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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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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
Notwithstanding soone after secretly hee reconciled himselfe to the Pope vtterly abandoned the French But the Pope by the ouerthrow which he had receiued at Rauenna and the great charges he had sustained in these wars the burthē wherof had lyen vppon his shoulders beeing brought to great pouertie and doubting also what would bee the isheu of the schisme in the Church sought for peace with the king onely crauing at his hands that hee would relinquish the protection of the duke of Ferrara which the king vtterly refusing the Pope fell farther out of pacience with him then euer hee was beefore And so happely it came to passe at that very instant for the Popes affaires that the king of Aragon sent him a secret message to perswade him to continue the warres against the French assuring him of his ayde which thing the king of Aragon dyd thereby to distract the kings forces while hee inuaded the Realme of Nauarra which hee was fully resolued to attempt And farther Monsieur de la Palisse generall of the Kings forces after Monsieur de Foix his death was constrayned to depart out of Romania with his victorious armie to the defence of the Duchie of Milan fearing that the Swyssers would inuade it as indeede they dyd wherefore the Pope by these occasions hauing recouered his spirits and being now more animated against the king then euer first continued his spirituall armes by celebrating the counsell of Lateran against him and afterwards stirred vp not onely the Venetians but also Maximilian the Emperour the King of England Spaine and the Swyssers to bee his enemies These Swyssers as before you haue heard had abandoned the kings seruice because through couetousnesse hee would not augment their wages and were entered into the Popes paye which his error the king wold willingly haue reformed afterwards and haue recouered them to his seruice againe but neuer could till his dying day The king seeing all the Princes his neighboures in armes against him by the Popes practises was constrained to withdraw his forces out of Italie for the defence of his owne Realme by meanes wherof the Pope and the Venetians preuayled so mightely in Italie that they recouered all the townes that were helde by the French namely Bolonia Cremona and diuers other Parma also and Placentia yeelded themselues to the Pope yea and the King lost his Duchie of Milan which was deliuered to Maximilian Sforce sonne of Lodouic that died prisoner in France vnder the protection and defence of the Swyssers The state of Genoua likewise reuolted from the king by meanes of Ianus Fregose who was made duke thereof the Duke of Ferrara was forced to make his submission to the Pope and to abandon the French so that the king held nothing at all in Italie saue a few castles namely that of Milan the castle of Cremona which continued French still till the next yeare after the battayle of Nouara when for want of victualls they were forced to yeeld themselues into the Duke of Milans hands but all the rest the King lost almost in a moment and withall all his friends a strange conuersion of Fortune that the King being conquerour lost all and the Pope and the Venetians being conquered wanne all But in truth they sayled not with their owne winde but with other mens for the Realme of Fraunce had at that time to many enemies by the Popes practises and to few friends Now to leaue a while the affaires of Italie and to come to the warres in Fraunce you shall vnderstand that the kings of England and Spaine determined to inuade Guyenne But the king of Spaine pretending the Realme of Nauarra to bee of great importance for the defence of the sayde Countrey of Guyenne perswaded the english men first to assault that from thence to enter into Guyenne according wherevnto they did soone toke it being void of desēce not expecting any war which cōquest being achieued and the sayde Realme of Nauarra deliuered into the king of Spaines hands the said king with faier words dismissed the English men giuing his son in law the king of England leaue to inuade Guyenne with his owne forces if he would For he had alredie obtained his pray by meanes wherof the English men being disappointed of his ayde were forced to returne home And notwithstanding that the king of Fraunce after the English mens departure attempted to recouer the said realme of Nauarra yet could he not doe it because of his great affaires else where Cap. 8. Pope Iulius dyeth Leo the tenth succedeth the King maketh truce with the King of Spaine being confederated with the Venecians recouereth Milan Genoua which notwithstanding presently after the battaile of Nouarahee loseth againe The Venetians are ouerthrowen nere to Vincense ABout this time died Pope Iulius to whome succeded Leo the tenth of the house of Medices 1513. which fell out well for the kings affaires for Pope Iulius while he liued so animated all the Princes of Christendome against the King that none of them would encline to make peace or truce with him but after his death the Kings affaires began to haue a better course for notwithstanding that Pope Leo were not frend to the French but had iust cause to hate them first because of the schisme in the Church maintained by them secondarily because by them Peter of Medices his brother and their whole house was ouerthrowen and chaced out of Florence as in the warrs of Charles the eight mention is alreadie made and lastly because him selfe was taken prisoner by them at the battaile of Rauenna being than Pope Iulius Legat yet proued he not so deadly an enemie to them nor such an annimater of Christian Princes against them as his predecessor had been all the which proceded of the Popes owne disposition who was a Prince by nature more enclined to pleasures than to warrs by meanes whereof the King burning with a desier to recouer his Duchie of Milan the rather because the Castles of Milan and Cremona held yet for him as before you haue heard sought first to make truce with the King of Spaine which the sayd King easelie enclined to to the ende that in the meane tyme without any impediment of Fraunce he mought setle his late conquest of the Realme of Nauarra Farther the king entered also into league with the Venetians who promised to ayde him with 800 men of armes 1500 light horse and 10000 foote men for the recouerie of Ast Genoua the Duchie of Milan and hee promised to ayde them till they had recouered all that they held in Lombardie and in the Marca Treuisana before the league of Cambray Thus the king being ioyned with the Venetians in truce with the king of Aragon inuaded the Duchie of Milan with a mightie armie and first recouered Genoua and then all the Duchie of Milan saue Nouara and Coma which held yet for Maximilian Sforce Farther the French armie vnder the
condition that the king should ayde him to chace Francis Maria de la Rouere Nephew to Pope Iulius owt of the Duchie of Vrbin which also the king did in the yeare 1516. And the Pope gaue the saide Duchie of Vrbin to Laurens of Medices his nephew to whom also the king the more to content the Pope gaue in mariage the lady Magdelaine heire of the Earledome of Bouloyne in France of the which mariage issued Catherin of Medices queene of france Notwithstanding in the yeare 1517. the sayde Francis Maria recouered his Duchie againe out of the Popes hands notwithstanding that afterwards by aide of the French the Pope draue the said Francis Maria to a hard cōpositiō whereby he left the saide duchie to the Pope was constrained to take a Pension in regarde therof yet cōtinued he not long in this estate for so soone as pope Adrian was chosen Pope he restored Francis Maria to his Duchie of Vrbin againe who quietly enioyed it to his dying day which happened in the yeer 1538. Thus much I thought good to write in this place of the successe of this warr of Vrbin because hereafter I meane not to make farther mention thereof This yeare also Martin Luther beegan openly to preach against the Popes pardons in Germanie Cap. 3. Maximilian the Emperour dyeth Charles king of Castile succeedeth him The King confederateth himselfe with the King of England who restoreth Tournay to him The two Kings meete beetweene Ardres and Calais The King of England and the Emperor mete also together at Calais and Grauelin a rebellion in Spain THE King perceauing by diuers apparent 1518. reasons that the King of Castile ment to performe nothing of that which was promised at Noyon and farther vnderstanding that the Emperour Maximilian laboured the electors of the Empire to choose king of Romaines the sayde king of Castile his Nephew a thing greatly displeasing the king because the Empire being ioyned to his Patrimoniall seniories the sayd king of Castile should bee so mightie that no Prince in Christendome should bee able to withstand his power dyd both with his money and by his ministers disswade the electors from that election and stayed it during Maximilians lyfe Notwithstanding after the sayde Maximilians death which happened the twelfth of Ianuary 1519 after the Duch and Italian accompt who beginne the yeare at Newyerstide but 1518. after the French who begin it not till Easter the said Charles king of Castile was elected Emperour notwithstāding all the impediments of the king and the great sute both he and his friends had made to obtaine the Empire for himselfe but god had otherwise disposed of it Wherefore the king hauing failed of his hope for the obtaining of the Empire and seeing the powre of the Emperour elect so greatly to increase determined to enter into a straight confederacie alliance with the king of England to whom he sent Ambassadors to treate of a mariage betwen 1519. their children which was concluded and as well performed as the other treatise of mariage with the king of Castile had bene Farther the king laboured the king of England to restore Tournay vnto him because it was a towne that serued the English men to small purpose being far from their dominions and the defence thereof being yearely to the King of England a great charge but stoode verie commodiously for the king to offend at his pleasure the Emperour in his low coūtries which matter was so earnestly pursued that for the summe of 400000. crownes the towne was deliuered into the kings hands and a straight league concluded betwene the king of England and him and it was agreed that the next yeare an enteruiew should be of the two kings betwen Calais and Ardres which also was accomplished accordingly with so great 1520. triumph brauerie on both sides that the French called the place of the enteruiew Le Camp de drap d'or and with so great demonstrations of loue betweene the two Princes that the like was not seene in many hūdred yeares before For besides the roiall sumptuous entertainment that they gaue each to other such brotherly loue and assurance was betwene them that in one day the two kings went dined each with others Queene and farther one morning verie earely the king of Fraūce came with a small traine to Guysnes before the king of England was stirring and tould him that he was come to yeld him selfe his prisoner in his Castle of Guysnes whereunto the King of England answered that he was come to take his hart his prisoner which was a verie readie an apt answere To conclude such signes of perfect loue amitie passed betwen these two princes by the space of 15. or 16. dayes for so long they were together that all men thought their friendship to be indissoluble that war could neuer arise betwene thē but it happened otherwise afterwards whereby it appereth that he spake truth that said Princes amitie to be no inheritance Not long after this enteruiew aboue mētioned the new Emperour elect ariued in England where contrarie to the king of Fraunce his expectation he was most honorably receaued in such sort that the King of England accompanied him to Calais afterwards to Grauelin where they were together a certaine space in great friendship and fraternitie and where diuers things were concluded betwene them no whit to the contentation of the King of Fraunce Among other articles this was one that what controuersie soeuer happened beetweene the Emperour and the King the King of England should bee the iudge thereof which article beecause the king would not agre vnto the king of England toke occasion to become his enemie therevpon Notwithstanding the warres brake not out betwene them this yeare as well because they had no apparant quarell on either side as also because they had not as yet made their prouisions for the warres beesides that Spaine was troubled with a great rebellion which the Spaniards called La Santa giunta which could not bee appeased till the next yeare that feare of the forraine enemy namely the French inuading Spaine caused the Spaniards to forget all the domesticall dissentions and to attend to the defence of their countrey Cha. 4. VVars betwene the king the Emperour The French conquer Nauarre and presently lose it againe The Imperials winne many places from the French in the Duchie of Milan The French win Fontarabia Nassau inuadeth Picardie The Emperour recouereth Tournay BVt to proceede the long dissembled euill will 1521. betweene these two mightie Princes could no longer be hidden but like a fier that had long been smothered brake sodainely forth into a great flame partly by the solicitation of the King of England Francis Sforce and partly by a quarell that happened betweene Robert de la Marche and Monsieur d'Emeriez about a Castell called Hiergie This la Marche beeing in league with the King in his protection inuaded his
enemy with certaine french forces and destroyed certaine villages within the Emperours dominions wherewith the Emperour being much grieued toke vpon him the defence of de' Emeriez his subiect and vpon this occasion began the warrs in those parts the flames whereof in a moment spred ouer all these princes dominions for the king perceauing the Emperors the king of Englands euell disposition towardes him determined while the Emperour was troubled with the aboue mentioned rebellion in Spaine which as yet was vnpacefed to inuade the realme of Nauarra and to restore it to Henry the trew king therof frō whose father Ferdinande king of Spaine had wrongfully taken it as beefore you haue heard The French armie at the first had good successe recouered in effect the whole Realme But the French Captains puffed vp with pride because of this cōquest moued also with couetousnesse hoping to obtaine some goodly bootie in Spaine beecause of the great diuision the countrey was in entered into the Realme as farre as the Groyne which their inuasion vnited the Spainards together that beefore were in diuision in such sort that they set vpon the French and not onely chaced them out of Spaine but also pursewing them farther entered into Nauarra from whence the Kings armie beeing in destresse both of victuals money was forced to retire lost all the places which before they had takē in the said realme as easely as they had wonne them Farther the Emperours forces incited by this victorie passed farther into France and spoyled many places in the countrey and then in saftie returned home In Italie also the Emperour and his confederats toke diuers places in the Duchie of Milan and made sharp warres vpon the king there wherewith the king being greatly irritated and purposing to draw the Emperour from the warres in Italie to looke neerer home namely into Spaine sent an armie into Biscay toke Fontarabia and fortified it and held it till the yeare 1523. when the Spaniards recouered it againe as hereafter you shall heare And on an other side also the said Emperours sorces vnder the leading of the Earle of Nassau inuaded Picardie rased Musancourt toke Moson and besieged Meziers which Captaine Bayarde valiantly defended against him Then the King with a mightie armie came downe in person into Picardie purposing to fight with the sayde Earle of Nassau but whē he saw that he would by no meanes bee drawen to the battaile the King departed leauing his armie vnder the charge of the Duke of Bourbon who tooke Hesdin diuers other townes But the king himselfe after his departure out of Picardie entered into Burgundie where he toke and spoyled diuers townes while the Emperour on the other side recouered Tournay which had continued French till this time euer since it was restored to them by the king of England who toke it in the time of King LEVVIS the twelfth as beefore you haue heard and thus proceded the warrs in these parts Cap. 5. Pope Leo falleth from the King to the Emperour The Imperials winne Milan and soone after also Genoua Pope Leo dyeth Adrian the sixth succedeth The Swyssers furiously inuading the Imperials camp are vanquished The King of England defieth the King by the Emperours procurement The Turke winneth the I le of Rhodes NOw to returne to the warrs of Italie Pope Leo seing the Emperours great successe began to straunge his mind from the king and secretly entered into league with the said Emperour pretending diuers iniuries done vnto him by the kings Ministers in the Duchie of Milan but indede burning with a desire to recouer Parma and Placentia which himselfe as you haue heard had after the battaile of Marignian yeelded to the king So the Pope the Emperour and Francis Sforce ioyned together against the king and tooke Milan which Monsieur de Lautrech defended against thē as long as hee could and afterwards also Come Cremona Alexandria and Pauia Notwithstanding Cremona the sayd Lautrech recouered soone after againe and the Castell of Milan held still for the king While these warres in the Duchie of Milan endured dyed Pope Leo and in fauour of the Emperour Adrian the sixth a Holander the saide Emperours scholemaster notwithstanding that he were at that time absent in Spaine was chosen Pope The French beeing renforced with new 1522. supplies namely with 10000. Swyssers entred againe into the Duchie of Milan and came before Milan Pauia which were so defended against thē by Prospero Colonna that they were forced to depart and abandon their siege Wherevpon the Swyssers that serued in the kings armie being wearie of the warres came to Monsieur de Lautrech and tould him that except he would fight with the enemie the next day they would depart home which the sayd Lautrech at the first refused to doe alledging the great disaduantage they should fight with because they must of force assault the enemies in their camp where Prospero Colonna and the Marques of Pescara were so strongly fortefied that he could not but vtterly despaire of the victorie But notwithstanding all these reasons fight hee must with all these disaduauntages the Swyssers hoping of as good successe heere as they had against the French when they assaulted them in their campe at Nouara But the issue fell out cleane contrarie for notwithstanding that these Swyssers furiously assaulted the enemies campe yet were they repulsed and a great number of them slaine the French in very good order retiring themselues This battaile is called the battaile of Bicocque The Swissers after the battaile returned home not once taking their leaue of Lautrech who also hauing lost the whole Duchie of Milan through this mutinous rashnesse of the Swyssers retourned into Fraunce to the king leauing at his departure Monsieur de Lescun his brother gouernour in Italie of those Peices that held yet for the king but for want both of men and money seruice hee could doe none so that the Imperials tooke Cremona and soone after also Genoua and lastly the Castle of Milan was also yeelded to them The Emperour whose affaires fell out according to his desire passed into Spaine by the way landed in England and so preuayled with king Henry that hee declared himselfe Imperiall and sent a Herrault to defie the king Farther they both sent Ambassadors to Venis to disswade them from the kings friendship and to perswade them to enter into league with them which also they obtayned in the ende But you shall vnderstand that while these Christian Princes warred thus one vppon an other the Turke to the reproch of them all wan the I le of Rhodes being as it were the bulwark of all Christendome And notwithstanding that the great master of the Rhodes sent to all these Princes for ayde yet were they so inflamed one against another that they preferred theyr owne priuate quarells beefore the publique defence Cha. 6. The Venetians forsake the King The Duke of Bourbon falleth also from him The
the kings griefe for she was a most wise and vertuous Ladie The Imperials hauing chaced the French armie cleane out of the Duchie of Milan as before you haue heard but knowing the kings magnanimitie to bee such that hee would not faile to attempt the recouery therof determined to inuade him first in his owne Countrey thereby to cause him to attend to the defence of his owne Realme to stay him from trobling the Emperour on the other side of the mountains Wherefore the Duke of Bourbon with a mightie armie entered into Prouince promising the Emperour to worke wonders there for his seruice and besieged Marseilles But the king in person with a great armie came to succour the towne wherevpon Bourbon for all his great bragges and the Imperials were forced to leuic their siege and in great hast retired to Milan whether the king with his whole armie folowed them soone recouered Milan and in a manner the whole countrie except Pauia before the which he went and layde his siege Wherevpon the Pope entered into league with him and the Swyssers who the last yeare had traiterously refused to ioyne with the Admirall Boniuets armie and had abandoned the French as before you haue heard returned to the kings seruice againe But while the king lay beefore the siege of Pauia and had brought it to extreame necessitie Bourbon went into Germanie and brought with him 6000. footemen and 2000. horse Farther 6000. Rhetians being corrupted by the Imperials abandoned the kings campe and returned home leading also certaine bands of Swyssers away with them The king also by the Popes perswasion had sent the Duke of Albanie from the siege of Pauia vvith 10000. footemen and 600. horse to inuade the Realme of Naples supposing to drawe the Imperialls thither for the defence of that Realme vvhich notwithstanding wisely they forbare to do knowing the Realme of Naples to be in sufficient saftie if they ouerthrew the king Thus the kings camp being by the departure of those aboue mentioned greatly weakened and the forces that remayned with him through the corruption of his officers not being the one halfe of the number that he payed which was a wonderfull thing that such an abuse should be offered to a Prince beeing with his armie in person himselfe the Imperialls being ignorant of none of these disorders determined to inuade him in his owne Campe where through the defect of courage in the Swyssers hee was taken prisoner him selfe fighting more valiauntly then any man in his armie many of the nobilitie were slayne and many taken and the Swyssers were in manner all cut in pieces by the Landsknights in reuenge of the auncient hatred betwene the sayde Swyssers and them This battaile is called the battaile of Pauia and was fought vpon Saint Mathias day being the day of the Emperours Natiuitie in the yeare 1525. according to the Italians but 1524. according to the French which variance ariseth as before I haue mentioned because the one beginne the yeare vpon the first of Januarie and the other not before Easter The Duke of Albanie after the kings captiuitie by the Popes meanes passed by sea with his armie safly into Fraunce Thus was this noble King through the disorders principally proceding from his owne officers and Captaines taken prisoner as you haue heard who not being dismayed with this sodaine blow of fortune behaued himself with such princely magnanimitie that he was honored had in admiratiō euen of his enemies in such sort that his captiuitie blemished not but rather caused his noble vertues the more to shine as by this one example which I will rehearse shall well appeare So soone as hee was brought to his lodging hee sent for the leaders of the Imperiall armie and tould them that hee had a sute vnto them which he trusted they would not denie him Wherevnto when they semed doubtfull what answere to make supposing it to bee some great matter of difficultie that they mought not aduenture to graunt without the Emperours priuitie he perceauing their immagination tould them it was no such important suit that required any such doubt onely his desire was that the young French boyes taken in the battel mought not remaine with the Italians but in exchaunge of other prisoners bee deliuered to the Spaniards which was presently graunted and executed accordingly though not without great admiration of the Imperialls who wondered that the king forgetting his owne misfortune being of a Prince made a prisoner in one day could remember to bee so carefull of the chastitie of these young boyes Cha. 8. The King of England confederateth himselfe with the estate of Fraunce and the Princes and states of Italie themselues against the Emperour The Imperialls seaze vpon the Duchie of Milan The King sayleth into Spaine The treatie of Madrid The king is deliuered The Children of Fraunce goe in hostage into Spaine T The Emperour hauing receaued the 1525. newes of the kings captiuitie semed to take it very modestly forbidding all signes of ioy to be vsed alledging that we ought to reioyce at the ouerthrow of Turkes and infidels but not of any Christian Prince which his modest behauiour put the world in great hope that hee would deliuer the king with such honorable conditions as mought establish a quiet peace in Christendome perpetual amitie betweene them twayne But his rigor to the king afterwards declared his spirit to be farre from any such moderation as his externall beehauiour made shew of Farther you shall vnderstand that the king of England vpon the receipt of these newes leuied amighty armie purposing in person to inuade Fraunce but hee continued not long in that minde vppon these occasions folowing First certaine difficulties arose betwene the Emperour and him the king demaunding bearing but equall charges with the Emperour an vnequall part of the conquest of Fraunce and the Emperour hoping to obtaine better conditions of the King of Fraunce by making peace then he should doe if he ioyned with the king of England by making warre Secondarely the Cardinall of YORKE being altogether French and enemie to the Emperour diswaded the king of England from farther ioyning with the Emperour who was alredie so mightie that his greatnesse was become terrible to all his neighbours round about him Thirdly after the battaile of Pauia the Emperour semed not to make so great accompt of the king of England as before he had done for first he refused to marie the Lady Mary the king of Englands daughter being very young and maried the sister of Ihon king of Portugale as hereafter you shall heare with whom he receiued a great masse of money whereof he stood in great neede Farther whereas beefore the battaile of Pauia he neuer wroat letter to the king of England but with his owne hand and with this subscrption Your sonne and Cosin Charles after the battaile he neuer wroat letter with his owne hand nor with other subscription then his simple name Charles all
twice to the reliefe of the said castle of Milan which the duke considering despairing of succours being almost starued in the castle for victuals he made a compositiō with the duke of Bourbon gouernour of Milan for the Emperour whereby he yelded the castle into his hands and it was agreed that Coma being held by the Imperials should be deliuered to the duke of Milan that there he should reside till the Emperour had heard his iustification The Emperour sent against the confederats a mightie armie vnder the leading of the said duke of Bourbon and sought also to stir vp a rebellion against the Pope in Rome itselfe by meanes of the Coulonnois who by cunning toke him prisoner in the vatican made him yelde to such conditions of peace as pleased them and constrayned him to abandon his league with the confederats and to enter into league with the Imperials with these conditions he was deliuered by thē But that notwithstanding the duke 1527. of Bourbon whose armie wanting pay desired no thing more then to be inriched with the spoile of Rome marched directly against the citie toke it sacked it though with the losse of his owne life The Pope with many of his Cardinals was emprisoned in the castle of Saint Angelo put to their raunsome constrained to yeld to such cōditions of peace as it pleased the Imperials to propound vnto thē The Emperour hearing these newes semed in outward shew to sorrow greatly for the Popes emprisonment the sacking of Rome but the truth is he was glad of it at his very hart which also well appeared because that notwithstanding he ceased not the pastimes triumphs that he had appointed for the birth of his sonne But the king of Fraunce and England sent their Ambassadors to the Emperour demanding the Popes deliuerie And being entered into a straight league together by means of the Cardinall of Yorke who came this yeare with wōderful pomp to Amiens to the king they both sent their Heraults to defie the Emperour farther the king gaue the Emperour the lie sent vnto him a cartell of defiance wherein he chalenged the combat of him But the Emperour seeing so many Princes and states against him restored the Pope to his libertie and about this time Genoua by meanes of Andre D'oria beeing then in seruice with the King retourned to the Kings obedience Wherevppon foorth with 1528. the king leuying a mightie armie sent it vnder the leading of Monsieur de Lautrech into Italie which recouered diuers townes in the Duchie of Milan and besieged tooke Pauia sacked it in reuenge of the kings captiuitie had so good successe there that it is thought the French mought haue recouered not onely Milan but also the whole countrey But the Pope being set at libertie eyther to be reuenged of the Emperour or in hope to haue the Realme of Naples for himselfe according to the agrement in his confederacie with the King perswaded the king to withdraw his armie out of the Duchie of Milan where his affaires prospered well and to send Lautrech to inuade the sayde Realme of Naples which the king to gratefie the Pope was contented to doe Lautrech recouered all the sayde Realme saue Naples it selfe which he also besieged But during that siege Anáre D'oria who with the French nauie held the towne enclosed by sea sodainely left the king and went to the Emperours seruice by meanes whereof the Imperialls were masters of the Sea which beefore the French commaunded Farther the sayd D'oria reuolted Genoua also from the king dyd much mischiefe to the French by sea But their greatest misfortune and the very ruine of this enterprise was the plague which entered into the French camp whereof Lautrech himselfe dyed and whereby his armie was so extenuated that the siege was abandoned and the French forced to retourne home hauing lost all that they had before taken as well in the sayde Realme as in the Duchie of Milan Cap. 10. Peace is concluded at Cambray The Children of Fraunce are deliuered the King marieth the Emperours sister The Emperour is crowned Florence is be sieged and yelded to the Pope Ferdinand is chosen king of Romaines BVT in the end peace was cōcluded 1529. betwene these princes at Cambray for all parts were wearie of the warrs and the kings children were restored vnto him for the summe of two millions of crownes which were presently to be payd in this sort First the king was presently to paye to the king of England for the Emperour 400000. crownes of debt which the Emperour heretofore had borowed of the sayd King Farther he was likewise to pay to the sayd king of England for the Emperour 500000. crownes forfaited by the Emperour to the sayd king for refusing to marie the La die Marie the king of Englands daughter and marying the princesse of Portugale vppon payment of the which summes the king was to redeme all the Emperours obligations out of the king of Englands hands and to deliuer them to the Emperour Thirdly he was to redeme out of the sayd king of Englands hands a Iewell engaged to the sayd kings father by the Archduc Philip father to the Emperour for 50000 crownes being a flower deluce set with stones which beecause it had beene a Iuell of Philip surnamed Le bon duke of Burgundie the Emperour made no small accompt of the rest of the two millions was presentlie to be payed to the Emperour himselfe these conditions being performed the Children of Fraunce to bee deliuered otherwise not T The Emperours purpose in turning the king of Englands debt vpon the king was this First hee hoped that the king his Realme being empouerished and consumed with the long warrs that it had endured should not bee able to make present payment of so huge a masse of money as was to bee payed first to the Emperour himselfe and secondarely to the king of England for the redeeming of the Emperours bonds and iuells out of his hands without present payment whereof he assured himselfe that the king of England would not delyuer the foresayde bondes and iuells and by that meanes the children of Fraunce should remayne his prisoners still Neyther was hee out of hope that happilie some variance would arise beetweene these two kings about payment of the money and so their friendship be dissolued which was the principall marke he shot at and as also partly it fell out in the ende as heereafter you shall heare But the king of England perceauing the Emperours cunning and not beeing ignorant of the poore estate the Realme of Fraunce was fallen into hauing sustained such a continuall tempest of warres against so many mightie enemies euer since the beeginning of the reigne of king LEVVIS the twelfth till this very time as by the course of this Historie aboue written you may easely perceaue of a noble and heroicall mynde sent Sir Francis Brian with all the Emperours
obligations and the saide Iuell to king Francis willing him on his part to signifie vnto the king first for the 400000. crownes of debt dew vnto the sayde king of England by the Emperour the king his master would giue the King libertie to paye them in fiue yeares The 500000. crownes forfayted to him by the Emperour for not marrying the Lady Mary the sayde king of Englands Daughter hee would frankely giue him and the flower de luce hee woulde lykewyse giue to his Godsonne Henry Duke of ORLEANS the kings second sonne and thus was the sayde flower de luce and all the Emperours oblygations by the king of Englands commandement delyuered contrarie to the Emperours expectation into the kings hands and the sayd Emperour satisfied in all his demaunds therevpon the kings children set at libertie the article for the restitution of Burgundie released and the amitie betwene the two kings continewed And the next yeare 1530. the king maried Elenor 1530. the Emperours sister and the sayde Emperour receaued the crowne Imperiall of the Pope at Bolonia vpon Saint Mathias day being his birth day where the peace betwene the king him was sworne anew All the states of Italie were reconciled to the Emperour Francis Sforce was restored to his duchie of Milan and the Emperour was inuested by the Pope of the Realme of Naples who also at the Popes request sent an armie to besiege Florence beecause the Florentines during the time of the Popes emprisonment in the hands of the Imperials had chaced all the house of Medices out of Florence and spoyled all their goods In this siege the Prince of Orenge generall of the Emperours armie was slaine But the sayd Citie was so distressed that in the end it yelded was deliuered into the Popes hands who punished them with great seueritie suppressed their liberties and cleane altered their state This yeare also Ferdinand the Emperours brother was chosen King of Romaines and the Realme of Fraunce for certaine yeares remayned in peace Cap. II. The Practises of the kings of Fraunce and England against the Emperour The Turke inuadeth Hungarie The Pope and the Emperour meete at Bolonia and the Pope and the king at Marseilles Henry the kings sonne marrieth the Popes niece The King of England falleth from the Pope Pope Clement dyeth Paulus the third succedeth The Duke of VVirtemberg recouereth his Duchie NOtwithstanding both the KINGS 1531. minde likewise the king of Englands were exulcerated against the Emperour the one beecause he saw himselfe dispossed of the Duchie of Milan the conquest whereof had beene so chargeable both to his predecessor and to him the other because the Emperour defended against him the cause of his Aunt wife to the said king of England disswaded the Pope from graunting any Bull of deuorce betweene him and the sayde Lady whom the king was desirous to put away because she had beene first his brothers wyfe and by the lawes of God could not bee lawfull wyfe to him But the king of Fraunce was so impourished and wearied with long warres that he thought it not time to attempt aught against the Emperour as yet Notwithstanding he laboured to draw the Pope to his partie by offering a mariage beetweene the second sonne of Fraunce Catherin niece to the sayd Pope which afterward also tooke effect And not content therewith hee sought also to stirre vp the Turke against the Emperour and farther both he and the king of England practised a consederacie with such of the Princes of Germanie as they knew to be euell affected to him In this yeare also the kings mother dyed and the duchie of Britaine was incorporated to the crowne of Fraunce In the yeare 1532. the Turke by the kings perswasion as the Emperour sayde inuaded Hungarie hauing 1532. spoyled and robbed all the Countrey retourned sodainely to Constantinople contrarie to the expectation of the king of England and Fraunce both the which hating the Emperour most deadly met together about this time at Bouloyne and after went both together to Calais where they were agreed to haue proclaymed warr against the Emperour during the Turkes inuasion of Hungarie But the Turkes sodaine departure out of the sayde Realme and his retourne to Constantinople caused them to alter their mindes and to deferre the warre till a more conuenient time Notwithstanding wisely they gaue foorth that their meeting was to conferre together how to make resistance against the Turck the better to colour their pretence they sent Ambassadours to diuers Princes of Germanie other potentates of christendome to perswade thē to enter into league with them against the sayd Turck But the Emperor 1533. on the otherside not being ignorant of these their practises came into Italie and the Pope and he met together at Bolonia wher in outward demonstrations were great signes of loue and amitie But it well appeared that their harts were farre asunder for the Emperour obtained no thing of that he desired For first he perswaded the Pope to bestow his niece Catherine of Medices vppon Francis Sforce Duke of Milan and secondarelie that he would assemble a generall councell both the which were denied him onely the Pope at the Emperours earnest sollicitation and because he would not altogether discontent him agreed to enter into league with the Emperour with the king of Romains his brother and the other potentates of Italie all saue the Venetians who refused to be comprehended in the sayd league for the defence of their estates in Italie and each man was rated what charges he should beare in those warrs But with what minde this league was made soone after well appeared for the Emperour was no soner departed into Spaine but the Pope the king met at Marseilles wher the mariage betwen the second sonne of Fraunce and the Popes niece was accomplished farther the king moued the Pope for the Bull of deuorce betwene the king of Engand and his wife the Emperours Aunt which had before bene graunted in the yeare 1529. and sent into England to Cardinall Campegius in whose hands it remained till the Pope for feare of the Emperour commaunded it to be burned and at this time also notwithstanding the kings solicitation for the same reason it could not be obtained Wherefore the king of England withdrew him selfe and 1534. his Realme from the Popes obedience and proclaimed him selfe supreme head of the Church within his owne dominions Soone after this meeting the Pope dyed and Alexander Farnese succeded him by the name of Paule the third Farther the Duke of Wirtemberg ioyning vnto him the Lantzgraue of Hesse by the kings solicitation with his monie inuaded the Duchie of Wirtemberg wherof the sayd Duke had before bene dispossessed by the king of Romaines and recouered it little to the sayd king of Romaines contentment who notwithstanding fearing farther troubles in the absence of his brother the Emperour in Spaine was forced to wink
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
for the defence thereof besides that to stay the French from attempting aught against the sayd Duchie of Milan the Marques of Guast was sent into Piemont to make head against the French where betwene him and Monsieur de Langey generall of the French forces who dyed during these warrs and afterward betwene him and the Marshall'd Annebault many feats of armes but no great exploit was done thus these foure armies stode the king in an excessiue charge and turned him neither to honor nor profit Notwithstanding the armie that was in Picardie vnder the leading of the Duke of Vendosme winter being past put it selfe againe into the field and toke diuers places in Artoys and namely Lilliers a little 1543. but a strong towne likewise Bapaulme burned thē both finding almost no resistāce in the coūrey because the Emperour had withdrawen all his forces out of the strong places and sent for them to ayde him against the Duke of Cleues vppon whom hee made warre and whose countrey hee conquered and subdewed at this present But the King in the meane time to withdraw the Emperour from inuading the sayde Duke of Cleues being the kings confederate entered with a mightie armie into the Emperours dominions tooke Landersey and fortefied it and afterward also sent the Duke of Orleans againe to inuade the Duchie of Luxembourg who wan diuers townes in that Countrey and namely recouered Luxembourg it selfe which was now the second tyme taken by the French The Emperour on the other side being ayded by the king of England besieged Landersey fortefied by the French as you haue heard whether the King came in person with a mightie armie to relieue the towne in such sort that the two armies ioyned so nere together that the battell was assuredly looked for But the king hauing sufficiently victualed and relieued the towne which was the onely cause of his comming retired safly with his armie into France and the Emperour soone after for want of victuals and because of the continuall raine that fell the winter that approched about the seuenth or eighth of Nouember leuyed his siege A man may maruayle heere how it shoule come to passe that the King of England betwene whom and the King had bene so straight a league and from whom so many curtesies had proceded towards the king and his Realme in their most troubles and greatest aduersities should now become his foe and ioyne with the Emperour whom hee had so deadly hated in the inuasion of the kings dominions But you shal vnderstand that this proceded partly of the king of Englands owne disposition partly through the kings fault and partly through the Emperours cunning First as touching the King of England trew it is that as himselfe was a Prince of a noble and a franck minde and one that would endeuour to pleasure his friend to his vttermost power so if himselfe likewise were not satisfied in all his demaunds at his friends hands hee was by nature apte to strange himselfe from his friend not alwayes so depely considering as was requisit his friends abilitie to accomplish that which hee desired And because hee had shewed himselfe a firme yea almost an onely friend to the realme of France during the time of the kings captiuitie and afterwards at the deliuerie of the Children of Fraunce as before mention is made he toke it very vnkindely at the kings hand First that hee payed not his money dew vnto him for the which he had giuen the king fiue yeares day of payment and the payment whereof the Emperour had turned ouer vppon the king of purpose to set these two Princes at variance as before you haue heard Secondarely he was grieued that the king obtained not for him the Bull of deuorce at the Popes hāds which he was perswaded the king by his authoritie mought haue procured if he had delt so earnestly in that businesse as friendship required that he should Now as touching the king he fayled towards the king of England in the first point that is the payment of his monie through want of abilitie for the Emperor held him in such continuall wars that he was forced to leauie extreamly of his subiects neuer could be in case to pay debts as touching the second point namely the Bull of deuorce trew it is that the king after the restitution of his children trauailed not so earnestly in the busines as before he had done either because he held somwhat of the disposition of his countrey men who are saide to remember good turnes no longer thē they be in doing or because he was loth to offend the Emperour with whom he had cōcluded peace whose sister he had maried or because he found the Pope obstinate or a feard to graūt the Bull in respect of the Emperors greatnes in Italie or lastly because he held the case desperate especially after the king of Englands reuolt from the Pope Whether any of these reasons or all of them or some other vnknowne to vs caused him to deale cowldly in the king of Englands businesse we can but deuine but certaine it is that the kings remisnesse in this cause mightely grieued the King of England and diminished a great part of his loue towards the king Lastly as touching the Emperour hee vsed exceding cunning to seuer these two Princes whose amitie hee saw to bee the countermine of all his practises and procedings For first hee turned ouer his owne debt to the king of England vpon the king of Fraunce of purpose to cast a boane betweene them to set them at variance as before you haue heard Farther so soone as he perceued the king of Englands minde to bee a little alienated from the king hee fayled not to doe his endeuour to aggrauate euerie small vnkindenesse and to make a mountaine of euerie moulehill Beesides this hee wroate passing kinde letters to the king of England desiring him to remember the oulde friendship that had euer beene betwene the house of Burgundie and the Realme of England and likewise not to forget the auncient enmitie and the many quarells that were yet depending beetweene England and Fraunce adding that if any vnkindenesse had passed betweene them two in regard of his Aunts cause it was now cleane forgotten on his part by his Aunts death intimating farther vnto him that if hee the sayde Emperour would embrace the king of France his friendship the king offered to enter into league with him and to abandon his league with the sayd king of England or any other prince in Christendome that the sayde Emperour should mislike of And at such times as the Emperour had these purposes in his head hee would in apparance make so much of the king of Fraunce and haue such conference with him and his Ambassadors and seeme so wholy in all matters to depend vppon his direction and aduise that hee made not onely the king of England but all the kings other confederats in Christendome
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
Fight beetweene the French and Flemish Nauies before Douer The Emperour resigneth the Empire and all his other estates THe ouerthrow the French receaued in Italie happened thus You haue heard before how while the Emperour lay at the siege of Metz the towne of Sienne in Italie reuolted from him razed the Citadelle built by him chased the Spaniards out of the towne and put themselues into the protection of France Wherewith he being not a little offended after the said siege was ended commaunded the Viceroy of Naples to spoile all the country of Sienne which he did accordinglie purposing also to besige the towne which Mouluc Termes diuers others sent therher by the king for defence thereof fortified against the Imperialls The Viceroy because of the reuoult that happened also at this very instaunt in the realme of Naples by meanes of the Prince of Salerna whereof wee haue spoken a word or two also in the said siege of Metz was forced to returne into the said realme of Naples leauing the charge of the Imperiall forces in the country of Siena to the Marques of Marignan who being ayded by Cosmus Duke of Florence and the Pope wenr and besieged Siena But vnderstanding that Strozzi with great forces was sent by the king into Italie and that hee had alreadie inuaded the Duke of Florence his dominions taken diuers places from him and was gone to batter Ciuitelle the sayd Marques raised his siege from before Syena and went with his whole power to succour the Duke of Florence wherevpon Strozzi leuied his siege held before Ciuitelle and marched to encounter the Marques and giue him battaile in the which the sayde Strozzi was ouerthrowen and put to flight and all his forces dispersed The Marques after this victorie returned to the siege of Siena neuer departed thence till he had reduced it to the Emperours obedience by whose commaundement it was deliuered to the duke of Florence The sayde siege endured till the twentieth of Aprill in the yeare 1555. But in December in the sayde yeare 1554. Brissac to repaire this misfortune of Strozzi entered into Piemont and toke diuers townes of great importaunce and fortefied them against the Imperialls This yeare also 1554. the 23. of March after the French accompt who begin not the yeare till Easter dyed Pope Iulius tertius to whom succeded Marcellus who liued but a few dayes and to him succeded Cardinall Caraffa being foure score yeares of age by the name of Paule the fourth The French armie aboue mentioned vnder the 1555. leading of Brissac toke Cassal diuers other townes in the Marquisat of Montferrat and went to besiege Vulpian in Piemont which the Duke of Alua with a mightie army came to relieue as also hee did And hauing put victuals and munition sufficient into the towne he departed and besieged Saint Iac. But the towne was so notablie defended by the French for the king had sent thether great forces to succour the place that the Duke of Alua was forced to abandon the siege retire himselfe presentlie whervpon the French with their whole forces returned to the siege of Vulpian and toke it and razed both towne and castle because it maintained none but souldiours that robbed and spoiled all the country About this time also the French and Flemish Nauy met vpon the Sea neere to Douer a hauen towne in England where was a most bloddie fight betweene them in the which the French being put to the worse fired their ships thinking thereby to cause the flemings to vngraple from them but the fire was so vehement that they had no powre to doe it by meanes wherof both the Nauies were fired and many ships on both sides burnt Notwithstanding the French being entered into the flemish ships that remained seeing the small number of Flemings that were in them tooke fiue of their ships and led them away with them This yeare also vpon the fiue and twentith of October the Emperour in great solempnitie in the great hall of Bruxelles yelded vp all his estats and dominions patrimoniall to his sonne king Phillip and the Empire to the king of Romaines his brother Cap. 8. A truce for fiue yeares betweene the King of Fraunce and Spaine The Emperour saileth into Spaine and putteth himselfe into an Abbye where hee dieth AFter the Emperour had resigned all his estats to his sonne King Phillip 1556. the saide King by the perswasion of the Queene of England his wife and as some also writ by the Emperours owne perswasion enclined to make peace with Fraunce by meanes whereof both the Princes sent their commissioners to meete treat therof who not beeing able because of the sundry difficulties to conclude a finall peace made notwithstanding a truce for fiue yeares each part holding that which they had taken in the former warrs And in this yeare the Emperour with his two sisters Elenor Queene of Fraunce Marie Queene of Hungarie sailed into Spaine and put himselfe into an Abby wher he remained till his death which happened the one and twentith of September in the yeare 1558. One notable thing is to bee remembred of this noble Emperour wherby we may perceaue how vaine a thing the glory of this world is While the Emperour stayed at Vlushing for winde to carie him his last iourney into Spaine hee conferred on a time with Seldius his brother Ferdinands Ambassador till the deepe of the night and when Seldius should depart the Emperour calling for some of his seruants and no bodie answering him for those that attended vpon him were some gone to their lodgings and all the rest a sleepe the Emperour tooke vp the candle himselfe and went before Seldius to light him downe the staires and so did notwithstanding all the resistance that Seldius could make And whan he was come to the staires foote hee said thus vnto him Seldius remēber this of Charles the Emperour when he shal be dead and gone that him whom thou hast knowen in thy time enuironed with so many mightie armies and gardes of souldiers thou hast also seene alone abandoned forsaken yea euen of his owne domesticall seruants and that hee whom thou hast serued so manye yeares hath also serued thee and borne the candle downe before thee I acknowledge this chaunge of fortune to proceede from the mightie hand of God which I will by no meanes goe about to withstand Cap. 9. The truce for fiue yeares is broken by the Popes practise The Duke of Alua inuadeth the Church Dominions The Duke of Guyse entereth into Italie and the King inuadeth the King of Spayne in diuers other places The Queene of England proclaymeth warre against the French YOu haue heard how a truce for fiue yeares was concluded betweene the 1557. Kings of Fraunce and Spaine but it was broken before the expiration of one yeare vpon this occasion which you shall now heare The Pope being an enemie to the Spaniard gaue forth whether falsly
oath sent into Spayne to the king of ARAGON where after manie yeeres imprisonment hee marryed in the yeare 1522. with the LADIE GERMANE of FOIX widdow of the saide KING of ARAGON a rich LADIE but barrayne which marriage was made by the EMPEROVR CHARLES who greatly fauoured the saide Duke of Calabria because hee had refused to be taken out of La Rocca Sciatiua which was the prison wherin he lay and to bee made head of a rebellion that happened in Spaine called La Santa giunta whereof heereafter mention shall bee made This Ferdinand Duke of Calabria was the last of the race of the first Alfonse King of Naples for two of his bretheren died before him one in Italy the other in Fraunce But to returne to the History the treason of the King of Spaine towardes King Frederic was no greater in this action than the error of the king of Fraunce as the sequele well delared For whereas the saide Frederic offered King Lewis to hold the Realme of Naples of him and to pay him for it yeerely a great tribute by meanes whereof no man should haue commaunded in the saide Realme but his tributarie king who alwaies must haue depended vpon him and himselfe he now called in a neighbour PRINCE though not so mightie yet much more subtill than himselfe and deuided the kingdome with him beeing obtayned by his owne money and his owne subiectes blood and soone after lost the whole to his owne great dishonor and damage For you shall vnderstand that the very next yeere after the partition made of the sayde Realme beetweene 1502. these two Princes they fell at varience about the bounds of their territories and beecause the French were at that instant the stronger they tooke many places in the Countrey called the Capitanat which was the prouince in controuersie beetweene them from the Spaniards But the next yeere after the Spaniards haueing renforced their companies not onely recouered all their losses but also wanne diuers places frō the French namely 1503. RVBOS a towne not far from BARLETTA where also they tooke prisoner Monsieur de la Palisse And notwithstanding that by the entermise of Archduc Philip sonne in law to the king of Spaine who this yeere came into Fraunce a peace was concluded betweene the kings of Fraunce and Spaine vpon the securitie whereof king Lewis wholy reposing himselfe forbare to send new supplies to NAPLES yet the king of Spaine very cunningly delayed the confirmation of the sayde peace beecause hee saw his affaires to prosper well in Italie through the French kings ouergreat credulitie and negligence and in the end flatly disauowed al his sonne in laws actions And Consalue his Generall in the sayde Realme of NAPLES notwithstanding the Archducs commaundements often sent vnto him to surcease all Hostilitie in those parts not onely refused so to doe because hee receiued noe such commaundement from his Master but also proceeded still in his conquests and wanne from the French diuers townes defeated the Duke of ATRY who led certaine French bandes and tooke him prisoner and afterward also ouerthrew Monsieur d'Aubigny and tooke him prisoner and lastlie at the battayle of Cirignolles vanquished the whole power of france and slew in the fielde with diuers noble men the braue Duke of NEMOVRS generall of the French forces Farther the sayde Consalue vsing the benefit of this victorie marched presently before Naples and without resistance entered into the towne and reduced it to the obedience of the King of Spaine and soone after tooke also the Castles and conquered almost the whole Realme In the meane time dyed Pope ALEXANDER the sixt and PIVS the third was chosen Pope who dying also at the ende of sixe and twentie dayes the Cardinall Petri ad Vincula so often mentioned in the warrs of Charles the eight succeeded by the name of IVLIVS the second The King in the meane time made great preparation to recouer his Realme of NAPLES so shamefully and dishonorably lost and entered as farre as the Riuer GARILLIANO called LIRIS in auncient times where diuers attempts were made by the French to passe the sayde Riuer which all were ouerthrowen and brought to nought by the wisdome and industrie of Consalue In the ende what through want of victualls and lack of money which the kings officers most shamefullie detayned from them by meanes also whereof the companies that the King payed were not halfe compleat what through foule weather and what through the industrie and diligence of Consalue who tooke aduauntage of all these their disorders the French were forced to abandon their fortes vppon the sayde Riuer and to retire to CAIETTA which they yet held whether not onely the sayde inconueniences accompanied them but also Consalue with all speede pursued them and there beesieged them But they not beeing able to defend the towne 1504 yeelded it by composition and retourned into Fraunce and thus Consalue obtayned the Realme of NAPLES without bloudshed and had euer after the Title of great Captaine beecause of his noble exployts giuen vnto him Cap. 4. Frederic King of Naples and Elizabeth Queene of Spaine both dye by a mariage beetweene the King of Aragon and the Lady Germanie Foix peace is made beetweene Fraunce and Spaine Archduc Philip dyeth Bolonia is restored to the pope Genoua rebelleth and is soone reduced to the Kings obedience IN this yeere dyed FREDERIC king of Naples and likewise ELIZABETH 1504. Queene of Castile wife to king Ferdinand whose death caused the said king Ferdinand the rather to desire peace with Fraunce because hee doubted that the gouernment of Castile notwithstanding his wiues testament whereby hee was appointed Gouernour thereof during his life should bee taken from him and deliuered to Archduc Philip his sonne in law whose wife was heyre thereof The yeere 1505 was a yeere subiect to great Famine and Pestilence and in this yeere a secret 1505. consederacie beetweene the greatest Princes in Christendome against the Venetians beegan couertly to bee treated of which afterwards also tooke effect And the better to bring that matter to passe by practise of the Pope who was a deadly enemy to the Venetians as was also the King of Fraunce because for want of their help he lost the Realme of Naples as hee saide peace was concluded betweene Fraunce and Spaine the French king enclining therevnto to the end hee mought haue his reuenge of the said venetians the spaniard by that meanes to haue a rampar against his son in law the Archduc Philip wherfore in consideration of a marriage betweene the said King of Spaine and the Lady Germaine of Foix sisters daughter to the king of Fraunce the saide King yelded vp to the king of Spaine all his title interest to the Realme of Naples by the which meanes these two Princes that so long had continued in deadly warrs concluded peace and became friends allies And the king of Spaine heereby also fortified himselfe mightely
or truely it is vncertaine that the Colonnesi who alwayes haue beene and yet are Imperiall made secret assemblies against him in Rome for the which cause some of them hee emprisoned some hee banished and seazed all their lands and goods into his owne hands The Imperials say that this was but a quarell picked to them by the Pope because hee had secret intelligence with the king of Fraunce perswaded him to attempt the recouerie of the Realme of Naples as well therby to abate the Spaniards greatnes in Italie who held Naples Milan Siena disposed of the stats of Genoua Florence as of his owne as also hoping if the French had good successe in Italie that some part of the bootie would fall to his share which hee was the more desirous of because he was a Neapolitaine borne himselfe But howsoeuer it were the Colonnesi being thus iniuried complained to king Philip and desired his succour who sent the Duke Alua to their ayde yet offering the Pope any reasonable conditions of peace which he vtterly refused and sent to the king and the duke of Ferrara being his confederats for succours but before they could arriue the duke of Alua inuaded the Church dominions and toke Ostia Palestrina and much distressed Rome But the King with all speede sent the Duke of Guyse with a mightie armie into Italie who entering into Lombardie tooke Valentia in the duchie of Milan put a garison into it on an other side also the French inuaded Artoys and spoyled all the Countrey they besieged Douay but could not take it Notwithstanding Lens they toke and burned it Farther the kings forces in Piemont tooke Valfiniere and Cairas and thus the fiue yeares truce concluded the yeare before helde not one yeare great cōtrouersie is betwene the French and Spanish which of the two Princes first brake the truce The French say the Spaniard first brake it by inuading the Pope whom the king as an obedient sonne to the Church was bound to defend But the answere herevnto is easie for besides that the inuading of the Pope being an indifferent friend to both the Princes could not bee a breach of the truce towards the French king it is also most certaine that the first iniurie proceded frō the Pope towards the king of Spaines friends and cōfederats and therefore the French were not to ayde him in an euell cause But admit the ayding of the Pope were no breach of the truce yet the King ought not to haue proceded farther then to send the Pope ayde but hee inuaded king Philip before he tooke weapon in hand in Milan in Piemont in Artoys and in Flaunders which could not bee other then a flatte breach of the truce But to retourne to the warres of Italie The Duke of Guyse by the Popes perswasion and vppon promise of ayde from him was passing with his armie towards the realme of Naples with purpose to inuade it But seeing the Duke of Alua to make head against him and being also disapoynted of the ayde promised him by the Pope he was forced to retire with his armie being in very pore estate and cursing the Pope and all his trecheries While these matters thus passed in Italie the Queene of England by hir husbands perswasion entered into an vnnecessarie warre with Fraunce for she should haue done much better to haue continued as shee began a mediater for peace th●n vpon no occasion to become the French kings enemie but shee sped accordingly Cha. 10. The King of Spaine taketh Saint Quentin The battaile of Saint Laurens in the which the Constable is ouerthrowen and taken prisoner The duke of Guyse is reuoqued out of Italie The Pope maketh peace with the king of Spaine The French take Calais The marriage of the Daulphin The French take Theonuille BVt to proceede the king of Spaine seeing him selfe thus inuaded vpon a sodayne leuyed a mightie armie of Duch Flemish and English and went and besieged Saint Quentin a stronge towne in Vermandoys for the defence whereof the Admirall of Fraunce Gasper Chastillon with diuers bandes of men put himselfe into the towne But his brother d'Andelot issewing out of Perona with 15. enseignes of footmen purposing to doe the like was defeated Notwithstanding the king tendering greatly the saftie of the towne sent the Cōstable to succour it with an armie of 16000. foot and 4000. horse who vpon Saint Laurence day very earely in the morning by certaine boates which he had brought with him vpon cartes put Mon sieur d'Andelot by the riuer with certaine bands of footmen into the towne But King Phillips army as the said Constable retired charged him brake him defeated his forces slew 2500 of his men with the losse onely of 50. on their part and tooke him prisoner with two of his sonnes and likewise the Dukes of Montpensier and Longueuille the Marshall of Saint Andre the Rheingraue and diuers other great personages Wherevpon the King presentlie reuoqued the Duke of Guise with his forces out of Italy commaunded the Duke of Neuers to leauy a new army In the meane time King Phillip tooke Saint Quentin by assault and tooke prisoners therin the Admirall and d'Andelot his brother but d'Andelot soone after escaped away The King of Spaine wan also Catelet and Han and diuers other places The Duke of Alua on the other side in Italie tooke diuers places from the Pope who in the end seeing the Dukes forces so great that he came without resistance euen to Rome gates and that the Duke of Guise in verie poore estate was reuoqued home into Fraunce made peace at Caui with King Philip contraty to his promise made to the French King and obtayned better conditions of him than he deserued and among the rest of the conditions this was one that the Duke of Guise should returne home in safetie and he his armie bee well intreated wheresoeuer they passed through king Philips dominions which was all the recompence the French receaued at the Popes handes for the great losses they had receaued in Italie by his meanes such commonly is the ende of all vnnecessarie warres The King being much grieued with these his manifolde losses and supposing his honour to be stayned if he atchieued not some enterprise that might counteruaile these his misfortunes so soone as the Duke of Guise and Strozzi were returned with his forces out of Italie by sea and Monsieur d'Aumalle by land ioyned to them a great army of Swissers and Almaines who vnder the leading of the said Duke of Guise were sent to besiege Calais in the verie middest of winter Strozzi not long before the comming of the army thether had beene brought in disguised apparaile into the towne by a French man an inhabitant thereof and had veiwed all the fortisications both within the towne and without and the garison within it for the defence thereof which was very weake and to say the truth the said Strozzi was the onely author of
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