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GIOVANNI VILLANI: FLORENTINE CHRONICLE
Giovanni Villani was born sometime before 1277.
His career was that of the typical well-to-do
Florentine merchant. In 1300 he became a member of
the bankers' guild and a shareholder in the Perruzi
company, one of the leading Florentine trading and
money-lending firms. For the next few years Villani
traveled around Europe in the service of his company
.Then in 1307 he returned to Florence, married, and
settled down to a Iife of involvement in city
politics. During the last decade of his life
Villani's fortunes took a dramatic turn. Imprisoned
for debt in 1338, he emerged to find both his
standard of living and his political power
drastically curtailed. In 1348 he died, presumably
of the black death, along with up to half of his
fellow citizens.
Villani is principally remembered, not as
merchant or politician, but as an historian. His
chronicle of Florentine history offers a vivid
picture of medieval city life. The following
excerpts are chosen to illustrate the complexities
of Florentine politics and society. The first
selection deals with the rise of the
Guelf-Ghibelline split in Florence, a division that
seriously divided the city in the thirteenth century.
The origin of these two parties can be traced back
to twelfth-century Germany, where two powerful
families, the Welf and the Hohenstaufen, struggled
for power. Both had interests in Italy as well as
Germany. The Hohenstaufen occupied the imperial
throne and thus found themselves in conflict with
the papacy, which resented the growth of imperial
power in Italy. Thus the popes tended to lean toward
the WeIf faction.
As a result, the WeIf-Hohenstaufen controversy
took on a particular hue in Italy. It became a
division between those who supported the pope and
those who supported the emperor. It also gained a
slightly different set of labels. When placed in
Italian mouths, "WeIf" became "Guelf."
It may seem a little harder to imagine how "Hohenstaufen"
turned into "Ghibelline," but there really
is an explanation. Supporters of the. Hohenstaufen
used the battle- cry "Waiblingen," the
name of a Hohenstaufen castle. It was that battle
cry that came to be Italianized into
"Ghibelline." As the thirteenth century
progressed, the papal-imperial rivalry escalated
sharply. The last great Hohenstaufen emperor was
Frederick II, the wiliest, cruelest, most
intelligent and least Christian of the lot. By the
time he died in 1250, the popes were determined to
obliterate Hohenstaufen influence in Italy. Shortly
after, they did. Thus the Guelf-Ghibelline battle
had an international dimension; yet it also had a
more regional one. The alignment of cities on one
side or the other reflected their rivalry with one
another for power within their own area. Thus
predominantly Guelf Florence opposed Ghibelline
Siena, its major rival for influence in Tuscany .Below
the regional level, the controversy had a local
level which reflected the rivalry of powerful
families. Thus within Florence Guelf-Ghibelline
alignments were often based on considerations more
familial than ideological. It is this level that
Villani emphasizes.
In the year 1215, when Gherardo Orlandi was
podestà of Florence, Bondelmonte dei Buondelmonti
promised to marry a young woman from the house of
Amidei, honorable and noble citizens. Later, as
Buondelmonte, a graceful and skillful horseman, was
riding through the city, a woman from the house of
Donati called to him and criticized the marriage
agreement he had made, saying his betrothed was
neither beautiful nor fine enough for him. "I've
been saving my own daughter for you," she said,
and showed the daughter to him. The daughter was
very beautiful and immediately with the devil's
connivance, Buondelmonte was so smitten that he
married her.
The first girl's family met together, smarting
from the shame Buondelmonte had placed upon them,
and they were filled with a terrible indignation
that would destroy and divide the city of Florence.
Many noble houses plotted together to bring shame on
Buondelmonte in reprisal for these injuries. As they
were discussing whether they should beat or wound
him, Mosca dei Lamberti spoke the evil words,
"A thing done has a head," that is, they
should kill him. And thus it happened, for on Easter
morning the Amidei of Santo Stefano assembled in
their house, and as Buondelmonte came from the other
side of the Arno nobly attired in new, white clothes,
riding a white palfrey, when he arrived on this side
of the old bridge, precisely at the foot of the
pillar where the statue of Mars stood, he was pulled
from his horse by Schiatta degli Uberti, assaulted
and wounded by Mosca Lamberti and Lambertuccio degli
Amidei, and finished off by Oderigo Fifanti. They
had with them one of the Counts of Gangalandi.
As a result, the city was thrown into strife and
disorder, for Buondelmonte's death was the cause and
beginning of the cursed Guelf and Ghibelline parties
in Florence. To be sure, there were already
divisions among the noble citizens, and these
parties already existed because of the quarrels and
disputes between church and empire; yet it was
because of Buondelmonte's death that all the noble
families and other Florentine citizens were divided
into factions, some siding with the Buondelmonti,
leaders of the Guelf party, and others with the
Uberti, leaders of the Ghibellines
* * * * * * * *
By the mid-thirteenth century,
Guelf-Ghibelline tension was an unfortunate but
unavoidable fact of life in Florence. The Guelfs
were chased out in 1248, but were soon back and
managed to expel Ghibellines in 1251. The latter
were readmitted in 1252 but ejected again in 1258,
as the following selection describes. Note that the
Uberti family was already a prime target of
anti-Ghibelline wrath.
Villani says that the Ghibellines were expelled
in 1258 because they "planned to break up the
people of Florence." He refers to the
government at the time, the so-called primo
popolo or "first government of the
people," which ruled Florence from 1250 to
1260. Since Villani simply refers to it as "the
people," it is often hard to decide whether he
is using the word popolo in a general sense
("the citizens of Florence") or in a more
specific sense ("the government of Florence").
It is well to keep the problem in mind when reading.
The office of podestà, an important one in
medieval Italian cities, became popular in the
twelfth century. A professional administrator hired
to run the city for a specific time, the podestà
was usually from elsewhere and thus presumably above
local factional divisions. By the end of the
thirteenth century his functions had been limited by
the development of other offices, but he still had
an important role in enforcement, as we shall see.
In the year of Christ 1258, when Iacopo Bernardi
di Porco was podestà of Florence, at the end of
June, the house of Uberti and their Ghibelline
followers, encouraged by Manfred, planned to break
up the people of Florence because they thought it
favored the Guelfs. When their plot was discovered
by the people and they were cited to appear before
the Signoria, they would not do so but attacked and
seriously wounded the staff of the podestà. The
people then armed themselves and ran in fury to the
house of the Uberti, where the palace of the people
and priors is now located. There they killed
Schiatuzzo degli Uberti as well as several Uberti
followers and retainers. Uberto Caini degli Uberti
and Mangia degl' Infangati were taken and, once they
had publicly confessed the plot, were beheaded.
Others from the house of Uberti, along with other
Ghibelline houses, left Florence and went to Siena,
which was ruled by Ghibellines and was hostile to
Florence. Their palaces and towers, of which there
were many, were destroyed and the stones used to
build the walls of San Giorgio Oltrarno, which the
Florentine people began at that time because of
their war with the Sienese. Then, in September of
the same year, the Florentine people arrested the
abbot of Valambrosa, a well- born man from the
family of the lords of Beccheria of Pavia in
Lombardy. They had been told that he was planning
treason at the request of the exiled Ghibellines.
Once they had extracted a confession from him
through torture and the people had called for his
head, they villainously executed him without regard
for his rank or sacred orders. In reprisal, the
commune and people of Florence were excommunicated
and Florentines passing through Lombardy were
treated harshly by the abbot's family. And truly, it
was said that the man was not guilty, even though
his family ties made him an important Ghibelline.
Many wise men said that, for this sin and many
others committed by the villainous people, God in
his divine judgment permitted vengeance to be
wreaked upon the people through the battle and
defeat at Montaperti, which we will mention later.
The Florentine people, which ruled the city at that
time, was very proud and was engaged in high and
great enterprises, and it was often very rash; yet
one thing can be said of their rulers: they were
very loyal and true to the commune.
* * * * * * * *
At the time of the people in Florence, a very
handsome and strong lion was presented to the
commune and was placed in a cage in the Piazza San
Giovanni. Because of the keeper's negligence, the
lion escaped and ran through the streets terrifying
the city. When it arrived at Orto San Michele, it
caught hold of a boy and held him between its paws.
The mother, who had no other children and had
been pregnant with this one when the father died,
ran shrieking and disheveled up to the lion and
snatched the boy from its paws. The lion hurt
neither mother nor child, but simply sat quietly and
watched the whole affair. It was unclear whether
this occurred because of the lion's noble nature or
because fortune had preserved the boy's life so that
he could pursue a vendetta regarding his dead father.
He eventually did so, and was called Orlanduccio of
the lion of Calfette.
And note that in the time of the people, and
before, and for a long time after, the citizens of
Florence lived soberly and on simple food, spending
little, and their manners were often course and
plain. They dressed themselves and their wives in
coarse garments. Many wore skins without linings and
caps on their heads. All wore leather boots on their
feet. Florentine women wore boots without ornament,
and the greatest of them settled for a single
tight-fitting gown of coarse scarlet cloth fastened
with a leather belt in the ancient fashion, and a
hooded cloak lined with squirrel, the hood being
worn on their heads. The common women wore coarse
green cloth of Cambrai cut in the same style, and
one hundred lire was a common dowry for wives, two
or three hundred being considered excessive in those
days. Most young women were twenty or more before
they were married. Such were the plain manners of
the Florentines, but they were faithful and true to
their commune and with their simple life and poverty
they did greater and more virtuous things than are
done in our time of increased delicacy and luxury.
* * * * * * * *
In 1260 the primo popolo came to an end and
the Ghibellines received their final taste of power
in Florence. The reason for their fall was a
catastrophic error that led to the bloody defeat at
Montaperti. As Villani, describes it, they were
defeated by a combination of enemies: Manfred, the
last great Hohenstaufen, who directed the Ghibelline
cause from his kingdom in southern Italy; Siena, the
Florentine's major rival in Tuscany; the Florentine
Ghibellines, who had found shelter in Siena after
they were ejected from Florence; and the Florentine
Guelfs' own prideful stupidity, which encouraged
them to ignore the wiser counsels within their own
party and blunder into a deadly trap.
It happened that in the year of Christ 1260, in
the month of May, the people and commune of Florence
led their full forces against the city of Siena,
bringing the carroccio with them. Note that the
carroccio brought by the people and commune of
Florence was a four- wheeled cart painted red, with
two great poles sticking up on top from which waved
the communal standard, half white and half red,
which can be seen even today in San Giovanni. It was
drawn by a great pair of oxen covered with red cloth.
The oxen were used only for this purpose and
belonged to the Ospedale di Pinti. The drover was a
freeman of the commune. Our ancestors used this
carroccio for triumphs and solemn processions and,
when it went out on a military expedition, counts
and knights from the area brought it from San
Giovanni, accompanied it to the Piazza di Mercato
Nuovo, and, having paused a moment by a stone marker
(which is still in existence) carved in the form of
a carroccio, handed it over to the people, who led
it on the expedition. The best, strongest and most
virtuous foot- soldiers were detailed to guard it,
and the entire army massed around it.
When the campaign was announced, one month before
it actually set out, a bell was placed in the arch
of the Santa Maria gate at the end of the new
market. It was ringing continuously, day and night.
They did this arrogantly, to let the enemy know
where the campaign was going and give them time to
prepare. Some people called it the Martinella,
others the asses' bell. When the expedition set out,
they removed the bell from the arch, placed it in a
wooden tower on a cart, and let its sound guide the
army. Through these two displays, the carroccio and
the bell, our ancestors the people of old maintained
their lordly pride when on campaign.
We will leave this matter and turn to how the
Florentines waged war on the Sienese, taking the
castles of Vicchio, Mezzano and Casciole, which
belonged to the Sienese, and establishing themselves
at Siena near the city gate by the monastery of
Santa Petronella. Near there, on a hillock which
could be seen from the city, they placed a tower
where they kept their bell. Then, to show their
scorn for the Sienese and to commemorate their
victory, they planted there an olive tree which was
still alive until our own time.
One day while the siege was in progress, the
Florentine exiles in Siena wined and dined Manfred's
German troops and, when they were drunk, incited
them to ride out against the Florentine army,
promising them great gifts and double pay. This was
done craftily by wise men following the advice of
Farinata degli Uberti, advice which he had given
while in Apulia. The Germans, drunk out of their
wits, left Siena and vigorously attacked the
Florentine camp.
Because they had underrated the enemy forces, the
Florentines were caught off guard and were
thoroughly unprepared. Thus the Germans, despite
their small number, did a great deal of damage to
the army and many Florentines, people and knights
alike, made a poor show of it, fleeing in fear that
their assailants were greater in number than was
actually the case. But in the end they reconsidered,
took arms, defended themselves, and not one of the
Germans who had left Siena escaped alive. Manfred's
standard was taken, dragged through the camp, and
brought to Florence. When these events had
transpired, the army returned to Florence.
* * * * * * * *
When the Sienese and Florentine exiles saw what a
poor showing the Florentines had made against so few
German knights, they decided they could win the war
with more troops. They immediately provided
themselves with twenty thousand gold florins from
the company of the Salimbeni, who were merchants at
that time. As security, they put up the fortress at
Tentennana and other castles belonging to the
commune. Then they sent their ambassadors off to
Apulia again bearing the money and a message to
Manfred that his few German knights, by great vigor
and valor, had engaged the entire Florentine army,
put much of it to flight, and would have beaten it
if the German forces had been bigger. As it turned
out, however, because of their small number all lay
dead on the field and his standard had been dragged
in disgrace through the camp, then in and about
Florence.
They said everything possible to arouse Manfred,
who already had heard the news and was furious. With
the Sienese money, which covered half the expenses
for three months, and at his own expense as well,
Manfred sent his marshal Count Giordano to Tuscany
with eight hundred German knights. Accompanied by
the ambassadors, they arrived at Siena toward the
end of July in the Year of Christ 1260 and were
greeted festively by the Sienese.
Their presence gave the Sienese and other Tuscan
Ghibellines a great deal of energy and confidence.
The Sienese immediately sent an army against the
castle of Montalcino, which was under Florentine
control, and sent for aid to Pisa and all the other
Tuscan Ghibellines, so that with the knights of
Siena, the Florentine exiles, the Germans and their
allies, there were 1800 knights in Siena, most of
them German.
The Florentine exiles, through whose effort King
Manfred had sent Count Giordano with the eight
hundred German knights, decided that they still
would have done nothing if they could not draw the
Florentines out into the field, since the Germans
were paid for only three months and one and a half
months already had passed since their arrival. The
exiles had no money to hire them for a longer time,
nor could they expect more from Manfred. Once their
contract was up, the Germans would return to Apulia
without having done anything, thus leaving the
Tuscan Ghibellines in danger again.
Concluding that the situation could not be
rectified without great skill and strategy, they
turned the matter over to Farinata degli Uberti and
Gherardo Ciccia dei Lamberti, who craftily
dispatched two wise friars minor with a message for
the people of Florence. These friars were first
exposed to nine powerful Sienese who went to great
lengths to convince the friars that the government
of Provenzano Salvani, the current ruler of Siena,
was odious to them and they would willingly
surrender the land to the Florentines for a price of
ten thousand gold florins. They further promised
that, under the pretense of fortifying Montalcino,
they would come as far as the river Arbia and then,
with a force provided by them and their followers,
would turn over to the Florentines the gate of Santo
Vito in the Via d'Arezzo.
The friars, having been exposed to this fraud and
deceit, came to Florence with letters and seals from
the aforesaid Sienese and appeared before the elders
of the people. They said they could offer a means of
performing great deeds to the honor of the people
and commune of Florence, but the matter was so
secret that it had to be revealed under oath only to
a few. Then the elders chose from among themselves
Spedito di Porte San Pietro, a man of great
enterprise and daring, one of the principal leaders
of the people, and with him Gianni Calcagni di
Vacchereccia. Once the oath had been taken on an
altar, the friars disclosed the plot and displayed
the letters.
Led by desire rather than prudence, the two
elders believed in the plan. They immediately raised
the ten thousand gold florins, placed them on
deposit, and summoned an assembly of magnates and
people. They argued that, in order to provide for
Montalcino, it was necessary to dispatch to Siena a
force even greater than the one which had been at
Santa Petronella the preceding May.
Count Guido Guerra and the nobles of the great
Florentine Guelf houses, knowing more than the
People about warfare and nothing at all about the
bogus plan, aware as well that a new German force
was at Siena and that the Florentines had made a
poor showing at Santa Petronella against an assault
by one hundred Germans, failed to see the wisdom of
the proposed campaign. Seeing that the citizens held
various opinions on the proposal and were hesitant
to dispatch another army, they argued that
Montalcino could be provided for at little expense,
since the town of Orvieto was willing to take on
that responsibility, and that the Germans had been
paid for only a three- month term, half of which was
already over. If the Florentines let matters stand
without launching a campaign, the Germans would soon
be back in Apulia, leaving the Sienese and the
Florentine exiles worse off than before.
The spokesman for this view was Tegghiaio
Aldobrandi degli Adimari, a wise and brave knight of
great authority, and his advice was by far the best
offered. The aforesaid elder Spedito, a very
presumptuous man, gave that advice a rude answer,
saying Tegghiaio should check his pants if he was
afraid. Tegghiaio replied that, when it came to
action, Spedito would not dare to be where Tegghiaio
placed himself in the battle.
When he had said this, Cece dei Gherardini arose
to repeat what Tegghiaio had said. The elders
commanded him to be quiet and set a fine of one
hundred pounds for anyone who spoke against their
orders. The knight was willing to pay it in order to
oppose the campaign, but the elders refused and
doubled the fine. He again wished to pay it, so the
fine became three hundred pounds. When he still
wanted to talk and pay, the penalty became his head,
and there the debate ended. Thus through a proud and
thoughtless people the worst advice won out, namely
that the army should leave immediately.
Once the people of Florence had made their
unfortunate decision, they sought aid from their
allies, who came with foot- soldiers and knights
from Lucca, Prato, Volterra, San Miniato, San
Gimignano, and Colle di Valdelsa, all of which were
in league with the commune and people of Florence.
In Florence there were eight hundred horsemen who
were citizens, as well as over five hundred
mercenaries.
When the army was assembled, it departed at the
end of August. With pomp and circumstance they led
forth the carroccio and a bell which they called
Martinella, the latter being placed on a cart with a
wooden castle on wheels. Almost all the people went
bearing the standards of the guilds, and there was
not a house or family in Florence from which at
least one person and sometimes two or more (according
to their power) did not go forth on foot or
horseback. And when they found themselves in Sienese
territory, at the designated spot on the river Arbia,
in the place called Montaperti, with the Perugians
and Orvietans who joined them there, they had over
three thousand knights and thirty thousand
foot-soldiers.
While the Florentines were preparing for their
campaign, those in Siena who had devised the plan
sought to strengthen it by sending other friars to
Florence. They plotted treason with certain powerful
Ghibellines who had remained in Florence. These
Ghibellines were to join the campaign. Then, once
the troops were in battle order, they were to desert
the ranks and join their own group, thus throwing
the Florentines into confusion. Those in Siena
hatched this plot because it seemed to them that
they were greatly outnumbered by the Florentines.
And so it occurred.
Once the Florentine army was established in the
hills of Montaperti, those wise elders who had
approved the plan and were now leading the army
waited for the Sienese traitors to open the gate for
them as promised. Meanwhile, an eminent Ghibelline
named Razzante, from the Porta San Pietro section in
Florence, got wind of what the Florentine leaders
were waiting for. With the consent of other
Ghibellines in the army (who had treason on their
minds), he fled from the Florentine camp on
horseback and went to Siena. His mission was to
inform the Florentine exiles there that the city was
to be betrayed and that the Florentines were well
provided with knights and foot-soldiers. He advised
those within not to recommend battle.
When the two plotters Farinata and Gherardo heard
his message, they said to him, "You'll kill us
if you spread this news around Siena, because you'll
frighten them. We want you to say just the opposite.
If we don't fight while we have these Germans, we're
dead! We'll never get back to Florence. Death and
defeat would actually be better for us than to go
begging around the world any longer." They
preferred to stake their future on a single decisive
battle.
Having been set straight by Farinata and
Gherardo, Razzante promised to speak as they
suggested. With a garland on his head and a very
cheerful expression on his face, he and the other
two rode on horseback to a meeting at the palace,
where all the people of Siena, the Germans and other
allies were gathered. There he joyfully announced
the great news from the traitors in the Florentine
camp. The army, he said, was ill-prepared,
poorly-led and disunited. A determined attack would
defeat them. When Razzante had delivered his false
report, the Sienese all armed, shouting "battle,
battle!" The Germans asked and received a
promise of double pay, and their group led the
assault through the San Vito gate, the very one that
was supposed to be given to the Florentines. The
other knights and people followed close behind them.
When those in the Florentine army who were
waiting for the gate to be surrendered saw that the
Germans, other knights, and the people of Siena were
all coming out toward them looking very warlike,
they were surprised and rather dismayed at this
sudden appearance and unforeseen attack. They were
even more dismayed when many Ghibellines in their
camp, knights and foot-soldiers alike, upon seeing
the enemy forces, fled to the opposite side as they
had so treacherously planned. Among these were the
Pressa, the Abati, and many others. Nevertheless,
the Florentines and their allies managed to draw up
in battle order.
When the German troops violently collided with
the Florentine knights at the point where the
standard of the communal cavalry was being carried
by Iacopo del Nacca of the house of Pazzi, a man of
great valor, the traitor Bocca degli Abati, who was
near lacopo in his troop, struck him with his sword
and cut off the hand with which he held the
standard, after which he soon died. Seeing their
standard fallen and themselves betrayed and strongly
attacked by the Germans, the Florentine knights and
people were soon routed.
Because the cavalry was the first group to become
aware of the treason, only thirty-six of them were
among the dead and captured. Most of the slaughter
and captivity was sustained by the Florentine
foot-soldiers and by the men of Lucca and Orvieto,
who shut themselves up in the castle of Montaperti
and were all taken. Over 2500 were left dead on the
field and more than 1500 were captured, some of the
best people in Florence, men from every house, as
well as those of Lucca and the other allies. Thus
the arrogance of the ungrateful and proud Florentine
people was brought low. This was on a Tuesday, the
fourth of September, in the year of Christ 1260, and
the carroccio and bell called Martinella were left
behind along with uncountable booty from the baggage
of the Florentines and their allies. Thus ended the
old people of Florence, which had exercised such
great lordship and won so many victories over its
ten-year period.
* * * * * * * *
When news of the grievous defeat reached Florence
along with those who had escaped, there arose among
men and women a wail of lament so powerful that it
reached up to heaven, for there was no house in
Florence, small or great, from which someone had not
been killed or captured. ... The Guelf leaders were
afraid the exiles would soon arrive from Siena with
the Germans, and they knew that rebellious
Ghibellines were already returning to the area. Thus
the Guelfs, without being banished or chased out,
went weeping from Florence along with their families
and settled in Lucca. It was Thursday the thirteenth
of September, in the year of Christ 1260.
* * * * * * * *
Just as the Florentine Guelfs left home, so did
those of Prato, Pistoia, Volterra, San Miniato, San
Gimignano, and many other places in Tuscany, all of
which returned to the Ghibelline party. The one
exception was Lucca, which remained Guelf for a
while and became a refuge for Guelfs from Florence
and for other Tuscan exiles. The Florentine Guelfs
settled in the quarter around San Friano, and it was
Florentines who made the loggia in front of San
Friano.
When the Florentines found themselves in that
place, Tegghiaio Aldobrandi saw Spedito, who had
insulted him in the council meeting, telling him he
should check his pants. Tegghiaio stood up and took
five hundred gold florins from his purse. He showed
the money to Spedito, who had left Florence a poor
man himself, and said to him reproachfully, "See
how I've soiled my pants! You've led yourself, me,
and all the others to this by your foolhardy and
proud leadership." Spedito replied, "Tell
me, why did you believe us then?" We have
mentioned these petty and vile words as an example
to show that no citizen, particularly a Popolano or
a man of lesser status, should be too rash or
presumptuous when he wields power.
At this time the Pisans, Sienese, Aretines, Count
Giordano, and all the other Ghibelline leaders of
Tuscany met at Empoli.. .. At this meeting all the
neighboring cities, Count Guido, Count Alberto,
those of Santafiore, the Ubaldini and all the nearby
barons agreed that, for the good of the Ghibelline
party, the city of Florence should be completely
demolished and reduced to an open village so that it
would never again be renowned, famous or powerful.
At that proposal the valiant and wise knight
Farinata degli Uberti rose and spoke in opposition.
In his speech he recalled two old proverbs:
"The ass chews up his turnips as he knows how,"
and "the lame goat can go if the wolf doesn't
meet him." Farinata combined these proverbs,
saying, "As the ass knows how, so the lame goat
goes; thus he chews up his turnips if the wolf
doesn't meet him."
Then he added examples and comparisons to these
vulgar proverbs in order to show how foolish it was
to talk of this plan, as well as what great danger
and damage would result from it. He said, finally,
that even if there were no others with him, as long
as he had life in his body he would defend Florence
with sword in hand. When Count Giordano saw what
sort of man Farinata was, noting his authority and
great following, he recognized that the Ghibelline
party would be torn apart by the plan and he
abandoned it. Thus our city of Florence escaped fury,
destruction and ruin through the action of a single
good citizen; yet the people of Florence were
ungrateful toward Farinata and his family, as we
shall see later. Nevertheless, even if an ungrateful
people fails to recognize his deed, we should
nevertheless commend and perpetuate the memory of
this noble and virtuous citizen who acted in the
manner of Camillus, the good ancient Roman whose
story is told by Valerius and Titus Livius.
* * * * * * * *
Ghibelline domination lasted only as long as
Manfred's ascendency .In 1265, the papacy found a
new ally, Charles of Anjou, brother of the king of
France. In the spring of 1265 Charles arrived in
Italy with a French army, and in February 1266 he
encountered Manfred's army at Benevento. Manfred was
killed and his army annihilated.
Thus the Guelfs returned to power in Florence,
and the Ghibellines again found themselves in exile.
By 1272, however, the pope was intervening to bring
about a settlement between the two factions.
In the year 1272, Gregory X.. . was crowned pope.
A year after his coronation, the pope left Rome with
his court in order to go to Lyons on the Rh(tm)ne
River, where he had summoned a general council. On
the way, he stopped in Florence with his cardinals,
... and they were honorably received by the
Florentines. Because the water was handy, the air
pure, and the papal court offered every convenience,
the situation in Florence so pleased the pope that
he decided to spend the summer there. When he found
that such a fine city as Florence was being
destroyed because of the parties, the Ghibellines
now being in exile, he wished them to return to
Florence and make peace with the Guelfs. And so it
was done...
* * * * * * * *
The 1272 settlement existed entirely on the
level of theory. In fact, the Guelfs stayed in power
and the Ghibellines stayed in exile. By 1278 another
pope found himself pondering not only the unresolved
Guelf-Ghibelline split but a series of feuds among
Guelfs. The result was a new papal intervention
which produced not only reconciliation but a new
type of government.
By that time (1278), since the great Guelfs of
Florence were victoriously and honorably resting
from their warfare with outside enemies and had
fattened up on the goods of the exiled Ghibellines,
their pride and envy led them to fight among
themselves. Thus were born among the citizens of
Florence a series of quarrels and hatreds which
resulted in death or wounding. One of the greatest
of these was the dissension between the Adimari, a
great and powerful family, and the Tosinghi, Donati
and Pazzi, all of whom were allied together against
the Adimari in such a way that practically the
entire city was divided, some holding with one side
and some with the other. Because of this strife, the
commune and the captains of the Guelf party sent
ambassadors to Pope Nicholas III requesting his
advice and aid in pacifying the Florentine Guelfs.
Otherwise the Guelf party would split and one
faction would drive the other out. In the same way,
the Ghibelline exiles sent their ambassadors to the
pope begging him to put into effect the peace treaty
arranged by Pope Gregory X between them and the
Florentine Guelfs. For these reasons the pope
confirmed the treaty, appointing as legate and
mediator Cardinal Latino, a man of great learning
and authority, highly valued by the pope. When he
received the pope's command the cardinal left the
Romagna, where he was employed on church business,
and on October 8 in the year of Christ 1278 he
arrived in Florence with three hundred knights of
the church. He was met with great honor by the
Florentines and the clergy in procession, the
carroccio and many jousters coming out to meet him.
On the day of Saint Luke the Evangelist, during
the aforesaid year and month, the legate installed
and blessed the first stone of the new church of
Santa Maria Novella, built for the preaching friars
of which he was a member. There he dealt with the
matter of peace between Guelf and Guelf as well as
Guelf and Ghibelline. The first item of business was
a truce between the Uberti and the Buondelmonti - it
was the third one between them - and it included all
but the sons of Rinieri Zingane dei Buondelmonti,
who, upon refusing their assent, were excommunicated
by the legate and banished by the commune.
The peace was not lost on their account, however,
for the legate favorably concluded it the following
February when the entire people assembled in the old
square in front of the aforementioned church. The
square was covered with cloths and great wooden
platforms on which were the cardinal, many bishops,
prelates, clergy, monks, and the podestˆ, the
captain of the people, all the councilors, and other
officers of Florence. The legate delivered a fine
sermon with many lovely authorities thoroughly
fitting the occasion, for he was a wise and skillful
preacher. When he had finished, representatives of
the Guelfs and Ghibellines kissed one another on the
mouth, thus joyfully making peace among all the
citizens. There were 150 on each side. Then and
there the legate announced the terms each side must
observe, confirming the peace with solemn, duly
authorized documents and proper guarantees. From
that moment the Ghibellines could and did return to
Florence with their families and were absolved from
all banishment and condemnation. All the books of
banishment and condemnation in the chamber were
burned. These Ghibellines also received their
possessions back, but to insure the security of the
land it was ordained that some of the greater
Ghibellines should have to remain within certain
boundaries.
When the cardinal had finished with the Guelfs
and Ghibellines, he made peace among individual
families, starting with the greatest of all, that of
the Adimari with the Tosinghi, Donati and Pazzi,
arranging several weddings between the families. In
similar fashion he settled all the feuds in Florence
and throughout the countryside, some by the will of
the parties involved and others by command of the
commune, sentence having been pronounced by the
cardinal with solid sanctions and guarantees. The
cardinal derived a great deal of honor from these
peace treaties, almost all of which were maintained,
for they allowed the city of Florence to remain in a
peaceful, good and tranquil state for some time.
The legate decreed that the city should be
governed by fourteen good men drawn both from the
Grandi and from the Popolani. There were to be eight
Guelfs and six Ghibellines. Their term of office was
to be two months, and a means of election was
established. They were to assemble in the house of
the Badia of Florence, above the gate that goes to
Santa Margherita, returning to their own homes to
eat and sleep.
These things having been accomplished, Cardinal
Latino returned with great honor to his duties in
the Romagna...
* * * * * * * *
The Guelf-Ghibelline honeymoon lasted for four
years. In 1282 the dominant Guelfs excluded the
Ghibellines and created a new type of government
which was destined to have a long run in Florence,
the priors. Note that the government was now based
upon the guild system. The guilds which led the way
were the Calimala or cloth- merchants' guild, the
bankers' guild, and the Lana or wool- manufacturers'
guild.
In the year of Christ 1282, the city of Florence
was governed by fourteen good men as the Cardinal
Latino had ordained, with eight Guelfs and six
Ghibellines. It seemed to the citizens that this
government of fourteen was too big and confusing.
Thus, in order to unify the many divided souls, but
especially because the Guelfs did not like sharing
power with the Ghibellines,... for the safety and
health of the city the government of fourteen was
abolished and a new one created. This one was called
"the priors of the guilds."...This
innovation and movement began through the advice of
the Calimala guild, which contained the wisest and
most powerful citizens in Florence. . . The first
priors were Bartolo di Messer lacopo dei Bardi for
the district of Oltrarno and for the Calimala guild;
Rosso Bacherelli for the district of San Piero
Scheraggio and for the money-changers' guild; and
Salvi del Chiaro Girolami for the district of San
Brancazio and for the Lana guild.
They began their term in mid-June of the same
year and it lasted until mid-August, after which
three new priors were supposed to take over every
two months, representing the three greater guilds.
They were to work, eat and sleep at communal expense
in the house of the Badia, where the elders in the
time of the First People and then later the fourteen
used to meet. They were given six marshals and six
messengers to summon the citizens. These priors,
along with the captain of the people, had to settle
the great and weighty matters of the commune,
summoning councils and making regulations.
When two months had passed, the citizens approved
of the arrangement and for the next two months
appointed six priors, one for each district, adding
to the three aforementioned guilds those of the
doctors and pharmacists, the Porta Santa Maria
guild, and the guild of furriers and
leather-workers. Then gradually all the rest of the
twelve major guilds were added. They were men of
good deeds and reputation, Grandi and Popolani,
artisans and merchants. This arrangement endured
until the time of the Second People, which we will
mention in due course. After that point the Grandi
were excluded and a standard-bearer of justice
added, and from time to time there were twelve
priors as special needs or circumstances dictated,
the priors being chosen from all twenty-one guilds,
and even from those who were not themselves artisans
as long as their ancestors had been such.
The new priors were chosen by the old ones and by
the leaders of the twelve major guilds, along with
certain others who elected the priors for each
district, casting secret ballots, with him who
received the most votes becoming prior. This
election took place in the church of San Piero
Scheraggio with the captain of the people stationed
next to the church in the houses belonging to the
Tizzoni.
We have said a great deal about the beginning of
this office of the priors because great changes
occurred in the city of Florence through it, as we
will explain later.
In the Middle Ages, wealth and power were
often expected to guarantee a degree of immunity
from normal judicial procedures. (Perhaps this is
always the case. The expectation was at any rate
more blatant in the Middle Ages.) In 1292 the
Florentines attempted to remedy this situation with
the Ordinances of Justice, which placed certain
legal restrictions on the grandi for the
protection of the popolani.
The words grande (pl. grandi) and popolano
(pl. popolani) are difficult to render in
English. It is tempting to translate them
"noble" and "commoner," but that
is not quite what they mean. In the eyes of the
Florentines, the grandi were that handful of
people whose wealth and family connections gave them
the power to oppress the rest of the population, the
popolani. With the Ordinances of Justice,
however, the word became a legal designation.
Henceforth by branding certain families as grandi
the government could neutralize their power by
limiting their political rights.
The popolani were hardly a homogeneous
group, however. Political power was now exercised by
a small number of wealthy citizens whom Florentines
rather picturesquely termed the popolo grasso,
"the fat people." The lower orders of
society, the popolo minuto or "little
people," simply obeyed. Thus, from the
perspective of the popolo minuto the grandi
were not the only oppressors around.
In the same year (1287), the podestà of
Florence, Matteo da Fogliano di Reggio, had
condemned to death for murder a great warrior and
leader named Totto dei Mazzinghi da Campi. As he was
on his way to execution, Corso dei Donati and his
followers tried to rescue him by force, but the
podestˆ ordered that the great bell be sounded.
Then all the good people of Florence armed and
assembled at the palace, some on horseback and
others on foot, crying "justice, justice!"
By this means the podestà managed to carry out the
sentence, and whereas the aforesaid Totto was
originally supposed to be beheaded, he was dragged
along the ground and then hanged. Those who had
begun the uproar and impeded justice were fined.
In the year of Christ 1292, in the month of
February, the city of Florence was great and
powerful in every way, its citizens fat and rich.
Because of excessive tranquillity which naturally
engenders pride and novelty, the citizens were
envious and arrogant toward one another. The result
was a series of murders, woundings and other
outrages, particularly by the nobles who were called
Grandi, against the defenseless Popolani. In the
city and in the countryside, they committed violence
against other people's bodies and goods and took
over other people's property.
Thus certain good men, artisans and merchants of
Florence who wanted the good life, decided to end
this pestilence. .. They promulgated certain very
strong and weighty laws against powerful Grandi who
perpetrated violence against Popolani, strengthening
the common penalties in various ways. They enacted
that one member of a Grandi family should be held
accountable for all other members, that two
witnesses should be sufficient to convict a
malefactor, and that the communal accounts should be
revised.
These laws they called the Ordinances of Justice.
In order to preserve and execute them they ordained
that, besides the six priors who governed the city,
there should be a standard-bearer of justice from
each district, changing every two months as the
priors did. When the great bell tolled, the people
were to assemble in the church of San Piero
Scheraggio and present the standard of justice,
which had not been customary before. They also
ordained that no priors should come from the houses
of those nobles called Grandi.
The ensign and standard of the people was to be a
white field with a red cross. One thousand citizens
were elected, the total number being divided among
the districts with standard-bearers for each ward
and fifty foot-soldiers (each with hauberk and
shield marked with a cross) for each standard. At
any disorder or summons by the standard-bearer these
citizens were to assemble at the house or palace of
the priors and act against the Grandi. The number of
foot- soldiers later grew to two thousand, then four
thousand. A similar order of soldiers for the
people, with the same ensign, was ordained for the
countryside, and they were called "the leagues
of the people."
The first standard-bearer was Baldo dei Ruffoli
from the Porte del Duomo. In his time the standard
went forth under arms to destroy the goods of a
house called Galli of the Porta Santa Maria, because
one of them had murdered a Popolano while in France.
This innovation by the people and resulting
change in the state was very important to the city
of Florence. It later had a substantial effect, both
good and bad, upon the commune, as we shall see.
This innovation by the people would have been
prevented by the Grandi if there had not been so
many quarrels and disagreements among them at that
time, as in fact had been the case ever since the
Guelfs returned to Florence. For there was great war
between the Adimari and Tosinghi, between the Bardi
and Mozzi, between the Gherardini and Manieri,
between the Cavalcanti and Buondelmonti, between
certain of the Buondelmonti and the Giandonati,
between the Visdomini and Falconieri, between the
Bostichi and Foraboschi, between the Foraboschi and
Malispini, among the Frescobaldi themselves, and
among the Donati themselves, as well as among many
other houses.
* * * * * * * *
At one point in his chronicle, Villani pauses
to present an overview that has fascinated
historians ever since. There is no reason to assume
that Villani's figures are deadly accurate, but
there is equally little reason to believe them
wildly inaccurate.
Since we have described the income and
expenditure of the commune of Florence during this
period (ca. 1338), it seems fitting to mention other
important features of our city so that our
successors in later times can be aware of any rise
or decline in the condition and power of our city,
and so that the wise and worthy citizens who rule in
future times can advance its condition and power
through the record and example of this chronicle.
Careful investigation has established that at that
time there were in Florence approximately 25,000 men
capable of bearing arms, ages fifteen to seventy,
all citizens, of which 1,500 were noble and powerful
citizens required as Grandi to post the customary
guarantees. There were then around seventy-five
fully-equipped knights. We find of course that
before the government of the "second
people," which is still in power, there were
more than 250 knights, but after the people began
its rule the Grandi had neither the status nor the
authority they formerly enjoyed.
We learn from the taxes collected at the gates
that around 5,900,000 gallons of wine entered
Florence yearly, and in times of abundance there
would be around 1,120,000 gallons more.
The city required approximately 4,000 oxen and
calves, 60,000 sheep, 20,000 goats and 30,000 pigs
annually.
During the month of July 4,000 loads of melons
came through the San Friano gate and were
distributed throughout the city.
During this period the following offices in
Florence, each of which administered justice and had
the right to torture, were held by foreigners: The
podestˆ; the captain and defender of the people and
the guilds; the executor of the ordinances of
justice; the captain of the guard or conservator of
the people, who had more power than the others
(though all four of the offices just mentioned could
administer punishment); the judge handling civil
justice and appeals; the judge in charge of taxes;
the official concerned with female ornamentation;
the official concerned with the merchants; the
official concerned with the Lana guild; the
ecclesiastical officials; the court of the bishop of
Florence; the court of the bishop of Fiesole; the
inquisitor; and other dignitaries of our city which
should not be left unmentioned if those who come
after us are to be properly informed. Within the
walls, Florence was laid out and built up well, with
many lovely houses. At that time construction went
on continually and techniques were improved in order
to make the buildings comfortable and luxurious.
Examples of every sort of improvement were imported
from abroad. Cathedrals, churches for friars of
every order, and magnificent monasteries were built.
Beyond this, there was no citizen, Popolano or
Grande, who had not built or was not building a
large and rich estate in the countryside, with an
expensive mansion and other buildings even better
than those in the city. Each one of them was sinning
in this respect, and they were considered mad for
their inordinate expenditure. It was such a
marvelous thing to see that most foreigners
unfamiliar with Florence thought, when they came
from abroad, that the sumptuous buildings and
beautiful palaces occupying a three-mile area around
the city were a part of the city itself, in the
manner of Rome, to say nothing of the sumptuous
palaces, towers, courts and walled gardens farther
from the city, which would have been called castles
in any other territory. In short, it was determined
that, within a six-mile radius of Florence, there
were more than twice the number of sumptuous and
noble mansions found in Florence itself. And with
this we have said enough about the situation in
Florence.
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