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THE
AGE OF RECOVERY The
Fifteenth Century
JERAH JOHNSON LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY,
NEW
ORLEANS
AND
WILLIAM
A.
PERCY,
JR.
UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS,
BOSTON
Cornell University Press ITHACA AND LONDON
The Development
of
Western
Narrative Essays in the History of Its
Our
Tradition from
Origins in Ancient Israel and Greece Edited by Professor of
Civilization
to the
Present
Edward W. Fox Modern European History
Cornell University
THE AGE OF RECOVERY The By and
Fifteenth Century
JERAH JOHNSON
WILLIAM
A.
PERCY,
JR.
•
i
.^W^-^p
•w4-r»
Leonardo da Vinci, Vitruvian Man, 1485- 1490. Galleria dell' Academia, Venice
Copyright
©
1970
by Cornell University
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a re-
view, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in
any form without permission
lisher.
in writing from the pubFor information address Cornell University Press,
124 Roberts Place, Ithaca,
New
York
14850.
First published ipjo
Standard Book
Number
8014-9858-9
Library of Congress Catalog Card
Number
76- 108 161
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BY VAIL-BALLOU
PRESS, INC.
Foreword
THE proposition that each generation must rewrite history more widely quoted than practiced. In the field of college texts on Western civilization, the conventional accounts is
have been revised, and sources and supplementary materials
have been developed; but
it is
too long a time since the basic
narrative has been rewritten to
needs of
new
meet the rapidly changing
college generations. In the mid-twentieth cen-
tury such an account must be brief, well written, and based
on unquestioned scholarship and must assume almost no previous historical knowledge on the part of the reader. It must provide a coherent analysis of the development of Western civilization and its basic values. It must, in short, constitute a systematic introduction to the collective
ory of that tradition which This
we
series of narrative essays
mem-
are being asked to defend.
was undertaken
in an effort
to provide such a text for an introductory history survey
course and
is
being published in the present form in the
belief that the requirements of that
need that
is
coming
to be
one course reflected a
widely recognized.
Now that the classic languages, the Bible, the great historical novels,
even most non- American history, have dropped
Foreword
vi
out of the normal college preparatory program, tive that a text in the history of
European
civilization
This means not only that
fully self-explanatory.
impera-
it is
be
must be-
it
gin at the beginning, with the origins of our civilization in ancient Israel and Greece, but that
name
must introduce every
it
or event that takes an integral place in the account all
bedded
protocol.
in
historical
Only
complete will the narrative present line of those
how
others no matter
and ruthlessly delete
firmly im-
thus simplified and
a sufficiently clear out-
major trends and developments that have led
from the beginning of our recorded time
to the
most press-
ing of our current problems. This simplification, however,
On
need not involve intellectual dilution or evasion. contrary,
it
can effectively
of presentation. series has
It is
on
than lower the level
raise rather
this
the
assumption that the present
been based, and each contributor has been urged
to write for a
mature and
therefore, that the essays
literate
may
audience.
also
It
is
hoped,
prove profitable and
rewarding to readers outside the college classroom.
The
plan of the
first
part of the series
lated essays, the narrative of our history
the eve of the French Revolution; each a
recognized scholar and
reading for one
week
is
is
to sketch, in re-
from
is
its
origins to
being written by
designed to serve
in a semester course.
as the basic
The
develop-
ments of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries will be covered in a succeeding
series
which
will provide the
quantity of reading material for each
week
same
of the second
semester. This scale of presentation has been adopted in a
conviction that any understanding of the central problem of the preservation of the integrity and dignity of the individual
human being depends
first
on an examination of
the origins of our tradition in the politics and philosophy
of the ancient Greeks and the religion of the ancient
He-
Foreword brews and then on
a relatively
vii
more
detailed
knowledge of
recent development within our industrial urban society.
its
The
decision to devote equal space to twenty-five cen-
was based on the analogy with the human memory. Those events most remote tend to be remembered in least detail but often with a sense of clarity and perspective that is absent in more recent and and to
turies
a century
more crowded must be
and
a half
recollections. If the roots of our tradition
identified, their relation to the present
fully developed.
The
must be care-
nearer the narrative approaches con-
temporary times, the more
difficult
and complicated
this
becomes. Recent experience must be worked over more
thoroughly and in more
detail if
tively to an understanding of the It
may
be objected that the
The
attempt
that
any
is
it is
to contribute effec-
contemporary world. series
attempts too much.
being made, however, on the assumption
historical
development should be susceptible of
meaningful treatment on any scale and in the realization that a very large proportion of today's college students
not have more time to invest in
The
this part of their education.
practical alternative appears to
tempt to create a tradition
new
lie
between some
and the abandonment of any serious
It is
at-
brief account of the history of our
municate the essence of that tradition to of our students.
do
all
effort to
com-
but a handful
the conviction of everyone contribut-
ing to this series that the second alternative must not be
accepted by default.
few would find themselves thoroughly at home in the covered by more than one or two of the essays. This
In a series covering such a vast sweep of time, scholars fields
means, in practice, that almost every essay should be written
by
drawbacks,
this
Each contributor
will
a different author. In spite of apparent
procedure promises
real advantages.
Foreword be in a position to
of
higher standards of accuracy and in-
encompassing
sight in an essay his life's
set
work than could
major portion of the
a
field
ordinarily be expected in sur-
The
veys of some ten or twenty centuries.
inevitable dis-
continuity of style and interpretation could be modified
by
w as
quired
by
r
in itself desirable.
the student in
was
some disconmore easily acan elementary course, or is more
editorial coordination; but
tinuity
it
No
felt that
illusion
is
prejudicial to the efficacy of such a course, than that a single
smoothly articulated text represents the very sub-
stance of history
week by week, they are
itself. If
from author
the shift
raises difficulties for the
difficulties that will
not so
to author,
beginning student,
much impede
his
pro-
gress as contribute to his growth.
In this essay,
The Age
tury, Air. Jerah
of Recovery:
The
Fifteenth Cen-
Johnson and Mr. William A. Percy,
Jr.,
recount the gradual but accelerating reversal of the down-
ward economic and demographic
trends that had
marked
Buoyed by
a rising
the history of the preceding century. tide of population
and prosperity, Europeans once more
resumed what might be called limits of their
their
knowledge, understanding, and control of
geographic environment and of their cultural heritage.
For many
came
their offensive against the
historical observers the culmination of this effort
in the Italian Renaissance,
with
plishments in the fields of arts and
its
unrivaled accom-
letters.
For others the
crowning achievement was not merely the discovery of the New World, but the emergence of a new cosmology. For the authors of this essay, however, these spectacular accom-
plishments are part of an even larger story: that of the
expansion of Europe geographically to the east
as
well as
to the west, and intellectually through the recovery of the past, as well as
by
the development of a
new concept
of
Foreword
man and
his potentialities. It
coming of
own fate, The
is
ix
an awe-inspiring subject: the
age, the readiness to accept responsibility for his
of western
man
as
we know him today.
authors and the editor wish to thank Mrs. Esther G.
Dotson, Otakar Odlozilik, Steven Runciman, and Joseph R. Strayer for
many
useful suggestions.
Edward Whiting Fox Ithaca,
New York
January
ip-jo
Foreword, by Edward Whiting Fox
v
Introduction I
II
i
Economic and Principalities
Social
Changes
III
The Western Monarchies
IV
Political Patterns East
V
Ideas and
5
and City-States
Art
24 50 75 105
Epilogue
1
Chronological
Summary
35
141
Suggestions for Further Reading
145
Index
153
The Burgundian Eastern Europe
possessions
45
74
THE AGE OF RECOVERY The
Fifteenth Century
Introduction.
IN
the course of the fifteenth century
a recovery that has
seemed to many
The century opened sion in
at a
which the very
Europe experienced
a miraculous rebirth.
time of destitution and depressurvival of western civilization
appeared to be threatened. Plagues, wars, and famines ravaged a society already racked by economic dislocation, corruption,
ecclesiastical
Europeans,
and
political
disintegration.
however, not only succeeded in restoring
order, stability, and prosperity, but they also
upon
a
extended
series
embarked
of astonishing undertakings which vastly
their
artistic,
and
intellectual,
geographic
horizons.
Indeed, some of their achievements, notably those of the Italian humanists, were so dazzling that subsequent
views of the century have been distorted. Looking back
from
later periods, historians
have tended to treat each of
these accomplishments separately
—the
great discoveries,
the commercial revolution, Italian humanism, the artistic revival, or the all as
new monarchies
integral parts of the
zation as a whole.
The
—rather
than treat them
development of European
culmination of
this
civili-
approach, and
Age
2
of Recovery
of the uncritical enthusiasm
it
work
engendered, was the
of the great nineteenth-century historian Jakob Burckhardt.
(See his Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy
i860.) Europe, he asserted,
—
a
"Renaissance"
in Italy,
—
underwent
a cultural rebirth
in the fifteenth century, particularly
which reawakened mankind from
its
long medi-
aeval night of religious obscurantism to resume
trium-
its
phal march toward intellectual and artistic emancipation.
More
recently this
attack of scholars far less dark
argue that the Middle Ages were
and the Renaissance
than Burckhardt innovations,"
who
formulation has come under the
far less revolutionary
Many
had contended.
they
insist,
were mere
of
"great
the
modifications
mediaeval antecedents, while important mediaeval
of
insti-
tutions and attitudes survived well into the seventeenth
and
even
learning,
eighteenth
Modern
centuries.
historians
however, that both change and continuity can
be discerned in any century and that every age sense a "period of transition."
cept of a "Renaissance" has
some urge
that
it
is
in a
As a result, the whole concome under suspicion, and
should be abandoned altogether. Others
restrict the use of the letters or
are
term to designate
styles in art
and
simply to refer to a period of time, specifically
the fifteenth century in Italy. This scholarly pruning of
Burckhardt's theories has unquestionably improved our picture of the period, but pushed to
its
logical conclusion
of exorcising the concept of a "Renaissance" completely, it
produces
it is
a
misconception quite
as great as that
which
intended to correct.
Ultimately the
simply because
"Renaissance"
a cultural rebirth
enced, nurtured, and proclaimed
dinary
elite
cannot
be eliminated,
was consciously experi-
by
a small
of Italian intellectuals. These
but extraor-
men
of letters,
Introduction artists,
and
fifteenth century. It
By
divided western
first
whom
predecessors,
they
during the preceding "Dark Ages."
man and
nature had been distrusted,
demned, by most thinkers from century to
St.
St.
dismissed
classical
from the neglect and misunderstanding
if
tradition
had suffered
it
The
as
fact that both
not openly con-
Augustine in the fourth
Bonaventura in the thirteenth, did not deter
of the Renaissance from announcing as their goal
creation of a
the
and mod-
ancient, mediaeval,
they sought to rescue the
''Gothic,"
men
in
during the
thus deliberately separating themselves from their
immediate
the
engaged
classical culture
was they who
history into three periods: ern.
were
they
believed
scholars
launching a great revival of
5
better
world through the unlimited
development of human potentiality and the uninhibited understanding and enjoyment of nature.
This essay, recounting the revival of Europe during the fifteenth century,
employs the word "Renaissance"
its
depending upon the context. While
several current senses, it
in
notes the spectacular accomplishments of individuals
that have traditionally dominated historical accounts, also attempts,
framework, to
by
placing these achievements in a larger
call attention to
important matters. Thus state
it
it
more mundane but
still
opens with a review of the
of European civilization at the beginning of the
century and continues with an account of the regeneration of the long-stagnant
growth of population, ceding
economic
economy by such
trade,
depression,
and
capital.
this
factors as the
Like the pre-
revival
profoundly
affected the development of political and social institutions. In the
urbanized
West
it
tended to benefit both the
bourgeoisie and the peasantry at the expense of the nobility,
while in the East
it
favored the aristocrats,
who began
Age
4 to
of Recovery
consolidate their domination over the rapidly multi-
plying agrarian population. racies
Hie new
centralized bureauc-
western monarchies were able to subdue
of the
feudal forces and subordinate local interests.
In
central
Europe, however, where centuries of struggle gravely impaired the authority of pope and emperor, the eco-
nomic recovery was not
sufficiently sustained or vigorous
to permit the rebuilding of strong central institutions,
towns and lords generally retained
and
independence.
their
East of the Elbe, where there were few towns, the efforts of lords to reduce their peasants to serfdom
went unchal-
Beyond the eastern rim of Europe, both the Ottoman sultans and the Muscovite tsars solidified their lenged.
conquests, creating sprawling despotic empires of a non-
western type.
Supported and encouraged by ical revival, the artists
create a
new
this
economic and
and scholars of the age
set
polit-
out to
culture from the recently recovered remains
of classic civilization without realizing that they were
many
also incorporating
remains of the very mediaeval
synthesis they intended to demolish. But in spite of this
and the fact that
other areas of intellectual endeavor
in
conscious efforts to defend and shore up traditions and institutions
Renaissance
of
the
drive
fourteenth to
generate
ideas as well as to exercise
lands
eventually
century vibrant
new
styles
the
and
new authority or conquer new
produced
a
prosperous,
powerful Europe that was significantly mination and ability to assert
world.
continued,
its
new
proud, in
its
and
deter-
dominion over the entire
CHAPTER
I
Economic and Social Changes.
DURING the men
first
half of the fifteenth century the horse-
of the Apocalypse
—Conquest,
Famine,
Slaughter,
—continued to ravage Europe. Except for the
and Plague
Europe appeared permanent economic depression and
sparsely settled areas of the East,
to
be condemned to
its
consequent
social, religious,
and
political chaos;
but after
approximately 1450, war and plague subsided, with the result that population increased
and towns grew. This
expansion of the market for food stimulated
first
agricul-
ture and then trade in general, ultimately reviving
and
expanding the long-stagnant circulation of money.
By
economy was experiencing the unprecedented boom that would provide the wealth to send Columbus across the Atlantic, settle colonies in the end of the century the
the Americas, and at the same time support a brilliant cultural revival at
This
essay
explains
terms of a major established
home. these
rise in
demographic
dramatic
achievements
trend
and
appears
revived the equally long-depressed economy. the
records are
in
population that reversed a longto
have
Although
incomplete and unreliable by modern
Age
6
of Recovery
we know enough
standards,
representative
about births and deaths in
European communities
in the fifteenth cen-
tury to be quite certain that, with the tapering off of the calamities of famine, plague,
and war which dominated
the fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, the population
began to increase sharply and
We
know, with equal
In recent years,
more
at
an accelerating
rate.
certainty, that business improved.
economists
have tended more and
to see fluctuations in population as powerful, per-
haps decisive, influences on the economic health of a society.
To
take the later fifteenth century as an example,
it is
easy to recognize that as population increased, so did
the
demand
for grain, stimulating both a rise in prices
and an expansion of production.
Profits
made
most important, sector of the economy were
in this, the
either spent
for imported or manufactured goods, thereby extending
the stimulus
from agriculture
or they were invested in prosperity,
to industry
new production
population increased
still
and commerce,
of
all sorts.
With
and with
further,
the same bewildering speed they had manifested in their
common
decline a century and a half before, they pro-
vided a marked, often radical, and even revolutionary stimulus to
human
activity.
War, Famine and Pestilence ,
From struggle tated
1337 to
known
France,
1453,
as the
with brief
Hundred
disrupted
Years'
England,
despoiled Scotland and the
Low
respites,
War
and
a
confused
had devas-
intermittently
Countries. During the
same general period the Iberian kings never ceased ing
among
themselves except to seek conquests in Italy or
to attempt to drive the
Granada,
fight-
Moors from
their last foothold in
just as the Scandinavians interrupted their civil
Economic and
Social Changes
7
only to attack the Hanseatic League. In the
strife
east,
the Poles clashed with the Teutonic Knights and with
Tartar raiders roving over the Ukraine, while to the south,
Ottoman
armies
themselves, save in a
common
in turn,
the
pillaged
In
Balkans.
addition,
and towns fought incessantly among
barons,
princes,
on the
rare occasions
when they
joined
cause to suppress revolts of the masses, who,
more normally vented
their frustration in frequent
persecution of Jews or witches.
The
depredations of brig-
ands and pirates seemed petty annoyances to a society in
which
victors could legitimately slaughter the vanquished
they could not ransom and burn the booty they could not carry
off.
Hunger
still
stalked Europe.
natural
the drastic reduc-
during the fourteenth century had
tion of population
made food
Not even
generally plentiful. For one thing, frequent
calamities
—
floods,
duced new famines,
and
freezes,
droughts
at times so severe as to
—promen
reduce
to cannibalism. In addition, even local shortages caused starvation,
by
because fear of famine, ruthlessly exploited
speculators and political adventurers, drove most
munities
forbid
to
the
export
of
grain,
com-
and further,
because the transport of significant quantities over land
was all but impossible. Finally, neither individuals nor towns had the resources, even if they had the foresight, to lay
away
provisions for the inevitable emergencies.
foods could not be stored at
meat and value
if
fish
preserved in
they survived
In the
wake
of
all,
salt, lost
rats, rot,
Many
and those that could,
and
most of
like
their nutritive
fire.
war and famine came
disease.
Although
the worst epidemics of plague struck in the fourteenth
century, at least ten occurred between 1400 and
1485,
and minor outbreaks were recorded somewhere every
Age
8
The
year.
of Recovery
towns, overcrowded and vermin-infested, with
primitive ideas of public health and hygiene, susceptible to the plague than
were
seaports, continually exposed to infection
which swarmed around able of
all;
were more
rural areas;
and the
from the
rats
were most vulner-
their wharves,
but even remote and isolated communities did
not escape unscathed. Yet the most murderous plagues
many
could not claim as
victims as the
the care and treatment of which,
more dangerous than
often
and
a
disease
common
attempted at
if
illnesses, all,
were
the ailments. In the century
between 1300 and 1450, war, famine, and combined to reduce Europe's population by some
half
30 per cent, to about fifty million.
The
Agricultural
Before
Economy almost
this great decline,
all
the inhabitants of
Europe had been subsistence farmers, eking out barely enough for survival. Inevitably, they supported the rural
(who
clergy and nobility 0.5 per cent
and
1
constituted, respectively, about
per cent of the population), and those
few who lived near enough had to feed the people of the towns. Well over 90 per cent of Europe's meager population,
however, lived not in towns but in one of four basic
types of rural environment: arable land. Forests covered
the
continent,
but
accounted for huge land could
ill
both areas,
support
forest,
much
swamp,
steppe,
or
the largest portion of
swamps and steppes also and what remained as arable meager,
its
poor,
hungry,
and
unhealthy population.
Both
in the northern plain
leys of the Mediterranean,
dairy products and a
little
and
in the steep-walled val-
cereals,
together with some
meat, provided the basic diet
and surpluses to pay for the inescapable rents and
taxes.
Economic and
Farm ing, as
animals supplied
Changes
Social
power
p
well as food and cloth-
as
and the wretched inhabitants understandably made
much
beer, cider, or
wine
as local circumstances per-
by
mitted. Largely self-sufficient
necessity, farmers sup-
and
plemented basic products with game, fish, adjacent forests and swamps. For
fruit
from
which often had
salt,
to
be imported, and for any small luxuries or occasional
by
tools offered
peddlers or nearby market towns, they
bartered or sold their surplus.
After the onset of plagues in the fourteenth century, population declined faster than harvests, with the result that markets shrank
out
driven
of
and prices
depressed throughout the tury.
The
wage
levels in
first
general shortage
and prices of
Marginal lands were
fell.
and
production,
agriculture
remained
half of the fifteenth cen-
of labor, however,
caused
town as well as country to be maintained, handmade goods even tended to rise. The
principal consumers of such goods
were the
nobles,
still
predominantly landowners, whose income was suffering a steady drop.
A
significant
lowed,
as
change in the pattern of landowning
a steadily increasing
cratic victims of circumstances
number of
fol-
these aristo-
were driven to contract
mortgages they would be unable to carry while the
The
depression of cereal prices continued.
was the ants,
transfer of
who worked
it
more and more land
to thrifty peas-
themselves, thus avoiding labor costs,
or to prosperous burghers,
new
ultimate result
wealth and who, by
who were stricter
eager to invest their
economy and
better
management, made the land yield greater returns than did for their aristocratic predecessors.
mony Italy,
lands
by
The
it
loss of patri-
prodigal nobles was greater in France,
and western Germany than
in
England, Spain, and
w
Age
eastern Europe. vast tracts
of Recovery
Everywhere
owned by
still
all classes
hungrily eyed the
who
the higher clergy,
tended,
because of able, professional management, to keep their estates intact.
The
Community
Business
Demographic
decline and agricultural
depression had
transformed the economy, hurting some seg-
radically
ments of the community and helping industries
had catered primarily to
The
others.
aristocratic
old
extrava-
power of
gance, with the result that, as the purchasing
the nobles dropped, so did sales. Nevertheless, the skilled
power of
laborers in the established trades used the
their
well-organized guilds to prevent any lowering of wages or the introduction of laborsaving techniques, thus preclud-
ing
the
impasse, ers or
to
possibility
of
cutting
Caught
prices.
in
this
many shop owners were forced to dismiss workcontrast, new industries developed
go bankrupt. In
meet the growing market of rural and urban workers.
Benefiting from the general rise in wages, these hitherto
impoverished
classes
began
to
buy
handmade
cheap
goods which had previously been quite beyond reach.
By
far the
most important commodity
gory was lightweight, inexpensive woolen could be made by
less
skilled
in this cate-
which
cloth,
and more important
unorganized labor. Bypassing the guilds and their
restric-
entrepreneurs "put out" clothmaking to peasants
tions,
who
their
in their idle seasons or hours
weave
in their
The Flemish
cottages, textile
were glad
to spin or
even for low wages. centers
of
Ypres,
Bruges,
and
Ghent, forced by their guilds to continue turning English fleece
smaller
into
old-style
surrounding
expensive
towns and
woolens, villages,
exploiting unorganized labor and the
suffered.
however,
new cheap
The by
Spanish
Economic and
managed
wool,
Social Changes
The
prosper.
to
1
English
themselves,
deprived of their traditional Flemish market, were forced to follow the trend
and turn
their
raw wool
into inexpen-
own villages, in order to compete successnew Flemish clothmakers. Even Florence
sive cloth in their
fully with the
and the other
had made luxury cloth for
Italian cities that
most of southern Europe were forced to follow the example of the North.
To
switch to making the
expensive
buy Spanish wool and
products, they too were forced to to find cheap labor,
less
and thus destroy
their guilds
and
oppress their journeymen in the process.
These readjustments were both painful and hazardous, and many individuals and communities suffered; but the
general,
older and
better
Germany and
northern
united in a protective
German and The cities of
established
towns fared better than any
Italian
others.
the southern shores of the Baltic
federation
the Hanseatic
called
League which controlled the exchange of
grain, fish, furs,
and forest products from the Baltic lands for metals,
spices,
salt,
Europe.
Not
until the latter part of the fifteenth
Baltic trade
Ulm,
to
name
escaped the general decline
the
century
broken by the
English and the Dutch. Further south, Augsburg,
and
cloth,
and wine from western or southern
was the hold of the Hansa on berg,
in
Nurem-
most important
by continuing
established trade with the great Italian
cities,
their
long-
communes, nota-
bly Milan, Venice, and Florence, importing both the
new
cloth and such traditional items as silk and spices.
At
least
until
the end of the fifteenth
century, the
Italians managed to maintain their position as the most
successful
businessmen in Europe.
If
they
owed
their
previous eminence to their location at the center of the
Mediterranean,
they
consolidated
this
advantage
by
developing the most advanced business methods of the
Age
12
Through
time.
of Recovery
joint-stock companies and deposit banks,
they increased their ability to
we
development of what
enormous to a
risks
insurance they shared the
call
in their accounts.
bookkeeping
possible
and
practical, while bills of exchange,
at the
introduc-
accounting
effective
bought
in
one currency
date in another, expanded credit
at a later
same time they expedited commerce. superior
Inevitably, these lona,
The
and Arabic numerals made double-
tion of the abacus
and payable
and by the
involved in commerce and reduced them
manageable factor
entry
capital,
raise
as
techniques
Barce-
spread.
well as Genoa, established a state bank, while
private Italian financiers concentrated banking operations at
great financial
capitals
London, and Lyon. The
such
Florence,
as
Antwerp,
Italians also established resident
agents, or factors, in other principal
commercial centers,
and the Medici, operating from Florence, developed close-knit
and
resilient
cious forerunner of the
tem of
business
organization.
modern holding company, made it
intricate interlocking partnerships
for a branch to go bankrupt without pulling
parent
A
—
company
a possibility that
a
preco-
this sys-
possible
down
the
would not have been
comprehensible or acceptable to mediaeval businessmen.
These innovations, along with many practice of investing
of
rising
imitators,
princes,
growing
clerics,
others, including the
profits in the
and
kings,
governments
began to
attract
notably the greatest French financier of the
century, Jacques Coeur, and the rising banking family of the Fuggers in southern
Population
Germany.
Growth and Economic
Prosperity after 1450
Between 1450 and 1500 the number of inhabitants of Europe rose from some 50,000,000 to an estimated
Economic and 70,000,000,
more than compensating
losses suffered since 1300.
British Isles
Social Changes
may
By
13
for the demographic
the end of the century, the
have had 4,500,000 inhabitants; France,
15,000,000; Spain, 7,000,000; Italy, 10,000,000;
and
Netherlands,
the
10,000,000;
Hungary,
Greater
6,000,000;
Germany
Poland-Lithuania,
Bohemia,
3,500,000;
2,000,000; Russia, 6,000,000; the Balkans, 4,000,000; and
Scandinavia, 2,000,000. Although the large majority of the
population
still
rapidly. Paris
is
lived
on the
began growing
land, cities
estimated to have had between 100,000
and 200,000 inhabitants by the end of the century. Italy had more large towns than any other country:
Milan,
Venice, and Naples, each with perhaps 100,000, and several others
with over 50,000. Only four
Peninsula and four in the
Low
cities
of the Iberian
Countries had over 30,000.
Cologne, with perhaps 40,000 persons, was the largest city
Germany; and London, with
in
number, was the
a like
only city in England to exceed 15,000. Eastern Europe
was
far less urbanized and, except for Prague, Novgorod, Moscow, and Constantinople, probably had no towns with a population of more than 15,000. Maximum growth
occurred in the eastern plains and along the western seaboard, areas which tion that
would soon provide
would migrate
a surplus popula-
across the Atlantic and the Urals.
In some areas of central Europe, however, where the losses suffered in the
preceding 150 years were not made
up, the population remained dispersed.
Everywhere the economy responded the dramatic population growth.
housing, and clothing drove the
demand
to the stimulus of
The need
commodity
for
more food,
prices up,
for arable land outpaced the rate at
and
which
it
could be cleared. Consequently, land rents and values soared,
and the colonization of the
less
developed areas
Age
14
of eastern Europe,
particularly
Increased
accelerated.
of Recovery in
Poland and Russia,
demand spurred
the introduction
of improved techniques, especially of crop rotation, and the quality as well^as quantity of the crops improved.
But because the population grew more rapidly than
new farm
land could be opened and thus caused a labor
surplus in the predominantly agrarian society, real wages
began to
first
fall,
The consequent
on farms and
later in
towns
decline in per capita spending
as well.
by both
town and country laborers was, however, more than offset by the increase in their total number, which was great enough to absorb all available output. As a result, propritors
enjoyed both cheaper labor costs and an expanding
market for
their produce.
As
grain prices rose, landowners
prospered and, in turn, contributed to the expansion of
commerce and industry by buying manufactured goods and imported
luxuries. In response to this stimulus of
expanding
market,
particularly
by
industry
augmented
an
capacity,
its
further developing the "putting out" sys-
tem. Originally designed to circumvent the guilds in a
now
period of shrinking markets, this technique different
served a
purpose in a rapidly expanding economy by
drawing on the unlimited reserve of peasant This normal economic
revival,
labor.
however, was soon to be
overtaken by a revolution in Europe's commerce. Italian capitalists, technicians,
and adventurers, of
whom Colum-
bus and Amerigo Vespucci are the most famous, contributed significantly to the development of ocean trade;
but even before the great discoveries, Atlantic
coastal
route from
the
Baltic
had reached an important
profit.
And
restricted
by
industry,
which had
traffic
along the
Mediterranean to the level
of activity and
hitherto been severely
the limitations of mediaeval transportation,
was suddenly drawn
into a maelstrom of expansion.
Economic and Gradual improvements
Changes
between Germany and
new Alpine
passes
Italy shortened the routes
from
Italy to northern Europe,
making
it
possible for a courier in a
week.
speed was to expedite important negotia-
as this
heavy or bulky goods could
transported only
months
of
between Venice and Bruges
to travel overland
tions,
i$
communications had already
The opening
served to expand trade.
Useful
in
Social
by
still
be economically
water, and a cargo
to traverse the distance
still
took three
between those
sailing ship. Progress in techniques
cities
by
of water transporta-
tion had, however, continued even during the depression.
Map-making, navigation, and shipbuilding so that trade
between
Italy
all
improved,
and Flanders, which during
the Middle
Ages had used the north-south
rivers,
notably
the Rhine,
now was
Sailing
around
increasingly
by
sea.
Gibraltar, merchants visited the Atlantic ports en route,
contributing to their development even before the advent
of the transatlantic trade. In fact, one of the most important steps in the expansion
commerce had been achieved by the famous "Venetian galleys." Even though there had always been some coastal shipping along Europe's Atlantic of later mediaeval
no regular through trade from the Mediterranean
shores,
by way of the Atlantic, existed before the thirteenth century. About 1300, however, both the volume of commerce and nautical techniques attained levels that made such a route not merely to the
North Sea and
feasible
to
but extremely promising. Although very costly
organize,
volume
With chants
the Baltic,
it
this
w ater r
transport,
because of the enormous
could handle, could produce unheard-of
profits.
prospect clearly in mind, the Venetian mer-
—working
through their oligarchy
solve the problems of risk
by arranging convoys
owing
to
— proceeded
to
weather and piracy
of their largest galleys (propelled
1
Age
6
by
as
many
make
180 oars) to
as
—usually
Low
and the
of Recovery
Countries
the voyage to
once
a year.
Although
no doubt
precise figures are elusive, there can be
England that this
innovation raised .the volume of north-south trade to an
new
entirely
order
manufacturing
both
of
thereby
magnitude,
and
banking
to
a
stimulating
corresponding
degree, and inevitably inviting imitators and initiating a
whole new phase of economic Profits
from
this
consumed
to be
in
sea-borne
any
history.
commerce became too
traditional
manner, so
a
new prob-
lem of rinding opportunities for investment began to Initially this led to a further
The
results
arise.
expansion and extension of
trade and then to the development of niques.
large
new
business tech-
could soon be seen in the widespread
introduction of a variety of innovations. Itinerant ped-
who had
dlers
supplied dispersed and limited markets
instinct either transformed themselves, or
by, professional merchants
ing
reports
wines,
grain,
and
who worked
accounts.
wool,
by
were replaced
in "offices" study-
Large-scale
speculation
in
and metals accompanied increased
investments and improved techniques. In mining, printing,
made
spinning, and weaving, the
commitment of
and the introducand systematic management. Lender
possible the enlargement of plants
tion of specialization
these conditions, credit insurance
and banking operations
expanded rapidly, and international business plied, building a
but with professional
profits,
was
European
to
ties
multi-
common European economy. The new
sophisticated process of investing large risks
capital
skill,
sums
in pursuit of
at calculated
even greater
play an increasingly important role in
affairs, until it
dominated the entire
civilization
under the name "capitalism."
Governments of the period became acutely conscious
Economic and
Social Changes
77
of the unprecedented expansion of business and often
sought to tap
The mining
its profits.
industry offered an
opportunity and consequently provided a fine
irresistible
example of
this
procedure.
and mounting
In constant
need of bullion for coins and iron for arms, rulers every-
where not only maintained
their
traditional
rights
in
mineral deposits but began to take an active part in the
management of mines and even invested heavily in their development. Under such favorable conditions, the production of
and iron probably quintupled
silver, lead, tin,
Europe between 1450 and 1530. In Italy the popes and the Medici divided the profits from vast new alum mines, while in Germany and Hungary the Hapsin central
burgs ultimately shared the growing mining wealth with their principal bankers, the Fuggers. Simultaneously, the
Portuguese began to import significant amounts of gold
from western Africa. This new bullion induced inflation,
stimulated
increased the Rulers,
demand
enhanced
business,
for
all
by
encouraged
sorts of this
goods and
as well.
and
services.
attempted
success,
extend their control to other businesses
a mild
incomes,
to
Louis XI of
France, for example, succeeded in establishing a fair at
Lyon which
lured
much
business
away from Geneva, but
he failed in his efforts to establish a native
silk
industry in
France. In a remarkable anticipation of the mercantilism of Jean-Baptiste
Colbert,
his
bureaucrats
and
theorists
consciously tried to manipulate trade to build up their country's monetary reserves through the maintanance of
a favorable
balance
of
payments. Preoccupation with
constantly growing needs for bullion drove kings to take
new sources of gold and silver, by encouraging the explorations which
increasing interest in ticularly
parled
eventually to the importation of vast American treasures.
Age
i8
of Recovery
Social Changes
The impact
of these economic developments
deepened the
political
They
and cultural chasm dividing the
commercial West from the
increasingly
on the
western Europe was profound.
social structure of
East
agrarian
and wrought basic changes in both. In the West, during the
feudal
depression,
and manorial
nobles
number and importance
declined in
as
new
had
serfs
classes arose.
Until the expansion began, about 1450. aristocratic landlords
were forced
and
to sell their grain for less
while
less
they had to pay more and more for labor that had once
been owed them
as
their lands to peasants for
either case
was
The
service.
a drastic
low
was
alternative
rents,
to
let
but the result in
reduction of income. Similarly,
the continuous debasement and devaluation of currencies
eroded revenues based on long-term dues.
Some landowners,
leases or
particularly
Spain, protected themselves
by
customary
England
in
evicting the tenants
and
and
converting their estates to sheep farms, early anticipating the enclosure their
movement. Others attempted
Spain,
supplement
dwindling incomes by becoming professional
diers, bureaucrats,
even
to
businessmen.
brigands, or Still
—
others,
in
England and
especially
in
sol-
Italy
France,
and the Rhineland, sank into chronic poverty,
becoming the hobereaux, sixteenth
century.
Thus
hidalgos, and Raubritter of the
the
shrinkage
of
demand
for
grain and the rise in labor costs before 1450 put a steady
economic pressure on the noble landowners
Europe and weakened, or tional
in
western
at least threatened, their tradi-
Most were too impoverished to benefit from the expansion when it finally began.
position.
significantly
In contrast,
the
serfs
and agricultural laborers
who
survived the Black Death found their services in greatly
Economic and
Social Changes
Landowners were forced
increased demand.
who
for labor with businessmen
to
compete
could offer not only
higher wages,
but even the
escaped
In certain districts,
serfs.
19
prospect
freedom,
of
such
to
the English
as
Midlands and the Castilian plateau, the early enclosure
movements reduced
workers and
landless rural
serfs to
beggars, but such exceptions notwithstanding, the general scarcity of labor placed
most
serfs in a strong position.
Frequently able to buy emancipation, to commute service obligations
money payments, or to and even buy land, not
into
favorable leases
their
numbers began
the West,
to increase rapidly, the peasants of
where serfdom had
East,
numbers
serf,
yeoman. After 1450, when virtually disappeared, miti-
by migrating
gated the effects of the decline in wages increasing
few during
a
from poor
these decades ascended the social ladder to free peasant, to prosperous
more
acquire
in
to the expanding towns. In the rural
however, having nowhere to go, the peasants were
who
completely vulnerable to the local nobles, to exploit
them
at will, ultimately
proceeded
reducing them to serf-
dom. After a generation or two, country yeomen in the
West
became hardly distinguishable from urban businessmen who, upon retirement, had invested their money in farms. Sometimes both crats
in
a
new
amalgamated with rural
middle
recently acquired lands, tended to
townsmen, and,
like
the
the
poorer
which,
class
buy from and
capitalists
in
the
aristo-
exploiting sell
to
towns, was
primarily concerned with making profits.
Turmoil and violence accompanied the classes in
town and country.
pation, peasants for land,
wages and
from the
political
least skilled
rise
and
fall
of
Serfs struggled for emanci-
and urban workers for better
rights.
The worst
and lowest paid
outbreaks came
laborers, especially
Age
20
the weavers and fullers, the
privileged
classes.
of Recovery
who were ruthlessly crushed by None of these popular revolts
brought permanent amelioration; they only
and countryside
and arson, leaving chaos in
witji violence
Following an old Judaeo-Christian from,
their
promising earthly
discontent
social
millennium
the
in
—the
poverty or even to provide a friars,
who
movements
cities,
an
of
establishment
however,
the miseries
alleviate
of
sufficient religious opiate.
attempted to sublimate
class
despair, could not minister to all the rootless
urban poor, while secular
or relief
of,
religious
kingdom of God. In the crowded
church proved unable to
The
tradition, the alien-
masses sought expression
frustrated
ated,
ate
town
wake.
their
the
filled
priests,
who
hatred and
and desper-
all
too often
lacked true religious commitment, were frequently not
even assigned to slums. Discontent among the ignorant continued, therefore, to express
itself in
heresy and revolt.
The overcrowded and underemployed Prague, for example, Hussite tury,
lowed
movement
joined the extreme
at the
proletariat
wing
fef
Similarly,
in
the
beginning of the fifteenth cen-
and the downtrodden peasants of the region suit.
of
Germany some
of the
fol-
poor
mingled heresy with rebellion. Peasants' revolts multiplied in the fifteenth in the
German
movements
and early sixteenth Peasants'
failed,
as
War
centuries, culminating
of 1525. But these chiliastic
thoroughly
as their
purely secular
counterparts had, to impede the newly developing class structure of Europe.
Summary In the West, the principal beneficiaries of the economic expansion of the latter part of the fifteenth century were
Economic and the
Social Changes
21
Because of rising prices and increasing
bourgeois.
demand, they could expect to make
a profit
on anything
they bought and held. Agricultural producers ants or also
yeomen
benefited
suffered.
The
West and
from
the
same
—the
their
on long-term
peas-
the nobles in the East
Other
factors.
classes
old feudal nobles of the West, most of
had transmuted their land
in the
whom
manorial services or rented leases,
were caught with
out
relatively
Even wages
fixed incomes in a period of general inflation.
did not rise as fast as prices, and the proletariat, whether
town or country, was
in
also
caught
at a desperate disad-
West lost power to who now employed many of the surplus
vantage. But while the nobles in the the bourgeois,
workers, those in the East succeeded in enserfing their peasants and consolidating their control of the land, thus
reinforcing their social and economic dominance.
The western
capitalists,
began to undermine the
with their drive for
cultural, religious,
structures of the old agrarian world.
and
But by
profits,
political
their
more
than princely patronage, combined with their improving taste,
they began to establish
new
ones, notably during
the northern and southern Renaissances. attitudes
new
toward work and poverty,
mental
as
By
their
new
by
their
well as
they influenced the Protestant and
habits,
Catholic Reformations.
And
finally,
through heavy capital
investment and the infusion of their
new
business meth-
growth of centralized states. In eastern Europe, where few cities arose and the economy
ods, they aided the
changed
little,
the
political structures
—
as
in
traditional
cultural,
religious,
and
tended to survive unchanged, unless
the case of serfdom
—they
were actually
rein-
forced and extended.
Thus, although the transition from mediaeval to mod-
Age
22
of Recovery
ern society remained incomplete, important progress in this direction
had occurred by the end of the fifteenth
The
beginnings of the commercial and capitalist
century.
on the one hand, and the concomitant growth of the urban middle classes on the other, produced revolutions
not merely radical economic and social changes but striking advances in the five-hundred-year-old process of territorial consolidation
which
constitutes the central
of the political history of the Middle Ages.
important widespread developments, however,
was
its
all
impact
different in different parts of Europe, so that existing
regional differences
To
were often accentuated.
follow these changes in a systematic manner
useful to think of the
map
divided into four vertical
which benefited most expansion
strips.
directly
overseas.
it
is
of fifteenth-century Europe as
Along the western edge
lay the national states of England,
the
theme
As with
France, and Spain,
and most extensively from
Next,
between
lines
formed
roughly by the Scheldt, Meuse, and Rhone rivers on the
west and by an imaginary extension of the Elbe to the Adriatic on the
east,
was what we
shall call west-central
Europe. Here were to be found the small
and princely
states that characterized the
city-, church-,
Italian penin-
Germany, and the Low Countries, and the old centers of commerce along the rivers that linked the Mediterranean and the North Sea. East-central Europe, between the Elbe-Adriatic line and the Dvina and Dnieper, was made up of the large, loosely organized kingdoms of Poland-Lithuania, Bohemia, and Hungary. There towns
sula,
and commerce always lagged, partly because of seacoasts. Still further to the east
a lack of
sprawled the huge and
heterogenous Muscovite and Ottoman empires tied more to the caravan trade of the Asiatic steppes than to the
Economic and
Social Changes
water-borne commerce of Europe. Just
as
23
each of these
four strips developed a characteristic economic structure, so also,
by
the end of the fifteenth century, each had
acquired distinctive regional political patterns. Beginning at the center of
then to the
we
east,
Europe and moving
we
shall
first
to the west
and
examine each of these areas as
follow the historical process of consolidation.
CHAPTER
II
Principalities
THE
line of the Scheldt,
ating western
same
and City-States.
as
Meuse, and Rhone rivers separ-
from west-central Europe was roughly the 870 to divide the northern
that established in
domains of Charlemagne between sons, Louis the this
German and
his
surviving grand-
Charles the Bald.
(See, in
Richard E. Sullivan, Heirs of the
series,
Roman
Empire.} This boundary remained relatively stable until early
modern
times, and, indeed, sections of
stitute the long-contested
fifteenth century this line
it
still
con-
Franco-German border. In the marked more than the political
differences
between the monarchies
city-states
and
principalities
to
to the west
the
east,
in
and the central
Europe.
It
areas in
which the western monarchies were grounded river valleys of Ger-
also
effectively separated the
large
agrarian
from the more densely populated many, the latter
areas
Low the
Countries, long,
and northern
mutually
Italy.
destructive
In the struggle
between the Holy Roman Empire and the papacy had allowed the flourishing commercial and industrial towns of the Po, Rhine, and Elbe valleys and the Baltic shores to
win and maintain
a
large
degree
of independence.
Principalities
and City -States
25
Grown
vigorous on the trade that crossed the Alps and
filtered
down
the rivers to the north, they
remain free (in
were able to
fact, sovereign) or to offer sufficient resist-
ance to both pope and emperor to preserve precarious autonomy. Most, however,
fell
a
one after the
other to local princes or upstarts, who, rising
among
the
Empire and papacy, amalgamated these old
of
ruins
least
at
independent
cities
territorial states.
small
into
The
and closely administered
history of one city does not closely
resemble that of another, but in historical perspective certain similarities
common
appear that suggest
trends
or patterns of development. Italy
At from
the end of the thirteenth century, Italy emerged
long struggle with popes and emperors to become
its
the promised land of princes. Ostensibly the prosperous
northern communes continued their famous experiments in republican government, but social strains of the next
constitutions
became
under the economic and
hundred and
fifty years, their
so corrupted that, sooner or later,
they were subverted or suppressed by despots. Whether these
new
tyrants started as noblemen, regular citizens,
power
or professional soldiers or whether they achieved
power by
legally or seized
methods clever
in
their
betrayals,
ascent:
and
force, they intricate
carefully
employed
marriage
plotted
assassinations.
Furthermore, once entrenched in power, they
same objectives:
similar
alliances,
all
had the
the establishment of hereditary ruling
houses, the conquest of
weaker neighbors, and the con-
solidation of administrative institutions. In the process of
attaining replete
their
goals,
they
created
the
modern
state,
with armies, bureaucrats, and diplomatic corps.
Age
26
of Recovery
Just after 1400, five territorial states rose
of precariously independent
Under her
peninsula.
her
despite
Without
benefit of its
Naples
even
but
politics,
republic.
by
and the canonically remained
alone
—
Peace of Lodi (1454)
in the
apparently
kingdom underwent reform. Although originally
This treaty, which served
let live.
Venice,
while
oligarchical
and suspicious of one another, these
soon agreed
the
feudal
its
administrative
significant
Milan became
excellence,
an
Italian
the Medici ruled Florence
rough urban
monarchs.
unchanged,
jealous
title,
dominate the
attempted to govern the Papal States as
elected popes
absolute
par
remained
doge,
dominating
dukes,
great
despotism
Renaissance
cities to
from the welter
five
—
powers
to live
and
as a putative constitu-
tion for the peninsula, not only ensured, incidentally, the survival of
the
first
some of
Italy's lesser states,
modern system
but also instituted
of permanent resident ambas-
sadors to oversee the peace and spy on rivals.
when
as a result
were beginning Atlantic,
By
1500,
of the great discoveries trade and wealth to shift
from the Mediterranean to the
French and Spanish invasions precipitated the
political decline of Italy
and the waning of
its
cultural
renaissance.
Milan Milan, which dominated the western valley of the Po,
had long constituted
a
natural center for the political,
military,
and commercial activity of the surrounding
ritories,
but
dominions
major (1
to
subjugate
required
Renaissance
385-1402),
seized the rest
who by
the
and
unify
rapacious
despot.
Gian
ter-
turbulent
determination
of
a
Galeazzo
Visconti
from
his father,
inherited half of iMilan killing his uncle
these
and succeeded
in turn-
Frincipalities
and City -States
commune
ing the old commercial and industrial
modern
territorial
bought the
state.
Duke
title
To
27
gain appropriate status, he
Holy Roman
of Milan from the
Emperor and then married
into a
a
French
princess,
with the
immediate purpose of recovering respectability but with the ultimate result of providing the pretext for a French invasion of his ill-won duchy. Early resolved to expand his
kingdom
holdings into a
able, at his death in 1402, to
in northern
bequeath to
he was
Italy,
his son, Filippo
Maria, a well-established principality together with the
purchased
The
title.
father's success,
retributive aggression
son had to spend legacy.
When
however, provoked
by Venice and Florence; and hold
his life in endless struggles to
the male line of the Visconti
end with Filippo's death
came
the his
to an
in 1447, a vicious struggle for
the succession began.
The
victor,
Francesco Sforza, was the epitome of a
particularly ruthless type of professional soldier, in fifteenth-century Italy as condottiere. After
known
marrying
Filippo's illegitimate daughter, Sforza used his formidable
military
power
to seize the throne of the duchy.
having consolidated
through
his
his
alliance
Then,
control of Milan, he was able,
with Florence and Naples in the
Peace of Lodi, to help reduce the chronic chaos of the peninsula. Finally,
by introducing irrigation, as well as worms to his domains, he economy toward the exploitation of
the cultivation of rice and silk reoriented Milan's
the land instead of the traditional transalpine trade and
thus fostered a
new
prosperity.
This increased wealth
enabled Sforza not only to strengthen
and army but
also to patronize artists
his
government
and writers, thus
transforming Milan into a brilliant capital.
His son and successor, the
cruel,
licentious Galeazzo
Age
28
Maria,
of Recovery
record. After ten years of scandal-
left a different
by
ous misrule he was assassinated, to be succeeded brother, Ludovico, called
Moro, who,
il
his
regent for
as
Galeazzo's eight-year-old son and heir, ruled as virtual
Even though he made Milan one of
dictator.
and most
the richest
brilliant centers of the Renaissance,
the seeds of ultimate
he sowed
Seeking revenge against
disaster.
Florence and Naples for disintegrating the long-standing alliance
and leaving Milan
Moro
il
French king, Charles VIII,
in persuading the
Italy at the
isolated,
An
unforeseen
deviation
French royal succession, however, turned
At
its
cousin
die
come
to
this
in
the
maneuver
author.
the time,
would
to
head of an army to press old claims to the
kingdom of Naples. against
succeeded
it
did not occur to Ludovico that Charles
without
Louis
a direct heir, leaving the
Orleans,
of
who had
claims to Milan as well as Naples.
crown
already
When
to his
inherited
Charles died, the
victim of an accident, shortly after his Italian expedition,
Louis XII (1498-15 1 5) mounted the throne and promptly set
out for Milan.
The
driven from his duchy
fact that
by
the invaders,
soon replaced by the Hapsburgs overlords in Italy,
made
Ludovico himself was
who
in turn
were
as the principal foreign
practical difference to the
little
inhabitants of the city.
Venice If this transformation of
ing
commune
tyrant
into a
made her
fifteenth century,
Milan from
modern
a
mediaeval trad-
territorial state ruled
by
a
typical of northern Italian cities of the
Venice remained unique. Secure behind
her lagoons, she continued her prosperous trade. Unaffected
by
the confusions that
wracked the
rest of the
and City -States
Principalities
29
peninsula throughout the fifteenth century, the citizens
of the republic had to contend with
except from
the
government of the
dictatorial
merchant
exclusive
and
patriciate
had long promoted
jealous
interference,
little
its
economic
city's
This
oligarchy.
rich
by
interests
building an empire of fortified ports along the coasts and
on the
and the eastern Mediter-
islands of the Adriatic
At
ranean that discouraged or repelled foreign attack.
home
factional
strife
was
stifled
by
a
combination of
prosperity and unremitting police surveillance.
The gov-
ernment, composed of an elected doge, or duke, a senate,
and
grand council, was designed to protect the
a
from seizure by either a dynastic despot or demagogue as well as from external foes.
At
a proletarian
was of Europe. Having
the beginning of the fifteenth century, Venice
actually one
of the leading states
defeated her chief commercial
nated the
and
state
as
quests
silk
long
and
rival,
Genoa, she domi-
spice trade of the eastern Mediterranean;
as she resisted the
temptation to seek con-
on the mainland, she was
able to avoid
most of
the debilitating warfare that had long engulfed the rest
of Italy. Eventually, however, the consolidation of the
new
states in the north, particularly Milan,
appeared to
threaten her security. After long debate, the Venetian oligarchs reluctantly reversed their traditional policy and set
out to acquire territories that would establish a pro-
tective zone to the northwest of the city. Gradually they
annexed the eastern half of the Po Valley, securing their western boundary with Milan the price of being
drawn
at the
into the unstable politics
by
the expense of
Venice began to
lose
at
and
With
her resources thus
becoming
a territorial state,
sporadic wars of the peninsula. strained
Adda River but
some of her pre-eminence
in the
Age
So
eastern Mediterranean,
of Recovery
where her
irreconcilable conflict
with the Ottomans and mounting competition from the Portuguese and eventually the Dutch led to her decline in the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries.
Florence
commune
Florence, an old commercial-industrial
Milan, rounded out
its
like
Tuscany by annex1406. Long governed by
possessions in
ing the important port of Pisa in
a small oligarchy of rich merchants, the masters of the
seven largest guilds, or
arti
maggiori,
it
had,
by
the begin-
ning of the fifteenth century, become the political property of an even smaller faction, headed family.
an
Exploiting
which appeared all classes,
extremely
by
complex
the Albizzi constitution
to guarantee equitable representation to
these patricians
trol of the signory, or
managed
to gain effective con-
municipal administration.
In the course of the fifteenth century, however, the hold
of the Albizzi faction was broken in
turn,
its
and a
new by
family, the Medici, gained control. Rising generation
generation from obscure origins to wealth, power, and finally nobility, the
Medici personified the virtuosity and
achievement associated with the Renaissance. dations of family
power had been
Bicci de' Medici (1 360-1429),
immense fortune
in
who
laid
The
foun-
by Giovanni
di
not only amassed an
commerce and banking, but
associ-
ated himself with the lesser guilds and proletariat in their resistance to the oppressive taxation of the Albizzi.
son Cosimo, a consummate businessman, career in trade and banking for politics.
left
With
a
His
brilliant
the support
of the lower orders of society, he forced the Albizzi into
1434 and proceeded to rule Florence through a or reform commission with unlimited power. By
exile in balia,
engineering an alliance with Naples and Milan to rein-
Principalities
and City -States
31
force the Peace of Lodi, he contributed not only to the pacification of Italy but to the prosperity of Florence.
With an
earnest love of beauty and a deep reverence for
learning, he
was
a great
patron of the arts (and
he was a student of the
his day. In addition,
artists)
of
and
classics
an important collector of ancient manuscripts. In 1464, at the age of seventy-five, he died while listening to a reading of one of Plato's dialogues.
He was
succeeded
first
by
son Piero, then in 1469 by his grandson Lorenzo. Lorenzo maintained both the fagade of republican
his
and the practice of benevolent despotism which had characterized his grandfather's rule. He also
institutions
continued to manipulate the
alliance
with Milan and
Naples to preserve peace on the peninsula. lesser
businessman than
even more
Known
as
Lorenzo was an
his grandfather,
enthusiastic
supporter
of
he was a
If
arts
and
letters.
"the Magnificent," this versatile intellectual
became not only the Renaissance patron par
excellence,
artists, writers, and philosophers he composed poetry which, by its intrinsic
but the friend of the
He
aided. merits,
also
has rightly earned
literature.
him
Perhaps the greatest
dialect
—
as
the
high place in Italian
among
tions to the culture of his age
re-establishing
a
was
vernacular Italian
his
many
his
leading role in
—
his
contribu-
own Tuscan
an acceptable vehicle for serious expression.
After Lorenzo's death in 1492, the Medici fortunes
wanted. His son Piero,
in
a
desperate
effort
Florence from Charles VIII's invading armies,
to
save
surren-
dered a number of outlying towns to the French. Disappointed and angered expelled
by such weakness,
him and attempted
the Florentines
to revive the republic.
long unaccustomed to self-government, however,
Too they
allowed the fanatical Savonarola to seize power. This notoriously morbid Dominican employed his demagogic
Age
$2
powers to overwhelm their immorality
tunes were piety, he
of Recovery
his fellow citizens
with remorse for
and to convince them that
nothing
less
their misfor-
than divine retribution. True
warned, required them to renounce the luxuries
and destroy the splendid creations of the Renaissance worldly "vanities." Terrified by their new-found the populace pillaged the city for
works of
art,
as
guilt,
books, and
rich costumes to sacrifice in public fires
and then threw
open the gates to the invading French
as emissaries
of
God's wrath. Florence's neighbors,
unswayed by Savonarola's proon their own mun-
phetic exhortations, kept their minds
dane survival, until they suceeded
French
from
the
peninsula,
and
in
first
then
driving the
in
punishing
Florence for what they considered treacherous aid to the
common
foe.
the fanatical
This retribution broke the
monk
spell in
which
held the people of Florence, and since
his religious excesses
had seriously alienated many church-
men, including the Pope, he was seized and condemned as
both a traitor and a heretic. But
was hanged and
his public
body burned
his
—did
execution
little
—he
to restore
either the reputation or unity of the republic. Florence
appeared an easy prey for any unemployed despot; yet surprisingly, the discredited regime survived until
1512,
when the Medici returned and re-established their control. Twenty years later, by imperial decree, they became hereditary dukes and, as such, ruled until 1737. This "first
family" of Florence,
it
cardinals, three popes,
The Papacy and
By
the
should be noted, produced several
and two queens of France.
Church
was creating The very gravity of the problems which
the fifteenth century, the papacy, too,
a territorial state.
threatened the later mediaeval church
—schism,
concili-
Principalities
arism, heresy,
rely
and Islam
and City -States
—seemed
more and more on
their
33
to force the popes to
own
princely resources in
the Patrimony. After their narrow escape
from the
ulti-
mate threat of subjection to conciliar authority, however,
became increasingly preoccupied
the Renaissance popes
with humanism and
simply with their
art or
own
personal
fortunes, to the detriment not only of the church but of
the Papal States as well.
Still,
church, these successors of the revenues they
Germany, vicinity of
St.
badly
they managed the
as
Peter were able, thanks to
wrung from Christendom,
to subjugate the various local
particularly
powers
in the
Rome.
Avignon during much of fourteenth century and then weakened by the schism, Having been absent
popes had long since States.
lost effective control
the the
of the Papal
In 141 4, after a period of almost fifty years during
which there were the
in
title (see,
Adversity:
first
two, and finally three, claimants to
in this series,
Robert E. Lerner, The Age of cardinals from the
The Fourteenth Century),
various rival camps finally succeeded in convening one of the largest and most important councils ever held. Meet-
ing at Constance,
it
began by deposing
all
three pretend-
and then, in 141 7, elected Martin V, thus reuniting western Christendom under a single
ers to St. Peter's throne
pope. Martin's successor had to beat
down
attempts
by
subsequent councils to assume control of the church and
was himself forced
to
squander
a
large
part
of
his
resources fighting against the followers of the heresiarch
John Hus, who had been burned by the Council of Constance. Significantly, Nicholas
V
(1447- 1455), the first postconciliar pope, concentrated his energies on re-establishing his position in Palace.
Rome and
Employing humanists
refurbishing his Vatican
to collect,
copy, and edit
Age
54
of Recovery
form the nucleus of the enlisting countless artists and
the classical manuscripts that
Vatican
City
and
Library,
architects,
still
he supervised the restoration of the Eternal
as the seat
of Christendom.
The
of Constanti-
fall
nople in 1453 cast a shadow on Nicholas' achievements, as well as on the papacy; and one of his great humanist successors, Pius II (1458-1464), spent
much
of his pontifi-
cate in a vain attempt to launch a crusade to free that
from the Turks. But later, more cynical popes concentrated their more openly and ruthlessly on achieving success in city
politics.
When
VI
(
1
mounted the papal throne
Italian
nephew of
the Spaniard Rodrigo Borgia,
a previous pontiff,
efforts
as
Alexander
492-1 503), the Renaissance papacy reached a kind
of apogee. Demonstrating that he recognized no conflict
between
his
papal
Alexander established for
To
clerical corruption.
common-law wife
his
rumor, bought the extend
his
through a
all
his
personal
ambitions,
posterity a record for urbane
capture the papacy, he put aside
contemporary
and, according to
tiara
new power series
and
duties
with
his
he directed
personal fortune. his
To
daughter, Lucrezia,
of marriages with Italian despots and
used every opportunity that the papacy afforded to secure place and
power for
his family.
Determined to reconquer the subject been seized by tivity
command
charming,
that had
Avignonese cap-
and the schism, Alexander put
Borgia, in
and
local despots during the
cities
his
son,
Cesare
of the papal armies. Refined, elegant,
though
utterly
unscrupulous,
Cesare
proved to be an excellent commander and an able administrator. all
cal
In three major campaigns he restored practically
the lost territory, thus re-establishing the Pope's politi-
authority over the Papal States.
As
a
result,
both
and City -States
Principalities
35
Cesare and Alexander appeared to personify what the Renaissance called virtu, daring and ruthless cleverness resulting in worldly success.
tyranny and
But
fiscal extortion,
over the councils, had been
this
triumph of
political
just like the earlier victory
won
leadership. Corruption flourished
at the cost of spiritual
unheeded and unchecked
throughout the western church.
Naples In contrast to the city-states of the north, Naples was a
monarchy based on an
feudal
agricultural
graphically accessible to conquest,
it
economy. Geo-
had long suffered
under foreign misrule; and when a century and stagnation under the French house of
a half of
Anjou came
to a
catastrophic climax in the scandalous reign of the degen-
even reform came from abroad.
erate
Joanna
mad
queen's death in 1435, Alfonso the
II,
Upon
Aragon drove out the Angevin claimant
to the throne
added
Sicilian
Naples
Alfonso to
to
his
centralized
structure of southern Italy.
administration
They
I,
strove
on the feudal
suppressed the surviving
reorganized
supporters,
and
holdings.
1458) and his bastard son, Ferrante
(d.
impose a
Angevin
and
Spanish
the
Magnanimous of
state
finances,
and
encouraged the investment of foreign, largely Florentine, capital.
Both men, but especially Alfonso, were notable
patrons of
make
art,
letters,
their court a
and scholarship
show
who
sought to
place of Renaissance culture.
After the Peace of Lodi, Alfonso helped construct the alliance of Naples, Florence,
and Milan; but by support-
power of the Medici, allies. There is little doubt, however, that he and his father were the outstanding Neapolitan rulers of the fifteenth century. It was the ing a papal attempt to break the
Ferrante lost the confidence of his
Age
36
of Recovery
death of Ferrante that prompted his old enemies at
and abroad
—Angevin
home
and the
sympathizers, the Pope,
Milanese under the leadership of Ludovico Sforzo
urge Charles VIII of France to press
his
—to
claims to the
crown of Naples. The consequent French
invasion of
1494 and the Spanish counterattack it provoked ravaged southern Italy, leaving it under uninterrupted foreign occupation that turned
it
into one of the
most backward
regions of Europe.
Germany Germany,
In
as in Italy, the fifteenth
century was the
period of the prince. Since the collapse of the Empire in the middle of the thirteenth century, despite such efforts at
reconstruction
Age
Lerner, slipped
as
Charles
Adversity),
of
Golden Bull
IV's
Germany had
toward anarchy. The flourishing
managed to ence and exerted what trade routes
(see
gradually
along the
cities
affirm their de facto independ-
they
influence
could
for
the
maintenance of peace and order, but unlike their greater counterparts in Italy, they were unable to extend their
domination to the countryside. Emperors, electors (the seven great magnates, lay or the terms of the
townsmen, and above those of fifteenth
was
Golden
Germany
and
as a
however,
known
ecclesiastical
sized territories,
,
nobles,
whole. In the course of the disintegrative
this
process
as princes.
lords,
managed
by
A
score of powerful
consolidating
to subdue
most of
mediumtheir local
and eventually to achieve regional autonomy. Sevfounded major dynasties, which not only prospered
rivals
eral
Emperor)
checked by the emergence of strong regional
rulers collectively
lay
Bull, chose the
clerics all placed their particular interests
century,
partially
who, according to
clerical,
and City -States
Principalities
57
German
but survived until the ultimate collapse of the
Empire the
not
in 191 8.
Of
House of Luxemburg, whose ancestral
its
county but
of Bohemia, the only
Hapsburgs the
in
the
were to
was
greatest possession
was
recently acquired kingdom
its
monarchy
Empire. Later the
in the
Swabia and Austria, the Wettins
Wittelsbachs
finally
in 1400
most powerful
these, the
in
the
Palatinate
and
Saxony,
in
and
Bavaria,
Hohenzollerns in Brandenburg and Prussia
exercise
great influence in
German
affairs.
In
addition, lesser princes, including the ecclesiastical electors
—the
archbishops of Mainz, Trier, and Cologne
ceeded
in
amassing
incomparably
greater
—suc-
wealth
and
the
em-
authority than ordinary nobles.
The Princes and
the
Traditionally,
Emperors were
princes
subordinate
to
peror, but in practice they
were frequently
Since he had almost none
of the
that might be expected to
go with
his
legislative
exalted
his
equals.
authority title,
he
would have needed the cooperation of the unwieldy parliament (diet) to make new laws; and to enforce them he had sources.
but
little
The
his
own
personal and very limited re-
imperial office
was thus hardly more than
an empty dignity. In Germany, as in the rest of Europe, the fourteenth
century had closed on a scene of mounting chaos. Electors
and princes had deposed the incompetent Wenceslas, to replace
him on the imperial throne with the ignominious
Rupert of the Palatinate (1400-1410), inept reign
by launching an
proved so embarrassingly
many
he was obliged to
who
expedition to Italy, which
futile that to get
pawn
climaxed an
his
crown.
back to Ger-
Upon
his death,
the electors transferred that tarnished symbol to
Sigis-
Age
38
mund
(141 0-1437), tne younger brother of the deposed
Wenceslas. Vain,
was
of Recovery
also
profligate,
and capricious, Sigismund
charming, generous, and learned, and perhaps
the most nearly iflustrious emperor of the later Middle
Ages.
He
foreign enemies,
heresy,
no match for the anarchy,
however,
was,
and economic depression that
plagued the Empire. (See Chapter IV.)
Although Sigismund spent
his
rushing headlong
life
by
from defeat
to defeat, he achieved one notable success
summoning
the Council of Constance. Public opinion had
long favored calling an assembly to end the papal schism
which had divided the western church since 1378; but none of the contending popes had ever been willing to support
this solution
and accept the implicit
deposed. Finally, however, in 141
3
risk of
being
the schismatic pope
who called himself John XXIII, having Rome by the king of Naples, begged
been driven from protection of the
Emperor. Sigismund seized the occasion to force John to
summoned
agree to a general council and then
other papal claimants, together with
and
prelates, to
meet
all
two
Christian princes
in the imperial city of Constance.
In addition to presiding in person, the vigorous role in the
the
Emperor played
a
of the council, exacting sub-
affairs
mission from the rivals and guiding the assembled fathers
toward common
action.
When
the
field
was
finally
cleared of contenders and a single successor agreed on,
Sigismund was the hero of the day. In 1438 he was succeeded on the imperial throne his son-in-law,
by
Albert of Hapsburg. This prince, in spite
of the fact that he had been looked to as a promising successor, actually achieved
of the
title
of Albert
than a year. That
II,
little
beyond the
acquisition
since he survived Sigismund less
act, in itself,
however, sufficed to launch
Prmcipalitics and City -States
39
Hapsburg family on an almost unbroken
the
line
of
imperial succession that lasted until the abolition of the 1806.
in
title
During
a long
and empty reign, Albert's
cousin and successor, Frederick III (1 439-1 493), allowed
Germany devoted
burg
to plunge even deeper into civil strife while he
his
meager energies to strengthening the Haps-
position. In this pursuit he achieved his greatest
and
possibly least expected triumph, the marriage of his son
and
Maximilian, to Mary, the daughter and heiress
heir,
of Charles the Bold of Burgundy. Elected official heir
apparent with the
King of
title
the
Romans
Maximilian took charge of the Empire before
in
i486,
his father's
death and, from the powerful base of his Austrian and
Burgundian tige
by
possessions,
began to restore imperial pres-
military successes.
In an attempt to capitalize on his triumphs, Maximilian
convoked
a diet at
Worms
in
1495 to draft a workable
constitution for the Empire. First he secured the right to collect
tax
a
established
called
"common penny,"
the
an imperial supreme court, and
persuaded the legislators
to
outlaw private
then
he
finally
he
wars and
confederations within the Empire. Maximilian intended these changes to help re-create a central government; but
throughout the
rest of his reign, his jealous princes
from him one concession in
1
5 19,
little
after another, until, at his death
of the centralized authority for which he
had struggled so hard remained for
his
successor.
contrast, the marriage of his son, Philip, to
Mad, the daughter and and
forced
Isabella of Spain,
eventual
was
heiress
to leave a
of
Joanna the Ferdinand
major imprint on
European history by binding the crumbling Empire the fastest rising national
monarchy
in
In
Europe.
to
Age
40
of Recovery
Rivals to the Princes: Clergy, Knights,
Even
if
Towns
the princes did succeed in establishing them-
selves as the most* powerful
and favored
class in fifteenth-
century Germany, three other deeply entrenched groups
managed
to survive as active rivals:
the clergy, the free
and the burghers. All three saw
knights,
their positions
gradually erode, in spite of their vigorous,
nated
efforts,
at
could have cooperated for their the encroachments of the
group resorted to
its
common
they
defense against
but too often each
princes,
own
ill-coordi-
if
Theoretically
self-preservation.
and individual-
characteristic
istic devices.
Perhaps the chief obstacle to the
political consolidation
of Germany, though ironically not to the ambitions of the princely families,
was the church. As
a result, in part,
of the early mediaeval practice of using churchmen as imperial administrators, almost a sixth of the country
under the jurisdiction of
clerical
rulers
who
acted as
temporal lords. Some actually bore secular virtually
all
titles,
The
between the two was that the
chief
clerical lords,
deprived of the possibility of legitimate heirs
vow
but
shared the views and objectives, as well as
the rank and prestige, of their lay colleagues. difference
was
by
their
of celibacy, were precluded from the normal practice
of bequeathing their offices and lands to their spring.
Instead,
ecclesiastical
succession
elections
in
own
off-
was normally established by which local princely families
frequently had sufficient influence to reserve bishoprics for their
own younger
sons.
Speyer, and Wiirzburg, quite
The bishops of Strasbourg, as much as the more famous
archbishop-electors of Mainz, Trier, and Cologne, were in practice lay princes.
The members
of the lower clergy,
and City -States
Principalities
41
over which these worldly prelates presided, were
own
largely to their
earned
left
with the result that they
devices,
a reputation for lack of discipline,
mismanagement
of funds, and the perversion of offices for personal or gain.
political
had
as
little
corrupt
For obvious
establishment
The consequences
of this
great
rich
a
clerics
shameless
princes
secular
reform of such
the
as
the
reasons,
interest in the
abuse
and
themselves.
of
clerical
a
century
incomes and prestige were to be experienced
later in the wholesale confiscation of ecclesiastical lands
and prerogatives during the Protestant Reformation. Unlike the princes and upper clergy, few of the once proud barons and knights (Ritter) continued to enjov
them during the high Middle Ages. Although many managed to maintain a
the prestige and position accorded
precarious independence under the nominal authority of the
emperor,
burghers,
they
resentful
were of
the
jealous
of
the
prosperous
powerful princes, and fre-
quently in mortal conflict with both. Because as nobles
they were prohibited by pride, tradition, and in some cases, law,
trade,
from
associating with burghers or engaging in
they were driven increasingly to banditry
only occupation appropriate to their that usually failed to
The
mend
their
station,
as the
and even
dilapidated
fortunes.
degrading poverty that transformed them into "rob-
ber barons" contributed to the mounting bitterness that
would eventually
incite
many
to
join
Martin Luther's
revolt.
During the
later
Middle Ages, wealth and
culture
Germany was concentrated in the cities. Although small by modern standards, these prosperous, resourceful
in
communities produced
art,
architecture,
scholarship of remarkable quality.
Under
literature,
and
the titular pro-
Age
42
of Recovery
tection of the emperor, the "free imperial cities" enjoyed
and
privileges
which
independence
they
defended
vigorously against repeated and tremendously destructive
by
attacks
survival,
of
the
greatest threat to urban
succumbed
eventually
and
started
all
to
north-south
traditional
Economically weakened by princes;
The
however, proved to be the gradual divergence Atlantic
the
to
the risfng princes.
trade.
some of the cities the growing power of the this shift,
on the gradual decline that would
continue into the nineteenth century. Estates
and Leagues
Although
of
three
all
threatened
these
groups
were
represented
Landtage, or this
estates,
mediaeval
in
regional
—the
towns
nobility, the clergy, and, to a lesser degree, the
assemblies
called
they failed to make effective use of
institution
in
their
with
struggle
princes. In fact, these legislative bodies
the
which might have
been expected to oppose the growing authority of the
new
princely bureaucracies tended to contribute to their
consolidation.
Since
their
constituents
were
interested
primarily in peace, order, and efficient government, the deputies
in
the
administrators
and the
to
Landtage were differentiate
eager
new
the
as
between public finances
ruler's private resources
independent judiciary.
as
and to create
They even attempted
a
quasi-
to impose
primogeniture on the ruling families by law, in order to obstruct their ancient custom of dividing lands
male
heirs.
In the long run
all
among
these efforts at reform
all
had
the effect of strengthening the position of the princes, but
probably none more than the expanding use of law,
which the Landtage encouraged
Roman
in their efforts to
further judicial reform. Originally revived
by
the Italian
Frincipalities
and City -States
law schools in the twelfth century for mercial use, the
Roman
Germany by
—
were
all
clerical
code was gradually employed in
—who
More com-
Germanic custom, the
prehensive and systematic than
code buttressed the authority of administrative
government and recognized the sovereign all
and com-
princes and Landtage included
interested in reinforcing civil authority.
Roman of
43
rights
Though
as the
source
and power. the Landtage ended
by
serving rather than
opposing the forces of centralization, another mediaeval institution,
the
urban
league,
obstacle to princely progress.
pose
did
a
formidable
The most famous was the known as
organization of commercial cities in the north
Hansa (see above, Chapter I). In cities, and bishops of Swabia formed
the
restore
of
all,
and maintain order
addition, the nobles,
own league to The most notable
their
in the south.
however, was the Helvetic, or Swiss, Confederation,
which gained control of many of the crucial Alpine passes linking Italy with Germany. In existence since the end of the thirteenth century,
it
gained formal recognition as an
independent power in 1394, thanks mainly to a spectacular series of military victories over the French, the Burgundians, and the Hapsburgs. As a of the Helvetic League enjoyed
other
Europeans,
squandered
its
even
result, the citizens
more freedom than any
though
benefits in fighting
member cantons among themselves and the
them with the inhabitants of territories they conquered. Even if the members of the League, torn by tensions between German-, French-, and Italianspeaking regions, and by endemic factional strife, were refused to share
incapable of consummating a stable federal organization, their
stubborn courage, backed up by superb
natural
defenses and a formidable military reputation, preserved
Age
44 their
of Recovery
independence and, by
later
providing a safe haven
for Zwingli, Calvin, and their followers, proved to be an
important factor in the Reformation.
Burgundy '
Among
new
the
princes,
by
far the
most spectacular
were the dukes of Burgundy. By gaining control of the commercial and industrial cities of the lower Rhine, Meuse, and Scheldt, they had succeeded in dominating the main northern terminals of the old mediaeval trade routes and thus, in less than a century, had possession of wealth exceeding that of
The founder
Europe.
come
any other
into
rulers in
of the dynasty, Philip the Bold
( 1 363-1404), had received the duchy of Burgundy from his father, John of France, as a royal appanage. Then, by
marriage,
added
he
the
counties
of Flanders,
Artois,
Nevers, Rethel, and the imperial Free County of Burgundy (Franche-Comte). Not content with these acquisitions, he persuaded the widowed and childless duchess of Brabant and Limburg to bequeath her holdings to one of his sons
as
and arranged
a marriage for a daughter, as well
another son, with the family ruling Holland, Zeeland,
and Hainault.
Philip's successor,
141 9), proved
no
less
shrewd
John the
at the
Fearless
(
1
404-
marriage game than
with the result that his own son, Philip the Good (141 9-1 467), found himself lord of the French and German Burgundies and all of the Netherlands. The very extent of Philip's holdings robbed them of any unity. The Burgundies (the French duchy and the his father,
imperial county) fore poorer and sessions in the
were primarily agricultural and thereless
Low
populous than the duke's other posCountries. All his lands, however,
were inhabited by peoples of mixed Teutonic and Latin
Principalities
The Burgundian
possessions
and City -States
45
Age
46
who
extraction as
of Recovery
spoke Germanic or French
Low
countv of Burgundy and the
(the
and partly within the realm of France
just
Holy Roman
each major portion lay partly within the
Empire
dialects,
Countries)
and
(Flanders
duchy of Burgundy). The only common bond between these scattered and yaried territories was their
the
duke. Philip the Good.
That ambitious prince had three major aims: first, to round out his territories by acquiring the strip separating
Burgundy from
the
Low
permanently through tration;
and
Namur and
in 1455
gain a royal crown.
142
had one of
nephew
A
to the
The
first
he
purchased the county of
he
1
rich bishopric of L'trecht.
election of a
and centralized adminis-
unified
a
finally, to
nearly achieyed. In
Countries; second, to link them
his
sons inyested with the
year later he secured the
still
richer see of Liege, and
then purchased the extensiye duchy of Luxemburg. But
when
he set
his sights
territorial jigsaw
on Lorraine, the
last
piece of the
puzzle, the king of France recognized
the threat and declared war.
The
administratiye integration of
howeyer. proyed more each,
Philip
wholly
difficult
was accepted
local ruler.
To
as
all
these
than their acquisition. In
the
right
the Burgundians he
to the Flemings their count,
territories,
and lawful but
was
their duke,
and to the Dutch the count
of Holland. Thus, in the exercise of his soyereign rights in each, he
was bound by
local laws
and customs. In
spite
of these restrictions, Philip and his successor, Charles the
impose some degree of centralization
Bold, did
manage
to
on their power of
yarious
lands.
the church to their direct control and subjecting
it
By
subordinating the temporal
to taxation, they established both an important source
of reyenues and a kind of ready-made bureaucracy.
The
and City -States
Principalities
47
Great Council, composed of members from inces, dealt
extended
all
the prov-
with matters of general concern and gradually
its
authority over areas not protected
by
well-
entrenched local customs. Financial matters were centralized
Chambre
the
in
jurisdiction for
all
Comptes
des
and
appellate
the domains invested in a parlement at
Mechlin. After 1463, delegates from all local assemblies met at Bruges in an estates-general; and from 147 1, a standing
army was
recruited from, and supported by,
all
the provinces.
Having thus created a de facto kingdom, Duke Philip was determined to secure the appropriate title to go with it.
His establishment of the Golden Fleece, the most
famous and magnificent of chivalric orders, served notice of his intention. His opulent court of the
dream
West" of
Charlemagne's stretching
the
envy of
grandson
his
Lothair
—the
realm
middle
—terrorized them. quest
insistent
for
Low
Philip, as a result,
coveted
the
of
kingdom
between France and Germany from the
found
resolutely
"Grand Duke
ninth-century
Countries to the Alps his
this
fellow sovereigns, but his
the
reconstituting
made
turned aside with offers of the
royal
title
humiliating
compromise designation, "King of Brabant." In 1467, Charles the Bold inherited his father's
and ambitions, but
Commynes
as the
recounts,
famous chronicler Philippe de
"He had
neither the sense nor the
malice to carry off his designs." sive,
if
titles
Even
so,
he made impres-
temporary, additions to the Burgundian inherit-
ance and prestige. First he ruthlessly crushed revolts in several of his Netherlandish cities, a
and then he secured
de facto mortgage from the Hapsburgs on their holdings
in Alsace. finally
Next he annexed
the
duchy of Guelders, and
he assumed the protectorate of Liege and Lorraine.
Age
48
of Recovery
All this he clearly intended to cap with the marriage of his
Mary,
daughter,
Frederick
III.
Emperor Charles and Frederick met at son
Maximilian,
to
Late in 1473,
of
work out the details. Tentatively, they agreed Mary's dowry would be the entire Burgundian
Trier to that
inheritance; that Charles, as the defender of Christendom,
would
lead a crusade against the Turks;
would
emperor
create
Burgundy, including,
and that the
long-desired
the
kingdom
in addition to the existing
ions, the bishoprics of Utrecht, Liege,
of
domin-
Toul, and Verdun,
together with the duchies of Cleves, Lorraine, and Savoy.
When
everything
seemed ready for
final
Maximilian suddenly and inexplicably sailed
ratification,
down
the
Moselle in the middle of the night, leaving Charles the laughingstock of Europe.
To
insult
was rapidly added
suddenly faced with
a hostile
injury.
Finding himself
coalition of the
duke of
Lorraine, the Swiss cantons, and his archenemy Louis
XI
of France, Charles seized the initiative. After overrun-
ning Lorraine, he rashly attacked the Swiss on their
own
Morat in 1476, his ill-disciplined semifeudal forces were surrounded and slaughtered by the tough mountain soldiers of the cantons. Six months later terrain,
where,
at
Charles suffered a final disaster when, along with most of his troops,
he was cut
down
at
Nancy. So great was the
carnage that Lord Byron reported seeing bones of the
Burgundian dead when he
visited the battlefields in 1816.
Morat and Nancy marked the beginning of the end of the Burgundian dream. To secure acceptance as her father's successor to the ducal throne,
Mary had
to grant
"Great Privilege" (1477) abolishing much of the centralized administration and restoring many old
a charter of
regional
liberties.
At
this
point Louis
XI launched an
and City -States
Principalities
demand
invasion to back his
that
Mary wed
49 his
son the
dauphin, driving the desperate young duchess to find a protector in Maximilian fiancee,
and Maximilian
new
of Hapsburg.
as
wife's realm.
when Adary
Having restored order in
his
in the provinces
1482, he
was
able,
died the same year, to have their infant son,
Philip, declared her successor in all the
Philip,
legally
quickly took up the defense of his
and concluded peace with France
ritories.
Still
she hastily arranged the long-delayed marriage,
When known
Maximilian
Burgundian
ter-
became emperor in 1493, Handsome," took over
to history as "the
actual administration of this inheritance. His marriage to
Joanna the Mad,
daughter of Ferdinand and
Isabella,
however, was destined to subordinate Burgundian and Netherlandish interests to those of Spain, diverting
his
ancestors' grandiose dreams of territorial aggrandizement
to
new
heir,
regions. In 1500, with the death of the last male
Joanna became heiress presumptive to the several
Spanish crowns and
World and
the
New.
increasingly occupied
all
their
dependencies in the Old
was inevitably and immense inheritance.
Philip's attention
by
this
CHAPTER
III
The Western
WHILE new
princes
Monarchies
were successfully consolidating
city-states in Italy,
Germany, and Burgundy,
tary kings were busy welding the great
fiefs
their
heredi-
of France
and England and the petty kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula into centralized monarchies. These royal gov-
by papal
ernments, not having been undermined
was the Holy Roman Empire
vention, as series,
chies),
(see,
inter-
in this
Sidney Painter, The Rise of the Feudal Monar-
were eventually able to tighten the loose feudal
bonds linking the nobles to the crown. Further, since agriculture predominated in this area west of the Scheldt,
and Rhone
Aleuse,
—
at
least
until
the
trans-European
trade began to be diverted from the overland routes to the Atlantic to
gain
—towns were generally too weak to
their
independence.
Instead,
they
attempt
cooperated
with the emerging bureaucratic authority of the central monarchies against the anarchic misrule of the feudal nobles.
rich
With
this support,
and without the opposition of
and powerful trading
cities
of the sort that had
checked the ambitions of would-be kings Europe, the
new
in west-central
royal governments of the
West were
The Western Monarchies
j/
able to subject the nobility, control the clergy, and create
new
fiscal administrations.
The
Consolidation of States: Final Phase
marriage-making was
Dynastic
the
favorite,
if
not
always successful, technique of the "new monarchs" in
Near the Henry V, had
their untiring efforts to extend their authority.
beginning of the century, the English king,
attempted to acquire the French crown and end the
Hundred
War by
Years'
marrying the French Princess
Catherine. Although this plan proved to be overambi-
Henry Tudor, somewhat
tious,
date his hold battle,
was
able to consoli-
on the English crown, which he had
by marrying
chief rival.
later,
won
in
Elizabeth of York, the heiress of his
And toward
the end of the century Charles
VIII added Brittany to the French crown by marrying the Duchess Anne.
Most famous of
all
was the marriage
Aragon and Isabella of Castile in 1469. two most important Iberian kingdoms, it
of Ferdinand of
By
uniting the the
laid
foundation for a great national monarchy in
Spain.
In England and France, and to a lesser extent in Spain,
one of the chief obstacles to the development of monarchical
authority was the stubborn resistance of the princely
rulers of the great appanages. Since the thirteenth cen-
tury kings had frequently granted huge appanages, to younger sons
who were
estates,
called
not expected to
crown (see Painter, Rise of the Feudal Monand by the end of the Middle Ages the practice
inherit the
archies),
was bearing fact,
bitter fruit in
both England and France. In
throughout Europe appanages had grown so enor-
mously
in
both
size
and number that they not only
Age
J2
of Recovery
challenged royal authority but even occasionally became
autonomous
states.
The new monarchs were revamping
The
ment. their
old, a*nd creating
diligent
of
task
their
in
new, instruments of govern-
kings of England, France, and Spain centered
growing bureaucracies
which
in the royal council,
At
often acted as the supreme court of the realm.
same time, new royal agents, or "king's men"
as
they were
called, increasingly insinuated themselves into the
istration of local,
and
feudal,
ecclesiastical
the
admin-
courts,
with
the result that both laws and legal procedures became more uniform and effective, and the authority of the monarchy was extended and entrenched. Finally, new
standing armies composed of infantry and cavalry sup-
ported by archers superiority in the
by
(later
Hundred
established
artillery)
Years'
War
their
and, because they
were too expensive for any save national monarchies
new
maintain, greatly reinforced the
royal power.
to
The
was further demonstrated Granada from the Moors in 1492 and the French invasion of Italy two years later. effectiveness of these forces
in
the capture of
in
The ever,
cost of the
new
could not be met
bureaucracies and armies,
by
how-
existing royal resources.
In
England, France, and Spain, the king's ordinary revenues from crown lands, feudal dues, commodity monopolies,
customs
seriously
markets
by
duties,
and
mint
1300; and the traditional
tolls,
fines, fees,
and vacant
benefices dwindled to insignificance.
and church
grants,
depended, were
upon which
date.
the
declined
income from mines, fiefs
or ecclesiastical
Even
the feudal taxes
new monarchs now
irregular and infrequent, and to
matters worse, existing
and out of
had
rights
fiscal
make
machinery was inadequate
Various expedients, such
as
borrowing
at
The Western Monarchies discounts
great
revenue
future
against
53
imposing
or
forced loans, produced limited returns but no ultimate
The
solutions.
inescapable
monarchs was that
(taxes paid in lieu of
scutages
(money given
all
customary service)
and
Sidney Painter, Mediaeval Society)
were combined with "extraordinary" levied
as
to an overlord for unusual expenses)
in this series,
(see,
of
confronting
and frequently. In France feudal payments such
larly
aids
conclusion
had to be collected more regu-
taxes
taxes, theoretically
on burghers for the defense of the realm in time and all were collected annually. In other areas a
crisis,
greater reliance
was placed on increased
sales taxes, like
the alcabala in Castile. In England the king failed institute a
to
high permanent tax but gained more control
of existing revenues, especially of customs on wool and cloth.
at the
If,
end of the century, royal income
still
remained inadequate for growing needs, the monarchs were,
nevertheless,
resources to
finally
in
command
of
overwhelm any combination of
sufficient
recalcitrant
feudal lords. Increasingly the
new
won
centralized states either
the
more important elements of society. The church, weakened by schism, became everywhere more dependent on royal protection and more subservient to national interests. The support
once
of,
or imposed their authority
disputed
Gallican
the church in France
control tion
was
Bourges in
1438,
—the
thus
in the
direct
that
papal
Pragmatic Sanc-
virtually
transforming
bishops into royal agents. In Spain, too, the kings
dominated the church, and through
power of of the
the
doctrine
not subject to
—was formally recognized
of
French
Liberties
on,
it
the
formidable
the Inquisition, while in England the tradition
crown's authority in religious matters,
already
Age
of Recovery
established in the fourteenth
century by limitations on
the rights of foreign clergy to visit lish
clergy to appeal to foreign
the
Statutes
More
tained and reinforced.
courts
—was
—
in
main-
important, the bourgeoisie
monarchs, largely
rallied to the
papal)
and Praemunire
Provisors
of*
England and of Eng-
(i.e.,
in return for protection
of their trade and preservation of the peace. French kings
kept close watch on town governments and finances and
made
of bourgeois officials in the royal
increasing use
The
administration.
town
control of
Spanish crown exercised
direct
less
but pursued a policy of close
affairs
cooperation with the burghers; and the English kings
drew support from
commercial
their
feudal nobility failed,
a
as
class,
classes.
much weakened by
economic changes
W hile
was already
it
foreign and civil wars and
Europe common
interests
new
principalities, reinforcing regionalism, the
archies in larger
West extended
the
areas
of the
by
become
a
political
and
common
Even
so, the
language and obeying
tended
city-states
new mon-
jurisdiction
—
to
the
the self-
cause of a ''people"
linguistic
dominant factor only
twentieth centuries.
common
their
nation-state. Nationalism
conscious advocacy of the defined
by
to be of decisive importance.
in west-central
to develop within the limited territories of
and
the old
contribute to the
to
development of the new monarchies; but too
Only
in
associations
—has
the nineteenth and
awareness of speaking a a single ruler
gave
men
of the fifteenth century the conviction that they shared
economic
and
political
interests,
especially
group or "nation" became personified
when
the
in hero figures.
Spain
At
the opening of the fifteenth century, the Iberian
Peninsula was
split into
the three Christian
kingdoms of
The Castile,
W
estern
Monarchies
55
Aragon, and Portugal, the Moorish kingdom of
Granada, and the tiny Christian kingdom of Navarre,
which crossed the Pyrenees
into France.
With
tion of Aragon, these Iberian states had had
with the
rest of
Europe.
the excep-
little
Not only were they
contact
isolated
by
strong provincial traditions, but they were also divided into smaller units tutions.
by innumerable
local
customs and
insti-
Aragon, for example, was comprised of Aragon
proper, Valencia, the Balearic Islands, and Catalonia.
By
the beginning of the sixteenth century, however, the five Iberian
kingdoms had been reduced
becoming
a rich
a vast colonial
commercial nation, and Spain, thanks to
empire in the
possessions in Italy, est
was
to two. Portugal
was about
New World to
emerge
as
and important Europe's great-
power.
During the early
fifteenth century, the nobles, clergy,
and towns of the peninsula continued to exercise and
their
exemptions,
largely
unhampered by their weak kings. Soon, however, and stable monarchy appeared in Portugal. In
a strong
with the prosperous trading towns of the Atlantic
littoral,
ancient
the
privileges
crown subdued
leadership
kingdom
rights
to
alliance
the nobles and, through the inspired
of Prince
Henry
in the forefront of
the
Navigator, placed the
European exploration and
oceanic commerce. Ironically, however, in Castile, where the
king sometimes claimed the
title
of
emperor, the
crown was weaker than in any monarchy in Europe except the Holy Roman Empire. The absence of effective central government was largely due to the Islamic occupation and the long peninsula.
The
bitter
struggle for the reconquest of the
cities
and towns, for example, were more
often fortified centers of refuge from A4oorish attack than true trading centers, and as a result had long carried the
burdens and exercised the privileges of precarious, de
j
Age
5"
of Recovery
on the
facto independence. Largely tially
of this essen-
basis
democratic military service, representatives of the
towns dominated the Cortes, or representative assembly, particularly in matters involving
great
nobles,
or
money. In
addition, the
hombres, tended to ignore
ricos
the
crown, while members of the clergy and the military
won,
orders had
reward for
a
as
Islam, the privileges of tax
exemption and the right of
being judged by canon law. In Aragon, however,
weak and
the towns that were
The
the Cortes. aristocrats
the nobles that controlled
reflected in the very oath of allegiance to their
is
as you, swear to you, as
who
are
"We, w ho r
are as
good
no better than we, to accept
our king and sovereign lord, provided you observe
our
all
was
it
intransigent independence of these great
king that tradition ascribes to them:
you
with
struggle
their
liberties
and laws: but
if
not, not." Finally, the
great Catalonian port of Barcelona, because
and wealth
a
phenomenon
in itself,
was
crown
military resources of the Aragonese interests.
in 1434
The
acquisition of Sicily in 141 o
made Barcelona
of
size
its
able to use the to serve
its
and of Naples
the dominant commercial
power
on the western Mediterranean.
The
culmination of Spain's mediaeval
history
came
with the marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand in 1469 and the consequent union of Castile and Aragon. Following a
complicated and protracted controversy over the succession to the Castilian throne, this marriage aroused strong
opposition.
The
kings of Portugal and France tried des-
perately to prevent
the
strength
of
as did
it,
Isabella in her native
the
Castile.
many
opposition,
Ferdinand slipped into
a
nobles and rivals of
In eloquent testimony to
private
the
Aragonese Prince
home
guised as a merchant, to celebrate what
in
Castile,
dis-
the outside world
W
The
est
em
Monarchies
and subsequent historians would regard
57 as a particularly
brilliant royal marriage.
The a
political result
confederation.
own
was the creation of something like and Aragon each retained its
Castile
Cortes, councils, laws, courts, armies, taxes, coins,
and sovereignty. The subjects of the one were
aliens in
the other, and in theory there was neither a king of Spain
nor a Spanish kingdom. In practice, however, the union
produced important mutual advantages for both
states,
even though Castile rapidly became the dominant part-
Aragon, already suffering from the general stagna-
ner.
tion of Mediterranean
commerce, could
mercantile and maritime tradition ans in their transatlantic
manufactured into cloth
by
ventures.
in,
carry on her
still
aiding the Castili-
Castilian
wool was
and exported by, Barcelona,
Columbus had frequented long before he began
a port
serving Castile. In return, Castilian troops supported and
even expanded Aragon's Mediterranean empire, until by 1529
it
dominated
tion of the
all
Thus began
of Italy.
the amalgama-
two major Spanish kingdoms.
Their Catholic majesties, Ferdinand and
Isabella,
set
out to replace the old mediaeval administration with a
new
central bureaucracy. First they reduced
nobles to a courtier class
huge
sums
demolishing
to
the
their
by
royal castles,
the great
forcing them to disgorge
by
treasury,
and
by
systematically
transferring
their
authority in local administration to agents of the crown. Finally,
the
with the Audiencia, a powerful secular court,
monarchs developed an
with recalcitrant aristocrats
methods
failed.
The
effective
means of dealing
when normal
administrative
palace guard, created to siphon off
the military energies of the nobility,
became the nucleus
of a royal standing army; and the hitherto independent
Age
j8
of Recovery
and powerful military orders of righting monks were brought under royal command by the expedient of forcing each order to elect King Ferdinand
The
Grand Master.
old hermandades, leagues of towns with their
armed
forces,
were reorganized
as a
royal police to main-
law and order. Central control of
tain
by
further reinforced dogs,
or
own
local affairs
was
the appointment of royal watch-
within
corregidors,
the
now
which
towns,
more from the unaccustomed order than they ever had from their old liberties, raised no serious objections to the practice. This new central power was exercised through a maze of mediaeval councils that was benefiting
gradually enlarged, restaffed, and wholly transformed into
and independent royal bureaucracy, supported
a dedicated
by
the Cortes' imposition of permanent
the alcabala.
The
ence and reorganized.
which was
ple,
new
taxes such as
church, too, was reduced to subservi-
The famous
Inquisition, for
originally established in Castile
exam-
to deal
with Jews and Aloors suspected of mere token conversion to Christianity and
union
of
energies as
political
much
and
which came religious
power,
directed
to support the interests of the
punish covert dissenters from the
to
epitomize the
to
faith.
its
crown
The
as
disen-
franchisement of Jews and their eventual expulsion in
were
1492
undertaken
quite
as
much
to
bring
vast
quantities of confiscated wealth to the royal treasury as
to purge the religious
At
community.
the end of the century the consolidated Spanish
monarchy rounded out and capped
its
Catholic
territories
by new conquests
successes with world-wide
In 1492 the capitulation the
its
monarchs
explorations.
of the kingdom of Granada finally
completed,
after
to
nearly
eight hundred years, the reconquest of the peninsula from
The Western Monarchies Moslems were
the Moslems. Although the subjugated
to
suffer a fate similar to that of the Jews, the first victims of
victory were
this
Ferdinand's Christian
neighbors.
By
1512 he had occupied and annexed the portion of the
kingdom of Navarre south of
the Pyrenees, thus bringing
of the peninsula, except Portugal, under his sway.
all
While waiting for ever,
their
Catholic
the
fall
howwere approached by a
of Granada in 1491,
majesties
Genoese ship captain with
a plan for sailing across the
Atlantic to the Orient. Apparently attracted sonality of Christopher
by
the per-
Columbus, and certainly jealous
of the Portuguese and their African route to the East, Isabella
backed an expedition that
under the aegis of
Castile.
set sail
On March
August 1493,
15,
3,
1492,
Columbus
returned triumphant to announce a golden age for Spain and, although he did not a fabulous
know
it,
to give her the keys to
new world.
France Bled by half a hundred years of war, France, at the
opening of the fifteenth century, was being drained of her
last
remaining energies by a scandalous court and a
notoriously corrupt administration. (
1
380-1422), was mad; and
his
The
king, Charles
brother,
Orleans, as well as his uncles the dukes of
Berry and
his
cousin the duke of Anjou,
the
VI
duke of
Burgundy and all
vied for his
power and wealth. The duke of Orleans by his cousin the duke of Burgundy plunged the country into civil war just as it faced a new onslaught by the young and dashing Henry V of England, who hoped to make good his claims to the crown of treacherous assassination of the
France.
Crossing the channel in 141
5,
Henry
V
met
the French
Age
60
The
Agincourt.
at
able,
of Recovery
English forces were few but formid-
and the French nobles, remembering nothing from
Crecy or
the debacles of ronistic
six
superior, thanks to their organization
the
heavily
over seven thousand
hundred
and
proved
one,
to
their archers.
armored French nobles attempted to
charge across a wet plowed
five
armored English,
lightly
although outnumbered by five or
As
an anach-
Poitiers, constituted
The
mediaeval host.
field,
at a cost to
the English slaughtered
themselves of fewer than
France was stunned,
casualties.
but
the
worst had not yet happened. While Henry occupied
Normandy,
the
king and
government and,
tracts
his
duke of Burgundy seized the French in 1420, in return for vast
ceded to himself, signed the Treaty of Troyes
recognizing
V
Henry
of England as Charles VI's heir to
the throne of France.
The Dauphin,
refused to
Charles,
and made good
treaty or his disinheritance
from
Paris
to
up
set
a
rival
government
Although the young Charles was prince, he
managed
in the south
and acquired
desultory
VI
allies
a far
his at
escape
Bourges.
from promising
to establish a semblance of authority a certain popularity, perhaps
With
the English and their
control
north of the Loire,
because of his very weakness.
Burgundian
accept either the
in
firm
war continued
until
both Henry
V
died in 1422, leaving Henry's infant son,
and Charles
Henry VI
of
England, the legal heir to the throne of France. In October, 1428, the English mounted a major offensive against the city of Orleans in
an effort to break the
defensive line of the Loire protecting the southern bastion
of the Dauphin. In February,
nearing
surrender
and
1429,
Charles's
when cause
Orleans was
seemed
lost,
A
farm-
deliverance arrived in the person of Joan of Arc.
The Western Monarchies daughter
er's
Domremy,
from
boundary of Lorraine,
61
near
had heard
she
northeastern
the
"voices"
since
childhood and had developed a local reputation for piety,
prophecy, and healing. Passionately in love with France, she
became obsessed with the need
and have the Dauphin crowned
to expel the English at
By
Reims.
sheer
obstinacy reinforced with awesome piety, Joan succeeded in persuading a local officer to take her to the Dauphin's
court at Bourges. There she identified Charles,
been disguised to
test
and an
his advisers
win permission
to
who had
her special powers, and impressed
ecclesiastical
commission
sufficiently
to join the forces being mustered for
the relief of Orleans. Although the claims that Joan dis-
played
military
genius
in
lifting
the
siege
are
quite
groundless, she certainly contributed to the victory injecting confidence into the
by
downhearted French. Joan's
appearance at Orleans was clearly the turning point; and
when
the English
withdrew
in confusion,
Dauphin's forces to seize the
allowing the
she
initiative,
became the
heroine of France.
Next, exploiting
all
her
new
prestige,
Dauphin to go to Reims ceremony in the great cathedral of
Joan persuaded
for the traditional coronation
the
northern France was
still
St.
Remy. Although
in English hands,
the French
procession encountered slight resistance, and on July 17,
accompanied by Joan, was duly crowned Charles VII. Ten months later, in a minor skir1429,
the
mish, Joan
over
first
Dauphin,
was captured by the Burgundians and turned to the English and then to the church, to be
tried for heresy. Charles
and the
trial
made no
dragged on to
its
on her inevitable and effort
denouement in her execution at the stake in
May
30, 143
1.
behalf, tragic
Rouen on
Joan's irreducible and irresistible simplicity
Age
62
has
made her one
of Recovery
of the great heroines of history, just as
her devotion and achievements have saint of France.
Thanks
crowned, but he had
made her
had not only been
to her, Charles
also
the patron
been transformed from
a
puny
do-nothing into a purposeful monarch; and the French
had been galvanized into and devoted to
its
a nation conscious of its destiny
king.
As Charles began to press the war, the duke of Burgundy read the signs, deserted his English allies, and made peace with his rightful king. This tipped the scales, enabling Charles to retake Paris, Rouen, Cherbourg, and
Bordeaux, so that by 1453 only Calais remained in English hands. The fighting ceased, and without treaty or
ceremony
the
Hundred
Years'
War
finally
ground to an
end. Depopulated and disorganized, France lay in ruins;
Not only had
but the French had emerged victorious. territory been liberated
her
and her people's morale restored,
but her monarch, sanctified by Joan's revival of the mediaeval mystique of kingship,
reinvigorated
was
by her evocation
able to lead the nation,
of
a
toward recovery and the foundation of
new
patriotism,
a vigorous national
monarchy. In the course of his long reign (142 2-1 461), Charles
and
his able advisers
forming the royal administrative
succeeded in developing and trans-
institutions in the direction of greater
independence from, and authority over,
the feudal elements of the realm. Fundamental to the
whole program was the laying down of cial
base.
The crown
established
its
a
modern
finan-
permanent right to
"extraordinary" revenues, to the continuation in peace-
time of the special taxes which had been exacted to finance the war. Thus, to the king's traditional "ordinary"
revenues from royal estates and customary taxes were
The Western Monarchies added the gabelle on significant, the taille
into annual levies.
on land or hearths
With such
Charles was able to create series 1
45
1,
the aide on
salt,
63 sales,
—
transformed
all
impressive
new
resources,
Through
standing army.
a
and most
a
between
1439 and he suppressed the unruly free companies which of military ordinances issued
had wreaked such havoc during the Hundred Years'
and arrogated
War
himself the exclusive right of raising
to
By creating a professional officer corps of nobles command a strictly disciplined army stationed in per-
troops. to
manent provincial
down
the
garrisons,
king was able to put
uprisings and bring to heel such grandees as the
dukes of Bourbon, Orleans, and Alencon. Even the church felt the
impact of the royal power.
By
the Pragmatic
Sanction, promulgated at Bourges in 1438, the king had
subordinated papal authority and revenue to
and had made himself
virtual
his
control
church
head of the
in
France. Impressive as his accomplishments were, Charles VII left
many
successor,
King" by ity,
his
son and
the
"Spider
unresolved and urgent problems to
Louis XI
(1 461 -1483).
history, Louis
was
Tagged
a strange,
neurotic personal-
treacherous, deceitful, and cruel, but single-minded
and tenacious inherited.
in his
devotion to the monarchy he had
Sometimes mistakenly described
he was in fact
as
mediaeval
as his
as
"modern.''
contemporaries, but of
a bourgeois rather than an aristocratic turn of mind.
Delighted at the news of
his father's
death and his
own
consequent succession, Louis rushed to Paris and threw
More than any of power on the support of
himself into the business of being king. his
predecessors, he based
his
towns, particularly Paris, and
his
anything he could buy. Allegedly,
avoided
fighting
his passion for
for
bribery
Age
64
of Recovery
extended to attempts to buy the intervention of
saints
through lavish votive offerings. His chief opponents and enemies were, inevitably, the great nobles, w ho
bitterest
formed the League of the Public Weal
in 1465
threatened
their
subordinate
interests.
monarchy
the
they failed
If
to
through lack of leadership and
made such inroads
less
to
ultimately
control,
their
defend to
largely
they neverthe-
discipline,
against the king's authority that
it
took Louis years to recover from their insubordination
and
armed
repeated
however,
Gradually,
attacks.
brought these princely antagonists under control.
by
Armagnac and Foix w and
subjugated royal
their
in
only
until
jurisdiction,
remained
and
fiefs
One
Maine and the
one, the dukes of Brittany, Anjou, and
counts of
he
ere either eliminated or
appanages Charles
open defiance of the crow
returned
of
to
Burgundy
n.
Although Louis eventually manipulated the downfall of this
last
creating
among
still
his great rivals,
other problems.
1
he did so
at the cost of
laving formed
a
coalition
with the Empire and the Swiss, the king brought the
contumacious duke to defeat and death this
moment
in
1477; but at
of apparent triumph Louis saw his ally, the
wily Kmperor Maximilian, make off with Charles's daughter
The
Mary and
the
bulk of the Burgundian inheritance.
obvious menace
marriage created for the king
this
compounded by still another wedding, that of Ferdinand and Isabella. That the first would open a lapsburgs was understood by bitter rivalry with the of France was
I
everyone, but no one dreamed that the Spain was also destined to become 1
a
newly united
possession
lapsburgs, and therefore, no one foresaw
of the
the full conse-
quences for the French. In spite of his
failure
to
prevent the Spanish union,
The Western Monarchies
6
Louis proved himself a remarkably successful king. Havconsolidated
ing
the
great
reduced the towns and
fonning municipal
cities
officers
of
fiefs
monarchy,
the
Bv
to subservience.
into
royal
he
trans-
he vastly
agents,
increased the size and efficiency of his bureaucracy and
succeeded in quadrupling
his revenues.
Thus, bv working
with the wealthy bourgeois to maintain order, revive busi-
and restore prosperity, he managed to win
their
support while he was increasing their tax load bv
fiscal
ness,
innovations.
Louis
Altogether.
made
XI
remarkable
progress toward the centralization of the royal adminis-
and the development of the absolute authority
tration
of the king.
Lender
his
Louis XII
Charles YIII
successors.
powers continued. The canseil du administrative
chief
^
1485-1408)
and
1498-1 5 15), the consolidation of the royal
officers
of
roi %
the
composed of the gradually
realm,
absorbed such traditional prerogatives of the old
estates,
or provincial assemblies, as the right to impose taxes or
name
a
entire
resorted estates, larly, as
popular
increasingly
such
as
support to
those in
the grand conscil.
bureaucrats,
also
body and became its
estates-general,
kingdom, were summoned
where
and
The
regent.
jurisdiction to
and making
its
more
less
needed,
the
tractable
crown
provincial
the
estates
of supreme court
as
a
iudicial
bv extending
cases of special interest to the king
judgements immune to appeal. At the
same time the provincial courts, or parlements.
bv bourgeois lawyers, not only survived but gained in authority. Thus, the absolute
the
frequently;
Languedoc and Brittanv. Simiwhich included princes as well
displaced
a sort all
the
and
less
was
representing
as
the bureaucratic
monarchy expanded
at the
staffed
actually
power of
expense of tradi-
Age
66 tional local,
institutions,
Recovery
of
notably
the
certain
estates-general,
even semiautonomous, agencies were developed bv
royal support, creating the peculiar relationship of local
government to the become a principal
which was
central administration
to
characteristic of the ancien regime.
Both Charles VIII and Louis XII nourished dreams of military glory, and both inherited claims to the
kingdom
With
this lure
of Naples from their Angevin ancestors.
added to the tinople
fantasy of liberating Constan-
traditional
from the
and restoring
infidel
his
on
attack
Naples
Christian empire.
As might have been
Charles VIII invaded Italy in 1494. expected,
its
brought
their
Aragonese
defense of their
cousin
own
(the
king of Naples),
but
in
very active interests in western
Mediterranean trade. In addition, but the Hapsburgs joined
Spanish
the
not merelv of
sovereigns into the struggle in support,
and ultimately successful
—military
control of the Italian peninsula. thirty-five-year struggle has
To
seemed
ning of modern "international"
predictably,
less
what thus became
a
formidable
coalition striving for
some, to
this
mark
confused
the begin-
Domination,
as
Lord Acton pointed out, became a reigning motive European history, for which a monarch would sacrifice
in
the resources of his kingdom.
unwilling
to
tolerate
either
politics.
The new limitations
all
national states,
on
their
own
ambitions or the fulfillment of those of their neighbors, lived in a condition of internecine competition for con-
quest and survival,
nowhere more deadly than on the
peninsula of Italy.
England Like France and Spain, England the fifteenth century
at the
beginning of
was divided and weak, but
in spite
The Western Monarchies
managed
of disasters and disorders, she
and united. In
this island
monarchy could not the
defense,
army
standing
a
parliament
retained
revenues and legislation. Although the
became
great strength, they never
for self-
of
control
kings
gain
did
as autocratic as their
on the Continent. Furthermore,
rivals
emerge strong
to
kingdom, however, where the
justify
mediaeval
6j
it
must be remem-
bered that once shorn of her continental possessions, as she was after mid-century, England was less
much
smaller,
populous, and therefore poorer than either France or
Spain. Until long after the opening of the Atlantic, she
remained on the periphery of European trade, culture,
and even
politics.
But her
leader
makes the events of
utmost
interest.
Henry
importance
later
as
a
world
her formative period, of
this,
of Lancaster, having deposed the
of the
last
Plantagenets, justified his seizure of the throne
by
claims
based on inheritance, conquest, and parliamentary support; but the struggle
and
141 3)
between the new Henry IV (1399-
his nobles did
not cease with his coronation.
In practice, this meant that the royal council continued to
authority,
exercise
worked ing.
while
the
in Parliament to restrain
Not
feeling
sufficiently
burghers
and gentry
and direct royal spend-
secure
to
challenge
this
by imposing basic reforms on governmental procedures, Henry IV was forced to cut expenses. To this end he let the war with France lapse, thus dissembling
opposition
rather
than
abandoning
his
merely delaying the inevitable
The young Henry with
his
V
announcement
claim their throne and
crusade
to
"build
ambitions,
and
thereby
disaster.
(141 3-1422) dazzled the English to the
French that he intended
make good
again
the
his
walls
promise to lend of
Jerusalem."
to a
In
Age
68
of Recovery
response to Henry's appeal to the emerging national consciousness of his subjects, the nobles put aside political quarrels,
burghers forgot economic problems,
the
and
the country united in preparation for the impending war.
At the same time, with unprecedented diplomatic skill Henry kept the Burgundians and the Emperor friendly and English trade annihilated
In a lightning invasion, he nearly
safe.
French nobility
the
Agincourt,
at
married
the French Princess Catherine, and had himself declared heir to the throne of France.
camp good
When
fever near Paris, while
still
he suddenly died of attempting to make
seven years of struggle,
his claims after
Henry
V
had raised English prestige on the Continent but had notably failed to contribute to the development of effective
government
at
home.
His nine-month-old son was proclaimed Henry
England
in
1422
and two months
later,
VI
of
following the
death of his maternal grandfather, Charles VI, was recog-
As Henry approached
nized as king of France as well. maturity, inherited
but
became apparent that he had French grandfather not only his crown
however,
from
his
it
Throughout
his insanity as well.
his reign,
the for-
tunes of England declined abroad as rapidly as those of the throne did at home. finally expelled
from
seemed to repatriate
sown
When, by
all
all
1453, the English
were
of France except Calais, they
the strife and disorder they had
abroad, with the demented king's rapacious uncles
and cousins conniving and contending with the royal council
and
the
Parliament
and
unleashing
anarchy
throughout the land.
Many
of England's difficulties were created
and economic changes. Ancient
institutions
reciprocal services and loyalties had
by
social
founded on
become anachronis-
W
The
new
tic in the
estern
secular and
Monarchies
mercenary
69
age.
Attempts to
adapt the traditional institutions ended by producing what has been called "bastard feudalism." The monarchy was reduced to using tax money to pay the great nobles vast sums,
ostensibly for the military services
"companies" but in reality
Thus enabled retainers
crown
to reach
hombres
of this
basis
relationship
in force
Germany and
new power was
the reciprocal
by which
defend or "maintain" the is,
at
to
appanage lords
in
between the lords and
malized in contracts
that
in Spain, the
and the independent princes
The
—
enough
the magnates developed into English coun-
itself,
in France,
tion
"support."
their fiefs to hire
and troops to challenge the authority of the
terparts of the ricos
Italy.
as bribes for their
beyond
of their
their
retainers,
for-
the former promised to
interests of the latter in litiga-
overawe even royal courts by appearing
the head of
their
retainers
—
in
return for
which the same retainers agreed to wear the lords' livery and serve them upon their summons. In England, where the lack of a standing army left the king dependent on feudal levies for military support, practice of "livery and maintenance," as
it
was
this
called,
threatened the very existence of public law and order.
The
defeat in France
coupled with misgovernment
court robbed the monarchy of
all
at
confidence and respect.
Throughout the period, contemporaries appealed for reform, or more "abundant government," as from place to place popular discontent grew into open revolt. In 1450 rebellious peasants captured the city of London, and for some time no one seemed able or willing to take the lead in restoring order.
The among
stage
was
the king's
set for civil
own
war.
The
traditional rivalry
relatives for control of the council
Age
jo
of Recovery
deteriorated into a naked contest for the throne; and the
House of York opened a campaign castrian line by advancing legal Then,
inheritance.
two
in 1455,
to supplant the
Lan-
claims
royal
the
to
years after the expulsion
of the English from France had flooded England with
"companies" of unemployed mercenaries, both to arms. Virtually
not to
other,
all
uphold constitutional
classes
tive, these
deadly
took
the nobles joined one faction or the
further private feuds and interests.
and lower
sides
but to
principles,
Though
the middle
remained largely indifferent and inac-
Wars
of the Roses, as they have tradi-
tionally been called, dragged
Edward, duke of York,
on for
finally
out of the endemic chaos proclaiming himself king.
thirty years.
brought temporary order
by deposing Henry VI and As Edward IV ( 146 -1483), 1
he was able to restore a degree of royal authority and financial solvency
Lancastrian
Henry VI
and to deal successfully with several
uprisings,
in
1471.
one
The
of
which
reconstruction begun
Yorkist king was terminated
by
his
England was plunged once again into
ter,
by
this
death in 1483, and civil
war. Edward's
Edward V,
twelve-year-old son sat briefly on the throne as until his
restored
briefly
shrewd but neurotic uncle, the duke of Glouces-
consigned him and
his
Tower
of
Richard
III
brother to the
London. Then, having seized the crown
as
—who
was immortalized by Shakespeare as an archetypal monster and tyrant but who has been somewhat exonerated by modern scholars succeeded in raising more opposition than support. (1483— 1485), the usurper
—
The widely princes
murdered
around the
duke
of
accepted charge that he had had the
latest
roused
dissident
elements
Lancastrian claimant,
Richmond.
With
the
defeat
to
little
rally
Henry Tudor, and
death
of
The Western Monarchies
7/
Richard on Bosworth Field in 1485, Henry brought the House of York and the Wars of the Roses to an end.
Henry VII
485-1 509), the able
(1
if
little-known victor,
founded the new Tudor dynasty and began the restoration and transformation of the his political position,
ter of
monarchy.
To
strengthen
he married Elizabeth, eldest daugh-
Edward IV, and
to symbolize the significance of
union of the Lancastrian and Yorkist factions, he
this
had her crowned he gained
still
more
and
and solemn ceremony. In time
by marrying
prestige
his eldest
daughter Margaret to James
his
IV
of Scot-
land. In spite of these brilliant foreign marriages, still
son
Aragon, the daughter of Ferdinand and
to Catherine of Isabella,
in a rich
Henry
had to suppress repeated factional attempts to under-
mine
his position at
home.
Although England's once powerful mediaeval monarchy appeared to be disintegrating, cratic institutional
condition.
To
machinery
still
much
of
bureau-
its
existed in a
moribund
bring the institutions back to vigorous
life,
Tudors discovered, they had only to reassert the personal authority that had made all mediaeval prerogathe
tive effective.
Moreover, since the general population had
suffered relatively
little
disorders, the nation
ernment to
flourish
loss
of property during the
needed only peace and secure gov-
once again.
Henry VIFs most remarkable achievement was reorganization
milked
all
of
revenues
royal
the
finances.
He
the traditional sources of the
income, customs
—while
civil
duties,
feudal
dues,
and
his
assiduously
crown
—royal
ecclesiastical
keeping a close check on government
expenditure. But no king of the time, not even the frugal
Henry, could hope forced to develop
to
new
"live
on
expedients.
his
own," and he was
One
that
was
to cause
Age
7-
of Recovery
resentment was the shameless exploitation of
bitter
his
right to impose fines and grant pardons for the slightest
misdemeanors or "dead
new
letter"
crimes.
In
addition
to
bv such dubious means, he also strove to reduce expenses both bv improving methods of accounting and bv cutting unnecessarv outseeking
sources of revenue
lav, particularly for military forces
To
without
increasing
seriously
populace, of
on land and
Henry VII added
making Parliament
a
fiscal
sea.
monarchy from the
the remarkable feat of refinancing the
exactions
the inspired accomplishment
cooperative,
not complaisant,
if
partner of the crown. Further, he cultivated the support
and loyalty of the commercial elements of the realm bv
promoting prosperity and increasing foreign he kept the reins of government firmly in his
But
trade.
own
grasp.
His chief administrative instrument, the royal council,
was composed of the great
who
ministers finances, in
to
the
and household
ordinance,
supervised
and conducted embassies abroad. This council,
— the
Castile
and the
France.
Known
a
modern
cabinet, also
began
high court of virtually unlimited
regularly as a
authority
its
enforced
some ways resembling sit
officers of state
English counterpart of the Audiencia in judicial section of the as the
meeting place,
it
conseil
du
roi in
Court of Star Chamber, because of
acquired an awesome reputation for
dealing effectively with "over-mighty subjects." Various
other sub-bodies, with special duties, gradually took on the appearance of separate institutions, but such definition
was slow and never
the
administration,
represented
the
system.
always
gradual
precedents and the
absolute.
The whole growth by
dictated
hardening
proliferation
of
of an
of
convenience,
expedients
into
unpremeditated
The Western Monarchies
13
Summary In
the
two
century,
fifteenth
great
new
phenomena almost completely transformed life
political
the political
of western and west-central Europe. Both centralized
administration and national consciousness emerged with the development of
new
The one gave sinew and
states.
the other spirit of these evolving monarchies, enabling their kings
and princes to consolidation
territorial
establish dynasties
with
the
and pursue of
services
trained
bureaucrats and disciplined armies, as well as with the enthusiastic support of that
kind
of
national
new
union under
element "the people. " popular
dynasties
A
was
achieved, not only in Spain, France, and England, but also in
Burgundy and
regions of Italy and
sovereigns,
although a few,
France and the bishops of to
Germany. Most
had to submit to the new
surviving feudal magnates
such
Durham
preserve substantial elements
Bourbons
the
as
in England,
managed
of independence.
ordinary nobles, however, lost purpose
as
in
well as
The
power
while the bourgeois, making tremendous gains in status
and self-confidence, increasingly replaced them in royal
was the monarchs, however, who made gains and whose appetite for power increased
administration. It
the greatest
the most. Thus, during the fifteenth century a great deal
had been done to expand the jurisdiction increase the authority of monarchical levels,
but
gargantuan tasks
builders of the
modern
state.
as
well as
government on
remained
for
the
all
future
In western and west-central
Europe the ultimate triumph of the prince and raison d'etat over the feudal lords and chivalry was by 1500 inevitable
though
still
incomplete.
74
Age
of Recovery
CHAPTER
IV
Political Patterns
EASTERN climate,
Europe, in both
soil,
The
history and geography,
Because of poorer
and topography, the East was underdevel-
population of the Balkan Peninsula, tied more
to the Mediterranean
lowed
its
sharply with the West.
contrasted
oped.
East
the
lead
of
than to the Continent, had fol-
Byzantium;
but
peoples
the
that
inhabited the cold plains of eastern Europe lagged far
behind and only slowly came to develop monarchies, accept Christianity, and even use the plow.
they had contributed
little
however,
If,
to the advance of civilization
before 1300, during the next 150 years they nearly over-
took their neighbors to the west.
During the fourteenth and early
when western and
fifteenth
centuries,
west-central Europe, in the grip of
famine, plague, and wars, seemed on the point of eco-
nomic and
Elbe and the Dnieper prospered. For the area played civilization.
the
a
A
positive
great
role
in
the
agricultural
of
expansion
began trading with the commercial
time this
first
history
growth of towns, and those along the
rivers
between the
political disintegration, the lands
western
stimulated
seacoasts cities
and
of the
Age
of
Recovery
Mediterranean and North Sea. 1
unctions on the sreppes.
central
1400.
Europe seemed as rivals
economy
of west-
and by
of England, France, and Castile. But finally
began
and trade
to revive
once
into the Atlantic, the East
behind, never again to challenge the economic
fell
pre-eminence of
Those
well as with the caravan
to be shitting to the east,
when the hard-hit West moved increasingly out more
.15
old urban
Bohemia, and Hungary appeared to be
Poland.
emerging
The
its
better-place rivals.
local rulers in east-central
Europe who had been
trying to take advantage of the economic the rising
boom
monarchs of the West ultimately
efforts to create centralized
to emulate
failed in their
kingdoms. The towns, whose
counterparts were proving such vigorous
allies
of royal
authority in the West, never became strong enough to
play the same decisive
role.
As
the eastern kings
a result,
had none of the basic elements of power necessary to subjugate their nobility or to integrate them into effective bureaucracies or standing armies.
magnates,
who
Even
the
many
local
transformed their traditional position as
more independent status of to form stable principalities. Their one important success was defensive. By uniting in representative estates, or diets, they were able to resist tribal
feudal
chieftains lords,
into
the
were unable
the efforts of would-be to old legends of
monarchs
to give
new
substance
once powerful kingdoms. Though
monarchs survived
as figureheads,
thev found no
a
few
signifi-
cant class or segment of the population to support their pretensions.
Even
the peasants lacked the ethnic, linguis-
tic,
and religious homogeneity that was contributing to
the
new
sense of national identity in various parts of the
West. Only along the eastern frontier did strong emerge; but both the Grand
Duchy
of
states
Muscovy and
the
Political Patterns East
77
Ottoman Empire were more Oriental and despotic in character than European and feudal. Geography and history thus again conspired to retard the political and
economic development of eastern Europe.
Geography, Peoples, and Religions Eastern Europe has always been as a
geographic
boundary
is
much
its
a cultural as
traditional
eastern
by
the line
defined
it is
predominantly Slavic ethnic and linguistic
from the Germanic or
Europe. In the north
and
Though
the Urals, in the west
that divides areas
concept.
by
in the south
Italian territories of central
this division
the Adriatic.
is
effected
The
line
by
the Baltic
connecting the
two seas is bent toward the west by the Harz and Bohemian Mountains that define Bohemia, and then toward the east by the upper Danube Valley that thrusts beyond Vienna to the famous Iron Gate formed by the eastern Alps and western Carpathians that meet at the river.
For those
familiar with the
map
of Europe in the
second half of the twentieth century, readily satellites
recognizable
and the
as
West
the
—with
that since the 1200's East
this
"curtain"
will be
line
between Soviet
only the single difference
Germany was
considered part
of western Europe.
Even where
these
boundaries
were geographical
in
character they offered no serious impediment to migration
and,
since
time immemorial, invaders have swept
into the great central plain that constitutes the bulk of
the area.
The
vast forest areas in the north
and west and
the Carpathian and Balkan Mountains in the
southeast
served primarily to slow the westward advance and to precipitate population deposits that
of
linguistic,
ethnic,
and
produced
eventually
a
complex
cultural
units.
-
;
of Recovery
A2J
Although these groups were not separated by well-defined
by
boundaries,
a pattern that
the end of the Middle
Ages they formed
recognizable today.
is still
During the great migrations of the early Middle Ages. Slavic-speaking peoples came to populate most of eastern
Europe. Three basic groups evolved: the Western Slavs, settled in a triangular area
with
ward
plateau;
Bohemian
the
into
its
apex thrusrinsr westthe
Southern
based between the Danube River and the Balkan
and
tains;
in
what
is
finally the
into
Eastern Slavs, or Russians. located
today European Russia. In time each
subgroups
Sbvs
speaking
Wends.
languages:
distinct
or Ruthemim
were
(the last .
the
split into
Western
and Slovaks; the White Russians, and
Sorbs, Poles. Czechs,
Eastern Slavs into Great Russians. Little Russians,
Slavs,
Moun-
mi
ans. Slovenes. Serbs,
also
known
as
Ukrainians
the Southern Slavs into Macedoni-
and Croats.
Non-Slavic peoples had
gained
also
a
place in eastern
Europe by the end of the early Middle Ages. Five of them spoke Finno-Ugric languages.
Of
these the Finns, in the
extreme north, and the Estonians, Livs. and Cours,
just
south of the Gulf of Finland, lived on the eastern shores
of the Baltic, while the Magyars occupied the center of the
Danube
—
group
Valley. Another major non-Slavic linguistic
the Letts. Lithuanians, and Prussians,
— was
lectively as
Baits
strung
known
col-
out along the southern
shore of the Baltic Sea. Along the lower Danube, in what is
now Rumania,
least
in
the
—from
part
Vlachs.
Roman
language derived from Latin. Bulgars. in spite of their
probably
settlers,
To
Mongol
descended
—
at
spoke a Romance
the south of them, the origin,
Slavic language, while at the southern
had adopted a
end of the Balkan
Peninsula the Greeks, though mixed with Slavic imrni-
Political Patterns East
grants, continued to speak their
plete the
from
it
list,
own
y