LUDWIG VON PASTOR'S
HISTORY OF THE POPES FROM THE CLOSE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
CHAPTER IV.
Ecclesiastico-Political Struggle with
Venice and Proclamation of the Interdict.
Venice has always been the point of contact between East and West; in
many respects it may be described as a bit of the East in the
midst of the West. To begin with the church of St. Mark, the heart and
symbol of the republic, gives the impression of having been brought over from
Byzantium. The East is called to mind by the Venetian administration of justice
with its arbitrary verdicts and its secret condemnations and executions. The
whole constitution bears an eastern stamp in that it jealously checks one branch
of the executive by another and allows even the doge to be sent to the block.
In Venice, says an account written towards the end of the XVIth century, there are not many monuments of the great men of bygone centuries; the
republic sees even in the outstanding worth of her captains and statesmen a
danger against which it guards itself. Andrea Contarini, the conqueror of
Genoa, deemed it expedient to leave instructions that not even his name should
appear on his tomb. Even as regards manners Venice was the most oriental city
of Europe. There was a counterpart to the joyous sensuality and the delight in splendour and display which Titian and other Venetian
artists paint with such glowing colours. Venice was
the abode of luxurious, self-indulgent frivolity and the rendezvous of
pleasure-seeking, dissipated foreigners. Above all relations with the Church,
in Venice, seem to have been modelled on a Byzantine pattern.
The republic set store by a reputation for orthodoxy and its frequent
boast was that of being an obedient daughter of the Roman Church and a bulwark
of Christendom against Islam. The numerous churches and pious foundations of
the city as well as the splendour of the liturgical
functions might well convey an impression that here religion flourished
greatly. However, at least among the upper classes, there prevailed much
religious indifference which was being steadily fostered by constant business
relations with the Greeks and Mohammedans. The philosophy of Averroes, with its
denial of the immortality of the individual soul, flourished at the Venetian
university of Padua. As late as the beginning of the XVIIth century one of the masters there, Cremonini, was able
to propagate such ideas with impunity. Free-thinkers such as Aretino and Giordano Bruno sought refuge precisely at Venice and
nowhere in Italy did protestantism meet with so much
success as in that city.
If in private life, seemingly at least, religion meant everything,
little room was left for it in political life. “We are Venetians first, and Christians after that”, was the motto of
the leaders of the State. True there was then elsewhere also a party which held
that the interests of the State take precedence over everything, religion included; that all religions should be tolerated and that
the State should claim sovereignty over the Church. But, in the opinion of a
contemporary, Venice was perhaps the birthplace of these principles which there
had passed into the political system.
No more than her captains or her statesmen was the Church allowed to
gain such prestige as might stand in the way of the men in power. For this reason the Signoria went so far as to foster the deplorable
decadence observable in the ranks of the clergy, and jealously protected both
priests and monasteries against the Pope and the bishops who in the nature of
things should have reformed them. Moreover the liberty of the Church was
impeded by laws against the right of ownership of mortmain; by the
surveillance of churches and monasteries; by the putting of the clergy on the
same footing as the laity before the law; by the stringent exercise of placet and exequatur; by the Signoria’s right
of nomination of the patriarch and the bishops, and by the exclusion of
clerics, even if they belonged to the ranks of the nobility, from all public
offices. All these dispositions the Republic justified by an appeal either to
established custom or to papal concessions.
The years immediately preceding the accession of Paul V had been
particularly rich in such encroachments on the rights of the Church. Clement
VIII repeatedly had occasion to complain of the violation of episcopal
jurisdiction by the Senate of Venice. In 1603 a dispute arose at Brescia
between the town and its clergy about the latter’s obligation to contribute
towards the repairing of the city walls. The Signoria decided against the
clergy, and because in consequence of the dispute many citizens had been
refused absolution in confession, it was resolved to issue a legal summons
against those who had instigated this line of action. The clergy of Brescia
refused to acknowledge the jurisdiction of the Signoria in such a matter. They
complained to the Pope that they were made to pay twice as much as the laity
and asked him to proceed with ecclesiastical censures against their oppressors.
Thereupon the Signoria, in support of its right, appealed to a century-old
custom, but the Holy See instructed the bishop of Brescia to protest
against the execution of the decrees of the government. The bishop,
however, did not dare to carry out his orders.
Rome was even more perturbed by two decrees passed at Venice in the last
years before the election of Paul V which were intended not only for the city
but for the whole territory of the Republic. Anyone erecting a monastery, a
church, a hospital or similar buildings without leave
of the Senate was to be punished, in virtue of one of these laws, with
perpetual banishment or, should he return, with perpetual imprisonment; the
buildings were to be pulled down, the site on which they stood was forfeit and
was to be divided between the official who carried out the sentence and him who
denounced the delinquent. Remissness in the execution of the law was punishable
with a fine of 500 ducats. The second law ordained that immovable property
could not be handed over to ecclesiastical persons either by purchase or by a
free gift, or in any other way, without leave of the State, under pain of
confiscation for the benefit of the Republic, the officials who carried out the
law and the informer; as regards granting such permissions, the Senate should
make as many difficulties as if it were a question of the alienation of State
property.
Such ordinances could not be justified by any papal concessions; they
were, in fact, an interference with the existing law as it had grown up in the course of more than a thousand years. In addition to
this the republic violated the immunity which the clergy had enjoyed from time
immemorial though, of course, not in order that culprits might go unpunished,
but because men wished to see the dignity of the clerical state respected even
in its unworthiest members. One Saraceni, a canon of
Vicenza and a man of ill repute, and who, as a matter of fact, had not received
major orders, was accused of having defiled, by night, out of revenge, the door
of a lady of the town. The woman would not endure the humiliation and the
affair ended by being brought before the Council of Ten. Cardinal Delfino,
himself a Venetian, advised the authorities to have nothing to do with the
case. “To defile a door was no crime against the State”, he said; “papal
concessions would not avail to justify a secular tribunal in taking proceedings
in such a matter; should the Pope hear of it there might be trouble”. The
answer for the Republic was that the papal concessions included not only the
city, but the whole territory of Venice; that, moreover, every day fresh crimes
of Saraceni’s were being brought to light. Rome was
not satisfied with these explanations. On December 24th Delfino wrote that much
dissatisfaction obtained there on account of Saraceni whom the Ten had summoned to appear before their tribunal on October 21st, and
that he found it difficult to restrain the Pope from intervening.
At about the same time a lawsuit was pending against another most unworthy
priest, one Brandolino, abbot of Nervesa,
who was actually suspected of homicide. In September
the Ten commissioned the Podesta of Treviso to take action against him; a month later they called the case before their own tribunal. The
Council of Trent had already stressed the fact that the liberty and immunity of
the Church were no mere demand of Canon Law, but were based on a divine
ordinance: as a matter of fact they have their roots
in the divine origin of the Church. Moreover the
interference of the secular power in spiritual affairs proved one of the main
causes of clerical decadence and the chief hindrance to its reform: hence the
attitude to be taken in regard to these usurpations was a most delicate as it
was a most awkward problem for the protagonists of Church reform, the Fathers
of the Council of Trent, Pius V and Charles Borromeo. Paul V had been brought
up from his youth in the spirit of the existing law, and he was exceedingly
keen on the reform; hence it was natural that he should strongly resent the
arbitrariness of the Signoria.
It is, therefore, easy to understand, notwithstanding some show of
friendliness towards the new Pope on the part of the Republic, that Paul V,
particularly from the end of October,1605, should have made earnest remonstrances
to the Venetian ambassador, Agostino Nani : “With indescribable ardour and incredible emotion”, he declared at the end of
one of these discussions, that his duty as Pope demanded the defence of ecclesiastical jurisdiction; with all the energy
of which he was capable he affirmed that he would maintain it, “ with all zeal,
with all his strength, even to the shedding of his blood”. As an experienced
lawyer the Pope was of course but little impressed by the arguments of the
ambassador who sought to defend the Venetian legislation and to justify the
action of the Signoria against the clergy by papal privileges the existence of
which he was unable to prove; or when he excused its despotism with the
hyperbolic assertion that if donations to the Church were not checked, she
would soon own all the land right up to the walls of the cities, for even now
more than a fourth part of the ground was in her possession. Paul V insisted on
the repeal of the laws against the liberty of the Church as well as on the Republic
handing over for punishment the two guilty ecclesiastics, if not to their own
bishops, then to himself, otherwise measures would have to be taken which would
not be agreeable to the signori in Venice. Similar representations were made to
the Signoria, but without success, by the none-too-worldly-wise nuncio Orazio Mattei. The Senate decided
not to alter the two laws and not to give up the two ecclesiastics.
Paul V now judged that the time had come when he must carry out his
threats. A few years earlier the Interdict which Clement VIII had pronounced
against Ferrara in 1597, had met with prompt and complete success. Other States
also, such as the republics of Genoa and Lucca, had ended by yielding in
similar conflicts. Paul V hoped for a like result in Venice. The republic had
repeatedly been laid under interdict and excommunication; as recently as the pontificate of Julius II the scorn with which such
punishments were at first looked upon in the city of the lagoons was not kept
up for very long. On December 10th, 1605, therefore, Paul V published two
briefs, one of which condemned the two Venetian laws and the other the
procedure against the two ecclesiastics. In the event of further obstinacy, the
briefs threatened with ecclesiastical penalties.
At this juncture the Signoria sought above all things to gain time. As
the day drew near on which the briefs might be expected in Venice, a fresh
envoy was appointed with a view to further negotiations; he seemed, however, in
no hurry to set out for Rome. It is significant that in the selection of an
envoy, the choice should have fallen on Lunardo Donato, a man who maintained that his Venetian birth took precedence over his
Christian baptism, and that his first duty was not to the Church, but to his
country. Whilst Donato delayed his departure the briefs arrived, but the nuncio
was persuaded to keep them back for a time, in view of the alleged good
dispositions of the Senate. Mattei allowed himself to
be taken in; on the other hand when Rome rebuked him
for his conduct and ordered him to deliver the briefs at once, he took the
command too literally for he handed them in on the morning of Christmas day,
whilst the doge Grimani lay dying and the Senators
were in the act of going to High Mass. After Grimani’s death the briefs remained unopened until a new doge was elected. When they were
opened at last, another untoward event occurred; by an oversight the drafts
only of the briefs, not the originals, had been despatched from Rome. In the Senate’s reply all this was duly pointed out to the Pope in
mordant fashion, reproaches being but thinly veiled by gushing professions of
respect. As a matter of fact by that time all hope of
an amicable settlement of the dispute had practically vanished for the choice
of a new doge fell on none other than Donato, the avowed enemy of the Church.
Pietro Duodo took Donato’s place as envoy to Rome,
but he too delayed his departure for as long as possible.
However, the Signoria failed in its attempt at an indefinite
procrastination of the affair. So far from this being the case, on February
20th, 1606, the Pope had to take exception to yet
another law directed against the Church, by which clerics or religious
associations who had let to laymen immovable property on a long lease were
debarred from ever again claiming it for their own personal use. The Pope
declared he would wait another ten or twelve days for the arrival of Duodo but after that he would proceed against the republic.
The second brief of December 10th also, which through an oversight had not been despatched, he caused to be
subsequently delivered, on February 25th by the nuncio Mattei. On March 11th the Senate categorically declined to
accept it, declaring that all explanations would be given by the extra ordinary
envoy. On the same day, March 11th, information came at last from Venice that Duodo had set out on his journey, but that he would travel
by slow stages and that he had no powers to conclude anything. The envoy
arrived on Monday in Holy Week so that the discussion was naturally deferred
until after Easter. Needless to say Duodo achieved nothing.
Moreover, at that very time, another dispute was pending between the
Curia and the Signoria. Clement VIII had given a ruling that the Italian
bishops would not receive papal confirmation until they had come to Rome for an
examination. The Venetians would have liked to see their Patriarch exempt from
this obligation. The embassy, which came to pay homage to the newly-elected Paul V, was instructed to secure this
exemption. But the Pope would not hear of it. Nor was the embassy more
successful with regard to two other requests, viz.
that Paul V should settle the long-standing dispute over the town of Ceneda4
and impose on the Venetian clergy the payment of a tenth.
Whilst the Curia was still awaiting Duodo’s arrival it received sufficiently disquieting information from Venice without
him. Extreme embitterment, dating as far back as the reign of Clement VIII,
prevailed in that city against Rome. There had been a feeling that in his defence of the rights of the Church Clement allowed himself
to be led by interested advisers and that he was bent on treating the republic
like a stubborn donkey out of whom nothing was to be got except with the stick.
The action of Paul V could not soothe this unfortunate mood. When the nuncio to
Venice was taken ill his secretary Tommaso Palmegiani,
with many excuses for the boldness of his speech, sent repeated and earnest
warnings to Rome. The Signoria is determined, so he wrote on February 4th,
1606, not to yield an inch; as a matter of fact there
prevails an incredible exasperation. If the Pope were to show some
consideration and if a man experienced in debate were here, these gentlemen, he
thought, might be brought to reason, to the advantage, perhaps, of the
Apostolic See. But the threats on the one side, and the obstinacy on the other,
are surely fraught with evil consequences, in fact they will be so disastrous
that I wonder if this aspect of the case is sufficiently realized. The
Government would rather see Venice in ruins than give way. Minds had been still
further inflamed by the delivery of the second brief on February 25th. If the
Pope insists on the repeal of the two laws he will be
compelled to take extraordinary measures. But if he merely demands the
surrender of the two prisoners and the examination of the Patriarch, he may
well succeed; the Signoria would send the Patriarch to Rome and in time an
opportunity would present itself for settling the matter of the two laws. If
the affair were to take a bad turn, a conflagration would break out in Italy
which would be put out only God knows when. Either the Pope remains firm, and
it will mean the end of ecclesiastical liberty if he loses, or he gives way and the prestige of the Apostolic See suffers.
Even in Rome there was no unwillingness to make concessions, but it was
felt that the Pope must obtain some satisfaction from the republic. Venice,
however, would concede nothing, consequently, on April 17th, 1606, a decisive
step was taken. In the Consistory the Pope announced that he intended to
excommunicate the Senate and to lay the whole territory of Venice under an
interdict if the three laws were not repealed and the prisoners surrendered
within twenty-four days, with an additional three days’ grace. With the exception of the two Venetian Cardinals, Valiero of Verona and Delfino of Vionga,
the thirty-seven Cardinals expressed their approval. Immediately after the
consistory the edict, which was already in print, was published in due legal
form. The departure of the Venetian envoys from Rome and that of the nuncio
from Venice sealed the breach between the Curia and the Signoria.
The republic had long ago taken measures for the coming struggle. Even
before the delivery of the first papal brief it had appealed, through its
representatives, to the emperor, the kings of England and France as well as to
Florence and Milan. The Signoria felt assured of the approval of the princes,
so long as it kept representing its case as the common cause of all the secular
potentates. But since in the conditions then obtaining excommunication might
easily prove a pretext for armed intervention on the part of neighbouring States, the military captains and commanders
were summoned to Venice, a precaution which, as we know on the authority of Palmegiani, was not meant to be taken too seriously. The
most important measure taken by the republic was the preparation for a
big-scale paper war against Rome by means of learned consultations and
pamphlets in the vernacular. As early as January, 1606, the Collegio resolved to submit all the
documents relevant to the controversy to the judgment of the celebrated lawyer
Giacomo Mennocchio (died 1607) who had declared his
readiness to act in defence of the republic. Already
on January 15th, 1606, a jurist of Padua of the name of Pellegrini had prepared
a memoir and on March 26th an order was given to have three of his pamphlets
translated into Italian as soon as possible.
Even more significant was the fact that the Signoria, so that it might be
ready for every eventuality, decided to hire an extraordinary State divine of
its own. The choice fell on Paolo Sarpi, a Servite, who had already rendered
good service to the republic in its numerous quarrels with Clement VIII and
who, in the dispute with Paul V had also several times stated his opinion by
word of mouth. When on January 14th, 1606, the Senate had guaranteed its
protection to the defenders of the rights of the State Sarpi felt bold enough
to give public utterance to his views. His very first memoir convinced the
Senate they had found the man they needed in their struggle with Rome. As soon
as his pamphlet had been publicly read Sarpi received his appointment as State
theologian with a salary of 200 ducats. On February 25th Palmegiani writes that Sarpi was at work on a pamphlet on the invalidity of the impending
excommunication. Thereafter Sarpi became the real protagonist of the republic
in its struggle with the Pope; his learned memoirs were decisive factors in the
conduct of the Signoria and it was owing to his intervention that the struggle
round particular rights and laws developed into a fight for principles, a
battle for the relationship between Church and State.
Sarpi was born at Venice in 1552, of poor parents, and in 1575 he
entered the Servite Order in his native city. He was an extraordinarily gifted
man. From childhood he was consumed by an ardent thirst for knowledge;
mathematics, Hebrew, botany, Canon law, ecclesiastical history, medicine,
especially anatomy, all attracted him alike. He succeeded in acquiring
considerable knowledge in all these branches owing to an amazing memory which
enabled him, as a boy, to repeat thirty lines of Virgil after but one hearing.
Only one branch of knowledge was not to his liking: he hated scholastic
theology. Had he had constancy enough to apply the full power of his keen
intellect to his favourite subject, the new science
of physics, which was then gathering force, he might have secured a place among
the pioneers in this field, for Galileo, Porta and Acquapendente speak highly of his ability and perspicacity. But it could hardly have been
conducive to a really deep and thorough formation,
especially could it not have been favourable to his
religious life that, when only eighteen years of age and after a brilliant
disputation, he should have been summoned to the court of Mantua in the
capacity of theologian. There he was frequently made to shine before visitors
and to display his dialectical skill in the defence of the most daring theses. At the same time the bishop appointed him professor
of dogmatic theology. In 1579, when not yet twenty-seven, he became provincial
and in 1585 he went to Rome in the capacity of Procurator-General of his Order.
There he appears to have made a not unfavourable impression. In 1593, Cardinal Santori proposed him
for the See of Milopotamo, in Crete. However, not
many years later the Curia thought differently, for when in 1600 and 1601 Sarpi
applied successively for the sees of Caorle and Nona, he met with a refusal each time,
notwithstanding the backing of the Signoria: his dealings with heretics as well
as other circumstances were giving offence.
Thereafter Sarpi became increasingly estranged from the Church. It is
impossible to say how far he strayed. The British envoy in Venice, Wotton, in
his report to his Sovereign, described Sarpi as a true Protestant in a monk’s
habit and Wotton’s information was derived from his chaplain Bedell who was
wont to spend half a day every week with the Servite friar. On these occasions he
made it his business to ascertain the friar’s religious opinions. To the French
envoy, Bruslart, Sarpi was represented as a man
without religion, without faith, without conscience and as one who denied the
immortality of the soul. The Church which venerates the Pope as its visible
head, Sarpi invariably describes in his letters in terms and with the
apocalyptic imagery which were current among the Protestants; he did all he
could to bring about her destruction and to introduce Protestantism into Italy.
On the other hand he also declared he could see
no difference between Calvinism and Lutheranism. He owed allegiance to none of
the existing religious bodies; as a matter of fact he
had been excommunicated since January, 1607. This did not prevent him from frequently
saying Mass and, for instance, from beginning one of his pamphlets with these words : “The republic of Venice has always held that the
chief foundation of the State is true religion and piety and it has always seen
a special favour of God in the fact that it was born and reared and has grown
up in the true service of God”. In point of fact in
his memoirs on behalf of the republic he was constrained to keep up a Catholic
appearance; he was a chameleon, he says in a letter, and had to wear a mask like
everyone else in Italy.
After his appointment as State theologian the influence of Sarpi was
promptly felt in the changed attitude of the republic. Until then the Senate
had justified its action against criminal ecclesiastics by an appeal to papal
privileges and concessions, thus acknowledging that it possessed no real
jurisdiction over the clergy. From the moment of Sarpi’s appointment it adopted the view that God Himself had immediately conferred on
it all power over the subjects of the State. Sarpi suggested this line of
conduct from the first. The question as to how the republic was to defend
itself against the papal excommunication he had
already answered in the memoir which had secured him his post of official
theologian. In this work he explained that it would be best not to appeal from
the Pope to a general council but to treat the excommunication as invalid and
non-existent and to forbid its publication. The republic followed this advice
when, on April 17th, 1606, a courier brought word that the Pope was resolved to
proceed against Venice. The religious Orders were at once forbidden, under pain
of death, to publish the sentence of excommunication. On the same day, in the
Senate, the doge represented to the Spanish envoy that in all this the Pope was
actuated by no other motive than a desire of securing unlimited authority over
the princes even in temporal affairs.
When on April 20th news arrived that the excommunication had actually been pronounced further measures were taken.
Through the foreign envoys in Venice, as well as through its own
representatives abroad, the republic sought to win over the princes. From the
vicar of the Patriarch the parish priests received instructions to give up
unopened all documents they might receive from Rome and not to have them posted
up in the churches. Troops were recruited, and though excommunicated, the
Senate did not forget to give public proof of its piety by dividing 500 ducats
among the hospitals to the end that prayers be offered there for the unjustly
persecuted republic. The doge, in a full assembly of the Collegio,
told the nuncio to his face that the Pope, inexperienced as he was, knew
nothing of the management of the world; he even hinted pretty
bluntly that Venice might go so far as to cut itself off from the Church
and draw others along with it. On May 5th the monasteries were reminded of the
previous injunction, with its accompanying threat of the death penalty; those
who proved pliant could feel assured of the protection of the republic; those
who withdrew themselves from its authority, by leaving its territory, would
never be permitted to return.
On May 6th the doge issued to the whole body of the clergy an
instruction which was posted up everywhere. In this document, in accordance
with the opinion of the theologians and lawyers whose signatures were appended,
solemn protest was made against the papal censures. In temporal matters, the
doge declared, he acknowledged no superior except the divine Majesty. He
solemnly attested before God and man that he had had recourse to every
imaginable means in order to make His Holiness see the
strong and incontrovertible grounds of the justice of his claims, but he had
preached to deaf ears. Hence he was applying the means
which their forbears had used whenever the Pope went beyond his bounds. A
similar edict was issued, in the name of the Senate, to all the towns and
communes.
Notwithstanding every precaution, on the night of May 2nd to 3rd, 1606,
the brief containing the threat of excommunication was nailed up in five
churches in Venice itself, though, as elsewhere, it was promptly torn down. However the substance of the brief, if not the brief itself,
soon became generally known, as may be gathered from the very conduct of the
Senate. The effect of the Brief was slight. If the bishops and the greater part
of the regular clergy had fearlessly protested their loyalty to their highest
Superior, so we read in a pamphlet of the period, there can be no doubt that
the doge would have been impressed. As things were they pleaded that obedience
to the Pope was punishable by death, so they strove to convince themselves that
in such circumstances a human law was not binding, even though it was an open
secret that the threatened death penalty was meant to be no more than a mere
threat, to enable the priests to cover their disobedience with the thin cloak
of fear ; for the rest everybody knew that they would not have observed the
interdict even had there been no pressure.
The Pope was so dissatisfied with the Venetian bishops that he thought
of taking action against them and of deposing every
one of them. True, the bishop of Brescia seemed at first disposed to obey the
Pope, but when the Senate threatened to deprive his aged parents of their
property and their title of nobility, he too gave up all further resistance.
Generally speaking no resistance was to be
expected from the lower clergy in Venice. As a consequence of the interference of the State in the affairs of the Church, there was a good
deal of demoralization in its ranks. No one from among the better classes in
Venice ever becomes a priest, says a pamphlet of the period; the parish priests
are chosen by the people, and in these elections considerations of friendship and various intrigues are the decisive factors, so
that it is invariably the most ignorant and the least qualified that are
appointed; the priests are despised; towards the rich their attitude is that of
mere lacqueys. The condition of the monks was even worse. At the time of Paul V they were deemed the dregs and the scum of all the Orders
and it was they who furnished the republic with its keenest champions in the
quarrel over the interdict. The convents of nuns were to a large extent little
more than asylums for the daughters of nobles. But that the decadence of the
Venetian clergy was far from universal was presently to be shown in the
struggle over the interdict.
The first to declare their submission to the interdict were the Jesuits.
To them also the doge represented that the threatened death penalty was
sufficient ground for regarding the Pope’s command as not binding. However the General of the Order, Aquaviva, had directed
them in the name of the Pope to submit to the Bull and if obedience was impossible
to leave Venice. If they were prevented from leaving they were rather to die than to offend God. The government of Venice had no
love for the Jesuits; Sarpi, its chief adviser, cherished a deadly hatred of
them. The occasion was now seized to get rid of them; if possible, for good.
They were banished from the entire territory of the republic. When the
Capuchins and the Theatines also indicated their willingness to obey, they were
forbidden, under pain of death, even to leave the city. However, they remained
firm and were allowed to depart. A special law affecting the Jesuits alone was
passed on June 14th, 1606, by which they were permanently banished from Venice;
their return was made dependent on conditions which would hardly ever be
fulfilled. Under threat of being sent into exile, or to the galleys, all
citizens were commended on August 17th, to refrain from all epistolary
intercourse with the Jesuits and to withdraw any members of their families from
their colleges. The revenues of those thus banished were conferred on more
pliant religious.
Not a few ecclesiastics, besides the above named, were found ready to go
to prison rather than disobey the Pope; a considerable number were even
secretly executed for having laid on their penitents the duty of observing the
interdict. Many took to flight, disguised as peasants or soldiers and even as
women, thereby forfeiting all their possessions but escaping from an
intolerable pressure on their conscience. Even where the clergy gave way, it
was apparent that they only yielded to violence and against their convictions.
More detailed information about the period of the interdict is available
from Brescia. There the publication of a decree of the Senate against the
interdict on May 10th was followed, on the next day,
by a proclamation of the Rectors forbidding the priests to leave the city and
ordering them to carry out the Church services as before. The penalty for
disobedience was death, and to a confidential representative of the clergy the
Podesta declared that he would have strung up in front of his church any priest
who spoke of leaving the town. Nevertheless on May
13th, Whitsun Eve, and the day on which the interdict came into force, no
church services were held. However, the Rectors visited the various churches,
gave orders for Mass to be said everywhere, set up sentries to prevent the
posting up of the sentence of excommunication and had the gates guarded in order to detain the religious who one after another were
trying to flee from the city. Nevertheless very many
made good their escape. The Capuchins declared they would rather die than
disobey the Pope. They were banished, to the great sorrow of the people, and
replaced by more pliant Capuchins from Drugolo. Some
priests yielded to the ceaseless demands, warnings and threats of the Rectors
and resumed the practice of saying Mass; others, who had failed in their
attempted flight, preferred to go to prison. Amongst those who fled were the
archpriest, who was subsequently banished; one canon; the Abbots of St.
Faustino and St. Euphemia and many others, so that in July the government set a
prize of 500 berlingotti on the capture of every
fugitive priest. The Olivetans of Rodengo made good
their escape in August, though their movements were watched by fifteen policemen;
their flight had been favoured by an officer formerly
in the service of Venice and now in that of Mantua. Far greater than the monks’
was the embarrassment of the nuns. On learning that Mass was not being said in
their chapels the governors, on November 9th, cut off their supplies of
necessaries, a weapon similarly adopted against the Bernardine Sisters at
Murano. When the nuns of Brescia gave the excuse that their chaplain had fled
other priests were appointed in their place.
In many churches in Brescia, notwithstanding the interdict, the services
suffered no interruptions and were attended by the people. The bulk of the
ordinary people did not understand the nature of the quarrel; they grumbled at
the interdict and applauded the monks who went on with the performance of the
wonted services. Those who did not side with the government would flock
together, in great numbers, and then walk in procession to a holy image which
stood over the fountain in the market place, where
they prayed for the cessation of the interdict; in consequence the governors
forbade these processions. Many consciences were gravely perturbed by the
action of the bishop when, on Rosary Sunday, in October, he celebrated a
pontifical High Mass in memory of the battle of Lepanto. Vast crowds passed
over into the territory of Cremona, or that of Mantua, in
order to attend the offices of the Church. During the night lampoons
against the republic and the Podesta were stuck on the walls whilst satirical
inscriptions against those clergy who were in sympathy with Venice, were
scribbled on the walls of the churches; however their
author was discovered and suffered for his action on the gallows. But this did
not put a stop to the epidemic of satirical writings. Whilst the bulk of the
common people stood by the authorities, the greater part of the nobles, since
the proclamation of the interdict, ceased to attend church and, to safeguard
their freedom, retired to their country houses outside the city. Small wonder
that the Podesta declared that the administration of Brescia, always a
difficult business, became an almost unbearable burden; he complained of great
difficulties with the religious Orders; had he not on occasion proceeded with
severity Brescia and its surrounding territory would have been almost without
priests; even those of the laity who were loyal to the government failed to
show the keenness he could have wished for.
In other Venetian cities the position was more favourable to the government than at Brescia. At Cividal di Belluno only the Capuchins, and even they only for a time,
made any attempt to observe the interdict. At Crema only a few priests were
banished; at Feltre a few Reformati and at Legnago only one priest took to flight. At Orzi-Novi the archpriest and a few others at first observed
the interdict but by the end of December they had been brought round by the
Podesta. Treviso and Udine were praised by their respective Podestas. Serious
opposition only came from Padua and Verona. According to the Podesta it was due
to the influence of the Jesuits that the people of Verona, always so loyal to
the government, failed on this occasion to show their wonted readiness and
zeal. For this reason he observed a studied moderation. According to official
reports from Padua priests in that city upset people’s consciences under
pretext of religion. Hence many religious who were not natives of Padua were
banished; others were forced to lie in hiding or to flee in disguise. Special
difficulties arose in the convents of nuns from the attitude of the confessors
who insisted on observing the interdict. The Podesta deemed it within his power
to compel them to say Mass. He forced them to do so at times in his own
presence, at the palace, at other times in some of the churches; but not all
complied. The Provveditore of Legnago boasts of a similar abuse of authority. It seemed to him that the archpriest of
the place no longer said Mass as often as he used to do; so, having first
closed every avenue of escape, he ordered him to obey punctually the commandments
of the republic. The monasteries were daily visited by a layman whose duty it
was to ascertain whether the offices were being celebrated. By order of the
Senate the governors of the ten largest cities were to see to it that preaching
was not stopped and that the task was entrusted to priests loyal to the State.
Towards the end of September, as the time drew near when the faithful were in
the habit of going to confession, the public officials of Padua were instructed
to summon the confessors before them in order that they might ascertain their
attitude towards the interdict and inflict suitable penalties on those who
proved loyal to the Pope. They were likewise to bring pressure to bear on the
bishops, to the end that, in confession, consciences might not be troubled.
These measures throw light on the way in which, under Sarpi’s influence, the republic interpreted the relationship between Church and State
and what it understood by the alleged encroachments of the Pope on the temporal
domain. The domain of the Church, according to this theory, is exclusively
constituted by what concerns the inner life of the soul; whatever is external
comes within the competence of the State, even such functions as saying Mass,
hearing confessions and preaching.
One wonders whether it was possible to humiliate the Church still
further. Yet even more galling indignities were in store for her. The intention
of the government was not to remain content with isolated encroachments, on the
contrary, violence was to be given a permanent status by being put as a logical
basis. It was for this that the republic had its Paolo Sarpi with his two
hundred ducats a year, an honorarium which was doubled on September 28th, 1606,
and trebled the year after. It was precisely the writings of Sarpi and his
sympathizers that imparted to the struggle between the Pope and the Signoria
its bitterness and its special significance in the history of the Church.
Long before the proclamation of the interdict the republic had seen to
its own defence in the theological field. As early as
January and February, 1606, certain lawyers of Padua
had drawn up three reports which were published there in September, in the name
of the whole university. As a matter of fact the
author of the most important of these three pamphlets, Pellegrini, contradicts
therein his own earlier writings. More sensational, however, were the pamphlets
of the ex-Jesuit Giovanni Marsiglio, the Senator
Marcantonio Quirini, and the Franciscan-Conventual
Capello. But they were all surpassed by Sarpi whose ideas these others endeavoured to make their own. He began by printing, with
an introduction, but without his signature, a translation of two small works of
Jean Gerson in which the great chancellor, in the midst of the troubles of his time, had said many things concerning resistance to the
abuse of the papal power and to unjust excommunication which, later on, proved
greatly to the taste of the Gallicans. This was followed, under Sarpi’s name, by Considerations on the Censures of Paul
V against the Republic of Venice. In a tone devoid of all respect the
pamphlet claims to show the injustice of almost every assertion and every
sentence of the brief of excommunication of April 17th. But Sarpi’s chief effort in his quarrel with Paul V is his Treatise on the Interdict.
It is Sarpi’s work although it is published in the
name also of six other divines of the republic. The brief of the interdict, it
is asserted, cannot create an obligation inasmuch as it was not properly promulgated and from its observance grave disadvantages
would ensue for the mass of the people and for the priests who obeyed it. If
the Venetians, before accepting the brief, submitted it to an examination, they
were within theft rights, for both the Pope’s power and the obedience due to
him have their limits and blind obedience is immoral. Examination of the brief
shows that the Pope had exceeded his powers; that it is contrary to God’s law
and is therefore not binding. What then is to be thought of the excommunication
under threat of which the brief promulgates its orders? It is null and void;
the Pope has misused his power ; he must be resisted
and to obey him is a sin.
Sarpi’s assertions caused an enormous sensation throughout Europe and started a
controversy which, in the years immediately following, seemed likely to go on
indefinitely. Gretser, who entered the lists in 1607,
in the opening pages of his pamphlet, enumerates twenty-eight works in support
of Venice and thirty-eight in favour of Paul V. In 1607, seventeen such writings
for and against the Pope were gathered into one volume and published at Chur,
and we are told in that same year that this was only a tenth part of all that
had appeared. Moreover some of these documents won the honour of being several times reprinted and
translated into various languages! The most important replies to the Venetian
divines came from Bellarmine who, in point of fact,
excused himself for taking part, he a Cardinal, in such a controversy. Cardinal Caetani, though under an assumed name, likewise wrote
a defence of the Pope, and Cardinal Baronius wrote at
least an admonition to the republic. Among the universities, Padua sided
with the republic, Bologna with the Pope. The most noted theologians of the
time, such as Francesco Suarez and Adam Tanner devoted special treatises to the
questions then so hotly controverted. In France, where the Gallicans, in
Germany and Holland, where the Protestants applauded Venice, translations were
published of more than one pamphlet; even in Spain a defence of the Pope saw the light. Marsiglio and Sarpi were
summoned to Rome, to explain their conduct, and when they failed to put in an
appearance they were excommunicated and their writings
fell under the ban of the Roman Inquisition.
It is easy to understand the excitement of the Catholic as well as the
Protestant world. On the one hand there was fear, on the other hope, that in
Italy also another Luther had arisen who, in the very heart of the Catholic
world, would promote apostacy from Rome. Prompted by Sarpi, the republic had
made the acceptance of papal briefs dependent on a previous examination; in other words, on its own caprice. From this to a complete denial of papal
jurisdiction it was but one step. Moreover, by his views on the relation
between Church and State, Sarpi took up a position which was at variance with
the conception hitherto maintained by scholars; in fact he challenged the whole traditional teaching in this respect. In the opinion of
his admirers the merit of Sarpi’s writings lies
precisely in this that by their means he became a pioneer and one of the
founders of modern statecraft. So we must submit Sarpi’s writings to a brief examination from just this
point of view.
The Catholic conception of the relationship between Church and State
starts from the fact that Christ founded the Church; that as God-man all power
was given to Him in heaven and on earth, and that in virtue of this power He
bestowed on His Church, in the person of the Apostles, all the rights and
powers that she needs for the fulfilment of the task entrusted to her. The
authority of the Church is, therefore, not limited to the interior life of the
soul. Christ sends forth His Apostles to teach and to administer the
Sacraments; hence, they and their followers are free to take up their abode
anywhere on earth, even though the secular princes may banish them; they may
convene assemblies, build churches, acquire property and in none of these
things has any secular power a juridical right to interfere with them. Were it
otherwise the Church could never have struck roots on earth, for from the first
the State was ill disposed towards her so that any obligation in conscience to
obey its laws of proscription would have made her existence impossible from the
very outset.
Sarpi does not openly deny these principles but
he observes a complete silence in their regard. In other ways also it would not
do for him to oppose Catholic convictions openly; Venice was still too
religious for that. Even during the time of the interdict a pamphlet by the Calvinist Nicholas Viguier which
was hostile to the papacy was banned by the Senate and the republic boasted to
the French ambassador that it had never tolerated any abusive writings against
the Pope. Accordingly, Sarpi did not openly deny the jurisdiction of the Pope
or his infallibility : in principle at least he even
recognized the immunity of Church property; his claim was that the laws of the
republic were not at variance with this immunity.
However, when viewed in the light of the code then obtaining, the laws
to which the Pope objected could not be defended and, when he undertook to
defend them in the name of Canon Law, Sarpi condemned himself to the role of a
sophist and pamphleteer. Thus, for example, the prohibition of the free
erection of churches is, according to him, no more than a decision concerning
the ground on which the church was to be raised; now questions of ground or
land are within the competence of the State so that ecclesiastical interests
are not in any way affected by the prohibition. The obvious answer to such
reasoning was that the republic might with equal right forbid millers and
bakers to grind corn and to bake bread for the priests, and then pretend that
it had merely given its orders to millers and bakers without in any way
interfering with the clergy. In defence of the same
law Sarpi further argued that any private citizen might prevent the erection of
a church on his own property, hence a similar right belonged to the State
within the whole of its territory, since the soil of the whole State was the
private property of the prince! Apart from this there can be no serious doubt
that the better type of pamphlet written against Sarpi far surpassed his as
regards objectivity and thoroughness. True, Sarpi’s knowledge ranged over an immense field but he was no
specialist. His numerous references to legal sources were shown to be
inaccurate and inadequate; he had the mortification of being told that often
enough he made long-winded attacks against positions which no one defended, and
it will scarcely be denied that he frequently talked against his own better
knowledge.
It remains, nevertheless, that Sarpi’s writings did their work. They are clever, seasoned with witty sallies, and they
drown the reader in a flood of arguments and texts which only a few are able to put to the test; moreover, in literature of this
kind boldness in the attack invariably puts the defence at a disadvantage. Most of the ideas of Sarpi and his followers are already
found in Marsilius of Padua, Wyclif, Hus and Luther; Gretser went to the trouble of furnishing detailed proof in
every single instance. On the other hand the
significance of these writings lies precisely in the fact that they advocate an
anti-Catholic conception of the State at the very gates of Rome. In his
writings James I of England adopted Sarpi’s ideas.
From the point of view of Church history Sarpi, by allying himself with the
Protestants, was the first, on the Catholic side, to start an evolutionary
process which, through Richer, Barclay, the Gallicans, Febronius,
leads up to Josephism. From the standpoint of secular history it must be said that he helped to loosen the
subordination of the secular to the spiritual authority and thus paved the way
for absolutism which in its turn led up to the revolution with its incalculable
consequences. In the story of his native city Sarpi also has his place; through
him Venice already in decay became for a last time the centre of world politics and once more riveted all eyes on itself. There was but
little need of any polemical writings to raise the excitement of the Venetians
against the Pope to fever heat. Such was its embitterment, Tommaso Palmegiani wrote to Borghese, that the republic was capable
of extreme measures; there was reason to fear a catastrophe that might well
prove irreparable; not everything could be entrusted to writing but if the
Secretary of State could hear what was being said at Venice he would have a surprise. It is well known, Bellarmine wrote, that at Venice
many who formerly were but seldom at Mass now hear it daily, just to display
their rebelliousness. The Corpus Christi procession of 1606 was more gorgeous
than it had been for years and the ornaments in gold and silver which were
displayed at it were valued at three to four millions.
Fresne writes that on all
feast days sermons were preached all over the city to proclaim that the
excommunication was null and void; that the people looked on the Pope as the
enemy of their spiritual welfare; the Jesuits, and their conduct in the
confessional, were hotly discussed in the public houses; the Inquisition was despised and the booksellers scattered broadcast all kinds
of writings. The sermons of Fulgenzio Manfredi, a
friar minor, in particular were remarkable for their
abuse of the Pope.
In these circumstances the fear lest Venice should end by going over to
Protestantism took an ever more concrete shape. Already in the reign of Clement
VIII it was known in Rome that English agents were making propaganda in favour
of Calvinism. At the time of England’s apostasy from the Church, diplomatic
relations between London and Venice were broken off; they were only resumed in
the last year of Elizabeth. James I had sent as his
representative in Venice Sir Henry Wotton who caused his chaplain to hold
Protestant services. True, Wotton had given a pledge that no one, beside his
own household, was to be admitted to the Protestant sermons, but on one
occasion he himself declared that “an ambassador was a gentleman sent abroad to
tell lies for reasons of State!” For Wotton this definition was a joke only in
its wording. Soon news reached Rome that the Anglican sermons at Wotton’s house
were much frequented and that dreadful things were said in them. When the
nuncios Offredo and Orazio Mattei lodged a protest both Wotton and the Signoria met
them with a complete denial.
As soon as the struggle with the Pope had begun Protestantism began to
rear its head still higher in Venice. Wotton got in touch with Geneva in order
to secure from there a Calvinist preacher for the city of the lagoons;
Protestant writings in vast quantities were smuggled into the city and into the
very chamber of the doge; from Catholic pulpits friends of Sarpi began to
preach thinly disguised Protestant doctrines; the doge himself, whom Paul V
would have liked to summon before the Inquisition, notwithstanding many
assurances of orthodoxy, let fall on occasion mysterious threats; in June,
1606, a printed sheet which openly advocated apostacy from the Pope was
publicly posted up at Vicenza though, as a matter of fact, the government
suppressed it.
There can be no doubt that Paul V seriously misjudged the effect of the
interdict. A century earlier the Signoria had at least made
an attempt to have the ecclesiastical censures raised, but within the
last decades a change had come over the city. Since the last war against the
Turks, so we read in a memoir of 1590, eighteen years of age was deemed
sufficient for membership of the Council. The result was that youths
outnumbered the older and experienced men. Venerable old men could be seen
courting the favour of these youths for the distribution of all offices lay
with them. This brought about a change in the moral as well as the political
condition of the republic. The Council of Ten saw its power curtailed to the advantage
of the Senate in which the young people were in the majority. The spirit of
parsimony and frugality of former times vanished; levity and immorality became
rampant; only a few years previous to the interdict a
preacher had the courage to proclaim that if the city did not amend in this
respect, he himself feared lest God should punish Venice by taking from it the
light of faith. Not many months after the interdict it became apparent that
things could not go on in this strain: either Venice must openly secede from
the Church or, by mutual concessions, a reconciliation with Rome must be
brought about. Paul V showed an early readiness to parley; all he insisted on
was that he should be given some kind of satisfaction.
The Senate, however, seemed unwilling to relent; with unbending obstinacy it
sought to humiliate the Pope by insisting on an unconditional surrender on his
part.
However, since some time already the final decision no longer lay
exclusively with the Senate. The strife had had its repercussion as far as
England and Denmark. The immediate neighbours of the
republic especially could not be indifferent to the formation of a Protestant
State in Venice; such an eventuality could easily lead to civil war in Italy
and would constitute a danger for the whole of Europe. The leading ministers of
France and Spain, Villeroi and Lerma, were the first,
at any early date, to tackle the Venetian problem. The head of the German
empire would have had good ground for similar action but only in the beginning
and at the end of the struggle did the impotent Rudolph II rouse himself
sufficiently to take a few measures. As for the smaller Italian States, they
only saw in the quarrel an opportunity, by means of the double-faced flatteries
with which they encouraged the two principals, to acquire yet another strip of
territory. Charles Emmanuel of Savoy was seemingly prompted by loftier motives
when he strove for a league between the Pope, Tuscany and Mantua, with a view to keeping Spain and France out of these purely Italian
questions. Yet at the same time he entered into negotiations with Spain in the hope of securing Montferrat, and with France in
order to get possession of Milan. The duke of Mantua earned the thanks of the
Venetian Senate for informing it of his refusal to listen to the Spanish
solicitations. For all that the duke engineered a conspiracy among the Venetian
troops, supplied the papal army with officers and courted the friendship of
Spain and the Spanish governor of Milan. But even this friendship did not prevent
the duke from working for an alliance with France and Venice. The dukes of
Mantua, Savoy, and Florence also declared their willingness to act as mediators
between Rome and Venice, but their proposals were of little importance. A
decisive change in the situation could only be brought about by the great
powers, France and Spain, inasmuch as the Venetian
complications furnished each of them with an opportunity of cutting out the
other in their mutual struggle for preponderance in the Italian peninsula.
Henry IV had expressed the opinion that in this contest he would be both
for the Pope and for Venice; for the Pope against all comers; for Venice
against all, with the sole exception of the Pope. Of all the powers Venice had
been the first to recognize him as king, hence he felt under some obligation to
the republic. On the other hand he durst not offend
the Pope for fear of making his reception into the Church suspect. So the king decided to take sides for neither party in order
not to forfeit their confidence in him as a mediator. His envoy to Venice,
Philippe Canaye, Seigneur de Fresne,
showed himself less impartial than the king and his sympathy with the republic
frequently set him at variance with the instructions given him by Henry.
At the first threat of the interdict Henry IV took a preliminary step,
which aimed at securing a prolongation of the truce of twenty-four days which
had been granted. But since the Venetians showed no desire for it the Pope
could not consider the request of the king.
The disappointment of the French owing to this first ill-success, gave
the Spaniards a chance to intervene. On July 5th the Spanish envoy in Rome, the
Duke of Escalona, presented a letter of Philip III in
which the king expressed his determination to throw his person and his power
into the scales on the Pope’s side. The king said that he had spoken in that
sense to the Venetian envoy at Madrid and had caused the viceroys and other
officials in Italy to be informed of his attitude. A covering letter to Escalona mentions the orders given to the latter to be
ready for every emergency with the necessary forces on land and sea as well as
the instructions to the governor of Milan who was commanded under no
circumstances to permit the passage of troops.
Thus, to the great joy of the Spanish sympathizers in Rome, Philip III
appeared to be in earnest. However, he himself weakened the value of his letter
by the explanations given in Venice. When he expressed his devotion to the
Pope, he explained the king had merely sought to win the Pontif’s confidence to the end that he might the more readily be accepted as mediator.
An attempt at mediation was made before the Senate on July 13th by Iñigo de Cardenas, the Spanish ambassador, but in the circumstances there was all the less hope of success as the
English envoy, on May 16th, had held out to the republic the prospect of a
secret alliance with the Protestant powers. For the time being, therefore,
there was no hope of a reconciliation. To the pressing demands of the French
envoy, Alincourt, that he would raise the censures at
least for a time, the Pope had replied, with the consent of nearly all the
Cardinals, that before he could do anything it was the duty of the republic to
take at least the first step to meet him half-way. To the representative of
France who handed over this answer, as well as to the Spanish intermediary, the
Senate declared on September 14th that unless the censures were first raised
there could be no question of reconciliation. Nevertheless, under the impression
of the king’s letter, the Senate decided, not without many reservations, to
agree to the proposal that the King of Spain should ask for the raising of the
censures and that the request might also be made in the name of Venice.
The Spanish peace proposal was followed by two similar ones by France,
in August and November. The first was submitted by Henry IV, the second came
from the French Cardinals in Rome. Spain then re-appeared on the scene with a
great show of energy. The king decided to send an envoy extraordinary; his
choice fell on no less a personage than the former viceroy of Naples, Francisco
de Castro, nephew of the duke of Lerma. After the grand duke of Tuscany had
likewise made peace proposals the Pope made known his terms. All was in vain.
The republic would not have been unwilling to deliver the prisoners to the
Pope, or to the King of France, but it was not prepared to repeal the laws
concerning Church property, nor would it even go so far as to consent to their
provisional repeal. In these transactions a sinister role was played by Fresne who repeatedly spoke of papal concessions; he was
not empowered to do so and he thereby put the Pope in
an unfavourable light.
Outside Venice and Protestant or Gallican circles the attitude of the
republic caused but little surprise. Cardinal Du Perron wrote as follows to
Henry IV: “What risk would Venice have run if, out of regard for your Majesty,
it had suspended the application of the laws whilst peaceful negotiations were
proceeding, as between Prince and Prince, seeing that the Church took exception
to them? But Venice is no longer the shrewd republic of former times and the most weighty affairs of State are in the hands of a band of
young people”. The Pope had long been under the impression that the tension
caused by the Venetian situation would lead to a European war and he ordered
preparations to be made which were to be under the direction of a commission of
thirteen Cardinals. A Spanish memoir counselled that Venice should be
threatened with war; fear would make more impression on them than all the
arguments of St. Paul and all the eloquence of Cicero; these people worshipped
no other god than their personal advantage and their independence. Philip III
wrote in the same sense to his new ambassador in Rome, the Marquis de Aytona : “Since the Venetians, so far from humbling
themselves before the Apostolic See, have scattered abroad writings against it
which teem with harmful and anti-religious teaching, and since to defend their
erroneous principles they have asked for the help not only of the Catholic
princes, but even for that of heretical ones, thus at one and the same time
jeopardizing both religion and the peace of the world, he felt compelled to
take his stand beside the Pope. He therefore orders the governor of Milan,
Conde de Fuentes, to levy an armed force of 26,000 foot and 4,000 horse”.
Fuentes was an able soldier and a decided opponent of the Venetians. For some
time already he had been urging both the Pope and the king to go to war for, so
he urged, the Venetians would not yield to persuasion and there was a danger
that if they could get help from the Grisons, Switzerland and France, they would invade the territory of Milan. Thereupon, as was to be
expected, Venice pushed forward her armaments with greater energy than ever.
France also mobilized 24,000 foot and 4,000 horse, as a counterpoise to Spain.
Rudolph IV put at the Pope’s disposal 20,000 infantry and 2,000 cavalry. The Pope himself also prepared for a military
expedition since the republic clung so obstinately to its “diabolical writings”,
and he did not want Venice to become another Geneva.
Great was now the embarrassment of Venice for the Senate knew perfectly
well, and even said so, that the republic could not long resist unaided the combined
forces of Spain and the Pope. About that time Cardinal Du Perron expressed the
opinion that there remained now for the Signoria only one way out of its
difficulties, that is, to give satisfaction to the Pope and then, leagued with
France, to turn its whole strength against Spain.
In these circumstances, on January 8th, 1607, Castro was in a position to renew his offer with a better prospect of
success. The republic, he asked, should pledge itself not to apply the laws in
dispute during the discussion; otherwise he would take
his leave. On January 13th Fresne demanded a similar
promise. Nothing throws a clearer light on the situation as the fact that now
the doge himself strove for the suspension of the laws so hotly fought for
until then. In his speech on the proposal he openly
conceded the greatness of the peril, the inadequateness of Venice’s armed
forces and the lack of reliable allies, for the unwarlike James I was too far
away and Henry IV was content with good advice. Once again the national pride of the Venetians reared itself against the humiliation; once
again the old slogan about the intangible freedom and autonomy of the republic
proved effective at the sittings of the Senate, and the doge’s proposal fell
through. Nevertheless, in a subsequent vote, he secured a majority of two,
though this was insufficient in affairs of State and Castro was put off with
the excuse that for the time being no one knew what exactly were
the demands of the Pope. More and more the conviction gathered strength
that a compromise must be arrived at. The common people had long ago wearied of
the strife. When, in August, 1606, the mediation of
Henry IV was invited, even Fresne wrote that the Jews
had not more impatiently longed for the Messias than
people now awaited the reply of the King of France. A speaker in the Senate
insisted on the fact that, however much Venetian polemists might seek to put
the Pope in the wrong, the views of the Pope were bound to have the greater
weight with the faithful since by common consent he was the judge in all
disputed questions. Moreover many internal
disadvantages had ensued from the quarrel. Since a whole year, so the same
speaker pointed out, the republic was as it were on a war footing. Every day,
so it is said, inflicts some fresh damage; those of the princes who are
friendly with Venice hesitate; the undecided fall away and the enemies grow
stronger; trade suffers; taxes remain unpaid and
revenue decreases in a thousand ways by reason of the huge sums swallowed by
war preparations. Moreover the citizens are divided in
their opinions, troubled in conscience, weary of existing conditions, and all
the time a superstitious populace sees in their calamities the effects of the
excommunication. And who can tell what will happen if the Pope takes yet
sterner measures? If he insists on punishing the disobedience of bishops and
priests and inflicts severer censures? On the part of Venice so many fresh and
shocking excesses have taken place that the original cause of the quarrel is
almost forgotten; there have been so many extravagant sermons and pamphlets,
confiscations of Church property, banishments, persecutions; the prisons are
full of religious whose only crime is their submission to the interdict which
is treated with greater contempt and is scoffed at in worse fashion than it
would be in a heretical land. Add to this the external difficulties. Does
anyone believe the republic capable of maintaining three armies of 16,000 men
each, in Lombardy, in Friuli and Polesina? Can we
rely on the subjects? We have taken possession of their land, hence there
prevail amongst us luxury and an intolerable arrogance in stark contrast with
the manners of our forbears, whilst among the people
there is poverty, discontent and a longing for a
change. Add to this that we have no ally whom we could really trust.
The attitude of the foreign countries also was sufficiently humiliating
for the republic. The interdict was published in Savoy and the Venetian envoy
was forbidden to enter the churches; in Venice the envoy of Savoy refused to
attend services forbidden by the Pope and in order to avoid contact with the excommunicated Senate he retired to a country house
outside the city, alleging the example of the Imperial and the Spanish Court.
At the court of Rudolph II, at Prague, the nuncio Ferreri broke off all relations with the envoy of the Signoria and forbade him to take
part in the procession of Corpus Christi; the Emperor himself would not give him audience and his ministers openly avoided him. The
Spanish nuncio declared at Madrid that he would not take part in the services
in the chapel royal if the Venetian representative was present. With a view to
avoiding a decisive step the king ceased to attend his own chapel till at last,
in January, 1607, he yielded to the pressure of the
Pope and decided to exclude the envoy. At Warsaw the ambassador of the Signoria
had the mortification of seeing some gentlemen of his suite excluded from
church by order of the nuncio, though in this matter the archbishop did not agree
with the action of the nuncio and whilst the envoy remained in Poland the king
withheld the publication of the interdict. Henry IV, notwithstanding his
efforts at mediation, would not allow the Venetian ambassador to be present at
the christening of his children.
The best hopes of the Senate rested on the King of France. At the end of December, 1606, Fresne had
counselled getting the Grisons to make an irruption into Milanese territory; in
such an eventuality France would surely side with Venice. Towards the end of January the Venetian envoy in Paris vainly besought Henry IV
to come to the assistance of the republic. Heated discussions ensued; not long
after the envoy had a stroke of apoplexy which was thought to have been caused
by the controversy. An alliance which Fresne had
suggested the Venetians should ask for, Henry flatly refused. As a matter of
fact, notwithstanding all these warlike preparations, the king had not yet
given up hope of a peaceful settlement. At this very time he informed his ambassador of an important arrangement he had just concluded
with the Pope. Seeing how difficult Venice found it to promise suspension of
the laws in dispute, the king was prepared to make the promise in its name,
only the republic must give him some token which would win for his word respect
and trust.
The king took a step fraught with even graver consequences when at the
end of 1606 he commissioned his kinsman, Cardinal de Joyeuse, who was eager to
go to Italy, to inquire, whilst there, into the state of the quarrel and,
should reports be favourable, to betake himself to
the city of the lagoons with a view to acting as a mediator.
When he had entered Italian territory, Joyeuse made a show of journeying Romewards; in reality he set
out for Papozze, a village on the Po, where he spent
the whole of January and part of February at the country house of a nobleman, a
friend of his. There he had several conferences with Fresne.
On February 2nd, 1607, the King ordered him to proceed to Venice and on
February 10th de Joyeuse informed Rome of his impending departure.
Though Paul V had not summoned the French Cardinal he was not displeased
to see him, for he hoped that here at last there might be a chance to settle
the tiresome quarrel. In his instructions to Joyeuse the Pope insisted on the
strict observance of the interdict; the promise of the republic not to apply
the contentious laws must not be limited to a determined period; to this the
Pope would never consent, the promise to be made by the Signoria under the
guaranty of the French king, must be perfectly clear and defined in its
smallest detail. Rome would be greatly gratified if the King of Spain also
pledged his word. As a matter of fact it had been the
wish of the Pope that Spain and France should settle the dispute by a joint
action; however the rivalry between the two courts allowed but little hope of
such an eventuality.
Joyeuse reached Venice on February 15th. He met with a hearty welcome
for the arrival of the Frenchman was held as a guarantee that Henry IV would
fall in with the republic’s proposals for a league with France. It was only
when the king’s reply of February 20th and March 3rd had destroyed this hope
that a beginning could be made of the discussions which, it was hoped, would
lead to an amicable solution of the quarrel.
It is open to reasonable doubt whether Joyeuse was the best exponent of
Rome’s point of view. Henry IV had no intention to draw the sword on behalf of
the Pope, but he cherished the ambition of being considered the great pacifier
of Italy; hence his envoy strove for peace at all costs, the Spaniards and all
others being excluded from the discussions. In these endeavours the Cardinal more than once exceeded the instructions he had received from
Rome. The cunning statesmen on the Rialto soon saw that not only did France not
seriously threaten them, but that on the contrary she averted the storm that
threatened them from Spain. Hence they took up a position as follows : as
regards concessions to the Pope, only a bare minimum must be agreed to, so as
to get their necks out of the noose ; this minimum must be granted with as
little publicity as possible, so that it would be easier, later on, to deny
that a promise was ever made ; throughout the transaction they must display
towards the Pope as much disrespect and arrogance as was possible without
compromising the continuation of the discussion. As a matter of fact, even
after the arrival of the Cardinal, the excommunicated Franciscan, Fulgenzio Manfredi, was allowed to renew from the pulpit
his extravagant denunciations of the Pope. True, Joyeuse succeeded in getting
Manfredi removed from Venice, though only for a time. As late as February 26th,
the Senate instructed the governors of Padua and those of nine other large
towns to see to it that there were frequent services and that those who
obstinately submitted to the interdict were banished. They were particularly to
keep an eye on the confessors. Cardinal Borghese even writes that after the
arrival of the peace-maker, contempt for all things ecclesiastical and divine
became more pronounced; the protest of the doge against the excommunication, as
well as the proclamation of the Senate to the citizens, was once more posted up
on the church doors; by shutting them off from the outer world, nuns were made
to choose between death by starvation and breaking the interdict ; one noble
lady was cast into prison for refusing to hear Mass and blasphemous
publications were once more broadcast.
The discussions with Joyeuse started from the concessions consented by
the Senate in the preceding November, though in a somewhat altered form.
Accordingly, France and Spain were to pray the Pope for the revocation of the
censures; out of regard for the King of France, the two prisoners were to be
delivered into the hands of a prelate who would take charge of them in the name
of the Pope, without prejudice, however, to the right of the republic to judge
these ecclesiastics. With the raising of the censures, Venice’s protest against them would cease, and with regard to the
polemical writings published at Venice, the republic would deal with them as
Rome deals with those published in Rome. After the removal of the censures an
envoy would go to Rome to thank the Pope for having paved the way for an
amicable discussion. The republic persisted, however, in its refusal to suspend
the laws, but promised that in the application of them it would not depart from
its traditional piety.
In the last mentioned condition lay the chief
difficulty, hence Joyeuse took the greatest pains to make it easy for the
Senate to grant some concession on this point. The Pope, he explained, demanded
a promise of non-application of the laws; King Henry was prepared to give it to
the Pope; but there was no need for the republic to issue a written declaration
or to pass a special act in the matter ; all that was
required was that the king should have a guarantee that his word would not be dishonoured. Moreover the required nonapplication of the
laws meant very little, inasmuch as they were only prohibitions
; therefore, as long as they remain, the erection of churches, for
instance, which they forbade, would not be practicable and this state would
continue so even if they were suspended; there was really question of no more
than an act of courtesy towards the Pope, a “false coin” as Fresne put it. Joyeuse had likewise endeavoured to secure a
certain concession on the part of the Pope, but in this he had been so far
unsuccessful: it was that the Church agreed on looking upon everything as in
suspense, and in consequence no new church building would take place. In this
way the Venetian law would be purposeless and would fall into abeyance.
After an inconclusive vote on March 9th, the Senate on the 14th reached
an agreement on the text of an explanation to be presented to Joyeuse and
Castro. Since the republic, it was stated, did not wish to depart from its traditional
piety and religious spirit in the application of the laws, in that declaration
the two kings had enough to go on with to justify them in settling the whole
affair for they could rest assured of the republic’s straightforwardness and
the purity of its motives. The republic prayed for such good offices of the two
monarchs as could be expected from their prudence and kindly disposition.
Joyeuse, on being informed of the decision on the following day, declared
himself satisfied, whereas Castro remarked that he understood the decision to
mean no more than that the laws would not be applied whilst further
deliberation was in progress. To the query implied in this remark the doge gave
an evasive answer though in the letter in which Castro and Cardenas, on the
same day, prayed in the name of Venice for the removal of the censures, both
spoke as if a definite promise had been made. Yet another point in the letter
of the two Spaniards demands attention: they give an assurance that the priests
and religious who had fled by reason of the interdict, would be allowed to come
back, though with one exception: thereafter the city of the lagoons would be
closed to the Jesuits.
The Society of Jesus had bitter enemies in Venice of whom Sarpi was not
the least dangerous. From the first the decree which banished them had been so
worded that they could not benefit by the city’s reconciliation with Rome, for
it was not the interdict that was alleged in the decree of expulsion as the
ground of their banishment, but the evil dispositions towards the republic with
which they were credited. The polemical writings of Bellarmine and other
Jesuits against Sarpi and his associates, and their exhortations to observe the
interdict, were not likely to lessen the existing hatred for them.
Notwithstanding the intervention of Henry IV both the doge and the Senate
repeatedly declared that they would never again be admitted. On the other hand Paul V felt in honour bound
to exert himself on their behalf and he reasserted his determination in this
matter in his last instructions to Joyeuse. Hence the French peace-maker was faced with a difficulty which for a time seemed destined to wreck every
attempt to settle the quarrel.
However, by the time the question of the Jesuits threatened to become
acute the scene of the peace parleys had been transferred from Venice to Rome.
This is what had happened. In March, 1607, the emperor
Rudolph II, through the duke of Savoy and the marquis of Castiglione, had made
a show of throwing his weight into the scales in favour of peace. To preclude
so undesirable an intervention, Joyeuse now made out that a settlement had
already been reached and he forthwith set out for Rome: all that the marquis
could do was to follow him thither.
It was an arduous task that awaited the peace-maker in Rome. In their mortification the Spaniards had already seen to it that the
Pope was well informed as regarded the not very brilliant success achieved at
Venice. The marquis expressed surprise that Joyeuse should dare to approach the
Holy See, when he had but such slender concessions to offer. The Cardinal needs
must begin by trying to obtain a brief which would grant him full power to
absolve the Venetians without a demand for the return of the Jesuits. He
reached Rome on the evening of March 22nd, took counsel all that night with the
friends of France and only presented himself to Paul V on the evening of the
next day. He expatiated on the impending danger of Venice turning Protestant
and the difficulty of an accommodation, but made no
reference to the Jesuits. Only as he was about to leave he casually remarked that on the following day he would suggest a means by
which a satisfactory settlement of their affairs could be reached.
The whole of that night Paul V racked his brains as to the nature of the
mysterious way out which the Frenchman claimed he had been ingenious enough to
discover. Early in the morning he sent a messenger to Joyeuse asking for
details of the secret. The Pope must have been not a little disappointed when the
Cardinal came in person to inform him that discussions led nowhere but that he
would be able to achieve something if the Pope would first give him a brief
with full powers to pronounce absolution. Paul V would not allow the longed-for
brief to be wrung from him in such a fashion. He replied that the whole quarrel
had started because of two priests; he could not end it by sacrificing an
entire religious Order. Joyeuse had to leave without having obtained anything.
Where he had failed, Du Perron was now expected to succeed. The latter
represented to the Pope that he could assuredly not risk a war because of the
Jesuits. Meanwhile Joyeuse got in touch with Aquaviva, the General of the
Jesuits, who expressed his readiness for peace to be concluded regardless of
his Order. On April 1st the Pope dropped the question not indeed of the Jesuits’
return, but of their immediate return.
Even so they were very far from having cleared the ground of all
obstacles. Everybody in Rome deemed the French terms of settlement humiliating.
It was felt that if the French had acted in Venice in concert with the
Spaniards and if jointly with the latter they had
brought to bear on the Senate the pressure they were now applying to the Pope,
affairs would be in a very different state. A compromise like the French one,
Castro wrote, he could have secured himself without the aid of Joyeuse, and if
the latter had not stood in his way either he or Fuentes would have succeeded
in getting the objectionable laws repealed. Moreover on April 3rd it became known that on the occasion of the handing over of the
two priests the Venetians were determined to make an express declaration that
they meant to uphold their pretension that the two clerics were justiciable to
their city. Hence arose fresh difficulties. Late at night Du Perron called once
more on the Pope to give him a solemn assurance that Joyeuse would not make use
of his powers of absolution unless the prisoners were surrendered without
reservation. For the time being Joyeuse would absolve the bishops and prelates
only in so far as their individual conscience was concerned, but not publicly.
At last, on April 1st, Joyeuse, in conjunction with the French envoy Alincourt, was able to draw up two documents. In the first
it was stated that Alincourt, in the name of his king
and in that of the republic, prayed for the repeal of the censures. It gave
expression to the republic’s deep regret for all that had happened, its
eagerness to recover the Pope’s goodwill and its readiness to give him every
satisfaction. In the second document Joyeuse and Alincourt,
in the name of Henry IV, pledged themselves as follows : The two prisoners
shall be handed over to the Pope; Venice agrees not to apply the laws in
dispute whilst the discussions are in progress; the protest against the
interdict and the doge’s letter shall be withdrawn simultaneously with the
repeal of the censures; religious who fled because of the interdict are free to
return; any proceedings taken against persons, or property by reason of the
observance of the interdict, are declared null and void and compensation will
be made. On March 10th Castro and Cardenas had pledged their king’s word in
respect to these same points and with the consent of the republic had prayed,
in the king’s name, for the removal of the censures. An instruction to Joyeuse
enumerates the conditions under which he is empowered to absolve the Senate. In
addition to the non-application of the laws and the above
mentioned promises, the Pope now demands the immediate despatch of an envoy to Rome. In the event of no settlement
ensuing the Pope was resolved to stiffen the existing censures.
Easter, so he thought, everything could be settled. However, whilst
under this impression, the Cardinal had forgotten that beside the doge, the Senate
and the Counsel of Ten there was yet another power in Venice, namely Sarpi, for
whose hatred of Rome a settlement was most unwelcome. On his advice the Senate
would not hear of a public absolution and of a public recantation of the former protest against the censures. This led to a further
lengthy discussion and it was with the greatest
difficulty that an agreement was come to at last. Saturday after Easter, April
21st, was fixed upon for the reconciliation. Castro had been previously
informed by the Senate of the terms of the settlement.
No one can maintain that in this affair of the reconciliation the Senate
showed the faintest trace of either dignity or magnanimity; on the contrary, no
trick or artifice was too petty if by using it it was
possible to whittle down and to lessen the value of what it could not help
agreeing to. To begin with, early in the morning the two prisoners were handed
over to the French envoy, at the Cardinal’s lodgings. It was explained that
this was done out of regard for the King of France and without prejudice to the
jurisdiction of the republic over the two ecclesiastics. After that a
deputation called upon the Cardinal to whom Fresne handed the prisoners; at this ceremony no mention was made of the jurisdiction
of the republic. Thereupon Joyeuse proceeded to the assembly hall of the Collegio where he absolved from their censures both the
doge and the Senate represented by sixteen of its members. Thus the republic permitted an act by which it acknowledged the existence both of
the excommunication and the interdict, but, as was seen at once, it did so only
with the intention of subsequently denying everything. In order that all might
see that the interdict was at an end, the Cardinal resolved, immediately after
the absolution, to say Mass with all possible solemnity, for until then, to the
keen chagrin of the Senate, he had strictly observed the interdict. To add to
the annoyance of the Senate a vast concourse of people had assembled in the
piazza of San Marco to await the arrival of the Cardinal. The Senate now
ordered the main door to be closed. When Joyeuse was about to set out for St.
Mark’s he was told that the key could not be found; so he had to make his exit through a narrow postern gate. However, a dense mass of
worshippers assisted at his Mass. Finally the wording of the Senate’s statement
concerning the recall of its protestations caused general indignation in Rome,
for its most important paragraph was couched in these terms : “Since both sides have done all that was required and the censures have been
removed, the protest is likewise revoked”. Obviously if the Pope no longer
insisted on the censures Venice’s protest was purposeless and the fact was
disguised that an absolution had taken place and that the recall of the protest
had preceded it. The document, in this form, was then broadcast by means of the
printing press. When the Pope complained, the Senate declared itself ready for
further explanations, but opinion in Rome was that it was best not to insist. So it was deemed that enough had been done when Fresne and Joyeuse attested by an official written document
that the protest had been revoked previous to the absolution. Rome had likewise
demanded the recall of a circular dealing with the interdict which the doge had
addressed to the subjects of the republic. However, the Pope declared himself
satisfied with an attestation of the Senate that it was not responsible for its
publication. In the letters of April 6th and 21st, Joyeuse had been instructed
to exert himself on behalf of the Jesuits, but in this respect his efforts
proved in vain. The Senate would inform the Pope, he was told, why it insisted
on the continuation of the banishment of the Society. The other Orders were
allowed to return, but they were to do so unostentatiously. The Senate refused
to draw up a formal document concerning the settlement; to do so would be
against the laws of the republic, it was said, and a thing attested by a
Cardinal and the envoys of two such great kings needed no further guaranty. As
a matter of fact both kings confirmed by special
letters all that their envoys had promised and performed and guaranteed the
non-execution of the laws to which Rome took exception. Nevertheless when in the consistory of 30th April Paul V gave an account to the Cardinals of
what had taken place in Venice they were not given an opportunity to express
their opinion for the Pope was afraid lest they should signify their
disapproval. The Senate had refused to observe the interdict for two or three
days previous to the absolution and just before the
solemn Mass of Cardinal de Joyeuse several priests had been compelled to say
Mass. For two whole days the waiting rooms of the Cardinal were encumbered with
priests and religious who flocked to him in order to get absolution from the censures they had incurred by their non-observance of
the interdict, so that Joyeuse saw himself compelled to delegate his powers to
ten suitable priests and these also found themselves surrounded by an
extraordinary concourse. In this respect also the republic took counter
measures lest the pressure it had exercised on consciences should become too
evident. However, many priests refrained from saying Mass until they had
received absolution and in this way the interdict was after all observed.
Joyeuse informed the bishops and prelates by letter that they were absolved,
though with certain limitations. This letter made things awkward for the
Senate, since it stated the fact that the republic had been absolved, and
consequently, that absolution had been needed; accordingly the locum tenens of
the bishop of Padua received orders not to publish the document without the
Senate’s leave for it was enough that the censures no longer existed de facto ;
moreover he was to take care not to grant to any priest or religious power to
absolve from the consequences of their non-observance of the interdict; let him
soothe anxious consciences with this assurance, all the more as in Venice
absolution was neither needed nor demanded by the Senate. Thus, by every means
imaginable, did the republic vent its spite against the Pope.
At the time of the death of Cardinal Valier of Verona, who had always
counselled peace with Venice, Villeroi had written to
Cardinal Givry that he regretted both the death of the Cardinal and the
prolongation of the quarrel; that the latter would cause more injury to the
Holy See and grief to the Pope than is realized by those who oppose the
reconciliation. The successor of Paul V, Gregory XV, begins his instructions to
the new nuncio of Venice with these words : “The best results had been hoped
for from the use of spiritual weapons which Paul V took up for the defence of the Church’s freedom, not for destruction but
for building up; however, the existing evil dispositions towards them, the
influence of persons who, by reason of their age and, discretion were not
entitled to as much authority as they exercised, the inspiration of a man of
genius for evil who exerted greater influence through his tongue and his
friends than by reason of his position, all these things produced as many evils
as would have been the case had these weapons been used at the worst periods of
history. Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and discipline, respect for the Pope and
the Apostolic See suffered such damage, to the no small danger of the Catholic
religion, that instead of gain and recovery no small loss had to be registered”.
Such an admission suggests a comparison with the action of Pius V: like his
successor that Pope had had difficulties with Venice of a similar nature, yet
notwithstanding his great zeal he could not make up his mind to take steps such
as were taken by Paul V. If Paul V had made a miscalculation, so had Venice.
The Senate imagined that it stood for the cause of all the princes as against
the Pope, so that all the European powers would range themselves by its side.
In this the Senate, or its advisor Sarpi, was mistaken: in the end the republic was forced to yield to the combined pressure of Spain
and France. The very fact that it strove to deny, or to whittle down by
unseemly tricks, the concessions it was finally compelled to make to the Pope,
was the surest proof that the republic only yielded because it could not help
itself. At the beginning, as a speaker in the Senate remarked, they were not afraid
of the censures, on the contrary, they welcomed them, for if they now became an
object of contempt, the power of Venice would be confirmed for all time. But
our republic, he adds, is more powerful in name than in
reality. A contemporary writer declares that Venice would never have
allowed things to go as far as a war had the Pope seriously contemplated taking
up arms. At the close of his history of the interdict the Senator Antonio Quirini sets down the following twelve conclusions. The
event, he writes, has shown that the republic begins everything eagerly but
fails to hold out; that wars in which religion enters are exceedingly
dangerous; that in all contests with the Pope the latter has an enormous
advantage over his opponents. Fourthly that nothing so jeopardizes the
independence of the State as a misunderstanding with the Pope. Our forbears were well aware of the
necessity of not rousing the Turk; of being on good terms with the Pope, of
rewarding the good and punishing the wicked. These things, in their opinion,
were the four wheels which must carry forward on the right road the chariot of
a republic. The ship of our republic will be secure when, by means of a good
understanding, it is anchored to the Church! In the ninth place Quirini points out to the merchants on the Rialto the
losses incurred by them as a result of the quarrel, namely two millions in gold for armaments, the losses resulting from
irregularities in the collection of taxes and the sixty thousand ducats
annually paid to the army, and all to no purpose. His eleventh point is that
all the calculations of the republic were wrong from the beginning. At first
people thought the Pope would not really make use of the weapon of
excommunication; then they imagined that no secular prince would take sides
against Venice; lastly they fancied that at least the
king of France would surely come down with his whole weight on the side of
Venice as soon as Spain had decided to support the Pope. They were mistaken. Again people deceived themselves when, after the statement
made by Spain, it was thought that the main purpose both of the Spaniards and
the Pope was the oppression of the republic. Neither France nor Spain sought a
real compromise; if they did, the attempt of the one must nullify that of the other;
in a word, if in the end things did not go badly, it was all due not to the
action of men, but to the kindly intervention of Providence. Quirini ends with an attack on the party of the youths who,
during the struggle, had arrogated to themselves a preponderant role. Venice
must maintain itself by prudence rather than by force of arms, hence the
republic honours age and its maturity of judgment, at
least it used to do so once upon a time.
Sarpi’s Political Theories and his Attempts to Protestantize Venice.
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