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A19807 A continuation of the historie of France from the death of Charles the eight where Comines endeth, till the death of Henry the second. Collected by Thomas Danett Gentleman. Danett, Thomas, fl. 1566-1601. 1600 (1600) STC 6234; ESTC S109248 69,757 158

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this enterprise They began the siege the first day of Ianuarie and tooke the towne the morrow after twelfth day and soone after also Hams and Guysnes and all that the English helde on that side the sea In Aprill following Frauncis the Daulphin maryed Marie daughter and heire of Iames the fift King of Scotland in Iune following the French besiged Theonuille held for an impregnable towne in the Dutchie of Luxembourg Yet notwithstanding they tooke it but in that siege was Peter Strozzi slaine to the Kings great griefe for he had beene a most valiant and expert Captaine Cap. II. The French inuade Flaunders and sacke Dunkerke they are ouerthrowen in their retrait to Calais The English Nauy taketh Conquet Peace betweene the Kings of Spaine and Fraunce and Elizabeth Queene of England Bourg and other Councellours of the law are sent to the Bastile The Kings daughter is maried to the King of Spaine The King is slaine at the iusts BVt the King supposing this reuenge of his losses not to be sufficiēt as yet determined to attempt farther Wherfore in the beginning of Iulie he sent Monsieur de Termes to inuade Flaunders who tooke Dunkerke and burned it But the Earle of Egmont leuying an army of 12000. foote and 3000 horse met with the French as they retired towards Calais vpon the sandes betweene Dunkerke and Grauelin where he charged them and by the helpe of the English Nauy which by chaunce sailed at that time close by the shoare and discharged their great shot into the middest of the French troups they were deseated and Termes himselfe taken prisoner to the great astonishment of all Fraunce which in sower yeares space had receaued three great ouerthrowes the first in Italie the second at Saint Quentin and the third this heere mentioned And thus the King not beeing contented with a reasonable reuenge but seeking to recouer all his honour lost euen that which hee had in part recouered before and put both himselfe and his Realme into greater daungers than euer heeretofore they had beene in Termes had left behinde him three enseignes of footemen to spoile and fier Dunkerke who being in the middest of their blouddie execution were all surprized by the Burgundians and cut in peeces The Duke of Guise hearing of this ouerthrow retired into Picardie and held himselfe in places of safetie After this victorie the English Nauy consisting of 100. saile of ships and 10000. men and 20. great hulks ioyned with them inuaded Bretaine and toke Conquet but partlie by the force of the countrey that came downe vpon them partlie by tempest they were forced to returne home with speed King Phillip being encouraged by this his good successe and many victories leuied a mightie army and encamped neere to Dourlans in Picardie beeing a French towne his whole force was 30000. foote 15000. horse all his souldiours being well paied The king on the other side neere to Amiens leuyed a great armie but seemed not willing to hazerd an other battayle considering the losses hee had alreadie receaued Notwithstanding in the ende both the Princes to auoyde the effusion of Christian blood enclined their mindes to peace The two and twentith of Ianuarie Charles Duke of LORRAINE maryed the Ladie Claude the kings younger Daughter and the Februarie after peace was treated of at Cambresis beetweene the two Kings and ELIZABETH Queene of England latelie succeded to the Crowne of that Realme by the death of hir Sister MARIE who dyed the seauententh of Nouember 1558. The Commissioners agreede reasonably well about euerie thing saue CALAIS which King Philip would haue in any case restored to the English againe and the French would by noe meanes part with which matter was so whotlie debated betweene them that all the treatie had assuredlie broaken of if newes had not beene brought from the Queene of England that shee was contented to accept of the peace with these conditions that at eyght yeares ende Calais should bee restored to hir agayne or fiue hunfiftie thousand crownes in lieu thereof for assuraunce whereof shee should haue delyuered vnto hir foure hostages of the nobilytie of Fraune such as shee would demaund This article beeing agreed vpon peace was concluded beetweene these Princes the third of Aprill and solemply proclaimed with great ioye 1559. And King Philip maryed ELIZABETH the Kings eldest Daughter promised beefore to CHARLES Prince of Spayne King Philips sonne and the Duke of SAVOY Philibert maryed MARGARET the Kings sister Thus the king hauing concluded peace to his great comfort with all his enemies and beetrauthed his Daughter to the king of Spayne by meanes of the which allyaunce hee assured him selfe of an euerlasting amitie with that Prince beganne to embrew his handes in the bloud of the LVTHERANS and committed BOVRG and foure other Iudges of the Law to MONTGOMERIE Captaine of his Guarde who sent them prisoners to the Bastile where they were layde in yrons The only cause of their emprisonment was for that they had delyuered out of prison certayne Lutherans and had forborne to publish the kings bloudy edicts till a generall or a nationall councell should take order in so wayghtie a cause This beeing done the king in great triumph departed to his Daughters mariage who was maryed to king Philip by his Deputie the Duke of Alua who represented the king his Masters person in this case which beeing accomplished the king gaue himselfe to sports and pastimes and the eight and twenteth of Iune entered into the Lists to iust and continewed so long therein and ranne so many courses three dayes together that with excessiue trauayle his whole body was become stiffe wherevppon diuers of the nobilitie and especially the Queene his wyfe besought him to runne no more the rather because that night the Queene had dreamed that shee saw him wounded to death diuers other prognosticatiōs of his death are also written which I ouerpasse But he refusing all perswasions despising his wiues dreame all the other prognostications entered againe into the listes ranne diuers courses excellently well for he was a perfect man at armes At the last he called foorth Montgomerie the selfe same that had caryed BOVRG and the other foure Councellours to prison as before you haue heard Montgomerie had runne diuers courses the day before had sayled in them all for the which cause hee was loath to come forth But being constrained by the king in the ende foorth he came being reserued by God to giue one sound blow at the last to counteruaile all his faylings before For as the king and hee met together with great violence a splenter of Montgomeries staffe which brake all to sheuers strake the kings head-peece full vpon the visard which being vnbuckled either through negligence or because the king would haue it so meaning to make this his last course flew vp in such sort that one of the splēters strake the king full in the right eye and entered into
the name of Lewis the twelfth a Prince as well beefore as after his comming to the crowne subiect to great varietie of fortune The first thing hee attempted after he had setled his estate was to bee deuorced from his wife the Lady Iane daughter to King Lewis the eleuenth pretending that hee had maried hir by constraint neuer had any carnall knowledge of hir But because hee doubted how his Realme would digest so great an iniurie offered to this Lady beeing a Kings daughter and sister a most vertuous Princesse who had also beene his wife a great number of yeares and had by excessiue sute and manie teares begged his life of king Charles hir brother after the wars of Bretaine ended wherein the saide Duke of Orleans as before you haue heard was taken prisoner hee sought to the Pope for reliefe hoping vnder coulour of religion to cloake his vngodly purpose and to iustifie by authoritie of the Church his ambitious desire to ioyne himselfe in marriage with Anne widdow of the late King Charles and heire of Bretaine thereby to hold still the said Dutchie of Bretaine vnited to the crowne of Fraunce which otherwise must haue beene seuered from it if this Lady had beene bestowed els where Alexander the seuenth so often mentioned in the warrs of Charles the eight a spaniard borne of the house of Borgia continewed still Pope at this time a man apt to imbrace any wicked motion that mought tend either to the filling of his cofers or to the aduancement of his house This Pope had a sonne named Valentinus Borgia a sinke of all fillthinesse the selfe same that had beene hostage with king charles in his Italian warrs being at that time a Church man and named Cardinall of Valence had escaped from him as in the said warres of Italy mention is already made This Borgia hauing lately renounced his Cardinals hatt had betaken himselfe to the warres was entred into the Kings pay And his father exchaunging spirituall graces for temporall possessions was contented to graunt the king a Bull of deuorce from the said Lady Iane his wise with these conditions that his said sonne Borgia mought be made Duke of Valence a Citie in Daulphine haue the charge of a company of men of armes vnder the king marry with Charlotte daughter of Monsieur d'Alebret a great Prince in Guyenne receaue a yearely pension of 20000. crownes and as much reuenew of inheritance all the which conditions were yelded vnto by that meanes the Bull of deuorce obtained and the King married the said Queene Anne heire of Bretaine I 1499. know not well who is most to be cried out of in this case either the Pope for graunting so wicked a Bull or the king for his extreme ambition and ingratitude towards his wife or his people for soothing him vp encouraging him to so detestable a fact or the Queene Dowager hir self in accepting so vngodly a marriage especially considering that she hauing been married before to a king of France whom shee could not enioy but by dismission of his former wife to giue hir place and beeing punished therefore as well by the sodaine death of the sayde king hir husband as by the losse of all hir children begotten in that vnlawfull marriage durst now notwithstanding aduenture vpon a second husband after the same sort But sure it well appeared that God was much offended with this match for if we consider first the Popes end his sonnes the one of the which poisoned himselfe with a flaggon of wine which his said sonne and he had prepared for the poisoning of certaine Cardinals their enemies and the other after al his great conquests in Italie his fauours in Fraunce was sodainely spoyled of all that he held in both those Countries sent prisoner into Spaine and lastly slaine being a miserable vagabond in the Realme of Nauarra Secondarely if we behold the miseries that fell vpon the king and the great dishonors and losses he receaued euen till the time of his death being tossed and chased like a tennis ball first cleane out of Italy by a prince in power much inferiour to himselfe and afterwards almost cleane out of his owne Realme by a confederacie of most of the Princes and states of Christendome against him in the last periode of his age Thirdly if we waie with our selues the continuall troubles the realme of Fraunce hath endured euer since this wicked marriage vnder the gouernment of this Ladies of-spring euen till this very day Lastly if wee obserue how in this our age hir discent is vtterly dispossessed of hir Dutchie of Bretayne which was the onely occasion of this vngodly match and the said Dutchie fallen to the hands of a king a meere stranger to hir none of hir line we must of necessitie confesse that God is a iust iudge and punisheth sharplie such offences howsoeuer flatterers that are about Princes sooth them vp and encourage them to such wicked acts cleane forgetting God and his commaundements if the breach thereof may further their affaires or enlarge their dominions Examples heerof are plentifull both in sacred and prophane Histories so that it were but lost labour to spend much breath in this discourse Cap. 2. The king conquereth the Dutchie of Milan Lodouic Sforce recouereth it and presently after loseth it againe and both hee and his brother Cardinall Ascanius are caried prisoners into France THis matter of deuorce hauing succeeded according to the Kings desier hee made peace with all his neighbours roūd about him namely with Ferdinande King of Aragon Maximilian King of Romaines and Archduc Philip his sonne and with Henry King of England which beeing done hee presently leuied men and made friends on all sides purposing to inuade the Dutchie of Milan held still as yet by Lodouic Sforce surnamed the Moore the selfe same that called King Charles the eight into Italie as before you haue heard which also the King soone conquered for you shall vnderstand that the saide Lodouic was hated of his owne people as well because of his great tirannie as also for poysoning his Nephew right heire of Milan at the least heire before him Farther hee was fallen out with his best friends the Venetians about Pisa who also partly for extreame hatred that they bare against him and partly for greedinesse of Cremona the countrey of Guyradadda which the king promised them for their part of the victorie dyd not onely incourage the king to passe into Italie and inuade Milan but entered also into league with him so that the saide Lodouic was destitute of all help the Pope and the Venetians beeing in league with the King and the poore King of Naples Frederic vnable to defend his owne much lesse to giue Lodouic any ayde So that after the French armie had taken La Roccad'Arazza Anon Valentia Basignane voghera Chasteauneuf Pontcorona and Tortona and that Galeas of Saint Seuerin to his great reproch had through cowardise
Duke therof who stood in continuall feare of the Duke of Milan and the Swyssers hee presently marched with his armie towards the mountaines Maximilian duke of Milan seing the tempest that hunge ouer his head sent to the Swyssers and to Pope Leo for aide The Pope sent to his ayde Prospero Coulonna with 1500. horse whom the french vpon a sodaine as they passed the Alpes by a secret way neuer passed before by horsemen surprised toke prisoner at villa francha and defeated al his troupes Frō thence the king marched beesieged Nouara which yeelded vnto him as did also Alexandria Tortona Pauia with diuers other townes Farther to make his conquest the easier he practised to pacifie with monie the Swiffers who were bound to the defence of the duchie of Milan as before you haue heard to cause thē to returne home wherevnto they agreed and rceaued some small part of the kings money in such sort that the king accompted his conquest to bee at an ende But the Cardinall of Syon so preached vnto them their league made with the Duke of Milan that they altered their mindes And when the king thought they had beene telling their money they came in a great furie and inuaded his armie which valiantly receaued their charge And what with force of canon shot and valour of the Gendarmerie of France who made a 1515. mends this day for their cowardise at the battell of Nouara but especially through the great magnanimitie of the king himselfe they were repulsed and so hewed in pieces two dayes together for so long the battayle endured that in the ende they were put to flight slaine at the least 16000. of them their courages so daunted that after this they reigned not ouer princes as before times they had done This battaile is called the battaile of Marignian which was fought the thirteenth of September in the yeare 1515. and was so bloudie on both sides that Master Iames of Treuoul who had beene in nineteene battayles reported this to haue beene a battayle of Gyaunts and all the other eighteene that hee had been in in comparison of this to haue beene but battailes of boyes These Swyssers purpose was if they had ouerthrowne the king to haue disposed at theyr pleasure of the Duchie of Milan which wholy depended vpon them But their hope was frustrate and being thus vanquished they returned home whervpon Maximilian Sforce Duke of Milan and the whole Countrey yeelded to the king The sayde Maximilian was sent into Fraunce where hee was so honorably entertained of the King that notwithstanding that he mought afterwards haue returned home yet would he neuer so do alledgeing that hee was deliuered from the seruitude of the Swyssers the euell vsage of the Emperour and the trecherie of the Spaniards wherfore hee chose rather to remaine in France wher he cōtinued till his death which happened in the yeare 1530. After this victorie the Pope and all the Princes of Italie sought the kings amitie so far forth that the Pope met with him at Bolonia yeelded vnto him Parma and Placencia as members of the Duchie of Milan which Iulius his predecessor had taken before as the possessions of the Church About the ende of this yeare dyed the valyaunt Captaine Aluiane hauing done great seruice at the battayle of Marignian aboue mentioned and was very honorably buried at Venis in the Church of Saint Stephan Cha. 2. The King returneth into Fraunce recouereth the Swissers to his seruice Ferdinande King of Spaine dyeth Maximilian the Emperour inuadeth the Duchie of Milan The Venetians recouer Bressa Verona a treatie betwene the king and Charles king of Castile at Noyon The wars of Vrbine Luther preacheth against the Pope THE King at his retourne into Fraunce lest the 1516. Duke of Burbon gouernour of Milan and so soone as hee was come into his Realme practised to recouer the Swyssers to his seruice and to make a new league with them which also was brought to passe and they promised from time to time to ayde him in his warrs against all men the Pope and the Empire onelie excepted But fiue of theyr Cantons would not agree to this accord at this time Notwithstanding about the ende of this yeare these fiue also were contented to enter into league with him but not so far foorth as the other eight for they entered into a league offensiue with the King but these fiue onely for the defence of his owne estates In this yeare dyed Ferdinande king of Aragon and Consalue otherwise surnamed the great Captaine about a moneth before him The Duke of Borbon gouernour of Milan for the King according to the kings league with the Venetians sent vnto them vnder the leading of Monsieur de Lautrech 3000. footemen and 1000. horse to recouer Bressa Verona But because the Emperour Maximilian enuying the kings great successe as did also the king of England leauied men of the fiue Swysser Cantons that were as yet not in league with the king and hauing receaued 50000. angels of the king of England and being confederated with Francis Sforce brother to Maximilian aboue mentioned inuaded the Duchie of Milan with a mightie armie of Swyssers Lanceknights and Spaniards the sayd Lautrech was constrained to returne againe with his forces to Milan The sayd Maximilian came before Milan with this mightie armie but being by nature verie inconstant and hauing receaued out of England a new supply of monie he sodainly gaue forth that he was aduertised of the king of Hungaries death which occasiō reuoked him of necessitie into Allemayne wherevppon presently he dismissed his armie without doing any matter of moment and departed home hauing filled his baggs with the king of Englands angells After his departure Lautrech returned againe to ayd the Venetians who recouered Bressa and Verona Farther Charles Duke of Austrich by his grandfathers death king of Castile seeing the kings great successe doubting that he would inuade the realme of Naples which easely at that time he mought haue done and was also purposed to haue done if the Emperour Maximilians descent into Italie had not staied him cōcluded peace with the king at Noyon wher were great demonstrations of amitie betwene these two princes promise of mariage betwene the said king of Castile Louyse the kings daughter diuers other articles agreed vpon which neuer wer performed for the said king of Castile ment onely by this dissimulation to preserue his realme of Naples which if the king would haue inuaded he was not at that time in case to defend by reason he was not as yet setled in his kingdome of Spaine the people wherof seemed better affected to Ferdinand his brother because he had been bred vp among thē then to him You haue heard beefore how the King and the Pope met at Bolonia after the battaile of Marignian 1517. where also the Pope restored to the king Parma and Placentia but with this
Emperour inuadeth Biscay recouereth Fontarabia The King of England inuadeth Picardie Bourbon inuadeth Burgundie Boniuet inuadeth Milan for the king but with euell successe Pope Adrian dyeth Clement the seuenth succedeth The Emperour inuadeth Fraūce but with euell successe THE treatie aboue mentioned with the Venetians was so earnestly pursued 1523. that in the ende they forsoke the king entered into league with the Emperour with the Archduc Ferdinande his brother and with Francis Sforce inuested by the Emperour Duke of Milan so that it was thought the king would now attempt no thing in Italie hauing so many enimies his especial friēds namely the Venetians being become his foes but it fell otherwise out as hereafter you shall heare In the meane time Pope Adrian being come out of Spaine into Italie compounded the controuersie betwene the Duke of Ferrare and the Church and endeuoured to reconcile all those Princes together and to conuert their Armes against the Turke but all in vaine About this tyme also Charles Duke of Bourbon Constable of Fraunce and the greatest prince in the Realme reuolted from the king to the Emperour Diuers causes are alleadged by diuers men of his reuolt But I think ambition to haue bene the onely cause thereof For he being a Prince of great courage and greatly beloued in the Realme was perswaded that he could haue drawen the greatest part of the Realme after him and was promised in mariage Elenor the Emperours sister widow of Emanuell king of Portugale and to haue the earledome of Prouince conquered by the armes of the Emperour and the King of England and erected into a Kingdome deliuered to him And he for his part promised if the Emperour would giue him the leading of twelue thousand Lancknights to conquere all Burgundie from the king and to restore it to the sayde Emperour who claimed it as heire to Charles the last Duke of Burgundie slaine by the Swyssers at the battaile of Naucy in the yeare 1476. Thus oftentime are the noblest witts so drowned with an ouergreat opinion of themselues that they hould those enterprises for easie which are indeede impossible to be atchieued Notwithstanding the Emperour vsed his help in the warres and hee shewed extreame hatred against the king and his countrey all the time of his life for the which most men blame him and few commend him The Emperour hauing stirred vp almost all the Princes of Christendome against the king ment to assault him on all sides and so to destract his forces that he should haue enough to doe to defend his owne and by that meanes not bee able to offend him in Italie Wherefore first hee sent an armie to inuade Biscay which besieged Bayonne but could not take it but Fontarabia they recouered from the French God so disposing of this matter that each partie should hould their owne and no more on the other side the king of England sent the Duke of Suffolke with a mightie armie to inuade Picardie But God hauing commiseration as it is to be thought of the poore Realme of Fraunce caused the sayde English armie for want of victualles and money to retourne home without any matter of moment done The Duke of Bourbon likewise inuading Burgundie had no better successe for beeing entered with his twelue thousand Lansknights into the countrey both his money and his intelligences fayled him and his souldiours wanting pay left him and the most part of them went to serue the king Thus God fought for the king as long as hee stoode vpon the defence of his owne Realme but out of his owne Realme his successe was farre otherwise God as it is to be thought punishing his ambition in mouing vnnecessary warrs abroad to trouble the state of Italie and not being contented with his large ritch and florishing Realme at home For you shall vnderstand that at this time he was him selfe passing with a mightie army into Italie to recouer the Duchie of Milan as though without Milan the king of Fraunce were not worthie the name of king And notwithstanding that Bourbons reuolt and the inuasions aboue mentioned stayed his owne person in Fraunce yet his armie consisting of 34000. men hee sent into Italie vnder the leading of the Admirall Boniuet to recouer the sayd Duchie of Milan Prospero Colonna being gouernour of Milan for the Emperour and Francis Sforce met with this French armie at the Riuer of Th●sin with purpose to stoppe their passage but that notwithstanding they passed the riuer and Prospero was forced to retire to Milan whether if Boniuet had presently solowed him and giuen him no leasure to fortefie the towne it is thought he mought haue taken it without any resistance But the actions of great souldiers are not to bee censured by the iudgement of the vulgare sort many reasons great daungers mought moue him to forbeare to giue Prospero the chace attempt to take the towne by force which he being generall concealed to himselfe and deliuered not to the notice of men About this time dyed Pope Adrian to him succeded Iulius Cardinall of M●dices by the name of Clement the seuenth The French armie aboue mentioned vnder the leading of Boniuet besieged Milan during the which siege Prospero Coulonne dyed in his bed to the reliefe of the towne came the Marques of Pescara with new supplies and likewise the Duke of Bourbon hauing fayled of his enterprise in Burgundie with 7000. Landsknights leuied in Allmaigne by Ferdinand the Emperours brother by meanes whereof the Venetians also ioyning with the Imperials and the Swyssers that came to the succour of the French traiterously refusing to passe the riuer of Seuze to ioine with the Admirals armie the French were forced not onely to abandon the siege but also with great losse of men especially of the noble captaine Bayarde to retire into France Bourbon and the Imperials continually charging them on the backe as they marched This successe had the king in Italie and no better had the Emperour in Fraunce who about the ende of this yeare inuaded in person with a mightie armie the Realme of Fraunce from the frontiers of Spaine supposing the small exploict done beefore Bayonne to haue proceded from the negligence of his Captaines Sauueterre he tooke a place of small importance which being done his courage being greater thē his abilitie to entertaine so mightie an armie lacking both money victuals which could hardly folow him in those straight passages beesides that the harde weather comming on which is verie terrible in that rockie and mountaine countrey he was forced to dismisse his armie returne home to abandō this enterprise which he had attempted against the aduice of all his best souldiours and Captaines Cap. 7. Queene Claude of France dieth Bourbon inuadeth Prouince but is soone forced to retire The king inuadeth Milan and is taken prisoner at the battaile of Pauia IN Iulie in the yeare 1524. dyed Queene Claude 1524. at Bloys greatly to
thereat This yeare also Solyman the great Turck was ouerthrowen and put to flight in Persia by the Sophy Cha. 12. The Emperour winneth Tunis and Gouletta in Afric The king establisheth legions of footemen in Fraunce VVarres beetweene the Emperour the King about Sauoy The Emperour inuadeth Prouince with euill successe Nassau beesiegeth Perona in vayne The King inuadeth Picardie and Artoys The warrs of Picmont and Salusses truce for three moneths THE Emperour being in peace with the king made a iourney into Africa 1535. and conquered Thunis and Gouletta and so victoriously returned into Italie The king in the meane time established diuers lawes for the good gouernement of his Realme and withall made also great prouision for the warrs for he leuyed in his Realme an army of 50000. footemen which were in continuall pay and were diuided into Legions after the auncient Romaine discipline and these were alwaies in a redinesse to offend or defend as occasion required In the meane time dyed the Duke of Milan and the whole country was yelded to the Emperour who seeing the king in a readinesse with so mightie an armie and doubting that he would vppon a sodaine inuade the sayd Duchie of Milan being vtterly vnfurnished at that time of all things necessarie for defence thought good to temporise with the king and to entertaine him with communication of marriage beetweene the Daulphin and the princesse of Portugale daughter to Queene Elenor and likewise betwene Monsieur de' Angoulesme the kings third sonne the Princesse of Spaine the Emperours daughter but notwithstanding all this temporising the hatred these two princes bare the one to the other could noe longer bee smothered but brake out into a bluddie warre vppon this occasion which I will now rehearse The king claymed the duchie of Sauoy as appertayning to him in the right of his mother 1536. for the which cause hee inuaded it with his armie and conquered the whole countrey The duke was entered into league with the Emperour and prayed ayde of him who sent Anthonie Leua to his reliefe But the Kings armie beeing first in a readinesse chased the Sauoyan cleane out of his Countrey before the Emperours ayde could come vnto him The Emperour came to Rome where in the consistorie hee made a most bitter inuectiue against the king wherevnto the King answered by writing at large Farther the sayde Emperour seeing his confederate the Duke of Sauoy thus 1537. spoyled of his countrey in a great fury entered with a mightie armie into Prouince perswading himselfe soone to be Lord of all Fraunce But after hee had remayned in Prouince a while and saw the preparation that the king made against him his armie also being in great penurie and distresse because the king had so stopped all the passages that no victuals could come to his campe he soone returned into stalie without doing any thing worthie of remembraunce finding the Realme of Fraunce a morsell not so easie to be swalowed v● as he imagined on the other side the Earle of Nassau at the same time inuaded Picardie and besieged Perone but after he had lyen two moneths before the towne he was forced to leauie his siege and depart the selfe same day that the Emperour retired out of Prouince Then the King on the other side inuaded the Emperours dominions in Picardie and Artoys where hee spoyled many townes and villages and tooke Hesdin both towne and castell and lykewise Saint Pol which he strongly fortefied Notwithstanding the armie Imperiall vnder the leading of the Earle of Buren soone after recouered Saint Pol and entered into Fraunce and tooke Montreuil and spoyled many other townes and there truce was concluded beetweene these two Princes dominions onely in those parts for tenne monethes But the warres in Piemont endured still for you shall vnderstand that about this tyme Francis Marques of Salusses most trayterously and without any occasion left the King and went to the Emperours seruice for the which cause the kings armie in Piemont entered into the sayde Marquisate and before any ayde could come to the Marques from the Imperials seazed all the countrey into the kings hands Notwithstanding soone after the armie Imperiall 1538. vnder the leading of the Marques du Guast recouered in manner the whole countrey againe and restored it to the sayde Marques all saue the castels of Verculo Carmagnolla the later also wherof they went and besieged there the sayde Marques os Salusses was slaine with a musket shot But notwithstanding that accident the Marques of Guast toke the saide Castell of Carmagnolla and entered into Piemont where hee recouered many places which the King seeing sent a mightie armie into Piemont vnder the leading of Henry the Daulphin his sonne who presented battayle to the sayde Marques of Guast which hee beeing farre inseriour in forces refused The Daulphin recouered in a manner all the places that the sayde Marques had before taken The king also himselfe passed in person into Piemont Wherevpon by the mediation of the Queene of Hungarie the Emperours sister a generall truce was concluded for three moneths as well for these parts as beefore it had beene for Picardie Cap. 13. The Pope the Emperour and the king mete at Nice in Prouince a truce is there concluded for tenne yeares The Emperour and the King meete at Aiguesmortes The Empresse dyeth Gaunt rebelleth The Emperour passeth through Fraunce and represseth the rebellion of Gaunt The Kings Ambassadors are slayne The Emperours vnfortunate voyage to Argier The Turke iuuadeth Hungarie BVT the Pope seeing the miserable state Christendome was brought into through the continuall warrs of these two great Princes trauayled all that hee could to establish a firme peace betwene them wherefore he intreated them both to meete him at Nice in Prouince Wherevnto they both condescended and accordingly in Iune they all three met at the sayde place of Nice where the Pope endeuoured to make a finall peace betweene them but when hee perceiued that could by no meanes bee brought to passe hee concluded a truce for tenne yeares which beeing done they all departed the Pope to goe to Rome the Emperour into Spaine and the king by Auignion to retourne into Fraunce But so soone as the king was arriued at Auignion hee receaued newes that the Emperour beeing at Villa Francha would gladly againe speake with him and that if it pleased him to come to Aiguesmortes he would there meete him The king sent the Queene to Villa Francha to visit hir brother the Emperor and himselfe folowed after to Aiguesmortes wher the Emperour came on land and dyned with the King and lodged with him all night in great demonstration of loue and fraternitie Afterward also the king went with the Emperour into his galey where they were together a long time so in great amitie departed the Emperour into Spaine and the king home In the yeare 1539. dyed the Empresse and the towne of Gaunt rebelled against the Emperour
sent 1539. to submit themselues to the king who not onely refused them but also aduertised the Emperour thereof who meaning in person to suppresse their rebellion and knowing the iourney by sea to bee long and dangerous because tempest mought cast him vpon the coast of England the king whereof was his enemie as it had done his father in times past sent to the king desiring him that he mought passe the next way through France promising him the restitution of Milan for one of his sonnes but hee besought him not to demaund any assuraunce thereof in writing till hee should be come into the low countreys least hee should seeme to yeeld the saide duchie not of his owne accord but by constraint to obtaine his passage through Fraunce The king agreed to all his demaunds receaued him into his realme and conueighed him through it into his owne dominions with all the honor that possibly mought be imagined But after he was passed out of the realme of France first he began to temporise about the restitution of the said Duchie of Milan till hee had spoken with his brother the king of Romaines and afterwards flatly denied that he had made any such promise at all and thus was the king deluded agreable whereunto certaine words much vsed by the Emperour in his passage through France wer better vnderstod after his said passage by the sequell that folowed than whan they were vttered for you shal vnderstād that Monsieur de Sanssac was appointed to attend vpon him with all sorts of Haukes wherein the saide Emperour semed to take great delight especially with flying at the Kight which the French call Voler le Milan in so much that he vsed often to aske the said Sanssac whether they should Voler le Milan Which after his departure out of Fraunce and his deluding of the king for the restitution of the Duchie of Milan was interpreted not to be ment of flying at the Kight but as a ieast the Emperour in his owne conceit made at the Kings simplicitie in beeleeuing that for his passage through Fraunce he would restore the said Duchie The said Emperour vnder colour and promise of pardoning the Gantoys all their offences entered 1540. with his armie into Gaunt where he made a bluddy and cruell execution of all the offendors tooke away their weapons seazed all their priuiledges built a Castle of the Abby of Saint Bauon to command the towne hould it in awe in the nature of a citadelle This dissimulation of the Emperours aboue mentioned touching the restitutiō of Milan so faithfully promised gaue the king iust cause to be ielous of all his actions and to fortefie himselfe against him with as many friends as he could make wherfore he sent Caesar Fregose Ricon his Ambassadors the one to the Venetians the other to negotiate 1541. with the Turke who passing peacably through the dominions of the Emperor as the kings good brother friend and confederate were both slaine vpon the Riuer of Poe by the Marques of Guast and that by the Emperours commaundement as the King sayde whose meaning was to haue found their instructions about them and so to haue discouered all the kings secrets But the said Ambassadors for the better assurance had sent their packets an other way to Venis so the said Marques fayled of his purpose The king demaunded iustice at the Emperours hands for this wicked fact naming vnto him the men that had committed this vilanous murther directly prouing the sayde Marques to haue beene author thereof But because the Emperour refused to doe iustice heerin as reason was he should haue done it is manifest that the fact was not commited but by his commaundement In this yeare also the Emperor made his iourney by sea into Africk purposing to besiege Argier but his nauie was so tossed with tempest that with great daunger of his person and infinit losse both of treasure munition ships men he was forced to returne home But it had ben much more honorable for him to haue gone to aide his brother whom the Turke spoiled at this very time of the greatest part of Hungarie then to haue attempted this voiage into Africk which the king charged the Emperour to procede of couardise alledging that because he durst not goe against the Turke who was in person in Hungarie he chose the other enterprise as easier and of lesse daunger But to proceede Cap. 14. Warrs renewed betwene the Emperour and the king The king inuadeth the Emperour with foure armies The Emperour inuadeth the Duke of Cleues The king winneth Landersey inuadeth Luxembourg the second time The Emperor ioyned with the king of England be sieged Landersey but in vaine The causes why the king of England left the kings friendship THe king seing the Emperour returned from his voiage in Africk during the which like a Christian Prince he forbare to attempt any warre against him solicited him earnestly to doe iustice for the murther of his two Ambassadors and farther sent to Marie Queene of Hungarie the Emperours sister regent of the low countries to haue the towne of S. Pol deliuered to him according to the Articles of the late truce concluded betwene the Emperour and him But receauing vppon both these points an answer that liked him not he determined to recouer by warr that which he could not obtain by reason Wherefore he inuaded the Emperours 1542. dominions with foure seuerall armies First he sent one armie vnder the leading of the Daulphin his sonne to besiege Perpignian in the coūtie of Roussilion in Spaine supposing the towne to be worse prouided for defence than in deede it was and this armie did him no seruice but was forced to returne home relinquish the enterprise The secōd armie vnder the leading of the Duke of Orleās the kings secōd sonne inuaded the Duchie of Luxembourg toke almost all the strōg places therof euen Luxembourg it selfe Farther during the aboad of the Kings armie before Luxembourg certaine bands were deliuered to the Duke of Longueuille and Martin van Rossam who met with the prince of Orenge comming to relieue the said town of Luxembourg and ouerthrew him and pursued him euen to Andwerpe gates the suburbes also whereof they toke spoiled burned them but the towne they could ●ot take wherefore they returned to the Duke of 〈…〉 lying still at the siege of Luxembourg and ioyned themselues with him But Luxembourg being taken the king reuoqued home his sonne whose back was no soner turned but the Imperialls presently recouered all the sayd Duchie from the French The third armie vnder the leading of the Duke of Vendosme inuaded Artoys and spoiled all the countrie and toke diuers small places and that being done the sayd Duke lodged his armie all the winter in the garrison townes The fourth armie was sent into Piemont with a purpose to haue entered into the Duchie of Milan But the Emperour had prouided well
to doubt that he ment to doe as the Emperours letters reported namely to enter into league with him and to forsake all his other friends and thus vnderhand the Emperour made the king himselfe the instrument to cut his owne throat and to seuer from him all his friends Whervnto I also adde that to draw the king of England to his partie to ioyne armes with him he offered him of the conquest of Fraunce what portion he would desire himselfe and by these meanes was the King of England wonne from the Kings friendship and sent a Herrault to defie the King and presently passed ouer his forces to ioyne with the Emperour before Landercy as alreadie you haue heard But to returne to the matter Cap. 15. The Turke ioyned with the kings forces take Nice in Prouince the Emperour entereth into Cambray Furstembergs successe in the duchie of Luxembourg The English spoyle the Countrey of Bouloynoys The warres in Piemont and the battayle of Serizoles The Emperour recouereth Luxembourg hee and the King of England inuade Fraunce The King of England winneth Boloyn peace betwene all these Princes The death of the Kings of England and Fraunce THe King seeing him selfe thus inuaded by the Emperour and the King of England was forced to pray in ayde of the Turke who sent his nauie to ioyne with the Kings in the siege of Nice in Prouince and the towne they tooke therein executed great crueltie but the Castle they could not take wherefore they retired themselues The Emperour on the other side by cunning entered into the towne of Cambray and in apparance left them in their auncient libertie but indeede so brideled them by a citadelle which he caused the Citizens thē selues at their owne charge to build and into the which he put a garison of his owne souldiours that he brought them to plaine slauerie and bondage Farther the sayd Emperour sent also Williā Eatle of Furstemberg with an army to recouer Luxembourg who recouered diuers places in the countrey went and layed his siege before Luxembourg it selfe but hearing of the prince of Melphes cōming to succour the towne he leuyed his siege retired into Allemayne the Frēch recouered all the places that before they had lost But the English on the other side spoiled and forraged all the countrey of Boulonoys The king hauing succoured Luxembourg sent an army into Pie mont vnder the leading of the Earle of Anghien a most valiant yong prince who wan diuers townes there in the Marquisat of Salusses from the Marques of Guast generall of the Emperours forces went and besieged Carignan whether the said Marques 1544. with the army Imperiall came to leuie the siege but the French at a place called Serizoles gaue him battaile and ouerthrew him slew 7000. of his armie and tooke 2000 prisoners After the which battaile the said Monsieur d'Anghien toke Carignan and diuers other townes in Piemont in the Marquisat of Montferrat But on the other side the Emperour with a huge armie inuaded the Duchie of Luxembourg and recouered Luxembourg the chiefe Citie thereof and diuers other townes and namely S. Disier which last was takē with great difficultie long defēded it selfe against the Imperial armie This yeare also the Emperour the king of Englād being cōfederated together inuaded France with so great forces that it is reported aboue 80000. mē to haue ben in both their armies Their purpose was to haue sacked Paris as vndoubtedly they had done if the king of England had marched forward according to his promis to the Emperour had not stayed at the siege of Bouloyne by meanes whereof the Emperour seeing his armie to be in distresse of victualls that the English armie marched not forward to his succour according to their agrement concluded peace with the king and retired his forces out of Fraunce In the meane time the king of England wan Boloyne which was yelded to him by Monsieur de Veruins the fourth of September which being done the king of England returned home and landed at Douer the first of October Notwithstanding the next yeare after many skirmishes and feates of armes done betwen the french 1545. and English as well by sea as land peace was treated off betwene these two Kings and in the ende after many difficulties concluded but not proclaymed before Whitsonday being the thirtenth of Iune 1546. thus God miraculously preserued the Realme of Fraunce which vndoubtedly had stood in great daunger if God had not put into the king of Englands head to stay at the siege of Boulonie and not to march forward to ioyne with the Emperour as hee ought to haue done which his error in all apparance was the preseruation of the Realme of Fraunce The Emperour hauing made peace with the king entered into warre against the Protestants of 1546. Germanie and both he they sent to king Frances for ayde but he refused to giue ayde to eyther of them promising to be an indifferent friend to both The eight and twenteth of Ianuarie folowing died Henry king of England which newes the king tooke grieuously when he heard it as well because of the great good will that had been betwene thē as also because the king was in hope to haue made a firme league with him lastly because they two hauing beene almost of one yeares and of one cōplexion he foresaw his owne ende to draw neere Notwithstanding after the sayd king of Englands death he renewed the league lately made betwene them twaine with king Edward king Henryes son and not long after dyed also himselfe at Rambollet the last day of March in the yeare 1546. after the French accompt who begin not the yeare till Easter hauing liued 53. yeares reigned two and thirtie and three moneths and sixe dayes This was a Prince endued with many excellent parts especially magnanimitie curtesie and liberalitie and farther so great a patron louer and aduauncer of learning that he may iustly be called the father sounder of good letters What his fortune was in this world may easely be gathered out of his Historie wherin it doth appeare that she was more froward then fauourable vnto him but one great grace of God he had that no aduersitie was able to diminish the magnanimitie of his minde besides that he was of an excellent memorie and exceding eloquent in his owne tongue HENRY THE SEcond of that name King of Fraunce Cap. 1. King Henry commeth to the Crowne The Emperours warres in Germanie The English inuade Scotland The rebellion of Guyenne TO King Francis the first succeded his onely sonne Henry the second being eight twentie yeares of age in the very beginning of whose reigne the Emperour as before you haue heard in the ende of king Francis his reigne was entered into a warre in Germanie against the Protestants 1547. namely the Duke of Saxonie and the Lantzgraue of Hessen and diuers other Princes
and townes confederated with them against him perswading the Pope who sent him ayde in these warrs that his quarel was Religion but to the princes Protestāts of Germanie many of the which were in his Camp ayded him he pretended that he made warr vppon them for their rebellion although in truth neither of both these were the cause motife of this warre but his owne ambition for his purpose was by vsing the Germanies help against the Germaines so to weaken both parts and in the meane time so to plant garrisons of Spaniards in the strong places of the countrey that in the ende he mought make the easier conquest of the whole And such successe he had at the beginning of these warrs that he toke the Duke of Saxonie prisoner made the Lantzgraue come yeld him selfe to his mercie but with this condition that he should not be detained in prison which article the Emperour so gloased with a Spanish exposition that that notwithstanding he emprisoned him alleadging that the article mentioned onely perpetual emprisonment The Palfzgraue also and the Duke of Wirtemberg and diuers other Princes and free Townes submitted them selues to him and with their money bought their peace You haue heard before how Henry the eight king of England dyed a little before king Francis and left behinde him Prince Edward his sonne a childe about tenne yeares of age the sayed King Henry before his death had practised a marriage in Scotland betwene the sayd prince his sonne afterward called Edward the vj and the heyre of Scotland being about foure yeares of age and so farre this matter was proceded in that the greatest part of the states of Scotland had giuen their consent thereunto but after king Henrys death by the perswasion of the Queene mother being of the house of Guyse and by the practise of the French faction who could not endure this vniting of these two Realmes by the sayd mariage the treatie made with king Henry was disauowed and a practise set on foote to bestow this yong Princes vpon the Daulphin of Fraunce for the which cause the English men entered into Scotland with a mightie armie spoiled all the countrie whom the Scotts encountering with all their forces at a place called Muscleborow were ouerthrowen and a great number of them slayne in September this yeare 1547. after the which victorie the English men tooke manie Castles and strong places and entered as farre as Edemborough the chiefe Citie of the Countrey and fortified Hedington a strong Towne where what happened what issue these warres had hereafter you shall heare The Emperour hauing ended his warres aboue mentioned in Germanie and established the 1548. Interim which was a forme of Religion to bee obserued till the assemblie of a generall counsell came downe into the low countries leading the Duke of Saxonie and the Lantzgraue with him as it were in triumph to the no small griefe of diuers Princes of the Empire especially of Duke MAVRICH sonne in law to the sayde Lantzgraue as the sequell shall well declare About this tyme also the Prince of Spaine the Emperours sonne came out of Spaine into Italie and from thence to Bruxelles to his father beeing honorably receaued in all places through which he passed But the Realme of Fraunce beeing deliuered from forrayne warres beeganne to bee vexed with domesticall seditions for a great rebellion was raysed at BOVRDEAVX and through all GVIENNE and XAINTOIGNE for a newe imposition increased vppon Sault for the appeasing whereof the Constable and Monsieur d'Aumalle were sent into those partes who punished very sharply them of BOVRDEAVX because they had slaine the kings officers and commited many disorders and tooke from them all their priuiledges and condemned both them and other townes that had offended in great summes of money and so appeased the tumult Cap. 2. The King aydeth the Scots against the English hee inuadeth the Countrey of Boulonoys The Queene of Scots is caried into Fraunce Paule the third dyeth Iulius the third succedeth peace betwene England and Fraunce YOu haue heard how the last yeare the English men were entered into Scotland as farre as Edingbourg and had ouerthrowen the Scots at Muscleborow for the which cause the Scots sent into Fraunce for ayde and the King knowing how preiudiciall it should bee for him and his Realme to suffer the English men to nestle in Scotland sent thether an armie of 6000. men vnder the leading of Monsieur d'Esse Strozzi the Rhingraue and others who made head against the English men and much endamaged them wanne Hedington which they had fortefied from them while in the meane time their nauie conueighed the young Queene into Fraunce notwithstanding the English nauie that lay vpon the Sea to stoppe their passage purposly to haue surprised the sayde young Queene and to haue brought hir into England but the French nauie escaped them and ariued safly in Fraunce After the conueighing away of the young Queene the king reuoqued d'Esse and sent de Thermes a valiant souldier and a wise man to take the charge of his armie in Scotland willing him to busie the English men on that side while the French forces entered into the Countrey of Boulonoys for notwithstanding that peace had beene concluded as before you haue heard betwene king Francis and king Henry before their death and afterward confirmed also betwene the two Realmes yet that notwithstanding the French perceauing the Realme of England to be vexed with seditions because of the alteration of Religion vsed that opportunitie and besieged Bouloyne but could not take it notwithstanding diuers other small peces held by the English in the countrey of Boulonoys namely Boulonberg Hambletow and Montlambert and diuers other they toke This yeare also the tenth of Nouember died Pope Paule the third to whom after three moneths dissencion in the Consistorie succeded Iulius the third and this yeare also in December died Margaret Queene of Nauarra sister to king Francis a Lady of an excelent spirit But after these wars aboue mentioned had thus passed as you haue hard since the beginning of this kings 1550. reigne betwene the French English nations as well in Scotland as in Boulonoys both parts disposed thēselues to peace England was afflicted not onely with sorraine warrs but also with domesticall seditions of the commons and dissentions among the nobles the French king was entered into practise against the Emperour both in Italie with Octauio Prince of Parma and in Germanie with duke Maurice and diuers other Princes who hated the Emperour deadly for his extreame tiranie vsed against the liberties of their country Wherefore the King meaning to attempt somewhat against the Emperour was the more inclined to make peace with England thereby to haue all cleere on that side of Fraunce Both the Realmes therfore being thus disposed to concord their commissioners met concluded peace with these cōditions Boloyne was restored to the French for the which they payed
the lyke greatly to the derogation of his authoritie pontificall for these reasons I say the Pope ended the warres of Parma and Mirandula and not onely forsoke the Emperour but also deliuered into the hands of the Earle of Mirandula all those fortes that during the siege thereof had hene built at the Emperours charge so that by the Popes treason the French held Mirandula made impregnable by the Emperours purse The kings nauie also vpon the sea toke diuers Flemish and Holandish shippes of great price and the Turke likewise about this time wanne Tripoly in Africk from the Emperour which the sayde Emperour toke very grieuously and attributed the losse thereof to the king by whose perswasion the Turke conuerted his forces thither as the Emperour sayde Cap. 4. VVarres betweene the Emperour and the Princes of Germanie Tbe king entereth into Germanie hee carrieth away the duke of Lorraine inuadeth Luxembourg Haynault and Picardie YOu haue heard before how the Princes of Germanie were euell affected towards the Emperour for tirannizing ouer their Countrey and especially Duke MAVRICE beecause the Lantzgraue his father in law was still held prisoner by the Emperour for whose deliuerie duke MAVRICE had layde his honor to pawne wherfore seing they could haue no reason at the Emperors hands they purposed to obtaine it by the sword hauing made a firme league with the king they leuyed a mighty armie and assaulted the Emperour vpon such a sodaine 1552. that he was forced for feare of his life to flye from Iusburg through the mountaines in the night by torchlight with a small company where in his passage hee had almost broaken his neck A straunge chaunge of Fortune that so mightie and glorious an Emperour the lyke of whom Christendome had not seene in many hundered yeares before should be thus pursewed and that by his owne subiect yea and such a subiect as himselfe not long before had highly aduanced Notwithstanding soone after by the mediatiō of the king of Romaines the Emperours brother peace was concluded betweene the Emperour and his Princes and the Lantzgraue and the Duke of Saxonie were restored to their libertie notwithstanding that the later of them would not depart from the Emperour but folowed him in all these troblesome broyles beecause hee would not receaue his libertie by Duke Maurice his meanes The King on the other side during these troubles betweene the Emperour and these Allemaine Princes accordingly as was agreed betweene him and the sayde Princes entered into Germanie with the title of Protector of the libertie thereof and toke Metz in Lorraine an Imperiall towne and likewise Thoul Verdun and Nancy and carryed away the young Duke of Lorraine with him farther he marched as farr as Strausbourg Hagenau neere to Spire where the Ambassadors of the Princes of the Empire came to him and gaue him thankes for his readie succour in the defence of the libertie of Germanie and signified also vnto him that they beeing now reconciled to the Emperour should haue no occasion farther to craue his ayde Wherevpon the king withdrew his forces out of Germanie the rather because hee was giuen to vnderstand that Martin van Rossem had entered and spoyled some part of Campaine and that the queene of Hungarie had taken Astenay a small towne vppon the Meuze belonging to the Duke of Lorraine Wherefore the king entered into the Duchie of Luxembourg and wanne diuers townes there hee toke prisoner also there the Earle of Mansfelde and restored Bouillon to the house of La Marche The Constable likewise by the kings commaundement entered into Haynault and Picardie and made great spoyle there which beeing done the king because of the foule wether dismissed his army and in great triumph returned to Paris Cap. 5. The Emperour besiegeth Metz. The Prince of Salerna reuolteth from the Emperour and likewise the towne of Syena The armie Imperiall inuadeth Picardie Brissac in Piemont winneth Alba. Therouenna is razed by the Imperials THe Emperour hauing pacefied the Princes of Germanie leuyed a mightie armie purposing at one instant both to recouer Metz and to inuade Fraunce But the king sent to the defence of the towne Francis duke of Guyse accompanied with so many noble men and valyaunt souldiours that the Emperour with great losse both of honor men munitiō money was forced in the ende to abandon the siege which he began in October a very vnseasonable time of the yeare vppon his owne obstinate will and contrarie to the aduice of all the Captaines that were in his campe When the Emperour made his approaches to the towne two skirmishes worthie of remembrance happened one made by the French issewing out of the towne vppon the Duke of Alua in the which the sayd Duke lost 150. men with losse onely of 5. on the French part But to requite this ouerthrow you shall vnderstand that Albert Marques of Brandembourg who had beene against the Emperour in the warres of Germanie aboue mentioned being then in pay with the king had euer sithens those warres ended runne with his troupes all ouer Germanie spoiling robbing and raunsoming all those that he became master of especially Abbies Nunries Bushoprikes and all whosoeuer of the ecclesiasticall state now seeing the warres open betweene the Emperour and the king and meaning to recouer the Emperours fauour came with his armie beeing to the number of 12000 towards the siege of Metz and so houered vp and downe beetweene the Emperours campe and the places held by the French that hee put the King in hope that hee came to his seruice But the Duke d'Aumale discouering his practises with the Emperour set vpon him with certaine troupes of horsemen being vnder his leading but to his owne cost for the Marques ouerthrew him and toke him prisoner receaued 50000. crownes for his ransome which the duche● of Valentinoys the kings Minion and mother in law to the sayde Duke caused the king to pay After this the sayde Marques ouerthrew also a great conuoy of victualls comming to the reliefe of the towne of Met●… and that beeing done retired himselfe with all his Troupes into the Emperours campe Farther you shall vnderstand that during this siege of Metz the Prince of Salerne in the Realme of Naples beecause of the extreame tirannie and crueltie that Don Piedro de Toledo vncle to the Duke of Alua vsed in the Countrey whereof the sayde Prince could haue no redresse at the Emperours hands turned French as dyd also the towne of Siena hauing first razed the citadelle built by the Emperour to oppresse their libertie and chaced all the Spaniards out of their towne An other armie of the Emperours vnder the leading of Monsieur de Reux entered into Picardie and burned many townes and vilages and namely the Castell of Foulenbray a place wherein the king toke great delight they wanne also Hesdin both towne and Castell and many other places notwithstanding the nineteenth of December in this very yeare Monsieur de
Vendosme recouered Hesdin and afterward all the other townes and on the other side the Marshall of Brissac in Piemom w●n from the Emperour the towne of Alba. But to returne to the siege of Metz. Notwithstanding that the Emperour vsed all warlike attempts for the taking of the towne and so cōtinually beat it with artilerie that it is reported by some his batterie to haue beene heard as farre as Strausbourg and by othersome aboue 22. Duch miles from the towne yet was the industrie of those within the towne and the miserie of his souldiours without the towne such his camp being most grieuously afflicted with the plague famine bluddie flux and cold the siege continewing in the midst of an extreame winter as before you haue heard that hee was forced to leuie his siege returne into Flaunders the second day of Ianuarie 1553. after the Duch Italian accompt who begin the yeare the first of Ianuarie but 1552. after the French who begin it not till Easter At his departure to the ende hee mought returne with the more speede he cast into the Riuer a great part of his artilerie and munition for the warres farther hee lost in this siege 40000. men the ignominie thereof so much afflicted him that he forbare all communication with men and soone after resigned the Empire to his brother and his orher states to his sonne and put himselfe into an Abbie in Spaine where he ended his dayes Such misfortunes Princes often fall into when they are wedded to their owne wills and reiect all good aduise or rather when GOD is purposed to punish them and to chaunge their good fortune into bad It is reported that the Emperours armie sustayned so extreame miserie in this siege that one day as hee roade thorow his Campe a poore souldier beeing miserably afflicted with the bluddye fluxe cryed out thus to him as he passed by Thou sonne of a mad woman how much miserie doe I and many a thousand more endure heere through thy ambition and wilfull obstinancie If thou wert not tainted with thy mothers humor thou wouldest neuer haue brought vs to this siege at this time of the yeare which words the Emperour hearing gaue no euell answere therevnto but onely sayde good words souldiour this matter shall bee remedied ere long be and with that gaue the poore soule money wherewith to comfort himselfe and soone after raysed his siege leauing a great number behinde him sicke whom the enemies of very pitie succoured and relieued But notwithstanding the Emperours euell fortune here before Metz his armie in Picardie vnder the leading of Monsieur de Reux besieged Therouenne in the which siege the sayd de Reux dyed after whose death Monsieur de Lalain continued the siege with a mine ouerthrew the fortifications wherevpon Montmorency the Constables sonne Gouernour of the towne yeelded the place and withall himselfe and diuers other noble men of Fraunce prisoners Cap. 6. The Imperialls raze Hesdin The Duke of Arscot is taken prisoner The death of Edward the sixt King of England and of Duke Maurice The king inuadeth the Emperour with three armies the battaile of Renty THe Emperour because of the variance that was among his Captaines made the Duke of Sauoye generall of his armie who in Iulie recouered also Hesdin from the French in the which the duke of Bouillon was taken prisoner and razed the Castle as the Imperials before had done the Castell of Therouenne buylt a new Hesdin in a more conuenient place vppon the Riuer of Cauche which they called Hesdinfiert From thence the Duke of Sauoy marched towards Dourlans and Amiens where the Constable with part of the Kings armie met with certaine of his troupes vpon the fifteenth of August and hauing layde diuers ambushes to entrap them charged them and ouerthrew them and toke prisoner the Duke of Arscot who was led to Boys de Vincennes neere to Paris whence hee escaped in the yeare 1556 wherevpon the Emperour ieasted of him saying that he was taken like a begger and scaped away like a theefe Farther the king in person with a mightie armie entered into Artoys and came before Cambray where the Imperiall armie lay in such sort that the battaile was looked for there but it fell otherwise out wherevpon the king returned to Paris leauing the Marshall of Saint Andre to spoyle the Countrey In this yeare the sixth of Iulie dyed Edward king of England a young Prince of rare expectation and to him succeeded Marie his sister Cosin germaine to the Emperour who about Saynt Iames tide the nezt yeare maryed with the Prince of Spaine the Emperours sonne And the ninth of Iulie was a cruell battaile fought in Germanie betwene Duke MAVRICE and Albert Marques of Brandenbourg in the which the sayde Albert was vanquished and Duke MAVRICE lost his lise You haue heard how the king returned to Paris leauing the Marshall of Saint Andre behinde him 1554. to spoyle the Countrey of Artoys But the next sommer the king leuied three armies one vnder the leading of the Prince of Roche sur Yonne was sent into Artoys where it spoyled many townes villages The Constable with an other armie entered into Haynault and the Duke of Neuers with a third into the countrey of Ardennes and Liege where he burned and spoiled all the country before him The Constable likewise in Haynault burnt Cymay a towne appertaining to the Duke of Ars●ot Trelon and Glayon and tooke Mariembourg through the cowardise of him that defended it with the fame of the which victorie the king being incited came in person into his army and tooke Bouuines in Brabant and burned it and sacked Dinand But the Emperour leuied a mightie power to encounter him vnder the leading of the Duke of Sauoy Wherevpon the King returned againe into Haynault and destroyed Bins and Mariemount the Queene of Hungaries places of pleasure in reuenge of Folenbray in Picardie which the Imperialls burned in the yeare 1552. as before you haue heard thus hauing burned and spoiled all Haynault the King with his army entered into Artoys and besieged Renty But the Emperour with his whole force came to leauie the siege in such sort that a battaile was there fought betweene the king and him in the which the successe on both sides was so equall that the victorie can iustlie be attributed to neither part some call it but a halfe battaile Notwithstanding this was the battaile in the which it was first found by experience that the rutters with their Pistoles are not able to abide the force of the Launce if they be roughly and resolutely charged The next day as the King was returning to the siege of the towne he reccaued newes that his forces were ouerthrowen in Italie wherevpon he retired and returned to Montrueil and the Emperour likewise to Bruxelles Cap. 7. The warres of Siena Brissacs successe in Piemont Pope Iulius dieth Paule the fourth succedeth The French in Piemont take Vulpian The
against his sonne in law the Archduc Philip who in the beginning of the yeere 1506 sailed into Spaine 1506. with a purpose to take the gouernment of Castile in to his owne hands But by the entermise of the NObles of the realme an accord was made betweene his father in law him and the king of Aragon departed into his realme of Naples with very honorable conditions But not long after died the Archduc because his wife daughter of the said King Ferdinand was distracted of hir wits both hir selfe being mad in all points but in this likewise hir whole realme of Castile reuoqued king Ferdinand out of Italy reestablished him in the gouernment of Castile till such time as Charles the saide Archducs sonne nephew of the said Ferdinand being very yong should be of age to gouerne the Realme him selfe About this tyme also the Pope by ayde of the French king recouered Bolonia from the Bentiuoli though litle to the kings honor who had receiued the sayd citie of Bolonia the Bentiuoli into his protection in the yeare 1500 yet now betraied thē to the Pope more regarding the Popes pleasure thē his owne honour and faith for the which fact the Pope wel requited him as hereafter you shall heare But to returne to the french affaires The Genuoys 1507. seing the Kings greatnes so mightely to decline in Italie by losse of the realme of Naples and being also desirous to recouer their libertie determined to rebell and to withdraw their obedience frō him which also they did and began first to chace away his officers afterwards to spoile the noble mens houses in the towne But the king being aduertised thereof passed in person with a mightie armie into Italie soone reduced them to their former obedience which being done he presently dismissed his army and returned into France therby deliuering all the states of Italie frō the ielousie they had conceiued of him that he ment to make some farther attempt Cap. 5. A confederacie is made at Cambray against the venetians the french ouerthrow them at the battell of Guyradadda SOone after this the practise aboue mentioned 1508. against the Venetians which had been long treated off vnder hand had long ere this ben concluded but that so many strings could not so soone be tuned for the Pope the kings of Romains Fraūce Aragon were concurring in the accion brake openly foorth For you shall vnderstand that Pope Iulius hating the Venetians extremly because they detained from him certain towns in Romania belōging to the Church receiued into their protection the church rebells namely the Bentiuoli others laboured to make peace among these Princes and to conuert their armes not against the Infidels but against the said Venetians which also he effected in the end the rather because euery one of these Princes had priuate quarells to them The Popes quarell you haue already heard and the cause of the french kings displeasure towards them I haue in part touched also before said it was for that they refused to ayde him in his wars of Naples according to their league which was the onely losse of the said realme as he said But in very deede his principall hatred against thē was because they held Cremona the coūtrie of Guiradadda members of the Duchie of Milan which notwithstanding that they wer deliuered to thē by his own agreemēt at such time as they aided him to chace Lodouic Sforce out of the said duchie yet now considering their ingratitude towards him withall how necessary those countries were for the strength defence of the said Duchie of Milan he determined to recouer thē againe into his owne hands Maximilian and the Archduc Charles his Nephew had an auncient quarell to thē first for Verona Padoua vinc●nse and diuers other townes with helde from the Empire and secondarelie for the countries of Friull and Treuisa which they with hold from the house of Austria Besides that Maximillians quarrell was lately greatlie increased for euen in this very yeere 1508 they had not onely denied him passage through their countries for his souldiers whose passage he pretended to be onely because he ment to goe to take the crowne imperiall at Rome though they knew well the contrarie but had also defeated his companies being entred into their dominions by force And notwithstanding that they had reason so to doe knowing his purpose to be no thing lesse then that which he pretended that he came with a resolution to surprise those places which he claimed to be his yet this defeate of his men exasperated him not a little against them for few Princes can endure the contrarying of their wills be it neuer so iustly done The king of Spaine likewise hated them because they held in the realme of Naples certaine townes engaged to them by Ferdinand King of Naples in the warrs of Charles the eight which by no meanes they would restore Thus all these princes beeing animated against them a generalleague was concluded among them against the said Venetians at Cambray The Pope 1509. began first with spirituall armes and sent forth a terrible bull against them from the which they appealed to the next generall Counsell But of all the other Princes the king of Fraunce was first in a redinesse and with an armie of 24000 men inuaded their dominions And they encountered him with noe lesse forces and vnder the conduct of Aluiane the Earle of Petillian gaue him battaile in the which they were ouerthrowen Petillian sayde through Aluianas temeritie and ouergreat heate and Aluiana sayde through Petillians cowardise or malice who would not ayde him with his troups beecause the battaile was fought against his aduice But howsoeuer it were certaine it is that the Venetians lost in this battayle 10000 men and Aluiana himselfe was taken prisoner therein This battel is called the battell of Guiradadda or de la Vaile After this victorie almost all the townes that the Venetians held in Italie yeelded to the king who restored to the king of Romaines those that he pretended Title to to the Pope those that hee quareled which being done he returned to Milan This yeare dyed Henry king of England the two and twenteth of Aprill to whom succeeded Henry his sonne a young Prince eighteene yeares of age of whom heereafter ample mencion shall bee made and this yeare also the seuenteenth of October dyed Philip de Commines Lord of Argenton a worthie counseler and no lesse worthie writer Cap. 6. The Venetians are reconciled to the Pope and the King of Aragon all they three toyne together against the King The Swyssers also beecome the Kings enemies the quarell beetweene the Pope and the Duke of Ferrare the Pope loseth Bolonia The King withdraweth himselfe from the Popes obedience The Pope excommunicateth the whole Realme of Fraunce The battayle of Rauenna wherein the Pope and his confederats are ouerthrowen THE
Venetians beeing thus low brought and seeing so many princes against them determined to take some course to dissolue this cōfederacie wherfore they humbled themselues first vnto the Pope and found meanes to be reconciled vnto him for you shal vnderstand that after this victorie aboue mentioned partly commiseration of the venetians moued him to fauour them but especially the kings greatnesse in Italie beecame very odious terrible vnto him in such sort that he also secretly withdrew the king of Aragon from the kings friendship ioyned him in league with the Venetians they restoring vnto him the ports in Pouille aboue mencioned which they held and the Pope himselfe putting him into a continuall ielousie that if the french affaires prospered in Italie he should bee constrained againe to fight for the realme of Naples notwithstanding his mariage with the kings niece But in very truth the thing that most troubled the Pope most caused him to enuie the kings good successe was ielousie of his owne estate beecause many cardinalls hated him and obiected many crimes against him all the which had intelligence with the king wherfore the saide Pope to the ende hee mought omit no thing that tended to the ouerthrow of the kings proceedings these Cardinalls practises hiered the Swyssers 1510. to inuade the Duchie of Milan and to abandon their league with the french which being begun by Lewis the xi expired at this very instant could not be renewed beecause the Swyssers demanded proudly greater pēsions thē they had before which the king partly through disdaine partly through couetousnesse would not condescend vnto wherevpon they entered into league with the Pope against the king inuaded the dutchie of Milan but for wāt of victuals monie they were forced at this time to returne home without any exploit done Farther the said Pope now shewing himselfe openly to bee the kings enemy together with the Venetians prepared a nauie to surprise Genoua and so this Pope that was the first kindler of this warre against the Venetians the principall author of the league of Cambray was also himselfe the first that brake it notwithstanding all the kindenesse that hee had receaued at the kings hands But the nauie aboue mentioned appoynted to inuade Genoua was ouerthrowen and dispersed by the French nauie and so all the Popes enterprises against the king fayled and came to naught farther you shall vnderstand that the Pope had a quarell to the Duke of Ferrara as well for certaine townes which hee withheld from the Church as also for selling of salt at Comache without the Popes permission which thing beeing his vassall hee mought not doe as the Pope sayde for the which cause hee inuaded his countries but the king to requite the Popes disloyaltie and ingratitude towards him receiued the Duke into his protection and defended him against the Pope which not a litle increased their euill will The king also to crie quittance with the Pope 1511. tooke Bolonia from him which not long beefore hee had deliuered to him and restored it to the Bentiuoli whom also hee receiued into his protection by meanes whereof extreame hatred grew beetweene the Pope and the King so farre foorth that the King withdrew his Realme from his obedience and celebrated a councell at Pisa against him which was afterward transported to Milan And the Pope on the otherside excomunicated the whole Realme of Fraunce and celebrated a counsell at Lateran against the king But not onely spirituall but also temporall armes were exercised betweene them for the Pope hiered the Swyssers to inuade the Dutchie of Milan the second time but they being corrupted with French crownes soone returned bome deluded the Popes hope which hee perceauing waged a great armie of Spaniards and Italians against the king and against the Counsell or as hee termed it the Conuenticle of Pisa and the king on the other side in the name of the sayde counsell of Pisa sent a mightie armie against the pope as a Simoniac a trobler of Christendome a drunkard and a periure And after diuers skirmishes beetweene the two armies and surprises of townes and such like feates of warre achieued ensewed the great battayle of Rauenna which was fought vpon Easter day It is written by diuers that Pope Iulius seeing his forces issew out of Rome 1512. tooke Peters keyes and threw them into the Riuer and withall girt himselfe with a sword adding these wordes that since Peters keyes could doe him no more seruice hee would see if Paules sword could stand him in any better steede which accion of his the learned Melanthon hath properly expressed by these verses folowing In Gallum vt fama est bellum gesturus a cerbum armatam educit Iulius vrbe manum accinctus gladio claues in Tibridis amnem proijcit saeuus talia verba facit Cum Petri nihil efficiant ad prelia claues auxilio Pauli for sitan ensis erit Which may bee thus Englished When Iulius against the force of Fraunce sent foorth his troups armed with pike launce this fury fell inflamde with ire and moode the sacred keyes into the famous flud of Tyber flange and tho with might and maine wayuing his glaiue thus spake in great disdaine sith Peters keyes auayle naught in this case the sword of Paule shall now supply their place But to returne to the Historie In the battaile of Rauenna aboue mentioned the Pope with his confederats namely the king of Aragon the Venetians wer ouerthrowen But Monsieur de Foix the kings nephew generall of his forces through his owne to great hardinesse or rather rashnesse pursuing his enimies with a small troupe was entrapped and slaine whose death the king tooke so greuously that he wished he had redemed his life with the losse of al that he held in Italie The said de Foix his death so astonished the French armie though victorious that for want of a generall sufficient to supplie his place they pursewed not the victorie as they ought to hauedone but gaue their enemies libertie to breath repaire their forces which if they had not done the king mought not onely haue recouered the realme of NAPLES but also haue disposed of all the rest of Italie as it had pleased himselfe Rauenna was sacked in reuenge of Monsieur de Foix his death Cap. 7. The king celebrateth the counsell of Pisa against the Pope and the Pope the counsell of Later an against him The Pope stirreth vp Maximilian the Emperor the kings of England Spaine the venetians the swissers against the king The king loseth Milan and Genoua The king of Spaine conquereth Nauarra Aeter this victorie the king returned to celebrate the counsell of Pisa and by authoritie thereof to deposse the Pope hauing the Emperour Maximilian in apparance concurring with him and as some report affecting the Papacie for himself meaning to resigne the empire to his nephew Charles though as yet but a childe
to the king of England 400000. crownes The king of England promised to marie Elizabeth the eldest daughter of Fraunce afterward wife to Philip king of Spaine Both English and French departed Scotland which was ordained to be gouerned by one of their owne nation and both the Kings were made knights each of others order Cha. 3. The warres of Parma and Mirandula The kings nauie spoyleth diuers Holandish shippes The Turke winneth Tripoli THe king hauing thus established peace on that side of his realme began to attend to his forraine practises against the Emperor as well in Italie as in Germanie The first attempt that he made against the Emperour was the warre of Parma in Italie which began 1551. vpon this occasion Petrus Aloisius Franesius sonne to Pope Paule the third had giuen him by his father with the consent of the consistorie of Cardinalls Parma and Placencia in exchaunge of other lands and was created Duke thereof This Peter the tenth of September in the yeare 1547. was slaine in his owne house not without the consent of Ferdinando Gonzaga gouernour of Milan for the Emperour as it was thought For presently vpon his death the said Ferdinando came to Placencia and entered into it and placed a garrison in it to the Emperours vse and farther alowed Giouanni Aguzzolo who killed the sayde Peter with his owne hands twentie souldiours for his guard Octauius Peters sonne and sonne in law to the Emperour for he had married the Emperours base daughter widow of Alexander Medices duke of Florence demaunded of the Emperour against Gonzaga iustice of his fathers death and that Placentia mought bee restored to him againe but receauing frō him no thing but delatorie answers fearing to be spoiled of Parma as alreadie he was of Placentia hee sought for succour at the hands of Iulius tertius newly chosen Pope who misliking the Emperours greatnes in Italie perswaded Octauius to put himself vnder the protection of France not so much regarding Octauius good thereby as hoping by this meanes to set these two Princes at variaunce which hee accompted the onely preseruation of his owne estate But the Emperour on the other side beeing exceedingly offended with this reuolt of Octauio to the French practised with the Pope to claime Parma as the right of the Church and to excomunicate Octauio as the Church rebel promising him if he would so doe that hee would enter into these warres and besiege Parma and restore it to the Church if it were recouered Wherevpon the Pope respecting his owne profit more thē his credit or the goodnesse of the cause vtterly abandoned Octauio and ioyned with the Emperour in this warre But the king hauing receaued Octauio into his protection and that by the Popes owne perswasion promised to defend him both against the Emperors ambition and violence and likewise against the Popes trecherous inconstancie who as you haue heard being reuolted from Octauio ioyned with the Emperour in this warre in hope to recouer Parma for the Church wherefore the king fortefied Parma and manned it and likewise Mirandula the Earle whereof fearing continually to be surprised by Gonzague ioyned with the French and receaued into the towne certaine French bands sent thither out of Piemont by the marshal Brissac Gonzague on the other side by the Emperours commaundement went and besieged Parma but all in the Popes name for neither would the Emperour seeme to attempt any thing against the King but onely to aide the Pope in a iust cause neither would the King seeme to attempt any thing against the Emperour but onely to ayde Octauio beeing vnder his protection in his iust cause But this dissimulation betweene these two Princes held not long for as Monsieur d'Andelot passed through the Emperours dominions in Lombardie with certaine bandes of men to put himselfe into Parma by the Kings commandement notwithstanding that they passed quietlie without harme doing as in their friendes country yet was the said d'Andelot staied prisoner by the Imperialls and iustefied for a good przse wherevpon the King charged the Emperour with breach of the truce and beegan to make warre vpon him on all sides A man may thinke the King was not well aduised to enter into this warre for Octauios cause in whom being the Emperours sonne in law he could repose no assured trust and who hee mought assure himselfe vpon the restitution of Placentia would alwaies be ready to giue him the slip so in deede he did being restored therevnto in the yeare 1556. But you must know that the king vsed this matter but as a coulour to prouoke an open warre beetweene the Emperour and him as hee was sure it would in the ende and the which thing he principally desired both because hee was yong and naturally enclined to martiall affaires and also because hee hoped while the Emperour was busied with the Princes of Allemaine with whom the king had good intelligence to recouer the duchie of Milan in the which as also in diuers other parts of Italie he had many good friends But the warrs of Germanie had a speedier end then hee expected after the which the Emperour held him play in so many places that hee had no leasure to looke ouer the mountaines in a good many yeares after this and sped but euill when he toke that enterprise in hand as heereafter you shall heere And so it appeereth that whatsoeuer man purposeth God disposeth afterwards thereof as it pleaseth him Gonzague as you haue heard besiged Parma the Pope on the other side to distract the kings forces besieged Mirandula But the King auowing the truce to bee broken beecause of Monsieur d'Andelots imprisonment aboue mentioned sent to Brissac new supplies into Piemont commaunding him not onely to succour Parma and Mirandula but also to endamage the Emperours dominions in those partes by all the meanes he mought Wherevpon the saide Brissac wanne diuers townes in Piemont in the Marquisate of Montferrate from the Imperialls and put the whole Duchie of Milan into so great feare that Gonzague was forced for the defence thereof to abandon the siege of Parma retire thether The Pope also preuailed no better beefore Mirandula but lost many of his men before the towne and among the rest his Nephew Giouanni Battista de Monte. Wherfore seing his hope frustrate for the recouerie of Parma and Mirandula and being cōsumed with the charges of the warres and farther perceauing a new tempest readie to arise against the Emperour from Duke Maurice and other princes of Germanie with whom while the Emperour was busied himselfe by the French mought be vtterly ruinated Wherevnto I also adde that the king had alreadie forbidden any cause whatsoeuer to be remoued out of his realme to Rome which was no small blow to the Popes purse and farther had vtterly refused to send any of the Clergie of his Realme to the counsell of Trent or to accept that as a generall counsell and had also perswaded the Swyssers to doe
his very braine which put this poore Prince to extreame paine Vpon the ninth of Iulie he caused the mariage of his sister the duke of Sauoy to bee accomplished without any pomp which should not haue bene solempnisated till eight dayes after and the next day he dyed of the sayde hurt The wound soone made an ende of his owne life but his realme hath bled of that wound euer since the blood is hardly stenched as yet This king liued one forty yeares and reigned twelue yeares and 3. moneths and tenne dayes Thus haue I continued as compendiously as I could the Historie of Fraunce frō Charles the eighth till the death of Henry the second namely til the beginning of their owne ciuill broyles and dissentiōs which because they cōtaine nothing but murthers massacers trecheries treasons and no orderly disciplined warres are nothing pleasaunt for mee to write nor I thinke acceptable to any man to reade much lesse fit to be annexed to the martiall actes of those Princes whom I haue here before in this Historie treated of Notwithstanding if any man shall take pleasure in writing them I had rather hee handeled such a bucherly argument then my selfe Cap. 12. The conclusion of the Historie NOw to conclude this Historie can we haue any more notable examples than these heere aboue mentioned to proue that mans cogitations are vaine and all his thoughts wicked for if you consider how all these Princes tossed and turmoiled themselues with continuall warres what infinit treasures they consumed what slaughters they made of their subiects what sacking and burning of townes defiling of yong Maidens and Virgins murthering of women and Children with all such like mischiefes as be appendant to the warrs and that is worst of all charging their owne soules with manie promises and oathes which they neuer ment to performe when they sware them neither performed at all when they had sworne them And if we farther consider how little they haue effected and brought to passe of their owne desires by all these their bloddy Martiall actions with the which they troubled the world by the space of many yeares we cannot but confesse and say with the Psalmist Hee that dwelleth in the Heauen shall laugh the Lord shall haue them in derision For first of all consider well the example of Lodouic Sforce surnamed the More Duke of Milan hee poisoned his nephew to obtaine therby the said Duchie and set all Italie on fier by calling in the French to establish him therin but himselfe was within 5. yeares after taken prisoner by the French and put into a dongeon wher he miserablie ended his life his eldest sonne Maximilian being restored to the said Duchie of Milan by meanes of the Swissers the Pope and the Venetians was within three yeares after likewise taken prisoner by the French and in Fraunce ended his daies Afterward his other sonne Francis was established in the said Dutchie by the Emperour Charles but with such slauish conditions that he rather deserued the name of a noble slaue than an honourable Prince and in the end died of poison as it was thought and was the last of this wicked race of Sforces after his death the Emperour seazed all the Duchie of Milan into his owne hands whose race holdeth it yet and shall doe so long as it pleaseth God And all these miseries fell vpon the said Lodouic and his sonnes within the space of 34. yeares Now way likewise the example of Pope Alexander the sixt and Valentinus Borgia his sonne The said Valentine in his fathers life time obtained so many conquests in Italie some by armes some by crueltie some by treason and trecheries some by periurie and by all other wicked meanes that may be imagined that all Italie stoode in feare of him and he was growen to such a pride in himselfe that hee gaue Aut Caesar aut nullus for his deuise The Father poisoned himselfe with the same wine that he had prepared for the poisoning of diuers cardinalls his enemies and so fell himselfe into the pit which he had digged for others and the son after his fathers death was spoiled by Pope Iulius of all that he had conquered in Italie and the King of Fraunce toke from him all his estates that he held in Fraunce Wherefore he fled to Consalue vnder his safe-conduct and remained with him a while at Naples in great kindnes in outward apparance But soone after by King Ferdinands commandement hee was sent prisoner into Spaine by the said Consalue who also tooke from him the safe-conduct that he had giuen him In Spaine he was emprisoned in the Rocque of Medina del Campo from whence by cunning he escaped and went into Nauarre where hee liued a while in very base and miserable estate and in the end was there slaine The Venetians likewise for hatred they bare against Lodouic Duke of Milan aboue mencioned called Lewis the twelfth into Italie to conquer the said Duchie and had for their part of the bootie the countrey of Guiradadda deliuered vnto them by the King But soone after the same king toke it from them againe became their deadly enemie so that notwithstanding all their charges employed in those warres and diuers other since yet hould they not at this day one foote of ground in Lombardie more then they did before those warres began and in other parts of Italie lesse Againe fower kings of Fraunce successiuely namely CHARLES the eight LEVVIS the twelfth FRANCIS the first HENRY the second by the space of three score yeares and better made continuall warres in Italie with infinit expences of money toyle of themselues and the death not of so few as a hundered thousand of their subiects for the duchie of Milan the realme of Naples and what haue they gotten in recompence therof onely this that they hould not at this day one foote of Land in neither of both those countreys Likewise Charles the Emperour who was so ambitious a Prince that hee thought to haue swalowed vp both Fraunce and Germanie was chaced out of both those countries with great ignominie and was neuer able to hould no not one pore towne in either of both those realmes in the end through moodinesse of his euell successe gaue a deffiance to all the world and dyed in an Abby among a companie of Monkes Lastly king Henry the eight who was so noble a Prince and obtained so many conquests in Fraunce both in his youth and in his age what hath he lest to his posteritie in that Countrey for his infinite charges employed in those warres not one towne no nor one foote of French land These examples I thinke may suffice to teach Princes to bee wise and not to attempt ambitiouslie vnnecessarie warrs seeing the sequell that enseweth therof but to liue peaceably at home to entertaine the good will of their neighbours by all the good meanes they may to se iustice done among their subiects which is their principall charge and especially to ground all their actions vpon God who is the guyder of all their enterprises and the giuer of all good successe Happie is the Prince that thus gouerneth his subiects and happie are the subiects that liue vnder such a Prince FINIS