LUDWIG VON PASTOR'S
HISTORY OF THE POPES FROM THE CLOSE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
CHAPTER III.
Paul V as Ruler of the Papal States.
Papal Finance.
At the very beginning of the pontificate of Paul V the opinion was
expressed that his reign would be very similar to that of Clement VIII. This
opinion was to be verified in connection with the administration of both
ecclesiastical and secular affairs.
The political economist and statistician, Giovanni Botero, sometime
secretary to Charles Borromeo, writing in the first quarter of Paul V’s reign,
has left an extremely interesting account of the Papal States, the boundaries
of which had been considerably extended with the acquisition of Ferrara under
Clement VIII. Every division of property was prevented by the decree of Pius V,
settling the inviolability of the entire possessions of the Holy See, which
Paul V at once confirmed.
The area of the Papal States was somewhat more extensive than that of
the Venetian Republic, while the population, owing to the sparseness of Central
Italy, was about the same; Botero estimated it at one and a half million souls. The Papal States possessed only two large cities:
Rome, the capital, with 115,000 inhabitants, and Bologna with over 80,000.
After these came Ferrara with 60,000, a number which was rapidly declining
owing to the cessation of the ducal residence there. All the other places had
considerably smaller populations, as, for example, Viterbo and Civitavecchia in the Patrimony, Rieti and Tivoli
in Sabina, Velletri, Anagni and Terracina in the
Roman Campagna proper, Perugia, Assisi, Foligno,
Spoleto, Terni, Narni and Orvieto in Umbria, Ancona,
Fermo, Macerata and Ascoli in the Marches, Ravenna, Faenza, Forli, Cesena and
Rimini in Romagna. There were also smaller places with episcopal sees,
amounting to about fifty in number.
The nature of the soil of this State, crossed by the chain of the
Apennines, presented great contrasts : next to extremely fertile districts
there were rough, mountainous areas and extensive tracts of unhealthy lowlands
like the Pontine Marshes, the Maremme, which reached
from the mouth of the Tiber to the borders of Tuscany, and the swamps, which
stretched along the Adriatic coast from the banks of the Po in the direction of
Rimini, in the middle of which lay Comacchia. These
districts were infested with malaria, as was also practically the whole of the
Roman Campagna. These regions apart, the remaining lands were blessed with a
splendid climate and with great natural resources and plants and animals
abounded and prospered everywhere.
Botero praises as being particularly fertile the Umbrian valley of the
Tiber, the smiling plains of Rieti, the country surrounding Bologna and the
whole of Romagna and the Marches, where fertility was enhanced by a charming
landscape. The rich harvests of corn, oil and wine allowed of considerable
exportation, notably to Venice. Certain districts were renowned for their
special produce as, for example, Faenza and Lugo for flax, Cento and Perugia
for hemp, Bologna and Forli for woad, Sant' Arcangelo, Norcia and Terni for
their rape of remarkable size, San Lorenzo for its manna and the famous woods
of Ravenna for their pine-cones. The vineyards prospered exceedingly in the
whole of Romagna, in the Marches, Umbria, the Patrimony, the Sabina and in the
Lazio. Besides the world-famed muscatel of Montefiascone, the wines of Orvieto, Todi, Albano, Cesena, Faenza and Rimini were also highly esteemed. In the plains as well as in the hills
there were numerous olive yards and chestnut groves. Many woods still held a
great wealth of timber.
The animal kingdom in the Papal States was no less favoured than the vegetable. Large herds of cattle, sheep, pigs, goats and horses grazed freely and half-wild in the uninhabited parts of the Roman
Campagna, the Pontine Marshes and the Maremme.
Outside the Roman Campagna, the Romagna in particular
produced magnificent oxen; the horses of the Agro Romano were scarcely inferior to those of Naples. Of the pigs, which abounded
everywhere, those of the mountainous districts were considered the best. There
was also no dearth of animals of the chase. The Pontine Marshes in particular harboured many wild
boars. Excellent hunting country was to be found in the Lazio in the neighbourhood of Sermoneta,
Terracina and Nettuno. After the sea itself, the
lagoons of Comacchio were pre-eminently abundant in fish and the eels from
there passed for the best in the whole of Italy. The mineral kingdom offered
splendid marbles, peperino and the famous Travertine. The excellent alum from
the Tolfa district near Cerveteri was a state monopoly,
as were also the famous saltworks of Comacchio. The sulphur baths of Poretta in the legation of Bologna and those
of Viterbo, where Nicholas V had laid out a bathing
establishment, were the most esteemed of all the numerous mineral springs. The
warm sulphur-springs of Vicarello,
not far from the lake of Bracciano, which the ancient
Romans had used, and the medicinal waters of Anticoli,
a picturesque mountain village near Subiaco, were also much frequented.
Notwithstanding all these natural advantages, the trade and commerce of
the Papal States, apart from Rome itself, had scarcely been developed at all
beyond the immediate requirements and the general prosperity as well as the
number of the population was on the decline. The efforts of several Popes of
the XVIth century to bring about an improvement in
this matter had not attained the desired end. There were many different factors
which were unfavourable to success. The elective
character of the State robbed its secular administration of the necessary
stability, for there were no fixed rules here as there were in ecclesiastical
affairs. Almost every pontificate brought with it a change of system. Added to
this was the increasing elimination of the lay element from the administrative
personnel of the Papal States; the ecclesiastics, who took their places, had
not the requisite training for secular business and were often also unsuitable
in other ways. The weak character of the people was also prejudicial to
progress; they lacked energy and organizing ability and expected everything to
be done by the government. To all this must be added the general misfortunes,
which visited Italy at the end of the XVIth century:
pestilence, bad harvests, famines, uneconomic taxation and the evils consequent on banditry.
The scourge of banditry had increased to such an extent in the Papal
States that many districts were abandoned by their populations and lay
uncultivated. Botero specially mentions the widespread occurrence of malaria as
a cause of the decline in the population of the Papal States and he suggests as
a remedy not merely drainage but also the systematic colonization of the Roman
Campagna. Botero also draws attention to the fact that everybody thought that
organized recruiting of mercenaries was permissible in the Papal States, which
were regarded as a sort of common property. The temptation was particularly
strong as the people of Romagna and the Marches were reputed to make very
efficient soldiers.
Paul V intervened repeatedly against the abuse of foreign recruiting on
the lands of the Church, but his immediate and especial efforts were directed
to the fight against banditry, which his predecessors, Clement VIII and Sixtus V, had carried on with varying results. Even the
most embittered enemies of the Borghese Pope are compelled to recognize the
undeniable success which attended his efforts to establish public safety,
although it was just here that his initial difficulties were particularly
great, owing to the fact that the Holy See had
recently been twice vacant.
As an example of the rigour with which Paul V
inaugurated his reign, one can cite in particular the execution of a man of letters, Piccinardi, a native
of Cremona, amongst whose possessions was found a Life of Clement VIII, in
which that excellent Pope was placed on a par with the emperor Tiberius.
Although Paul V at first expressed himself in favour of a light punishment in
consideration of the fact that the lampoon was only shown by the author to
quite a small number of persons, he nevertheless finally let the law, under
which Piccinardi was accounted guilty of high
treason, take its course, and this notwithstanding the representations of
influential personages. This inflexibility made all Rome tremble. The Pope also
proved very stern towards his own household. The papal steward and his deputy,
who had sold favours, were dismissed, although Giovan Battista, Paul V’s brother, had pleaded on their
behalf. The officials realized, and with terror, how strictly they were being
controlled. Even the aged master of ceremonies, Paolo Alaleone,
received a reproof for courting too much the favour of Cardinal Scipione Borghese.
Paul V was also eager to improve the administration of justice. He saw
to it that only those officials were chosen, whom he knew to be the best in the
Curia. He similarly took care that the settlement of lawsuits was not
unnecessarily protracted and that no attention was paid to any representations
from outsiders. Justice must follow its course with vigour not least in the case of the powerful. The immunities, claimed by ambassadors
and cardinals, such as Farnese, were to be no let, to
the course of justice. The French ambassador, the Marquis of Coeuvres, was so unwilling to comply with this that an
action had to be brought in Paris.
In the struggle against banditry, which was the plague of the
countryside, the discontinuation of one of its causes, namely, the large number
of soldiers accustomed to the profession of arms, came to the aid of the
Borghese Pope; that banditry died of its own accord, as some people have
thought, was far from being the case. It required the repeated exertions of the
Pope as well as a fair lapse of time before the desired end was finally
attained. When Paul V died, perfect tranquillity and
security reigned in his States. In these matters the Pope had not the slightest
regard for high-placed personages, who had any connection with evildoers. In
1608, the Marquis of Rignano, who had sheltered a
bandit in his castle, was in danger of being executed. He had to consider
himself lucky to be let off with a fine and a five years’ banishment. The
fiscal attorney and auditor-general, Farinacci, well known on account of the Cenci case, was
also implicated in the affair of the Marquis; in 1611 he forfeited his various
positions. The heads of three Corsican guardsmen, who had killed two French
noblemen at the beginning of 1608, fell under the executioner’s axe. The Pope
opposed the shedding of blood, which occurred so frequently in Rome, by
repeatedly forbidding the carrying of arms. Rome’s beggars and vagabonds, those
who broadcast false news, avaricious innkeepers and
dissolute women, all felt the strong hand of the Pope.
At the beginning of the year 1608, Paul V embarked on a radical reform
of the entire judicature. With this end in view, he instituted a special
Congregation, which sat every Friday under the presidency of Cardinal Borghese.
A reform of this kind was sure to meet with great difficulties, hence it was at
first believed that the plan would come to nothing; but the Pope would not
rest, until success was attained. On March 1st, 1612, a consistorial bull was
issued. The very format of the document, with its Italian-gothic, small-print
type, showed the importance which the Pope attached to the matter; the severe
regularity and beauty of the writing was well in keeping with the significance
of the content.
The reform, laid down in the bull of March 1st, 1612, embraced the Segnatura di Grazia e Giustizia,
the Camera Apostolica, the tribunals of the Governor
of the City and of the Auditors of the Chamber, the Rota, the municipal
magistracy, the contentions between the Jews and the whole system of civil and
criminal law. Special attention was paid to the protection of the poor and to
the prison system. All prisons were to be inspected at least once a month, in order to prevent the illegal detention of prisoners; the
Pope also provided for their bodily and spiritual needs. Severe penalties were
fixed for all contraventions of the bull. Supplementary measures fixed the
taxes to be paid to municipal notaries and to other officials. The execution of
these measures, which were still further explained in a special declaration,
was very closely watched.
The legates in the provinces, following the Pope’s example, also worked
hard for the maintenance of peace and order. Cardinal Bonifacio Caetani, who was appointed legate of Romagna in 1608,
sought to obtain this end by the exercise of sagacity and gentleness.
Caetani,
in whose honour the grateful people of Ravenna
erected in 1609 a granite column adorned with an eagle, his coat of arms, was
in every respect an outstanding personality. A blameless priest, he preached
many times in Ravenna, particularly in the Church of the Theatines for whom he
cherished a special affection. He devoted himself to his secular business with
such zeal, facility and pleasure that his work
appeared to serve as his recreation. He dealt with every memorial with great despatch, often settling the matter personally. Only
persons of irreproachable reputation found employment with him. In his
immediate entourage he strongly insisted on order and discipline; his household
had to assist at Mass daily and on feast days at the sermon as well. The
Cardinal was an enemy of all superfluities. He had drawn up a strict time-table. When giving audience, he was courteous but
brief. He rigorously insisted that his officials should keep to their own
business and not meddle in affairs foreign to them. His demeanour was always grave and dignified. He knew well how to keep himself informed about
everything and to alternate sternness with mildness, for he realized how ill
the people can stand unmitigated rigour. He who
wishes to rule well, he used to say, must be reliable, moderate and just. The people of the Romagna had a reputation for turbulence. They were,
indeed, still so divided into factions that Caetani used to say that there were two different peoples in the province, the Guelphs
and the Ghibellines. For all that he praised the people of Romagna, declaring
that if one dealt with them with gentleness and friendliness they were easily
managed and pacified, and that they were obedient to their superiors and
appreciative of acts of kindness.
It was, however, rather with iron rigour that
the Genoese Benedetto Giustiniani, who was sent as
legate to Bologna in November, 1608, sought to carry
out his task. Giustiniani insisted the more on his
orders being obeyed in that he knew the old proverb, that in Bologna an
ordinance is observed for a month, less twenty-nine days. He would gain
information at first-hand and it was related that he
often went about in disguise, in order to get at the truth.
Giustiniani succeeded in restoring order, in spite of the unfavourable conditions which confronted him. His severity
often carried him too far, and this was, indeed, the cause of his recall in the
summer of 1611. His successor was the French nuncio, Maffeo Barberini. During his three years of office, this exceptional man provided
admirably for the economic conditions of the city; he also reformed the
coinage, settled some territorial disputes with the Duke of Modena and
preserved the peace in the territory of his legation during the war between
Savoy and Mantua.
In 1605 Paul V extended the jurisdiction of the Congregazione del buon governo, which
had been instituted by Clement VIII to deal with the economic conditions of the
Papal States. The Congregation did much towards the liquidation of the debts of
the various communes. These debts, which amounted to 1,745,600 scudi at the
beginning of Paul V’s pontificate, were reduced to 445,600. A tax on meat and a
reduction of the interest charged by the Monti was used for the extinction of
the debt of the City of Rome. The care which he took to avoid these taxes
falling on the poor was characteristic of the Pope’s humanity.
The demands which Paul V made on the governors of the provinces of the
Papal States can be seen from one of his instructions. He made it clear that
their first duty was to show the people love and benevolence, and thus to
convince them that the government had their well-being at heart. The governor
must treat his subjects as a father treats his sons. When he has
to punish anyone, he must do so in such a way that the people can see
that correction is the only motive. The officials, so ran the instruction, must
always have clean hands. The governor must give audience once a week, in which
women and the poor should be given precedence. If a punishment is commuted to a
money payment, the judges must derive no personal gain from the transaction; as had already been ruled by Pius IV. Every
fortnight the prisons must be visited, so that the prisoners can lodge what
complaints they may have. Heavy punishments must be meted out to those who help
bandits with information, money, provisions or
munitions. The governors must also see to it that important documents are
carefully preserved. The economic conditions must receive their closest
attention and they must above all take care that throughout the year the people
have bread of just weight and good quality. For this purpose, the weights and
measures in the shops should be inspected from time to time. The instruction
then summarizes the duties of a governor: he is to provide an absolutely impartial administration of justice, to preserve
peace and order, and to see to it that there is an abundance of provisions. In
this last respect, the Pope displayed the greatest zeal in Rome itself, his
solicitude being directed towards meat, vegetables and
oil, but above all towards bread.
In spite of all the efforts of the Popes of the XVIth century,
the productivity of the Campagna had dwindled. Already, at the end of 1605,
grain had to be imported from Sicily to make up for Rome’s deficiency. It was
necessary to re-issue and enforce with greater strictness the edicts of
previous Popes since Pius IV, which forbade the exportation of provisions from
the Papal States. Besides the Congregation of Cardinals sopra l’abbondanza dello Stato Pontificio, founded by Sixtus V, it was the duty of the Prefect of the annona to provide for the importation of grain and that of
the President of grascia to procure cattle for
slaughter, oil and other provisions. The annona depended partly on the municipality and partly on
the Camera Apostolica. It fixed the price of grain, actually purchasing it in order to resell it to the bakers.
It was a source of considerable annoyance to the Pope that the treasury often
lost much money in this way. The bakers were very discontented with the scale
of prices for 1606, at which they had to buy grain. This discontent only grew
when Paul V opposed a reduction of the weight of bread, although in that year,
1606, the harvest had been poor. Some Jews, who tried to turn the general
scarcity to their advantage by profiteering in wheat ended their lives on the
gallows. Proceedings were also taken against others, who transgressed in this
respect, regardless of the fact that they were
Christians. During the month of August in 1606 the Pope daily sent his palafrenieri into Rome to ascertain whether there was
sufficient bread of good quality. Giacomo Serra, an expert financier, was sent
into the Marches to buy up grain. An edict forbidding exportation was also
issued. The selfishness of the bakers and corn-merchants was restrained as far
as it was possible. The Pope at this time spent in all 160,000 scudi,
particularly large quantities of corn coming from Provence. In January, 1607, Serra returned from the Marches and reported
that he had found there sufficient supplies to hand. Shortly afterwards, a
consignment arrived from Civitavecchia. In spite of this, the prices remained high. An edict of June, 1607, forbade profiteering in corn under pain of death. Fortunately there was a good harvest. But in spite of this, the
bread question was still to cause the Pope great trouble. The Camera did not
want to give up selling the old stock of corn, although its quality was poor.
Only when it was finally decided to mix the old corn with the new did the
situation improve. Throughout the whole affair the Pope showed the greatest
watchfulness. He had bread sent in from various bakers in order that he might
himself test it. When he discovered fraud, the guilty were sent to prison.
Malvasia, the Prefect of the annona,
having been found wanting in energy in this matter, was relieved from his post
at the end of July. The difficulties, however, were not yet over. Only by
placing a bounty on imports and by procuring grain from Sicily was all want
finally averted.
With what goodwill the Pope was animated is seen in the plans, which he
now made, for the erection of a granary for the poor of Rome. An edict of the
Prefect of the annona, issued in the name of the
Cardinal-President of the Camera on December 19th, 1607, made it known that
with the new year a store would be opened at the expense of the State, in which
the poor would always be able to buy flour of good quality at a moderate price.
The regulations declared: That the store will be stocked with the best meal. It
is forbidden to purchase there more than 50 pounds (about 34 English pounds).
The price must always be 8 quattrini a pound
(about 2d. a pound). This meal may only be bought by the poor. The rich, the
corn merchants and all those who have no need of this privilege, if they either
buy direct or through another will have it confiscated and will, in addition, have to pay a fine of 25 scudi.
This new storehouse for corn, which can only be described as a truly
providential institution for the poor, was erected near the baths of
Diocletian, where it was secure from flooding. The Pope had it enlarged in
1609, and he visited it repeatedly. The supplies proved particularly useful to
the people when the unusually hot summer of 1611 caused a bad harvest.
Until 1611 the corn trade was regulated by long-standing dispositions
which laid it down that corn was to be either consumed at its place of origin
or else to be transported to Rome. However, on October 19th, 1611, Paul V
cancelled a prohibition of Clement VIII and allowed a fifth of the harvest to
be exported so long as the price did not exceed 55 giulii (about 28s.) a rubbio (about 188 lbs.).
By a similar decree issued on October 19th, 1611, Paul V instituted
alongside the Congregation of the annona, founded by Sixtus V, a new Congregation, whose special work was to
procure victuals for the Papal States and for Rome in particular. The members
had to meet twice a month, in the Papal palace, so that Paul V could take part
personally in their deliberations, when he thought it necessary. The
Congregation was composed of the Treasurer-General Serra and four other
officials, and the Pope had to be regularly furnished with its decisions, which
he read through carefully, adding remarks and instructions of his own.
The Constitution of October 19th, 1611, contained special orders for the advancement of agriculture in the
Roman Campagna. It renewed the prohibition of the sale of plough oxen for
slaughter; it confirmed the obligation of cattle-merchants to offer for sale
every year 25 per cent of their oxen for agricultural labour and also the right of vassals to cultivate land
outside their feudal property, as also all the other privileges granted by
previous Popes for the promotion of agriculture. The pawnshops (Monte di Pieta)
of Rome were, moreover, ordered to lend sums of money up to 1,000 scudi at the
rate of 2 per cent to the farmers of the country round Rome and of the Lazio,
the Marittima and the Campagna. Unfortunately Paul V damaged his own designs by making it possible for his nephews to acquire
in the Campagna those large estates which were later on to prove so great an
obstacle to the advancement of agriculture.
Notwithstanding the bad harvest of 1611, the Pope opposed to his utmost any
alteration in the price of bread. He threatened to have corn imported from
abroad; he is reported to have said that he would rather resign the tiara than
give way in this matter. He felt his burden of cares lightened, however, when
the harvest of 1612 turned out well. In July of this year he made a personal inspection of the grain stored for the poor, in order to
assure himself that there was a sufficient stock in hand. He repeated his visit
in February, 1614.
However much Paul V desired that his people should be supplied with the largest
possible loaves, the thing proved unattainable. The views of the Congregation
were divided. Serra, who was made a Cardinal on August 17th, 1611, and Rucellai, his successor as Prefect of the annona, shared the Pope’s views, but the commissioner of
the Camera and Giovanni Battista Costaguti declared
that a diminution of weight was unavoidable. They pointed out that the quality
was more important than the quantity. Paul V ended by coming round to this
view. In the year 1613 he entrusted the management of the matter to Costaguti; he had no reason to regret this step and soon
found himself free from what had been a grave worry.
When the harvest was bad, as in the year 1617, the grain store tided
matters over until new supplies could arrive from Sicily. Thanks to the great
sums which Paul V spent on provisioning Rome, there was never a scarcity of
food during the whole of his long pontificate; nor was the population crushed
by excessive prices, as was the case in most of the neighbouring states.
In order to assure for the future the
importation of grain into Rome by sea, in April, 1613, the Pope ordered
extensive works to be undertaken to facilitate shipping in the Tiber. It had
been observed that south and south-westerly winds were a great hindrance to
shipping entering the mouth of the river. In order to obviate this, Paul V continued the work begun under Gregory XIII of embanking
the right mouth of the Tiber. With a view to facilitating the importation of
grain and to promote commerce generally the Pope also ordered the repair of the
principal roads leading into Rome. The care of the roads leading into the
Marches was in 1608 entrusted to Cardinal Pierbenedetti,
while that of the road to Florence was given to Cardinal Bandini. Cardinal Cesi was made responsible for the repair of the highway to
Naples; this included restoration of the bridge over the Liris near Ceprano. These works were protracted until 1620.
Paul V had the Ponte Salario restored; he also laid
down new roads in the Alban hills to Gavignano, the
birthplace of Innocent III, lying on the picturesque hills near Segni. The building of harbours was likewise undertaken to promote commerce. In Civitavecchia he continued
through the agency of Pompeo Targone the improvements
in the harbour begun under Clement VII, a new
lighthouse and a large warehouse being constructed. Targone was also charged by the Pope with the inspection of the cities on the Adriatic
as regards harbours and fortifications. Paul V
decided to construct a new harbour at Fano, where the
road leading from the Furlo pass terminated. In spite of much opposition to this plan, the work was taken
in hand in 1613. The new harbour, which received the
name of Porto Borghesiano, acquired considerable
importance, especially for the Marches, Umbria and
Romagna.
The Pope took up repeatedly the question of the draining of the marshy
regions and the regulation of rivers in the Papal States. At first he concentrated on the northerly provinces, Ferrara and Romagna, but Central
Italy was also in prospect. Two extraordinary congregations were occupied with
this question of water in the district of Ferrara and in the Chiana valley. How difficult the task was is apparent from
the evidence of numerous experts, amongst them being Giovanni Fontana and Targone. In addition to Cardinal Piatti,
who was well acquainted with conditions in Ferrara, Mgr. Centurione and later Cardinal Caetani were consulted as regards
the Romagna, and the legate, Cardinal Luigi Cappone,
as regards Bologna. The water problem also played an important part in the
settlement, made in 1607, of the boundary between the papal city of Citta della Pieve and the Tuscan
city of Chiusi. Three years later, Paul V regulated
the boundary between Rieti and the Neapolitan Civita Ducale. In the same year the Pope ratified the agreement made by the Bolognese
with Modena concerning the boundary and various questions relating to the water
supply.
Floodings of the Tiber at the end of 1607 and the beginning of 1608 once again gave cogency
to the question of providing against this calamity, and once more there was no
dearth of suggestions of the most varying kinds as to how to set about it ; it
was, however, rather the question of raising the necessarily large sum of money
as well as the difficulties inherent in an undertaking of this kind, which
prevented the remedying of an evil which was a constant menace.
During the flooding of the Tiber in January, 1608, Cardinal Borghese and the Pope’s brother had done all in their power for
the people. In other ways also they vied with Paul V in their undertakings for
the general good, which were specially beneficial to the Eternal City. The construction of the famous conduit, Acqua Paola, was a very great boon to the Trastevere and the Borgo. Castelgandolfo and Loreto also acquired aqueducts through the energy of Paul V. The extensive
building enterprises of Pau in Rome were intended to give able-bodied labourers a chance to earn a livelihood. The Pope rightly
regarded this as the best kind of almsgiving.
Of great importance for the administration of the Papal States as also
for the transaction of ecclesiastical and political affairs was the collection
of all the documental treasures of the Church into one uniform secret archivium, which Paul V carried out. With him there
begins a new epoch for these collections, which, in spite of all losses, were still as voluminous as they were valuable. Paul V could see
this for himself when, in February, 1609, he visited
the archivium in St. Angelo, which had been founded
by Sixtus IV, for housing the more “valuable of the
privileges of the Roman Church”. A good canonist himself, he was well able to
appreciate the great importance of such documents; it was only by the decision
to bring together all the scattered collections and to preserve them more
securely could further losses be prevented and what still
remained be utilized to good purpose.
The new papal secret archives were housed near the Vatican Library in
the long wing of the papal palace, overlooking the Vatican gardens. The rooms
were adorned with paintings, illustrative of the donations made to the Church,
and furnished with presses. The first transfer of archival material to the new
quarters took place under the supreme direction of Cardinal Cesi at the end of 1611, and lasted during the following
year. Next took place the transfer of 258 volumes of papal registers and other
important documents from the secret library, which had also been founded by Sixtus IV; the volumes were repaired and re-bound where
necessary. There were also transferred a number of historical manuscripts, which the Pope had received as a present. The archives
of the administrative offices of the Camera Apostolica yielded a considerable consignment. Amongst these were also, since the time of Sixtus V, the majority of those
registers and briefs, acts and manuscripts, which had of old been preserved in
the papal wardrobe. The wardrobe was situated on the third floor of the court
of St. Damasus over the papal apartments since it served to house those acts
which might be wanted for reference at any moment. In addition to this, the
famous collection of manuscripts of Cardinal Vitelli was also removed from the
archives of the Camera Apostolica. In May, 1614, the archivium in
St. Angelo, of which at the request of Paul V an inventory had been made by
Silvio de Paulis, had to yield some of its Acta to
the new secret archives. All these consignments were put in order, numbered and indexed. A brief of December
2nd, 1614, contained rigorous measures for the security of this
treasure.
The foundation of the new secret archives of the papacy was laid not
merely through the collecting of scattered archives and the assigning of
special quarters for them: special officials were also appointed. On January
30th, 1616, Baldassare Ansidei was made custodian. At
his death he was succeeded by Nicola Alemanni.
A bronze bust of Paul V over the entrance from the Vatican Library into
the secret papal archives recalls even today the memory of their creator, who
here called into being a safe home for a vast quantity of ancient documents and
precious correspondence. Thus came into existence a
collection of archives, which, if it is not the largest in Europe and the most
important in every possible respect, is nevertheless unrivalled in its
significance. The majordomo of Paul V, Giovan Battista Costaguti, observed in connection with the
foundation of the papal secret archives that the ancient documents were
juridical weapons for the preservation of what has been acquired. What was the
state of the material weapons at this time?
MILITARY PRECAUTIONS.
The army was always a weak point in the Papal States. Giovanni Botero
thought it an advantage for the worldly possessions of the Church that, apart
from the great prestige of the Pope, they were so well protected by nature that
it was unnecessary to spend a single quattrino on military projects. The country possessed no large harbour and its coasts were so constituted that it
could only be attacked with great difficulty and then not with a large fighting
force. There was also the marshiness of the coasts of the Tyrrhenian Sea, which
alone sufficed to render a hostile landing impossible. The people of the
Marches and the Romagna were good soldiers, well able to ward off an aggressor.
The land frontiers also presented no danger, for the Papal States were larger
than Tuscany and only slightly smaller than the kingdom of Naples. Orvieto, Civita Castellana, Paliano and Spoleto were advantageously situated, Umbria
was a natural fortress and Rome seemed safe enough with the Castle of St.
Angelo and the fortifications of the Borgo. According to Botero, it would have
sufficed to fortify in addition Ascoli and Rieti, and in the south Frosinone
and Anagni. He regarded the Tuscan frontier as the
weakest spot: the Pope should therefore keep on good terms with the Grand Duke.
Of the outlying parts in the north, Ferrara and Bologna would have to be
considered first. As regards Bologna, Paul V had made a good beginning with the
fortification of Castelfranco, while Clement VIII had started the construction
of a citadel at Ferrara. Paul V brought this work to completion and, in
addition, gave security to the coasts of the Papal States, notably by means of
fortified towers as against the Turkish corsairs and by restoring the works at
Ancona. He thought that he could let the matter rest there, for Clement VIII
had been able to raise 22,000 men in a month against Ferrara, an achievement
which, according to Botero, could have been equalled by very few princes in Europe. Nevertheless, when in 1606 a serious conflict
broke out with Venice, this number proved to be as little equal to the occasion
as the available funds. Paul V had at that time erected two arsenals in Rome
and had started a munitions factory at Tivoli. Even after the special
congregation for military affairs was constituted and, after the end of 1609,
began to meet weekly, the decline in military strength was far from being
stemmed. In 1612 the Venetian ambassador, Mocenigo,
reported that the 650 light horse, previously kept for
withstanding banditry, were sent into Hungary to help the Emperor against the
Turks without any other troops taking their place. Nor did the Pope have in his
pay any general officers, and Ferrara and Ancona alone possessed garrison
troops. Money was saved wherever possible, for the financial circumstances of
Paul V were anything but easy.
TAXATION EMBARRASSMENT.
The treasurer-general, Luigi Capponi, who had been appointed by Leo XI,
was confirmed in office by the Borghese Pope, and he continued to hold it until
he was made a Cardinal on November 24th, 1608. He was followed by the Genoese
Giacomo Serra, an extremely conscientious man, who on August 17th, 1611, was
also raised to the purple though he retained, for a time, as pro-treasurer, the
supervision of the papal finances. When Serra went to France as legate in September, 1615, Mgr. Patrizi became Treasurer.
The task of these men was fraught with difficulties. When Paul V, at the
beginning of his reign, lamented in a letter to the Archduke Ferdinand of
Austria that his coffers were empty and that he was crushed by heavy debts, he
was stating the bare truth. The chief evil was that the subscribers of the
loans (monti) were entitled to certain of the taxes,
so that a considerable part of the revenue was entirely lost to the State. The
Venetian obbedienza reported in 1605 that only
70,000 scudi of the taxes paid to the Camera were not accounted for by payment
of interest. Through the selling of offices, fees and perquisites were likewise
lost to the State treasury. From the autumn of 1605 a special congregation
tried to find a remedy for this sorry condition. The conflict with Venice,
which broke out in April, 1606, rendered new taxes
necessary for a time and occasioned yet further deliberations. Of the many
different suggestions, which were forthcoming in the autumn of that year, a
detailed plan drawn up specially for Paul V by Malvasia, an expert of the
Camera, is of particular interest.
At the outset the author showed how entirely justified was the
determination of the Pope to put the finances in order, for the interest, which
the Holy See had to pay, swallowed up practically the whole of the income, so
that it was a constant embarrassment to find enough money even to cover running
expenses; and when an extraordinary necessity arose, one did not know where to
turn.
Malvasia discussed four possible ways of effecting a financial reform:
new taxes, economies, reducing the rates of interest on the state loans and
removing gold from the treasure in St. Angelo. He declared that the imposition
of new taxes was impossible, quite apart from the fact that such a method was
entirely against the wishes of the Pope. And in view of the large debts and the
pressing demands it was useless to attempt any economies. Thus there only remained the two last methods, which would have to be combined.
Malvasia sought to remedy the parlous state of affairs,
in which the income of the state was ear-marked for creditors, by a complete
alteration in the prevailing system of loans and the sale of offices. He
suggested the creation of one single monte papale at
6 per cent, or 5 per cent at the highest, in place of the many existing monti with their varying rates of interest; to do this,
they must redeem all the outstanding obligations with a million in gold from
the treasure in St. Angelo; this could easily be paid back later with the
saving effected. The redemption of the luoghi di monte should be based on the nominal value of the loans: Paul V would be
entirely justified in doing this as previous Popes, such as Paul III, Pius IV,
Gregory XIII and Clement VIII had all reduced the rates of interest, although
their financial difficulties were not nearly so serious. The governments of
Spain and Venice had acted in a like manner; it was in this way that Venice had
in a few years paid off the debt of nine millions,
which she had been forced to contract during the last Turkish war.
In his memorandum Malvasia sought to meet every possible objection. In particular he took pains to point out that the owners of
the luoghi di monti had no right to complain if they only obtained the face-value of the loans
under the Pope’s redemption scheme, for in most cases this had been expressly
reserved by the Apostolic Camera; and even if it had not been so, the
justification lay in the very nature of the case. Malvasia recalls in this
connection that previous Popes, as for example Paul IV, had been forced to sell
the luoghi in the monti vacabili at 50; and quite recently Clement VIII
had been forced to sell the luoghi of the monti di pace at 96. For the rest, one could indemnify
those who had acquired the luoghi above par.
Malvasia also pointed to the general economic interests which would
benefit by the adoption of his scheme. It could not but be beneficial if an end
were made of the custom of obtaining through the monti life annuities without having to do any work. Also, the million taken from St.
Angelo for the purpose of discharging the obligations on loans would bring
fresh capital into circulation, which would be beneficial to agriculture, trade and industry. The consequent increase in customs
duties would benefit the Pope.
Malvasia supported his plans with an appendix in which he gives accurate
statistics. From these we learn that the debts of the Apostolic Camera had
mounted to no less than 12,242,620 scudi in 1606, while the annual interest
charges were 1,800,600. Malvasia showed how this last could be reduced to
either 489,702 or 612,130 by a reduction of the interest to 4 per cent or 5 per
cent respectively.
Paul V shrank from such drastic measures as were suggested to him in
these proposals. A decisive factor in their rejection, in addition to other
reasons, was the fact that the Pope was unwilling to take, even temporarily, a
million in gold from the treasure in St. Angelo, the employment of which had
been carefully circumscribed by solemn bulls. An attempt to balance the budget
by means of economies proved fruitless.
And so the old system of defraying expenses
through the monti and the sale of offices, initiated
principally by Sixtus V, remained substantially in
possession. This way seemed easier than that indicated by Malvasia. An
incentive to persist in this also lay in the fact that the luoghi di monti, even after Paul V had reduced the rate
of interest in some cases, remained much in demand in view of the greater
security offered.
The new loans, which Paul V raised, were not of course large in
individual cases, but they were repeated so frequently that they gradually totalled a considerable sum. In the years 1608-1618 Paul V
contracted debts to the amount of two millions. In the
last years of his pontificate the debt rose even further; in the autumn of
1619, according to the statement of Paul V himself, it had risen to eighteen millions. And since the fixed annual income, according to
the notes of majordomo Costaguti, amounted to
1,375,000 scudi, it was only possible to make ends meet by relying on uncertain
and variable revenues which, according to the same authority, amounted to
435,000 scudi. That these variable sources of revenue were great is likewise
attested by Mocenigo, the Venetian ambassador. He
lays stress on the fact that the Popes were still able to collect large sums of
money, through tithes and subsidies, not only in the Papal States but in other
countries as well. For the rest Costaguti assures us
that towards the end of his reign, Paul V thought seriously about the
establishment of an ordered economy and the reduction of the burden of debts:
only death prevented him from carrying out this work.
Ecclesiastico-Political Struggle with Venice and Proclamation of the Interdict.
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