History of Florence
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Book II
Chapter III
Changes in Florence -- The Ghibellines
recalled -- New form of government in Florence -- The
Signory created -- Victory over the Aretins -- The
Gonfalonier of Justice created -- Ubaldo Ruffoli the
first Gonfalonier -- Giano della Bella -- New reform by
his advice -- Giano della Bella becomes a voluntary exile
-- Dissensions between the people and the nobility -- The
tumults composed -- Reform of Government -- Public
buildings -- The prosperous state of the city.
Florence was at this time in a very unhappy condition;
for the great Guelphic families had become insolent, and set
aside the authority of the magistrates; so that murders and
other atrocities were daily committed, and the perpetrators
escaped unpunished, under the protection of one or other of
the nobility. The leaders of the people, in order to
restrain this insolence, determined to recall those who had
been expelled, and thus gave the legate an opportunity of
uniting the city. The Ghibellines returned, and, instead of
twelve governors, fourteen were appointed, seven for each
party, who held their office one year, and were to be chosen
by the pope. The Florentines lived under this government two
years, till the pontificate of Martin, who restored to
Charles all the authority which had been taken from him by
Nicholas, so that parties were again active in Tuscany; for
the Florentines took arms against the emperor's governor,
and to deprive the Ghibellines of power, and restrain the
nobility, established a new form of government. This was in
the year 1282, and the companies of the Arts, since
magistrates had been appointed and colors given to them, had
acquired so great influence, that of their own authority
they ordered that, instead of fourteen citizens, three
should be appointed and called Priors, to hold the
government of the republic two months, and chosen from
either the people or the nobility. After the expiration of
the first magistracy they were augmented to six, that one
might be chosen from each sixth of the city, and this number
was preserved till the year 1342, when the city was divided
into quarters, and the Priors became eight, although upon
some occasions during the interim they were twelve.
This government, as will be seen hereafter, occasioned
the ruin of the nobility; for the people by various causes
excluded them from all participation in it, and then
trampled upon them without respect. The nobles at first,
owing to their divisions among themselves, made no
opposition; and each being anxious to rob the other of
influence in the state, they lost it altogether. To this
government a palace was given, in which they were to reside
constantly, and all requisite officers were appointed; it
having been previously the custom of councils and
magistrates to assemble in churches. At first they were only
called Priors, but to increase their distinction the word
signori, or lords, was soon afterward adopted. The
Florentines remained for some time in domestic quiet, during
which they made war with the Aretins for having expelled the
Guelphs, and obtained a complete victory over them at
Campaldino. The city being increased in riches and
population, it was found expedient to extend the walls, the
circle of which was enlarged to the extent it at present
remains, although its diameter was previously only the space
between the old bridge and the church of St. Lorenzo.
Wars abroad and peace within the city had caused the
Guelph and Ghibelline factions to become almost extinct; and
the only party feeling which seemed occasionally to glow,
was that which naturally exists in all cities between the
higher classes and the people; for the latter, wishing to
live in conformity with the laws, and the former to be
themselves the rulers of the people, it was not possible for
them to abide in perfect amity together. This ungenial
disposition, while their fear of the Ghibellines kept them
in order, did not discover itself, but no sooner were they
subdued than it broke forth, and not a day passed without
some of the populace being injured, while the laws were
insufficient to procure redress, for every noble with his
relations and friends defended himself against the forces of
the Priors and the Capitano. To remedy this evil, the
leaders of the Arts' companies ordered that every Signory at
the time of entering upon the duties of office should
appoint a Gonfalonier of Justice, chosen from the people,
and place a thousand armed men at his disposal divided into
twenty companies of fifty men each, and that he, with his
gonfalon or banner and his forces, should be ready to
enforce the execution of the laws whenever called upon,
either by the Signors themselves or the Capitano. The first
elected to this high office was Ubaldo Ruffoli. This man
unfurled his gonfalon, and destroyed the houses of the
Galletti, on account of a member of that family having slain
one of the Florentine people in France. The violent
animosities among the nobility enabled the companies of the
Arts to establish this law with facility; and the former no
sooner saw the provision which had been made against them
than they felt the acrimonious spirit with which it was
enforced. At first it impressed them with greater terror,
but they soon after returned to their accustomed insolence,
for one or more of their body always making part of the
Signory, gave them opportunities of impeding the
Gonfalonier, so that he could not perform the duties of his
office. Besides this, the accuser always required a witness
of the injury he had received, and no one dared to give
evidence against the nobility. Thus in a short time Florence
again fell into the same disorders as before, and the
tyranny exercised against the people was as great as ever;
for the decisions of justice were either prevented or
delayed, and sentences were not carried into execution.
In this unhappy state, the people not knowing what to do,
Giano della Bella, of a very noble family, and a lover of
liberty, encouraged the heads of the Arts to reform the
constitution of the city; and by his advice it was ordered
that the Gonfalonier should reside with the Priors, and have
four thousand men at his command. They deprived the nobility
of the right to sit in the Signory. They condemned the
associates of a criminal to the same penalty as himself, and
ordered that public report should be taken as evidence. By
these laws, which were called the ordinations of justice,
the people acquired great influence, and Giano della Bella
not a small share of trouble; for he was thoroughly hated by
the great, as the destroyer of their power, while the
opulent among the people envied him, for they thought he
possessed too great authority. This became very evident upon
the first occasion that presented itself.
It happened that a man from the class of the people was
killed in a riot, in which several of the nobility had taken
a part, and among the rest Corso Donati, to whom, as the
most forward of the party, the death was attributed. He was,
therefore, taken by the captain of the people, and whether
he was really innocent of the crime or the Capitano was
afraid of condemning him, he was acquitted. This acquittal
displeased the people so much, that, seizing their arms,
they ran to the house of Giano della Bella, to beg that he
would compel the execution of those laws which he had
himself made. Giano, who wished Corso to be punished, did
not insist upon their laying down their arms, as many were
of opinion he ought to have done, but advised them to go to
the Signory, complain of the fact, and beg that they would
take it into consideration. The people, full of wrath,
thinking themselves insulted by the Capitano and abandoned
by Giano della Bella, instead of going to the Signory went
to the palace of the Capitano, of which they made themselves
masters, and plundered it.
This outrage displeased the whole city, and those who
wished the ruin of Giano laid the entire blame upon him; and
as in the succeeding Signory there was an enemy of his, he
was accused to the Capitano as the originator of the riot.
While the case was being tried, the people took arms, and,
proceeding to his house, offered to defend him against the
Signory and his enemies. Giano, however, did not wish to put
this burst of popular favor to the proof, or trust his life
to the magistrates, for he feared the malignity of the
latter and the instability of the former; so, in order to
remove an occasion for his enemies to injure him, or his
friends to offend the laws, he determined to withdraw,
deliver his countrymen from the fear they had of him, and,
leaving the city which at his own charge and peril he had
delivered from the servitude of the great, become a
voluntary exile.
After the departure of Giano della Bella the nobility
began to entertain hopes of recovering their authority; and
judging their misfortune to have arisen from their
divisions, they sent two of their body to the Signory, which
they thought was favorable to them, to beg they would be
pleased to moderate the severity of the laws made against
them. As soon as their demand became known, the minds of the
people were much excited; for they were afraid the Signors
would submit to them; and so, between the desire of the
nobility and the jealousy of the people, arms were resorted
to. The nobility were drawn together in three places: near
the church of St. John, in the New Market, and in the Piazza
of the Mozzi, under three leaders, Forese Adimari, Vanni de
Mozzi, and Geri Spini. The people assembled in immense
numbers, under their ensigns, before the palace of the
Signory, which at that time was situated near St. Procolo;
and, as they suspected the integrity of the Signory, they
added six citizens to their number to take part in the
management of affairs.
While both parties were preparing for the fight, some
individuals, as well of the people as of the nobility,
accompanied by a few priests of respectable character,
mingled among them for the purpose of effecting a
pacification, reminding the nobility that their loss of
power, and the laws which were made against them, had been
occasioned by their haughty conduct, and the mischievous
tendency of their proceedings; that resorting to arms to
recover by force what they had lost by illiberal measures
and disunion, would tend to the destruction of their country
and increase the difficulties of their own position; that
they should bear in mind that the people, both in riches,
numbers, and hatred, were far stronger than they; and that
their nobility, on account of which they assumed to be above
others, did not contribute to win battles, and would be
found, when they came to arms, to be but an empty name, and
insufficient to defend them against so many. On the other
hand, they reminded the people that it is not prudent to
wish always to have the last blow; that it is an injudicious
step to drive men to desperation, for he who is without hope
is also without fear; that they ought not to forget that in
the wars the nobility had always done honor to the country,
and therefore it was neither wise nor just to pursue them
with so much bitterness; and that although the nobility
could bear with patience the loss of the supreme magistracy,
they could not endure that, by the existing laws, it should
be in the power of everyone to drive them from their
country; and, therefore, it would be well to qualify these
laws, and, in furtherance of so good a result, be better to
lay down their arms than, trusting to numbers, try the
fortune of a battle; for it is often seen that the many are
overcome by the few. Variety of opinion was found among the
people; many wished to decide the question by arms at once,
for they were assured it would have to be done some time,
and that it would be better to do so then than delay till
the enemy had acquired greater strength; and that if they
thought a mitigation of the laws would satisfy them, that
then they would be glad to comply, but that the pride of the
nobility was so great they would not submit unless they were
compelled. To many others, who were more peaceable and
better disposed, it appeared a less evil to qualify the laws
a little than to come to battle; and their opinion
prevailing, it was provided that no accusation against the
nobility could be received unless supported with sufficient
testimony.
Although arms were laid aside, both parties remained full
of suspicion, and each fortified itself with men and places
of strength. The people reorganized the government, and
lessened the number of its officers, to which measure they
were induced by finding that the Signors appointed from the
families, of which the following were the heads, had been
favorable to the nobility, viz.: the Mancini, Magalotti,
Altoviti, Peruzzi, and Cerretani. Having settled the
government, for the greater magnificence and security of the
Signory, they laid the foundation of their palace; and to
make space for the piazza, removed the houses that had
belonged to the Uberti; they also at the same period
commenced the public prisons. These buildings were completed
in a few years; nor did our city ever enjoy a greater state
of prosperity than in those times: filled with men of great
wealth and reputation; possessing within her walls 30,000
men capable of bearing arms, and in the country 70,000,
while the whole of Tuscany, either as subjects or friends,
owed obedience to Florence. And although there might be some
indignation and jealousy between the nobility and the
people, they did not produce any evil effect, but all lived
together in unity and peace. And if this peace had not been
disturbed by internal enmities there would have been no
cause of apprehension whatever, for the city had nothing to
fear either from the empire or from those citizens whom
political reasons kept from their homes, and was in
condition to meet all the states of Italy with her own
forces. The evil, however, which external powers could not
effect, was brought about by those within.
History of Florence
Book II
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Chapter II
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