History of Florence
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Book I
Chapter V
- The state of Italy -- Beginning of the
greatness of the house of Este -- Guelphs and
Ghibellines -- Death of the Emperor Frederick II. --
Manfred takes possession of the kingdom of Naples --
Movements of the Guelphs and Ghibellines in Lombardy
-- Charles of Anjou invested by the pope with the
kingdom of Naples and Sicily -- Restless policy of the
popes -- Ambitious views of pope Nicholas III. --
Nephews of the popes -- Sicilian vespers -- The
Emperor Rodolph allows many cities to purchase their
independence -- Institution of the jubilee -- The
popes at Avignon.
At this time the states of Italy were governed in the
following manner: the Romans no longer elected consuls, but
instead of them, and with the same powers, they appointed
one senator, and sometimes more. The league which the cities
of Lombardy had formed against Frederick Barbarossa still
continued, and comprehended Milan, Brescia, Mantua, and the
greater number of the cities of Romagna, together with
Verona, Vicenza, Padua, and Trevisa. Those which took part
with the emperor, were Cremona, Bergamo, Parma, Reggio, and
Trento. The other cities and fortresses of Lombardy,
Romagna, and the march of Trevisa, favored, according to
their necessities, sometimes one party, sometimes the
other.
In the time of Otho III. there had come into Italy a man
called Ezelin, who, remaining in the country, had a son, and
he too had a son named Ezelin. This person, being rich and
powerful, took part with Frederick, who, as we have said,
was at enmity with the pope; Frederick, at the instigation
and with the assistance of Ezelin, took Verona and Mantua,
destroyed Vicenza, occupied Padua, routed the army of the
united cities, and then directed his course towards Tuscany.
Ezelin, in the meantime, had subdued the whole of the
Trevisian March, but could not prevail against Ferrara,
which was defended by Azone da Este and the forces which the
pope had in Lombardy; and, as the enemy were compelled to
withdraw, the pope gave Ferrara in fee to this Azone, from
whom are descended those who now govern that city. Frederick
halted at Pisa, desirous of making himself lord of Tuscany;
but, while endeavoring to discover what friends and foes he
had in that province, he scattered so many seeds of discord
as occasioned the ruin of Italy; for the factions of the
Guelphs and Ghibellines multiplied,--those who supported the
church taking the name of Guelphs, while the followers of
the emperor were called Ghibellines, these names being first
heard at Pistoia. Frederick, marching from Pisa, assailed
and wasted the territories of the church in a variety of
ways; so that the pope, having no other remedy, unfurled
against him the banner of the cross, as his predecessor had
done against the Saracens. Frederick, that he might be
suddenly abandoned by his people, as Frederick Barbarossa
and others had been, took into his pay a number of Saracens;
and to bind them to him, and establish in Italy a firm
bulwark against the church, without fear of papal
maledictions, he gave them Nocera in the kingdom of Naples,
that, having a refuge of their own, they might be placed in
greater security. The pontificate was now occupied by
Innocent IV., who, being in fear of Frederick, went to
Genoa, and thence to France, where he appointed a council to
be held at Lyons, where it was the intention of Frederick to
attend, but he was prevented by the rebellion of Parma: and,
being repulsed, he went into Tuscany, and from thence to
Sicily, where he died, leaving his son Conrad in Suabia; and
in Puglia, Manfred, whom he had created duke of Benevento,
born of a concubine. Conrad came to take possession of the
kingdom, and having arrived at Naples, died, leaving an
infant son named Corradino, who was then in Germany. On this
account Manfred occupied the state, first as guardian of
Corradino, but afterward, causing a report to be circulated
that Corradino had died, made himself king, contrary to the
wishes of both the pope and the Neapolitans, who, however,
were obliged to submit.
While these things were occurring in the kingdom of
Naples, many movements took place in Lombardy between the
Guelphs and the Ghibellines. The Guelphs were headed by a
legate of the pope; and the Ghibelline party by Ezelin, who
possessed nearly the whole of Lombardy beyond the Po; and,
as in the course of the war Padua rebelled, he put to death
twelve thousand of its citizens. But before its close he
himself was slain, in the eightieth year of his age, and all
the places he had held became free. Manfred, king of Naples,
continued those enmities against the church which had been
begun by his ancestors, and kept the pope, Urban IV., in
continual alarm; so that, in order to subdue him, Urban
summoned the crusaders, and went to Perugia to await their
arrival. Seeing them few and slow in their approach, he
found that more able assistance was necessary to conquer
Manfred. He therefore sought the favor of France; created
Louis of Anjou, the king's brother, sovereign of Naples and
Sicily, and excited him to come into Italy to take
possession of that kingdom. But before Charles came to Rome
the pope died, and was succeeded by Clement IV., in whose
time he arrived at Ostia, with thirty galleys, and ordered
that the rest of his forces should come by land. During his
abode at Rome, the citizens, in order to attach him to them,
made him their senator, and the pope invested him with the
kingdom, on condition that he should pay annually to the
church the sum of fifty thousand ducats; and it was decreed
that, from thenceforth, neither Charles nor any other
person, who might be king of Naples, should be emperor also.
Charles marched against Manfred, routed his army, and slew
him near Benevento, and then became sovereign of Sicily and
Naples. Corradino, to whom, by his father's will, the state
belonged, having collected a great force in Germany, marched
into Italy against Charles, with whom he came to an
engagement at Tagliacozzo, was taken prisoner while
endeavoring to escape, and being unknown, put to death.
Italy remained in repose until the pontificate of Adrian
V. Charles, being at Rome and governing the city by virtue
of his office of senator, the pope, unable to endure his
power, withdrew to Viterbo, and solicited the Emperor
Rodolph to come into Italy and assist him. Thus the popes,
sometimes in zeal for religion, at others moved by their own
ambition, were continually calling in new parties and
exciting new disturbances. As soon as they had made a prince
powerful, they viewed him with jealousy and sought his ruin;
and never allowed another to rule the country, which, from
their own imbecility, they were themselves unable to govern.
Princes were in fear of them; for, fighting or running away,
the popes always obtained the advantage, unless it happened
they were entrapped by deceit, as occurred to Boniface
VIII., and some others, who under pretense of friendship,
were ensnared by the emperors. Rodolph did not come into
Italy, being detained by the war in which he was engaged
with the king of Bohemia. At this time Adrian died, and
Nicholas III., of the Orsini family, became pontiff. He was
a bold, ambitious man; and being resolved at any event to
diminish the power of Charles, induced the Emperor Rodolph
to complain that he had a governor in Tuscany favorable to
the Guelphic faction, who after the death of Manfred had
been replaced by him. Charles yielded to the emperor and
withdrew his governor, and the pope sent one of his nephews,
a cardinal, as governor for the emperor, who, for the honor
done him, restored Romagna to the church, which had been
taken from her by his predecessors, and the pope made
Bertoldo Orsino duke of Romagna. As Nicholas now thought
himself powerful enough to oppose Charles, he deprived him
of the office of senator, and made a decree that no one of
royal race should ever be a senator in Rome. It was his
intention to deprive Charles of Sicily, and to this end he
entered into a secret negotiation with Peter, king of
Aragon, which took effect in the following papacy. He also
had the design of creating two kings out of his family, the
one in Lombardy, the other in Tuscany, whose power would
defend the church from the Germans who might design to come
into Italy, and from the French, who were in the kingdom of
Naples and Sicily. But with these thoughts he died. He was
the first pope who openly exhibited his own ambition; and,
under pretense of making the church great, conferred honors
and emolument upon his own family. Previous to his time no
mention is made of the nephews or families of any pontiff,
but future history is full of them; nor is there now
anything left for them to attempt, except the effort to make
the papacy hereditary. True it is, the princes of their
creating have not long sustained their honors; for the
pontiffs, being generally of very limited existence, did not
get their plants properly established.
To Nicholas succeeded Martin IV., of French origin, and
consequently favorable to the party of Charles, who sent him
assistance against the rebellion of Romagna; and while they
were encamped at Furli, Guido Bonatto, an astrologer,
contrived that at an appointed moment the people should
assail the forces of the king, and the plan succeeding, all
the French were taken and slain. About this period was also
carried into effect the plot of Pope Nicholas and Peter,
king of Aragon, by which the Sicilians murdered all the
French that were in that island; and Peter made himself
sovereign of it, saying, that it belonged to him in the
right of his wife Gostanza, daughter of Manfred. But
Charles, while making warlike preparations for the recovery
of Sicily, died, leaving a son, Charles II., who was made
prisoner in Sicily, and to recover his liberty promised to
return to his prison, if within three years he did not
obtain the pope's consent that the kings of Aragon should be
invested with the kingdom of Sicily.
The Emperor Rodolph, instead of coming into Italy, gave
the empire the advantage of having done so, by sending an
ambassador, with authority to make all those cities free
which would redeem themselves with money. Many purchased
their freedom, and with liberty changed their mode of
living. Adolpho of Saxony succeeded to the empire; and to
the papacy, Pietro del Murrone, who took the name of
Celestino; but, being a hermit and full of sanctity, after
six months renounced the pontificate, and Boniface VIII. was
elected.
After a time the French and Germans left Italy, and the
country remained wholly in the hands of the Italians; but
Providence ordained that the pope, when these enemies were
withdrawn, should neither establish nor enjoy his authority,
and raised two very powerful families in Rome, the Colonnesi
and the Orsini, who with their arms, and the proximity of
their abode, kept the pontificate weak. Boniface then
determined to destroy the Colonnesi, and, besides
excommunicating, endeavored to direct the weapons of the
church against them. This, although it did them some injury,
proved more disastrous to the pope; for those arms which
from attachment to the faith performed valiantly against its
enemies, as soon as they were directed against Christians
for private ambition, ceased to do the will of those who
wished to wield them. And thus the too eager desire to
gratify themselves, caused the pontiffs by degrees to lose
their military power. Besides what is just related, the pope
deprived two cardinals of the Colonnesi family of their
office; and Sciarra, the head of the house, escaping
unknown, was taken by corsairs of Catalonia and put to the
oar; but being afterward recognized at Marseilles, he was
sent to Philip, king of France, who had been excommunicated
and deprived of the kingdom. Philip, considering that in a
war against the pontiff he would either be a loser or run
great hazards, had recourse to deception, and simulating a
wish to come to terms, secretly sent Sciarra into Italy,
who, having arrived at Anagnia, where his holiness then
resided, assembled a few friends, and in the night took him
prisoner. And although the people of Anagnia set him at
liberty shortly after, yet from grief at the injury he died
mad. Boniface was founder of the jubilee in 1300, and fixed
that it should be celebrated at each revolution of one
hundred years. In those times various troubles arose between
the Guelph and Ghibelline factions; and the emperors having
abandoned Italy, many places became free, and many were
occupied by tyrants. Pope Benedict restored the scarlet hat
to the cardinals of the Colonnesi family, and reblessed
Philip, king of France. He was succeeded by Clement V., who,
being a Frenchman, removed the papal court to Avignon in
1305.
History of Florence
Book I
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Chapter IV
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