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The
Life of Cesare Borgia
Urbino And Camerino
It may well be that it was about this time that Cesare, his ambition
spreading -- as men's ambition will spread with being gratified -- was
considering the consolidation of Central Italy into a kingdom of which he would
assume the crown.
It was a scheme in the contemplation of which he was encouraged by Vitellozzo Vitelli, who no doubt conceived that in its fulfillment
the ruin of Florence would be entailed -- which was all that Vitelli cared
about. What to Cesare would have been no more than the means, would have been
to Vitelli a most satisfactory end.
Before, however, going so far there was still the work of subjugating
the States of the Church to be completed, as this could not be so considered
until Urbino, Camerino, and
Sinigaglia should be under the Borgia dominion.
For this, no doubt, Cesare was disposing during that Easter of 1502
which he spent in Rome, and during which there were heard from the south the
first rumblings of the storm of war whereof ill-starred Naples was once more --
for the third time within ten years -- to be the scene. The allies of yesterday
were become the antagonists of to-day, and France and Spain were ready to fly
at each other's throats over the division of the spoil, as a consequence of
certain ill-definitions of the matter in the treaty of Granada. The French
Viceroy, Louis d'Armagnac, and the great Spanish
Captain, Gonzalo de Cordoba, were on the point of coming to blows.
Nor was the menace of disturbance confined to Naples. In Florence, too,
the torch of war was alight, and if -- as he
afterwards swore -- Cesare Borgia had no hand in kindling it, it is at least
undeniable that he complacently watched the conflagration, conscious that it
would make for the fulfillment of his own ends. Besides, there was still that
little matter of the treaty of Forno dei Campi between Cesare and
Florence, a treaty which the Signory had never
fulfilled and never intended to fulfill, and Cesare was not the man to forget
how he had been fooled.
But for the protection of France which she enjoyed, Florence must long
ere this have been called to account by him, and crushed out of all shape under
the weight of his mailed hand. As it was she was to experience the hurt of his
passive resentment, and find this rather more than she could bear.
Vitellozzo Vitelli, that vindictive firebrand whose original motive in allying himself
with Cesare had been the hope that the duke might help him to make Florence
expiate his brother's blood, finding that Cesare withheld the expected help,
was bent at last upon dealing, himself, with Florence. He entered into plots
with the exiled Piero de Medici to restore the latter to his dominion; he set
intrigues afoot in Pisa, where his influence was vast, and in Siena, whose
tyrant, Pandolfo Petrucci,
was ready and willing to forward his designs, and generally made so disturbing
a stir in Tuscany that the Signory became gravely
alarmed.
Cesare certainly took no apparent active part in the affair. He lent
Vitelli no aid; but neither did he attempt to restrain him or any other of the
Borgia condottieri who were allied with him.
The unrest, spreading and growing sullenly a while, burst suddenly forth
in Arezzo on June 4, when the cries of "Medici!" and "Marzocco!" rang in its streets, to announce that the
city was in arms against the government of Florence. Arezzo followed this up by
summoning Vitelli, and the waiting, watchful condottiere was quick to answer
the desired call. He entered the town three days later at the head of a small
body of foot, and was very shortly afterwards followed by his brother Giulio
Vitelli, Bishop of Città di Castello, with the artillery, and, presently, by Gianpaolo Baglioni with a condotta of
horse.
A few days later Vitelli was in possession of all the strongholds of the
Val di Chiana, and
panic-stricken Florence was speeding ambassadors hot- foot to Rome to lay her
complaints of these matters before the Pope.
Alexander was able to reply that, far from supporting the belligerents,
he had launched a Bull against them, provoked by the poisoning of the Bishop de Pazzi.
Cesare looked on with the inscrutable calm for which Macchiavelli was
presently to find him so remarkable. Aware as he was of the French protection
which Florence enjoyed and could invoke, he perceived how vain must ultimately
prove Vitelli's efforts, saw, perhaps, in all this
the grave danger of ultimate ruin which Vitelli was incurring. Yet Vitelli's action served Cesare's own purposes, and, so that
his purposes were served, there were no other considerations likely to weigh
with that cold egotist. Let Vitelli be caught in the toils he was spinning, and
be choked in them. Meanwhile, Florence was being harrowed, and that was all to
Cesare's satisfaction and advantage. When sufficiently humbled, it might well
befall that the Republic should come on her knees to implore his intervention,
and his pardon for having flouted him.
While matters stood so in Arezzo, Pisa declared spontaneously for
Cesare, and sent (on June 10) to offer herself to his dominion and to announce
to him that his banner was already flying from her turrets -- and the growth of
Florence's alarm at this is readily conceived.
To Cesare it must have been a sore temptation. To accept such a pied-à- terre in Tuscany as was now offered him would have been the first great step towards
founding that kingdom of his dreams. An impulsive man had surely gulped the
bait. But Cesare, boundless in audacity, most swift to determine and to act,
was not impulsive. Cold reason, foresight and calculation were the ministers of
his indomitable will. He looked ahead and beyond in the matter of Pisa's offer,
and he perceived the danger that might await him in the acceptance. The time
for that was not yet. To take what Pisa offered might entail offending France,
and although Cesare was now in case to dispense with French support, he was in
no case to resist her opposition.
And so, the matter being considered and determined, Cesare quitted Rome
on the 12th and left it for the Pope to give answer to the Pisan envoys in the Consistory of June 14 -- that neither his Holiness nor the Duke
of Valentinois could assent to the proposals which Pisa made.
From Rome Cesare travelled swiftly to Spoleto, where his army, some ten
thousand strong, was encamped. He was bent at last upon the conquest of Camerino, and, ever an opportunist, he had seized the
moment when Florence, which might have been disposed to befriend Varano, Tyrant of Camerino, was
over-busy with her own affairs.
In addition to the powerful army awaiting him at Spoleto, the duke had a
further 2,000 men in the Romagna; another 1,000 men held themselves at his
orders between Sinigaglia and Urbino, and Dionigio di Naldo was arming yet another 1,000 men at Verucchio for his
service. Yet further to increase this force, Cesare issued an edict during his
brief sojourn at Spoleto ordering every house in the Romagna to supply him with
one man-at-arms.
It was whilst here -- as he afterwards wrote to the Pope -- that news
reached him that Guidobaldo da Montefeltre, Duke of Urbino,
was arming men and raising funds for the assistance of Camerino.
He wrote that he could not at first believe it, but that shortly afterwards --
at Foligni -- he took a chancellor of Camerino who admitted that the hopes of this State were all
founded upon Urbino's assistance; and later, a
messenger from Urbino falling into his hands, he
discovered that there was a plot afoot to seize the Borgia artillery as it
passed through Ugubio, it being known that, as Cesare
had no suspicions, the guns would be guarded only by a small force. Of this
treachery the duke strongly expressed his indignation in his letter to the
Pope.
Whether the matter was true -- or whether Cesare believed it to be true
-- it is impossible to ascertain with absolute conviction. But it is in the
highest degree unlikely that Cesare would have written such a letter to his
father solely by way of setting up a pretext. Had that been his only aim,
letters expressing his simulated indignation would have been in better case to
serve his ends had they been addressed to others.
If Guidobaldo did engage in such an act,
amounting to a betrayal, he was certainly paid by Cesare in kind and with
interest. If the duke had been short of a pretext for carrying a drawn sword
into the dominions of Guidobaldo, he had that pretext
now in this act of enmity against himself and the Holy See.
First, however, he disposed for the attack upon Camerino.
This State, lying on the Eastern spurs of the Apennines, midway between Spoleto
and Urbino, was ruled by Giulio Cesare Varano, an old war-dog of seventy years of age, ruthless
and bloodthirsty, who owed his throne to his murder of his own brother.
He was aided in the government of his tyranny by his four sons, Venanzio, Annibale, Pietro, and Gianmaria.
Several times already had he been menaced by Cesare Borgia, for he was
one of the Vicars proscribed for the non-payment of tribute due to the Holy
See, and at last his hour was come. Against him Cesare now dispatched an army
under the command of Francesco Orsini, Duke of Gravina,
and Oliverotto Eufreducci,
another murderous, bloody gentleman who had hitherto served the duke in Vitelli's condotta, and who, by
an atrocious act of infamy and brigandage, had made himself Lord of Fermo, which he pretended -- being as sly as he was bloody
-- to hold as Vicar for the Holy See.
This Oliverotto Eufreducci -- hereafter known as Oliverotto da Fermo -- was a nephew of Giovanni Fogliano,
Lord of Fermo. He had returned home to his uncle's
Court in the early part of that year, and was there received with great honor
and affection by Fogliano and his other relatives. To
celebrate his home-coming, Oliverotto invited his
uncle and the principal citizens of Fermo to a
banquet, and at table contrived to turn the conversation upon the Pope and the
Duke of Valentinois; whereupon, saying that these were matters to be discussed
more in private, he rose from table and begged them to withdraw with him into
another room.
All unsuspecting -- what should old Fogliano suspect from one so loved and so deeply in his debt? -- they followed him to
the chamber where he had secretly posted a body of his men-at-arms. There, no
sooner had the door closed upon this uncle, and those others who had shown him
so much affection, than he gave the signal for the slaughter that had been
concerted. His soldiers fell upon those poor, surprised victims of his greed,
and made a speedy and bloody end of all.
That first and chief step being taken, Oliverotto flung himself on his horse, and, gathering his men-at-arms about him, rode
through Fermo on the business of butchering what
other relatives and friends of Fogliano might remain.
Among these were Raffaele della Rovere and two of his children, one of whom was
inhumanly slaughtered in its mother's lap.
Thereafter he confiscated to his own uses the property of those whom he
had murdered, and of those who, more fortunate, had fled his butcher's hands.
He dismissed the existing Council and replaced it by a government of his own.
Which done -- to shelter himself from the consequences -- he sent word to the
Pope that he held Fermo as Vicar of the Church.
Whilst a portion of his army marched on Camerino,
Cesare, armed with his pretext for the overthrow of Guidobaldo,
set himself deliberately and by an elaborate stratagem to the capture of Urbino. Of this there can be little doubt. The cunning of
the scheme is of an unsavory sort, when considered by the notions that obtain
to-day, for the stratagem was no better than an act of base treachery. Yet,
lest even in this you should be in danger of judging Cesare Borgia by standards
which cannot apply to his age, you will do well to consider that there is no
lack of evidence that the fifteenth century applauded the business as a clever
coup.
Guidobaldo da Montefeltre was a good
prince. None in all Italy was more beloved by his people, towards whom he bore
himself with a kindly, paternal bonhomie. He was a cultured, scholarly man, a
patron of the arts, happiest in the splendid library of the Palace of Urbino. It happened, unfortunately, that he had no heir,
which laid his dominions open to the danger of division amongst the neighboring
greedy tyrants after his death. To avoid this he had adopted Francesco Maria della Rovere, hereditary Prefect
of Sinigaglia, his sister's child and a nephew of Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere's. There was
wisdom and foresight in the adoption, considering the favour enjoyed in Rome and in France by the powerful cardinal.
From Nocera Cesare sent Guidobaldo a message calculated to allay whatever uneasiness he may have been feeling, and
to throw him completely off his guard. The duke notified him that he was
marching upon Camerino -- which was at once true and
untrue -- and begged Guidobaldo to assist him in this
enterprise by sending him provisions to Gubbio, which
he should reach on the morrow -- since he was marching by way of Cagli and Sassoferrato. Further
-- and obviously with intent that the Duke of Urbino should reduce the forces at his disposal -- he desired Guidobaldo to send Vitelli the support of a thousand men, which the latter had earlier
solicited, but which Guidobaldo had refused to supply
without orders from the Pope. Cesare concluded his letter with protestations of
brotherly love -- the Judas' kiss which makes him hateful to us in this affair.
It all proved very reassuring to Guidobaldo who set his mind at ease and never bethought him of looking to his defenses,
when, from Nocera, Cesare made one of those sudden
movements, terrible in their swiftness as the spring of a tiger -- enabling him
to drive home his claws where least expected. Leaving all baggage behind him,
and with provisions for only three days, he brought his troops by forced
marches to Cagli, within the Urbino State, and possessed himself of it almost before the town had come to realize
his presence.
Not until the citadel, taken entirely by surprise, was in Cesare's hands
did a messenger speed to Guidobaldo with the
unwelcome tidings that the Duke of Valentinois was in arms, as an enemy, within
the territory. Together with that message came others into the garden of the Zoccolanti monastery -- that favourite resort of Guidobaldo's -- where he was indulging his
not unusual custom of supping in the cool of that summer evening. They brought
him word that, while Valentinois was advancing upon him from the south, a force
of 1,000 men were marching upon Urbino from Isola di Fano in the east, and twice that number through the passes of Sant Angelo and Verucchio in the north -- all converging
upon his capital.
The attack had been shrewdly planned and timed, and if anything can
condone the treachery by which Guidobaldo was lulled
into his false security, it is the circumstance that this conduct of the matter
avoided bloodshed -- a circumstance not wholly negligible, and one that was
ever a part of Cesare Borgia's policy, save where punishment had to be
inflicted or reprisals taken.
Guidobaldo,
seeing himself thus beset upon all sides at once, and being all unprepared for
resistance, perceived that nothing but flight remained him; and that very night
he left Urbino hurriedly, taking with him the boy
Francesco Maria, and intending at first to seek shelter in his Castle of S. Leo
-- a fortress that was practically impregnable. But already it was too late.
The passes leading thither were by now in the hands of the enemy, as Guidobaldo discovered at dawn. Thereupon, changing his
plans, he sent the boy and his few attendants to Bagno,
and, himself, disguised as a peasant, took to the hills, despite the gout by
which he was tormented. Thus he won to Ravenna, which was fast becoming a home
for dethroned princes.
Urbino, meanwhile, in
no case to resist, sent its castellan to meet Cesare and to make surrender to him
-- whereof Cesare, in the letter already mentioned, gives news to the Pope,
excusing himself for having undertaken this thing without the Pope's knowledge,
but that "the treachery employed against me by Guidobaldo was so enormous that I could not suffer it."
Within a few hours of poor Guidobaldo's flight
Cesare was housed in Urbino's splendid palace, whose
stupendous library was the marvel of all scholars of that day. Much of this,
together with many of the art- treasures collected by the Montefeltri,
Cesare began shortly afterwards to transfer to Cesena.
In addition to publishing an edict against pillage and violence in the
City of Urbino, Cesare made doubly sure that none
should take place by sending his soldiers to encamp at Fermignano,
retaining near him in Urbino no more than his
gentlemen-at-arms. The capital being taken, the remainder of the duchy made
ready surrender, all the strongholds announcing their submission to Cesare with
the exception of that almost inaccessible Castle of S. Leo, which capitulated
only after a considerable resistance.
From Urbino Cesare now entered into
communication with the Florentines, and asked that a representative should be
sent to come to an agreement with him. In response to this request, the
Republic sent him Bishop Soderini as her ambassador.
The latter arrived in Urbino on June 25 and was
immediately and very cordially received by the duke. With him, in the
subordinate capacity of secretary, came a lean, small-headed, tight- lipped
man, with wide-set, intelligent eyes and prominent cheek-bones -- one Niccolò Macchiavelli, who, in needy circumstances at
present, and comparatively obscure, was destined to immortal fame. Thus did
Macchiavelli meet Cesare Borgia for the first time, and, for all that we have
no records of it, it is not to be doubted that his study of that remarkable man
began then in Urbino, to be continued presently, as
we shall see, when Macchiavelli returns to him in the quality of an ambassador
himself.
To Soderini the duke expounded his just
grievance, founded upon the Florentines' inobservance of the treaty of Forno dei Campi;
he demanded that a fresh treaty should be drawn up to replace the broken one,
and that, for the purpose, Florence should change her government, as in the
ruling one, after what had passed, he could repose no faith. He disclaimed all
associations with the affair of Vitelli, but frankly declared himself glad of
it, as it had, no doubt, led Florence to perceive what came of not keeping
faith with him. He concluded by assuring Soderini that, with himself for their friend, the Florentines need fear no molestation
from any one; but he begged that the Republic should declare herself in the
matter, since, if she did not care to have him for her friend, she was, of
course, at liberty to make of him her enemy.
So impressed was Soderini by Cesare Borgia
that on that same night he wrote to the Signory:
"This lord is very magnificent and splendid, and so spirited in
feats of arms that there is nothing so great but that it must seem small to
him. In the pursuit of glory and in the acquisition of dominions he never
rests, and he knows neither danger nor fatigue. He moves so swiftly that he
arrives at a place before it is known that he has set out for it. He knows how
to make himself beloved of his soldiers, and he has in his service the best men
of Italy. These things render him victorious and formidable, and to these is
yet to be added his perpetual good fortune. He argues," the Florentine
envoy proceeds, "with such sound reason that to dispute with him would be
a long affair, for his wit and eloquence never fail him".
You are to remember that this homage is one of the few surviving
impressions of one who came into personal contact with Cesare, and of one,
moreover, representing a Government more or less inimical to him, who would
therefore have no reason to draw a favorable portrait of him for that
Government's benefit. One single page of such testimony is worth a dozen
volumes of speculation and inference drawn afterwards by men who never knew him
-- in many cases by men who never began to know his epoch.
The envoy concludes by informing the Signory that he has the duke's assurances that the latter has no thought of attempting
to deprive Florence of any of her possessions, as "the object of his
campaign has not been to tyrannize, but to extirpate tyrants."
Whilst Cesare awaited the Florentines' reply to their ambassador's
communication, he withdrew to the camp at Fermignano,
where he was sought on July 6 by a herald from Louis XII. This messenger came
to exhort Cesare to embark upon no enterprise against the Florentine Republic,
because to offend Florence would be to offend the Majesty of France.
Simultaneously, however, Florence received messages from the Cardinal
d'Amboise, suggesting that they should come to terms with Valentinois by
conceding him at least a part of what had been agreed in the Treaty of Forno dei Campi.
As a consequence, Soderini was able to inform
Cesare that the Republic was ready to treat with him, but that first he must
withdraw Vitelli from Arezzo, and compel him to yield up the captured
fortresses. The duke, not trusting -- as he had frankly avowed -- a Government
which once already had broken faith with him, and perceiving that, if he
whistled his war- dogs to heel as requested, he would have lost the advantages
of his position, refused to take any such steps until the treaty should be
concluded. He consented, however, to enforce meanwhile an armistice.
But now it happened that news reached Florence of the advance of Louis
XII with an army of 20,000 men, bound for Naples to settle the dispute with
Spain. So the Republic -- sly and treacherous as any other Italian Government
of the Cinquecento -- instructed Soderini to
temporize with the duke; to spend the days in amiable, inconclusive interviews
and discussions of terms which the Signory did not
mean to make. Thus they counted upon gaining time, until the arrival of the
French should put an end to the trouble caused by Vitelli, and to the need for
any compromise.
But Cesare, though forced to submit, was not fooled by Soderini's smooth, evasive methods. He too -- having
private sources of information in France -- was advised of the French advance
and of the imminence of danger to himself in consequence of the affairs of
Florence. And it occasioned him no surprise to see Soderini come on July 19 to take his leave of him, advised by the Signory that the French vanguard was at hand, and that, consequently, the negotiations
might now with safety be abandoned.
To console him, he had news on the morrow of the conquest of Camerino.
The septuagenarian Giulio Cesare Varano had
opposed to the Borgia forces a stout resistance, what time he sent his two sons
Pietro and Gianmaria to Venice for help. It was in
the hope of this solicited assistance that he determined to defend his tyranny,
and the war opened by a cavalry skirmish in which Venanzio Varano routed the Borgia horse under the command of
the Duke of Gravina. Thereafter, however, the Varani had to endure a siege; and the old story of the
Romagna sieges was repeated. Varano had given his subjects
too much offence in the past, and it was for his subjects now to call the
reckoning.
A strong faction, led by a patrician youth of Camerino,
demanded the surrender of the State, and, upon being resisted, took arms and
opened the gates to the troops of Valentinois. The three Varani were taken prisoners. Old Giulio Cesare was shut up in the Castle of Pergola,
where he shortly afterwards died -- which was not wonderful or unnatural at his
time of life, and does not warrant Guicciardini for stating, without authority,
that he was strangled. Venanzio and Annibale were imprisoned in the fortress of Cattolica.
In connection with this surrender of Camerino,
Cesare wrote the following affectionate letter to his sister Lucrezia -- who
was dangerously ill at Ferrara in consequence of her delivery of a still-born
child:
"Most Illustrious and most Excellent Lady, our very dear Sister, --
Confident of the circumstance that there can be no more efficacious and
salutary medicine for the indisposition from which you are at present suffering
than the announcement of good and happy news, we advise you that at this very
moment we have received sure tidings of the capture of Camerino.
We beg that you will do honor to this message by an immediate improvement, and
inform us of it, because, tormented as we are to know you so ill, nothing, not
even this felicitous event, can suffice to afford us pleasure. We beg you also
kindly to convey the present to the Illustrious Lord Don Alfonso, your husband
and our beloved Brother-in- law, to whom we are not writing today."
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