History of Florence
by Nicolo Machiavelli
Book VIII
Chapter IV
The duke of Calabria routs the Florentine
army at Poggibonzi -- Dismay in Florence on account of
the defeat -- Progress of the duke of Calabria -- The
Florentines wish for peace -- Lorenzo de' Medici
determines to go to Naples to treat with the king --
Lodovico Sforza, surnamed the Moor, and his brothers,
recalled to Milan -- Changes in the government of that
city in consequence -- The Genoese take Serezana --
Lorenzo de' Medici arrives at Naples -- Peace concluded
with the king -- The pope and the Venetians consent to
the peace -- The Florentines in fear of the duke of
Calabria -- Enterprises of the Turks -- They take Otranto
-- The Florentines reconciled with the pope -- Their
ambassadors at the papal court -- The pope's reply to the
ambassadors -- The king of Naples restores to the
Florentines all the fortresses he had taken.
The army being thus reduced, without a leader, and
disorder prevailing in every department, the duke of
Calabria, who was with his forces near Sienna, resolved to
attack them immediately. The Florentines, finding the enemy
at hand, were seized with a sudden panic; neither their
arms, nor their numbers, in which they were superior to
their adversaries, nor their position, which was one of
great strength, could give them confidence; but observing
the dust occasioned by the enemy's approach, without waiting
for a sight of them, they fled in all directions, leaving
their ammunition, carriages, and artillery to be taken by
the foe. Such cowardice and disorder prevailed in the armies
of those times, that the turning of a horse's head or tail
was sufficient to decide the fate of an expedition. This
defeat loaded the king's troops with booty, and filled the
Florentines with dismay; for the city, besides the war, was
afflicted with pestilence, which prevailed so extensively,
that all who possessed villas fled to them to escape death.
This occasioned the defeat to be attended with greater
horror; for those citizens whose possessions lay in the Val
di Pesa and the Val d'Elsa, having retired to them, hastened
to Florence with all speed as soon as they heard of the
disaster, taking with them not only their children and their
property, but even their laborers; so that it seemed as if
the enemy were expected every moment in the city. Those who
were appointed to the management of the war, perceiving the
universal consternation, commanded the victorious forces in
the Perugino to give up their enterprise in that direction,
and march to oppose the enemy in the Val d'Elsa, who, after
their victory, plundered the country without opposition; and
although the Florentine army had so closely pressed the city
of Perugia that it was expected to fall into their hands
every instant, the people preferred defending their own
possessions to endeavoring to seize those of others. The
troops, thus withdrawn from the pursuit of their good
fortune, were marched to San Casciano, a castle within eight
miles of Florence; the leaders thinking they could take up
no other position till the relics of the routed army were
assembled. On the other hand, the enemy being under no
further restraint at Perugia, and emboldened by the
departure of the Florentines, plundered to a large amount in
the districts of Arezzo and Cortona; while those who under
Alfonso, duke of Calabria, had been victorious near
Poggibonzi, took the town itself; sacked Vico and Certaldo,
and after these conquests and pillagings encamped before the
fortress of Colle, which was considered very strong; and as
the garrison was brave and faithful to the Florentines, it
was hoped they would hold the enemy at bay till the republic
was able to collect its forces. The Florentines being at
Santo Casciano, and the enemy continuing to use their utmost
exertions against Colle, they determined to draw nearer,
that the inhabitants might be more resolute in their
defense, and the enemy assail them less boldly. With this
design they removed their camp from Santo Casciano to Santo
Geminiano, about five miles from Colle, and with light
cavalry and other suitable forces were able every day to
annoy the duke's camp. All this, however, was insufficient
to relieve the people of Colle; for, having consumed their
provisions, they were compelled to surrender on the
thirteenth of November, to the great grief of the
Florentines, and joy of the enemy, more especially of the
Siennese, who, besides their habitual hatred of the
Florentines, had a particular animosity against the people
of Colle.
It was now the depth of winter, and the weather so
unsuitable for war, that the pope and the king, either
designing to hold out a hope of peace, or more quietly to
enjoy the fruit of their victories, proposed a truce for
three months to the Florentines, and allowed them ten days
to consider the reply. The offer was eagerly accepted; but
as wounds are well known to be more painful after the blood
cools than when they were first received, this brief repose
awakened the Florentines to a consciousness of the miseries
they had endured; and the citizens openly laid the blame
upon each other, pointing out the errors committed in the
management of the war, the expenses uselessly incurred, and
the taxes unjustly imposed. These matters were boldly
discussed, not only in private circles, but in the public
councils; and one individual even ventured to turn to
Lorenzo de' Medici, and say, "The city is exhausted, and can
endure no more war; it is therefore necessary to think of
peace." Lorenzo was himself aware of the necessity, and
assembled the friends in whose wisdom and fidelity he had
the greatest confidence, when it was at once concluded, that
as the Venetians were lukewarm and unfaithful, and the duke
in the power of his guardians, and involved in domestic
difficulties, it would be desirable by some new alliance to
give a better turn to their affairs. They were in doubt
whether to apply to the king or to the pope; but having
examined the question in all sides, they preferred the
friendship of the king as more suitable and secure; for the
short reigns of the pontiffs, the changes ensuing upon each
succession, the disregard shown by their church toward
temporal princes, and the still greater want of respect for
them exhibited in her determinations, render it impossible
for a secular prince to trust a pontiff, or safely to share
his fortune; for an adherent of the pope will have a
companion in victory, but in defeat must stand alone, while
the pontiff is sustained by his spiritual power and
influence. Having therefore decided that the king's
friendship would be of the greatest utility to them, they
thought it would be most easily and certainly obtained by
Lorenzo's presence; for in proportion to the confidence they
evinced toward him, the greater they imagined would be the
probability of removing his impressions of past enmities.
Lorenzo having resolved to go to Naples, recommended the
city and government to the care of Tommaso Soderini, who was
at that time Gonfalonier of Justice. He left Florence at the
beginning of December, and having arrived at Pisa, wrote to
the government to acquaint them with the cause of his
departure. The Signory, to do him honor, and enable him the
more effectually to treat with the king, appointed him
ambassador from the Florentine people, and endowed him with
full authority to make such arrangements as he thought most
useful for the republic.
At this time Roberto da San Severino, with Lodovico and
Ascanio (Sforza their elder brother being dead) again
attacked Milan, in order to recover the government. Having
taken Tortona, and the city and the whole state being in
arms, the duchess Bona was advised to restore the
Sforzeschi, and to put a stop to civil contentions by
admitting them to the government. The person who gave this
advice was Antonio Tassino, of Ferrara, a man of low origin,
who, coming to Milan, fell into the hands of the duke
Galeazzo, and was given by him to his duchess for her valet.
He, either from his personal attractions, or some secret
influence, after the duke's death attained such influence
over the duchess, that he governed the state almost at his
will. This greatly displeased the minister Cecco, whom
prudence and long experience had rendered invaluable; and
who, to the utmost of his power, endeavored to diminish the
authority of Tassino with the duchess and other members of
the government. The latter, aware of this, to avenge himself
for the injury, and secure defenders against Cecco, advised
the duchess to recall the Sforzeschi, which she did, without
communicating her design to the minister, who, when it was
done, said to her, "You have taken a step which will deprive
me of my life, and you of the government." This shortly
afterward took place; for Cecco was put to death by
Lodovico, and Tassino, being expelled from the dukedom, the
duchess was so enraged that she left Milan, and gave up the
care of her son to Lodovico, who, becoming sole governor of
the dukedom, caused, as will be hereafter seen, the ruin of
Italy.
Lorenzo de' Medici had set out for Naples, and the truce
between the parties was in force, when, quite unexpectedly,
Lodovico Fregoso, being in correspondence with some persons
of Serezana, entered the place by stealth, took possession
of it with an armed force, and imprisoned the Florentine
governor. This greatly offended the Signory, for they
thought the whole had been concerted with the connivance of
King Ferrando. They complained to the duke of Calabria, who
was with the army at Sienna, of a breach of the truce; and
he endeavored to prove, by letters and embassies, that it
had occurred without either his own or his father's
knowledge. The Florentines, however, found themselves in a
very awkward predicament, being destitute of money, the head
of the republic in the power of the king, themselves engaged
in a long-standing war with the latter and the pope, in a
new one with the Genoese, and entirely without friends; for
they had no confidence in the Venetians, and on account of
its changeable and unsettled state they were rather
apprehensive of Milan. They had thus only one hope, and that
depended upon Lorenzo's success with the king.
Lorenzo arrived at Naples by sea, and was most honorably
received, not only by Ferrando, but by the whole city, his
coming having excited the greatest expectation; for it being
generally understood that the war was undertaken for the
sole purpose of effecting his destruction, the power of his
enemies invested his name with additional lustre. Being
admitted to the king's presence, he spoke with so much
propriety upon the affairs of Italy, the disposition of her
princes and people, his hopes from peace, his fears of the
results of war, that Ferrando was more astonished at the
greatness of his mind, the promptitude of his genius, his
gravity and wisdom, than he had previously been at his
power. He consequently treated him with redoubled honor, and
began to feel compelled rather to part with him as a friend,
than detain him as an enemy. However, under various pretexts
he kept Lorenzo from December till March, not only to gain
the most perfect knowledge of his own views, but of those of
his city; for he was not without enemies, who would have
wished the king to detain and treat him in the same manner
as Jacopo Piccinino; and, with the ostensible view of
sympathizing for him, pointed out all that would, or rather
that they wished should, result from such a course; at the
same time opposing in the council every proposition at all
likely to favor him. By such means as these the opinion
gained ground, that if he were detained at Naples much
longer, the government of Florence would be changed. This
caused the king to postpone their separation more than he
would have otherwise done, to see if any disturbance were
likely to arise. But finding everything go quietly on,
Ferrando allowed him to depart on the sixth of March, 1479,
having, with every kind of attention and token of regard,
endeavored to gain his affection, and formed with him a
perpetual alliance for their mutual defense. Lorenzo
returned to Florence, and upon presenting himself before the
citizens, the impressions he had created in the popular mind
surrounded him with a halo of majesty brighter than before.
He was received with all the joy merited by his
extraordinary qualities and recent services, in having
exposed his own life to the most imminent peril, in order to
restore peace to his country. Two days after his return, the
treaty between the republic of Florence and the king, by
which each party bound itself to defend the other's
territories, was published. The places taken from the
Florentines during the war were to be taken up at the
discretion of the king; the Pazzi confined in the tower of
Volterra were to be set at liberty, and a certain sum of
money, for a limited period, was to be paid to the duke of
Calabria.
As soon as this peace was publicly known, the pope and
the Venetians were transported with rage; the pope thought
himself neglected by the king; the Venetians entertained
similar ideas with regard to the Florentines, and complained
that, having been companions in the war, they were not
allowed to participate in the peace. Reports of this
description being spread abroad, and received with entire
credence at Florence, caused a general fear that the peace
thus made would give rise to greater wars; and therefore the
leading members of the government determined to confine the
consideration of the most important affairs to a smaller
number, and formed a council of seventy citizens, in whom
the principal authority was invested. This new regulation
calmed the minds of those desirous of change, by convincing
them of the futility of their efforts. To establish their
authority, they in the first place ratified the treaty of
peace with the king, and sent as ambassadors to the pope
Antonio Ridolfi and Piero Nasi. But, notwithstanding the
peace, Alfonso, duke of Calabria, still remained at Sienna
with his forces, pretending to be detained by discords among
the citizens, which, he said, had risen so high, that while
he resided outside the city they had compelled him to enter
and assume the office of arbitrator between them. He took
occasion to draw large sums of money from the wealthiest
citizens by way of fines, imprisoned many, banished others,
and put some to death; he thus became suspected, not only by
the Siennese but by the Florentines, of a design to usurp
the sovereignty of Sienna; nor was any remedy then
available, for the republic had formed a new alliance with
the king, and were at enmity with the pope and the
Venetians. This suspicion was entertained not only by the
great body of the Florentine people, who were subtle
interpreters of appearances, but by the principal members of
the government; and it was agreed, on all hands, that the
city never was in so much danger of losing her liberty. But
God, who in similar extremities has always been her
preserver, caused an unhoped- for event to take place, which
gave the pope, the king, and the Venetians other matters to
think of than those in Tuscany.
The Turkish emperor, Mahomet II. had gone with a large
army to the siege of Rhodes, and continued it for several
months; but though his forces were numerous, and his courage
indomitable, he found them more than equalled by those of
the besieged, who resisted his attack with such obstinate
valor, that he was at last compelled to retire in disgrace.
Having left Rhodes, part of his army, under the Pasha
Achmet, approached Velona, and, either from observing the
facility of the enterprise, or in obedience to his
sovereign's commands, coasting along the Italian shores, he
suddenly landed four thousand soldiers, and attacked the
city of Otranto, which he easily took, plundered, and put
all the inhabitants to the sword. He then fortified the city
and port, and having assembled a large body of cavalry,
pillaged the surrounding country. The king, learning this,
and aware of the redoubtable character of his assailant,
immediately sent messengers to all the surrounding powers,
to request assistance against the common enemy, and ordered
the immediate return of the duke of Calabria with the forces
at Sienna.
This attack, however it might annoy the duke and the rest
of Italy, occasioned the utmost joy at Florence and Sienna;
the latter thinking it had recovered its liberty, and the
former that she had escaped a storm which threatened her
with destruction. These impressions, which were not unknown
to the duke, increased the regret he felt at his departure
from Sienna; and he accused fortune of having, by an
unexpected and unaccountable accident, deprived him of the
sovereignty of Tuscany. The same circumstance changed the
disposition of the pope; for although he had previously
refused to receive any ambassador from Florence, he was now
so mollified as to be anxious to listen to any overtures of
peace; and it was intimated to the Florentines, that if they
would condescend to ask the pope's pardon, they would be
sure of obtaining it. Thinking it advisable to seize the
opportunity, they sent twelve ambassadors to the pontiff,
who, on their arrival, detained them under different
pretexts before he would admit them to an audience. However,
terms were at length settled, and what should be contributed
by each in peace or war. The messengers were then admitted
to the feet of the pontiff, who, with the utmost pomp,
received them in the midst of his cardinals. They apologized
for past occurrences; first showing they had been compelled
by necessity, then blaming the malignity of others, or the
rage of the populace, and their just indignation, and
enlarging on the unfortunate condition of those who are
compelled either to fight or die; saying, that since every
extremity is endured in order to avoid death, they had
suffered war, interdicts, and other inconveniences, brought
upon them by recent events, that their republic might escape
slavery, which is the death of free cities. However, if in
their necessities they had committed any offense, they were
desirous to make atonement, and trusted in his clemency,
who, after the example of the blessed Redeemer, would
receive them into his compassionate arms.
The pope's reply was indignant and haughty. After
reiterating all the offenses against the church during the
late transactions, he said that, to comply with the precepts
of God, he would grant the pardon they asked, but would have
them understand, that it was their duty to obey; and that
upon the next instance of their disobedience, they would
inevitably forfeit, and that most deservedly, the liberty
which they had just been upon the point of losing; for those
merit freedom who exercise themselves in good works and
avoid evil; that liberty, improperly used, injures itself
and others; that to think little of God, and less of his
church, is not the part of a free man, but a fool, and one
disposed to evil rather than good, and to effect whose
correction is the duty not only of princes but of every
Christian; so that in respect of the recent events, they had
only themselves to blame, who, by their evil deeds, had
given rise to the war, and inflamed it by still worse
actions, it having been terminated by the kindness of others
rather than by any merit of their own. The formula of
agreement and benediction was then read; and, in addition to
what had already been considered and agreed upon between the
parties, the pope said, that if the Florentines wished to
enjoy the fruit of his forgiveness, they must maintain
fifteen galleys, armed, and equipped, at their own expense,
as long as the Turks should make war upon the kingdom of
Naples. The ambassadors complained much of this burden in
addition to the arrangement already made, but were unable to
obtain any alleviation. However, after their return to
Florence, the Signory sent, as ambassador to the pope,
Guidantonio Vespucci, who had recently returned from France,
and who by his prudence brought everything to an amicable
conclusion, obtained many favors from the pontiff, which
were considered as presages of a closer reconciliation.
Having settled their affairs with the pope, Sienna being
free, themselves released from the fear of the king, by the
departure of the duke of Calabria from Tuscany, and the war
with the Turks still continuing, the Florentines pressed the
king to restore their fortresses, which the duke of
Calabria, upon quitting the country, had left in the hands
of the Siennese. Ferrando, apprehensive that if he refused,
they would withdraw from the alliance with him, and by new
wars with the Siennese deprive him of the assistance he
hoped to obtain from the pope and other Italian powers,
consented that they should be given up, and by new favors
endeavored to attach the Florentines to his interests. It is
thus evident, that force and necessity, not deeds and
obligations, induce princes to keep faith.
The castles being restored, and this new alliance
established, Lorenzo de' Medici recovered the reputation
which first the war and then the peace, when the king's
designs were doubtful, had deprived him of; for at this
period there was no lack of those who openly slandered him
with having sold his country to save himself, and said, that
in war they had lost their territories, and in peace their
liberty. But the fortresses being recovered, an honorable
treaty ratified with the king, and the city restored to her
former influence, the spirit of public discourse entirely
changed in Florence, a place greatly addicted to gossip, and
in which actions are judged by the success attending them,
rather than by the intelligence employed in their direction;
therefore, the citizens praised Lorenzo extravagantly,
declaring that by his prudence he had recovered in peace,
what unfavorable circumstances had taken from them in war,
and that by his discretion and judgment he had done more
than the enemy with all the force of their arms.
History of Florence
Book VIII
by Nicolo Machiavelli
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