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        READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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          ITALYIN THE TIME OF DANTE1265-1321
 
 No higher
                  tribute could be paid to Dante than to give his name to an age rich in famous
                  men, the age of Boniface VIII and Henry VII, of Can Grande della Scala and
                  Robert of Anjou. Yet it is no misnomer, for every one of them recalls a line of
                  the Commedia, and, if the discredited exile had no influence upon his
                  age in life, he has done much to keep its memory fresh in history. Dante
                  himself would not have been content with this. He was no mere man of letters;
                  lie had plunged eagerly into politics. Yet all his efforts in public life
                  seemed doomed to failure. His priorate of two months led to exile of over
                  twenty years; his outspoken protest against Florentine aid for an unjust papal
                  war was beaten; his embassy to Boniface VIII, if indeed he served on it, found
                  no friendly hearing; he early broke from all his fellow-exiles to form a
                  one-man party. In politics misfortune even dogged his pen. His De Monarchia failed of its practical purpose, and seemed to have died still-born; his
                  letters to the Italian cardinals in conclave at Carpentras, calling for an
                  Italian Pope with his seat at Rome, brought no response; he died in humble
                  employment at a small Romagnol court, and that of the Guelfic party.
                   Dante’s career
                  then, as a man of action, which he would fain have been, was failure
                  unrelieved. And yet no man, not even Villani,has so impressed himself upon the
                  history of his age, and that without his writing a line of history. Consciously
                  or unconsciously the celebrities mentioned in the Commedia are still
                  classified under the categories in which he placed them. Emperors, kings, and
                  Popes, ambitious despots and factious republicans, are all labelled for
                  posterity. If a very small percentage is allotted seats in Paradise, the result
                  is appropriate to an age of even peculiar violence, lust, and fraud. The
                  mummified De Monarchia has become, for political science the subject of
                  constant study; the Convivio is ransacked lor scraps of historical
                  information; the Letters are documents of real historical interest. No
                  reasonable man would read the story of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth
                  centuries without his Dante within reach.
                   The period
                  covered by this chapter begins approximately with the year 1289, in which the
                  youthful Dante is said to have fought in the victory of Campaldino, and it ends
                  within a year or so of Dante’s death. Its history is confused by the number of
                  independent States, small or large, each working out its own salvation or its
                  ruin. A certain unity is preserved by the close relation between the Angevin
                  house at Naples, the Papacy, and the Guelf republic at Florence. Florence,
                  indeed, gives a centre to most of the
                    Tuscan cities comprised in the Guelfic league, to which even Siena, her traditional
                    Ghibelline rival, during this period belongs, but to east and west she has
                    persistent foes in Arezzo and Pisa. Within the Papal States, Perugia, Bologna,
                    and the lords of Ferrara have their independent story. In Lombardy, Milan and
                    Verona seem destined to be predominant powers under their respective dynasts,
                    though Pavia from ancient jealousy and Padua from its republicanism and wealth
                    have to be reckoned with. Between the expansive powers Milan and Verona, with
                    its satellite Mantua, lay a group of cities usually Guelfic but always
                    quarrelsome. Brescia, a city of refuge for the plain, had access to Alpine
                    pastures and northern commercial routes. Cremona controlled the northern, and
                    Piacenza the southern, bank of the Po, with custody of the historic Emilian
                    road. Farther south from Parma led the route across the Apennines into Liguria
                    and Tuscany, and was of high interest in the history of despotism even to the
                    nineteenth century. Modena and Reggio were noteworthy as bones of contention
                    between Bologna and Ferrara, with the Ghibelline powers hungrily on the watch.
                    The Piedmontese cities vacillate between Milan and the house of Anjou, which
                    might have dominated western Lombardy but for its chronic preoccupation with
                    the reconquest of Sicily. Events in Venice and Genoa might in common parlance
                    be described as side-shows, so far as continental Italy is concerned, though
                    each for a time became the centre of acute general conflict. Petrarch described
                    them later as the two eyes of Italy, whose duty it was to watch her eastern and
                    her western seas, but their invariable aim was rather to blind each other.
             The Guelf and
                  Ghibelline struggle was continuous, but in inter-State policy the cleavage was
                  more distinct in Tuscany than in Lombardy and the adjoining papal fiefs, such
                  as Bologna and Ferrara. Dante was nearly accurate in stating that every city
                  had war within its walls, but strong hereditary despotism was serving as a
                  check on internal faction, Thu dynast may be Guelf or Ghibelline; either of the
                  two may rest on the people or the nobles. Dante makes the demagogue despot play
                  the tribune Marcellus in every city; even liltle Assisi could claim a thoroughgoing
                  tyrant. When in large cities despots do not exist, the government is compelled,
                  as in Florence and Genoa, to submit to a foreign protectorate. Padua and
                  Bologna struggle for so-called liberty, but the shadow of despotism is already
                  falling. Elsewhere immunity is only due, as in Genoa, to equality in fighting
                  force between the contending family groups. The republican polity was in
                  process of being played out, Venire alone belying the general rule.
                   The advent of
                  the Emperor Henry VII is a landmark in the confused history of the age. Here at
                  least principles were involved, Philip IV had tested the power of national
                  monarchy against Rome, but now the two universal sovereignties, both claiming
                  divine origin, came into collision in the garden of the Empire, the old
                  familiar ground. As in ancient Athens temporary local ailments determined in
                  the great plague, so in Italy local disorders were merged in one general
                  conflict, which gave some unity to the history of three years.
                   After Henry’s
                  death the two chief Lombard dynasties again follow their respective lines of
                  expansion, while Venice still nurses her wounds. A revival of Ghibellinism once
                  more sets all Tuscany ablaze. The house of Anjou still casts lingering glances
                  upon Sicily, while its princes and mercenaries are reluctantly dribbled into
                  the Tuscan conflict. The period ends with a customary civic fight at Genoa,
                  which becomes a focus for all contending powers, Lombard, Neapolitan, and
                  Tuscan, the Avignon Papacy, and even the Sicilian king. The fate of Genoa was,
                  indeed, of supreme importance to every maritime power in the western Mediterranean,
                  and to the dominant State beyond her northern frontiers.
                   
                   From the death
                  of Charles I Naples ceased to be the focus of Italian history. On 29 May 1289,
                  however, the kingdom of Sicily once more had a lawfully crowned head. The heir,
                  released from captivity by Alfonso of Aragon, left three young sons as
                  hostages, engaging to return, if within a year he had not obtained the
                  renunciation of the Aragonese claim from Charles of Valois and peace with
                  France and the Pope. Nicholas IV released him from his oath, and crowned him at
                  Rieti as King of Sicily with all that his father had held. The renewal of war
                  with James of Sicily was imperative; Loria was conquering the Calabrian coast
                  towns, while James from his base at Ischia and Procida besieged Gaeta. Charles
                  saved the fortress by aid of a heterogeneous crusading force, but this was his
                  sole success; he was forced to a truce, which left James all his conquests.
                  Alfonso had remained neutral; threatened by Castile, he made peace with France
                  in February 1291, no mention being made of Sicily. On 18 June he suddenly died.
                  Alfonso left Aragon and Majorca to James, who should, transfer Sicily to their
                  younger brother Frederick, so that Aragon and Sicily would remain separate.
                  Resignation was antipathetic to James’ character; he must keep both kingdoms.
                  Leaving Frederick as governor, he sailed in July 1291 to be crowned at
                  Saragossa. He claimed as the heir, not of Alfonso, but of his father Peter III.
                   Charles II on
                  2 April 1292 lost the papal suzerain who had crowned him. Nicholas IV was among
                  the least distinguished Popes. Having been legate in the East, he was mainly
                  interested in the Crusade. The Saracen capture of Acre made further operations
                  hopeless, and Nicholas was the last genuine crusading Pope. There was often
                  talk of renewal in papal and royal circles, but the motives were mainly
                  financial or matrimonial. To Nicholas the Colonna owe much of their later
                  importance, for which the Papacy paid dearly. Nicholas III had made Giacopo
                  cardinal; his nephew Peter now became his colleague; Peter’s father John,
                  created Senator of Rome and Rector of the March, ruled Rome almost as dictator,
                  forcing Viterbo to recognise the city’s suzerainty. Napoleon Orsini, connected
                  by marriage with the Colonna, also received the cardinal’s hat, perhaps with
                  the aim of dividing the rival family. His name was to reappear for very many
                  years to come.
                   A dreary
                  conclave, which opened at Rome in April 1292, only closed at Perugia on 5 July
                  1294. Charles II had intervened, only to be snubbed. The ten surviving
                  cardinals were divided between the Orsini and Colonna factions, with Benedict
                  Gaetani occupying an intermediate position. At length Cardinal Latino
                  Malabranca, inspired by a dream, proposed the election of an aged hermit, who,
                  living in a cave on Monte Murrone in the Abruzzi, had founded an Order of the
                  Holy Ghost. Both parties acclaimed the proposal, either from a wave of
                  repentance or from pure exhaustion. Even Gaetani, though exempt from either
                  feeling, somewhat sarcastically adhered. The hermit was dragged unwillingly
                  from his cave; Charles II, whose subject he was, and Charles Martel, titular
                  King of Hungary, led his palfrey into Aquila, and hence escorted him to Naples.
                  The new Pope took the name of Celestine; he never saw Rome. His reign was an absurdity;
                  under the thumb of Charles he created eight French and four Italian cardinals,
                  all of the Angevin party; a few months reduced the Curia to chaos. Celestine,
                  conscious of incompetence, braced himself to resignation. He had learnt to rely
                  on the advice of Gaetani, who stated that he had at first dissuaded him. It
                  was, however, generally believed that he had intrigued for Celestine’s
                  withdrawal through the medium of a midnight voice, professedly angelic,
                  speaking through a megaphone to Celestine in bed. The Neapolitans, furious at
                  losing their Pope, clamoured riotously before the royal palace. But Celestine
                  stood firm; Charles, having obtained his ends, and realising the impossibility
                  of a pontificate based on piety alone, made no resistance. Celestine’s
                  successor thought it imprudent to leave the self-deposed Pope in his cell on
                  Monte Murrone. Fearing arrest, the hermit attempted to escape to Dalmatia, but
                  was captured and confined at Fumone, near Anagni, until his death in 1296. Even
                  then it was thought safer that ten feet of soil should hide potential relics
                  from pious exhumation. Celestine’s resignation has been made famous by Dantes
                  line on t he gran rifiuto (Inferno, III, 60). There are difficulties in
                  referring this to Celestine, but it is hardly possible to reject the tradition
                  handed down from Dante’s son. Esau is a less attractive, alternative.
                   On 23 December
                  1294 Gaetani was elected at Naples by a large majority out of twenty-two
                  cardinals; he took the name of Boniface VIII. The election was honest enough,
                  for both Orsini and Colonna voted for him, several of the French cardinals
                  being violently opposed. He stood head and shoulders above his colleagues in
                  legal knowledge, diplomatic experience, and business ability. He was born at
                  Anagni, the home of Innocent III, Gregory IX, and Alexander IV, of whom his
                  mother was a niece. The Gaetani were a knightly family of no great importance;
                  they were Ghibellines, and Benedicts father had served under Manfred.
                  Boniface’s age is much disputed. Dino Compagni makes him eighty-six at death; a
                  recent authority holds that he was not much over sixty on election. His
                  character has been fiercely discussed between those who believed him to be the
                  worst of all Popes and others who, regarding him as the boldest champion of
                  papal claims, are bound to refute as libels the charges of vice and heresy laid
                  agains him by the French Court, the Colonna, and the Celestinians. The evidence
                  seems conclusive that he was doctrinally a sceptic, but a believer in amulets
                  and magic; in this he was but on a level with other high ecclesiastics. It is
                  probable that for him, as later for Alexander VI, the moral code had little
                  meaning. On the other hand, the unsavoury details of the twenty-nine articles
                  of the French minister Plaisians, and the evidence concocted after his death by
                  Nogaret, are suspicious commonplaces, applied to others whom the French lawyers
                  were interested in attacking. A celebrated passage in a dispatch to James of
                  Aragon describes him some years before his death as all eyes and tongue, with
                  all else diseased. In 1300 in another Aragonese dispatch he is mentioned as
                  being very well, better than three years ago, and again in 1302 as saying that
                  he would live till all his enemies were “choked off.” On exhumation his body
                  was found in excellent preservation; such a monster of corruption could hardly
                  have preserved all his fine teeth but two. A modern apologist admits that he
                  kept bad company, but was not himself so bad as he has been painted.
                   To the
                  historian Boniface’s temperament is more important than his morals, for it
                  explains his pretensions, his success, and his tragic fall. He was at once a
                  law and an idol to himself. His legal learning culminated in the ipse dixit;
                  he worshipped his fine person, appearing now in the full garb of Pope, now, it
                  is said, of Emperor. He fostered this idolatry by distributing silver
                  statuettes or larger effigies of himself. For supposed inferiors of whatever
                  rank he had illimitable scorn; his rudeness extended from Charles II, “the miserable,
                  whom, but for his own bounty, the earth would have swallowed up,” to the
                  kneeling Archbishop of Genoa, into whose eyes he threw the ashes expected on
                  his head, or to a German envoy, whom he kicked in the face. Though always
                  hated, he had the art of at once bribing and intimidating his court into
                  submission. His chief energies were directed to the advancement of his own
                  family at the expense of their neighbours or the Church. His views ranged from
                  the creation of petty principalities to the claims of an old Roman Emperor,
                  with the custody of the Keys of Heaven added. It is small wonder that Boniface
                  incurred hatred during life and after death. If the Commedia is the
                  drama of love and hate, Boniface may well stand as the villain of the play.
                   The Pope, in
                  spite of his Ghibelline origin, flung himself fiercely, as was natural, into
                  the duel between Anjou and Aragon, for he was vitally interested in the
                  recovery of Sicily, the whole kingdom being admittedly a papal fief. James had
                  soon found that he was in danger of falling between two thrones. The Aragonese,
                  as distinct from the Catalans, disliked the Sicilian connexion, in which, as an
                  inland State, they had no interest, and which dragged them into a drawn-out
                  struggle with France, the Papacy, and Castile. Patriotic Sicilians resented
                  being an annexe of unsympathetic Aragon. Frederick must have felt himself
                  cheated of his rights to the throne under Alfonso’s will. Nevertheless there
                  was no decisive change until Boniface’s election. James, now in danger of revolt,
                  gave in. Boniface in June 1295 arranged the terms of peace between Anjou,
                  Aragon, and France. James should marry the daughter of Charles II; the French
                  king withdrew all claims to Aragon; the surrender of Sicily was later rewarded
                  by the promise of Sardinia and Corsica under papal suzerainty, if James could
                  expel the Pisans and Genoese. Frederick was tempted with the hand of Catherine
                  Courtenay, heiress of the titular Emperor of the East and niece of Charles II;
                  he resisted so speculative an exchange, and threw in his lot with the
                  Sicilians.
                   Frederick and
                  Sicily were now left to their fate, and very terrible this seemed. But the
                  people and their leader never faltered. Frederick was proclaimed king by the
                  Parliament at Messina, and crowned at Palermo. National support was rewarded by
                  a liberal constitution, giving to the three Estates the decision on peace and
                  war, much power of legislation, and some approach to ministerial
                  responsibility. The king took the bold offensive in Calabria, tempted the Neapolitans
                  to revolt, and allied himself with Ghibelline elements in Tuscany and Lombardy.
                  Boniface was now Frederick’s deadliest enemy. He brought Charles II and James
                  to Rome early in 1297, and here John of Proci da and Roger Loria, neither of
                  them Sicilians, threw over the cause in which they had made their reputations.
                  Loria became Admiral of the allied fleets, which were to restore Sicily to
                  Anjou, Even Constance, widow of Peter, deserted her favourite son, and left
                  Sicily for Rome. Here too was Charles II’s third son, Robert, released from
                  Aragon in 1295 and now his father’s vicar for Naples. Wide scandal was caused
                  by the presumption that he was to succeed his father. His eldest brother
                  Charles Martel had died in 1295, but loft a son, Carobert, afterwards King of
                    Hungary. The second son, Louis, who had taken Orders, only renounced his
                  rights in December 1299, Boniface stifled opposition by recognising Robert, as
                  heir in February 1297, and in March he married Yolande, sister of James and
                  Frederick.
                   At this time
                  Boniface became involved in another war, caused almost wholly bv his nepotistic
                  ambitions. The Colonna large estates and strong fortresses along the hills
                  south of the Campagna were natural objecls of papal greed, especially as they
                  adjoined the humbler Gaeiani holdings. Cardinal Giacopo, a man of saintly
                  character, was associated with Jacopone da Todi and the Spiritual Franciscans;
                  he may well have been persuaded of the illegality of Celestine’s resignation,
                  and of Boniface’s manipulation thereof. The house moreover, being now definitely
                  Ghibelline, was in favour of Frederick of Sicily and opposed to any papal
                  claims to imperial authority in Italy. Sciarra, a violent young member of the
                  family, provoked attack by raiding in March 1297 a convoy of papal treasure, on
                  the pretext that it was extorted for the purchase of estates for Boniface’s
                  nephew Peter. Though the property was restored, a Bull was issued, depriving
                  the two Colonna cardinals of their benefices. The Colonna took to their
                  fortresses, denied the legality of Celestine’s resignation, and appealed to a
                  council. On interdict and sentence of confiscation followed the preaching of a
                  crusade. The Orsini, Florence, and other Guelfic, Tuscan, and Umbrian cities
                  sent contingents. In September 1298 the ancient walls of Palestrina were
                  surrendered under false promises, for which Dante makes Guido of Montefeltro
                  responsible. The site of the city was ploughed up and salted. Colonna fugitives
                  found refuge in England, France, or Ghibelline Italian cities. A powerful State
                  was formed for Peter Gaetani, intended to overawe the smaller nobles and
                  restore order in the wide feudal lands surrounding Rome.
                   On this
                  success the Jubilee of 1300 closely followed. Among all Roman Jubilees this has
                  been the most distinguished, celebrated by Villani’s youthful resolve to write
                  his History, and by Dante’s simile, describing the dense lines of
                  pilgrims as they crossed the Bridge of Sant’ Angelo to and from St Peter’s. The
                  touch is so intimate as to have suggested that Dante was among their number.
                  Amid the ceremonies, which lasted until Christmas Eve, Boniface was at his
                  best. His love for splendour, his talent for organisation, his very autocracy
                  ensured the success of this huge European festival. His croupiers at St Peter’s
                  and St Paul’s raked in the countless pious offerings, from which he hoped to
                  finance the conquest of Sicily and the establishment of yet another Gaetani
                  State, this time in Tuscany.
                   Until the last
                  month of the Jubilee papal prospects were encouraging. The Sicilians soon felt
                  the loss of their great admiral. Frederick, faced by a huge fleet, which Loria
                  had collected from the Mediterranean powers, retired from before Naples. In
                  July 1299 the Neapolitan and Aragonese fleets won a decisive victory over a much
                  inferior force off Cape Orlando, Frederick escaping with only seventeen
                  galleys. It was some compensation that James sailed home, in dudgeon with his
                  allies, and, perhaps, disgust with himself. Sicily was attacked from west and
                  east. Robert and his brother, Philip of Taranto, took Catania and besieged
                  Messina. Then fortune turned with Frederick’s memorable victory of foot over
                  horse in the plain of Falconaria, near Trapani, in December 1300. Philip was
                  captured, and Messina then relieved. The Sicilians held fast in Calabria,
                  though they had lost the islands off Naples. Charles would gladly have made
                  peace, but Boniface railed against the cowardly king, called Templars and
                  Hospitallers to join in his crusade, and dragged Genoa reluctantly into the
                  conflict. On 14 June 1301 Corrado Doria destroyed yet another Sicilian fleet,
                  but on land Robert made little progress. Naples was being starved to feed his
                  army; news reached Rome that he was ill-fitted to conquer Sicily, being too
                  much under the influence of his wife and the Catalans. The great fleet, which
                  was to reduce western Sicily, was shattered by a tempest off Cape Passero. The
                  aid of France seemed essential to Pope and king, and Charles of Valois was the
                  saviour selected. Towards this incompetent personality Angevin, papal, and
                  Florentine interests were now converging.
                   Side by side
                  with his Sicilian venture Boniface had embarked upon an expensive war in
                  southern Tuscany. Marriage was with Boniface, as with Renaissance Popes, a
                  valuable asset for the construction of the Temporal State. His great-nephew
                  Loffred was one of the many husbands of Margaret Aldobrandeschi, Countess
                  Palatine of the Patrimony in Tuscany. Boniface coveted her wealthy fief and
                  wide allodial domains, unfortunately lost to Loffred by matrimonial rupture.
                  Boniface, elected Podesta of Orvieto, turned the city against its neighbour and
                  ally. Margaret’s relations, the six Counts of Santafiora, hitherto unfriendly,
                  took up her cause, one of them even having courage to marry her. A severe defeat
                  of the Sienese, old enemies of the Aldobrandeschi, forced Boniface to call in
                  the Tuscan league against this stubbornly Ghibelline house. The war began in
                  the first month of the Jubilee; nearly three years passed in wearing resistance
                  down. Margaret’s estates were conferred on another of Boniface’s nephews,
                  together with the Rectorate of the Patrimony. Before this happened,
                  intervention in Florence had begum. From 1289 to 1300 she had been peculiarly
                  free from external complications. Her close relations with Naples had been
                  mutually profitable. She was monopolising Neapolitan commerce and finance at
                  the expense of Italian rivals, while the Angevin kings lived upon her loans.
                  Her bankers also dominated the papal money-market. The internal troubles which
                  brought her into collision with Boniface must now be traced to their source.
                   
                   For Tuscany
                  the year 1289 was one of high importance. At Pisa Ugolino and his family were
                  starved to death in the Tower of Hunger. The Ghibellines once more ruled, with
                  Guido of Montefeltro as their captain. Arezzo had become the headquarters of
                  east, Tuscan Ghibellinism, which included the Florentine feudal families of the
                  upper Arno and the Apennines, the Pazzi, Ubaldini, and Ubertini, one of whom
                  was the fighting Bishop of Arezzo. Count Guido Novello of Poppi and Buonconte,
                  Montefeltro’s son, hold high command. The Aretines had heavily defeated the
                  Sienese, while from Florence were seen the flames of her own outpost San
                  Donato. Within her walls Ghibelline were so numerous among nobles and people
                  that it became necessary to expel them till the sky was clearer. All depended
                  upon immediate success. The army mobilised was unusually large, estimated at
                  2400 horse and 10,000 foot. Charles II had left Aimeri de Narbonne as nominal
                  leader, with the veteran Guillaume de Durfort as guardian. Bologna and the
                  cities of the Tuscan league sent contingents, while, under the Angevin banner
                  fought a troop of Romagnol horse under Maghinardo di Susinana, Ghibelline in
                  Romagna and Lombardy, but Guelf in Tuscany in gratitude for the faithful
                  guardianship of Florence.
                   The Aretines
                  expected the advance by the direct road, south of the Arno, but the Florentines
                  crossed the river, and took the Consuma pass from Pontassieve, a dangerous
                  manoeuvre had there been opposition on the rough descent. The aim was to raid
                  the Guidi territories round Poppi, and the bishop’s estates at Bibbiena. Thus
                  the Aretines entered the Casentino from the southward, and the battle was
                  fought in the plain of Campaldino, between Poppi and Bibbiena. The Florentines,
                  contrary to practice, stood on the defensive. In front was a picked body of
                  light horse consisting of Florentine gentry, among whom Vieri de’ Cerchi and
                  his sons were prominent. Their flanks were covered by cross-bowmen and lancer
                  infantry. Behind them was ranged the main body of heavy cavalry and foot; to
                  cover a possible retreat, a reserve of Pistoians was commanded by their
                  Podesta, the impetuous Corso Donati, who was ordered under pain of death not to
                  attack without express orders. The Aretines, inferior by a third in numbers,
                  furiously attacking, pushed the light horse and main body back, but were then
                  exposed to a flanking fire from the cross-bowmen, who stood firm. Corso, a born
                  soldier, saw his opportunity. Crying out—“If we lose, I will die with my
                  citizens; if we win, let who will come to Pistoia to execute my death
                  sentence,” he dashed into the Aretine flank, and turned the fortunes of the
                  day. Guido Novello with his men rode off for safety; Buonconte and the bishop,
                  who had respectively dissuaded and urged attack, were killed. Dante, who was
                  now twenty-four, was probably engaged; the evidence rests on a fragmentary
                  letter read by his later biographer, Leonardo Bruni, but now lost, which tells
                  how Dante had much fear but the greatest delight owing to the changing fortunes
                  of the fight.
                   Waste of a
                  week or more in ravaging the Casentino spoilt any chance of capturing Arezzo,
                  though the siege train flung donkeys crowned with episcopal mitres into the
                  city. An attack upon Pisa by Genoese galleys and Florentine armies was thwarted
                  by Guido of Montefeltro, wisest and wariest of generals, magnificent in defence
                  and in surprise. Thus no very obvious military results followed on Campaldino.
                  Yet it decided the supremacy of Florence among friends and enemies in Tuscany,
                  until another Tuscan general, Uguccione della Faggiuola, turned the tables. All
                  danger from Ghibellines had ceased, the split between Blacks and Whites had not
                  begun. Trade grew apace, every one seemed rich, the gates stood open with no
                  excise-men to rummage the sacks and baskets of country folk. Villani writes
                  that it was the most joyous time that Florence had ever had, and, indeed, she
                  was never to see another such, save at the height of the Medicean age. Dante
                  enjoyed all the fun of the continuous fair; his first sonnet was addressed to
                  Guido Cavalcanti, leader in literature, fashion, and politics, who perhaps made
                  Dante’s social fortune. It is known that the young poet dressed with care,
                  appreciated delicate cooking and luxurious furniture. He would not then have
                  preferred the ladies of Cacciaguida’s day, who left their mirror without paint
                  upon their cheeks, and donned the products of their spindle and distaff rather
                  than the garish belts and low-cut silks and muslins of the fair objects of his
                  youthful admiration; nor would he have worn the undressed leather-suit with
                  belt to match and clasp of bone, as approved by his great-great-grandfather.
                   In spite of
                  gaiety and prosperity all was not well with Florence. The great gentry presumed
                  on their new prestige to ruffle the middle and lower classes, to add small
                  holdings of defenceless country neighbours to their large estates. Critics
                  complained that the vaunted victory had no results, that the Pisan general had
                  even taken the offensive with success. It was whispered that Corso Donati
                  himself had been bought off from pressing home an attack on Pisa. Wealthy
                  traders, shop-keepers, and the unrepresented classes found a spokesman in Giano
                  della Bella, himself noble and rich, but a reformer by instinct and principle.
                  Hence came about the celebrated Ordinances of Justice, initiated in 1293. Giano
                  himself fell before a combination of the uppermost classes with the Gild of
                  Butchers led by the vapouring demagogue Pecora. The populace offered to support
                  him; but, from a horror of civil war or fear for its issue, he refused the
                  offer, and left Florence for ever. His work was only half done, but the
                  Ordinances in their main tenor were retained, though in 1295 modifications were
                  introduced to meet just grievances of the nobles, while the popolani were reinforced by minor noble families, from whom disqualification for office
                  was now removed; henceforth actual practice was not essential to membership of
                  the gilds which monopolised the government. The Alighieri were possibly
                  included under the former measure, and it is practically certain that Dante
                  benefited by the hitter. Being now thirty, he became a member of the Gild of
                  Doctors and Druggists, but never practised either profession.
                   No
                  constitutional changes could cure the ineradicable spirit of faction among
                  Florentine families. This became concentrated in the feud between groups headed
                  respectively by the Cerehi and the Donati. The Cerchi had migrated from the
                  country, while the Donati were an old Florentine family. Vieri de Cerchi had
                  bought and enlarged the Guidi palace, closely adjoining that of Corso. There
                  was no hard and fast line between noble and bourgeois families; both Cerchi and
                  Donati were engaged in banking, both intermarried with the opposite class, but
                  family pride remained. Vieri was rich and generous, but rough in manners and
                  clumsy in speech. Yet he and his family were popular with middle, and lower
                  classes, with many of the nobles and the oppressed Ghibellines. Corso headed
                  the extreme Guelfic families, and was the darling of the mob, who called him ll
                    barone, and delighted in his martial bearing and ready wit. He ridiculed
                  Vieri, but his personal enemy was Guido Cavalcanti, a noble of the first rank,
                  poet and philosopher, high-spirited but aloof. Assaults and charges of murder
                  culminated in Corso’s banishment in 1299 for gross corruption of a needy Podestà
                  in a matrimonial suit. Hitherto he had been predominant since Giano della
                  Bella’s fall; henceforth the Cerchi, in favour with the moderates, controlled
                  the government until the coming of Charles of Valois.
                   By this time
                  the two parties had become known as Blacks and Whites, nicknames borrowed from
                  Pistoia. This city had been in uproar owing to a murderous feud between two
                  branches of the chief family, the Cancellieri. The disorder threatened the
                  stability of the Guelfic league with a Ghibelline revival at a dangerous
                  strategic point. Florence intervened, took over the administration as a
                  mediatory power, and removed the heads of both parties. The Blacks received
                  hospitality from the Frescobaldi across the Arno, the Whites from the Cerchi.
                  Hence the infection spread through Florence and Tuscany, even into Umbria and
                  Lombardy. It was no longer a feud between two families and their groups, but
                  between parties as definite as Guelfs and Ghibellines.
                   Present hatred
                  and future disaster were barely concealed by the continued gaiety and
                  prosperity. The hatred might any moment blaze up into a ruinous flame. A
                  trifling incident, indeed, caused the outbreak. On the Calends of May 1300, two
                  groups of young bloods, Black and White, were watching the dancing of girls on
                  the Piazza Santa Trinità. Spurring their horses against each other, they came
                  to blows. The only casualty was a nose sliced from a Cerchi face. But Villani
                  justly compares this wound to the murder of Buondelmonte; as that was the
                  beginning of Guelf and Ghibelline factions, so was this the beginning of great ruin to the Guelf party and
                  its city of Florence.
                   This quarrel
                  gave Boniface the opportunity for which he was waiting. The vacancy in the
                  Empire had opened to him rosy prospects. After Adolf of Nassau’s defeat and
                  death in July 1298, he had refused to recognise Albert, but, alarmed by rumours
                  of alliance with Philip IV, he changed his tactics, seeking from Albert the
                  cession of imperial rights over Tuscany in return for recognition. This was a
                  revival of Nicholas III’s scheme for creating nepotist kingdoms in Lombardy and
                  Tuscany. Albert was not to be tempted, whereupon Boniface strove to influence
                  the Electors. The value of such a cession was small, unless he gained practical
                  control over the Tuscan cities, and especially Florence. With this aim he had
                  liberally bestowed benefices and matrimonial dispensations upon leading
                  Florentine families. His probable attitude towards parties was displayed when,
                  on a proposal for the recall of Giano della Bella in 1294, he threatened with
                  excommunication any who should advocate it. Recently he had given office in the
                  Papal States to Corso Donati when banished. Corso conspired against the White
                  government, which in April 1300 condemned for treason three Florentines in
                  Rome, the chief of whom was Simone Gherardi degli Spini, the papal banker.
                  Boniface ordered the government to revoke the sentence, but it resented
                  ecclesiastical interference with civil justice. The skirmish of 1 May stirred
                  him to action. Early in June he sent his chief adviser, Cardinal Acquasparta,
                  to mediate between Blacks and Whites. Perhaps he genuinely wished to reconcile
                  them, and so control both parties. If this failed, he would naturally side with
                  the extremist magnates against the more moderate party, which upheld the
                  Ordinances of Justice and favoured reconciliation with Ghibellines. The Whites,
                  as constitutionalists, would resist any attempt on municipal independence; the
                  Blacks would make any concession, if the Pope would restore them to power.
                   Acquasparta on
                  arrival repeated Boniface’s order for acquittal of the papal agents. The
                  Priorate of 15 June, of which Dante was a member, confirmed the sentence.
                  Public feeling had recently been aroused by a gross assault by turbulent
                  magnates on the Consuls of the Gilds while carrying gifts to the Baptistery on
                  St John’s Day. The Priors who preceded Dante and his colleagues banished the
                  heads of both parties. The White chiefs were soon recalled from Sarzana on
                  hygienic grounds, while, in spite of promises, the Blacks were long excluded.
                  Guido Cavalcanti, indeed, justified the act of mercy by dying of malaria.
                  Acquasparta published his award for the restoration of peace, the chief
                  obstacle to which was the corrupt canvassing and violence which set the city in
                  an uproar on each election to the Priorate. He proposed that suitable names
                  from both parties should be placed in a ballot-box, from which those of the
                  Priors should be drawn by lot. The Whites, unwilling to lose their advantage,
                  refused the award, on which he departed in high dudgeon, pronouncing an interdict
                  against the city.
                   The Pope now
                  determined on more active measures. Corso and the Blacks had pressed him to
                  summon a French prince to his aid. Negotiations had long been on foot with
                  Charles of Valois with a view to French assistance in Sicily. During the last
                  two months of 1300 the conditions were settled. Charles should bring a large
                  force for the conquest of Sicily and the submission of Florence to the Pope’s
                  will. The White government now strove to avoid, a breach, which would bring
                  upon the city the suspended interdict, to the ruin of its foreign trade.
                  Florence had sent large contingents for the Colonna and Aldohrandeschi wars. In
                  dune 1301, however, on the demand for a further reinforcement, opposition showed
                  itself, and Dante, who led this, was only beaten in the Council of
                  100 by 49 votes to 32. The government had in May taken a step which must
                  inevitably provoke papal displeasure. In defiance of its mission as official
                  mediator at Pistoia, it expelled the Black population with much cruelty. Lucca
                  replied by similar treatment of its Whiles, and this with Boniface’s warm
                  approval. The great Tuscan Guellic league was splitting into fragments.
                   Charles joined
                  the papal Court at Anagni on 2 September, ami was appointed Peacemaker (paciaro) by Boniface. The White government, now thoroughly alarmed, sent envoys, among
                  them Dante, as is generally believed, to propitiate the Pope. He would only
                  urge complete submission. Bologna alone stood by Florence at this crisis.
                  Charles, reaching Siena with 800 horse, reinforced by Lucchese, Perugians,
                  Romagnols, and Sienese, sent his Chancellor to Florence to announce his
                  mission. The Priorate, of which Dino Compagni was a member, dared not deny him
                  entrance, for it had made no preparations for resistance. The Priors feebly
                  tried to win the Blacks by forming an advisory committee of both parties; the
                  Parte Guelfa rejected their advances. The Peacemaker’s admission was made the
                  subject of a referendum, a rare example, to the 72 Gilds, which included the 51
                  Lower Trades, usually unrepresented. The gallant Bakers alone opposed it,
                  saying that Charles should neither be received nor honoured, for he was coming
                  to destroy the city. All the leading citizens swore perfect peace and kissed
                  the Gospel at the Baptistery font; tears coursed down the cheeks of those who
                  were to be foremost in destruction. The precautions for public order were
                  ludicrous. Abusive language was to be punished by excision of the tongue. In
                  front of the Palazzo Pubblico, now rising from its foundations, stood the
                  executioner with axe and block awaiting customers. Charles was warned of the
                  imprudence of entering on All Saints’ Day, when the lower classes would be full
                  of new wine. Charles, risking the new wine, rode in by the Porta San Pier
                  Gattolini on 1 November, unarmed “save with the lance of treachery wherewith
                  Judas tilted, with which he was to burst asunder the bowels of Florence”. Of
                  course there were omens of disaster. The comet, now known as Halley’s, was in
                  the sky. Dante in the Convivio describes a cross in the heavens, formed
                  by the vapours which follow the course of Mars and portend the deaths of kings
                  and the revolutions of States, such being the effects of his domination. At
                  first Charles was courtesy itself, inviting the Priors to dine, with the
                  knowledge perhaps that the law forbade them to dine out. He attended the sermon
                  of the celebrated friar Remigio Girolami, who, like Savonarola afterwards,
                  discoursed on the evils of tyranny. A Parliament of Peace was summoned for 5
                  November, and here Charles received full power to act as mediator. He swore
                  faithfully to perform his task, but already his agents had concerted revolution
                  with the Blacks. Only on the previous night the Medici had wounded a recent
                  Gonfalonier of Justice; the citizens gathered round the Priorate ready to take
                  vengeance, but the Priors refrained.
                   The villain of
                  the piece now took the stage. Corso Donati, who had lurked hard by, broke into
                  Florence by a postern, seized the nunnery of San Pier Maggiore, and fortified
                  the campanile. Popular feeling veered with the breeze of audacity, and then
                  arose the cry of Viva Messer Corso il barone. He plundered the houses of
                  the Priors who had exiled him, and threw the prisons open. An orgy of blood,
                  lust, and fire began; the rabble and the gaol-birds were surpassed in crimes by
                  the noblest or wealthiest citizens, Donati, Tosinghi, Rossi, and Medici; they
                  were committed against near neighbours, intimates until the recent split in the
                  Guelfic ranks. Warehouses of merchants and tradesmen were ransacked; heiresses
                  were married by force, and shivering fathers compelled to sign the settlements.
                  In vain the great bell of the Priorate clanged to arms; the few faithful
                  families found no leaders and few followers. Charles of Valois threatened to
                  hang Corso, but never moved a finger. A gallant Pistoian, Schiatta de’
                  Cancellieri, who commanded 300 State horse, wished to attack Corso, but Vieri
                  de’ Cerchi forbade him. No wonder that the populace was passive when the Cerchi
                  were hiding in their palaces.
                   Corso put the
                  final touch to the revolution by turning out the Podestà and Priors. The sole
                  magistrate left was the Captain of the People. Yet even in the flush of triumph
                  the nobles dared not touch the constitution, nor the hated Ordinances of
                  Justice. They were content, with nominating new Priors, who received absolute
                  powers, but submitted every measure to the Black nobles before proposing it. On
                  1 November the new Podestà was appointed, that Cante de Gabrielli of Gubbio to
                  whom Dante was to owe his exile. Cardinal Acquasparta, reappearing, nominally reconciled
                  hostile families, even the Donati and Cerchi. The futility of such friendships
                  was proved by a fresh tragedy. Simone Donati, most brilliant of Florentine
                  young bloods, and his father Corso’s darling, saw old Niecolò de’ Cerchi, his
                  own uncle, pass through the Piazza Santa Croce towards his country house. He
                  followed him, fell on him unawares, and murdered him. A servant, before flying,
                  plunged his sword into Simone’s side; the bloodthirsty youngster died next day.
                   In January,
                  the sack now over, the trials or rather sentences began. Fifteen Gonfaloniers
                  or Priors who had held office between December 1299 and November 1301 were
                  condemned. Among these was Dante, whose outspoken opposition to Boniface VIII
                  had made a verdict inevitable. Penalties varied from fine, exile, and civic
                  disqualification to confiscation of property. If the accused failed to stand
                  his trial, he would be burnt, beheaded, or hanged according to the Podestà’s
                  choice. There were in all 559 sentences of death. Few probably were actually
                  executed. Citizens who fled from justice were rarely caught. A good horst or
                  even a sturdy pair of logs would soon carry the culprit beyond Florentine
                  jurisdiction. Fra Remigio tells a pitiful tale of houses destroyed or deserted,
                  farms and fields lying waste, commerce ruined. The revolution had its sequel in
                  bankruptcies among the great commercial families. Charles of Valois, on leaving
                  Florence early in April 1302, received 24,000 gold florins for his work of
                  peace. The Peacemaker had caused a disgraceful civil war; he went his way to
                  Sicily to sign a degrading peace.
                   
                   On arrival at
                  Rome, Charles was appointed, in May 1302, Captain-General of the papal and
                  Neapolitan forces. All the Tuscan Black Guelfs contributed contingents, while
                  the Bardi and Peruzzi financed the operations. Never was fiasco more complete.
                  The army, burning and plundering, struggled across Sicily to Sciacca, which
                  faces Africa. Here it melted away from malaria. To avoid the chance of a
                  resolute attack by Frederick, the Treaty of Caltabellotta was signed on 24
                  September 1302. With this the War of Sicilian Vespers technically ended, though
                  in practice it proved to be little more than a truce. Frederick married in May
                  1303 Charles II’s daughter Eleanor. Philip of Taranto was released, to prove
                  his military incompetence on Tuscan fields thereafter. Frederick, until death,
                  should rule a free Island of Sicily as King; after his decease it should revert
                  to the Angevins, his heir receiving Cyprus or Sardinia in compensation.
                  Sicilian and Neapolitan conquests were mutually restored. John of Procida was
                  already dead; Loria retired to Spain, his brilliant reputation sadly tarnished.
                  Boniface was, as always, furious, but Charles II for once held firm, and the
                  Pope’s quarrel with Philip IV was developing. Yet he succeeded in modifying the
                  treaty to his own advantage. Frederick agreed to recognise papal suzerainty, to
                  restore ecclesiastical lands, to pay substantial tribute, and provide 100
                  lances for papal service. He had to content himself with the title of King of
                  Trinacria, as Boniface would not tolerate any suggestion of the divisibility
                  of the kingdom of Sicily. The hordes of Catalans, which for years had poured
                  into the island, formed themselves into the Grand Company, and started on their
                  marvellous career on both sides of the Aegean, finally creating that strange
                  soldier-State, the Duchy of Athens, which was to give a claim across the seas
                  to the Aragonese Kings of Sicily.
                   Before
                  Boniface could avail himself of his Tuscan successes, the quarrel began which
                  culminated at Anagni; this hardly affects Italian history, except in so far as
                  it led to the outrage. The tragedy was due to the violent, masterful characters
                  of the two protagonists, and to Philip IV’s substitution of civil lawyers for
                  ecclesiastical councillors. The subjects under dispute were the right of the
                  State to tax its clergy, and the subjection of criminal clerks to royal
                  jurisdiction. Bickerings began in 1296, and an issue might have been reached
                  much earlier, but for the necessities of both parties. To Boniface French aid was
                  essential foir the reconquest of Sicily and the coveted control over Florence,
                  and for both Charles of Valois was the instrument. Yet the final quarrel had
                  begun in October 1301 before Charles had entered Florence or set sail for
                  Sicily. The celebrated Bulls, Salvator mundi and Ausculta fili, issued in December, and Boniface’s wild talk which followed, might have at once
                  caused war but for Philip’s defeat at Courtrai on 11 July 1302, in which Pierre
                  Flote, the royal minister, “the diabolical Achitophel, blind of one eye and
                  totally blind of brain” was killed. Boniface took advantage of the disaster to
                  issue in November the Bull Unam sanctam, perhaps the high-water mark of
                  papal pretensions. Philip, still in difficulties, and under the influence of
                  moderates, suggested arbitration. Boniface, unaware that the moderates had been
                  replaced by Nogaret, Pierre Flote’s right-hand man, who had a personal
                  grievance against the Pope, sent on 13 April 1303 an uncompromising answer.
                  Already on 7 March Nogaret had received instructions to proceed to Italy and
                  bring Boniface back for trial by a General Council. As he was leaving France,
                  Boniface’s envoy arrived, and was arrested. On 13 and 14 June Plaisians read to
                  an Assembly of Notables the twenty-nine articles, on which the post-mortem
                  charges against Boniface were based. Ten days later Philip sent a summons for a
                  General Council to the European powers. The shock caused Boniface to hesitate,
                  but his final Bull, Super Petri solio, which was conditionally to
                  release Philip’s subjects from allegiance, was reserved for publication on 8
                  September 1303.
                   Meanwhile
                  Nogaret, who had enrolled adventurers in Tuscany and kindled rebellion in the
                  late Colonna territories, moved upon Anagni, accompanied by two French
                  subordinates, Sciarra Colonna, and Rinaldo da Supino, Captain of Ferentino. The
                  commandant of the papal troops, the Podestà and Captain of Anagni, had been
                  suborned; Cardinals Napoleon Orsini and Riccardo Petroni of Siena were almost
                  certainly in the secret. The force which broke into Anagni at dawn on 7
                  September may have numbered 1600 horse and foot. The three French assailants
                  hoisted the papal banner, to signify that Boniface was no Pope, but the
                  Italians, for their security, insisted that the French flag should fly beside
                  it. This adds significance to Dante’s line on the sacrilegious outrage—“I see
                  the fleur-de-lys enter Alagna and Christ captured in the person of his Vicar.”
                  The invaders, after hours of stubborn fighting, forced their way into the
                  Gaetani quarter and rushed through the cathedral to the papal palace, where
                  Sciarra found the Pope lying on his bed. To his demand that he should resign
                  Boniface replied: “Here is my neck and here my head,” but resign he would not.
                  Nogaret then entered and stopped any attempt at violence; a dead Pope would not
                  have served his purpose. He had planned every detail of the capture, but was
                  baffled by the impossibility of carrying his captive through half Italy. On the
                  third day came reaction. The people, stirred up by Cardinal Fieschi, rose
                  against the invaders, crying no longer “Death to the Pope”, but “Death to the
                  foreigners”. Sciarra and Supino fled to Ferentino, where Nogaret joined them,
                  not without a wound; the French flag was dragged through the town and trampled
                  under foot. Boniface, released, from the head of the staircase pronounced
                  pardon and blessing to the citizens. On 13 September an escort, sent by the
                  Senators, brought Boniface to Rome, where he fell from the hands of the hostile
                  Colonna into those of his nominal friends the Orsini. The city was in such a
                  ferment that the Senators resigned. Boniface wished to leave the Vatican for
                  the Lateran, but the Orsini hold him tight. Numerous tales, coloured by Guelf
                  or Ghibelline taste, are told of his last days. There seems no doubt
                  that he died in some sort of frenzy, even if he did not try to scratch the eyes
                  of all who approached him. His natural violence had reacted against himself; he
                  thought to be the greatest of Popes, he suflfered the deepest humiliation of
                  any. Pride was his very being, and, pride mortally wounded, he must die.
                   Boniface can
                  scarcely be reckoned among the greater Popes. His was, indeed, an imposing personality,
                  which men either hated or admired, but he had no high impersonal ideals. His
                  reputation is due to the tragic contrast between his pretensions and his fall.
                  The patriotic feeling of Italy was roused by the outrage inflicted on its
                  greatest figure by an unscrupulous French king and his rascally lawyer.
                  Benedict’s reign was so short that Boniface was thought of as the last Italian
                  Pope; the ruinous results to Rome and Italy were rightly attributed to his
                  virtual murder. Yet he was not really a successor to Innocent III or Gregory X,
                  but was rather the precursor of the fifteenth-century Popes, with the
                  territorial aims of Sixtus IV and Alexander VI, and the futile ecclesiastical
                  pretensions of Pius II’s Bull Execrabilis. Pierre Flote had said that
                  his master’s sword was made of steel, that of the Pope of verbiage. He had no
                  real force wherewith to face a strong national king. Florence, his best
                  supporter, would not have raised a ducat or a man against her best customers,
                  the French. The petty successes against Colonna and Aldobrandeschi were
                  outbalanced by total failure in Sicily. He never had real control over the
                  papal territories; Bologna, his chief provincial city, allied herself against
                  him with the Florentine Whites. The absence of an Emperor seemed to give him an
                  opportunity, but the comparative indifference of Rudolf and Albert to Italy was
                  perhaps a disadvantage, for there was no great national cause to champion. The
                  weakness of the Ghibellines at this time encouraged the Guelfs in each State to
                  split into sections; Boniface had neither a nation, nor even a united party, at
                  his back. As a battle-cry, the Church was nearly as husky as the Empire. The
                  posthumous importance of Boniface lies not in his life but in his death, not in
                  his triumphs but in his tragedy.
                   Under the
                  shock caused by Boniface’s tragic death the jarring factions in the Conclave
                  unanimously elected an unexceptionable candidate at the first scrutiny on 22
                  October 1303. Niccolò Boccasini, now Benedict XI, was son of a notary at
                  Treviso; he had pure morals, high culture, and no nipoti. His career had
                  been that of peacemaker. He had negotiated between Philip IV and the Papacy,
                  between France and England. Having promoted, when Legate to Hungary, the
                  election of Carobert as king, he was in favour with Charles II. He restored
                  friendly relations with Sicily, though resisting any revision of the Treaty of
                  Caltabellotta. As General of the Dominicans, he had prevented them from joining
                  the Spiritual Franciscans’ revolt against Boniface. The Colonna cardinals were
                  absolved, though not yet restored to their dignities. Some partial arrangement
                  was made between the Colonna and Gaetani. The Romans elected Benedict Senator
                  for life, yet, in spite of his popularity, the fights between leading families forced
                  him to make Perugia his headquarters. It was impossible to fly in the face of
                  Philip, and yet inexcusable to condone the crime of Anagni. Benedict,
                  neglecting threats, determined to try the actual perpetrators, but acquitted
                  the French king and nation of complicity. The compromise was rather politic
                  than just.
                   Benedict’s
                  hardest problem was that of Florence. Here the expulsion of the Whites had
                  increased external enemies, without leaving peace at home. There was hard
                  fighting with Whites and Ghibellines, and with Arezzo, aided sometimes by
                  Pisans and Bolognese. Corso Donati, whose policy was individualistic rather
                  than oligarchical, expected the spoils of the Black victory. The brain,
                  however, of the conspiracy had been Rosso della Tosa, whom not even the second
                  place would content. Corso, playing as usual to the gallery, took up the cry
                  that Rosso’s party pocketed the profits of corn bought by the Treasury during a
                  famine, and adulterated the supplies sold to the poor. He found an ally in the
                  new bishop, Lottieri della Tosa, who accused them of filching episcopal
                  estates. The rival Black sections, named Pars populi and Pars
                    episcope took up arms. Corso burnt the Palace of the Podestà, but was
                  beaten off from that of the Priors. The government invited the city of Lucca to
                  send troops to establish order, but Corso was still unbeaten. Benedict now
                  intervened, sending his most trusted cardinal, Nicholas of Prato, to reconcile
                  the parties. The suspicions of the extreme Blacks were not unnatural, for the Pope
                  had transferred his banking account from the ultra-Black Spini to the White
                  Cerchi, and Nicholas was of Ghibelline origin. Both, however, were generally
                  regarded as impartial. All classes below the highest longed for peace; the
                  memory of Boniface, who had deprived them of their best customers or employers,
                  was detested. On 17 March 1304 Nicholas was given full powers for reform, and
                  on 26 April there followed the spectacular act of general reconciliation on the
                  Piazza Santa Maria Novella. Florence was now en fête; on the Calends of May, once more fateful, crowds
                  flocked to a well-advertised aquatic representation of Hell; the Ponte Carraia
                  broke under the spectators’ weight; hundreds were drowned, some of whom,
                  observed the chronicler, prematurely experienced the torments which they had
                  come to enjoy.
                   Nicholas
                  passed on his path of peace to Prato and Pistoia. A web of intrigue was now
                  spun round him. Corso having persuaded the men of Prato that the cardinal meant
                  to restore the Ghibellines, they rose in fury. Nicholas fled, for his life,
                  pronounced an interdict, and commanded Florence to attack Prato; but the
                  so-called crusade was a laughable fiasco, a march out and home again. Nicholas,
                  not losing hope, brought to Florence representatives from its best White and Ghibelline
                  families. They received an enthusiastic welcome, bystanders kissing the
                  coat-of-arms of the Uberti as they passed. The magnates, now in great fear,
                  were deeply divided. The Cavalcanti and other moderates supported Nicholas; the
                  two rival extremists, Corso and Rosso, opposed him. Hostilities broke out with
                  cries of “Death to the Magnates, Death to the People.” The Ghibelline envoys
                  escaped from Florence; and Nicholas on 9 June, when his neighbours prepared to
                  shoot into his windows, also thought it time to leave, and joined Benedict at
                  Perugia.
                   High time it
                  was, for next day was perpetrated the worst crime that Florence had yet
                  witnessed. The Donati, Tosinghi, and Medici, by the aid of a disreputable
                  priest, Neri degli Abati, threw an artificial, inextinguishable fire into
                  their enemies’ palaces, with the result that the very heart of Florence was
                  burnt out, with some 1400 houses and warehouses. The Cavalcanti, losing heart,
                  retired to their country estates. Thus Florence lost another of her wealthiest
                  and most reasonable families; the Guelfic circle shrank once more. Though Corso
                  and Rosso from illness or caution had not taken part, their nearest relatives
                  were the criminals. The Lucchese troops had also aided the assailants. Benedict
                  cited the communes of Florence and Lucca, with their chief magnates, to his
                  court at Perugia. The chiefs arrived with a strong armed escort on 6 July. Next
                  morning Benedict died of dysentery. A dish of figs, doctored as his friends
                  believed, deprived the Papacy and Italy of a Pope who, by character and intense
                  desire for peace, might have saved them from an infinity of woe.
                   While the
                  Black leaders were still away, and the city still smouldered, the exiles
                  attempted to surprise it. Time was precious, for Robert of Anjou’s election as
                  Captain of the Tuscan league was tightening its organisation. In Florence there
                  was only a handful of troops; encouragement came from Whites and Ghibellines
                  still in Florence, and from Blacks injured by the fire. Success depended upon
                  punctually concerted action between the converging forces. A large body of
                  exiles, Aretines, and Bolognese reached Lastra, about two miles from Florence,
                  before the appointed day. Young Baschiera della Tosa, who commanded, was urged
                  from within to attack quickly. Instead of waiting for night and bivouacking by
                  the so-called Red City, the poor East-end quarter, where he would have popular
                  sympathy and water for his horses, he made for the Porta Spada on the
                  north-east with only a portion of his troops. 20 July was a blazing day. The
                  exiles, crying “Peace,” with olive garlands and white banners, entered by the
                  postern with little resistance, for the prominent Guelfs were hiding in
                  despair, and reached the Cathedral. They found, however, no aid forthcoming;
                  men and horses were exhausted by the heat; a fire breaking out near the gate
                  caused a panic, and every one ran. A promising enterprise was ruined. The force
                  at Lastra broke up; the exiles from south and east, the Aretine and Bolognese
                  reinforcements, and, above all, Tolosato degli Uberti with his fighting
                  Pistoians, turned back without reaching the rendezvous. The last hope of the
                  militant exiles was shattered.
                   War,
                  accompanied by revolt in southern Tuscany, still continued. There could be no
                  security for Florence while the Whites held Pistoia. In April 1305 arrived
                  Robert as War Captain with picked Aragonese and Catalan horse, and serviceable
                  mountaineer infantry under the Catalan condottiere Diego de Rat, who long
                  played a leading part in Florentine battles and boudoirs. On 20 May Pistoia was
                  surrounded by Lucchese and Florentines. After three days of grace no man or
                  woman was allowed 2-2 to pass the besiegers’ lines without death, outrage, or
                  mutilation. The siege once more brought Florence into collision with the
                  Papacy. The Conclave of Perugia lasted till 5 June 1305. The ten Italian
                  cardinals were still stirred by the outrage on Boniface; their six opponents
                  were bent upon the full restoration of their Colonna colleagues, and, above
                  all, on the favour of Philip IV, who did not spare his threats. Ultimately
                  Napoleon Orsini by somewhat unsavoury means won the necessary majority for
                  Bertrand de Got, Archbishop of Bordeaux, who had taken no active part against
                  Boniface, and was technically a neutral English subject, though regarded by
                  Philip with favour. The Gascon nobleman was crowned,by Philip’s request, at
                  Lyons, and took the name of Clement V. The procession was marred by the
                  collapse of a wall, which killed John of Brittany, wounded Charles of Valois,
                  and threw the Pope off his horse, causing a shock which perhaps permanently
                  affected his health. The story of the Avignon Papacy is told elsewhere; this
                  chapter treats solely of its Italian interests. Clement had no wish to remove
                  the Papacy from Italy, but his will was rarely compatible with his wish. He was
                  not strong enough to break the toils of Philip, who was resolved to keep him
                  within reach of royal pressure. Absent though he was, Clement clung closely to
                  Italian interests. Napoleon Orsini naturally influenced his policy, and with
                  him was soon associated Nicholas of Praia. Under their lead he continued
                  Benedict’s mediatory efforts in favour of Whites and Ghibellines, as being in
                  Tuscany the weaker party. His envoys, on reaching Pistoia, ordered Robert to
                  stop the intended assault; he obeyed and withdrew, but his troops remained. As
                  no agreement was reached, the legates in November held an assembly at Siena, were
                  they ordered the immediate raising of the siege. Siena and smaller towns withdrew
                  their contingents, but Florence, Lucca, and Prato remained obdurate. Throughout
                  the winter the blockade was tightened. Napoleon Orsini’s appointment in
                  February raised a flicker of hope, but only stimulated the besiegers’
                  determination to have done with it. Florence had fostered discontent against
                  the White government of Bolognas sympathetic with Pistoia. This culminated in a
                  wild revolution on 1 March. Bologna joined in a treaty for the extermination of
                  Whites and Ghihdllmes. Pistoia had no more hope; one day’s food remained when the
                  gallant town capitulated on 10 April. Pistoian territory was divided between
                  Florence and Lucca with the exception of a strip a mile wide outside the walls,
                  which were destroyed. The city was ruled by Florence and Lucca, who appointed
                  Podestà and Captain.
                   The two chief
                  Guelf republics were now at open war with the Pope, and lay under an interdict.
                  Napoleon Orsini in May 1306 reached Bologna as Rector of Romagna. The populace
                  turned savagely on him; he escaped with the loss of one chaplain and all his
                  baggage to Forli, where he organised the Romagnol Ghibellines, and then from
                  Arezzo directed operations against the Tuscan league. A clever flank march
                  through the Casentino round the Florentine army in Aretine territory caused an
                  undignified scamper home, after which Siena and smaller towns returned to papal
                  obedience. Florence, fearing isolation, negotiated directly with Clement, who,
                  early in 1309, relented and withdrew Orsini. A new era in papal and Florentine
                  history was opening. The only Ghibellines who had benefited by four years of
                  papal favour were the two Colonna cardinals, restored to their dignities,
                  though under other titles.
                   During the
                  preceding period, Florence, in spite of her conquest of Pistoia, had little
                  stability at home. Benedict’s death was a triumph for the extremist oligarchy.
                  The nine Lesser Arts were subordinated to the twelve Greater; the twenty
                  Companies lost their organisation; the Priors were the tools of the Parte
                    Guelfa, dominated by magnates. The oligarchs, absorbed in foreign politics,
                  class interests, and personal quarrels, had no care for ordinary justice.
                  Financial depression became so deep that in 1307 a moratorium was granted for
                  debts contracted since the entry of Charles of Valois. At length popular
                  feeling asserted itself. The Companies were reconstituted as representatives,
                  not merely of the Trades, but of all popolani between 15 and 70 years
                  old; their Captains consulted with the Priors and the Council of 100 on all
                  weighty matters. A new official, the Executor of Justice, had collateral powers
                  with Podesta and Captain for protection against magnates, and general
                  superintendence over all officials, especially the Podesta.
                   Consequent
                  partly on this reform was the tragedy of Corso Donati. In personal prestige he
                  stood high above his colleagues in the Parte Guelfa, but Rosso della
                  Tosa, Betto Brunelleschi, Geri Spini, and Pazzino Pazzi combined to keep his
                  adherents out of office. He had, perhaps, always aimed at monopoly of power; he
                  made no secret of his hatred for the Ordinances of Justice. If ever he was to
                  succeed, he must act quickly, for he was over fifty and disabled by gout. He
                  engaged in a widespread conspiracy against the Constitution; he had promises
                  from the old families, Buondelmonti, Bardi, and Frescobaldi, and from secondary
                  houses such as Medici and Bordoni. Aid was expected from Arezzo and the country
                  districts of Pistoia, Prato, and Lucca. On being sued for a debt due to Pazzino
                  Pazzi, he fortified his quarter. The government was too quick for him; on 6
                  October the Companies surrounded the Donati houses; no aid came from the
                  aristocrats across the river; he was no longer the darling of the mob. As a
                  last hope Corso escaped from the back of his quarter; the Catalan horse soon
                  came up with him; the Captain wished to spare his life, but he slipped from his
                  horse, and was dragged, until he was speared. Dante has made his end famous
                  through the ghost-lips of his brother Forese in Purgatorio., xxiv, 83,
                  84.
                   Corso’s death
                  was a blow to the reader of Florentine history, for he was the one picturesque
                  figure in a somewhat drab decade. For Florence it was a blessing; there could
                  be no peace while his restless ambition nursed discontent among the highest and
                  lowest classes, both unrepresented in the government. He had the will and the
                  courage to found a dynasty, but neither the character nor the clientele. Dino
                  Compagni, whose honourable career was wrecked by him in 1301, pays generous
                  tribute to his capital enemy, to his knightly bearing, his personal beauty even
                  in old age, his persuasive oratory, ceaseless political industry, and great
                  Italian reputation. But, he concludes, Corso was unprincipled and full of
                  wicked schemes; his life was dangerous, though the manner of his death was
                  reprehensible.
                   Corso owed his
                  death, as did Dante his exile, to the cowardice of his associates, who failed
                  him at the crisis. Both, in their several ways, were fighting men with the
                  courage of their convictions; but Florentine parties were riddled by personal
                  jealousies, paralysed by physical timidity, relying on intrigue rather than on
                  straightforward policy or arms. The best commentary on Florentine political
                  life is given in Compagni's concluding chapters, showing how Corso’s rivals
                  came to what are euphemistically termed middling ends. Rosso della Tosa, when
                  out walking, made his first false step, fell over a dog, and died in
                  convulsions under his doctor’s tortures in July 1309, when over seventy-five.
                  Betto Brunelleschi, hated for cornering corn in times of famine, was stabbed in
                  his own house, while playing cards, by two of the Donati, and died in frenzy
                  and unshriven, amid general rejoicing, in March 1311. Pazzino was in January
                  1312 murdered by a Cavalcanti, while fowling in the dry bed of the Arno. Geri
                  Spini, more cautious and time-serving, was the sole survivor of the quartet
                  which brought Corso to his doom. Astonishing is the contrast between these
                  repeated scenes of bloodshed and the lofty standard of poetry and art in the Florence
                  of Dante, Guido Cavalcanti, and Giotto, or between the horrors of Pistoia, meet
                  den for robbers, as Dante wrote of Vanni Fucci, and the exquisite tenderness of
                  Cino's veise.
                   It was nevertheless in these troublous years that the more modern Florence was coming into life, and the tragic end of the former leaders doubtless contributed to this. Davidsohn has well pointed out that, during the years of Henry VI’s expedition, men of less family and personal prestige were pushing forwards, that in the Priorale names so familiar throughout the next two centuries constantly reappear, such as Acciaiuoli, Peruzzi, Rieci, Medici, Strozzi, and Soderini. The lead already lay with the bankers, who wore international financiers, dealing with jewelry and commodities as much as with specie, opening commercial avenues, scrambling for concessions. Thus they had a working knowledge of foreign policy, which al Florence was mainly economic, and had thhe governmental experience of which the magnates had been deprived. Conscious of military weakness, they relied on skilful opportunism as to pushing or delaying, knew exactly how far bluff would carry them. These qualities in the critical years were to stand a severe test, not without success. 
                   Robert of Naples:
                  William of Montferrat
               
 From the
                  Treaty of Caltabellotta to Charles II’s death on 8 May 1309, Neapolitan history
                  is without striking incidents save for Robert’s participation in the siege of
                  Pistoia. The absence of the Gascon Pope from Rome relieved the dynasty from a
                  potentially troublesome neighbour, though Clement’s insistence on Robert’s
                  withdrawal from Pistoia proved that he was no mere cypher. The situation was
                  difficult, because Clement was on ill terms with the Florentine government,
                  whereas the Angevin king as traditional head of the Guelfs must support it. He
                  must moreover propitiate both Pope and Florentines owing to huge indebtedness
                  to both. Robert since 1306 had acted practically as his father’s partner, and
                  was thus no novice in administration when he was crowned by Clement V at Lyons.
                  The succession came, however, at a peculiarly delicate moment, in consequence
                  of the new election to the Empire. It seemed probable that Frederick would take
                  advantage of this for a revision of the recent treaty. In Robert’s kingdom,
                  apart from chronic deficits and endemic disorder, there were fears of a rising
                  against his faulty dynastic claim; Philip of Taranto was forced to suspend his
                  eastern projects, and act as Robert’s Captain-General in his absence. The Pope,
                  moreover, dragged Robert into his Venetian quarrel, which not only seriously
                  hampered Apulian commerce, but entailed feverish fortification of his eastern
                  coast against possible attack from Venice. Most reluctantly also he was forced
                  to take action against the Templars, whom his house had favoured as a valuable
                  military asset. On the other hand, Robert was now peculiarly powerful in his
                  county of Piedmont, and influential in Tuscany and Romagna; while in 1312
                  Clement made over to him the Vicariate of Ferrara. He would certainly be an
                  all-important factor in the Emperor’s Italian visit, in which for the first
                  four years the history of his reign is merged.
                   The capture of
                  William of Montferrat by the people of Alessandria had a profound effect on
                  future Lombard history. He has been called one of the three forerunners of
                  Lombard municipal despots, and of the three he was the most distinctive.
                  Ezzelin and Pelavicini were rural feudal nobles, but each based his power upon
                  a city, Verona and Cremona respectively. Montferrat was a considerable feudal
                  State, much on a level with Savoy and Provence. William had close relations
                  with royalty both in West and East, with England, Castile, and the Eastern
                  Empire. His father-in-law Alfonso, when claimant for the Empire, had created
                  him his Vicar in Italy. Dante has well portrayed him in the Purgatorio as seated at the feet of the great kings and looking up towards them, not quite
                  a king himself, but worthy of their company. His power stretched from the
                  Simplon to the Ligurian Apennines. Not only a great soldier but a subtle
                  statesman, he confessed to buying more often than he conquered. Cities which
                  fringed his territory, such as Vercelli and Alessandria, called him in to
                  restore peace between factions and then converted temporary dictatorship into
                  life or hereditary lordship. He had been chief of a Ghibelline league
                  stretching from Turin to Verona, from Como to Genoa. The Visconti had appointed
                  him Military Captain of Milan, but, at the time of his capture, he was an
                  ardent supporter of the Torriani, aiming at Pavia, and drawing a ring of steel
                  round Milan through Vercelli, Como, Lodi, and Crema. His end proved the
                  difficulty of holding together an aggregate of Piedmontese and Lombard cities,
                  each divided into factions. Alessandria had made him spontaneously hereditary
                  lord, especially to protect the people from the magnates. At the instance, of
                  the wealthy city of Asti, which had long feared his predominance, the
                  Alessandrians revolted, and on his arrival trapped and caged him in a loathsome
                  dungeon, exhibiting him as a peep-show until his death in 1292. Doubtful
                  whether they could have killed so great a man, they poured molten lead and lard
                  down his throat, and drew samples of his blood to make sure that it was cold.
                  His son John grew up into a fine fighting man, but never wielded his father’s
                  wide authority. On his death in 1305 the marquessate passed to Theodore
                  Palaeologus, his sister’s son. It is clear that William was totally distinct
                  from the normal municipal despot. He never had an urban centre; he could not
                  have established a highly centralised State. Municipalities welcomed the rule
                  of a lord, far higher in rank than their own nobles, who had no prevailing
                  interest in any single city. Yet this meant that in no single city had his
                  power deep root; any party or popular squall could overthrow it. A feudal
                  superiority was not in accord with the temper of the Italy of that day.
                   The death of
                  the great marquess was a boon to the Visconti, and the archbishop’s
                  great-nephew Matteo was now in a position to enjoy it. For five years he had
                  been annually elected Captain with power to alter the statutes; in 1292 he was
                  reappointed for a term of five years. Shortly afterwards Otto made over the
                  administration of the State, and in 1295 he died. The Visconti attributed high
                  importance to imperial recognition. Adolf had appointed Matteo Vicar for
                  Lombardy. After Otto’s death he styled himself Vicar-General of the King of the
                  Romans in Lombardy, Captain-General of the People of Milan. Albert of Austria
                  confirmed his title as Vicar in 1299, while the Milanese Council extended his
                  captaincy for another five years, empowering him to make peace and war. Matteo
                  had taken full advantage of William’s death to extend his influence westwards.
                  He took Casale, a strong strategic point; Novara and Vercelli gave him the
                  lordship for five years, and Alessandria the captaincy; he acted as guardian
                  for William’s heir. This was too fast to last; the young marquess, breaking
                  from his guardian, took Casale and drove the Ghibellines from Vercelli and
                  Novara. Pavia, now under the Count of Langosco, formed a league with Crema,
                  Cremona, and Bergamo, backed by Azzo VIII of Ferrara. Matteo received aid from
                  Brescia, Parma, Piacenza, and Bologna, and turned the scale by detaching Azzo.
                   The year 1300
                  was the climax. He was now among the greatest of North Italian chiefs; he
                  married a daughter to Alboino della Scala, and gave a Court day, celebrated
                  throughout Italy, in honour of his son Galeazzo’s marriage with Beatrice d’Este,
                  Azzo’s sister, and widow of Nino Visconti, Judge of Gallura in Sardinia. Yet
                  Matteo’s position was none too secure either within or without. Among his own
                  relatives there was discontent at his monopoly of power; some of the nobles,
                  the chief source of his authority, were malcontent; the people groaned under
                  the expense of wars, which they attributed to Galeazzo’s pugnacity. Two late
                  allies, Filippone Langosco of Pavia and Alberto Scotto of Piacenza,
                  disappointed suitors for Visconti marriages, formed a fresh combination against
                  Matteo, who found himself confronted by overwhelming odds. Scotto, professedly
                  an arbitrator, insisted on his resignation, and the return of the Torriani as
                  private citizens. Matteo retired to Nogarola on the Mantuan frontier; Galeazzo
                  was reduced to living on his brother-in-law’s bounty. The splendour of his
                  marriage, followed by the suddenness of his fall, formed a literary commonplace
                  on the instability of fortune: Dante, in the interval before the Visconti
                  revival, might naturally write that the Viper of Milan would not make so fine a
                  sepulchre for Beatrice d’Este as the Cock of Gallura. Ultimately Beatrice had
                  both cock and viper sculptured on her tomb.
                   At Milan the
                  populace expelled the chief Ghibelline partisans and burnt their houses; this
                  gave the Torriani, though nominally private citizens, control over elections
                  and foreign policy. The normal city government was ill-fitted to hold together
                  other independent communes, whose only bond to Milan consisted in the rule of Guelfic
                  families. Guido, now head of the house, was elected Captain for one year in
                  1307. At its close the Councils and the representatives of the Trades,
                  numbering together some three thousand, unanimously elected him Captain of the
                  People for life, with power to alter statutes. This was the tyrannis in
                  form, and Guido took up his residence in the Broletto Vecchio, a symbol
                  that he was the personification of the government. He was now extremely strong.
                  Milan was protected by a ring of Guelfic cities. To the west, Novara, Vercelli,
                  and Alessandria were under allied families, backed by the house of Anjou in
                  Piedmont. Southwards, Pavia was ruled by Langosco, head of the noble party,
                  always allied to the popular Guelfic party at Milan. Eastwards, Lodi, Brescia,
                  and Cremona were friendly, though in the two latter the Guelfs were dangerously
                  divided. The Visconti had been ruined and dispersed. In Italy, however, the
                  individual ruler was confronted by his family, which resented a monopoly of
                  power. Guido’s cousin was elected to the archbishopric, and he, like Otto
                  Visconti, was ambitious to revive the temporal authority of the see, and to
                  lead the house. Other relatives concurred and were arrested. When Henry VII
                  reached Italy, the archbishop was kept out of his see, and his brothers were
                  imprisoned. Yet Guido, with his body-guard of 1000 and a force of 10,000 at his
                  disposal, might well have formed a permanent dynasty. His overthrow resulted
                  from the accidents of the imperial visit.
                   The power
                  enjoyed by the Scaligeri at Verona was voluntarily conferred by the popular
                  party, but was absolute in every department of government. Their sway had been
                  ushered in by no display of military force; the hereditary principle was
                  established almost as a matter of course. It was party government in the
                  strictest sense. It was usually the aim of the tyrant to reconcile party
                  factions, to restore exiles. The Scaligeri believed that their own power and
                  internal peace could only be preserved by a continuous and rigorous system of
                  party government. From the first there were stringent laws against cries for
                  reconciliation. If a citizen cried “Peace, Peace”, it was the surest sign of
                  the wish to raise a riot. Under Can Grande such a cry was punishable by death;
                  a gentleman was beheaded, a commoner hanged, a lady had the privilege of being
                  burnt, for it was ungentlemanly to touch a lady. The long wars with Padua were
                  partly a cause, and partly a result of this. The enmity dated long before the
                  age of the Scaligeri, but henceforth it was hostility, not only of
                  neighbourhood but of principle, for Padua represented the cause of State
                  republicanism, Verona that of State monarchy. Alberto della Scala was only once
                  threatened within the city. The conspiracy of 1299 was fiercely suppressed, and
                  thenceforward there was no more trouble. It was easier to exclude opposition
                  from the city than from Verona's crown of castles, and yet she could never be
                  safe if exiles lodged themselves therein. From 1277 provision was made that
                  seven of the strongest should be in the hands of Alberto himself. The municipal
                  despot was thus reaping the succession of the feudal lords; he was developing
                  the urban tyrannis into a territorial principality.
                   There remained
                  the questions of external expansion and diplomatic position. For the latter the
                  magnificent Court days, for which Verona became famous, were important, and
                  were generally held in honour of foreign marriages. Alberto initiated such
                  alliances in 1289 by the marriage of his daughter Costanza with Obizzo II of
                  Ferrara, his former enemy. In 1291 his son Bartholomew married the daughter of
                  Conrad of Antioch, grandson of the Emperor Frederick II, while her sister was later
                  married to Can Grande. Alboino, his second son, cemented the Milanese alliance
                  by his wedding with Catherine, daughter of Matteo Visconti. Alberto’s reign was
                  peaceful, as was that of Bartholomew, who succeeded in 1301 and reigned till
                  March 1304. Alboino was no soldier, but was engaged in almost chronic war
                  against Azzo VIII until his death in January 1310. His constant allies wore
                  Ghiberto da Correggio and the Bonaccolsi of Mantua, Bologna also taking part until
                  the Guelfie revolution of 1306. Friendly treaties were made with Venice, and
                  the Scaligeri took her side in the Ferrarese Succession War against Clement V.
                  The closest entente was with the Bonaccolsi, amounting almost to a protectorate.
                  Both Alberto and Can Grande effected changes in the dynasty on any symptom of
                  dangerous independence. Co-operation with Mantua was essential for securing the
                  whole course of the Mincio, and for the protection of the Po, in the contests
                  with Padua and Ferrara. Can Grande was associated with Alboino in the
                  government, probably in 1308. Both served Henry VII in the siege of Brescia,
                  where Alboino caught the fever, of which he died on 29 November 1311.
                   
                   Pietro
                  Gradenigo, who was to leave his mark upon Venetian history for all time,
                  succeeded Dandolo under gloomy auspices. After the doge’s funeral on 2 November
                  1289, the populace, reviving a custom long abandoned, yelled for the election
                  of Giacomo Tiepolo, nephew of one doge and grandson of another. This very hint
                  at an hereditary principality perhaps decided the ruling aristocracy to resist
                  popular pressure. Choice fell upon Gradenigo, who was only thirty-eight, but
                  was already so unpopular that his election was published amid dead silence. He
                  was soon involved in constitutional struggles and in foreign war. The storming
                  of Acre in May 1291, followed by the fall of Tyre and Sidon, was a grievous
                  blow to Venetian commerce in Syria and Palestine. In this year also the truce
                  with Genoa expired. Galata, occupied by favour of the Greek Emperor, gave the
                  Genoese a strong base for the conversion of the Black Sea into a commercial mare
                    clausum. They controlled Trebizond, had a flourishing new colony at Kaffa,
                  and from Azov commanded the trade of the Don. The war which now began extended
                  from Kaffa to Genoa. The first great fight was at Laiazzo on the coast of
                  Armenia (Cilicia) in the autumn of 1294. The Genoese galleys lashed and planked
                  together formed a nautical laager in the harbour. The Venetians, scorning the
                  use of fire-ships, bore down with wind abaft, lost their formation, and retired
                  after their admiral was killed and 25 ships out of 68 were sunk.
                   Nearly four
                  years of incessant warfare passed before another decisive battle. The Venetians
                  stormed Kaffa, taking enormous booty; the Genoese ravaged Crete. In
                  Constantinople itself the Genoese, abetted by Andronicus, slew the Venetians
                  and burnt their banks. The Emperor imprisoned the survivors, even the Venetian
                  commissioner, an outrage on diplomatic inviolability not to be overlooked.
                  Buggero Morosini with a strong fleet anchored off the imperial palace and, with
                  a large indemnity and a host of Genoese prisoners, returned to Venice. In 1298
                  fortunes changed. A Genoese fleet of 85 galleys reached Dalmatian waters.
                  Andrea Dandolo with 95 galleys met it off the island of Curzola, and fought the
                  great battle of the war on 8 September. The Venetian fleet, after some success,
                  got out of hand, and was struck in flank by the Genoese reserve squadron, which
                  had stood out to sea and came down the wind on the unsuspecting foe. Only a few
                  galleys escaped from the rocks or fire to tell the tale at Venice. It is said
                  that 9000 men were killed or wounded, while 5000 were carried off to Genoa to
                  join the Pisan captives taken at Meloria thirteen years before. The admiral, to
                  avoid this fate, dashed his head against a mast. Misfortune seems stimulating to
                  men of letters; but for his exile Dante would never have written the Commedia, while to a Genoese prison we owe the Travels of Marco Polo.
                   The Genoese
                  fleet had been too roughly handled to sail for the lagoons. With marvellous
                  courage Venice raised another fleet of 100 galleys, filling the gaps among her
                  cross-bowmen with Catalan mercenaries. On either side small squadrons shewed
                  much enterprise; a Genoese squadron caused a fright by appearing off Malamocco,
                  and Domenico Schiavo returned the visit, and coined money, a symbol of
                  sovereignty, in the very port of Genoa. In May 1299 Matteo Visconti negotiated
                  a peace, and in October 1302 Andronicus was reduced to signing a truce by the
                  sight of his subjects being flogged by the boatswains of 25 Venetian galleys
                  under the walls of Constantinople.
                   In these very
                  years, when the resources of Venice were strained to the uttermost, by the
                  closing of her Great Council a fundamental change in her constitution, which
                  was for centuries to be the world’s admiration, was bloodlessly carried out.
                  The Venetian sense for governance stands in marked contrast to the Genoese
                  passion for faction, which neutralised the advantage gained by naval victories.
                  At Venice the sea called forth from all classes the patriotism which might well
                  have been dissipated by political quarrels. No sacrifices were grudged to
                  retain the Queenship of the Adriatic. It was otherwise when these were demanded
                  for territorial expansion.
                   Peace at sea
                  was followed by a short war with Padua over the ever-recurring question of the
                  neighbouring salt-pans, on which Venice was peculiarly sensitive. This was
                  arranged, and preparations were being made for an attack on the Greek Empire in
                  concert with Charles of Valois, when the succession to Ferrara absorbed her whole
                  attention, involving her in a war with the Papacy, a forecast of the dangerous
                  combination formed against her by the League of Cambrai. The death of Azzo VIII
                  on 31 January 1308 was certain to intensify the confusion long endemic in
                  eastern Lombardy and Romagna. His fortunes had waned with the revolt of his
                  imperial fiefs, Modena and Reggio, in 1306, but expulsion of the Whites, his
                  bitterest enemies, from Bologna brought relief. Aided by the victorious
                  Blacks, the Florentinos, and Naples, he was conducting a vigorous offensive
                  when he died. He left the succession to Foleo, legitimate son of his bastard
                  Fresco, who was appointed guardian during the minority. His brothers Francesco
                  and Aldobrandino had long claimed a share of Obizzo’s inheritance; the former
                  with Aldobrandino’s sons now appealed against the will to Azzo’s late enemies,
                  but Fresco with the stronger support of Venice and Bologna assumed the
                  government. Then in April fell the bolt from the Avignon blue. Clement declared
                  Ferrara to lie under the Pope’s direct government, and exhorted her to throw
                  off the tyrant’s adulterine yoke and enjoy the blessings of papal rule. Of the
                  Pope’s suzerainty there could be no doubt, but papal charters more than once
                  recognised the right of illegitimate succession; to cancel the authority which
                  the Estensi had exercised for nearly a century under papal sanction was an
                  audacity which would have startled the strongest Italian Pope. But Clement’s
                  weakness in Italy at this moment was probably the very motive for his decision;
                  Ferrara should be the base from which to re-establish his authority. In May the
                  papal standard was hoisted at Ravenna. Ferrarese exiles flocked to it with
                  Francesco; the Della Torre of Milan gave ready aid, Bologna was won by the
                  withdrawal of Napoleon Orsini’s interdict. Meanwhile Gradenigo threw himself
                  eagerly into the fray; he stood for a forward mainland policy, for the revival
                  of former preeminence in Ferrara, which had left precious privileges behind
                  it.
                   Fresco, now
                  faced by popular revolt, retired to the Castle of Tedaldo, which with its
                  bridge and fortified bridge-head commanded the town and the Po di Ferrara,
                  which then skirted the southern walls and joined the Po di Venezia at Stellata.
                  In October, Fresco sold his claims for a Venetian pension, and a Venetian army
                  took over the fortress and city. The Pope would hear of no diplomatic
                  compromise, but hostilities were not active until the end of March 1309. The
                  peace party in Venice, headed by the Tiepoli, Badoeri, and Querini, was gaining
                  ground, styling itself the Pars guelfa sive ecclesiastica. Gradenigo was
                  empowered to send reinforcements to Ferrara, while the opposition carried the
                  dispatch of envoys to Clement. They arrived just too late. On Good Friday, 27
                  March, a Bull was issued depriving Venice of all privileges of a Christian
                  State, empowering the seizure of Venetian property and persons, the latter to
                  be sold as slaves, the lands to be vested in the Papacy, the movables to reward
                  the captors. To show that he was in earnest, Clement appointed his nephew
                  Arnaud de Pelagrue legate for North and Central Italy. Arnaud, preaching a
                  crusade, levied troops from Guelfs and Ghibellines, bishops and cities. Appeals
                  were made to all European powers; the Emperor supported the Pope, Philip IV preferred
                  conciliation.
                   On 10 April a
                  rising in Ferrara forced the Podestà, Giovanni Soranzo, to concentrate his
                  forces in the castle, whence ineffectual attempts were made to seize or flood
                  the town. Meanwhile Francesco from without was harassing the besiegers. He
                  destroyed a relieving fleet at Francolino, where the Po di Venezia narrowed,
                  built a bridge here and another below Ferrara. A large fleet from Venice
                  attempted to prevent the operations at Francolino but was defeated after three
                  days’ battle. Tedaldo now was completely isolated, but Ferrara itself was in a
                  desperate condition. The papal army was too small to storm the castle, North
                  Italy was war-weary, Pelagrue’s recruiting campaign was failing. If the
                  Venetians could hold out till September, the autumn floods would enable their
                  ships to operate. The legate made the desperate decision to storm Tedaldo; on
                  26 August the bridge and bridge-head were taken, and the fleet capitulated; on
                  the 28th Tedaldo fell. Venice lost 200 ships and some 6.000 men. Not a man was
                  spared, save a few who were sent blinded into Venice. Abroad her commerce was
                  destroyed, her ships taken, their crews sold for slaves, her colonies were
                  restive or in revolt. Venice sued for peace through the mediation of Philip IV.
                  This was granted on not ungenerous terms on 15 June 1310.
                   Venice had
                  signally failed in her first attempt to annex a large mainland State. She
                  turned her eyes away from Ferrara until 1483, when she failed again. Ferrara
                  never became part of the Venetian State. It is strange that an alien Pope,
                  reputed to be powerless in Italy, should be the first to make his sovereignty
                  direct and real. His success was short, but Ferrara remained the constant aim
                  of the Papacy until, in the last years of the sixteenth century, another
                  Clement annexed it at the expense of yet another legitimate son of another
                  bastard of the house of Este.
                   The disastrous
                  Ferrarese war had as its sequel a conspiracy, which might have ruined Venetian
                  stability for all time. Family feuds were, as in all cities, not unusual, but
                  very rarely were permitted to endanger the public peace, and in this Venice
                  stood alone. Genuine disagreement both in home and foreign policy there may
                  well have been, but personal and family feeling caused the armed revolt of one
                  group among the chief houses against Gradenigo and another group comprising his
                  supporters. Parties were fiercely divided throughout the war, fighting even on
                  the Great Council benches. It was ominous that the opposition introduced the
                  terms Guelf and Ghibelline, which ordinarily have no meaning in Venetian
                  history. There was, indeed, an undercurrent of popular discontent. Exclusion
                  from the Council was a grievance with those who hud intermittently attended
                  it. The populace had howled for war and insulted papal envoys, but war had
                  entailed heavy taxation, and, latterly, terrible sacrifice of life. After a
                  peace, good or bad, the government which conducted the war becomes unpopular.
                   The chief
                  conspirators were Bajamonte Tiepolo and Mario Querini, bis father-in-law, both
                  actuated by personal grievances. The former was a showy young noble, acclaimed
                  by the lower classes as ll gran carallerieri, a poor Venetian
                  counterpart of Corso Donati, il baroni. He had been fined for corrupt
                  exaction in his Moreau government, and had since sulked in his Villa Marocco on
                  the mainland. Querini had been insulted by reflections on his courage in the
                  surrender of Castel Tedaldo. A third chief, Badoero Badoer, was also a mainland
                  proprietor. They represented the movement as purely patriotic, directed,
                  against the tyrant doge in favour of the disfranchised classes. The attack was
                  fixed for the feast of San Vito, 15 June. Tiepolo and Querini collected their
                  forces across the Rialto on the previous evening. Badoer with, troops levied in
                  Paduan territory was to cross from the mainland in support. During the night
                  information of the plot reached the government. Gradenigo, aided by the Dandoli
                  and Giustiniani, occupied the Piazza San Marco. Morning opened with a terrific
                  gale and thunderstorm, which damped any hope of a popular rising. Badoer,
                  unable to start, was captured with his force by the more weatherproof Podesta
                  of Chioggia. Tiepolo, advancing by the Merceria, was held up at the church of
                  San Giuliano. A woman threw down a mortar on the head of his standard-bearer,
                  and the banner with its scroll of Liberty fell. The gran cavaliere fled
                  back over the Rialto bridge, and barricaded his quarter. Querini fared even
                  worse; in the Campo San Luca he was attacked and killed by men armed by the School
                  of Charity and the Gild of Painters. Tiepolo was persuaded to capitulate on
                  terms. The conspiracy had ignominiously failed. Badoer, taken in arms, was
                  executed. Tiepolo and his chief associates were exiled for short terms. There
                  was no general proscription as was usual elsewhere. Several palaces were pulled
                  down, the first time that such a common penalty had been inflicted at Venice.
                  Nevertheless the government had had a fright and meant to take no risks. The
                  most stringent measures were taken to guard the canals, the doge’s palace, and
                  the piazza against further trouble.
                   Of all
                  defensive measures the most important was the institution of the celebrated
                  Ten. No one probably foresaw its unique history. It was a balia, an
                  executive committee, formed at a crisis for a definite purpose, such as was
                  often created by a score of cities. The object was to strengthen the heads of
                  the high court, the Quarantia. Ten citizens were nominated by the
                  electoral section of the Great Council and ten by the Doge, his Councillors,
                  and the chiefs of the Quarantia. From these the Great Council elected
                  ten. The office was renewed every two months until 1314, when it was
                  established for five years, the members, however, retiring each Michaelmas and
                  being ineligible for re-election. Gradenigo did not long survive the foundation
                  of this memorable institution. He died on 13 August 1311. Venice, still nursing
                  her wounds, was unable to take part in the war already raging.
                   
                   The election
                  of Henry of Luxemburg on 27 November 1308 as successor to the murdered Albert
                  of Austria might in itself have had little influence upon Italian history.
                  Albert had deliberately decided that his duty lay in Germany; Henry’s own first
                  acts had been to suppress disorder in western Germany, and by his son’s
                  marriage to secure a territorial power in Bohemia comparable to the eastern
                  possessions of the Habsburgs. The Italian question was introduced by the
                  candidature of Charles of Valois, supported by the whole weight of the French
                  Crown. Charles had had the closest connexion with Naples and with Florence, but
                  above all his election would rivet the chain of Philip IV upon Clement V, and
                  through him upon papal possessions and pretensions in Italy. Charles would be
                  the cat’s-paw for further aggression upon Italy, already incurably wounded by
                  the Pope’s detention in France. Clement was determined not to strengthen French
                  influence in Italy, and desired the creation of a counterpoise. While making
                  vague promises to Philip, he delayed any definite steps until after the
                  election; he probably encouraged Henry’s brother, the Archbishop of Treves, to
                  win the other Electors for Henry. He would gladly increase Robert’s power on
                  the Franco-imperial borderland by the cession of the Arelate, which Henry
                  might be willing to cede, as yet another counterpoise to Philip. Henry did,
                  indeed, from the first, try to win Robert by proposals for his daughter’s
                  marriage to Robert’s son.
                   Henry was not
                  free for an advance on Italy until the late autumn of 1310, and meanwhile his
                  court was swarming with Ghibelline exiles and Guelf spies. His position when he
                  crossed the Mont Cenis was none too favourable. His mission to Italy had been
                  badly received in Florence and Bologna, though welcomed by Arezzo and the
                  Tuscan Ghibelline gentry. Philip had refused to be bound by any definite
                  treaty. Clement had appointed Robert Count of Romagna, which, in the event of
                  the Angevin’s hostility, would bar the southward march through the Emilia,
                  where Henry might expect substantial support. Florence, with Robert’s personal
                  aid, was feverishly completing her third line of walls, while Bologna helped to
                  defend the Apennine passes, especially that down the Magra valley to Sarzana.
                  Robert had visited Siena to repress awakened Ghibelline volitions.
                  Nevertheless the adventure opened well. In Piedmont Amadeus V, Count of Savoy,
                  and his nephews Louis and Philip gave him a warm welcome; he courteously
                  refused homage from Alessandria and Asti, as they were fiefs of Robert, who
                  promised to do fealty for them. At Turin he received the Guelf despots of
                  Vercelli, Pavia, and Lodi, who stood next to Guido della Torre in importance.
                  The dispossessed Ghibelline tyrant of Vercelli complained that he had suffered
                  ruin for the Emperor’s party. Henry replied that he had no party in Lombardy,
                  that he had come for no party but for the whole. This speech pleased the Guelf
                  leaders, who pressed him to make no changes until he reached Milan. Henry
                  refused, and, as he proceeded, recalled exiles of either party, and established
                  his Vicars in the. cities. He meant to be ruler and shewed his meaning. At Asti
                  arrived Matteo Visconti after an adventurous journey, mostly by night, from the
                  Veronese frontier, and hither also came the Archbishop Cassone della Torre to
                  beg for the release of his brothers from Guido's prison. Milan was reached
                  without opposition on 23 December 1310.
                   Guido della
                  Torre, fierce and irresolute, hysterical and sulky by turns, had not dared
                  resist Henry as an enemy, nor was willing Io welcome him as lord. Behind the
                  crowd of citizens, ordered to meet Henry without arms, he rode with his banner
                  flying. When this had been rolled in the mud by the German guards, he
                  dismounted, kissed his lord’s feet, and was graciously received. The first task
                  was to reconcile Torriani with Visconti, and Guido with his cousins. This
                  successfully performed, Henry on the Epiphany 1311 received the Iron Crown, or
                  rather an impromptu imitation, Guido having privily pawned the original to a
                  Jew. In the Council a donative to the Emperor and Empress was debated; Guido,
                  whether or no with sinister motives, outbid Matteo. The tax of 100,000 florins
                  was burdensome to all classes, and Henry’s demand that a hundred nobles, picked
                  equally from both parties, should accompany him to Rome dismayed the upper class.
                  Trouble was brewing; there were suspicious meetings of Galeazzo Visconti and
                  Franceschino della Torre, gatherings of armed men, cries of “Death to the
                  Germans; there is peace between the lord Guido and the lord Matteo.” On a
                  search for arms Matteo was found sitting blandly innocent in his porch, and
                  delayed the inquisitors with wine; the Della Torre palace was full of armed
                  confusion. A skirmish between Germans and Torriani developed into hard
                  street-fighting, in which the Visconti joined the strangers. The Torriani
                  chiefs escaped with some difficulty; Matteo and Galeazzo were also exiled, but
                  soon recalled. When Henry left North Italy for Rome, he created Matteo imperial
                  Vicar for life. This was the formal beginning of Italy’s greatest dynasty. Elsewhere
                  also Henry replaced his temporary vicariates by selling the office to the
                  ruling lords, the Scaligeri at Verona, Bonaccolsi at Mantua, Da Camino at
                  Treviso, and Ghiberto da Correggio at Parma. By these means Henry hoped to
                  receive reliable contingents, and, above all, to finance his campaign, for the
                  chests of gold, upon which his officials had proudly sat during the journey,
                  were a mere fleabite in Italy.
                   Meanwhile
                  Guido della Torre and the Florentines had set revolt ablaze between the Adda
                  and the Oglio. Lodi, indeed, gave in without a struggle. At Cremona the Guelfs,
                  the Cappelletti of Dante’s famous line, had long become divided. The head of
                  the extremists, Cavalcabò, fled, leaving his rival Amati to make terms. These
                  were extremely harsh, and only a petition from the Empress caused Henry to
                  spare the great campanile, the Torrazzo, still the glory of Cremona.
                  Severity was ill-timed, for it determined the desperate defence of Brescia,
                  where on Henry’s orders the Guelfs had been restored. One of these, Tebaldo
                  Brusati, saved from ruin and knighted by Henry, headed the revolt to his own
                  undoing, for, captured on a reconnaissance, he was sewn in the skin of an ox,
                  dragged round the city walls, executed and quartered; his remains were exposed
                  to intimidate the besieged. Henry’s army was now large, for he had been
                  reinforced from the Empire, while Alboino and Can Grande della Scala rendered
                  admirable service. Brescia, however, is traditionally difficult either to storm
                  or blockade. The siege dragged on from May to November; pestilence ravaged both
                  besieged and besiegers; among Henry’s losses was that of his gallant young
                  brother Waleran. At length the papal envoys arranged a surrender on generous
                  terms; Henry was free for a move on Rome.
                   From Brescia the imperial army
                  marched to Genoa by Pavia. The Genoese gave Henry a warm reception, though,
                  like Venice, they had failed to do homage; for these States, thought Nicholas
                  of Botrinto, a papal envoy, regarded themselves as a fifth element, obeying
                  neither God nor man, Pope nor Emperor. Here the two predominant Ghibelline
                  families had quarrelled, and the Doria had expelled the Spinola, whom Henry now
                  succeeded in reconciling. Nevertheless he outstayed his welcome. The expense of
                  his court and his financial demands were onerous, while the independent,
                  seafaring race resented his suppression of a recent popular constitution
                  comprising both nobles and commons. Delay was largely due to the marriage
                  negotiations with Robert, which were so far advanced that an offer from
                  Frederick of Sicily of his son’s hand for Henry’s daughter was refused. Robert
                  had begun his double game, for Henry heard that his brother, John of Gravina,
                  reaching Rome with 400 horse, had won the Orsini and had tried to bribe the
                  Colonna. He made the lame excuse that John was sent to represent him at his
                  coronation, from which he himself would he unavoidably absent. Louis of Savoy,
                  Vicar of Rome, was sent back thither at full speed, but failed to get general
                  acceptance, and was barred from the Capitol. At Genoa the Empress died, an
                  irremediable loss. Virtuous to sanctity, in Compagni’s words a servant to
                  Christ’s poor, with a level head and an instinct for mercy and moderation, she
                  was a valuable asset to the imperial cause at a time when tempers were sorely
                  tried.
                   A Pisan fleet
                  brought Henry to their city, enabling him to turn the defensive positions
                  elaborated by Florence, Lucca, and Parma. Hence, after a stay of two months, he
                  had a clear course to Rome. The Sienese government, endangered by a large
                  Ghibelline populace, dared not oppose his march through the Maremma. He went to
                  Rome with Clement’s full approval, and thus it was unlikely that he would find
                  resistance in papal cities such as Grosseto and Viterbo. Before entering Rome,
                  however, he had to force the Ponte Molle under fire from Gravina’s
                  cross-bowmen. Henry had reached his goal, but found Rome partly occupied by a
                  hostile Neapolitan force, while Central and Northern Italy were ablaze behind
                  him. The focus of disturbance was still Florence, which stiffened the backbone
                  of the faltering Tuscan league, reinforced the attacks of Bologna on the
                  Ghibelline Romagnols, rekindled revolt at Cremona and Lodi, and worked upon the
                  traditional republicanism of Padua, which had momentarily wavered before
                  Henry’s eloquent professions of peace and justice. Langosco, imprisoning his
                  Ghibelline rival Beccaria, was again sole lord of Pavia. Ghiberto da Correggio
                  betrayed his oath of fealty for Parma, and closed the Emilian Way and the Taro-Magra
                  route into Tuscany. Henry’s own Vicar, Philip of Savoy, had turned Asti and
                  Vercclli against him. Imola, Faenza, and Forli, long headquarters of Romagnol
                  Ghibellinism, had fallen to Robert’s Vicar, who had trapped its gallant leader,
                  Scarpetta Ordelatli, and thrown down the walls of Forli, which no longer lay,
                  as in Dante’s words, under the daw of the green lion. Henry thus lost control
                  with the Visconti and Scaligeri; Can Grande had hurried from Genoa to secure
                  the inheritance of Alboino, who never recovered the health lost at Brescia.
                  Werner of Homburg, one of the best imperial generals, was dispatched to
                  counteract reverses in North Italy. In Rome Henry was only reinforced by the
                  Colonna, the fighting nobility of Tuscany, and the small papal towns of Todi
                  and Narni. Against him were Gravina with regular troops, the Orsini who
                  commanded the northern approaches to Rome and half the city, while Florence
                  poured in her Catalan mercenaries, her volunteer cavalry, and large numbers of
                  foot; the Tuscan league followed suit to a less degree, but Perugia threw her
                  whole considerable weight into the fray. Fighting became brisk. The
                  imperialists recovered the Capitol, drove the Guelfs back to the west of the
                  Corso, but were decisively beaten in attempting to force a passage across the
                  bridge of Sant Angelo. The coronation could not thus be held in St Peter’s
                  under the Pope’s instructions to the Cardinals Nicholas of Prato, Luca Fieschi,
                  and Arnaud Faugeres. Delay might have been indefinite, had not the populace
                  forced the legates to crown the Emperor in the Lateran. On 29 June Nicholas set
                  the crown on Henry’s head; the Emperor thrice waved his sword before placing it
                  on his shield upon the altar, a symbol that with shield and sword he would
                  defend the Church. But the stately open-air banquet which followed was
                  disturbed by archers from the Aventine, and the guests were driven under cover.
                   Throughout the
                  Roman struggle the determining political factors were the two least determinate
                  of rulers, Robert of Anjou and Clement V. Since the summer of 1310 Robert had
                  been tempted by an imperial marriage for his heir, with the Arelate as a dower,
                  with the vicariate of Tuscany and Lombardy. On the other hand, Florence
                  importuned him to wield the full power of the Tuscan league in opposing Henry’s
                  advance. As usual, he evaded a decision by not answering his letters. The
                  Florentines in dismay and alarm dubbed him Monna Berta, old Mrs
                  So-and-So. Negotiations for the marriage seemed nearly complete, when in March
                  1312 Henry sent envoys from Pisa to settle definitive terms. The reply,
                  received at Rome, was definite to stupefaction. Robert’s heir, Charles, should
                  bear a royal title; his heirs should succeed to the kingdom of Sicily; he
                  should be Vicar of Tuscany for life, the several cities paying a proportionate
                  tribute to the Emperor and electing their own officials subject to confirmation
                  by the Vicar; in Lombardy for ten years the Emperor’s Vicar should be one
                  acceptable to Robert; the contracting powers should jointly appoint an Admiral;
                  they should reconcile Orsini and Colonna, and Henry should leave Rome four days
                  after coronation. It is doubtful whether Robert made these proposals merely to
                  be refused. The breach was not complete until Henry’s envoy to Gravina brought
                  the reply that he had indeed come to Rome in honour of the coronation, but had
                  since received orders to oppose Henry’s entrance to Rome, and, above all, to St
                  Peter’s. Such was the position as between Emperor and king at the time of the
                  coronation.
                   Meanwhile Clement’s attitude
                  had changed. He had been whole-hearted in support of Henry’s schemes for
                  Italian peace, declaring that it would be a sin not to second them. His
                  cardinals had promoted the treaty with Brescia, so essential to Henry’s progress;
                  their head, Nicholas of Prato, was devoted to the imperial cause. The Council of Vienne was probably responsible for
                    Clement’s change of policy. Charles of Valois, Philip’s three sons, with
                    Plaisians and Marigny, accused him of preparing bulls commanding John of
                    Gravina to offer no opposition to Henry’s coronation; they told him that no
                    treaty would prevent Philip from defending the French blood that flowed in
                    Robert’s veins, and demanded suppression of the bulls. Clement was suffering
                    from internal pains and nervous exhaustion; he always disliked responsibility;
                    he felt unequal to altercation with one who had him at his mercy. He was
                    moreover sensitive as to papal rights in Italy; he might well fear that an
                    attack on Naples would destroy his suzerainty, for he was probably aware of
                    Henry’s negotiations with Frederick of Sicily. Nevertheless his first overt act
                    was a Bull of 19 June proclaiming a year’s truce between Henry and Robert, and
                    demanding an explanation of Henry’s hostility.
                     Henry received the bull at Tivoli with high indignation;
                  Clement had perhaps not realised that it would be so offensive. The imperial
                  lawyers were summoned to pronounce on the question whether the Pope could
                  impose a truce between Emperor and vassal. Henry doubtless had imperial ideals,
                  but in practice he had been accustomed to the drastic legalism of Philip IV.
                  The lawyers’reply was naturally in the negative. Before the delivery of the
                  bull, the breach with Robert had become inevitable, for on 4 July the Emperor
                  nominated Henry of Flanders as his proctor to treat of his daughter’s marriage
                  with Frederick’s son, to prepare a perpetual alliance against all powers except
                  the Pope, France, and Avignon. Robert was declared guilty of high treason, and
                  Frederick appointed Admiral of the Holy Roman Empire. This was the
                  long-deferred conclusion of tentative negotiations. Late in 1311 Henry had told
                  Frederick that the Sicilian marriage was impossible, as the Pope has bent upon
                  the Angevin match, the negotiations for which were far advanced. A general
                  treaty was indeed signed in the spring of 1312. This had redoubled Robert’s
                  temperamental irresolutiou; he was pressed by Florence to attack Henry in Rome,
                  but he feared the certainty of an attack by Frederick on Naples, and the
                  rumours of an invasion by John of Bohemia and Carobert of Hungary. So he
                  marched his troops out of Naples, but halted them at Aversa, to the dismay of
                  Florence. Robert would gladly have accepted the papal truce, but was forced to
                  insist on the inclusion of his Guelfic allies, which Clement refused. Nor
                  probably would the Guelfic league have accepted, though two most influential
                  Blacks, Geri Spini and Pino della Tosa, sent an emissary to Tivoli to discuss
                  terms of peace.
                   On 19 August 1312 Henry left Tivoli on his march for Florence,
                  with his army much depleted. The Tuscan Ghibellines and the levies of Spoleto,
                  Narni, and Todi marched home; northern feudatories such as Rudolf of Bavaria
                  and Louis of Savoy feared a Roman autumn. From Viterbo he turned aside with
                  characteristic unwisdom to pay a grateful visit to Todi and inflict a
                  revengeful raid upon Perugia. At Arezzo, under its bishop Guido Tarlati, he had
                  an enthusiastic welcome and large reinforcements of Tuscan and Romagnol
                  Ghibellines. With little resistance Incisa was reached; here all the best
                  Florentine troops defended the walls and the bridge which spanned the Arno,
                  there unfordable. Henry with his cavalry only, by a turning movement over
                  country reputed impossible for horsemen, placed himself on the main road, south
                  of the Arno, in the Florentine rear. After a sharp fight, in which Henry and
                  his brother Baldwin of Treves took valorous part, the Florentines fled by the
                  secondary northern road. Henry raced them home by the southern bank, and
                  crossing to the east of Florence established headquarters at San Salvi on 19
                  September. Surprise was his only chance; the siege was a hopeless effort. The
                  garrison alone was double his own force; reinforcements and supplies could pour
                  in from north, west, and south; his troops had burnt bare the Florentine
                  territory behind them; autumn rains flooded the Arno and made supplies from
                  Arezzo precarious. Henry, shattered by fever, burnt his camp, and crossed the
                  swollen river on the night of 30-31 October. With any active courage the enemy
                  might have destroyed him.
                   Henceforth, until Henry’s arrival at Pisa on 10 March 1313,
                  the campaign straggled over the valleys of the Greve and Elsa. The latter had
                  strategic importance, for it facilitated his communications with Pisa and hampered
                  those of Florence with Siena, Volterra, and Poggibonsi. The latter town
                  suffered for its stalwart Guelfism by destruction and the erection of a rival,
                  named Monte Imperiale, across the deep valley. The quarrel between Henry and
                  Robert, and the conflict of principle between Emperor and Pope, here reached
                  their climax. On 26 April Robert was declared guilty of high treason. Henry’s
                  edict is the highest assertion of the universality of Empire, of the divine
                  command that every soul should be subject to the Roman Emperor; Naples was not
                  excluded by virtue of papal suzerainty, for “Regnum Siciliae et specialiter
                  insula Siciliae sicut et ceterae provinciae sunt de imperio, totus enim mundus
                  imperatoris est.” Clement, under pressure from Philip IV, issued the Bull of 13
                  June, threatening with excommunication all who should attack the kingdom of
                  Naples. Henry’s comment was: “ If God is with us, neither Pope nor Church can
                  destroy us, and God we have not injured.”
                   The march on Rome and Naples was now decided. Baldwin went to
                  Treves to levy troops; pressing messages were sent to John of Bohemia, the
                  German princes and bishops, the Lombard States, and Venice and Genoa. Homburg
                  and Montferrat won a useful victory over Robert’s seneschal near Alessandria.
                  To break the spirit of Lucca, Henry of Flanders made a brilliant capture of
                  Pietrasanta, in the face of Diego de Rat and all his Florentine Catalans. The
                  Ghibelline Malaspina captured the yet more important Sarzana. The object was
                  to clear the coast road for forces coming southward by the Magra valley; a
                  small Veronese and Mantuan force did indeed attempt the dangerous pass, but
                  without success. The German reinforcements came in slowly; Baldwin, John of
                  Bohemia, and Leopold of Austria arrived too late. Yet, when Henry started on 8
                  August, he had a useful mobile force of 2500 Luxemburg and German horse and
                  1500 Tuscan and Romagnol Ghibellines. He approached the gates of Siena in hope
                  of a rising by gentry and populace against the bourgeois government, but the
                  Nine were once more too strong. He was now desperately ill but would give
                  himself no rest. Buonconvento was reached on 21 August, and there on 24 August
                  he died. The rumours of his being poisoned in the Sacrament by his confessor
                  Bernardino of Montepulciano caused persecution of Dominicans in Italy and
                  Germany, but were conclusively disproved.
                   Such was the melancholy end of the great adventure. Failure
                  was probably inevitable from the first. Italy had long outgrown an imperial
                  system; its re-establishment would have endangered the interests of both
                  parties. The aim of government, as Dante wrote, was Peace, and the path to it
                  was Justice; but Henry was crying Peace where there was no peace, and Justice
                  was unknown in Italy, outside Venice, for centuries to come. A permanent
                  monarchy was a dream, yet Henry might have succeeded in his immediate objects,
                  the recognition of his rights in Rome and the expulsion of the Angevin from
                  Naples, where feudalism was still a living force; he had better chances than
                  the Aragonese of the next century. The squadrons of Frederick, of Genoa and
                  Pisa, perhaps even of Venice, would have swept Robert’s galleys off the seas.
                  Robert had long feared for his southern ports; his nobles had refused to serve
                  outside their country, many were now on the verge of revolt; his forces were
                  scattered in Lombardy, Piedmont, Romagna, and Tuscany; he could only cover
                  ordinary expenses by papal and Florentine loans; he had no personal magnetism,
                  no military skill; by long tradition the regnicolas. always faithless to
                  the existing government, would welcome the first comer. Such reasons doubtless
                  induced Villani, Guelf as he was, to testify that Henry would have driven
                  Robert from his throne.
                   
                   With Henry VII’s death the Ghibelline cause, in Tuscany at
                  least, seemed lost beyond retrieve. The only two powers of any note, Pisa to
                  west and Arezzo to east, were separated by a wide range of hostile territory,
                  for the old feudal families which had flocked to the imperial standard were but
                  scattered islands in a Guelfic sea. Arezzo in its loyal grief changed the horse
                  upon its shield from white to black. The more mercantile Pisans regretted that
                  they had spent 2000 golden ducats on the imperial cause and had got nothing for
                  it. In Guelfic cities exultation knew no bounds. In these the oppressed
                  Ghibellines were forced to take a part in processions and illuminations. The
                  imperial army broke up, the Aretines and Tuscan nobles hurrying to their homes,
                  while Henry of Flanders with the German and Pisan contingents escorted the
                  Emperor’s remains to Pisa, where his body rests. The weak point in the Guelfic
                  league was that, though it had baffled Henry, it had not beaten him. Diplomatic
                  acumen and skill in organisation had been superior to military spirit. In
                  Tuscany the complete sense of security was probably the cause of disappointment
                  and disaster.
                   Pisa hoped to defend herself with the aid of Frederick of
                  Sicily who visited the city, but his terms, the cession of Sardinia, were too
                  high. Henry of Flanders and the Count of Savoy were approached in vain. Aid
                  came unexpectedly from within her walls. Uguccione, Podesta of Genoa for Henry
                  VII, accepted the office of Podestà and Captain. He was a capable condottiere
                  from the Aretine territory, with a somewhat shady political record. Feeling
                  that safety lay in a brisk offensive, he induced 1000 Brabançon and Flemish
                  horse to enter Pisan service. Taking advantage of the war-weariness and
                  internal divisions of Lucca, he sent strong raiding parties into her territory.
                  The Florentines dispatched aid, but their retirement was followed by fresh
                  attacks. Meanwhile King Robert was striving for a general peace, which would
                  give him the control of Tuscany, and especially the use of the Pisan fleet
                  against Sicily. Peace was actually signed at the end of February between Pisa,
                  the Guelfic league, and himself. Uguccione felt his position threatened; he
                  worked up agitation among the lower classes, rode the town, beheaded his chief
                  opponent, and had himself declared General War Captain for ten years.
                  Negotiations in Lucca resulted in the mutual recall of exiles, among whom were
                  the once powerful Lucchese house of Interminelli. To this belonged the keen
                  young soldier Castruccio Castracani, of much experience in French and Italian
                  wars, who at once gained favour with the lower classes. Their rivals, the
                  Obizzi, were thought to be still negotiating with Florence, whereas the
                  Interminelli were for peace with Pisa. Castruccio conspired with Uguccione,
                  and together they expelled the Guelfs; Uguccione established his son as Podestà
                  and War Captain in June 1314.
                   The loss of Lucca was a serious blow for Florence. Her access
                  to the sea and the road across the Apennines from Sarzana was blocked, while
                  her hold upon Pistoia, none too secure, was endangered. The general political
                  position was critical, for Clement V had died in April, and a fiercely disputed
                  election was in sight. Robert was straining his resources for another attack on
                  Sicily, but he sent his young brother Peter to Florence with 300 horse. He
                  entered on 18 August 1314, bearing for the king the title of Imperial Vicar of
                  Tuscany, Lombardy, Romagna, and Ferrara, and Captain-General of the Guelf party
                  in Italy. The Ghibelline party was now tightening its consolidation. In
                  February 1315 Pisa and Lucca made an alliance with Verona and Mantua, the Pazzi
                  of Vai d’Arno and the Ubertini; but Arezzo, feeling its isolation, had made
                  peace with Florence. The situation in the Guelfic cities was aggravated by
                  renewed faction and discontent with the heavy taxation, while in Siena the
                  Tolomei and Salimbeni fought pitched battles in the streets.
                   In March 1315 the campaign began with an unsuccessful Pisan
                  attack on Montecatini, strongly garrisoned by Florentines and Lucchese exiles.
                  Uguccione roused the drooping spirits of the Pisans by promising a direct
                  attack on Florence. On an appeal by Peter of Anjou, Bologna, always faithful to
                  her engagements, sent troops at once, while on 6 August Robert’s brother,
                  Philip of Taranto, arrived with Neapolitan forces and a large Sienese
                  contingent. Uguccione also had called on his allies, and on 10 August again
                  besieged Montecatini with 3000 horse and 20,000 foot, to which Matteo Visconti,
                  the Bonaccolsi of Mantua, and the Bishop of Arezzo, in spite of his city’s
                  treaty with Florence, contributed contingents; that of Can Grande, however,
                  arrived too late. Philip of Taranto, reinforced by troops from Umbria and
                  Romagna, moved to relieve Montecatini with 3200 horse and infantry estimated
                  at from 30,000 to 60,000. He crossed the dangerous marshes of Fucecchio, while
                  the Lucchese peasantry, disaffected towards their new government, cut the roads
                  and captured convoys in Uguccione’s rear. This on 28 August decided him to
                  retire, but to fight, if harassed on retreat. On 29 August Philip followed. While
                  crossing the stream of the Vorra, his forces were attacked by Italian
                  mercenaries and Florentine exiles. The vanguard from Siena and Colle fled.
                  Uguccione’s son Francesco and Giacotto Malaspina, who bore the imperial
                  standard of Lewis of Bavaria, pressed the attack, but were beaten off. Here Francesco fell,
                  perhaps in personal combat with Philip’s son Charles, for their bodies were
                  found together; the imperial banner went under. Uguccione then threw his 800
                  German horse into the fray. The infantry protecting the left flank of the
                  Guelfic cavalry, being harassed by the Pisan cross-bowmen, threw their long
                  lances into the charging Germans, and ran for their lives. General confusion
                  ensued, and the Florentine rout was complete. Pursuit followed for 13 miles:
                  many fugitives were drowned in the marshes, prisoners were numerous, the booty
                  enormous. Peter of Eboli’s body was lost in the marshes, and never found.
                  Philip of Taranto, suffering from malaria, had been carried in a litter to the
                  field, and managed to escape. The Catalan mercenaries fought well, and suffered
                  badly; Diego de Rat was a prisoner. The chief Guelfic families lost heavily in
                  dead, wounded, and prisoners. No such defeat had been inflicted on Florence
                  since Montaperti.
                   In view of the seething discontent within Florence and the.
                  defection of some of her smaller South Tuscan allies, the city herself might
                  have fallen but for Uguccione’s delay in following up his victory, A capable
                  soldier, he had no statesmanlike quality, no great aim beyond his immediate
                  interest. This was now to monopolise the whole of the captured booty. Pisa and
                  Lucca, which under Castruccio had no small share in the victory, were equally
                  indignant. Jealousy of Castruccio was, indeed, the direct cause of Uguccione’s
                  fall. The schism in the Empire was beginning to affect Italian politics.
                  Uguccione from the first supported Lewis; Castruccio accepted from Frederick
                  the confirmation of his election as Vicar by the city of Sarzana, a post of the
                  utmost importance for imperial communications with Lucca, Pisa, and Florence
                  herself. Uguccione ordered his son Neri, who represented him at Lucca, to
                  arrest Castruccio, and if he refused to surrender his possessions, to behead
                  him. Realising possible danger, he rode out to support his son. The Pisans rose
                  against him; he turned back on the news, to find the gates bolted and barred.
                  Hoping to save Lucca, he hurried thither, only to fall into the hands of
                  Castruccio, who had already been released. The captor with characteristic
                  generosity sent father and son under escort to Spinetta Malaspina in the
                  Lunigiana, whence Uguccione made his way to Can Grande. After a later vain
                  attempt on Pisa he died as Podestà of Verona in November 1319. His career
                  illustrates the difficulty in establishing a durable tyranny by a mere
                  condottiere without local or dynastic ties. If statesmanship, character, and
                  military skill combined could accomplish such a feat, Uguccione’s successor at
                  Lucca had a far better chance. He was the real Tuscan hero in the drama of the
                  Trecento. Machiavelli had some justification in converting the hero of history
                  into one of legend. Castruccio’s chief exploits, however, lie beyond the limits
                  of this chapter. After Uguccione’s death Castruccio became Captain of Lucca, to
                  be elected in 1320 General-Captain and Lord for life. A somewhat similar post
                  was held by Guido della Gherardesca at Pisa. The two States continued a
                  raiding war upon the Tuscan Guelfs, until in 1317 Robert succeeded in promoting
                  a general peace. This was the easier, as, in consequence of the marriage of
                  Frederick of Austria’s daughter Catherine to the Duke of Calabria, Naples,
                  Florence, and Lucca recognised the same claimant to the Empire. Within
                  Florence, however, the incompetence and greed of the Angevin princes led to a
                  reaction against French influence in favour of the house of Luxemburg. Simone
                  della Tosa headed a party based mainly on the Gonfaloniers of the Companies and
                  the lower classes against the wealthy families. On 1 May 1316 dictatorial
                  powers were conferred on a new official, the Bargello, Lando Bicci, who
                  ruled without appeal by axe and gallows, in defiance of excommunication by the
                  clergy. Robert’s brother-in-law, Bertrand de Baux, was powerless, but his
                  successor, Count Guido of Battifolle, backed by orders from Naples and a
                  reaction among the Companies, dismissed Bicci and broke Simone’s power.
                  Government fell to the wealthy popolani for some years to come. Abroad,
                  military enterprise was devoted to support of the Lombard Guelfic league
                  against Visconti and Scaligeri, and to the relief of Genoa. In spite of
                  Robert’s own success in this relief, the Florentines suffered with increasing
                  disgust the officials commissioned to represent him. This reached its climax
                  with the expiration of his lordship in 1322. Florence was free for a time from
                  a foreign protectorate, and restored to the dubious enjoyment of her own
                  constitution.
                   
                   Clement V did not long survive the Emperor whom he had
                  deserted, for he died on 20 April 1314. His pontificate had rather tightened
                  than loosened papal hold in Italy. The impetus had been due to the genius of
                  Arnaud de Pelagrue, but it was mainly through Robert and his Neapolitan
                  officials that he maintained his hold upon the capital and Romagna. The
                  conquest of Ferrara brought small satisfaction. The citizens desired either
                  republican liberty or the recall of the legitimate Estensi. In one of the
                  movements Francesco was murdered; Clement found himself forced late in 1312 to
                  hand over the government to Robert, who held Ferrara with a force of Catalans.
                  These in August 1317 were massacred by the inhabitants, who restored the sons
                  of Francesco and Aldobrandino. Direct papal sovereignty ceased, in spite of the
                  interdict long laid upon Ferrara by Clement’s successor.
                   Dante has mercilessly condemned Clement to a terrible cell and
                  unsympathetic company in Hell. His desertion of Italy, his betrayal of Henry,
                  his unlimited simony to enrich his relatives, are sufficient reasons for his
                  punishment. Yet it is possible to regret it. In spite of Viliani’s scandal,
                  Clement lived a clean life, and was a man of simple piety, easy and pleasant in
                  his manners, a contrast to the insufferable arrogance of Boniface VIII and the
                  rough brutality of John XXII. Though not ascetic, he lived frugally and
                  unostentatiously; he was always taking medicine and consulting doctors,
                  becoming a chronic valetudinarian. This, perhaps, accounted for the weakness of
                  will which sometimes followed tenacity of resistance, forcing him to
                  concessions which he afterwards regretted. A see-saw between high pretensions
                  and weak practice was a main characteristic of his career.
                   The disgraceful conclave of Carpentras ended on 7 August 1316
                  in the election of John XXII. Dante’s patriotic letter to the Italian
                  cardinals, addressed especially to Napoleon Orsini, was of no avail, and the
                  failure to elect an Italian caused St Peter to denounce the Cahorsins and
                  Gascons, who would drink like ravening wolves the blood of Christ’s flock.
                  Napoleon himself had told Philip IV that the desertion of Rome had ruined Italy
                  and brought danger upon France herself. During the conclave the political
                  situation had materially changed. On 27 November 1314 Philip IV had died, while
                  in October the elections of Frederick of Austria and Lewis of Bavaria had
                  caused a schism in the Empire. Only five years of John’s reign fall within
                  Dante’s life, but these were sufficient to cause his condemnation. He soon
                  rivalled Boniface in the assertion of temporal claims, and outdid Clement in
                  extortion. Having failed to close the imperial schism, he utilised it by
                  continuing Robert’s vicariate, and forbade vicars appointed by Henry VII to
                  perform their functions. From this sprang the conflict with Visconti, elsewhere
                  described.
                   
                   Of
                  all the combatants King Robert stood to gain most by Henry VII’s death. He was
                  relieved from the very real danger of a combined attack by the Emperor and
                  Frederick of Sicily. Clement created him Imperial Vicar in Italy during the
                  vacancy. In Rome itself he exercised senatorial power, through a Roman noble or
                  through one of his own officials. If the nobles still fought without much
                  government control, this was too normal to cause anxiety. Southwards, the
                  reconciliation of Gaetani and Colonna made access from Naples easy. In Umbria,
                  Perugia, the most powerful and united city, kept the Guelfic banner always
                  flying. In Romagna and the March, Guelfs and Ghibellines under the Malatesta
                  and Federigo of Urbino were so evenly balanced that Robert’s aid was scarcely
                  needed. As ruler of Ferrara for the Pope since 1312 he could put pressure on
                  eastern Lombardy, while western Lombardy could be threatened from his fiefs in
                  Piedmont, and by the Count of Savoy, now his ally. In Tuscany, Florence, Siena,
                  and Lucca had no shame in accepting his protectorate. His undoubted wish to be
                  king, nominal or actual, of Italy seemed to Guelfic poets well within
                  possibility of fulfilment.
                   Against these advantages Robert’s preoccupation with Sicily
                  weighed heavily in the scales. During truce or peace he was always preparing
                  for another war, and this strained his resources to the uttermost; he held that
                  he would not really be king if he could not reunite the whole Angevin kingdom.
                  Two actual wars took place between Henry’s death and the visit of Lewis IV to
                  Italy. For the first, Frederick was responsible by his breach of the Treaty of
                  Caltabellotta through his alliance with Henry. He had his son Peter’s claim to
                  succession proclaimed by the assembled judges of the island, and himself
                  reassumed the title of King of Sicily. The ensuing war was a fiasco; Frederick
                  seized Reggio, and Robert sent a large force by sea to Trapani. Both fleets
                  were shattered by storms before coming into action, and a truce was made until
                  March 1316. The second war was far more serious. A large army, after pillaging
                  the western side of Sicily, combined with the fleet in an attack upon Palermo,
                  and, failing here, on the district of Marsala. Frederick’s forces were at a low
                  ebb when envoys arrived from John XXII and James of Aragon. Frederick assented
                  to the surrender of the posts still held in Calabria, stipulating for a peace
                  to last from 13 June 1317 to Christmas 1320. The negotiations at Avignon failed
                  owing to Robert’s usual delays, and the war became part of the pan-Italian
                  struggle around Genoa. To mobilise his fleet destined for this, Frederick
                  seized ecclesiastical property. John in January 1321 laid an interdict on
                  Sicily, whereon Frederick completed the ruin of the treaty of Caltabellotta by
                  having Peter crowned as his successor in April 1321. Robert’s personal
                  intervention in the siege of Genoa was the one courageous and decisive act in
                  the first decade of his reign. The siege was compared by Villani to that of
                  Troy for the size and wealth of the city, its long duration and violent
                  vicissitudes. It was originally a mere incident in the everlasting struggles
                  between the great families of Doria, Spinola, Grimaldi, and Fieschi, the former
                  pair classed as Ghibellines, the latter as Guelfs. After Henry VII’s death,
                  renewed quarrels between Doria and Spinola led to the return and predominance
                  of the Guelfs, stimulated by Robert’s intrigues, in 1317. The Ghibelline
                  houses, reconciled in exile, based their attack on the malcontent cities of
                  Savona and Albenga, and their own far-stretching coastal fiefs. The Guelfs,
                  after appealing in vain to Visconti, who gave support to the exiles, begged
                  help of Robert. To the ruler of Naples and Marseilles control over Genoa was
                  all-important, for it secured the long sea passage between these ports, opened
                  communications through the Ligurian Alps to his Piedmontese possessions, and
                  provided a first-class fleet for a Sicilian war. The exiles, in March 1318,
                  aided by Marco Visconti with German and Lombard troops, occupied the semicircle
                  of hills overlooking Genoa, the Polcevera valley immediately to the west, and
                  the Torre del Faro commanding the port. In July Robert with a large fleet broke
                  the blockade, and was recognised as lord for ten years in conjunction with the
                  Pope. The exiles found allies in the Lombard Ghibelline despots, Lucca, Pisa,
                  and the Emperor Andronicus, who could gravely hamper Genoese commerce in the
                  East. Robert was joined by Bolognese, Florentines, and Romagnols, shipped from
                  the Sienese port of Talamone. In February Robert broke the besiegers’ western
                  lines by landing at Sestri Levante. After this serious defeat the Lombards
                  withdrew, and Robert in April, leaving his fleet and a garrison, retired to
                  join the Pope. By August the exiles retook all their lost positions, and there
                  was fighting by sea from Savona to the gulf of Spezia.
                   The war in 1320 became truly international. A Sicilian fleet,
                  carrying cavalry, arrived before Genoa, while Castruccio captured Genoese towns
                  in the Riviera di Levante. By August the city vras more closely beset than
                  ever. Robert then sent 82 galleys, before which the Sicilian fleet retired,
                  and, to draw Cardona off, ravaged Ischia. Cardona’s pursuing fleet on sighting
                  his Neapolitan seamen’s home was disabled by mutiny. In September the Sicilian
                  squadron, having returned to Genoa, made with the Lombards concerted attacks,
                  which were with great difficulty repulsed. If only Castruccio had arrived
                  success was certain, but the Florentines, by attacking Lucca, called him
                  hurriedly home. Similarly, though with less success, the Pope sent Philip of
                  Valois with French troops to divert the Visconti. Winter approaching drove home
                  the Sicilian fleet, much damaged; the exiles retired to Savona. Though the war
                  dragged on till 1323, the crisis was really over. Robert had saved Genoa, ami
                  recovered the prestige lost in 1317 by his humiliating eviction from Ferrara.
                   
                   If in Tuscany the Emperor’s death gave apparent predominance
                  lo the Guelfs, the position of the imperialists in Lombardy remained unshaken.
                  This was directly due to Henry’s action in appointing as Vicars of Milan and
                  Verona men of real statesmanship and consistent purpose. Pecuniary necessity
                  may have been his immediate motive, but he could not have made better choice
                  than that of Matteo Visconti and Can Grande. Matteo, indeed, like other great
                  Visconti, had little military talent, but four warlike sons compensated for
                  the lack. The title of Imperial Vicar gave both rulers an unquestionable
                  status, as is proved by the insistence of Clement V and John XXII that they
                  should abandon it. Can Grande had a State undivided by party faction, while
                  Matteo’s justice and conciliatory spirit went far to reconcile the popular
                  Guelf elements to his rule. The alliance between the two lords, which included
                  Passerino Bonaccolsi of Mantua, was firmly set; there was as yet little cause
                  for jealousy, since between the Adda and the Mincio lay a wide block containing
                  Bergamo and Brescia, Crema and Cremona, mainly Guelf or suffering from chaotic
                  feuds. King Robert’s occupation of Ferrara was precarious, and in 1317 was to
                  have an ignominious end. The chief danger was the brilliant, unscrupulous
                  Ghiberto da Correggio, lord of Parma, who coveted Cremona, which, with his
                  possession of Guastalla, would give him command of both banks of the Po. If
                  only he could wrest Piacenza, so closely connected in history with Parma, his
                  State would be of real importance. Westwards, Pavia was ruled by Rizzardino
                  Langosco, son of Filippone, who was a prisoner in Milan. The Torriani had
                  returned to Lombardy; and had influence in the eastern half of the Milanese and
                  much sympathy in Milan. Matteo had during the first two years after Henry’s
                  death considerable trouble from such a combination supported by Bologna, Padua,
                  and Robert. But in October 1315 Marco Visconti, after a brilliant victory on
                  the Scrivia, took Pavia by an assault, in which Rizzardino was killed. The
                  Ghibelline Beccaria were restored, but, to make safe, Matteo built a castle,
                  occupied by a Milanese garrison under his son Luchino. The Visconti now ruled
                  over Milan, Tortona, Alessandria, Pavia, Bergamo, and Piacenza, while Como was
                  ruled by the closely allied Rusconi. Ghiberto da Correggio in 1316 induced his
                  friend Cavalcabo, the local despot, to surrender Cremona to him. On his return
                  to Parma, he found an organised rebellion, headed by his relatives, and
                  probably engineered from Milan and Verona. He fled, never to return, but, by
                  his military capacity and official command of the Guelf forces, was formidable
                  until his death in 1323. Parma once again became stringently republican,
                  starting a new radical club of 3000 members, who swore never to allow Parma to
                  obey a lord or have intercourse with nobles. This strange little radical
                  republic was in foreign politics Ghibelline, in alliance with Milan, Verona,
                  and Mantua, receiving her Podesta from the Visconti. Cremona, after Correggio’s
                  fall, suffered horrible vicissitudes of murder and sack until her acceptance of
                  Visconti rule in 1322.
                   The accession of John XXII was signalised by the Bull of 1317
                  excommunicating all who did not drop the title of Imperial Vicar, unless
                  confirmed in it by himself. Can Grande took no notice of this, but Matteo
                  abandoned the title, adopting that of General Lord of the Milanese people. His foreign
                  policy was not affected: he sent substantial aid to the Genoese Ghibelline
                  nobles, and with preliminary success; but the arrival of Robert with a large
                  force turned the scale. The Milanese and Veronese gave up the contest; Genoa
                  was not as yet within the practical programme of Visconti expansion.
                   In Lombardy, Matteo’s success continued. Robert’s Vicar, Hugh
                  de Baux, was killed in an action with Luchino; Philip of Valois, sent by Robert
                  to support the papal legate Bertrand du Pouget, retired rapidly before a
                  superior Visconti force, which then occupied Vercelli. A new danger now
                  threatened the Visconti from the east. The Pope persuaded Frederick of Austria
                  to send his brother Henry to execute the decree of excommunication. Henry found
                  a strong base in the zealous Guelfism of Brescia, where he received the papal
                  banner from Pagano della Torre, Patriarch of Aquileia, in April 1322. Yet he,
                  as Philip of Valois, disliked the look of the Visconti forces, and was bribed
                  to retire, ending his campaign with a jovial reception from Can Grande.
                   The Pope’s measures had failed to shake the military position
                  of the Visconti, but they were not without effect on Milanese feeling nor on
                  Matteo’s conscience. His own envoys were persuaded by the legate to depose him,
                  and on their return stirred up the people, who became clamorous for peace. The
                  Council wished Matteo to resign his pretensions to the Pope. Lombard
                  Ghibellines fiercely resented this, but Matteo’s health and courage were
                  waning; he resigned in favour of Galeazzo, and died, probably on 24 June 1322.
                  Strangely enough, Galeazzo was unanimously acclaimed by the Grand Council as
                  his father’s successor. Thus the Visconti seemed firmly seated as the ruling
                  house, in spite of Matteo’s personal difficulties or tender conscience.
                   At the time of Henry VII’s death Can Grande was sole ruler of
                  Verona. He had also received the vicariate of Vicenza, which had thrown off the
                  Paduan yoke in February 1312. Vicentine territory increased the Scala
                  possessions by half as much again, and acted as a buffer, protecting the
                  Veronese from the impact of the forces of Padua and Treviso. On the other hand,
                  it was the cause of the four succeeding wars with Padua, whose resources were
                  fully as great as those of Can Grande, and whose republican feeling was long
                  unalterable. In his own house Can was determined to be master. He suppressed
                  the Viccntine rural nobles, who had long been the bugbear of the city, ordering
                  all private castles to be destroyed, an act which drove many of the owners into alliance with
                  Padua. The defences of the State were strengthened, especially by two new forts
                  at Marostica, the stronghold on the northern frontier. The Scala ladder incised
                  on a bolt of one of the gates still bears witness to Can Grande’s action.
                   Not daunted by the Emperor’s death, Can Grande at once
                  prepared an offensive movement against Padua. In 1314 he raided Paduan
                  territory far and wide, burning Abano, to the distress of wealthy and gouty
                  citizens whose health depended on its baths, and caused a panic in Padua
                  itself. A counter-stroke against Vicenza had almost succeeded, when Can, riding
                  hard from his son’s marriage-feast at Verona, drove the enemy out after a
                  hand-to-hand figh t in the suburbs. A huge number of prisoners included the
                  historian statesman, Albertino Mussato. The ensuing peace in October 1314
                  recognised Can Grande’s rights over Vicenza. This peace enabled him, in concert
                  with his satellite Passerino Bonaccolsi of Mantua, to uphold the Ghibelline
                  cause in Central Lombardy. To him in great measure was due the expulsion of
                  Ghiberto da Correggio from Parma; he had, however, no ambition for permanent
                  expansion in this direction, and left any fruits of victory to Passerino. The
                  recognition of Frederick of Austria as King of the Romans on 16 March 1317 has
                  been ascribed to the influence of Uguccione, who was now his most talented
                  general. It was, however, inevitable that Can should have direct interest in
                  the Austrian claimant, who, through the Brenner and side passes, was in close
                  contact with Verona and Vicenza.
                   While campaigning against Brescia, Can heard of a treacherous
                  Paduan plot for the surprise of Vicenza. The attack was led by Vinciguerra,
                  Count of Sanbonifacio, the hereditary Guelfic foe of the Ghibelline Scaligeri.
                  He was descending from Monte Berico, which immediately overhangs Vicenza, when
                  Can and Uguccione burst upon him. Vinciguerra was taken, and after generous
                  treatment died, thus ridding Can of his most powerful feudal enemy. He then
                  conquered the southern Paduan towns of Este, Monselice, and Montagnana, while
                  the Estensi, restored to Ferrara, captured Rovigo, chief city of the fertile
                  Polesina, lying between the Adige and the Po. The peace, which was due to
                  Venetian mediation in February 1318, had momentous results for Padua, for
                  Giacomo da Carrara, who had pressed for peace, was in July accepted as lord.
                   In December 1318 Can Grande’s reputation caused him to be
                  elected Captain-General of the Lombard League, with a handsome salary and a
                  personal force of 1000 horse. Yet he did little service to the League’s cause.
                  His objective now was Padua’s ally Treviso, now a republic, but deeply divided
                  between the upper and lower classes. Aided by several feudal nobles and the
                  late despot, Guecello da Camino, Uguccione besieged the city, but Henry Count
                  of Gorizia was sent by Frederick of Austria to its relief, whereupon in July
                  1319 Can diverted his forces to a formal siege of Padua. Here on 1 November
                  1319 he lost Uguccione, who died of malaria. Padua, at the instance of Giacomo
                  da Carrara, gave herself to Frederick, whose Vicar, Henry of Gorizia, took the
                  besiegers completely by surprise. Utterly routed and severely wounded, Can
                  escaped by a hair’s-breadth to Monselice, losing all his military stores and
                  gorgeous personal equipment. Fortunately the Paduans, disheartened by an
                  attempt to take Monselice, longed for peace, which was signed on 26 October
                  1320. Can surrendered to Padua the strong frontier fortress of Cittadella, and
                  by a secret arrangement gave to Henry Asolo and Montebelluna, receiving in
                  exchange the more important Bassano, which commands the entrance to the Vai
                  Sugana. Frederick was to arbitrate on the return of exiles and the possession
                  of Este, Monselice, and Montagnana, but his defeat at Muhldorf left them in Can
                  Grande’s hands. Shaken by the wound received at Padua and the shame of his
                  flight, he left Padua and Treviso alone for the while; he had learned his
                  lesson, that personal bravery does not make a general. By clever negotiations
                  he won valuable acquisitions in Feltre and Belluno; with these added to
                  Bassano, Roveredo, and Riva he had a fine strategic and commercial northern
                  frontier.
                   At Venice the
                  election which followed Gradenigo’s death was sensational. The electors being
                  in doubt, some of them, as is usual, looked out of the window. A retired
                  statesman, Marino Zorzi, was passing, followed by a servant carrying a sack of
                  bread for the prisoners. A flood of sentiment swept the charitable old
                  gentleman to the dogeship. He was friendly to Henry VII, for deputies were sent
                  to his coronation, and leave given to levy cross-bowmen. Having reigned but
                  ten months, he died on 3 July l312. Ten days later Giovanni Soranzo was elected
                  at the age of seventy-two. No citizen had a stronger claim. With 25 galleys he had taken Kaffa from the Genoese, and then defended it against the
                  Tartars, had fought against Padua, and was Podesta of Ferrara in the critical
                  year 1308. Prosperity soon returned, especially in the year of double
                  thirteens. The papal interdict was withdrawn in March 1313; the old Venetian
                  privileges in Ferrara were restored; the fetters on foreign trade were
                  automatically struck off. In
                  September Zara returned to Venetian allegiance after her long revolt, and
                  during the next decade the other Dalmatian cities surrendered their temporary
                  independence. Soranzo’s dogeship was a period of unexampled growth in wealth
                  and population. The Genoese carried on war of a piratical character, but the
                  most sensational incident was the appearance of the ever fortunate admiral
                  Giustiniani before their headquarters at Galata with an irresistible demand for
                  complete restitution. Commercial treaties were made with Sicily, Milan,
                  Brescia, and Bologna, with Hungary and the Emperor Andronicus. The city of
                  Trebizond granted access to trade with Persia; the King of Tunis favoured
                  Venetian commerce. Levantine sugar was shipped to England in exchange for wool,
                  which was worked up in Flanders for the cloth trade along the Adriatic and in
                  the Levant. The city herself gained an impulse to silk manufacture by sheltering
                  Lucchese refugees; three Venetian citizens introduced the art of mirror-making,
                  which became a characteristic industry. Venice, with her arsenal enlarged, her
                  bridges and streets improved, became worthy of a population computed at 200,000
                  souls. Soranzo’s death did not take place until well beyond the limits of this
                  chapter, in December 1328.
                   
                   The Age of
                  Dante closes on a future indistinct. In Lombardy, indeed, the expansive
                  hereditary monarchies seemed likely to hold the field. Florence, uneasy within,
                  was again endangered from without. The States of the Church, under an absentee
                  Pope, would probably disintegrate rather than solidify. There remains King
                  Robert. If his resources could balance his ambitions, if he could prove as
                  effective as he was efficient, he might learn to play the spectacular part
                  which Guelf admirers assigned to
                   
 Il buon Roberto
                   Re d ’un italico Regno.
                   
 
 The Lombard communes; a history of the republics of north ItalyTHE STORY OF PADUATHE STORY OF VERONAVenice in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries; a sketch of Ventian history from the conquest of Constantinople to the accession of Michele Steno, A.D. 1204-1400Siena, the story of a mediaeval communeFrom St. Francis to Dante; a translation of all that is of primary interest in the chronicle of the Franciscan Salimbene; (1221-1288) together with notes and illustrations from other medieval sourcesThe two first centuries of Florentine historyThe empire and the papacy, 918-1273
 
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