
        well defended, and not easily taken; Spinola attempted several times to succour
        it but failed, and nearly lost Lucca itself by a bold assault of Castruccio's
        sons who for many hours were in possession of all the city except the fortress
        of L’Agosta. Montecatini held out for eleven months
        against a close and rigorous blockade by an immense army and vast lines of
        circumvallation; extending no less than fourteen miles, and backed by ditches
        sufficiently capacious to admit the waters of three rivers, the Pescia, Gora,
        and the Nievole. About the middle of June 1330 it
        surrendered and scarcely escaped total destruction by a decree of the
        Florentine people: it was however ultimately spared, partly because of its
        importance as a military station, and partly from old recollections of its
        having been the only place in Tuscany that generously received the Guelphic
        fugitives from Lucca after the battle of Monteaperto; and thus exposed itself
        to immediate enmity, and even subsequent conquest by that republic: Montecatini
        was therefore saved and incorporated into the Florentine state.
  
       During the
        continuance of this siege the emperor after an unsuccessful campaign against
        Milan and its subject states, managed while at Pavia, Cremona, and Parma in the
        months of October and November to organise a very powerful conspiracy at
        Bologna for the purpose of snatching that important city from the hands of the
        pope’s legate and nephew Bertrand de Poïet. The plot was personally directed by
        Count Hector of Panigo under the influence of the
        Rossi of Parma, one of which family was kept a close prisoner by the cardinal
        legate, and was too extensive not to have succeeded even after its complete
        detection, had not the arrival of a strong Florentine detachment enabled
        Bertrand to execute his prisoners and overawe the town.
  
       Thus Bologna
        like Florence and the other Italian republics, was ever in peril from civil
        discord or private and personal enmity; and thus a weak point always presented
        itself to external enemies in the swarms of vindictive exiles that infested
        every foreign shite, besides their secret adherents at home. These irritable
        fugitives, boiling up with vindictiveness, were continually intriguing for
        their own restoration, and in their eagerness to join any prince or state
        making promises of everything, no matter how extravagant or false, against
        their native country; the predominant factions at home being at the same time
        harassed by constant fears of plots and new revolutions, dreading external
        aggressions, and in everlasting quarrels amongst themselves.
            
       On the fifth of
        October, about ten weeks after the fall of Montecatini, the Florentines marched
        to Lucca and soon demonstrated to Gherardino Spinola
        that it was not that lordship but his own extraordinary talents which had
        exalted Castruccio Castracani whose mantle he vainly imagined he had secured
        with the rest of his spoils: in the short space of three days they captured the
        fortresses of Poggio, Corruglio, Vivinaia, Montechiaro, San Martino in Colle, and Porcari; thus
        mastering the whole of Castruccio’s former position and encampng two days after under the walls of his capital. The camp was intrenched,
        permanent quarters erected, and every other preparation made for a winter’s
        investment; but one of the first operations was to redeem the honour of
        Florence and revenge Castruccio’s insult by running for the Palio under her
        very walls. Their intention to celebrate these races was publicly proclaimed,
        and as a curious trait of that age’s customs it may be added, that a general
        safe-conduct to all who pleased to issue from the beleaguered town as
        spectators of the games was announced by the Florentines. Multitudes, both
        citizens and strangers, took advantage of this permission to view more nearly
        the insult about to be offered to them ; but the Florentine general had a
        deeper object; he had corrupted a German commander who with two hundred men-
        at-arms took the opportunity of coming quietly over to his standard. This
        treachery threw Spinola into great consternation and the siege proceeded with
        so much vigour that a secret treaty with Florence was begun and nearly
        concluded by the citizens for the surrender of Lucca but being detected and
        disapproved of by Spinola, although his purchase-money was secured, it fell to
        the ground.
  
       This investment
        continued under various commanders until the latter end of February 1331, when
        the old Florentine general Beltram del Balzo who had
        been serving in Lombardy, was again appointed to command the forces: discipline
        had relaxed, disorders occurred ; a mutiny had broken out amongst the Burgundy
        troops and was quelled with great difficulty; a German colonel had deserted to
        Spinola with a hundred horse ; and a strong reenforcement from John king of Bohemia (the same that afterwards fell at Cressy) to whom
        Spinola had offered on certain conditions the lordship of Lucca, was on its
        march to Tuscany, so that Count Beltram considered it necessary to raise the
        siege. The Bohemian’s troops arrived about the beginning of March and
        immediately acted on the offensive; Buggiano was
        abandoned by the Florentines, Cerreto Guidi and other places taken and burnt,
        and their territory ravaged for three days without opposition, but probably
        from treachery in the officers commanding the passes in the Val-di- Nievole.
  
       Spinola
        complaining of King John’s want of faith withdrew from Lucca in disgust and the
        latter found himself in addition to his other numerous acquisitions with a
        secure footing in Tuscany. This extraordinary man the son of Henry the Seventh,
        became king of Bohemia by his marriage with the daughter of Wenceslas II. but
        accustomed to the gallantry of the French court was soon tired and disgusted
        with the rude manners and turbulent disposition of the Bohemians and resided
        in his hereditary dominions. Young, brave, addicted to pleasure and nil the
        military amusements of the age, he became a constant traveller, had great
        personal influence, and mixed with the jxjlitics of
        all Europe without any apparent motive of personal aggrandisement. His
        reputation was high, for he made friends even of his opponents, and had
        recently arrived at Trent on purpose to many his son to the daughter of the
        Duke of Carinthia who had been his competitor for the kingdom of Bohemia. While
        thus employed ambassadors arrived from Brescia to offer him the sovereignty of
        their town for life they having been sorely vexed by the combined powers of
        Azzo Visconti and the two nephews of Cane della Scala who had not been long
        dead. The king of Bohemia eagerly accepted this offer well knowing how much
        might be gained in Italy at that time by any foreign prince who would boldly
        lead a faction; wherefore immediately repairing to Brescia he reconciled all
        parties, restored the exiles, induced Mastino della
        Scala to retire with his troops, and remained in quiet possession of the place.
        Cremona, Pavia, Bergamo, Vercelli, Novara, and even Milan itself became his
        voluntary subjects; Parma Reggio and Modena soon followed the general example,
        and it was during this shower of Lombard cities on his head that Spinola’s
        ambassadors came also to show him the way into Tuscany.
  
       Three envoys
        were immediately despatched to Florence imploring for peace or truce with his
        city of Lucca and adding that as king of Bohemia only, he could not be
        influenced by the friendships or mixed up with the pretensions of his late
        father the Emperor Henry the Seventh. The Florentines were much too calculating
        a nation to follow the general enthusiasm about John of Bohemia, and being then
        intent on disinterring the sacred relics of Saint Zanobi, only replied that the
        Lucchese war was begun at the instance of the pope and king of Naples without
        whose concurrence nothing could be accomplished; King John expecting such a
        reply had already prepared the reenforcement which
        compelled Count Beltram to raise the siege.
  
       The campaign as
        already mentioned went badly for Florence, and notwithstanding the pope’s
        protestations it was evident that he leaned to the king of Bohemia whose
        friendship with the cardinal legate now became notorious, each wanting to
        establish a separate dominion in Italy. Besides this, Florence had been laid
        under an interdict by the latter on account of a quarrel about the church of
        the Impruneta which the cardinal wanted for himself
        in defiance of the Buondelmonti who were its founders and patrons. On the other
        hand Colle from civil discord and private tyranny gave itself up entirely to
        Florence; Fucecchio, Castelfranco, and Santa Croce, did the same; and a quarrel
        having broken out at Pistoia between the Florentine party and their
        antagonists, the former with the troops of that nation at once took military
        possession of the town : the leading Ghibelines then gave Florence absolute
        authority for a year; but ere this period had half elapsed an embassy was sent
        to continue it for two years longer, so content were the Pistoians with their
        governors. Florence indeed fearful of again losing so valuable an acquisition
        tried to guide it by a thread of silk, and continued all the forms of
        government as though Pistoia were still independent: new podestas were elected
        half-yearly, a captain of the guard quarterly; and other functionaries in a
        similar manner. A board of twelve citizens was created and renewed every three
        months which in conjunction with the priors exercised a supreme authority over
        Pistoia ; finally a citadel was erected on that side of the city which looked
        towards Florence and was garrisoned by her troops; thus commenced a subjection
        under the form of voluntary obedience which continued ever after.
  
       About this time
        the Pisans fearful of a new revolution from the external strength and internal
        influence of numerous exiles implored the aid of Florence which notwithstanding
        her former enmity sent them a strong auxiliary force and preserved the town:
        the Ubaldini also quarrelling amongst themselves voluntarily returned to their
        allegiance, and the republic to secure these precarious subjects founded the
        town of Firenzuola on the river Santemo amongst the summits of the Apennines and in the very heart of their wild and
        mountainous country.
  
       Florence in the
        midst of her own misfortunes had always kept an anxious eye on the affairs of
        Lombardy: Cane della Scala, the best, the ablest, the most generous and
        successful of its tyrants, died in July 1329 and was succeeded by his nephews
        Albert and Mastino, but the former rather addicted to
        pleasure than business resigned the cares of government to his brother, who
        inherited more of the talents than the virtues of their predecessor. It was
        therefore with great satisfaction that the Florentines saw John of Bohemia
        compelled to return into Germany in order to check a hostile and powerful
        confederation of his former friends, while the Guelphs of Brescia and Bergamo
        assisted by Mastino della Scala, Azzo Visconti, and
        the lords of Ferrara and Mantua, threw off his jurisdiction in Lombardy. Novara
        and Vercelli were soon after lost in the same manner for the aggrandisement of
        Milan; and thus Guelph and Ghibeline wero strangely united against the emperor’s
        friend, the suspected accomplice of the papal legate, and one who was secretly
        countenanced by the pontiff himself while he repudiated all his proceedings.
        The Florentines were in fact exceedingly alarmed by the union between John of
        Bohemia and Bertrand de Poïet, a reputed son of the pope, and who with his
        connivance were striving to form two separate states in Italy, a design likely
        to prove destructive to their republic; and the Ghibeline lords in attacking
        that monarch found themselves strangely opposed to the enemies of the Guelphic
        Robert and, if possible, more Guelphic Florence.
  
       This community
        of present interest absorbed all other sentiments, and in the month of
        September produced a treaty of alliance between Guelph and Ghibeline; between
        republican Florence and Lombard tyrants; between King Robert and his fiercest
        enemies; and above all between the Florentines and Azzo Visconti, the friend
        and ally of Castruccio, by whose means beyond every other, they had been so
        deeply injured and insulted! Two objects were proposed by this treaty, one to
        get rid of a monarch closely allied to the “Bavarian” and likely if occasion
        suited to introduce that prince again into Italy; the other to partition his
        subject states equally amongst themselves and thus preserve the political
        balance of the Peninsula. Cremona and San Donnino were
        to be conquered for Azzo Visconti; Parma for Mastino della Scala; Reggio for Luigi di Gonzaga of Mantua who had succeeded by a
        bloody revolution in 1328 to Passerino Buonacossi;
        Modena for the lords of Ferrara; and Lucca for the Florentines.
  
       Little of
        importance occurred in Tuscany during the remainder of the year 1332 except a
        generally inglorious campaign and the loss of Barga, which was taken by the
        Lucchese in October with a cost to Florence of 100,000 florins and the
        diminution of her military reputation: but in the beginning of 1333 John of
        Bohemia who as if by enchantment had tranquillised Germany, and made allies of
        the pope and Philip VI of France, appeared at Turin with a powerful army from
        the latter kingdom. This encouraged the legate to make a vigorous attack on
        Ferrara after having defeated the lords of Este at Consandoli;
        but that city being timeously succoured by the confederates he was defeated
        with great loss and many prisoners of high rank, amongst whom were several
        lords of Romagna for whose release he refused to advance the money; and in
        consequence of their very natural disgust; artfully increased by the chiefs of
        the league who dismissed them with two thousand of their followers unransomed; lost the good-will of all Romagna. Forli,
        Rimini, Cesena, Cerna, and Ravenna severally revolted; while the previous
        arrival of King John at Bologna after the dispersion of his French army, had
        only augmented the ill-humour of its citizens: they were compelled to pay him
        fifteen thousand florins by the legate’s command, to secure the cooperation of
        three hundred horsemen under Count d’Armagnac who was
        afterwards made prisoner at Ferrara. A second visit of this king to Bologna
        renewed the general discontent and caused a coolness with the legate which made
        him again quit that city and soon after proceed to Lucca where he levied
        another contribution on the already impoverished inhabitants. After this,
        perceiving the general change of sentiments and his altered fortune, he
        determined to leave Italy, but not empty-handed, and therefore sold Lucca and Parma
        to the Rossi; Reggio to the Fogliani; Modena to the Pii; and Cremona to Ponzino Ponzoni; after which he despatched the German troops with
        his son to Bohemia and retired himself in October to Paris, but with a somewhat
        diminished reputation, considering the extraordinary influence that he so
        suddenly acquired and so long maintained over the states of Lombardy.
  
       The Legate had
        endeavoured to detach Florence from the Lombard confederacy but was steadily
        opposed in the councils, and not without reason; for by letters afterwards
        discovered it appeared to have been arranged with King John that Florence
        should be the first and principal victim to their joint ambition, and she
        consequently united with a lesser enemy to oppose the greater and more
        dangerous one.
            
       Florence was
        once again in strength and by the elastic power of industry had completely
        recovered from all her recent misfortunes; while Pisa, still languishing
        unsettled and exhausted, had even been compelled to implore the intervention of
        a Florentine bishop to make her peace with Siena, against whom she was at war
        about the possession of Massa Marittima. Lucca, now almost ruined, could give
        the Florentines no uneasiness, for when the Bohemian forced each individual to
        take an oath of fidelity to him, he found only four thousand four hundred and
        fifty-eight citizens able to bear arms in that once powerful commonwealth. With
        this sole exception Florence was either the sovereign or friend of every state
        in Tuscany: Piero Saccone of the Tarlati ruled Arezzo unmolested; Perugia and
        Siena, were her close allies; Volterra, Pistoia, Colle, San Gimignano,
        and other places, although nominally independent were mere subjects of the
        dominant city; therefore both comparatively and positively Florence enjoyed a
        higher state of power and prosperity than she had ever experienced since the
        memorable close of the thirteenth century. The mind of her citizens again
        turned to joy and festivity; two companies of artisans to the number of three
        and five hundred individuals paraded her streets in fanciful costume, and with
        garlands and songs and dancing, music and other diversions, entertained their
        fellow-citizens for a whole month, while the natural taste and lively spirit of
        the people seemed once more to revel in its accustomed cheerfulness, the happy
        result of universal prosperity.
  
       It would yet
        seem that in Florence far beyond other places, these periodical bursts of
        pleasure were as surely followed by some strong reaction, and whether from war
        faction or great natural calamities the sudden vicissitudes of human life were
        there most quickly and sharply experienced. On the first day of November 1333
        the heavens seemed suddenly to open and pour down an incessant stream of water
        for ninety-six hours successively, not only without diminution but in augmented
        volume: continued sheets of fire with sharp and vivid flashes struck from the
        clouds, while peals of thunder bellowed through the gloom, darting bolt after
        bolt into the earth, and impressing on mankind the awful feeling of universal
        ruin. The natural and superstitious fears of the people were painfully excited
        and all the church and convent bells were tolled to conjure the spirit of the
        storm: men and women were seen clambering on slender planks from roof to roof
        amidst falling tiles, crying aloud for mercy with such an unusual din as almost
        to drown the deeper tones of distant thunder and realise the idea of chaos, or
        the infernal regions of their own great poet. The first burst of the Arno, even
        near its source, broke over rocks and woods and banks and fields, and deluged
        the green plains of Casentino; then sweeping in broad and spreading sheets over
        those of Arezzo flooded all the upper Val-d’Arno, and with mighty force bore
        off mills, and barns and granaries in its course, with every human habitation
        and all that it contained, animate and inanimate, like weightless  things. Trees were uprooted, cattle destroyed,
        men women and children suffocated, the soil washed clean away, and the dark
        torrent thus unnaturally loaded came roaring down on Florence. The tributary
        Sieve after swamping its native vales rushed madly down, with the soil of half
        a province on its wave, and swelled the bounding Arno: the Affrica, the Mensola, every common ditch, now changed to torrents, gave
        force and danger to the flood which rolled its angry surges towards the
        capital.
  
       On the fourth
        of November 1333 the whole plain of San Salvi was covered to the depth of
        twelve, sixteen, and even twenty feet; the waters mounted high against wall and
        tower, and swept round Florence like the tide on a stranded ship. For awhile
        the ramparts withstood this pressure; but presently the antiport of Santa Croce
        gave way; then the main gate, then the Porta Renata; and then, night set in:
        but with it was heard the crash of falling towers and the onward rush of the
        water, which still unchecked swept wavy broad and cold, over the ill-fated
        town. Two hundred and fifty feet of the walls had been crushed by the enormous
        pressure; the red columns of San Giovanni were half buried in the flood; it
        deluged the cathedral, encompassed the altar of Santa Croce, measured twelve
        feet in the court of the Bargello, sapped the shrines of the Badia; covered
        almost all the rest of the city four feet deep, and even beat on the first step
        of the public palace, the loftiest ground in Florence. The town beyond Arno was
        scarcely less submerged; nearly a thousand feet of the ramparts fell and the
        wear, then above Ponte Carraia, was entirely
        destroyed: this brought instant ruin on the bridge itself which all except two
        arches was buried in the wave; that of La Trinita as quickly followed; then the
        Ponte Vecchio, its shops and houses, gold and jewellery, went down in masses: Rubaconte stood in part, but the indignant waters,
        overleaping a lateral arch, shattered the solid quay and dashed against the palace-castle
        of Altafronte, and this with such fury as to bring
        down that solid mansion and most of the houses as far as Ponte Vecchio in one
        continuous ruin. The statue of Mars the rude witness of Buondelmonte’s death tumbled headlong from its base into the tide below and disappeared for
        ever; this increased the public terror, for an ancient prophecy had foretold
        that whenever that crumbling image should move or fall, Florence would be in
        danger.
  
       The whole line
        of houses between the bridges, with many more on every side, next fell like the
        walls of Jericho before the sacred trumpets; nothing but lightning and
        devastation met the eye, nothing but hideous shrieks, the crash of houses, the
        roar of waters and dismal peals of thunder struck the ear; in what this awful
        scene would have ended seemed evident, had not a startling crash with the fall
        of near nine hundred feet of the western ramparts opened a wider vent for the
        waters and saved Florence from destruction.
            
       On the fifth
        all water was drained from the surface; but the cellars, shops, streets, and
        houses, were choked with such a mass of slimy matter as required six months of
        constant labour to remove; and the wells were necessarily deepened to the new
        level of the Arno’s bed, now changed by the scouring torrent: but devastation
        did not stop with the relief of Florence: the whole western plain from Signa to
        Prato became submerged, and men cattle mills and merchandise were again swept
        promiscuously away: the tributary streams loaded with mischief rolled onward to
        the Amo. Pontormo, Empoli, Santa Croce, Castelfranco felt the torrent on their
        walls ; San Miniato, Fucecchio, Montetopoli and Pontadera saw their plains deluged and destroyed; and even
        Pisa itself would have fallen if the Fosso Amonico and other cuts had not divided the course and volume of this fearful tide and
        led it through various channels to the sea.
  
       On the other
        side of Pisa the country was equally troubled at the moment but with ultimate
        benefit; for the whole plain was elevated no less than four feet by this
        alarming inundation: many lives were lost, many more supposed to have been so;
        but in the capital and its neighbourhood only three hundred were identified:
        the injury in property was enormous; bridges, mills, manufactories, corn, wine,
        oil, cloth, precious merchandise, the disappearance of vast tracts of soil and
        all their fruitfulness, left calculation far behind; but it was generally believed
        that since the fifth century no calamity so dreadful had ever been known in
        Florence.
            
       This outbreak
        of nature was not confined to the Arno; the Tiber, Serchio and other rivers
        made similar havoc; nor was the whole mass of water in the first believed to be
        greater than the flood of 1269; but infinitely more destructive in consequence
        of the number of wears that existed within the walls; by these the river’s bed
        had been raised between thirteen and fourteen feet above its natural level, and
        in consequence a decree was immediately made to prohibit any dams being erected
        within a certain prescribed distance of the two bridges above and below the
        town.
            
       For many days
        after the waters had abated a heavy fall of rain, with thunder and lightning,
        still continued in so alarming a manner, that nearly till Florence resorted to
        confession penitence and prayer to avert divine wrath; and so profound was the
        impression of melancholy that it became a question of earnest and universal
        discussion whether this event had arrived in the usual course of nature or by
        the particular judgment of God to punish national wickedness. The astrologers
        attributed it under Providence to certain conjunctions of Saturn and Mars in
        the sign of Virgo and others of the sun and moon, with a variety of celestial
        combinations of malign aspect, all minutely enumerated by Villani: but, it was
        shrewdly demanded of these soothsayers why Florence suffered more than Pisa or
        any other part of Tuscany; and as shrewdly answered, “Principally by your own
        folly in allowing the river to be dammed up for private purposes.” But this was
        still assisted they averred, by some peculiar combinations of heavenly bodies
        with a more distinct and immediate influence on the two capitals. The divines
        admitted that such reasoning might be partially but not necessarily correct,
        except inasmuch as it pleased the Almighty; because, said they, he being far
        removed above celestial things guided them at his pleasure, turning the whole
        frame of nature under his hand as the smith does a piece of iron on the anvil,
        out of which he can produce all the various utensils which his imagination had
        already conceived. By the same rule the whole course of nature, the elements,
        nay even devils themselves, all became in the Divine hands mere instruments for
        punishment, and it is impossible for the dulness of
        our nature to penetrate into either the foreknowledge or preordination of God
        when even his visible and diurnal labours are but impefectly known to us. The Almighty they said had two great objects, mercy and justice;
        for which, he either permitted the course of nature; interrupted it; or soared
        above it as omnipotent Lord of all. Villani maintains this position by a
        variety of scriptural and historical examples, finishing with a serious account
        of some vision of many devils seen on the very evening of the flood by a
        hermit of Vallombrosa who informed him that they were, if God permitted, about
        to destroy Florence on account of its great wickedness.
  
       The nature of
        these transgressions, as we learn from the same author, was abominable and
        highly displeasing in the sight of Heaven on account of the “arrogance of one
        citizen to another in attempting to domineer and tyrannise and despoil; also
        from their excessive covetousness, their public peculation, fraudulent trade,
        and usury in every country; the envy between neighbours and brothers; the
        foolish vanity of women in extravagant ornaments and expense; and universal gluttony
        and excess in drinking,” more wine being then consumed, he asserts, in the
        taverns of one parish than had been drunk by their forefathers throughout the
        whole city. Also on account of the inordinate depravity of both meh and women
        as well as the ingratitude of not acknowledging that their present benefits and
        ascendancy over neighbouring states came entirely from God. “ But,” he adds, “it
        is a great marvel that God sustains us (and perhaps it may appear to many that
        I say too much, and that to me a sinner it may not be permitted so to speak)
        but if we Florentines do not wish to deceive ourselves, all is truth. For how
        many flagellations and disciplines have we not received from the Almighty up to
        this moment, even from the year 1300, without counting those previously
        described in this chronicle. First our division into the black and white
        factions; next the arrival of Charles of France; then the expulsion of the
        Bianchi and its ruinous consequences; subsequently the judgment and danger of
        the great conflagration in 1304, besides numerous others that have happened in
        Florence to the infinite damage of many citizens. Afterwards came Henry of
        Luxembourg and besieged the city in 1312, with the devastation of all our
        country and the consequent mortality both in the town and neighbourhood. This
        was succeeded by the defeat of Montecatini in 1215; then the persecutions of
        the Castruccian war and the defeat of Altopascio in 1325 with its terrible
        effects and the boundless expense sustained by Florence to maintain these wars.
        Then arrived the Bavarian, who called himself emperor, and the dearness and
        scarcity of 1329; more recently the advent of John of Bohemia, and finally the
        present inundation. Now if all the former calamities were condensed in one they
        would not be greater than this last; therefore be ye assured 0 Florentines!
        that so many threatenings and flagellations of God
        are not without the provocation of exceeding wickedness’’.
  
       Tho news of
        this misfortune spread far and wide, and Robert King of Naples the most
        accomplished monarch of his day sympathised with the Florentines in an
        elaborate Latin epistle lull of scriptural texts and moral exhortations, the
        principal object of which was to convince them that “whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every
        son whom he receiveth.” Nevertheless it was
        honourably, even enthusiastically welcomed at Florence and universally
        applauded.
  
       But, as if to
        demonstrate the perverse spirit of the time, even the very day after the waters
        had subsided the city was thrown into confusion, open and unprotected as it
        remained, by an attempt of the Rossi and other noble families beyond the Arno
        to create a revolution and destroy public liberty: this however roused the
        people from their despair; bridges of boats were instantly thrown over the
        river; that of Rubaconte being in possession of the
        nobles; watch and ward were strictly kept, and the great mass of nobility with
        a higher feeling joined zealously in the preservation of peace; public spirit
        quickly regained its place; the people again became strong and the delinquents
        received their deserts.
  
       The resources
        of Florence experienced a severe shock from this incalculable loss of private
        property, that of the public alone amounting to 250,000 florins, while her prostrate
        bulwarks seemed to invite the aggressions of any new Castruccio that might be
        ready to take advantage of her present debility. Luckily the only man whose
        position and talents could have supplied the place of that accomplished leader
        was as yet unprepared for the enterprise and at this moment a close ally of
        Florence, whose enemy he became only when their interests no longer coincided,
        when the possession of Lucca opened for him a wider field of conquest, and when
        the former state already recovered from such depression reassumed her natural
        station and held the political balance of Italy.
            
       Lucca could now
        do nothing by herself, and the hostile chiefs of Lombardy, to whom John of
        Bohemia bad sold the lordship of his remaining cities, were too busy in
        opposing the league to dream of attacking Florence. They had in the previous
        autumn joined in strict alliance with Bertrand de Poïet, Parma, Reggio, Modena,
        Cremona; and Lucca as a dependency of the Rossi; all united in this
        confederacy: but the influence of Bertrand had nearly ceased; his selfish
        ambition, his deceit and tyranny began to be fully appreciated, and his
        administration was everywhere detested. Romagna had already revolted, and
        Bologna itself where a citadel had been erected as a pretended palace of the
        pope, was in a dangerous state of excitement, for both in person and through
        his legate he had assured the citizens of his intention to reside amongst them
        before his projected return to Rome. As in other republics, here also were two
        adverse factions; one, led by Taddeo de’ Peppoli,
        supported the legate; the other under Brandaligi de’ Gozzadini and Colazzo de’ Beccadelli, moved by hatred and perhaps a nobler spirit of
        patriotism than their opponents, determined to revolt. At their instance
        therefore, the Marquis of Ferrara chief of the confederate army, marched to
        Cento and challenged the cardinal to battle: the latter unwilling to refuse
        mustered his Languedocian soldiers by whose means he
        had commanded the town, and with the assurance of immediate support from the
        civic troops sent them forth to combat, two quarters of Bologna being already
        under arms for that purpose. This was the moment chosen for rousing an
        indignant people in the cause of liberty, and eloquence had its usual effect on
        men already prepared to mutiny: every armed foreigner found in the streets was
        immediately put to death and the legate closely blockaded in his massy citadel
        without a hope of salvation. Reduced to the last extremity he would have
        perished in this storm had not the Florentines, stifling all harsher feelings
        in their habitual reverence for the church, despatched four ambassadors and
        three hundred men-at-arms to shelter him. The terrified priest was too happy to
        purchase life by an instantaneous surrender, but it required all the troops and
        influence of the embassy to bring him safe to Florence, from whence he departed
        two days after for Avignon still carrying with him an unmitigated hatred of his
        protectors, which he tricked out in external expressions of endless gratitude.
  
       But his removal
        was far from calming Bologna; there the passions of men after being
        concentrated against a tyrant, but unsatisfied, soon divided against
        themselves, and the Florentines after twice successfully exerting their
        influence to restore tranquillity turned their whole attention to the Lucchese
        war and the correction of domestic abuses, the latter being an eternal source
        of anxiety in this jealous community and yet a continually recurring evil.
            
       Preparations
        were made to besiege Lucca with an auxiliary force from the league which had
        hitherto been successful in Lombardy; but a conspiracy detected amongst the
        German mercenaries there, who bad been bribed by Bertrand de Poïet to deliver Mastino and the other chiefs into his hands, discomposed
        the whole confederacy: the troops of that nation withdrew; each Italian leader
        retired in alarm and suspicion, the Lombard campaign finished, and Florence was
        thus deprived of her expected auxiliaries, which probably saved Lucca from
        Florentine dominion. For some time after this, with the exception of a few
        occasional inroads and the capture of Uzzano, the Lucchese
        war was feebly maintained, but succours went to Mastino della Scala at the siege of Colorino which
        subsequently surrendered, and Parma very soon afterwards fell under his
        control.
  
       At Florence
        notwithstanding all the pains already taken to insure the purity of public
        elections, a practice of allowing one person to hold two distinct offices with
        incompatible duties had become so notorious as to excite universal
        dissatisfaction; this compelled the government to interfere, and a prohibitory decree was passed: the new scrutiny now also
        approached and the ruling faction became proportionally anxious; for discontent
        had taken deep root in consequence of many citizens whose rank and character
        entitled them to a share in national honours, having been from party motives
        excluded. Disturbances were consequently expected in January 1335 wherefore the
        ascendant party resolved to strengthen government by means of an apparently
        beneficial and constitutional force which would they hoped be sufficient to
        curb any opposition to their own authority, but under the specious forms of
        justice and good government. In consequence of this resolution powers were
        demanded and given, to create a set of officers who under the appellation of “Captains
        of the Guard” or “Bargellint” were to watch over the
        public peace, supervise the conduct of returned exiles, and prevent frays,
        gambling, or any other kind of immorality; they had great power, and from the
        nature of their duties were generally unpopular. Two of them superintended the
        Sesto of Oltrarno, the rest were equally distributed
        amongst the other five divisions; each attended by twenty-five armed followers;
        and all being fellow-citizens little suspicion was excited: but when in the
        following year this office, its duties, and more than its existing powers,
        became concentrated in one man and he a stranger, the citizens had full leisure
        to contemplate their own folly and repent of so unguarded a confidence.
  
       During these
        transactions an event of considerable importance had occurred at Avignon in the
        death of Pope John the Twenty-second on the fourth of December, which relieved
        Florence and all Italy from one of her bitterest foes: he had flattered and
        courted that republic while she continued to support Bertrand de Poïet but
        changed with her changing politics, and was detested alike by Germans and
        Italians for his ambition avarice and cruelty; hated by every other nation he
        died unregretted by any. He it was who first usurped the ancient privilege
        which in the eleventh century Gregory VII had taken such pains to confirm, of
        the people and clergy, or the clergy alone electing their own pastors, and
        under the excuse of stopping simony rolled in an enormous revenue from tills
        source alone. He too first exacted the annates or first fruits, to the enormous
        amount of a whole year's salary on promotion or translation to another
        benefice; therefore whenever a rich bishopric became vacant he forbid a new
        election but instantly removed an inferior prelate to the vacancy, and thus
        filling up each empty benefice forged a long chain of preferment, every link of
        which was beaten gold. By these and other means he had amassed the incredible
        sum of 18,000,000 of coined gold alone, besides the value of seven more in
        crowns, mitres, crosses, plate, and precious jewellery; so that a treasure was
        found in his coffers nominally collected for the holy war, a favourite pretence
        of the church, of more than 25,000,000 of golden florins, an immense sum
        withdrawn by a single potentate from the comparatively small European
        circulation of those early days! The existence of such a treasure in the
        coffers of one prince, which however was as we are told, nearly doubled by his
        successor, would perhaps scarcely be believed if Villani, whose brother was one
        of the commissioners employed in its enumeration, did not assert the fact, and
        if he hid not had all the Christian world to draw from.
            
       Pope John in
        gathering this vast heap of mammon, as Villani drily remarks, did not seem to
        bear in mind the words of Christ to his disciples “Let your treasure be in
        heaven not on earthy for where your treasure is there will your heart be
        also" The cruelty and implacability of this pontiff aggravated by the
        tyrannical conduct of his officers, excited the anger of both Germany and
        Italy, and his religious opinions exposed him to the accusation of unqualified
        heresy, particularly his disbelief in the possibility of departed souls
        beholding God before the day of final judgment. The general outcry raised by
        churchmen against him on this account did not however arise from any intense
        interest in the question itself, which still existed as a point of unsettled
        theology and metaphysical argument; but from its more substantial influence on
        ecclesiastical revenues the touchstone of every established religion since the
        days of the Ephesian Demetrius. By denying that sanctified spirits could
        possibly enjoy the beatific vision until the world’s destruction he according
        to the Parisian theologists excluded the Virgin Mary, the Apostles, and all the
        saints from their supposed position; with a single blow crushed their power of
        mediation, destroyed the efficacy of indulgences, rendered masses useless, and
        gave a rude shock to the walls of purgatory. The perennial flow of gold from
        all these sources was too precious, too sacred, and too substantial, to be
        exposed unprotected even to the discretion of a pope, and a general council
        would inevitably have been convoked by the indignant clergy if Philip of
        Valois, fearful of losing the useful presence of a pontiff in France, had not
        exerted himself to prevent it; and by the aid of the French clergy, the
        assistance of King Robert and perhaps some sharp and threatening reproofs,
        finally compelled Jolin to renounce his errors. This however was accomplished
        only the day previous to his dissolution, by a formal instrument acknowledging
        the beatific vision, which under his immediate successor became one of the
        dogmas of the Roman Catholic Church
  
       The twenty-four
        cardinals then present immediately met in conclave and being of adverse
        opinions predetermined not to hurry on the election, but follow a course
        usually taken when no successor had been previously fixed upon; namely to cast
        away their daily votes on some obscure individual whom no two cardinals were
        likely to support, until they could be thrown in with a more certain aim. It
        happened that at this moment there was a monk of the Cistercian order in the
        sacred college named Jacques Fournier die son of a baker of Saverdun whom nobody supposed could by any possibility unite two votes in his favour,
        and for this very reason every secret vote was given to him; to his own and the
        general astonishment therefore he became pope, and although his humility
        induced him to tell his fellow cardinals that “they had elected an ass,”
        he is nevertheless described as a learned virtuous and sincere man, anxious for
        peace, and a stranger to court intrigues: under the name of Benedict XII he
        reformed many ecclesiastical abuses, especially amongst the monastic orders
        then in a lamentable state of corruption, and probably would have accomplished
        more had he reigned independently at Rome and in less turbulent times.
  
       About this
        period the Florentines were mortified to see King Robert’s power considerably
        diminished by the loss of Genoa, from whence the Guelphs had been recently
        driven by their adversaries whom he had restored, and all in consequence of a
        quarrel about the expediency of renewing his sovereign authority. The result
        was a new and widely-spread contention, which plunging the whole territory into
        civil war affected its relations with Florence, injured the commerce,
        diminished the strength, and for some time blasted the reputation of that
        celebrated maritime republic.
            
       The Florentines
        however were in some measure compensated by a sudden and rapid decline of power
        in the Tarlati of Pietramala Lords of Arezzo. This able, warlike, and still
        barbarous race were chiefs of the Apennines, and joining all the hardiment of a northern ancestry to the wily politics of
        their own age and country, had under Piero Saccone brother of the late bishop,
        not only maintained complete authority in Arezzo but acquired the cities of
        Castello, Cagli, Borgo San Sepolcro,
        and their several territories. Piero had also driven NXeri della Faggiola the son of Uguccione from his domains and dispossessed the
        counts of Montedoglio and Montefeltro of theirs: the
        bishop of Arezzo with all the family of Ubaldini had lastly yielded to his
        power, after which he crossed the Tuscan frontier and also made considerable
        acquisitions in La Maroa and Romagna. The Perugians who claimed some right to Cagli and Citta di Castello
        impatient of these rapid conquests gave, in conjunction with the lord of
        Cortona, the command of a body of troops to Neri della Faggiola who by means of
        secret intelligence within, succeeded in capturing Borgo San Sepolcro and soon afterwards its citadel which was defended
        by one of the Tarlati: this was a heavy blow to the reputation of Piero and no
        less pleasing to the Florentines, whose exclusive occupation in the wars of
        Lombardy and Lucca was the principal cause of Piero Sacchone’s unchecked exaltation. Presuming on success and supposing that Piero would
        hardly dare to show himself, the Perugians sent an
        army to ravage the Aretine districts, but Tarlati
        defeated them with great slaughter, devastated their country in return and
        insulted them by contemptuously hanging some Perugian prisoners within sight of that city.
  
       This act more
        than anything roused the public indignation; a thousand German horse were
        immediately levied, Florence without any solicitation despatched a hundred and
        fifty men-at-arms to their assistance, and in consequence of the restless state
        of Tuscany renewed her own alliance with Siena for ten years longer under still
        closer bonds of amity and mutual assistance.
            
       Affairs in
        Lombardy were still more unsettled: Orlando, Piero, and Marsilio de’ Rossi of
        Parma despairing of a successful opposition to the league commenced secret
        negotiations with Azzo Visconti about the cession of Parma and Lucca, winch on
        coming to light exasperated Mastino della Scala and
        alarmed the Florentines, to whom these cities had been respectively awarded: a
        meeting of the allies was therefore held at Lerici,
        where the mutual reproaches of those chiefs and Azzo’s determination to follow
        up his own objects nearly decomposed the confederacy; and would have done so
        had not the Florentine ambassadors; fearing if Visconti should get possession
        of Parma that Lucca would soon follow, exerted themselves strenuously to effect
        a general reconciliation. The question was finally left to their arbitration
        and having more confidence in Mastino than in their
        former enemy the friend of Castruccio, they at a second conference on the banks
        of the Oglio decided that Azzo Visconti was to have Piacenza and San Donnino; and Parma to be awarded to Mastino della Scala: the Rossi on bearing this immediately began to negotiate with Mastino and the Florentines were satisfied by his present
        assurance of procuring for them the sovereignty of Lucca on reasonable terms.
        The Rossi in fact engaged themselves to persuade their brother Piero then in
        possession of Lucea to surrender that city into the hands of Mastino, who continued deceiving Florence with empty
        promises of handing it over to her, or else giving his assistance to occupy it
        if physical force became necessary.
  
       The consequence
        of these arrangements was Alberto della Scala’s occupation of Parma in the
        month of June; Reggio soon after fell to the Veronese brothers by a separate
        treaty with the lords of Fogliano, but was immediately given to the Gonzaghi of Mantua according to agreement, the nominal
        sovereignty still resting with the family of La Scala. Azzo Visconti about the
        same period possessed himself of Piacenza where after one serious revolt he
        established his authority in the following December; Lodi having submitted some
        time before; and finally Modena was reduced to a dependency of Ferrara. Thus
        every one of the confederate states accomplished its object excepting Florence;
        and hence her quarrel with Mastino, her ultimate loss
        of Lucca, her long and expensive wars in Lombardy, and the first serious
        interference of Venice as a continental power in the disputes of Italy.
  
       Pisa at this
        time wits as much displeased with the conduct of Florence as the latter was
        with that of Mastino; for the town of Massa Marittima
        had been surprised by a Senese army through negligence or infidelity in the
        Florentine governor who held it for the Pisans under the guarantee of that
        republic: they justly complained and the Florentines endeavoured to excuse
        themselves; but as the transgressor escaped punishment and Siena was allowed to
        maintain her conquest unmolested, the credit of Florence received a stain that
        was afterwards deepened by her treatment of Perugia in the subsequent war
        against Arezzo. With Florentine assistance the Perugians had now regained the ascendant, had recovered Citta di Castello in September,
        and reduced Pietro Saccone so low that the whole viscounty of Valdambra consisting of the towns of Bicino, Cenina, Galatrone, Rondine and La Torricella, all
        belonging to the Tarlati, voluntarily tendered their allegiance on the 2nd of
        November to the republic of Florence, in the expectation of peace, mid future
        protection from that powerful state.
  
       This was an
        accession of strength and territory unusually acquired, inasmuch as it was
        unsought by ambition and unstained by blood; but while the people were justly
        proud of it, the thirst of power and the spirit of personal aggrandizement so
        rife at home presented a less satisfactory expression of their patriotism and
        humanity.
            
       Under the
        gonfalonier Cambio Salviati a physician of great eminence and well practised in
        his country’s politics, it was declared expedient to abolish the office of
        captains of the guard, who being citizens were perhaps not found quite so
        pliant as expected; and a decree passed to concentrate their authority in the
        hands of a single foreign officer under the title of “Captain of the Guard and
        Conservator of the Peace” the governing party, according to Villani, having
        been moved to this act by a wish of strengthening themselves and maintaining at
        all hazards the ascendancy of their own faction. This is one of many examples
        exhibited in Florentine history of the singular notions of liberty then
        prevalent: we see a democratic race empowering its rulers, during a time of
        profound tranquillity, to create an officer with a salary of 10,000 florins and
        so strong power that soaring, as it did above all law, pounced on the
        unconscious prey without danger responsibility or mercy; a power which
        strengthened by fifty men-at-arms and a hundred footrguards scared all good citizens and filled the community with torture exile and with
        death: there was here no form of trial, and this man was as independent of
        every statute or court of justice as he was irresponsible to any public
        authority in the commonwealth.
  
       Messer Jacopo
        Gabrielli d’ Agobbio was the first who exercised this
        formidable authority during a year of rapine cruelty and blood: he became like
        his predecessor of the same name and country a willing tool of his employers
        and returned to Agobbio like that kinsman filled with
        gold and crime, and followed by one deep and universal curse. Yet in the face
        of this dire experiment the office was continued for another year, and Accorrimbono da Tolentino, a kinsman of Jacopo’s, who had
        been previously known and was once esteemed in Florence, succeeded to this
        extraordinary charge: but neither could he resist the influence of faction nor
        the seductions of unlimited power: his first acts were unexceptionable, but the
        people were soon driven to revolt against his oppression and venality, and a
        decree was finally made that no rector of Florence should for ten years be
        chosen from the city of Agobbio or its territory.
  
       A crying act of
        injustice against Pino della Tosa one of the most eminent and popular citizens,
        completed the general disgust; universal horror possessed the public mind and
        neither intrigue nor persuasion could again induce the Florentines to renew
        this odious and tyrannical office. It was indeed an authority without order law
        or justice; an authority which could deprive any citizen of his life and
        property, and banish him from Florence at the nod of a miscreant or the
        pleasure of a dominant faction; a faction whose object was to keep down the
        citizens by taking advantage of those sudden jets of unlimited confidence and
        blindness to obvious consequences, that formed so prominent a feature in the
        aspect of their domestic politics.
            
       Mastino della Scala,
        whose ambition grew with his growing for tunes, had already projected the
        establishment of his own powder in Tuscany; wherefore by threats promises and
        even an attempt on their lives, at last succeeded in forcing Lucca from the
        Rossi, more especially from Piero who held it as a nominal vicar of the
        Bohemian monarch, and surrendered it with reluctance; yet apparently remaining
        there in Mastino’s service. Florence now fancied that
        her perseverance was about to be rewarded; but as she was only amused by
        courteous assurances, began to suspect that such an acquisition would not be
        easily relinquished by an able ambitious chieftain whose dominions already
        extended from the German frontier to the borders of Tuscany, and whose aim was
        the subjugation of Italy.
  
       During these
        transactions Pisa was far from quiet; the democratic party under Count Fazio
        della Gherardesca governed that republic; the spirit
        of Guelph and Ghibeline had almost disappeared from the great mass of people
        only to be cherished with an increased hereditary rancour by the old and still
        powerful aristocracy; hence there was a continual struggle between the two
        classes. At the head of the nobles were Benedetto and Ceo Maccaione de’ Gualandi, the Lanfranchi and others,
        who with assistance from Mastino had organised a
        revolution and offered him the lordship of Pisa: the attempt was bravely made,
        but after some desperate fighting without receiving the expected succours under
        Piero Rosso from Lucca, the insurgent nobles were defeated and most of that
        body driven from the town. Florence sent troops, although too late, to the
        people’s assistance, but the advance of Mastino’s soldiers under Piero to aid the revolution fully convinced that state of his
        real intentions both with respect to themselves and Tuscany : by a solemn
        embassy he was once more requested to deliver Lucca into their hands, and when
        under divers pretexts he still persisted in retaining possession, they shortly
        offered to repay every farthing it had cost him and thus allowed no place for
        further subterfuge. Mastino purposely ran his charges
        up to 360,000 florins on the supposition that a demand so exorbitant would be
        absolutely rejected; but to his astonishment Florence agreed without hesitation
        to pay this excessive price for a city which six years before had been
        repeatedly offered to her, without a struggle, for about a fifth of the money,
        and independent of the cost of all the subsequent wars in attempting to master
        it.
  
       Thus taken by
        surprise Mastino boldly threw off the mask and told
        the Florentine ambassadors that not being in want of gold he would only
        exchange Lucca for their assistance, or at least their neutrality, in his
        proposed attack on Bologna; which he knew to be closely allied and almost
        identified with them. His intentions were now suspected to be not only the immediate
        conquest of that republic, but also of Pisa and Romagna; all disunited by
        faction, and afterwards with the aid of Arezzo to subdue Florence; then
        convulsed by popolani and nobles while groaning under
        heavy taxation ; and ultimately to invade Naples and make himself king of
        Italy. He had been strongly urged to this by Azzo Visconti, Spinetto Malespini, and other Ghibelines who secretly fearing
        his power endeavoured to engage him in hostilities with an enemy that would
        find him immediate and sufficient employment both in Tuscany and Lombardy.
  
       Such was the
        state of things when Florence indignantly ordered her ambassadors to refuse the
        offered conditions and retire. “Go then,” said Mastino haughtily, “and bid your Florentines prepare; for before the middle of May I
        will be at their gates with four thousand men-at-arms on horse-back.” And on
        the fourteenth of February 1336, even before the ambassadors had arrived with
        this message, hostilities were commenced in the Val-di-Nievole.
  
       
         
       Cotemporary
        Monarchs.—England: Edward III.—Scotland: David II.— France : Philip VI. of
        Valois.—Castile and Leon : Alphonso XI.—Aragon : Alphonso IV.—Portugal :
        Alphonso IV. (During this king’s reign private warfare was forbidden and the
        nobles compelled to sue in the ordinary courts of justice).—German Empire :
        Louis of Bavaria.—Naples: Robert (the Good).— Sicily: Frederic II. (of
        Aragon).—Popes: John XXII. to 1334; Benedict XII.—Greek Empire: Andronicue the younger.—Turkish Empire : Or khan.
  
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