|  BOOK THE FIRST. CHAPTER V.
          
      FROM A.D. 1010 TO A.D. 1085.
      
      
         
       We now come to the first great event in early
        Florentine history, but are not yet sufficiently advanced to see our way
        clearly out of the obscurity that involves it; for amongst many contradictory
        accounts of these misty times the choice is difficult, and nothing has been
        more disputed than the capture of Fiesole. Malespini, who could hardly have
        been born later than 1220, is our earliest Florentine guide for the
        transactions in and near his own times; the recollection of some must have
        still lingered amongst the aged, and even tradition could not have been greatly
        disfigured as to the main fact in its transmission through three or four
        generations. We may fairly suppose that he could not have been very much
        mistaken in his belief of the true date and circumstances of this transaction;
        for the remembrance of such a conquest was unlikely to fade, and some record
        would assuredly have been preserved in both public and private archives at
        Florence as well as by oral tradition, of an event so important in her early
        history. “I have written”, says Malespini, “many things which I saw with mine
        own eyes in the said city of Florence, and of Fiesole; and in Rome I dwelt from
        the second day of August of the year 1200 until the eleventh day of April in
        the year---. And when I returned to our said city of Florence, I searched out
        many writings of the past events of this same matter, and I found many writings
        and chronicles; and in the manner that I did find them so have I written them
        and mentioned them; and for the time to come I will write more at large and of
        my own nation.”
        
       The above date is uncertain, most probably erroneous,
        and the manuscripts vary; but his nephew, who continued the history, adds:—“And
        I Giachetto Malespini continue to write the chronicle
        begun by the said Ricordano my uncle, of which he had
        a part from Rome, as already has been told, and a part from the Abbey of
        Florence: that is to say, ancient writings of those times from the said Abbey
        that were in the said Abbey, in which are contained many past events of the cities
        of Florence and of Fiesole.”
        
       We can hardly refuse credit to this plain statement as
        regards the main fact, an event comparatively so recent and momentous, and
        which he so simply relates, although disgraceful to his country, followed too
        as he is by all the principal Florentine historians.
        
       We learn from this author that under the Emperor Henry
        II, Florence had by favour of the Saxon dynasty been steadily increasing in
        power and population, and Fiesole proportionably decreasing from a constant
        emigration to the plain; but that Florence, thinking such a neighbour dangerous
        and convinced of the impossibility of openly reducing the Fiesolines,
        resolved to do so by stratagem.
        
       For this purpose a truce was concluded which by
        successive renewals inspired reciprocal confidence and apparent friendship :
        the gates of either city ceased to be any longer guarded, and the most familiar
        intercourse existed between them; but whether from previous design or sudden
        temptation, a plan was finally arranged to get possession of Fiesole on the
        festival of Saint Romulus. A body of young Florentines was placed in
        concealment round the town while the remaining force stood ready in the plain
        to act at a given signal. Thus posted after nightfall, they continued quiet all
        the eve of Saint Romulus, and when the Fiesolines hailed the morning festival of their patron Saint a number of the enemy with
        concealed arms passed through the gates as they had been accustomed, without
        awakening any suspicion. Groups of treacherous neighbours thus crowded the Fiesoline gateways, assembled in various quarters of the
        town, spread over the walls and towers, and thence made signals to the plain.
        The citizens were quietly enjoying their forenoon repast when a sudden movement
        amongst the rocks and thickets without, followed by some noise at the gates
        began to alarm them, although mistaken at first for an accidental affray of the
        peasantry who crowded every street in Fiesole. Ere long the shouts of
        Florentine soldiers, the quick trampling of steeds and cries of wounded men,
        told a different tale and at once laid bare the treason and its successful
        issue: defence was unavailing; a small body of citizens threw themselves into the
        citadel while the Florentines scoured the streets with shouts and menaces, but
        committed no outrage nor harmed any who offered no resistance. The citadel made
        a long and brave defence, but Fiesole was lost: the victors spread over all the
        surrounding district and reduced every stronghold but the “Rocca” or citadel,
        which still held out when the town was evacuated.
        
       This fortress was afterwards partly destroyed by
        mutual agreement; and the cathedral, and some other churches, perhaps the
        Bishop’s Palace with the ecclesiastical residences, alone remained of all the
        superior buildings: a capitulation followed by which Fiesoline citizens were either admitted to the freedom of Florence or allowed to retire
        elsewhere with their property. Numbers in consequence became Florentines;
        others withdrew to their country residences; many probably remained amongst
        their native ruins; but multitudes sullenly retired to Pistoia and were
        welcomed as a valuable accession to its growing power and population.
        Nevertheless most of the Fiesolines settled in
        Florence and, according to Ammirato, a senate and consuls were then first
        created, and chosen indiscriminately from both nations. Columns, sculptures and
        other valuables were removed to Florence; amongst them a celebrated rostrum or
        pulpit of carved marble called the “Ambona”, with the
        “Ruota” or Wheel, probably some piece of antique
        marble sculpture, which was attached to the front of San Piero Scheraggio and remained there until the church itself was
        demolished by the ducal Medici to make room for the present gallery and public
        offices. The Ambona served for ages as the pulpit and
        rostrum of that edifice, which was long used as a place of public assembly both
        for the vindication of general liberty, and the voice of faction.
        
       The union of two nations in such circumstances,
        although it augmented the common population was also a source of discord:
        cordiality could scarcely exist: the Fiesolines were
        too numerous for oppression; too angry to forgive; and too ambitious to remain
        inactive spectators of public events. Wherefore the first seeds of Florentino
        troubles are said to have sprung from this unnatural infusion, and the poet’s
        exclamation may be fairly echoed by history :
        
       “ Sempre la confusion delle
        persone
        
       Principio fu del mal della Citade”.
        
       In order more effectually to amalgamate the two races
        a new national standard was formed of the united arms of Florence and Fiesole:
        those of the latter were an azure crescent on an argent field: the former,
        which the Florentines prided themselves on having borne since the times of
        ancient Rome, was a white lily on a field of red; but now both lily and
        crescent were removed, and the fields alone, divided vertically, remained as
        the union standard of the new republic. This influx of fresh citizens rendered
        an extension of the city necessary, wherefore a stockade was driven round the
        line of recent dwellings beyond the walls, which sixty-eight years afterwards
        was changed into ramparts of solid masonry and called the “second circuit”. A
        few more words are now necessary on the much disputed point of this capture of
        Fiesole.
        
       Muratori is very suspicious of any documents that
        would exhibit Florence as a free city so early as the eleventh century, and leaving it to his readers to believe what they please of the tale is
          himself doubtful of such boldness in times when the Italian cities had neither
          the habit nor the power of making war on their own account or of thus
          destroying each other.
          
         Few authorities on Italian antiquities and history
        should be received with more deference than Muratori, yet this opinion is in
        direct opposition to his own account of the Pisan expedition against the
        Saracens of Calabria in 1006, and the battle of Acqualunga in 1004, which last he cites as the first example of a private war between two
        Italian cities; and also to the war between these states in 1002, of which the
        above battle was a consequence according to most of the ancient chroniclers,
        supported by such antiquarians as Cosimo della Rena
        and especially Fiorentini, on whom Muratori himself bestows the epithet of “accuratissimo”.
        
       But besides these examples Milan and Pavia were about
        the same period engaged in hostilities arising from their own local disputes;
        though nominally for the rival princes whose cause became an excuse for many
        republics to exercise their incipient liberty in private war. Both cities and
        nobles indeed used this self-assumed privilege until the Diet of Roncaglia in
        1158, when they were deprived of it by Frederic Barbarossa, who thus aimed a
        sharp blow at civic independence; but the many evils that sprang from private
        war amongst the nobility prevented a single Lombard voice being raised against
        the ordinance. With respect to Fiesole it has been urged that no sovereign
        prince would allow two cities under his dominion to make war for mutual
        destruction; but it has also been shown in the example of Lucca and Pisa that
        this custom not only did exist but was sanctioned, no matter whether from
        policy, necessity, or law : and if suffered at Lucca, the ducal residence and
        probably the provincial capital, how much more likely in places further removed
        from the seat of government.
        
       It has been already remarked that no notice exists
        about any permanent Marquis or Duke of Tuscany from the death of Hugo the Great
        in 1001 until the appointment of Ranieri in 1014, for during this epoch there
        was no steady government; and precisely at this time the above mentioned wars
        took place. The tide of fortune ebbed and flowed; the province was convulsed
        and alternately possessed by each contending monarch : the vicissitudes of war
        were continual; dukes and marquises were rapidly appointed and as rapidly
        expelled; the people avoided both the contending princes, and neither the names
        of Henry nor Ardoino are mentioned, as we are told, in any act of the time.
        Hence the young communities, like suckers from a severed trunk, sprouted with
        freshening vigour and offered peace, war, or obedience, according as their
        passions or interest dictated: nor were the rival lungs much displeased at their
        quarrels or neutrality, for each feared to see them in the hostile ranks, and
        it was precisely during this disturbed epoch that Florence attacked and
        captured Fiesole. Neither could the city have then been far from independence
        if, as Borghini thinks, she had previously exercised the sovereign right of
        coinage; but like other Tuscan states her lords paramount were Boniface,
        Beatrice, Godfrey of Lorraine, and the Countess Matilda : like them too she was
        internally free and in diurnal progress towards complete emancipation.
        
       It would be useless to enter into a discussion of
        other trifling antiquarian objections to the authenticity of this expedition;
        they are fully discussed by Lami; but Salvi (who cites the historians Pandolfo Arferoli and Giovanni Niccolo Dolieni) asserts that the Florentines having greatly
        increased in force did with the aid of Pistoia attack Fiesole in 1004, this was
        probably what convinced Florence of the impossibility of taking that city by
        open siege, and occasioned the truce recorded by Malespini. But in the year
        1010, he adds, “the city of Pistoia was much augmented in population by the
        many fugitives from Fiesole which the Florentines had nearly destroyed the year
        before.” This slight disagreement of dates does not annul but rather confirms
        the main fact of Florentine independence, which is the only real point for
        decision.
        
       It is clear that Fiesole was not entirely desolated in
        the year 1010: the citadel remained uninjured; the walls were partially
        destroyed; the greater houses ruined: and their materials removed to Florence;
        but the inferior classes who were not feared, and to whom the honours of
        citizenship were probably never offered, were permitted to remain and along
        with the clergy still preserved that city’s ancient denomination. Marchionne di
        Coppo Stefani says that the belligerents agreed by treaty to destroy all but the
        churches, to remove the materials necessary for reconstructing each citizen’s
        dwelling in Florence at the public charge, and to give a premium of ten per
        cent, to all who settled in this city or its suburbs.
        
       After such a blow the Fiesoline population would naturally decline, but it needs many days to tear a whole
        people from their fathers’ graves, their ancient temples, and the earlier
        scenes of childhood; wherefore we find on record another attack of this city in
        1125; not as would appear by a public decree of the Florentines in which the Fiesoline population must have concurred; but the private
        aggression of a part only, and probably the Florentine portion of the republic;
        for this the citizens were not only reprimanded but punished by Pope Honorius
        the Second. Atto Abbot of Vallombrosa intercedes for them in a letter quoted by
        Lami, assuring the pontiff that it was the “sudden, capricious, and
        inconsiderate resolution of a few,” who nevertheless (according to an old
        chronicle cited by the same author) scoured the whole country and managed to
        besiege the citadel of Fiesole for three months. It was ultimately taken by
        famine; and this long siege proves either secret connivance at the act or
        extreme weakness in the government.
        
       According to Malespini the citadel was occupied by
        certain Cattani or chiefs of Fiesoline race, who
        trusting to its strength plundered the whole neighbourhood; they had probably
        repaired it, for a law was immediately passed to forbid the reestablishment of
        any ruined fortress without public leave. After this the town gradually melted
        away, and the removal of Bishop Hildebrand to Florence in 1228 left only the
        name and shadow of a city with probably about its present population.
        
       The importance of this event may not justify so long a
        discussion; yet where an author’s account of disputed  points can be fairly reconciled with facts his
        authority is strengthened in other matters, and the value of his narration
        proportionally increased. Those who doubt have taken no notice of the important
        circumstance before mentioned, namely that Tuscany was without a general
        governor and in a state of complete municipal independence for thirteen years :
        Lami nevertheless asserts that a certain Duke Boniface (not Matilda’s father)
        governed during this period; but there is strong ground for believing that no
        Boniface regularly or permanently ruled Tuscany from the ninth century until
        the year 1027 when Countess Matilda’s father became Duke.
        
       After every research we still find Malespini’s details
        of this expedition sufficiently perplexing; he may have exaggerated its
        consequences by confusing them with subsequent events and the wasting influence
        of time, seen only in its effects; but modern writers reject the whole without
        sufficient reason. Many authorities have been here cited to confirm it, not to
        accumulate evidence; for except Salvi almost all must have drawn from the same
        source, namely the chronicle of Malespini: merely to show how generally the
        story has been received.
        
       That Florence was a town of comparative importance in
        the eleventh century (about the year 1055) is evident not only from its having
        been the favourite place of residence and election of several Pontiffs, but
        also because a General Council was then held there by Pope Victor the Second
        and Henry III of Germany; the latter at the same time exercising some acts of
        high authority against Godfrey of Lorraine and his wife Beatrice, who was a
        hostage at his court; and the former unfrocking many Bishops for simony and
        unchastity.
        
       In 1063 a quarrel arose between Bishop Pietro
        supported by Godfrey and Beatrice; and the monks of Florence under the auspices
        of Giovanni Gualberto founder of the Vallambrosan convent, in which the whole population took a part and filled the city with
        tumult. This prelate charged with the crime of simony, fell in the public
        estimation and was finally overcome by a furious adverse faction and more
        furious monks. Pope Alexander II then residing at Lucca displeased with this
        violence endeavoured to restore tranquillity but in vain; the citizens became
        still more disorderly; swarms of turbulent friars poured from the cloisters and
        by accumulated evidence so clearly proved the crime that they not only accused
        the Bishop before the Roman Council, but bold in superstition or in cunning,
        offered to substantiate their charge by the fiery ordeal. The Pope and Council
        wisely declined this tribunal, but the Florentines with truer faith instantly
        accepted the trial and shouted for faggots. The monks unable or unwilling to
        retreat chose Peter a Vallambrosan of exemplary
        virtue as their champion: he fearlessly advanced and passed uninjured through
        the flames.
        
       The Pontiff received immediate notice of this by “a
        special letter of the Florentine people” and the Bishop thus convicted was at
        once deposed; while the bold and lucky friar (ever afterwards known as Pietro Igneo) became successively Abbot of Fucecchio, a Bishop, and Cardinal of Albano.
        
       Besides this example of priestly arts and influence on
        superstitious credulity, the incident strengthens our notions of Florentine
        independence both as regards the direct communication with Pope Alexander in
        free community, and the Duke of Tuscany’s feeble power, which even with the Pontiff’s
        aid could neither preserve order amongst the citizens; protect the faction
        which he favoured; nor save the Bishop from persecution. Yet with so early an
        independence as respected both external relations and internal government
        Florence still acknowledged the imperial supremacy and nominally that of the
        provincial chief as its legitimate representative.
        
       The crime of simony which bore so dark a character in
        tills age became more hateful from the fact that ecclesiastical benefices were
        conferred by temporal sovereigns, and thus interfered too much with church
        patronage to be tamely endured: it was not so much the crime itself as the
        recipients of its offerings that was condemned, and the practice was
        accordingly denounced with far more virulence in proportion to its distance
        from the great treasury of Christian piety and devotion. When therefore the
        monk Hildebrand under the name of Gregory VII assumed the Popedom a council was
        convened at Rome from whence denunciations issued against all that should be
        convicted of this sin as well as against married priests, who were degraded
        without mercy; and this was accompanied by a politic, sagacious, and
        long-sighted decree forbidding the future admission of any person to Holy
        Orders that would not make a vow of chastity. These blows were particularly
        aimed at the Emperor, Henry IV, and the German priesthood, who sinned openly in
        both points, and their publication carried dismay and confusion throughout the
        imperial states. An absolute prohibition of priestly marriages was well calculated
        to strengthen ecclesiastical power; yet the priests rose in a mass, refused to
        abandon their wives, and would not even allow the papal decrees to be
        promulgated. Gregory nevertheless repeated his anathemas in the following spring
        against all recusants, and accompanied by new decrees prohibiting under pain of
        excommunication the investiture of Abbacies and Bishoprics to all those
        ecclesiastics whom the King of Germany had nominated by his own authority, and
        condemning the practice as a novelty and a source of simony and disunion.
        
       The ancient custom of electing Bishops by the united suffrages
        of clergy and people had not fallen completely into disuse during the minority
        of Henry IV, but his tutors nevertheless took advantage of their power to
        nominate incumbents to the richest Abbeys and Bishoprics. Henry on coming of
        age continued this lucrative practice; because in presenting the prelates with
        the Staff and Crosier, which was called the “Investiture” valuable presents
        were expected according to the worth of the benefice; but the Pope who
        participated in these elections without sharing the spoil branded such
        proceedings, perhaps justly, with the epithet of Simony, notwithstanding that
        the ceremonial part was of long standing in Germany.
        
       Another cause of dispute between these two potentates
        was the election of Pope Alexander II by means of Hildebrand, without reference
        either to the Empress Regent or the young King of Germany whose predecessors
        from the times of the Othos had always interfered in
        papal elections; yet as Gregory applied for the Emperor’s consent to his own
        election no opportunity for an open rupture presented itself until the year
        1076 when the above decrees were followed by haughty letters with threatenings of church censure in case of disobedience. His
        orders, his menaces, and his Legates were treated with equal scorn, and the
        indignant monarch at once convoked a Diet at Worms where with the concurrence
        of all his discontented prelates; he met the papal denunciations by a decree
        that declared Gregory illegitimate and excommunicate. This was accompanied by
        an order from the angry monarch as Patrician of Rome commanding that Pontiff’s
        instant abdication of the papal dignity and its delivery into the hands of a
        holier man; Rowland a priest of Parma was despatched on this perilous embassy
        and delivered his message boldly nay even audaciously to the Pope in full
        council at the Lateran; he first called with a loud voice on Gregory  to descend from the pontifical chair; then
        turning to the astonished prelates summoned them to appear before the Emperor
        and receive a true pontiff at his hands for he before whom they then stood was
        nothing but a wolf. Gregory had the good nature to save this audacious
        messenger from the weapons of his guard, and sure of Beatrice and Matilda’s aid
        with the favour of many German princes, he calmly rose and with all the
        decision of his character pronounced in a stern voice the long-menaced
        anathema; he declared Henry to be excommunicated and deposed, and his subjects
        absolved from every oath they had taken in his service.
        
       The assembly were awed and even astounded by this act
        for it was the first instance of a pope’s having exercised so tremendous a
        power, and Gregory himself, bold and resolute as he was, only attempted to
        justify it by the perilous conjuncture; he nevertheless felt secure in his
        position, which the Emperor did not; the malediction proved omnipotent; its
        effects instantaneous, loyalty shrank trembling from the cursed king; chiefs
        and princes abandoned him, and he was stript like a
        lofty oak by the winter’s blast.
        
       Amongst the first who left him was Guelph Duke of
        Bavaria, son of Albert Marquis of Este, a prince strongly attached to the Holy
        See, and Henry was forced unaided to bend before the storm: his pride soon
        yielded to expediency, he had rashly seized a position that he could not
        maintain, and in the depth of one of the severest winters ever known in Italy
        crossed the Alps with his wife and child and appeared as a suppliant under the
        treble-walled castle of Cannosa. Matilda was already
        there as a mediatrix; Gregory as an implacable priest to trample on the pride
        of disobedient royalty.
        
       A train of penitent ecclesiastics followed their king
        and wandered like spirits round the frowning towers: the Pontiff was long
        inflexible; but finally yielding to their prayers vouchsafed an ungracious and
        tardy absolution. Not so with the Emperor. All the unbending rigour of Gregory
        was now sternly manifested: neither Matilda’s influence nor the earnest
        entreaties of all those princes who had flocked around him were of any avail:
        the haughty monk still frowned on the degraded king, and when he at last
        vouchsafed to pardon, the terms were so humiliating that the imagination can
        scarcely conceive a man of Henry’s character ever deigning under any
        circumstances to accept them as the price of his reconciliation. Yet when he
        thus acted who shall justly accuse Matilda of superstitious weakness, for
        devotion to that church which had ever protected her, even in the moments of
        its greatest necessity. To merit this disgraceful pardon, all manly spirit, and
        royalty even to its very robes, were sacrificed; then, but not until then, the
        Emperor was contemptuously received within the second circuit of the castle
        walls where covered only by a woollen shirt, shivering with bare extremities in
        the cold of a rigorous winter and the ground black with frost, did this humbled
        image of the Roman Caesars remain for three successive days, and denied all
        sustenance until the evening shades periodically released him from his
        sufferings.
        
       On the fourth day prostrate at the Pontiff’s feet he
        implored a wretched pardon for his imputed sins; while the haughty priest took
        off the malediction and then proudly gathering up his robes moved on to Reggio
        leaving Henry’s restoration to the judgment of a German Diet!
        
       Such was the ominous commencement of fierce disputes
        between Church and Empire: born of avarice and ambition, nourished by scorn and
        defiance and matured by solid acts of shame and injury; they generated a long
        succession of misfortunes and retarded human civilisation. There were indeed
        some casual intervals of repose; and though the particular dispute about
        investitures was terminated in 1121 by mutual concessions from Henry V and
        Calistus II, causes of quarrel still smouldered with many outbursts until a general
        conflagration blazed wildly forth between the mighty frictions of Guelph and Ghibeline.
        
       Florence imbued with Matilda’s politics became
        essentially attached to her cause and followed all her fortunes; the citizens
        did not for a moment suppose that Henry would passively submit to such
        contumely; wherefore, comparing the prospect of immediate war with the
        unguarded position of their suburbs, they determined to inclose the whole town with new walls and in 1078 began the “second circuit.” The city
        was divided into six parts called “Sesti”, five of which occupied the
        north or right bank of the Arno, each named after its own particular gate;
        three small suburbs on the left bank formed the sixth division, both these
        portions being linked together by the “Ponte Vecchio” then the only bridge of
        Florence.
        
       Though many years were expended in perfecting these
        defences yet so extensive a work, originating entirely with the citizens,
        proves the independence and prosperity of Florence and its confidence in native
        energy and resources alone for safety: they were, as the Florentines
        anticipated, soon destined to be proved; for the Emperor ashamed of his late
        humiliation became again the Pontiff’s declared enemy and was moreover
        compelled to defend his own crown against Rodolph Duke of Swabia who had been
        elected king by a new Diet of the discontented princes. A war of three years
        which began in 1077 and a battle lost by Henry in 1080 determined the Pope to
        acknowledge Rodolph, redouble his curses on the king, and anathematise the
        Archbishops of Milan and Ravenna who had steadily adhered to his cause. A
        golden diadem with the legend “Petra dedit Petro,
          Petrus Diadema Rodulpho”,
        was on this occasion sent to Henry’s antagonist, which so moved the Emperor
        that he assembled about thirty schismatic prelates besides a numerous following
        of German and Italian barons, and at Brixen in the Tyrol was again rash enough
        to declare Gregory deposed, and to elect the manytimes excommunicated Archbishop of Ravenna in his place under the name of Clement III,
        a man, say his enemies “whose first thought was ambition, and his last the fear
        of God.”
        
       This event, which occurred in June 1080, was followed
        after a few months by a fourth pitched battle in which Rodolph was killed and
        his army totally defeated, while on the same day at a place called Volta in the
        Mantuan States, Matilda’s army was routed in attempting to expel the Antipope,
        and all Lombardy declared for the Emperor.
        
       Henry elated by this success marched to Ravenna and
        with words of Peace 0n his lips determined to crown the Antipope at Rome: but
        neither Gregory nor Matilda were disheartened; he relied on Robert Guiscard the
        Norman, who had been freed from ecclesiastical censure for the occasion and
        ruled the Neapolitan States; and she, confident of her own courage and
        resources, was true to the cause in which both her heart and conscience were
        engaged.
        
       Florence attached by habit to the Church was steady
        and determined, for while the Emperor marched in triumph through northern Italy
        she seems to have stood forward almost alone, and resolutely closed her gates
        against the conqueror. According to her own writers, who however are not too
        impartial, the Emperor indignant at such resistance from a single town had no
        choice but arms, and with Senese assistance began the siege believing that
        nothing could withstand him. Approaching Florence from the northward he encamped
        at a place then called Cafaggio (now occupied
        principally by the Church and Convent of the Santissima Annunziata) and
        extending his left wing to the Arno, commenced operations in the month of April
        1081.
        
       “There is no wall,” says Ammirato, “however strong it
        may be, so difficult to surmount as Union”; and the Florentines moved by this
        spirit not only dared the imperialists but harassed them so sharply by repeated
        sallies that after a while Henry being fearful of Matilda’s daily increasing
        numbers, raised the siege and made a disorderly retreat with considerable loss
        of baggage.
        
       Authors disagree about the precise date of this siege:
        Ammirato, apparently after Malespini, continues it from the beginning of April
        to the twenty-first of June; but Villani in asserting that it finished on the
        twenty-first of April agrees better with Munitori’s statement that Henry and the Antipope were before Rome in May of the same year,
        where meeting with unexpected resistance and no friends, he retired without
        accomplishing his purpose; nor was it until after a succession of annual sieges
        that by dint of bribery he mastered that capital in 1084. Clement was then
        crowned and Henry received the imperial diadem in return, while Gregory was
        closely besieged in the castle of Saint Angelo. Guiscard soon advanced to the
        rescue with a powerful army augmented by a body of Saracens who either drove or
        frightened the Emperor away and restored the Christian Pontiff to liberty.
        
       Some authors aver that he retreated three days before
        Guiscard’s appearance although favoured by the citizens whose support he had
        bought with the golden byzants of Alexius the father of Anna Commena: it is certain that the Romans rose tumultuously,
        attacked the Pope’s deliverers, and fought with vigour until the Norman calling
        fiercely for torches Rome was straightway in flames from the Coliseum to the
        Lateran. Soon after this barbarous feat Guiscard and his myrmidons quitted the
        scene of desolation with multitudes of prisoners, and accompanied by Gregory
        who under that rough protector retired to Salerno where he expired the
        following year; still invoking Heaven’s vengeance on the schismatic emperor and
        his wicked adherents.
        
       This conflagration was the real and phoenix-like death
        of ancient Rome and the birth of the moderm city on
        the Campus Mortius, for before this her antique
        splendour had been scarcely injured. The Emperor’s attempt on Florence too, as
        Villani avers, kindled a flame amongst the citizens which produced those fatal
        quarrels between the church and imperial factions which, thus early engendered,
        soon found in this stormy region a congenial habitation and a name.
        
       Florence being angry with Siena for assisting Henry,
        moved with all her force against it and carrying devastation to the very gates;
        but the Sienese suddenly issuing with six thousand men defeated them at Leceto on the Florentine road; and on this occasion, to
        recompense the services of the Incontrati family, a lofty tower was erected at the public expense near their houses as a
        mark of honour : these buildings were at first uninhabitable like the round
        towers of Ireland, but many were afterwards adapted to and used for defence, as
        in Florence, Pisa, and other parts of Italy.
        
       
         
       
         
       CHAPTER VI.
              
      FROM A.D. 1085 TO A.D. 1170.
        
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