The End Of The House Of Aragon
Cesare arrived in Rome on June 13. There was none of the usual pomp on
this occasion. He made his entrance quietly, attended only by a small body of
men-at-arms, and he was followed, on the morrow, by Yves d'Allègre with the army -- considerably reduced by the detachments which had been left to
garrison the Romagna, and to lay siege to Piombino.
Repairing to his quarters in the Vatican, the duke remained so close
there for the few weeks that he abode in Rome on this occasion that, from now
onward, it became a matter of the utmost difficulty to obtain audience from
him. This may have been due to his habit of turning night into day and day into
night, whether at work or at play, which in fact was the excuse offered by the
Pope to certain envoys sent to Cesare from Rimini, who were left to cool their
heels about the Vatican ante-chambers for a fortnight without succeeding in
obtaining an audience.
Cesare Borgia was now Lord of Imola, Forli, Rimini, Faenza and Piombino, warranting his assumption of the inclusive title
of Duke of Romagna which he had taken immediately after the fall of Faenza.
As his State grew, so naturally did the affairs of government; and,
during those four weeks in Rome, business claimed his attention and an enormous
amount of it was dispatched. Chiefly was he engaged upon the administration of
the affairs of Faenza, which he had so hurriedly quitted. In this his shrewd
policy of generosity is again apparent. As his representative and lieutenant he
appointed a prominent citizen of Faenza named Pasi,
one of the very members of that Council which had been engaged in defending the
city and resisting Cesare. The duke gave it as his motive for the choice that
the man was obviously worthy of trust in view of his fidelity to Astorre.
And there you have not only the shrewdness of the man who knows how to
choose his servants -- which is one of the most important factors of success --
but a breadth of mind very unusual indeed in the Cinquecento.
In addition to the immunity from indemnity provided for by the terms of
the city's capitulation, Cesare actually went so far as to grant the peasantry
of the valley 2,000 ducats as compensation for damage done in the war. Further,
he supported the intercessions of the Council to the Pope for the erection of a
new convent to replace the one that had been destroyed in the bombardment. In
giving his consent to this -- in a brief dated July 12, 1501 -- the Pope
announces that he does so in response to the prayers of the Council and of the
duke.
Giovanni Vera, Cesare's erstwhile preceptor -- and still affectionately
accorded this title by the duke -- was now Archbiship of Salerno, Cardinal of Santa Balbina, and papal
legate in Macerata, and he was chosen by the Pope to
go to Pesaro and Fano for the purpose of receiving
the oath of fealty. With him Cesare sent, as his own personal representative,
his secretary, Agabito Gherardi,
who had been in his employ in that capacity since the duke's journey into
France, and who was to follow his fortunes to the end.
However the people of Fano may have refrained
from offering themselves to the duke's dominion when, in the previous October,
he had afforded them by his presence the opportunity of doing so, their conduct
now hardly indicated that the earlier abstention had been born of reluctance,
or else their minds had undergone, in the meanwhile, a considerable change.
For, when they received the brief appointing him their lord, they celebrated
the event by public rejoicings and illuminations; whilst on July 21 the Council,
representing the people, in the presence of Vera and Gherardi,
took oath upon the Gospels of allegiance to Cesare and his descendants forever.
In the Consistory of June 25 of that year the French and Spanish
ambassadors came formally to notify the Holy Father of the treaty of Granada,
entered into in the previous November by Louis XII of the one part, and
Ferdinand and Isabella of the other, concerning the conquest and division of
the Kingdom of Naples. The rival claimants had come to a compromise by virtue
of which they were to undertake together the conquest and thereafter share the
spoil -- Naples and the Abruzzi going to France, and Calabria and Puglia to
Spain.
Alexander immediately published his Bull declaring Federigo of Naples
deposed for disobedience to the Church, and for having called the Turk to his
aid, either of which charges it would have taxed Alexander's ingenuity -- vast
though it was -- convincingly to have established; or, being established, to
censure when all the facts were considered. The charges were no better than
pretexts for the spoliation of the unfortunate king who, in the matter of his
daughter's alliance with Cesare, had conceived that he might flout the Borgias
with impunity.
On June 28 d'Aubigny left Rome with the French
troops, accompanied by the bulk of the considerable army with which Cesare
supported his French ally, besides 1,000 foot raised by the Pope and a condotta of 100 lances under Morgante Baglioni. As the troops defiled before the Castle of Sant' Angelo they received the apostolic benediction from
the Pope, who stood on the lower ramparts of the fortress.
Cesare himself cannot have followed to join the army until after July
10, for as late as that date there is an edict indited by him against all who should offer injury to his Romagna officers. At about
the same time that he quitted Rome to ride after the French, Gonsalo de Cordoba landed a Spanish army in Calabria, and
the days of the Aragon dominion in Naples were numbered.
King Federigo prepared to face the foe. Whilst himself remaining in
Naples with Prospero Colonna, he sent the bulk of his forces to Capua under Fabrizio Colonna and Count Rinuccio Marciano -- the brother of that Marciano whom Vitelli had put to death in
Tuscany.
Ravaging the territory and forcing its strongholds as they came, the
allies were under the walls of Capua within three weeks of setting out; but on
July 17, when within two miles of the town, they were met by six hundred lances
under Colonna, who attempted to dispute their passage. It was Cesare Borgia
himself who led the charge against them. Jean d'Auton -- in his Chronicles of Louis XII -- speaks in warm terms of the duke's valour and of the manner in which, by words and by example,
he encouraged his followers to charge the Colonna forces, with such good effect
that they utterly routed the Neapolitans, and drove them headlong back to the
shelter of Capua's walls.
The allies brought up their cannon, and opened the bombardment. This
lasted incessantly from July 17 -- which was a Monday -- until the following
Friday, when two bastions were so shattered that the French were able to gain
possession of them, putting to the sword some two hundred Neapolitan soldiers
who had been left to defend those outworks. Thence admittance to the town
itself was gained four days later -- on the 25th -- through a breach, according
to some, through the treacherous opening of a gate, according to others.
Through gate or breach the besiegers stormed to meet a fierce resistance, and
the most horrible carnage followed. Back and back they drove the defenders,
fighting their way through the streets and sparing none in the awful fury that
beset them. The defense was shattered; resistance was at an end; yet still the
bloody work went on. The combat had imperceptibly merged into a slaughter;
demoralized and panic-stricken in the reaction from their late gallantry, the
soldiers of Naples flung down their weapons and fled, shrieking for quarter.
But none was given. The invader butchered every human thing he came upon,
indiscriminant of age or sex, and the blood of some four thousand victims
flowed through the streets of Capua like water after a thundershower. That sack
of Capua is one of the most horrid pages in the horrid history of sacks. You
will find full details in d'Auton's chronicle, if you
have a mind for such horrors. There is a brief summary of the event in Burchard's diary under date of July 26, 1501, which runs as
follows:
"At about the fourth hour last night the Pope had news of the
capture of Capua by the Duke of Valentinois. The capture was due to the treason
of one Fabrizio -- a citizen of Capua -- who secretly
introduced the besiegers and was the first to be killed by them. After him the
same fate was met by some three thousand foot and some two hundred
horse-soldiers, by citizens, priests, conventuals of
both sexes, even in the very churches and monasteries, and all the women taken
were given in prey to the greatest cruelty. The total number of the slain is
estimated at four thousand."
D'Auton,
too, bears witness to this wholesale violation of the women, "which,"
he adds, "is the very worst of all war's excesses." He informs us
further that "the foot-soldiers of the Duke of Valentinois acquitted
themselves so well in this, that thirty of the most beautiful women went
captive to Rome," a figure which is confirmed by Burchard.
What an opportunity was not this for Guicciardini! The foot-soldiers of
the Duke of Valentinois acquitted themselves so well in this, that thirty of
the most beautiful women went captive to Rome."
Under his nimble, malicious, unscrupulous pen that statement is
re-edited until not thirty but forty is the number of the captured victims
taken to Rome, and not Valentinois's foot, but
Valentinois himself the ravisher of the entire forty! But hear the elegant
Florentine's own words:
"It was spread about", he writes, "that, besides other wickednesses worthy of eternal infamy, many women who had
taken refuge in a tower, and thus escaped the first fury of the assault, were
found by the Duke of Valentinois, who, with the title of King's Lieutenant,
followed the army with no more people than his gentlemen and his guards.(This,
incidentally, is another misstatement. Valentinois had with him, besides the
thousand foot levied by the Pope and the hundred lances under Morgante Baglioni, an army some
thousands strong led for him by Yves d'Allègre.) He
desired to see them all, and, after carefully examining them he retained forty
of the most beautiful."
Guicciardini's aim is, of course, to shock you; he considers it necessary to maintain in
Cesare the character of ravenous wolf which he had bestowed upon him. The
marvel is not that Guicciardini should have penned that utterly ludicrous
accusation, but that more or less serious subsequent writers -- and writers of
our own time even -- instead of being moved to contemptuous laughter at the
wild foolishness of the story, instead of seeking in the available records the
germ of true fact from which it was sprung, should sedulously and unblushingly
have carried forward its dissemination.
Yriarte not only repeats the tale with all the sober calm of one utterly destitute of a
sense of the ridiculous, but he improves upon it by a delicious touch, worthy
of Guicciardini himself, when he assures us that Cesare took these forty women
for his harem!
It is a nice instance of how Borgia history has grown, and is still
growing.
If verisimilitude itself does not repudiate Guicciardini's story, there are the Capuan chronicles to do it --
particularly that of Pellegrini, who witnessed the
pillage. In those chronicles from which Guicciardini drew the matter for this
portion of his history of Italy, you will seek in vain for any confirmation of
that fiction with which the Florentine historian -- he who had a pen of gold
for his friends and one of iron for his foes -- thought well to adorn his
facts.
If the grotesque in history-building is of interest to you, you may turn
the pages of the Storia Civile di Capua, by F. Granata,
published in 1752. This writer has carefully followed the Capuan chroniclers in their relation of the siege; but when it comes to these details
of the forty ladies in the tower (in which those chroniclers fail him) he
actually gives Guicciardini as his authority, setting a fashion which has not
lacked for unconscious, and no less egregious, imitators.
To return from the criticism of fiction to the consideration of fact, Fabrizio Colonna and Rinuccio da Marciano were among the many captains of the Neapolitan
army that were taken prisoners. Rinuccio was the head
of the Florentine faction which had caused the execution of Paolo Vitelli, and Giovio has it that Vitellozzo Vitelli, who had already taken an installment of vengeance by putting Pietro da Marciano to death in Tuscany, caused Rinuccio's wounds to be poisoned, so that he died two days later.
The fall of Capua was very shortly followed by that of Gaeta, and,
within a week, by that of Naples, which was entered on August 3 by Cesare
Borgia in command of the vanguard of the army. "He who had come as a
cardinal to crown King Federigo, came now as a condottiere to depose him."
Federigo offered to surrender to the French all the fortresses that
still held for him, on condition that he should have safe-conduct to Ischia and
liberty to remain there for six months. This was agreed, and Federigo was
further permitted to take with him his moveable possessions and his artillery,
which latter, however, he afterwards sold to the Pope.
Thus the last member of the House of Aragon to sit upon the throne of
Naples took his departure, accompanied by the few faithful ones who loved him
well enough to follow him into exile; amongst these was that poet Sanazzaro, who, to avenge the wrong suffered by the master
whom he loved, was to launch his terrible epigrams against Alexander, Cesare,
and Lucrezia, and by means of those surviving verses enable the enemies of the
House of Borgia to vilify their memories through centuries to follow.
Federigo's captains Prospero and Fabrizio Colonna, upon being
ransomed, took their swords to Gonzalo de Cordoba, hoping for the day when they
might avenge upon the Borgia the ruin which, even in this Neapolitan conquest
they attributed to the Pope and his son.
And here, so far as Naples is concerned, closes the history of the House
of Aragon. In Italy it was extinct; and it was to become so, too, in Spain
within the century.