History of Florence
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Book II
Chapter IV
The Cerchi and the Donati -- Origin of the
Bianca and Nera factions in Pistoia -- They come to
Florence -- Open enmity of the Donati and the Cerchi --
Their first conflict -- The Cerchi head the Bianca
faction -- The Donati take part with the Nera -- The
pope's legate at Florence increases the confusion with an
interdict -- New affray between the Cerchi and the Donati
-- The Donati and others of the Nera faction banished by
the advice of Dante Alighieri -- Charles of Valois sent
by the pope to Florence -- The Florentines suspect him --
Corso Donati and the rest of the Nera party return to
Florence -- Veri Cerchi flies -- The pope's legate again
in Florence -- The city again interdicted -- New
disturbances -- The Bianchi banished -- Dante banished --
Corso Donati excites fresh troubles -- The pope's legate
endeavors to restore the emigrants but does not succeed
-- Great fire in Florence.
The Cerchi and the Donati were, for riches, nobility, and
the number and influence of their followers, perhaps the two
most distinguished families in Florence. Being neighbors,
both in the city and the country, there had arisen between
them some slight displeasure, which, however, had not
occasioned an open quarrel, and perhaps never would have
produced any serious effect if the malignant humors had not
been increased by new causes. Among the first families of
Pistoia was the Cancellieri. It happened that Lore, son of
Gulielmo, and Geri, son of Bertacca, both of this family,
playing together, and coming to words, Geri was slightly
wounded by Lore. This displeased Gulielmo; and, designing by
a suitable apology to remove all cause of further animosity,
he ordered his son to go to the house of the father of the
youth whom he had wounded and ask pardon. Lore obeyed his
father; but this act of virtue failed to soften the cruel
mind of Bertacca, and having caused Lore to be seized, in
order to add the greatest indignity to his brutal act, he
ordered his servants to chop off the youth's hand upon a
block used for cutting meat upon, and then said to him, "Go
to thy father, and tell him that sword wounds are cured with
iron and not with words."
The unfeeling barbarity of this act so greatly
exasperated Gulielmo that he ordered his people to take arms
for his revenge. Bertacca prepared for his defense, and not
only that family, but the whole city of Pistoia, became
divided. And as the Cancellieri were descended from a
Cancelliere who had had two wives, of whom one was called
Bianca (white), one party was named by those who were
descended from her BIANCA; and the other, by way of greater
distinction, was called NERA (black). Much and
long-continued strife took place between the two, attended
with the death of many men and the destruction of much
property; and not being able to effect a union among
themselves, but weary of the evil, and anxious either to
bring it to an end, or, by engaging others in their quarrel,
increase it, they came to Florence, where the Neri, on
account of their familiarity with the Donati, were favored
by Corso, the head of that family; and on this account the
Bianchi, that they might have a powerful head to defend them
against the Donati, had recourse to Veri de Cerchi, a man in
no respect inferior to Corso.
This quarrel, and the parties in it, brought from
Pistoia, increased the old animosity between the Cerchi and
the Donati, and it was already so manifest, that the Priors
and all well-disposed men were in hourly apprehension of its
breaking out, and causing a division of the whole city. They
therefore applied to the pontiff, praying that he would
interpose his authority between these turbulent parties, and
provide the remedy which they found themselves unable to
furnish. The pope sent for Veri, and charged him to make
peace with the Donati, at which Veri exhibited great
astonishment, saying that he had no enmity against them, and
that as pacification presupposes war, he did not know, there
being no war between them, how peacemaking could be
necessary. Veri having returned from Rome without anything
being effected, the rage of the parties increased to such a
degree, that any trivial accident seemed sufficient to make
it burst forth, as indeed presently happened.
It was in the month of May, during which, and upon
holidays, it is the custom of Florence to hold festivals and
public rejoicings throughout the city. Some youths of the
Donati family, with their friends, upon horseback, were
standing near the church of the Holy Trinity to look at a
party of ladies who were dancing; thither also came some of
the Cerchi, like the Donati, accompanied with many of the
nobility, and, not knowing that the Donati were before them,
pushed their horses and jostled them; thereupon the Donati,
thinking themselves insulted, drew their swords, nor were
the Cerchi at all backward to do the same, and not till
after the interchange of many wounds, they separated. This
disturbance was the beginning of great evils; for the whole
city became divided, the people as well as the nobility, and
the parties took the names of the Bianchi and the Neri. The
Cerchi were at the head of the Bianchi faction, to which
adhered the Adimari, the Abati, a part of the Tosinghi, of
the Bardi, of the Rossi, of the Frescobaldi, of the Nerli,
and of the Manelli; all the Mozzi, the Scali, Gherardini,
Cavalcanti, Malespini, Bostichi, Giandonati, Vecchietti, and
Arrigucci. To these were joined many families of the people,
and all the Ghibellines then in Florence, so that their
great numbers gave them almost the entire government of the
city.
The Donati, at the head of whom was Corso, joined the
Nera party, to which also adhered those members of the
above-named families who did not take part with the Bianchi;
and besides these, the whole of the Pazzi, the Bisdomini,
Manieri, Bagnesi, Tornaquinci, Spini, Buondelmonti,
Gianfigliazzi, and the Brunelleschi. Nor did the evil
confine itself to the city alone, for the whole country was
divided upon it, so that the Captains of the Six Parts, and
whoever were attached to the Guelphic party or the
well-being of the republic, were very much afraid that this
new division would occasion the destruction of the city, and
give new life to the Ghibelline faction. They, therefore,
sent again to Pope Boniface, desiring that, unless he wished
that city which had always been the shield of the church
should either be ruined or become Ghibelline, he would
consider some means for her relief. The pontiff thereupon
sent to Florence, as his legate, Cardinal Matteo
d'Acquasparta, a Portuguese, who, finding the Bianchi, as
the most powerful, the least in fear, not quite submissive
to him, he interdicted the city, and left it in anger, so
that greater confusion now prevailed than had done
previously to his coming.
The minds of men being in great excitement, it happened
that at a funeral which many of the Donati and the Cerchi
attended, they first came to words and then to arms, from
which, however, nothing but merely tumult resulted at the
moment. However, having each retired to their houses, the
Cerchi determined to attack the Donati, but, by the valor of
Corso, they were repulsed and great numbers of them wounded.
The city was in arms. The laws and the Signory were set at
nought by the rage of the nobility, and the best and wisest
citizens were full of apprehension. The Donati and their
followers, being the least powerful, were in the greatest
fear, and to provide for their safety they called together
Corso, the Captains of the Parts, and the other leaders of
the Neri, and resolved to apply to the pope to appoint some
personage of royal blood, that he might reform Florence;
thinking by this means to overcome the Bianchi. Their
meeting and determination became known to the Priors, and
the adverse party represented it as a conspiracy against the
liberties of the republic. Both parties being in arms, the
Signory, one of whom at that time was the poet Dante, took
courage, and from his advice and prudence, caused the people
to rise for the preservation of order, and being joined by
many from the country, they compelled the leaders of both
parties to lay aside their arms, and banished Corso, with
many of the Neri. And as an evidence of the impartiality of
their motives, they also banished many of the Bianchi, who,
however, soon afterward, under pretense of some justifiable
cause, returned.
Corso and his friends, thinking the pope favorable to
their party, went to Rome and laid their grievances before
him, having previously forwarded a statement of them in
writing. Charles of Valois, brother of the king of France,
was then at the papal court, having been called into Italy
by the king of Naples, to go over into Sicily. The pope,
therefore, at the earnest prayers of the banished
Florentines, consented to send Charles to Florence, till the
season suitable for his going to Sicily should arrive. He
therefore came, and although the Bianchi, who then governed,
were very apprehensive, still, as the head of the Guelphs,
and appointed by the pope, they did not dare to oppose him,
and in order to secure his friendship, they gave him
authority to dispose of the city as he thought proper.
Thus authorized, Charles armed all his friends and
followers, which step gave the people so strong a suspicion
that he designed to rob them of their liberty, that each
took arms, and kept at his own house, in order to be ready,
if Charles should make any such attempt. The Cerchi and the
leaders of the Bianchi faction had acquired universal hatred
by having, while at the head of the republic, conducted
themselves with unbecoming pride; and this induced Corso and
the banished of the Neri party to return to Florence,
knowing well that Charles and the Captains of the Parts were
favorable to them. And while the citizens, for fear of
Charles, kept themselves in arms, Corso, with all the
banished, and followed by many others, entered Florence
without the least impediment. And although Veri de Cerchi
was advised to oppose him, he refused to do so, saying that
he wished the people of Florence, against whom he came,
should punish him. However, the contrary happened, for he
was welcomed, not punished by them; and it behooved Veri to
save himself by flight.
Corso, having forced the Pinti Gate, assembled his party
at San Pietro Maggiore, near his own house, where, having
drawn together a great number of friends and people desirous
of change, he set at liberty all who had been imprisoned for
offenses, whether against the state or against individuals.
He compelled the existing Signory to withdraw privately to
their own houses, elected a new one from the people of the
Neri party, and for five days plundered the leaders of the
Bianchi. The Cerchi, and the other heads of their faction,
finding Charles opposed to them, withdrew from the city, and
retired to their strongholds. And although at first they
would not listen to the advice of the pope, they were now
compelled to turn to him for assistance, declaring that
instead of uniting the city, Charles had caused greater
disunion than before. The pope again sent Matteo
d'Acquasparta, his legate, who made peace between the Cerchi
and the Donati, and strengthened it with marriages and new
betrothals. But wishing that the Bianchi should participate
in the employments of the government, to which the Neri who
were then at the head of it would not consent, he withdrew,
with no more satisfaction nor less enraged than on the
former occasion, and left the city interdicted for
disobedience.
Both parties remained in Florence, and equally
discontented; the Neri from seeing their enemies at hand,
and apprehending the loss of their power, and the Bianchi
from finding themselves without either honor or authority;
and to these natural causes of animosity new injuries were
added. Niccolo de' Cerchi, with many of his friends, went to
his estates, and being arrived at the bridge of Affrico, was
attacked by Simone, son of Corso Donati. The contest was
obstinate, and one each side had a sorrowful conclusion; for
Niccolo was slain, and Simone was so severely wounded that
he died on the following night.
This event again disturbed the entire city; and although
the Neri were most to blame, they were defended by those who
were at the head of affairs; and before sentence was
delivered, a conspiracy of the Bianchi with Piero Ferrante,
one of the barons who had accompanied Charles, was
discovered, by whose assistance they sought to be replaced
in the government. The matter became known from letters
addressed to him by the Cerchi, although some were of
opinion that they were not genuine, but written and
pretended to be found, by the Donati, to abate the infamy
which their party had acquired by the death of Niccolo. The
whole of the Cerchi were, however, banished, -- with their
followers of the Bianchi party, of whom was Dante the poet,
-- their property confiscated, and their houses pulled down.
They sought refuge, with a great number of Ghibellines who
had joined them, in many places, seeking fresh fortunes in
new undertakings. Charles, having effected the purpose of
his coming, left the city, and returned to the pope to
pursue his enterprise against Sicily, in which he was
neither wiser nor more fortunate than he had been at
Florence; so that with disgrace and the loss of many of his
followers, he withdrew to France.
After the departure of Charles, Florence remained quiet.
Corso alone was restless, thinking he did not possess that
sort of authority in the city which was due to his rank; for
the government being in the hands of the people, he saw the
offices of the republic administered by many inferior to
himself. Moved by passions of this kind, he endeavored,
under the pretense of an honorable design, to justify his
own dishonorable purposes, and accused many citizens who had
the management of the public money, of applying it to their
private uses, and recommended that they should be brought to
justice and punished. This opinion was adopted by many who
had the same views as himself; and many in ignorance joined
them, thinking Corso actuated only by pure patriotism. On
the other hand, the accused citizens, enjoying the popular
favor, defended themselves, and this difference arose to
such a height, that, after civil means, they had recourse to
arms. Of the one party were Corso and Lottieri, bishop of
Florence, with many of the nobility and some of the people;
on the other side were the Signory, with the greater part of
the people; so that skirmishes took place in many parts of
the city. The Signory, seeing their danger great, sent for
aid to the Lucchese, and presently all the people of Lucca
were in Florence. With their assistance the disturbances
were settled for the moment, and the people retained the
government and their liberty, without attempting by any
other means to punish the movers of the disorder.
The pope had heard of the tumults at Florence, and sent
his legate, Niccolo da Prato, to settle them, who, being in
high reputation both for his quality, learning, and mode of
life, presently acquired so much of the people's confidence,
that authority was given him to establish such a government
as he should think proper. As he was of Ghibelline origin,
he determined to recall the banished; but designing first to
gain the affections of the lower orders, he renewed the
ancient companies of the people, which increased the popular
power and reduced that of the nobility. The legate, thinking
the multitude on his side, now endeavored to recall the
banished, and, after attempting in many ways, none of which
succeeded, he fell so completely under the suspicion of the
government, that he was compelled to quit the city, and
returned to the pope in great wrath, leaving Florence full
of confusion and suffering under an interdict. Neither was
the city disturbed with one division alone, but by many;
first the enmity between the people and the nobility, then
that of the Ghibellines and the Guelphs, and lastly, of the
Bianchi and the Neri. All the citizens were, therefore, in
arms, for many were dissatisfied with the departure of the
legate, and wished for the return of the banished. The first
who set this disturbance on foot were the Medici and the
Guinigi, who, with the legate, had discovered themselves in
favor of the rebels; and thus skirmishes took place in many
parts of the city.
In addition to these evils a fire occurred, which first
broke out at the garden of St. Michael, in the houses of the
Abati; it thence extended to those of the Capoinsacchi, and
consumed them, with those of the Macci, Amieri, Toschi,
Cipriani, Lamberti, Cavalcanti, and the whole of the New
Market; from thence it spread to the gate of St. Maria, and
burned it to the ground; turning from the old bridge, it
destroyed the houses of the Gherardini, Pulci, Amidei, and
Lucardesi, and with these so many others that the number
amounted to seventeen hundred. It was the opinion of many
that this fire occurred by accident during the heat of the
disturbances. Others affirm that it was begun willfully by
Neri Abati, prior of St. Pietro Scarragio, a dissolute
character, fond of mischief, who, seeing the people occupied
with the combat, took the opportunity of committing a wicked
act, for which the citizens, being thus employed, could
offer no remedy. And to insure his success, he set fire to
the house of his own brotherhood, where he had the best
opportunity of doing it. This was in the year 1304, Florence
being afflicted both with fire and the sword. Corso Donati
alone remained unarmed in so many tumults; for he thought he
would more easily become the arbitrator between the
contending parties when, weary of strife, they should be
inclined to accommodation. They laid down their arms,
however, rather from satiety of evil than from any desire of
union; and the only consequence was, that the banished were
not recalled, and the party which favored them remained
inferior.
History of Florence
Book II
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Chapter III
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