History of Florence
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Book I
Chapter III
- Beginning of the greatness of the pontiffs in
Italy -- Abuse of censures and indulgences--The pope
applies to Pepin, king of France, for assistance --
Donation of Pepin to the pontiff -- Charlemagne -- End
of the kingdom of the Lombards -- The title of
cardinal begins to be used -- The empire passes to the
Germans -- Berengarius, duke of Fruili, created king
of Italy -- Pisa becomes great -- Order and division
of the states of Italy -- Electors of the emperor
created.
In these times the popes began to acquire greater
temporal authority than they had previously possessed;
although the immediate successors of St. Peter were more
reverenced for the holiness of their lives, and the miracles
which they performed; and their example so greatly extended
the Christian religion, that princes of other states
embraced it, in order to obviate the confusion which
prevailed at that period. The emperor having become a
Christian and returned to Constantinople, it followed, as
was remarked at the commencement of the book, that the Roman
empire was the more easily ruined, and the church more
rapidly increased her authority. Nevertheless, the whole of
Italy, being subject either to the emperors or the kings
till the coming of the Lombards, the popes never acquired
any greater authority than what reverence for their habits
and doctrine gave them. In other respects they obeyed the
emperors or kings; officiated for them in their affairs, as
ministers or agents, and were even sometimes put to death by
them. He who caused them to become of more importance in the
affairs of Italy, was Theodoric, king of the Goths, when he
established the seat of his empire at Ravenna; for, Rome
being without a prince, the Romans found it necessary, for
their safety, to yield obedience to the pope; his authority,
however, was not greatly increased thereby, the only
advantage being, that the church of Rome was allowed to take
precedence of that of Ravenna. But the Lombards having taken
possession, and Italy being divided into many parts, the
pope had an opportunity of greater exertion. Being as it
were the head of Rome, both the emperor of Constantinople
and the Lombards respected him; so that the Romans, by his
means, entered into league with the Lombards, and with
Longinus, not as subjects, but as equals. Thus the popes, at
one time friends of the Greeks, and at another of the
Lombards, increased their own power; but upon the ruin of
the eastern empire, which occurred during the time of
Heraclius, their influence was reduced; for the Sclavi, of
whom we spoke before, again assailed Illyria, and having
occupied the country, named it Sclavonia, after themselves;
and the other parts were attacked by the Persians, then by
the Saracens under Mohammed, and lastly by the Turks, who
took Syria, Africa, and Egypt. These causes induced the
reigning pope, in his distress, to seek new friends, and he
applied to the king of France. Nearly all the wars which the
northern barbarians carried on in Italy, it may be here
remarked, were occasioned by the pontiffs; and the hordes,
with which the country was inundated, were generally called
in by them. The same mode of proceeding still continued, and
kept Italy weak and unsettled. And, therefore, in relating
the events which have taken place from those times to the
present, the ruin of the empire will be no longer
illustrated, but only the increase of the pontificate and of
the other principalities which ruled Italy till the coming
of Charles VIII. It will be seen how the popes, first with
censures, and afterward with these and arms, mingled with
indulgences, became both terrible and venerable; and how,
from having abused both, they ceased to possess any
influence, and were wholly dependent on the will of others
for assistance in their wars.
But to return to the order of our narration. Gregory III.
occupied the papacy, and the kingdom of the Lombards was
held by Astolphus, who, contrary to agreement, seized
Ravenna, and made war upon the pope. On this account,
Gregory no longer relying upon the emperor of
Constantinople, since he, for the reasons above given, was
unable to assist him, and unwilling to trust the Lombards,
for they had frequently broken their faith, had recourse to
Pepin II., who, from being lord of Austria and Brabant, had
become king of France; not so much by his own valor as by
that of Charles Martel, his father, and Pepin his
grandfather; for Charles Martel, being governor of the
kingdom, effected the memorable defeat of the Saracens near
Tours, upon the Loire, in which two hundred thousand of them
are said to have been left dead upon the field of battle.
Hence, Pepin, by his father's reputation and his own
abilities, became afterward king of France. To him Pope
Gregory, as we have said, applied for assistance against the
Lombards, which Pepin promised to grant, but desired first
to see him and be honored with his presence. Gregory
accordingly went to France, passing uninjured through the
country of his enemies, so great was the respect they had
for religion, and was treated honorably by Pepin, who sent
an army into Italy, and besieged the Lombards in Pavia. King
Astolphus, compelled by necessity, made proposals of peace
to the French, who agreed to them at the entreaty of the
pope--for he did not desire the death of his enemy, but that
he should be converted and live. In this treaty, Astolphus
promised to give to the church all the places he had taken
from her; but the king's forces having returned to France,
he did not fulfill the agreement, and the pope again had
recourse to Pepin, who sent another army, conquered the
Lombards, took Ravenna, and, contrary to the wishes of the
Greek emperor, gave it to the pope, with all the places that
belonged to the exarchate, and added to them Urbino and the
Marca. But Astolphus, while fulfilling the terms of his
agreement, died, and Desiderius, a Lombard, who was duke of
Tuscany, took up arms to occupy the kingdom, and demanded
assistance of the pope, promising him his friendship. The
pope acceding to his request, the other princes assented.
Desiderius kept faith at first, and proceeded to resign the
districts to the pope, according to the agreement made with
Pepin, so that an exarch was no longer sent from
Constantinople to Ravenna, but it was governed according to
the will of the pope. Pepin soon after died, and was
succeeded by his son Charles, the same who, on account of
the magnitude and success of his enterprises, was called
Charlemagne, or Charles the Great. Theodore I. now succeeded
to the papacy, and discord arising between him and
Desiderius, the latter besieged him in Rome. The pope
requested assistance of Charles, who, having crossed the
Alps, besieged Desiderius in Pavai, where he took both him
and his children, and sent them prisoners to France. He then
went to visit the pontiff at Rome, where he declared, THAT
THE POPE, BEING VICAR OF GOD, COULD NOT BE JUDGED BY MEN.
The pope and the people of Rome made him emperor; and thus
Rome began to have an emperor of the west. And whereas the
popes used to be established by the emperors, the latter now
began to have need of the popes at their elections; the
empire continued to lose its powers, while the church
acquired them; and, by these means, she constantly extended
her authority over temporal princes.
The Lombards, having now been two hundred and thirty-two
years in the country, were strangers only in name, and
Charles, wishing to reorganize the states of Italy,
consented that they should occupy the places in which they
had been brought up, and call the province after their own
name, Lombardy. That they might be led to respect the Roman
name, he ordered all that part of Italy adjoining to them,
which had been under the exarchate of Ravenna, to be called
Romagna. Besides this, he created his son Pepin, king of
Italy, whose dominion extended to Benevento; all the rest
being possessed by the Greek emperor, with whom Charles was
in league. About this time Pascal I. occupied the
pontificate, and the priests of the churches of Rome, from
being near to the pope, and attending the elections of the
pontiff, began to dignify their own power with a title, by
calling themselves cardinals, and arrogated so great
authority, that having excluded the people of Rome from the
election of pontiff, the appointment of a new pope was
scarcely ever made except from one of their own number: thus
on the death of Pascal, the cardinal of St. Sabina was
created pope by the title of Eugenius II. Italy having come
into the hands of the French, a change of form and order
took place, the popes acquiring greater temporal power, and
the new authorities adopting the titles of count and
marquis, as that of duke had been introduced by Longinus,
exarch of Ravenna. After the deaths of some pontiffs,
Osporco, a Roman, succeeded to the papacy; but on account of
his unseemly appellation, he took the name of Sergius, and
this was the origin of that change of names which the popes
adopt upon their election to the pontificate.
In the meantime, the Emperor Charles died and was
succeeded by Lewis (the Pious, after whose death so many
disputes arose among his sons, that at the time of his
grandchildren, the house of France lost the empire, which
then came to the Germans; the first German emperor being
called Arnolfus. Nor did the Carlovingian family lose the
empire only; their discords also occasioned them the loss of
Italy; for the Lombards, gathering strength, offended the
pope and the Romans, and Arnolfo, not knowing where to seek
relief, was compelled to create Berengarius, duke of Fruili,
king of Italy. These events induced the Huns, who occupied
Pannonia, to assail Italy; but, in an engagement with
Berengarius, they were compelled to return to Pannonia,
which had from them been named Hungary.
Romano was at this time emperor of Greece, having, while
prefect of the army, dethroned Constantine; and as Puglia
and Calabria, which, as before observed, were parts of the
Greek empire, had revolted, he gave permission to the
Saracans to occupy them; and they having taken possession of
these provinces, besieged Rome. The Romans, Berengarius
being then engaged in defending himself against the Huns,
appointed Alberic, duke of Tuscany, their leader. By his
valor Rome was saved from the Saracens, who, withdrawing
from the siege, erected a fortress upon Mount Gargano, by
means of which they governed Puglia and Calabria, and
harassed the whole country. Thus Italy was in those times
very grievously afflicted, being in constant warfare with
the Huns in the direction of the Alps, and, on the
Neapolitan side, suffering from the inroads of the Saracens.
This state of things continued many years, occupying the
reigns of three Berengarii, who succeeded each other; and
during this time the pope and the church were greatly
disturbed; the impotence of the eastern, and the disunion
which prevailed among the western princes, leaving them
without defense. The city of Genoa, with all her territory
upon the rivers, having been overrun by the Saracens, an
impulse was thus given to the rising greatness of Pisa, in
which city multitudes took refuge who had been driven out of
their own country. These events occurred in the year 931,
when Otho, duke of Saxony, the son of Henry and Matilda, a
man of great prudence and reputation, being made emperor,
the pope Agapito, begged that he would come into Italy and
relieve him from the tyranny of the Berengarii.
The States of Italy were governed in this manner:
Lombardy was under Berengarius III. and Alfred his son;
Tuscany and Romagna were governed by a deputy of the western
emperor; Puglia and Calabria were partly under the Greek
emperor, and partly under the Saracens; in Rome two consuls
were annually chosen from the nobility, who governed her
according to ancient custom; to these was added a prefect,
who dispensed justice among the people; and there was a
council of twelve, who each year appointed rectors for the
places subject to them. The popes had more or less authority
in Rome and the rest of Italy, in proportion as they were
favorites of the emperor or of the most powerful states. The
Emperor Otho came into Italy, took the kingdom from the
Berengarii, in which they had reigned fifty-five years, and
reinstated the pontiff in his dignity. He had a son and a
nephew, each named Otho, who, one after the other, succeeded
to the empire. In the reign of Otho III., Pope Gregory V.
was expelled by the Romans; whereupon the emperor came into
Italy and replaced him; and the pope, to revenge himself on
the Romans, took from them the right to create an emperor,
and gave it to three princes and three bishops of Germany;
the princes of Brandenburg, Palatine, and Saxony, and the
bishops of Magonza, Treveri, and Colonia. This occurred in
the year 1002. After the death of Otho III. the electors
created Henry, duke of Bavaria, emperor, who at the end of
twelve years was crowned by Pope Stephen VIII. Henry and his
wife Simeonda were persons of very holy life, as is seen by
the many temples built and endowed by them, of which the
church of St. Miniato, near Florence, is one. Henry died in
1024, and was succeeded by Conrad of Suabia; and the latter
by Henry II., who came to Rome; and as there was a schism in
the church of three popes, he set them all aside, and caused
the election of Clement II., by whom he was crowned
emperor.
History of Florence
Book I
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Chapter II
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