I
                  
                
                Memory forgets, sometimes quite willingly. It is a
                  process whereby individuals, groups, and entire societies conserve and record,
                  but also filter, repress, and configure past experience to shape and
                  accommodate their identities for presentation to self and others. The aims (or
                  results) may range from explanation to concealment, self-congratulation to
                  exculpation, self-justification and legitimation to the nurturing
                  (construction, and elaboration) of grievances against others. Although memories
                  may be preserved even fortuitously in texts and artifacts, their storage there
                  can just as well be part of a deliberate and selective process. This is
                  especially so when the objects concerned are carefully designed works of art,
                  and the texts artfully composed narrative histories.
                  
                
                The memory of the Quattrocento Florentine Renaissance
                  has long enjoyed an iconic status in narratives of Western civilization as a
                  stage upon which its admirers have found enacted much of what they most prized
                  in European culture and politics. Nor is this wholly accidental. The numerous
                  vernacular memoirs (ricordi)
                  of merchants like Giovanni Morelli, as well as the
                  Latin histories of humanists like Leonardo Bruni and Poggio Bracciolini, reveal a
                  society whose members were deeply self-conscious and historically minded. Much
                  of the basis for accepting the notion of a Florentine Renaissance derives from
                  the testimony of contemporaries like Matteo Palmieri and Giorgio Vasari that they were indeed having
                  one, and on the determination of their fellows to furnish the necessary
                  historical texts and artworks as proof. The Florentines’ rediscovery of their
                  ancient Roman ancestors carried in its train a recognition of themselves as an
                  audience of modern posterity, making their Renaissance dialogue with the past
                  an essential stimulus also to their own studied self-presentation to future
                  generations.
                  
                
                Among the most notable examples of the Florentines’
                  Renaissance are the works of art they commissioned for their churches and the
                  texts composed by their humanist historians. Architects like Brunelleschi
                  articulated a classicized Roman vocabulary of harmoniously balanced columns and
                  rounded arches to solemnize the interior spaces of Florence’s new cathedral and
                  numerous other churches such as San Lorenzo and Santo Spirito that were rebuilt or remodeled in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth
                  centuries. Painters like Masaccio and sculptors such as Donatello in turn
                  adorned these churches with images and objects whose classical realism and
                  naturalism give them heightened spiritual poignancy. Meanwhile, the city’s
                  humanist chancellors and historians from Coluccio Salutati onward recalled to Florentine citizens the
                  genealogy of their descent from the Roman Republic, celebrated their republican
                  institutions and their embrace of civic duty in the defense of their liberty,
                  and lauded the ambition and unabashed entrepreneurial acquisitiveness that made
                  possible their civic and charitable benefactions.
                  
                
                But although Florentine artists and humanists alike
                  deployed classical motifs, the projects in which they engaged were in fact
                  quite different. Artists employed pre-Christian art forms in the city’s
                  churches not to subvert religious space but to sacralize the city's urban fabric. The humanists, on the other hand, used classical
                  rhetoric and historiographical models not only to connect the city’s republican
                  present to its Roman origins but also to secularize the vision of its history
                  that informed contemporary political discourse. Underscoring the particularity
                  of Florentine history did not, to be sure, require detaching it entirely from
                  Christianity’s universal eschatology. Even Machiavelli, after all, concluded Il
                  Principe crying out for a new Italian redeemer. But Florentine humanists no
                  longer recounted events to manifest the providence of God working directly
                  through human agents. They highlighted instead the causal agency of human
                  protagonists themselves and inscribed into their actions the civic and
                  republican values that they aimed to recall to their contemporary and future
                  readers. Fortuna was not providentia Dei.
                    
                    
                The result has been that subsequent historians, taking
                  their cues from Quattrocento and Cinquecento Florentine historians, long tended
                  to portray the society as a whole in secular hues. But if we turn back from
                  these textual sentinels to reconsider the city’s churches not simply as works
                  of art but as historical artifacts with a documentary significance of their
                  own, and begin, as historians recently have done, to incorporate the archival
                  study of religion and the church into Florentine social and political history,
                  a paradox emerges: while Florentines were secularizing and de-Christianizing
                  the discursive realm of their civic politics in the early Quattrocento, they
                  were simultaneously sacralizing and re-Christianizing
                  their built civic environment. This is not to resurrect long discredited
                  caricatures of the humanists as pagans, or to reposit a fundamental conflict (not even updated as “culture wars”) between
                  secularizing humanists and Christian reactionaries. Humanists from Petrarch
                  onward were deeply Augustinian in their anthropology and attacked ecclesiastics
                  not for their religion but for their lack of it. Nor is it necessary to pin
                  religion and classicism on different elements of the social order. Leonardo Bruni wrote his classicizing republican panegyric and
                  history of Florence to ingratiate himself with the same Florentine rulers who
                  commissioned Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise; indeed, he helped select the biblical
                  scenes to be represented.
                  
                
                Taken together, the written and material evidence
                  furnished by Quattrocento Florentines points to a simultaneous rise of
                  investment in a built Christian environment, concurrent with a surge of textual
                  production that wrote secular values into the Florentine social and political
                  world. The commemoration in Florentine churches of a Christian present
                  contemporaneous with the textual recollection of a secular past that pointed
                  directly to it suggests a fascinating instability of values. Societies, of
                  course, need no more be consistent with themselves than are individuals. The
                  Florentine case might simply be let stand as an example of mildly schizophrenic
                  Renaissance self-fashioning. But because memory is the art also of selective
                  (and collective) forgetting, and silences thus have histories of their own, it
                  is worth excavating the documentary remains of those lying beneath Florence’s
                  ecclesiastical commemorations and historical recollections to see whether they
                  do not converge at some point in the oblivion of a past that Florentines either
                  chose to forget—or remembered very carefully.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                II
                  
                
                In few societies have religion and politics been woven
                  together so intimately—and conflictually—as they were
                  in Renaissance Florence. As far back as the eleventh century, Florentine
                  support under the Countess Matilda had been essential to the survival of the
                  Gregorian reform movement, and from the formation of the Guelf entente in the
                  1260s down to the reigns of the Medici popes Leo X (1513-21) and Clement VII
                  (1523-34) at the outbreak of the Reformation, no community in Europe was more
                  vital to the economic and political fortunes (and misfortunes) of the papacy
                  than its Tuscan neighbor, rival, and financier, Florence. Nor, in the two
                  centuries from Dante’s robust denunciation of the papacy in his Commedia down
                  to Savonarola’s project to fuse Christian and republican renovatio in a Florentine “New
                  Jerusalem” that defied Pope Alexander VI (1492-1503), was any city so vigorous
                  in condemning the papacy or so protean in generating new forms of religious thought
                  and expression in artistic, political, and urban contexts.
                  
                
                The famous twenty-eighth maxim that Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540) penned in the early sixteenth
                  century appears to telescope the ambivalence many Florentines felt toward the
                  church: “I don't know anyone who dislikes the ambition, the avarice and the
                  sensuality of priests more than I do”, wrote the papal governor of Modena and
                  the Romagna. “Nevertheless, the position I have enjoyed with several popes has
                  forced me to love their greatness for my own self-interest. Were it not for
                  this consideration, I would have loved Martin Luther as much as I love myself”.
                  In his ensuing maxim Guicciardini specified the cause
                  of his dilemma, explaining that the Florentines had “the church as a neighbor, which
                  is powerful and never dies”. Essential to Guicciardini’s schematization of his Florentine codependence with the church was the manner in
                  which he identified clergy at all levels with the papacy, both with political
                  power, and the necessity he therefore felt to partition his religious
                  convictions from his political interests. Like Machiavelli (1469-1527), Guicciardini wondered whether it was possible “to control
                  governments and states, if one wants to hold them as they are held today,
                  according to the precepts of Christian law”, and concluded that it was not.
                  
                
                There was much to justify these sentiments in the wake
                  of Savonarola’s late-fifteenth-century failure as an “unarmed prophet”, when
                  Renaissance popes had subverted the earlier efforts of conciliar reformers to
                  curb their monarchical pretensions and had transformed themselves into
                  ambitious Italian princes. But because Machiavelli’s and Guicciardini’s texts became the vehicles through which the preceding three centuries of
                  Florentine history were synthesized and transmitted into the broader stream of
                  European thought—and memory—historians in turn have read back out of the
                  history of the Florentine republic the sixteenth-century identification of
                  church with papacy, and the separation of religion from politics, that they
                  wrote into it. Nor were these leanings without some foundation in earlier
                  fifteenth-century humanist historiography. Leonardo Bruni (c. 1370-1444) and Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459), upon whom they relied, embraced classical models that privileged
                  political, military, and diplomatic narratives to focus their histories on
                  Florence’s development in its republican dimensions. In the process, they
                  touched on local ecclesiastical or religious matters only so far as popes and
                  prelates came on stage as players in Italian politics. The roles that religion
                  and the local church played in shaping the Quattrocento Florentine cultural
                  milieu that produced its foundational humanist historians were thus masked and
                  obscured by the very selectivity and semiotics of the humanists’ own
                  narratives.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                III
                  
                
                This is nowhere more evident than in their treatment
                  of the cataclysmic War of the Eight Saints that Florence fought against Pope
                  Gregory XI (1370-78) in 1375-78. Climaxing in the outbreak of the papal schism and
                  the revolt of Florence's downtrodden Ciompi clothworkers, the war unfolded in two phases and
                  encompassed two corresponding clusters of issues. It began as a Florentine
                  effort to check the menacing expansion of the papal state in central Italy that
                  the Avignon popes had set as a condition for their return to Rome and was
                  fueled by the antipathy many Florentine citizens felt toward their Guelf
                  fellows whose personal ties to the Papal Curia threatened to subvert the
                  commune’s sovereignty. Florence enjoyed a series of early successes, sponsoring
                  uprisings throughout the papal state that were hailed by the republic’s newly
                  appointed chancellor Coluccio Salutati (1331-1406) as the triumph of Tuscan and Italian libertas over papal despotism.
                  But as the war bogged down, the Florentines were confronted with rising
                  military expenses that drove them to a momentous second step. Already under a
                  papal interdict, the city’s leaders determined in 1376 to finance the war by
                  selling off local clerical property, and they proceeded to the most extensive
                  liquidation of an ecclesiastical patrimony attempted anywhere in Europe before
                  the Reformation. A war against the papacy was thus transformed into a
                  referendum on the place of religion and the church within the Florentine community
                  itself—again, one of the most literate and sophisticated in pre-Reformation
                  Europe. The spoliation of the Florentine church, accompanied by efforts first
                  to do without clerical ministrations, then, from 1377, to compel clergy to
                  officiate and laity to attend services, turned the public sharply against the
                  war. Flagellants took to the streets, the city's political leadership split
                  bitterly, and Florence was forced to sue for peace. Gregory XI’s timely death
                  and the outbreak of the schism in the spring of 1378 enabled Florence to
                  negotiate with the weak Roman pope Urban VI (1378-89). But there immediately
                  ensued the revolt of the Ciompi. The war had a
                  devastating impact on the Florentine church that shaped its politics and
                  internal operations down to the mid-fifteenth century. And it impressed upon
                  subsequent generations of Florentine rulers the vital importance of the
                  legitimating power of the sacred in the city’s economy of political interests,
                  conditioning their policies not only toward papal Rome but, especially, toward
                  the local Florentine church, even longer.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                IV
                  
                
                Guicciardini omitted the war almost entirely from his youthful Storie fiorentine,
                  beginning immediately afterward with the revolt of the Ciompi.
                  But he blamed the uprising itself on the Otto di balìa,
                  a special commission of eight magistrates who had been charged with the war’s
                  prosecution, for recklessly catering to Florence’s lower classes. He returned
                  to the war twenty years later in his Cose fiorentine, written in the immediate aftermath of the
                  Sack of Rome in 1527, on his return to a Florence in the last gasp of
                  republican and messianic fervor. He prefaced his account with a speech by a
                  confident Florentine councillor who favored the war “to
                  preserve the dignity of our patria . . . [and] to maintain our liberty . . .
                  undertaken not against the Church of God, nor against the vicars of Christ, but
                  against evil pastors, against wicked governors”. To this he contrasted the
                  cautious Carlo Strozzi, who wondered how Guelf
                  Florence could justify a war against the papacy, and predicted that the
                  inevitable papal interdict would so traumatize the Florentines that “perhaps
                  the greater part, on account of the damages and injuries of the war, will be
                  disposed to return to the old faith”. But from these suggestive interpretive
                  poles Guicciardini proceeded to narrate a tightly
                  focused account of the political infighting between Florence’s Ricci and Albizzi factions, and of the movements of armies and
                  embassies, touching only minimally on the broader domestic impact of the
                  interdict and the expropriation of church property. The veteran statesman’s dry
                  verdict was that “it is not enough to undertake wars with justice and
                  generosity, if these are not accompanied by prudence as well”.
                  
                
                Machiavelli touched only glancingly on the war in his Istorie fiorentine.
                  Nevertheless, he paused to offer an encomium to the Otto for having
                  administered it “with such virtue and with such universal satisfaction that . .
                  . they were called Saints even though they had little regard for censures, had
                  despoiled the churches of their goods, and had compelled the clergy to
                  celebrate the offices—so much more did those citizens then esteem their
                  fatherland than their souls”. But though he lauded the Otto for their courage
                  in placing devotion to the patria above fear of spiritual sanctions,
                  Machiavelli nevertheless left open the possibility that their actions might
                  indeed have been damnable. Recounting a meeting held just before the war of
                  citizens concerned to end factional strife, Machiavelli inserted into the
                  speech of their spokesman the lament that factionalism and the corruption of
                  the city had arisen “because religion and fear of God have been eliminated in
                  all”. While he reveled in the blow dealt the papacy by the Otto, Machiavelli echoed
                  in his Istorie the view he had set forth in the Discorsi, that “as the observance of divine institutions is
                  the cause of the greatness of republics, so the disregard of them produces
                  their ruin”.
                  
                
                Writing a century before Machiavelli and only decades
                  after the War of the Eight Saints itself, Leonardo Bruni,
                  the founder of Florentine humanist historiography, was even more reticent. He
                  could scarcely ignore the rising new Florentine cathedral and the numerous
                  other ecclesiastical building projects that were visible throughout early
                  Quattrocento Florence. Thus, in his famous Panegyric (Laudatio) of 1403-4, he commended the Florentines’
                  piety and paused in his description of the city to offer lavish praise of their
                  churches: “Indeed”, he wrote, “in all of Florence nothing is more richly
                  appointed, more ornate in style, more magnificent than these churches. As much
                  attention has been given to decorating sacred buildings as to secular ones, so
                  that not only the habitations of the living would be outstanding but the tombs
                  of the dead as well”. At the same time, Bruni carefully circumscribed the churches' significance by inserting his description
                  into a portion of the Laudatio devoted not to the city’s history and institutions but to its architecture.
                  Aiming to celebrate the republic, his parallel juxtapositions of buildings
                  sacred and profane, of habitations for the living and the dead, effected an
                  equality between the Florentine church and the republic, while separating the
                  concerns of this world from those of the next.
                  
                
                Likewise, though Bruni celebrated
                  the role of Florence’s Parte Guelfa in championing the city’s Roman republican
                  ideals, he made only the briefest allusion to the Parte’s origin as an alliance
                  supporting the papacy. While he could trace the many wars that Florentines had
                  fought against tyrants in defense of their libertas back to the famous Guelf
                  victory over the Ghibelline leader Manfred at Beneventum in 1266, he made no reference whatsoever to the great war that Florence had
                  fought immediately prior to its recent victory over Milan’s Giangaleazzo Visconti in 1402—the War of the Eight Saints. The omission was scarcely casual.
                  Florence's victory over Milan in fact served Bruni,
                  as it did many other Florentines, not only as an occasion for celebrating the
                  triumph of Florentine republican ideals but also as a means of canceling the
                  memory of an earlier war for Florentine libertas—that of the Eight Saints—that had gone terribly
                  wrong.
                  
                
                Several decades later, when he turned to writing his Historiarum florentini populi libri XII (begun by
                  1415), Bruni could no longer completely ignore it.
                  Rather, he focused on the first year of the conflict, which he could easily
                  frame as a defensive war against papal aggression. Thereafter, throughout its
                  second, domestic phase, Bruni kept his attention
                  fixed squarely on the movements of armies and diplomats, turning to Florentine
                  civic affairs only to note that the renewals of the Otto “provoked great
                  jealousy among many”. Without ever mentioning Florence’s assault on its local
                  church and the political turmoil that ensued, he concluded his account by
                  noting the outbreak of the schism, then partitioned the war from the city’s
                  internal life, and the Ciompi Revolt, with a chapter
                  division.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                V
                  
                
                The War of the Eight Saints had its ideological roots
                  in a debate over ecclesiastical wealth and jurisdictions that had been
                  intensifying throughout Europe for over a century. In sixteenth-century Italy,
                  Machiavelli and Guicciardini took the temporal power
                  of church and papacy for granted and distinguished both from true religion. But
                  in the fourteenth century they were still conceivable as spiritual
                  institutions, and it was the doctrine of papal plenitudo potestatis, upon which popes based their
                  expanding claims not only to supreme authority within the church but also to
                  myriad powers of intervention in temporal affairs, that occupied political
                  theorists. It had inspired the growth of the radical Spiritual wing of the
                  Franciscan order, and King Philip IV of France’s challenge to clerical immunities
                  from royal taxation and the courts, which elicited from Pope Boniface VIII the
                  intemperate bull Unam sanctam (1302), strongly implying that all temporal rulers derived their authority from
                  the pope and roundly designating all the faithful as his subjects. Unam sanctam became a rich target for critics that papal apologists like Giles of Rome
                  actually widened by advancing fulsome claims for papal world dominium
                  (lordship) that fused the issues of jurisdictions and property rights, thus
                  effectively inviting opponents of papal authority to take aim at clerical
                  wealth as well.
                  
                
                Among the sharpest antipapal reactions came from
                  Italians. Dante articulated in his Monarchia (c. 1310) an ideal Aristotelian vision of a new
                  Roman Empire, in which all political authority would be concentrated in a
                  single temporal world ruler: restricting the church to a purely spiritual role
                  would secure humanity’s common good by ending the destructive conflict between
                  church and state. As he explained through Marco Lombardo at the center of his
                  Commedia, all the evils of the world derived from misgovernment caused by a
                  papacy which “striving to combine two powers in one, fouls self and load and
                  all”. In his Defensor pacis (1324), Marsilius of Padua added Roman corporation law to Dante’s
                  amalgam of Aristotelian and Franciscan arguments to propose reducing the church
                  to purely spiritual powers and subjecting it to the supervision of a sovereign
                  lay authority, the “faithful human legislator”. Clergy would be subject to the
                  penalties of the civil law and might, if necessary, be compelled by the state
                  to perform services and to administer the sacraments. The legislator would
                  supervise appointments to ecclesiastical offices and any necessary
                  inquisitions, and would oversee the administration of ecclesiastical property.
                  Superfluous clerical property would be subject to taxation just like that of
                  the laity. Dante’s Commedia became,
                  of course, the cornerstone of Florentine literature, and an Italian translation
                  (from the French) of the Defensor pacis circulated in Florence from 1363 onward, with numerous marginal arrows pointing
                  to the passages on tithes and church property.
                  
                
                Marsilius was soon joined at Ludwig of Bavaria’s antipapal
                  court by the brilliant English Franciscan heretic William of Ockham (c. 1285-c.
                  1347), who, followed by his Oxford countryman John Wycliff (d. 1384) later in the century, articulated political theories that also
                  curtailed ecclesiastical jurisdictions and property rights, based not, however,
                  on the church’s presumed character as a spiritual institution but on its now
                  evident forfeiture of that role. Wycliff wrote his De civili dominio (1378) with an eye on Florence’s War of the
                  Eight Saints, and the echo of his views in John Hus led to innumerable
                  condemnations before (and after) the Czech's execution at the Council of
                  Constance in 1415.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                VI
                  
                
                Florence’s rulers had been given a powerful incentive
                  to acquiesce in the expansion of papal controls over ecclesiastical wealth and
                  appointments by Pope Martin IV’s confirmation of the Florentine bankers’ right
                  to collect papal taxes in 1281, and papal actions touching the Florentine
                  church could in any case easily be mediated privately by Florentines at the
                  Papal Curia itself. Nevertheless, in (frequent) periods of domestic crisis,
                  when Florence’s patrician rulers sought to augment their power by admitting
                  members of the lesser guilds and novi cives to a greater share of political offices, these
                  new people (gente nuova) tended
                  to pursue stricter constitutional protections of the commune’s sovereignty,
                  both against papal meddling from outside and against aristocrats’ use of local
                  ecclesiastical institutions to augment their power within Florentine politics.
                  Under the “popular” governments of the Primo Popolo (1250-60) and of Giano della Bella (1293-97), and in response to interventions such as those of the papal
                  legate Cardinal Latino Malabranca in 1279-80, and of
                  Pope Boniface VIII in 1301-3, the Florentine councils passed a series of laws
                  that prohibited the appointment of Florentine “magnates” to the bishoprics of
                  Florence and Fiesole (which might be used as seigneurial power bases); required that ecclesiastics claiming fiscal and judicial
                  immunities verify their clerical status; and denied that excommunications of
                  communal officials could be cited to disqualify their decisions. When, in the
                  financial crisis of 1343-48 precipitated by the collapse of the Bardi and Acciaiuoli banking
                  houses, Pope Clement VI (1342-52) used the inquisitor’s office and an interdict
                  to pressure Florentine bankers to treat ecclesiastical creditors
                  preferentially, another broadly based government passed additional laws
                  limiting clerical immunity from communal courts, restricting the inquisitor's
                  power to investigate usury, and defying the interdict. At the same time, the
                  Florentines also managed their fiscal crisis to a resolution by creating a
                  funded public debt, the Monte, backed by papal juridical guarantees.
                  
                
                Thereafter, the decades leading up to the War of the
                  Eight Saints saw broad Florentine-papal collaboration on matters of finance and
                  appointments to benefices, as well as light Florentine taxation of the clergy.
                  But distrust began to grow when Pope Innocent VI (1352-62) dispatched Cardinal Egidio de Albornoz from Avignon
                  in 1353 to recover control of the papal state in central Italy. Two factions
                  emerged in Florence: the Albizzi family and their
                  followers identified the city’s interests with those of the papacy and the
                  elite Parte Guelfa, while the Ricci and their
                  supporters were more willing to countenance closer relations with Milan as a
                  counter to the papacy’s growing power on the peninsula and were more
                  sympathetic to the gente nuova's mistrust of local ecclesiastical
                  prerogatives.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                VII
                  
                
                Gregory XI came to the pontificate in late 1370 in a
                  moment of calm and was personally congratulated by members of Florence’s
                  powerful philo-papal Albizzi, Corsini, Strozzi, and Alberti families. He was determined, however, to complete
                  the papacy’s consolidation of control over its central Italian Patrimony, and
                  to subdue its neighbors, in order To bring the Curia back to Rome. Soon he was
                  dispatching letters and embassies to neighboring Florence and other Tuscan
                  cities with assurances that his assault on nearby Perugia portended no threat
                  to their “Tuscan liberties”, while he urged papal loyalists like Lapo da Castiglionchio and other
                  members of the Parte Guelfa within the city to
                  discourage any sharp Florentine response. Florentine councillors were deeply skeptical of the pope’s motives. Gregory’s increasingly indignant
                  appeals for Florentine aid against Perugia, the Este of Ferrara, and Bernabò Visconti of Milan went unheeded or were minimally
                  honored. But his use of indirect political as well as formal diplomatic
                  channels to influence Florentine decision making facilitated erratic jumps of
                  allegiance, such as Uguccione de' Ricci’s spectacular
                  defection to the Albizzi side in 1373, and fueled a
                  crescendo of factional strife that overtook the city in the next few years.
                  
                
                The pope also intervened aggressively in local ecclesiastical
                  affairs and pressed the issue of “ecclesiastical liberties” with Florence. In
                  1371 he replaced Fra Andrea of the popular Ricci family with his own man, Fra Piero di Ser Lippo of Florence, to head the Florentine inquisition, in a move that could not but
                  have been perceived in Florence as shoring up the political power of local
                  Guelf families. In 1373 Gregory deputed his own papal commissioners to reform
                  the monasteries of the Florentine and Pisan dioceses,
                  and he intervened aggressively in local ecclesiastical appointments. When
                  Antonio di Luca Abbati, a member of the minor Tuscan
                  aristocracy and Gregory’s “serviens armorum atque familiaris”,
                  was summoned to appear before the communal courts, Gregory stridently protested
                  this violation of ecclesiastical immunity. Subsequently, the Florentines
                  uncovered a scheme among members of the Albizzi and Corsini families to secure the appointment of a complicitous abbot to the strategically located monastery
                  of Vallombrosa in the Apennines to facilitate the advance
                  of papal troops toward the city. As the chronicler Stefani observed, “This
                  affair was said to have a very long tail”.
                  
                
                Florence’s councils responded to these provocations by
                  passing new laws limiting the rights of churches to offer sanctuary to criminals
                  and by refurbishing older measures that limited clerical judicial immunities
                  and regulated access to ecclesiastical benefices. The year 1375 revealed only
                  further papal treachery to the Florentines. The city had been hit by a wave of
                  plague and severe crop failures in late 1374, but appeals for permission to
                  import grain from the papal lands around Bologna went unheeded. Rather, while
                  Florence starved, Gregory ratcheted up his campaign in defense of
                  ecclesiastical liberties by demanding now that the commune repeal its laws
                  restricting the powers of inquisitors. For good measure, he fired some
                  excommunications on this issue over the Florentine bow at the rulers of
                  neighboring Pistoia. Then, in June, while papal envoys were in Florence seeking
                  funds for the war against Bernabò Visconti, news
                  arrived that the pope had secretly arranged a truce with the Milanese ruler.
                  Papal troops led by the English mercenary John Hawkwood were now released from service and headed toward Florence, demanding a
                  staggering 130,000 florins to spare the city from pillage. Later that month, a
                  clerical plot was uncovered in Prato to yield the city to papal troops from
                  Bologna.
                  
                
                The clerics involved in the Prato plot were brutally
                  executed, and Florence now organized for war. An executive priorate was drawn for the July-August term that contained an unusually large number of “new
                  men” sympathetic to the antipapal leanings of the Ricci faction. Already the
                  city had arranged a nonaggression pact with Hawkwood at a cost of 130,000 florins. Now, without mentioning the clergy directly, the
                  councils approved the priors' creation of a special commission of eight
                  citizens, who in fact came to be known as the Otto dei preti,
                  or Eight Saints, charged to levy a one-year, 130,000-florin forced loan (prestanza) on the
                  clergy of Florence and Fiesole to pay off Hawkwood.
                  The old prohibition against Florentine magnates accepting the bishoprics of
                  Florence or Fiesole was reinvoked, and a law was
                  passed transferring jurisdiction over last testaments and usury cases from
                  ecclesiastical courts to the commune’s Monte officials. A month later, the
                  councils approved the creation of another special commission, the Otto di balìa, empowered to make the military and diplomatic
                  arrangements necessary to carry on a war against the pope. By late summer they
                  had worked out an alliance with Florence's and the papacy’s traditional enemy:
                  Milan.
                  
                
                Both sides had already launched a war of propaganda.
                  In May, Florence’s ambitious young new chancellor Salutati addressed an “apology” to the pope, meant to be read out in Consistory, that
                  actually detailed Florentine grievances running back to the arrival of Cardinal Albornoz in 1353. Protesting Florence’s long-standing
                  devotion to the church, Salutati ostentatiously (but
                  menacingly) denied the rumor that Florence was preparing to sponsor an uprising
                  in the Patrimony: the papacy’s “most devoted sons” would never attempt “such a
                  sacrilege”. Gregory responded with complaints of his own, notably of Florence’s
                  refusal to aid in the campaign against Bernabò Visconti and of its “tyrannical” violations of ecclesiastical liberties. He
                  invited Florence’s citizens to put away their pride and return to the “old road”
                  of humility, threatening that otherwise he would do everything in his power to defend
                  the church, “against which not even the gates of Hell can prevail”.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                VIII
                  
                
                But Florence’s leaders, headed by members of the Ricci
                  faction but including also many eminent Guelfs, were in no mood for the “old
                  road”. “Wake up!” Salutati exhorted the Pisans. Moving to frame the anomalous Florentine war
                  against the papacy in a broad historical context, he reminded them of how the
                  ancient Greek republics had lost their liberty to the Macedonians by quarreling
                  among themselves. The dam burst on 11 November, when Città di Castello rose up against its papal governors. “Now
                  indeed”, crowed Salutati to Bernabò Visconti, “begins the ruin of the church!”. Like dominoes, Viterbo,
                  Perugia, and dozens of other cities of the Patrimony rebelled as well. They
                  were joined in the spring by Bologna, the crucial northern anchor of the papal
                  state. Reports coming into Florence almost daily were read out “in the name of
                  God and victory” to excited crowds summoned to the Piazza Signoria by the ringing of church bells. Troops of the Tuscan League entered the
                  liberated cities to cries of “Long live Florence and liberty!” and red banners,
                  “like those of Rome”, emblazoned with the motto Libertas, were distributed to
                  Florence’s new confederates.
                  
                
                Euphoric letters now streamed out of the Florentine
                  chancery exalting the Italians’ re-embrace of their ancient liberty as they
                  cast off the tyrannical yoke of servitude so long imposed on them by the
                  barbarism, greed, and despotism of the papacy’s Gallic prelates and governors. “Remember”, Salutati urged the Orvietans,
                  “that you are of Italian blood, the nature of which is to rule others, not to
                  submit to them, and mutually and in turn you should rouse each other for
                  liberty”. The war was not against the church, he assured Galeazzo Malatesta, but was “with barbarians, with foreigners
                  who, born of the vilest parents and raised on filth”, had been turned loose by
                  the church to plunder misera Italia. But as the war developed, Salutati was obliged (and not only by the protests of
                  Florence’s French and Angevin allies!) to articulate
                  a fuller and more complex vision of Italian liberty, one that went beyond the dictatores’ older, simple juxtapositions of
                  liberty and despotism, and that enriched earlier Aristotelian and corporate
                  views that proposed securing peace, “sufficiency of life”, and the bene comune as the
                  aims of legitimate government. This was not a war simply for Florentine or
                  Tuscan liberty but one fought to liberate all of northern Italy. Salutati had not only to address a variety of communities
                  of differing traditions and political experience but also to enlist the support
                  of foreign rulers. He was therefore inspired to elaborate a vision of liberty
                  that went well beyond traditional communal ideals of self-rule and freedom from
                  foreign domination in two new ways.
                  
                
                First, in soliciting the support of the Romans early
                  in the war and, later, condemning their readmission of Gregory to the city, he
                  articulated a new historical genealogy of Italian liberty. Reminding them of
                  their “hereditary debt” (debito hereditario)
                  as the “authors and fathers” of popular liberty, he offered the Romans ever
                  fuller lists of examples of their ancient forbears’ resistance to tyrants (Tarquin) and foreigners (Hannibal), and linked their
                  history to that of Florence and Italy. By the end of the war, Salutati had developed a view of Roman liberty grounded in
                  the rule of law. Its foundations had been laid under a dynamic republic, only
                  to be extinguished subsequently by the Caesars themselves.
                  
                
                At the same time, many of the cities in the Patrimony
                  lacked such traditions and constituted in effect what Machiavelli would later
                  describe as the problem of “new states”. In the course of dispensing much
                  practical advice to cities such as Città di Castello, Bologna, and Orvieto on
                  how to choose rectors, avoid factional strife, and keep taxes low, Salutati was obliged to reflect on the roles and interests
                  of nobles and plebs, merchants and artisans in civic affairs, and to develop a
                  broad anthropology of liberty and its effect on human nature as the magistra virtutum that
                  could be applied to Italian communities lacking clear republican traditions. In
                  phrases that go well beyond older visions of the bene comune and that anticipate the
                  republicanism of Bruni’s Laudatio, Salutati praised liberty to the Bolognese as “[the] one thing alone [which], exalting
                  cities, multiplies population immensely, enriches families, and adorns the
                  status and majesty of the citizens with an air of ancient grandeur. . . . This
                  is the teacher of virtues, since no one hesitates in his own republic which
                  flourishes with liberty to demonstrate how much and what a virtuous man can do”.
                  As the propagandist of Florence’s strategy to guarantee its own security by
                  republicanizing central Italy, Salutati developed an
                  anthropology of liberty that made its Roman genealogy accessible to all
                  Italians in an ideology that was, at the same time, new and distinctively
                  Florentine.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                IX
                  
                
                The war was immensely popular among the Florentines,
                  even among some elements of the clergy. “Woe to those who are under you and
                  don't rise up!” taunted the satirist Franco Sacchetti in a series of poems by turns sarcastic and enraged that he penned to Gregory
                  XI, Pope “Guastamondo”. The Augustinian canon and
                  humanist Luigi Marsili ventilated his own anticlerical
                  sentiments from Paris to his friend, the lanaiolo Guido Del Palagio, and assured him that excommunications by the likes
                  of Gregory XI’s “shameless” (sfacciati) Limousin legates meant nothing to Christ: “Christ
                  sent them [priests] to preach: but I see nothing in the Gospel that says he
                  sent them to rule”. The Vallombrosan monk Giovanni dalle Celle likewise reassured Del Palagio that “no innocent person can be excommunicated. . . . You only have to beware
                  not to vote that the pope should be taken or killed, and likewise for all other
                  clergy and religious”.
                  
                
                “Never”, exulted Salutati in
                  February, 1376, “has it been so easy to raise money from our citizens!” The
                  city’s rulers were delighted with the war’s progress. Even such “Archguelfs” as Lapo da Castiglionchio and Filippo Corsini now urged that the Otto “manfully pursue” what they
                  had begun. It took Gregory until the spring of 1376 to recover from the shock
                  of his losses in the Patrimony. He then summoned dozens of Florence's leaders
                  to appear before him at Avignon. The priors took the summons remarkably
                  seriously and deputed the lawyers Donato Barbadori and Alessandro dell' Antella to present the Florentine case. Salutati now sent
                  letters to Florence’s Cardinal Piero Corsini and to the College of Cardinals responding to
                  Gregory’s charge that Florence had deliberately instigated the rebellions in
                  the Patrimony. Reciting the long history of Florence’s Guelf devotion to the
                  papacy, he argued that “the damages the church has received . . . are to be
                  blamed not on us, but on the excesses of its own officials”. The uprisings in
                  the Patrimony were truly miracles, inspired by God’s spirit, and would
                  therefore be assessed by “divine judgment, not human counsel”.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                X
                  
                
                Gregory, however, conceived the process not as a forum
                  for debate but as a trial. The defense served up by Barbadori and dell'Antella was a breathtaking display of legal
                  caviling that cannot have been meant to convince so much as to taunt, ridicule,
                  and perhaps to generate sympathy for Florence among rulers north of the Alps.
                  The lawyers began with a plea for postponement, then turned to twenty charges
                  drawn up by the pope's advocate, Jacopo di Ceva, all
                  of which they set out to refute. The charges were remarkably detailed, ranging
                  from Florence’s sponsorship of rebellion in the papal states to the formation
                  of the commissions of the Otto di balìa and Otto dei preti, its execution of the
                  Prato conspirators, passage of anti-ecclesiastical legislation, and
                  unauthorized taxation of the clergy. But in each instance the lawyers argued
                  provocatively that, lacking exact times, dates, and the names of all persons
                  involved, the charges were “vague, obscure”, and therefore legally
                  inadmissible. And they did more than simply quibble. Though they made no
                  attempt to invoke Florence’s traditional Guelf allegiance to the papacy,
                  neither did they use this forum as an opportunity to champion the heroic vision
                  of republican libertas that Salutati had elaborated in support of the war.
                  
                
                Instead, they framed the Florentine defense from
                  beginning to end with the stunning assertion that Florence was, and always had
                  been, “subject to the most holy Roman Empire”, and that it therefore could not
                  recognize the jurisdiction of the Papal Curia. Florence indeed had renewed its
                  privileges with Emperor Charles IV in 1369 and had been paying the emperor an
                  annual census of 4,000 florins, a kind of ideological (and political) insurance
                  policy that the lawyers now cashed in full. Not only, they declared, were the Florentines
                  innocent of Gregory’s charge that they had violated the terms of their alliance
                  with the church; the pope lacked competence to judge, both because he could not
                  be plaintiff and judge alike in his own case and because the Florentine
                  community and citizens “are laymen, and immediately subject to imperial
                  authority”. Had they occupied the lands of Volterra,
                  Pistoia, and other of their neighbors? On the contrary, argued the lawyers,
                  Florentines served there as vicars of the emperor.
                  
                
                Barbadori and dell'Antella did not,
                  on the other hand, elaborate this new Florentine Ghibellinism into a bold vision of the prerogatives of the secular state along the lines set
                  forth by Dante and Marsilius. Rather, they affected
                  great respect for papal authority and the immunities of the church, while
                  serving up denials of the papal accusations that were teasingly sophistic and
                  mendacious. Responding to the charge that Florence had passed laws curtailing
                  the freedom of the inquisitor and regulating access to ecclesiastical benefices,
                  they first disputed the laws’ existence, then denied that they had been
                  enforced, then pointed out that the “clausula derogatoria" attaching to them explicitly prohibited
                  transgressions of ecclesiastical liberty. Had clerics been tried and condemned
                  in secular courts? Again they rejected the charge, adding, however, that these
                  things had been done by Florence’s podestà, a foreign official over whom they
                  had absolutely no control. Had the clergy been taxed and molested? Again, no:
                  besides, the pope had failed to specify the sums and clerics involved; anyway,
                  these were strictly voluntary loans.
                  
                
                And so it went. Not surprisingly, Gregory flicked
                  aside the Florentine defense as “frivolous and inane”. (Nor would Charles IV
                  have been amused, having only days earlier ordered the Florentines to desist from
                  disturbing the Patrimony.) In the interdict that he had ready for promulgation,
                  Gregory compressed his condemnation of the Florentines into ten major (though
                  quite detailed) counts, leaving himself ample space to elaborate on the
                  economic penalties that, along with denial of access to the sacraments and the
                  cult, were to be inflicted by the clergy and other Christians on these “impious
                  sons of perdition” and their allies and abettors, the enemies of mother church
                  and the Christian “respublica”. On hearing the papal
                  sentence, which was at once a judgment, a polemic, and a curse, Barbadori collapsed to his knees, reciting the Psalms and
                  calling upon Christ and the apostles as witnesses to Florence’s innocence.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XI
                  
                
                In his history of Florence, Leonardo Bruni made Gregory’s trial and condemnation of the
                  Florentines the centerpiece of his account of the war, inserting lengthy
                  speeches into the mouths of Barbadori and Gregory to
                  set out the Florentine and papal positions. But what was a good Florentine
                  republican, or even a Guelf, to make of Barbadori’s and dell'Antella’s defense, framed as it was within
                  an imperial jurisprudence that not only ignored, understandably, Florence's
                  Guelf traditions but also neglected to articulate the ideal of libertas that Salutati had made the centerpiece of the Florentine cause,
                  and that offered instead a defense which, in the age after civil lawyers like Bartolus of Sassoferrato (1313/14-57), was anachronistically servile even by Ghibelline standards in its
                  complete forfeiture of Florentine sovereignty?
                  
                
                Bruni rewrote the speech entirely, expunging every
                  reference to Florence’s submission to imperial authority, as well as virtually
                  every charge leveled by the pope against the Florentines for their abuse of the
                  church. This was no homage to the ancient historiographical tradition of
                  rhetorical summation but a deliberate excision from the historical record
                  undertaken to purify and sanctify Florentine public memory. In Gregory’s
                  speech, Bruni allowed the pope to express indignation
                  only at Florence’s provocation of the uprisings in the Patrimony. Then, drawing
                  on the charges advanced against the church by Salutati in his letters, Bruni moved Barbadori to the offensive, blaming the war squarely on the tyranny and abuses of the
                  papacy’s Gallic legates: “If your governors, your holiness, or let us say
                  legates, had bothered to establish a benevolent government, rather than a
                  tyranny frightful to all men, neither would you have reason to accuse us at
                  present, nor we to defend ourselves”.
                  
                
                But having recounted the legates’ abuses at length,
                  and following Salutati closely, Bruni then diverged from the course suggested by the chancellor’s own letters. For
                  rather than have Barbadori advance from traditional
                  Aristotelian denunciations of the despotism of the papal legates to an
                  articulation of Salutati’s affirmative new vision of
                  the ideal of libertas,
                  as the chancellor himself had frequently done, Bruni next inserted into Barbadori’s speech a history of
                  Florence's Guelf loyalty to the papacy that went back not simply to the time of
                  Manfred but, indeed, to that of Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa. Why, if Bruni was using Barbadori as a
                  mouthpiece for the Florentine position, did he not exploit this rhetorical
                  opportunity to highlight one of Salutati’s greatest
                  achievements? In part, he was simply following the line of argument that Salutati himself had directed to audiences like the College
                  of Cardinals, rather than that which he had developed to encourage Florence's
                  allies. But Bruni was now writing a history meant to
                  illustrate the theme of Florence's devotion to the cause of liberty that he had
                  set forth in his Laudatio.
                  It was one for which Salutati’s many letters provided
                  evidence in abundance. Surely Bruni had no intention
                  of suppressing his mentor's achievement in order to appropriate it
                  himself—though neither here, nor anywhere else in his history, did he ever
                  mention his predecessor.
                  
                
                Going through the chancellor’s letters, Bruni will have found that Salutati’s most frequent correspondent was Bernabò Visconti
                  (1323-1385), the uncle of Florence’s mortal enemy Giangaleazzo (1351-1402). And he will have discovered Salutati greeting him “not just as a friend, but as a brother”, with whom he felt united
                  “not just in a single will, but in a single body”. Bruni,
                  of course, had written his Laudatio to celebrate the
                  victory of Florentine libertas over Milanese despotism in the war of 1390-1402. Nowhere in his account of the
                  War of the Eight Saints did he acknowledge Florence’s crucial alliance with
                  Milan. To have demonstrated that Guelf Florence had fought a war for libertas against
                  a French pope was perhaps not terribly awkward. But to admit that the
                  Florentines had actually justified that war, at the moment of truth, in
                  Ghibelline terms, was impossible. To acknowledge, further, that his mentor and
                  fellow Florentines had attained full historical awareness of their mission to
                  champion the cause of libertas,
                  not simply in a war fought against the papacy but as comrades-in-arms with
                  Milan, was utterly unthinkable—indeed, not to be remembered. Barbadori’s original speech to Gregory XI was consigned to
                  the archives and erased altogether from Bruni'’
                  textual repository of Florentine civic memory.
                  
                
                Writing in the mid-fifteenth century, when Florentine
                  relations with Milan were warming up as a result of the demise of the Visconti
                  line of dukes (1447) and the rise of Francesco Sforza, Bruni’s successor as chancellor and historian, Poggio Bracciolini, acknowledged in his account of the war that
                  Florence indeed had allied with Bernabò Visconti. It
                  had been a difficult but necessary choice forced on the Florentines by the need
                  to defend their liberty against papal tyranny. And Poggio wholeheartedly framed the war as a Florentine struggle for liberty, praising
                  the city’s citizens in a manner that echoes Salutati and anticipates Machiavelli for “judging that the fear of religion is to be set
                  aside when liberty is at stake, and that the censures of unfaithful men are not
                  to be feared”. At the same time he did so in a way that, like Bruni, entirely submerged Barbadori’s original Ghibelline defense of the Florentine position. He may not even have
                  known of it. And, again like Bruni, Poggio then narrated the subsequent course of the war as a
                  purely military and diplomatic contest between Florence and Gregory. But there
                  was also, in this second phase, a domestic history of the war that neither
                  historian chose to touch upon.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XII
                  
                
                After some hand-wringing, Florence's leaders
                  proclaimed on 11 May 1376 that as a sign of Christian devotion the city would
                  observe Gregory’s interdict. The laity would be denied all sacraments save
                  baptism, confirmation, and penance; priests were to withdraw from public
                  religious processions, and to withhold the consecrated host from the sight of
                  Florentines. The citizens’ initial response was one of proud defiance: “But we
                  see it in our hearts”, declared an anonymous chronicler, “and God well knows
                  that we are neither Saracens nor pagans; on the contrary, we are and will
                  remain true Christians, elected by God, Amen”. Florentine spirits were buoyed
                  by the auspicious rebellion of Bologna, which the city marked with a feast
                  devoted to Saint Benedict, and further festivities were sponsored in honor of
                  the Otto di guerra. Salutati spent the spring sending letters around to the rulers of Europe thanking them
                  for their support and cautioning them of what Gregory’s ambitions portended for
                  their own kingdoms. Although Florentine merchants were subject to harassment
                  everywhere, Gregory exempted many leading families from the penalties of the
                  interdict (provided they refused to pay Florentine taxes), and in Italy only
                  Naples and Florence’s doughty little enemy Lucca, beyond the peninsula only
                  Castile, officially enforced the interdict.
                  
                
                But as the summer wore on, so did the war. Bologna,
                  Perugia, and other recently liberated cities in the Patrimony began to totter.
                  When the Romans admitted Gregory to their city in October, Salutati bitterly chided them: “What are you doing, my good men. . . . Still expecting
                  the messiah who will save Israel?” In Florence, voices had been raised since
                  the spring in the deliberations (pratiche) of Florence’s priors and their advisers, urging
                  the Otto dei preti to tax
                  the clergy more heavily “so that they contribute just as do other citizens”,
                  and “so that laymen are not taxed on account of clerics”. In September a failed
                  peace embassy produced rage and frustration in the councils. Salvestro de' Medici now advanced a radical proposal. “The
                  bishops of Florence and Fiesole”, he declared to the priors, “and all the
                  prelates of the city of Florence, should be sent to the pope to get him to quit
                  the war and make peace. And if not, all the goods of the clergy should be taken
                  by the commune, and the war fought at their expense”.
                  
                
                On 25 September the councils brought this neo-Marsilian vision to life by creating yet a third commission
                  of eight, the Otto livellariorum (or Otto dei livelli or livellari, the Eight of Rents), charged to survey the
                  ecclesiastical patrimony and to expropriate clerical estates for sale to
                  Florentine citizens. For the “defense of liberty and of the state”, they
                  promised that money could thus be raised “without inconvenience to anyone, and
                  to the advantage of many”. But the public response was hostile. Within a few
                  weeks, the councils were obliged to pass additional measures reassuring
                  citizens that the expropriations would touch only “superfluous” ecclesiastical
                  wealth and promising that the clergy would “infallibly” be inscribed “as
                  creditors of the commune” for reimbursement of their lost revenues at an annual
                  rate of 5 percent on the assessed monetary value of their property. But they
                  also empowered the Otto to compel citizens to purchase the estates “willingly
                  or unwillingly”.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XIII
                  
                
                The Otto livellariorum proceeded to the most extensive
                  liquidation of an ecclesiastical patrimony carried out anywhere in Europe
                  before the Reformation. Hundreds of churches, monasteries, and hospitals
                  suffered expropriations, and thousands of Florentines were forced to purchase
                  ecclesiastical lands, many against their will. The hardest hit were the secular
                  clergy and the older male religious orders. Fully 18,326 florins worth of
                  episcopal estates, 87 percent of the bishopric's later 1427 catasto tax assessment, were sold to 585 purchasers, and virtually all of the cathedral
                  chapter's property, 8,046 florins worth, was disbursed among 191 purchasers.
                  Though poorer parishes in the city went largely untouched, the city’s dozen
                  collegiate churches, such as San Lorenzo and Santa Maria Maggiore, were
                  stripped nearly bare. In the countryside, poorer parishes in the Apennines were
                  also spared, but all the large baptismal parishes (pievi) close to the city and
                  south of the Arno were heavily imposed upon. Among religious, the ancient
                  Florentine Badia lost over half its estates, and even
                  deeper expropriations were made from dozens of other Benedictine, Camaldoli, and Vallombrosan monasteries. Mendicant houses and nunneries, on the other hand, suffered only
                  token expropriations. Among hospitals, the city’s flagship institution, Santa
                  Maria Nuova, though more heavily endowed than the
                  bishopric itself, escaped untouched. But from one-third to one-half of the
                  estates of the Bigallo, the Misericordia,
                  and San Paolo were taken, and even orphanages like San Gallo and La Scala suffered comparable expropriations.
                  
                
                Some Florentines exulted in the fleecing of the
                  clergy. Jacopo Sacchetti urged the Otto livellariorum to squeeze them “down to the dregs”, and the expropriations continued even
                  after the death of Gregory XI in March 1378, beyond the election of Pope Urban
                  VI in April, and down to the official proclamation of peace in July 1378. Nevertheless,
                  more than Gregory XI’s imposition of the interdict itself, it was the decision
                  by the Florentine government—now clearly in the grip of its radical elements—to
                  proceed with the spoliation of their local church that turned much of the
                  Florentine populace against the war. It split the republic’s leadership as
                  well, alienating many of those Guelfs who had originally been willing to
                  countenance the war only to check Gregory’s territorial ambitions. Additional
                  measures had to be passed compelling communal accountants to carry out their
                  tasks and forcing citizens to accept assignment to the magistracy of the Otto livellariorum.
                  
                
                This was scarcely the first time that a temporal power
                  had gone to war with the papacy, and Florence had been interdicted over half a
                  dozen times before. But this interdict now gripped with exceptional force. Its
                  impact cannot be credited simply to the financial and spiritual penalties
                  inflicted on the Florentines, much less to the stature of the pope who imposed
                  them. Temporal rulers since the time of Emperor Henry IV (1056-1106) in the
                  investiture conflict and, more recently, King Philip IV the Fair of France
                  (1285-1314) in his confrontations with Pope Boniface VIII (1294-1303) had found
                  natural allies against the papacy among their own clergies, who resented the
                  encroachments of centralizing papal administration on their own local
                  prerogatives. The Florentine government’s financial punishment of the
                  Florentine clergy for the pope’s offenses proved a colossal political blunder
                  that forfeited the possibility of local clerical support. And turning a war
                  against the papal state into an assault on local ecclesiastical institutions
                  shifted public attention from Gregory XI’s aims to the pretensions of Florence’s
                  own rulers. It required extending the state’s coercive power not only over
                  ecclesiastics but also over citizens. Florentines were now forced to comply
                  with the profanation of a sacred ecclesiastical patrimony that they had endowed
                  themselves, carried out in violation of what even the most cynical regarded as
                  fundamental property rights. They had been assured that an interdict and denial
                  of the cult by a manifestly evil pope and prelates meant nothing to Christ: but
                  what if they were truly guilty of assaulting his shepherds?
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XIV
                  
                
                No sooner had the expropriations begun than the priors
                  were forced to confront a surge of public penitential processions. The
                  chronicler Marchionne di Coppo Stefani, who himself served in these months as a member of the Otto dei preti, observed that
                  throughout the city and the contado “it seemed that a compunction overcame all the
                  citizens, and every night, in almost every church, lauds were sung”. Every day
                  there were processions of upwards of twenty thousand people, with relics and
                  songs, “and all the people following behind”. Lay confraternities now formed
                  groups of flagellants, recruiting members down to the age of ten, and in all
                  five thousand. Wealthy young nobles were among their most enthusiastic
                  recruits, and they took to dispensing alms, fasting, preaching by day, and
                  sleeping out unsheltered by night. Stefani noted the paradox that “it seemed
                  indeed that they wanted to defeat and humiliate the pope, and that they wanted to
                  be obedient to the church”. The city's leaders directed the Dieci di libertà, a political police force, to
                  investigate the meetings of the flagellants, while urging the Otto livellariorum to push on with the expropriations. An atrocious massacre of civilians by
                  Gregory'’ Breton mercenaries at the town of Cesena in early 1377 gave
                  Chancellor Salutati a rich source of antipapal
                  propaganda to broadcast to the rest of Europe, but it provoked only an increase
                  of penitential processions in Florence itself.
                  
                
                Gregory now had the upper hand in the war and was
                  demanding over a million florins for a settlement. “He doesn't want to make
                  peace”, protested Salutati to Louis of Hungary, “he
                  wants to sell it!” That summer Bologna capitulated to papal forces, and that
                  autumn Gregory raised the stakes further by condemning Florence’s rulers for
                  heresy. They responded with a further act of defiance, accompanied by measures
                  demanding complicity of all citizens. In October 1377, “in order that by
                  attending masses and the clergy's other divine offices and orations, devotion
                  and orthodoxy may grow”, the councils passed a law requiring Florentines now to
                  violate the interdict. Not only would the priors attend mass daily in their private
                  chapel: the podestà and Captain of the People were to compel clergy to
                  officiate throughout the city, and laity to attend mass at least on Sundays and
                  feast days.
                  
                
                But Bishop Ricasoli and
                  other Florentine prelates had already fled the city. Andrea Capponi,
                  speaking for the government’s Standard Bearer of Justice (Gonfaloniere di giustizia), denounced them as “rebels
                  of the republic, and public enemies”. The mystical ascetic and church reformer
                  Catherine of Siena, instead, who before the war had chided Florence’s Bishop Ricasoli to “wake up from the sleep of negligence”, now
                  praised him for his “virile” resistance, while she condemned collaborative
                  clerics for their “servile fear of men”. Gregory deputed her on a peace mission
                  to Florence in the winter of 1377, believing, as he told her Dominican
                  confessor and biographer Raymond of Capua, that “they would not molest her; she
                  is a woman, and besides they hold her personally in high esteem”. At meetings
                  of the Parte Guelfa,
                  Catherine encouraged the politically divisive purges from public office (ammonizione) of
                  accused Ghibelline sympathizers that the Parte was now promoting as a means of overturning the radical government and
                  unblocking the path to peace. But according to Raymond, she was shocked by the
                  political vendetta that in turn swept the city in the spring of 1378. Stefani
                  reported more dryly that “on that account she was regarded almost as a
                  prophetess by those of the Parte, and
                  by others as a hypocrite and evil woman”. That summer Catherine was among those
                  obliged to flee the city by the July tumult of the Ciompi.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XV
                  
                
                Civic conflict, military reverses, and popular
                  resentment of the war forced the government to sue for peace in March 1378.
                  Gregory’s sudden death on 27 March enabled the city to negotiate terms with the
                  weak Roman pope Urban VI (el. 7 April), who, with the outbreak of the schism,
                  was soon seeking Florentine support against his rival Clement VII (20 July
                  1378-1394) of Avignon. At the end of July, Florence agreed to pay Urban an
                  indemnity of 250,000 florins (it had agreed to pay Gregory 800,000), to restore
                  all church property confiscated since October 1375, and, after some hesitation,
                  to repeal its laws touching the inquisition. But the treaty was not formally signed
                  in Rome until 28 August, and Salutati spent September
                  and October pleading with Florence’s Roman ambassadors to secure an official
                  bull of absolution to calm the religious crisis that had helped precipitate the Ciompi Revolt and upended the city’s politics.
                  
                
                The delay was caused by haggling over the first
                  installment of Urban’s indemnities. The broadly based
                  guild regime (1378-82) that recovered control of Florence from the Ciompi promptly complied with the treaty by formally
                  repealing the city’s anti-ecclesiastical legislation in September. But the
                  councils explicitly excepted all ordinances touching the Monte and thus
                  preserved the republic’s important fiscal claims against ecclesiastical courts
                  in matters of contract and usury. And Urban, though he counted heavily on the
                  indemnities, never received much more than 30,000 florins. Only the Florentine
                  populace’s hatred of the “butcher of Cesena”, Robert of Geneva, now Pope
                  Clement VII, prevented the post-1382 Albizzi regime
                  from accepting his offer to cancel them entirely, and from following Florence’s
                  Cardinal Piero Corsini into
                  the lucrative Avignon camp. But the Roman pope Gregory XII’s (1406-15) revival
                  of the claims was one of the reasons Florence withdrew allegiance from him on
                  the eve of the Council of Pisa in 1408. Among the first demands the city made
                  of the newly elected Pisan pope Alexander V (1409-10)
                  was the abrogation of the treaty, which he prudently granted.
                  
                
                Restoring the clergy’s confiscated property proved a
                  longer and more complex process that for decades left ecclesiastics dependent
                  on the (often inadequate) interest payments of their Monte shares and forced
                  many lay people to choose between restoring at a financial loss the property
                  they had been compelled to purchase or retaining it against their religious
                  consciences. Not until the civil disturbances had subsided in 1380 did the
                  councils, under pressure from ecclesiastics and “many officials and wise
                  citizens, merchants, and artisans”, pass into law a quintessentially Florentine
                  scheme for making restitution. Clergy would be issued 5 percent
                  interest-bearing shares in the Monte for sums equal to the purchase price of
                  the property they had lost. Restitution itself would be made in accordance with
                  drawings held twice annually. Citizens whose names were extracted would be
                  repaid the price of the property they had purchased, which would then be
                  restored to its original clerical owners. The clergy, in turn, were forbidden
                  henceforth to deny laity who had not yet made restitution the last rites and
                  ecclesiastical burial.
                  
                
                Unfortunately, the government could afford to budget
                  only 25,000 florins annually for the restitutions. The drawings did not get
                  well under way until 1383, and soon, from the late 1380s through the war
                  against Milan to its climax in 1402, the government was frequently obliged to
                  suspend the drawings, and later even the interest payments on the clergy’s Monte shares, to free up funds to meet
                  new war expenses “for the defense of Florentine liberty”. Only in the 1420s,
                  with the reunification of the papacy under Martin V (1417-31), did the
                  government press to complete the process, making possible in turn the
                  compilation of Florence's new tax inventory of lay and clerical wealth, the catasto, begun in
                  1427.
                  
                
                The restitutions not only were protracted over half a
                  century but also created in the meantime tremendous inequities among the clergy
                  and friction with the laity. As late as 1420, a quarter of the episcopal estates
                  remained in lay hands. Though all of the city’s smaller parishes had received
                  their goods by 1407, most of the larger collegiate churches had to wait until
                  1427. Small institutions, whose possessions had been distributed among only a
                  few purchasers, might receive all of them back within a few drawings—or be left
                  waiting for decades. Among hospitals, the Misericordia and San Paolo had recovered all of their property by 1405 and 1408: the Bigallo waited until 1426, as did most monasteries, whose
                  estates had been apportioned among numerous purchasers. Nor were the
                  restitutions always neat and straightforward: there was frequently an afterlife
                  of litigation. Some properties had been improved by their lay owners, others
                  allowed to deteriorate; some had been passed on whole in testaments, others
                  sold or divided up among several new owners. There were myriad disputes over
                  bookkeeping and interest payments. Hundreds came before the Monte officials;
                  dozens were appealed to the councils and the priors themselves. The last case
                  was not resolved until 1454.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XVI
                  
                
                The war fundamentally transformed the financial relations
                  between Florence, the papacy, and the Florentine clergy. Beforehand, Florence
                  had needed the papacy to serve as the judicial guarantor of the Monte. Now the
                  relationship of dependence was reversed. Popes from Urban VI (1378-89) to
                  Gregory XII (1406-15) relied on (meager) Florentine indemnity payments to keep
                  their finances afloat, and after the schism Popes Martin V (1417-31) and
                  Eugenius IV (1431-47) both sought to bolster papal finances by investing
                  heavily in the Monte. Through their Monte shares, the financial interests of the local Florentine clergy also became tied
                  to those of the Florentine state. During the process of restitution, clergy
                  depended on Monte interest for their
                  livelihood. Afterward, though occasional calls in the pratiche for new expropriations
                  of clerical property went unheeded, offers of Monte shares were used to secure
                  approval and prompt payment of further clerical taxes down to the mid-fifteenth
                  century, while threats to withhold interest payments if cooperation was not
                  forthcoming were made good against Pope Eugenius IV in 1446 and the Florentine
                  clergy in 1452. The detailed inventories of ecclesiastical wealth generated by
                  the Monte officials and, from 1427, the catasto tax
                  officials were used not only to carry out direct levies on the clergy but also
                  to monitor the movement of benefactions from laity to ecclesiastical
                  institutions, and even to appropriate the revenues of non-officiating (absentee) clergy. The Monte and the catasto thus became the basic bureaucratic instruments whereby
                  Florence circumscribed, supervised, and manipulated the financial operations of
                  the church within its expanding territorial state. The republic was still using
                  Monte shares and interest as levers on the clergy when Pius II (1458-1464)
                  assumed the pontificate.
                  
                
                Further, the financial devastation wrought by the war
                  did to church government in Florence what the schism did to the papacy: it
                  precipitated a constitutional struggle that lasted beyond the schism to the
                  mid-fifteenth century, in which the traditional principle of episcopal
                  hierarchical authority was challenged by clerical experiments with corporate
                  self-government. After decades of weak episcopal leadership, in the aftermath
                  of the Council of Constance (1414-1418) that ended the schism, the secular
                  clergy of the diocese took matters into their own hands by fusing conciliar and
                  republican principles to form a self-governing corporation that challenged the
                  hierarchical authority of Bishop Amerigo Corsini (1411-35; after 1419, archbishop) in order to
                  defend themselves against Florentine and papal tax officials. Only at
                  midcentury was the reforming Dominican archbishop Antoninus (1446-59) able to intervene between Florence and the papacy to defend the
                  clergy within the Florentine territory. Providing them with long-sought
                  financial relief, he was able in turn to reimpose his
                  own episcopal hierarchical authority over them.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XVII
                  
                
                Looking back, few Florentines doubted the justice of
                  their city's war against Pope Gregory XI. In the view of the contemporary
                  Stefani, the Otto di balìa “performed the greatest deeds that had ever been carried out down to that day”.
                  Two decades later the pious, prosperous, but politically emarginated dyer
                  Giovanni Morelli praised them in the Ricordi he wrote
                  for his son as “the most famous, sagacious and valiant men ever seen in
                  Florence”. Filippo Rinuccini,
                  whose uncle Francesco had been forced to purchase estates from the monastery of Vallombrosa, likewise believed they had “conducted
                  themselves valiantly” (portoronsi valentmente),
                  and his son Alamanno referred in his 1479 dialogue “On
                  Liberty” to Florence’s “greatest and most expensive war, the one against the
                  terrible governors of the Papal States”.
                  
                
                But the humble Morelli also
                  recalled another side of the war. “Our Lord God desired that his pastors be
                  chastised”, he explained, “but because that was not properly our task, since we
                  are sinners ourselves as well, God chastised us in turn”. Even before the
                  interdict was lifted, the Ciompi had risen in July
                  1378. The purges (ammonizioni)
                  of suspected Ghibellines had opened up a power struggle among Florence’s ruling
                  orders between resurgent partisans of the Parte Guelfa and supporters of the Otto, while the
                  government’s assault on local ecclesiastical institutions had had the broad
                  effect of destabilizing all public authority, lay as well as clerical, opening
                  the way for the popolo minuto now to
                  make a bid for political power. In July, half a dozen strategically located
                  churches were used as centers of Ciompi operations:
                  their leaders in fact styled themselves the”Eight Saints of the Balìa of the People of God”. Though
                  their demands were more strictly political and economic than religious,
                  Florence’s traditional rulers viewed the Ciompi with
                  horror and interpreted the uprising as a direct result of the war and, more
                  specifically, of the city’s assault on the local church. “For the sin committed
                  against the holy church of God”, noted the Florentine prior Alamanno Acciaiuoli in his chronicle of 1378, “having been led
                  by evil Florentine citizens to make an assault [impresa] upon it, and to provoke
                  so many cities and castles to rebel . . . and then, subsequently, for having
                  sold the possessions and goods of ecclesiastics, carrying away so much money;
                  and for the opprobrium, vituperation, and offenses that were inflicted daily on
                  ecclesiastical persons, God promised to impose this punishment [disciplina] on this our city”. Chancellor Salutati explained to Prior Ubaldino Buonamici of the church of Santo Stefano that God had
                  visited the schism on the papacy for its assault on Florentine libertas (and for the massacre at Cesena), the rebellion of
                  the Ciompi on Florence for its liquidation of the
                  clerical patrimony.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XVIII
                  
                
                Salutati spoke for the members of the Guelf reggimento that returned to power
                  in 1382 and found its political center in the Albizzi family. Thus, while they developed the use of institutions such as the Monte
                  and the catasto to control the church in their
                  expanding territory, they also articulated a variety of strategies aimed at
                  pacifying society, and legitimizing their regime, not simply by reviving old
                  papal Guelfism but by appropriating the legitimizing
                  power of local religious life and ecclesiastical institutions. Embracing and
                  shaping key (and acceptable) strains of public devotion, they made themselves
                  stewards of a project to resacralize a city that had
                  recently profaned itself.
                  
                
                The religious trauma of the war, followed by the
                  outbreak of the schism, had stimulated a rise in the activities of fraticelli heretics and prophets; but it also generated a surge in confraternal
                  foundations, new hospitals, ecclesiastical building projects, and lay
                  benefactions to ecclesiastics. The regime turned first to coercion, and set
                  boundaries, by passing a law in 1382 that condemned the fraticelli and required
                  Florentine officials to carry out the orders of the inquisitor. Aimed at
                  disciplining flagellants, prophets, and aristocrats of radical bents who had
                  surfaced over the last few years, the measure also put an ideological brand on
                  the upstart popolo minuto and
                  distanced the regime from the Marsilian policies of
                  the government of the Otto that had preceded it. But executions in 1384 and
                  1389 provoked worrying public revulsion. More persistently, therefore, the
                  government sought to shape and identify with, rather than repress, public
                  expressions of religious sentiment. In the century down to 1450, sixty new
                  confraternities were created in the city, the bulk of them penitential
                  societies of disciplinati.
                  Though the government kept a wary eye on them, confraternities provided an
                  important release of social tension. The Albizzi regime actively encouraged the musical development of the laudesi and incorporated
                  confraternities and sacre rappresentazioni into a ritual calendar of public religious holidays and dozens of new civic
                  oblations to key religious institutions that it expanded dramatically over the
                  next several decades. When, in 1399, the great movement of Bianchi penitents
                  reached the city gates, Florence's priors, unlike their counterparts in Milan
                  and Venice, welcomed them into the city and organized additional processions
                  throughout the surrounding countryside.
                  
                
                The restitution of ecclesiastical property was
                  accompanied by a surge of lay benefactions to ecclesiastical institutions that
                  continued through the fifteenth century. The completion of the cathedral, the
                  decoration of Orsanmichele, and the rebuilding of
                  such churches as Santa Trinita, San Lorenzo, and
                  Santa Croce were but the most notable of numerous projects that conjoined art
                  and power in a display of wealth and piety, carried out by opere that linked the city’s
                  priors, guildsmen (or, increasingly, leading parishioners), and ecclesiastics
                  to rebuild, repair, or redecorate the city’s churches and monasteries. The
                  government’s strategy of apportioning new ritual oblations to favored
                  ecclesiastical institutions was replicated in the distribution of gabelle exemptions, fiscal subventions, and communal assistance in the judicial pursuit
                  of testamental revenues to churches, monasteries, and
                  especially hospitals. As Poggio's De avaritia attests, the aftermath of the war saw the birth in Florence of modern
                  charitable philanthropy. A comparable process unfolded in the sphere of
                  Florentine sumptuary legislation. In the late fourteenth and early fifteenth
                  centuries, the Florentine government superseded the episcopal court in the
                  regulation of such life-cycle sacraments as baptisms, marriages, and funerals,
                  as well as in enforcing laws regulating women's dress, gambling, and sexual
                  conduct (including the supervision of nunneries). Even hosting the Council of
                  Pisa in 1409 was embraced as an opportunity not only to legitimize one of
                  Florence's most recent territorial acquisitions but also to connect the
                  sanctification of the republic to the broader effort to reunite a universal
                  church whose own sanctity, and legitimacy, had been located by conciliar
                  theorists in the community of the faithful. "Nothing," declared
                  Antonio di Alessandro degli Alessandri to the priors, “would bring our republic greater merit before God, and fame
                  among men”.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XIX
                  
                
                Bruni thus articulated his secularizing vision of
                  Florentine republican history not only in the aftermath of the city's triumph
                  over Milan in 1402, nor simply against a broad cultural backdrop of waning or merely
                  persisting medieval religious sentiment. Florence in the early Quattrocento was
                  a deeply penitential society, engaged in a process of civic re-sacralization in atonement for the profanation it had
                  inflicted on its church during the War of the Eight Saints. The evidence of
                  heightened Florentine religious sensibility abounds, as Bruni noted in his Laudatio,
                  in the city’s built environment. Bruni aimed not to
                  contest but to complement this lavish display of Florentine piety. Though he
                  has been lauded for his modern, critical approach to sources and documents,
                  more lay behind his narrative selections (and omissions) than critical method,
                  classical historiography, and rhetorical schematization.
                  
                
                Bruni would have been writing his account of the War of the
                  Eight Saints in book 8 roughly in the years 1434-36. He had begun the Historiarum florentini populi libri XII upon his
                  return to Florence in 1415 after a decade’s service in the Papal Curia, and by
                  the time he completed the first six books (to 1343) in 1429, his assumption of
                  the chancellorate in 1427 had given them official
                  status. Hostilities with Milan had resumed under Giangaleazzo Visconti’s son Filippo Maria (1392-1447) in 1423, and
                  in 1436 Pier Candido Decembrio challenged republican Florence—and Bruni—by issuing
                  his own imperial panegyric of Milan. In the biography of Dante that he wrote
                  that year, Bruni disparaged the poet’s Ghibelline Monarchia and, as
                  we have seen, he omitted entirely from his history of the Eight Saints the
                  Florentines’ Ghibelline defense of their policies before Pope Gregory XI in
                  1376. At a time when many Florentines still wondered whether the destruction of
                  papal power in central Italy had not in fact opened the door to Milanese
                  aggression, and when Florence had just joined Pope Eugenius IV in engaging the
                  condottiere Francesco Sforza against Milan (1434), Bruni likewise deemed it inopportune to highlight the birth of Salutati’s new historical vision of libertas in the war Florence had fought alongside Milan against the papacy. Rather, the
                  triumph of Florentine republican libertas remained attached, in Bruni’s historical narrative, to the Florentine victory over Milan in a manner that
                  canceled the failures of its earlier conflict with the church.
                  
                
                Nor was this the moment to open up the domestic
                  history of the war. In 1434 Pope Eugenius IV was forced to flee from Rome to
                  Florence, where he found shelter for nearly a decade. But it was scarcely to
                  appease this weak pope that Bruni suppressed from his
                  account of the war every reference to the city’s spoliation of its
                  ecclesiastical patrimony. Rather, it was the religious sensibilities,
                  anxieties, and memories of the Florentine public that he sought to assuage. Two
                  years after Eugenius’s arrival in the city—again in
                  1436—at great Florentine expense and with lavish ceremony, the pope consecrated
                  the newly completed Florentine cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore, which had
                  been erected on the site of the old Santa Reparata,
                  demolished in 1375. This was the capstone of that entire process of religious
                  commemoration and civic re-sacralization that had
                  been under way since the end of the War of the Eight Saints, one which the Albizzi regime had embraced and overseen, and which
                  Florence's new Medici rulers aimed to inherit. Two years later they underwrote
                  the Council of Florence (1438-39), again to connect the resanctified republic to a broader project to unify Christendom. Bruni chose not, in his history, to point back to the spoliation of its
                  ecclesiastical patrimony that Florence had carried out during the war, and to
                  the subsequent decades of restitution, that had necessitated this project. If
                  the memories now being inscribed into the city's sacred urban fabric were to be
                  piously conveyed to posterity, the legitimizing narrative of the Florentine
                  republic would have to be detached from much of the history of its own church.
                  The artistic commemoration of a Florentine respublica christiana entailed the construction of
                  a purified, expurgated—and thus, secularized—narrative of the respublica florentina.
                  The sacralization of Florentine space—and
                  memory—required the textual secularization of Florentine history, and time.
                  
                
                The Florentine response to the War of the Eight Saints
                  offers a remarkable study in the calculated disjunctures between historical events, historical writing, and public memory. Without the
                  archival documents, it would be impossible to hear the silences in Bruni’s and his successors’ humanist texts. Those silences,
                  in turn, echo the trauma of events willingly forgotten. Bruni was buried with a copy of his history: in his eulogy, Poggio praised it as a work “through which the fame and name of Florence will
                  certainly come down to posterity and even into eternity”, and an anonymous
                  panegyric noted that Bruni “embellished a history in
                  twelve books by which he kept alive the memory of many things done by Florence
                  which were already being forgotten”. The reverse was also true. Bruni’s authoritative history successfully reconfigured
                  Florentine memory by attaching the theme of republican libertas to the war against
                  Milan, while consigning the moment of Florentine Ghibellinism and sacrilege—and much of Florence's religious history since the Eight
                  Saints—to oblivion.
                  
                
                
                   
                
                XX
                  
                
                But the clergy remembered, and it fell to Archbishop Antoninus, who at midcentury supervised the last stage of
                  the restitutions and reordered the clergy’s finances and government, to recount
                  the domestic history of the War of the Eight Saints and the city’s assault on
                  its church. In his universal Cronica, less widely circulated than his Summa theologica,
                  and much less so than Bruni’s history, Antoninus willingly acknowledged his debt to the humanist’s
                  work. But Antoninus well knew the history of the
                  Florentine church and was unwilling to accommodate the construction of a civic
                  self-image that silently wrote it out of republican memory and into pious
                  oblivion. Thus, where Bruni turned in his narrative
                  to the movements of troops and diplomats, the archbishop instead brought the
                  penitents and prophets back into the city’s streets.
                  He offered a full account of the Florentines’ expropriation of clerical
                  property, “so that all the while with the goods of the clergy they could fight
                  against the church”, explained in detail the restitution process, and noted
                  that “nevertheless, many of [these goods] were lost, either through negligence,
                  or in the oblivion and passage of time”. And, unlike Bruni and Poggio, Antoninus revived the views of Acciaiuoli and Salutati by connecting the war and the expropriations
                  directly to the revolt of the Ciompi—and to God's
                  chastising judgment on the city. The Florentines had spent “infinite” sums of
                  money and had been interdicted and excommunicated while their enemies grew
                  stronger. Then had come civic strife, the struggles between citizens and the popolo minuto, and
                  finally the domination of the vilissima plebs,
                  the Ciompi. Thus, reminded the strict archbishop, “the
                  Florentines did not walk away unpunished”.
                  
                
                Antoninus’s episcopal reforms enabled him to reassert
                  ecclesiastical control of the sacred in Florentine life and gave him political
                  capital that he spent defending the republic. Like their Albizzi predecessors, the Medici pursued a policy of cultivating religious legitimation
                  that was a legacy of the “Eight Saints”. But when they moved to consolidate
                  their power in 1458 by pushing for the abolition of secret balloting in the
                  city’s councils, Antoninus threatened their partisans
                  with excommunication. They were obliged to abandon quiet subversion and to
                  resort instead to an open coup (parlamento), at the same time choosing political power over
                  the trappings of legitimacy. Thereafter, although Lorenzo de' Medici lavishly
                  underwrote public religious festivals and married members of his family into
                  families of the Papal Curia, the widening gap between private religious
                  sensibility and ostentatious public display became a staple of late-fifteenth-century
                  Florentine discussion.
                  
                
                At the end of the fifteenth century, Savonarola,
                  reaching deep into the city’s civic memory, cited Antoninus as a precedent for his own efforts to revive Florence’s republican and
                  religious traditions. But given the historiographical tradition they had
                  inherited from Bruni, it was natural that neither
                  Machiavelli nor Guicciardini should regard the
                  prophet as other than an anomaly, or even notice his ties to the reforming Antoninus. In the wake of Savonarola’s execution in 1498,
                  with the Medici restored to Florence by their kinsmen Popes Leo X and Clement
                  VII in the early sixteenth century, Machiavelli turned to ruminate on the
                  possibility of exercising political power in a state without credible
                  "divine institutions”. Guicciardini, in turn,
                  arranged his personal life and writings around that historical partition
                  between politics and religion that he had inherited from his Quattrocento
                  humanist predecessors. It has remained a staple of the European memory of the
                  Renaissance virtually to this day.