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Italian War of 1521–1526

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Military conflict between France and the Habsburgs

Italian War of 1521–1526
Part of theItalian Wars
oil painting of the Battle of Pavia in 1525
The Battle of Pavia, by an unknownFlemish artist
Date1521–1526 (5 Years)
Location
Italy, France, Low Countries and Spain
Result

Habsburg victory

Belligerents
 France
Old Swiss ConfederacySwiss mercenaries
Republic of Venice
Papal States(1524–1525)
Marquisate of Saluzzo
Holy Roman Empire
SpainSpain
 England
Papal States(1521–1523 and 1525–1526)
Commanders and leaders
1109–1120
First Hundred Years' War (1159–1259)
1294–1324
Hundred Years' War (1337–1453)
Italian Wars (1494–1559)
1562–1678
Second Hundred Years' War (1689–1815)
Franco-Spanish wars

TheItalian War of 1521–1526, sometimes known as theFour Years' War,[note 3] (French:Sixième guerre d'Italie) was a part of theItalian Wars. The war pittedFrancis I of France and theRepublic of Venice against theHoly Roman EmperorCharles V,Henry VIII of England, and thePapal States. It arose from animosity over the election of Charles as Emperor in 1519–1520 and fromPope Leo X's need to ally with Charles againstMartin Luther.

The war broke out acrossWestern Europe late in 1521, when aFrench–Navarrese expedition attempted to reconquerNavarre while a French army invaded theLow Countries. A Spanish army drove the Navarrese forces back into thePyrenees, and otherImperial forces attacked northernFrance, where they were stopped in turn.

In 1521 Charles V and Henry VIII signed theTreaty of Bruges in secret against France, and hostilities resumed on theItalian Peninsula. At theBattle of Bicocca on 27 April 1522, Imperial and Papal forces defeated the French, driving them fromLombardy. Following the battle, fighting again spilled onto French soil, while Venice made aseparate peace. TheEnglish invaded France in 1523, while the French military leaderCharles de Bourbon, alienated by Francis's attempts to seize his inheritance, betrayed Francis and allied himself with the Emperor. The failure of a French attempt to regain Lombardy in 1524 provided Bourbon with an opportunity to invadeProvence at the head of a Spanish army.

Francis led a second attack onMilan in 1525. His disastrous defeat at theBattle of Pavia, where he was captured by the Imperial captainCharles de Lannoy and many of his chief nobles were killed, led to the end of the war. Francis was imprisoned in the Lombard city ofPizzighettone and then inMadrid. Diplomatic manoeuvres to obtain his release included a French mission sent by his mother,Louise of Savoy, to the court ofSuleiman the Magnificent that resulted in anOttoman ultimatum to Charles. This unprecedented alignment between Christian and Muslim monarchs caused a scandal inthe Christian world, and laid the foundation for theFranco-Ottoman alliance. Suleiman invadedHungary in the summer of 1526, defeating Charles' allies at theBattle of Mohács. Despite these efforts, Francis signed theTreaty of Madrid, surrendering his claims to Italy,Artois,Flanders, andBurgundy. A few weeks after his release, he repudiated the terms of the treaty, starting theWar of the League of Cognac. The Italian Wars continued for another three decades, ending with France having failed to regain any substantial territories in Italy.

Prelude

[edit]

Following theTreaty of London (1518), the major European powers (France,England,Spain, and theHoly Roman Empire) were outwardly friendly towards each other. The treaty pledged them all to come to the aid of any signatory that was attacked, and to unite against any state that broke the peace.[4] They were divided on the question of theImperial succession; theHoly Roman Emperor,Maximilian I—intending for aHabsburg to succeed him—campaigned throughout 1518 on behalf of his grandsonCharles I of Spain, whileFrancis I of France put himself forward as an alternate candidate.[5] ThePapacy and the Holy Roman Empire were forced to cooperate in dealing with the rising influence ofMartin Luther, who found support among some Imperial nobles when he opened the way for them to assume authority over their local churches.[6][7] At the same time, Francis was faced with Henry's able, efficient and intelligent chief advisorCardinalThomas Wolsey, the "power behind the throne" who interposed himself into the quarrels of the continent in an attempt to increase both England's influence and his own.[8]

Maximilian's death on 12 January 1519 brought the Imperial election to the forefront of European politics.[9][10]Pope Leo X, threatened by the presence of Spanish troops 64 kilometres (40 mi) fromthe Vatican, supported the French candidacy.[11] The election was not a foregone conclusion; with the exception ofFrederick of Saxony andJoachim I of Brandenburg, all the electors accepted large bribes from Charles to obtain their votes.[12] Maximilian had already promised sums of 500,000florins to theprince-electors in exchange for their votes,[13] but Francis offered up to three million florins,[12] and Charles retaliated by borrowing vast sums from theFugger banking family.[14] The prince-electors all eventually voted for Charles,[12] and he was crowned King of the Romans on 23 October 1520,[14] by which point he already controlled both the Spanish crown and the hereditaryBurgundian lands in theLow Countries.[15]

portrait of Francis I
portrait of Charles V
(left)Jean Clouet,Francis I (c.1527), TheLouvre; (right)Jakob Seisenegger,Portrait of Emperor Charles V with Dog (1532),Kunsthistorisches Museum

During the autumn of 1521, the English became involved in arbitrating between Spain and France.[16] Henry entertained the emperor inKent for three days, in a meeting that achieved little, although the Treaty of Windsor (16 June 1522) reaffirmed the alliance between England andAragon.[17][18] Henry and Francis staged an extravagant meeting at theField of the Cloth of Gold throughout June 1520.[19][20] The following month, Henry sought an agreement with Charles atGravelines.[7]

Charles was crowned King of the Romans atAachen in October 1520, but not Holy Roman Emperor, which could only happen if he was crowned by the pope in Rome. To divert Charles—and his army—from entering and possibly taking control of Italy, Francis sought to wage war on the emperor by proxy,[21] and made plans for simultaneous incursions into German and Spanish territory.Luxembourg was attacked under the leadership ofRobert de la Marck, whilst a French-Navarrese army simultaneously advanced throughNavarre after reconqueringSt-Jean-Pied-de-Port.[22] The expedition was nominally led by the 18-year-old Navarrese kingHenry d'Albret, whosekingdom had been invaded byFerdinand II of Aragon in 1512, but the army was effectively commanded byAndré de Foix and funded and equipped by the French.[22] The French plans proved to be flawed, as the intervention ofHenry of Nassau drove back the Luxembourg offensive; and although de Foix was initially successful inseizing Pamplona, he was driven from Navarre after being defeated at theBattle of Esquiroz on 30 June 1521.[23]

Charles was meanwhile preoccupied with the issue of Luther, whom he confronted at theDiet of Worms in April 1521.[6] PopeLeo X was unwilling to tolerate open defiance of his own authority, and considered the Emperor as a potential ally to support him against Luther, whose backers included Frederick of Saxony.[24][25] In May 1521, Charles proclaimed theEdict of Worms against Luther,[24] whilst also aiding the Pope in the return ofParma andPiacenza to Italian authority.[26] Leo, needing the Imperial mandate for his campaign against what he viewed as a dangerous heresy, promised to assist in expelling the French fromLombardy,[27] leaving Francis with only theRepublic of Venice for an ally.[28]

Initial moves (June 1521 – May 1522)

[edit]

On 20 August 1521, the Imperial army under Henry of Nassau invaded northeastern France—an attack made in response to de Marck's attack on Luxembourg.[29][30]Ardres was overrun,Mouzon was severely damaged after being besieged, andAubenton was sacked and its inhabitants massacred.[29][31] The attackers were delayed during the three-weeksiege of Mézières by the resistance of the French, led byPierre Terrail, seigneur de Bayard. Francis had time to raise a large army atReims to relieveMézières. The town was resupplied a few days before the king's army arrived at the town on 26 September, which was by then largely destroyed. Nassau was forced to withdraw, laying waste to towns along his route of retreat.[29]

Tournai, which had been returned to France by Henry VIII in February 1519 as part of the terms of the Treaty of London, was besieged by Imperial forces.[30] Tournai was left to surrender to the besiegers after Francis's army was ordered to retreat, and later disbanded.[32][33]

map of Lombardy c.1521
Battles inLombardy (1521–1525). The engagements atBicocca, the Sesia, andPavia are labeled.

A Franco-Navarrese force approached the fortress ofAmaiur (Baztan, Navarre), laying siege to the fortress the Castilians had just reinforced. On 3 October 1521 the Castilians capitulated in exchange for free passage to Castile. The troops of Guillaume Gouffier then headed to Labourd and on toBehobia, capturing the fortress of Urantzu.Fuenterrabia, at the mouth of the riverBidasoa on the Franco-Spanish border, was captured later in the month by French-Navarrese troops underBonnivet andClaude of Lorraine.[34][35] The French held this advantageous foothold in northern Spain until March 1524.[36]

On 28 November 1521 Charles V and Henry VIII signed in secret theTreaty of Bruges.[37]Odet de Foix, Vicomte de Lautrec, the French governor of Milan, was tasked with resisting the Imperial and Papal forces. Lautrec was outmatched byProspero Colonna, and by late November 1521 had been forced out of Milan and had retreated to located towns around the riverAdda. Lautrec's army was reinforced bySwiss mercenaries. Unable to pay them, he had to give in to their demands to engage the Imperial forces immediately.[38]

On 27 April 1522, Lautrec attacked Colonna's combined Imperial and Papal army near Milan at theBattle of Bicocca.[39] Lautrec had planned to use his superiority inartillery to his advantage, but the Swiss, impatient to engage the enemy, masked his guns and charged against the entrenched Spanisharquebusiers.[40] In the resultingmelee, the Swiss were badly mauled by the Spanish and by a force oflandsknechts (Germanic mercenaries).[41] Their morale broken, the Swiss returned to theircantons; Lombardy was abandoned.[42] Colonna and d'Avalos, left unopposed, proceeded tobesiege Genoa, capturing the city on 30 May.[39]

France at bay

[edit]

The loss of Lombardy was followed by England entering openly into the conflict, when on 29 May 1522, the English formally declared war on France.[43] Henry VIII and Charles signed the Treaty of Windsor on 16 June 1522.[44] The treaty outlined a joint English-Imperial attack against France. Charles agreed to compensate England for the pensions that would be lost because of conflict with France and to pay the past debts that would be forfeit; to seal the alliance, he also agreed to marry Henry's only daughter,Mary.[45] In July, the English raidedMorlaix and in September an English army marched from Calais, burning and looting the countryside in an unsuccessful attempt to engage the French in battle.[43]

17th century portrait of the Duke of Bourbon
Charles III, Duke of Bourbon, Constable of France (c. 1630)

To raise money, Francis pursued alawsuit againstCharles III, Duke of Bourbon, who had received the majority of his holdings through his marriage toSuzanne, Duchess of Bourbon. After Suzanne's death,Louise of Savoy, her sister and the king's mother, insisted that the territories in question should pass to her because of her closer kinship to the deceased. Francis was confident that seizing the disputed lands would improve his own financial position sufficiently to continue the war and began to confiscate portions of them in Louise's name.[46] Bourbon, angered by this treatment and increasingly isolated at court, sought redress by making overtures to Charles V.[46]

The death ofDogeAntonio Grimani broughtAndrea Gritti, a veteran of theWar of the League of Cambrai, to power inVenice. He quickly began negotiations with the Emperor and on 29 July 1523 concluded the Treaty of Worms, which removed the Republic from the war.[47] Bourbon continued his scheming with Charles, offering to begin a rebellion against Francis in exchange for money and German troops.[48] When Francis, who was aware of the plot, summoned him toLyon in October, he feigned illness and failed to appear.[49] Francis ordered as many of Bourbon's associates as could be captured to be brought to justice after the Duke reached Imperial territory and openly entered the Emperor's service.[50]

Charles then invaded southern France over thePyrenees. Lautrec successfully defendedBayonne against the Spanish, but Charles was able to recapture Fuenterrabia in February 1524.[51] On 19 September 1523, an English army under theDuke of Suffolk advanced intoPicardy from Calais. The French, stretched thin by the Imperial attack, were unable to resist, and Suffolk soon advanced past theSomme, devastating the countryside in his wake and stopping only 80 kilometres (50 mi) fromParis.[52] When Charles failed to support the English offensive, Suffolk—unwilling to risk an attack on the French capital—turned away from Paris on 30 October, returning to Calais by mid-December.[53]

Francis now turned his attention to Lombardy. In September 1523, a French army under Bonnivet advanced through thePiedmont.[50]The Imperial commander, Prospero Colonna, had only 9,000 men to oppose the French advance and was forced to retreat to Milan.[54] Bonnivet overestimated the size of the Imperial army and moved into winter quarters rather than attacking the city; the Imperial commanders were able to summon 15,000landsknechts and a large force under Bourbon's command by 28 December, whenCharles de Lannoy replaced the dying Colonna.[55] Many of the Swiss now abandoned the French army, and Bonnivet began his withdrawal.[56] The French defeat at theBattle of the Sesia, where Bayard was killed while commanding the French rearguard, again demonstrated the power of massed arquebusiers against more traditional troops; the French army then retreated over the Alps in disarray.[57][58]

D'Avalos and Bourbon crossed the Alps with nearly 11,000 men and invadedProvence in early July 1524. Sweeping through most of the smaller towns unopposed, Bourbon entered the provincial capital ofAix-en-Provence on 9 August 1524, taking the title of Count of Provence and pledging his allegiance to Henry VIII in return for the latter's support against Francis.[59] By mid-August, Bourbon and d'Avalos hadbesieged Marseille, the only stronghold in Provence that remained in French hands.[60] Their assaults on the city failed and when the French army commanded by Francis himself arrived atAvignon at the end of September 1524, they were forced to retreat back to Italy.[39]

Francis I's campaign in Italy (October 1524 – February 1525)

[edit]

French advance into Lombardy

[edit]
French advances in Lombardy 1524 (map)
French advances into Lombardy, and the Pavia campaign of 1524–1525 (French movements are in blue)

On 17 October 1524, as Bourbon and Pescara were returning to Genoa, Francis confirmed his mother asregent during his absence.[61][60] Shortly afterwards, he crossed theAlps and advanced on Milan at the head of an army numbering more than 40,000.[62] Imperialist troops, not yet recovered from the campaign in Provence, were in no position to offer serious resistance.[63]

As the French advanced, the viceroy of Naples retreated fromAsti towards Milan.[61] Lannoy, the city's viceroy, who had concentrated 16,000 men to resist the French advance, decided that Milan could not be defended. The city was ridden with theplague, and so to avoid his troops becoming infected, on 26 October he withdrew toLodi,[64][65] leaving Milan through one gate as the French vanguard under Salazzo entered through another.[66][67]

Francis installedLouis II de la Trémoille as the city's governor. At the urging of Bonnivet and against the advice of his other senior commanders, who favoured a more vigorous pursuit of the retreating Lannoy, the king's army then advanced onPavia, whereAntonio de Leyva remained with a sizable garrison.[68] The main mass of French troops arrived at Pavia on 24 October.[69]

Siege of Pavia

[edit]

By 2 November, Montmorency had crossed the riverTicino and invested Pavia from the south, completing its encirclement. Inside were about 9,000 men, mainly mercenaries whom Antonio de Leyva was forced to pay by melting down the gold and silver treasures in the city's churches.[70] The French bombardment of Pavia began on 6 November.[67] On 21 November, Francis attempted an assault on the city through two of the breaches but was beaten back with heavy casualties. Hampered by rainy weather and a lack of gunpowder, the French decided to wait for the defenders to starve.[71]

old map of Pavia
A map ofPavia depicting the town during the siege of 1524–1525,Basel University Library

In early December, a Spanish force commanded byHugo of Moncada landed nearGenoa, intending to intervene in a conflict between pro-Valois and pro-Habsburg factions in the city. Francis dispatched a larger force underMichele Antonio I of Saluzzo to intercept them. Confronted by the more numerous French and left without naval support by the arrival of a pro-Valois fleet commanded byAndrea Doria, the Spanish troops surrendered.[72]

In January 1525, Lannoy was reinforced by the arrival of Frundsberg with freshlandsknechts and cavalrymen, enabling him to renew the offensive.[73] The French outpost atSan Angelo was taken,[74] cutting the lines of communication between Pavia and Milan, while a separate column oflandsknechts advanced onBelgiojoso and, despite being briefly pushed back by a raid led by Medici and Bonnivet, occupied the town.[75] On 22 January the main imperial army at Lodi simulated an offensive against Milan, which failed to lure away the French.[76] The Imperial commanders marched with 22,000 infantry, 2,300 cavalry, and 17 cannon to Pavia from Lodi on 25 January.[77][78]

Early in February, a thousand Italian soldiers were defeated at Alessandria before they could reach the French at Pavia.[76] The French position was weakened when Medici returned to Pavia on 8 February and replenished the garrison's supply of gunpowder, gathered by theDuke of Ferrara.[79][76] It was further weakened by the desertion of 2,000 Germans and the departure of nearly 5,000Grisons Swiss mercenaries, who returned to theircantons to defend their own region following the capture of the town ofChiavenna by Milanese troops.[80][81] Francis was encamped along with the majority of his forces in thegreat walled park of Mirabello outside the city walls, placing them between Leyva's garrison and the approaching relief army.[82] On 4 February an attack on the park was repelled by the French.[76] Skirmishes and sallies by the garrison continued through the month of February.[83] Medici was seriously wounded and withdrew to Piacenza to recuperate, forcing Francis to recall much of the Milan garrison to offset the departure of the Black Band.[76][84] On 21 February, imperial troops were repelled by the French when they attempted to storm the gates of the park.[80][83]

Albany's advance towards Naples

[edit]
portrait of Clement VII
PopeClement VII (c. 1526),Museo di Capodimonte,Naples

After the failure of a peace mission proposed by PopeClement VII, Francis and the pope negotiated an alliance in secret. Negotiations were concluded on 12 December 1524, and a secret treaty was signed by the pope on 5 January. Clement pledged not to assist Charles in exchange for Francis's assistance with the conquest of Naples by giving Albany free passage through his lands. In return, Francis promised to cede lands and maintain Medici rule in Florence.[85]

The pope tried to stop Francis from acting immediately, because of the dangers inherent in fighting during the winter months.[86] Against the pope's advice, and the counsel of his own senior commanders, Francis almost immediately detached a portion of his forces under theDuke of Albany, sending 5,000 infantry and 500 cavalry south to aid the pope in the invasion of Naples. The size of the army grew when it was joined by Papal States recruits, and French infantry led by the Italiancondottiero (Italian mercenary captain),Renzo da Ceri.[87][72]

Francis's ploy failed to achieve his aim of leading the Spaniards to abandon northern Italy,[63] as the Imperial commanders ultimately decided not to attack Albany but to concentrate on relieving Pavia.[77] Lannoy attempted to intercept the expedition nearFiorenzuola, but suffered heavy casualties and was forced to return to Lodi by the intervention of theBlack Bands ofGiovanni de' Medici, which had just entered French service.[88]

Battle of Pavia

[edit]
Main article:Battle of Pavia
woodcut of the Battle of Pavia
Jörg Breu the Elder'swoodcut of theBattle of Pavia (madec.1525),British Museum

On the night of 23 February, Imperial artillery began a bombardment to distract the French, whilst the remainder of the Imperial army moved from their camp to flank the brook that separated the two armies. Ahead of them weresappers, who dismantled part of the park wall as quietly as possible,[89] in an operation that took most of the night.[76] Columns of Imperial soldiers then entered the park.[90]

At the same time, Leyva sortied from Pavia with what remained of the garrison. In the ensuing four-hour battle, the French heavy cavalry masked its own artillery by a rapid advance,[note 4] and was surrounded and cut apart by landsknechts and a thousand massed Spanisharquebusiers,[92] who attacked the French from concealed positions in the park's woodland.[93] The French knights in their suits of armour were shot down with ease, and later butchered with daggers.[91] A series of protracted infantry engagements resulted in the rout of the Swiss and French infantry.[92] The French suffered massive casualties, losing the majority of their army. Bonnivet,Jacques de la Palice,La Trémoille, andRichard de la Pole were killed, while de Montmorency, de la Marck, and Francis himself were taken prisoner along with a host of lesser nobles.[92]

March 1525 – May 1526

[edit]

Imprisonment and release of Francis I

[edit]
map of Europe in 1525
Western Europe in 1525

The night following the Battle of Pavia, Francis gave Lannoy a letter to be delivered to his mother in Paris, in which he related what had befallen him: "To inform you of how the rest of my ill fortune is proceeding, all is lost to me save honour and life, which is safe." The broken remnants of the French forces, aside from a small garrison left to hold theCastello Sforzesco in Milan, retreated across the Alps under the nominal command of Charles IV of Alençon, reaching Lyon by March 1525.[94]

After Pavia, the fate of the French king, and of France itself, became the subject of furious diplomatic manoeuvring.[95] Charles V, lacking funds to pay for the war, sought to marryIsabella of Portugal, who would bring with her a substantial dowry.[96] Bourbon, meanwhile, plotted with Henry to invade and partition France,[97] and at the same time the Milanese chancellor,Girolamo Morone [it], proposed to d'Avalos that he lead the Italians against their oppressors, and seize the Neapolitan crown for himself.[98]

Louise of Savoy raised a small army and funds to defend France against an expected attack upon its eastern borders by English troops.[99] She also sent a first French mission toSuleiman the Magnificent, requesting assistance, but the mission was lost on its way inBosnia.[100] In December 1525 a second mission was sent, led by the Croatian noblemanJohn Frangipani, which managed to reachConstantinople with secret letters asking for the deliverance of Francis and an attack on the House of Habsburg.[101][102] Frangipani left Constantinople on 8 February with an answer from Suleiman, that promised nothing.[102]

Francis' captors, concerned he could be rescued by a French military expedition or might escape, decided it would be safer if he was held captive elsewhere. Francis was convinced he would gain his freedom again if he obtained a personal audience with Charles, and pressed Lannoy, who had intended to transport the king to theCastel Nuovo in Naples, to send him to Spain instead.[103] Lannoy agreed, and on 31 May 1525 he was taken by ship from Genoa, having been told he was being taken to Naples. Francis arrived inBarcelona on 19 June.[104]

Francis was initially held at the castle at Tarragona, before being moved toValencia and then to a nearby villa inBenisanó,[105] but Charles, urged to negotiate a settlement by Montmorency and Lannoy, who suggested that the Italians would soon prove unfaithful to their Imperial alliance, ordered the king brought toMadrid and imprisoned in the citadel there.[106] Charles showed no desire to receive Francis personally.[107] Meanwhile,Henry II of Navarre, who had fought alongside Francis at Pavia and who had been imprisoned in Madrid as well, escaped in December 1525.[108] The Spanish conquest of Iberian Navarre continued, with Charles occupying Navarre[109] and Henry remaining at large following his escape from Imperial captivity.[110]

Treaty of Madrid (1526)

[edit]

Charles demanded not only the surrender of Lombardy, but also of Burgundy and Provence, forcing Francis to argue that French law prevented him from surrenderingany lands possessed by the crown without the approval ofParlement, which would not be forthcoming.[111] By the beginning of 1526, Charles was faced with demands from Venice and the Pope to restoreFrancesco II Sforza to the throne of theDuchy of Milan, and had become anxious to achieve a settlement with the French before another war began.[112]

Francis, having argued to retain Burgundy without result, was prepared to surrender it to achieve his own release.[113] On 14 January 1526, Charles and Francis signed and agreed to the Treaty of Madrid.[114] The French king renounced all his claims in Italy,Artois, andFlanders. He surrendered Burgundy to Charles,[111] agreed to send two of his sons to be hostages at the Spanish court,[115] and to restore to Bourbon the territories that had been seized from him.[116] He also agreed to persuade Henry to relinquish the throne of Navarre in favor of Charles "in order to uproot the errors of the Lutheran sect and the rest of condemned sects",[117] and requested to marry Charles' sisterEleanor.[115]

Aftermath of the treaty

[edit]
Copy of theTreaty of Hampton Court (1526) in the French archives, signed personally byThomas More

Francis was released on 6 March.[118] On 17 March, he crossed the Bidasoa north into France, while at the same time theDauphin and his brother, who had been brought to Bayonne by Louise and Lautrec, crossed into Spain and captivity.[119] By this time, Francis had attained peace with England by the Treaty of Hampton Court; drafted by Wolsey and the French ambassador atHampton Court Palace. The treaty—in which France and England agreed not to ally with the Empire independently—was signed in August 1526.[120]

Clement VII became convinced that the Emperor's growing power was a threat to his own position in Italy, and Venetian and papal envoys went to Francis suggesting an alliance against Charles.[121] Francis never had any intentions of complying with the remaining provisions of the Treaty of Madrid.[122] On 10 May 1526 the royal council decided to break the treaty. It was made clear that the king would not be bound by the treaty because it had been signed when he was a prisoner under duress to give promises.[121] In June 1526, Francis and the Pope, together with the northern Italian cities of Milan, Venice, Florence and Genoa, launched theWar of the League of Cognac atAngoulème in an attempt to reclaim the territory the French had lost to the Empire;[123] Henry, named the 'protector' of the League, was not formally involved.[123]

Francis and his successor,Henry II, would continue to assert their claims to Milan through the remainder of the Italian Wars, only relinquishing them after thePeace of Cateau-Cambrésis in 1559.[124] France failed to regain any former possessions in Lombardy; the terms of the Peace that ended the Italian Wars gave Spain control of Milan, Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, Savoy, and Piedmont.[125]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Francesco II Sforza restored to power in the Duchy of Milan under the protection ofEmperor Charles V andPope Clement VII, who abandons a temporary alliance withFrancis I of France.[1]
  2. ^Liberation of Francis I under the condition that France abandons its claims on the ImperialDuchy of Milan and cedes theDuchy of Burgundy to the House of Habsburg.[2]
  3. ^The name refers to the four years between the beginning of hostilities in 1521 and the Battle of Pavia in 1525, although peace did not come until 1526.[3]
  4. ^Francis had to order the guns to stop firing when he led a charge across their line of fire.[91]

References

[edit]
  1. ^History of Italy, book XVI, chapter II, Francesco Guicciardini
  2. ^History of Italy, book XVI, chapter XV, Francesco Guicciardini
  3. ^Knecht 1994, p. 129.
  4. ^Setton 1984, p. 186.
  5. ^Blockmans 2002, pp. 49–50.
  6. ^abBrady 2009, p. 152.
  7. ^abSetton 1984, p. 193.
  8. ^Wooding 2009, pp. 90–91.
  9. ^Setton 1984, p. 187.
  10. ^Frieda 2018, p. 99.
  11. ^Brady 2009, pp. 144–145.
  12. ^abcRowdon 1974, pp. 77–78.
  13. ^Parker 2019, p. 90.
  14. ^abBlockmans 2002, p. 51.
  15. ^Blockmans 2002, p. 30.
  16. ^Mottram 2008, p. 43.
  17. ^Frieda 2018, p. 113.
  18. ^Mottram 2008, pp. 47–48.
  19. ^Wooding 2009, p. 106.
  20. ^Frieda 2018.
  21. ^Knecht 1994, pp. 175–176.
  22. ^abBlockmans 2002, pp. 51–52.
  23. ^Oman 1937, pp. 173–174.
  24. ^abBlockmans 2002, pp. 80–81.
  25. ^Rowdon 1974, p. 88.
  26. ^Setton 1984, pp. 193–194.
  27. ^Parker 2019, p. 132.
  28. ^Setton 1984, p. 194.
  29. ^abcFrieda 2018, pp. 132–133.
  30. ^abBlockmans 2002, p. 52.
  31. ^Potter 2008, pp. 166–167.
  32. ^Potter 2008, p. 206.
  33. ^Frieda 2018, p. 134.
  34. ^Bustillo Kastrexana 2012, p. 96.
  35. ^Pérez 1998, p. 354.
  36. ^Rowdon 1974, p. 94.
  37. ^Konstam 1996, p. 88.
  38. ^Oman 1937, pp. 175–176.
  39. ^abcBlockmans 2002, p. 57.
  40. ^Oman 1937, p. 180.
  41. ^Oman 1937, pp. 181–182.
  42. ^Oman 1937, pp. 184, 186.
  43. ^abKnecht 1994, p. 200.
  44. ^Mottram 2008, p. 47.
  45. ^Mottram 2008, p. 39.
  46. ^abKnecht 1994, p. 204.
  47. ^Norwich 2003, p. 439.
  48. ^Knecht 1994, p. 206.
  49. ^Knecht 1994, p. 207.
  50. ^abKnecht 1994, p. 208.
  51. ^Blockmans 2002, p. 45.
  52. ^Knecht 1994, pp. 208–209.
  53. ^Gunn 1986, pp. 631–633.
  54. ^Konstam 1996, p. 27.
  55. ^Konstam 1996, pp. 27–28.
  56. ^Knecht 1994, p. 211.
  57. ^Konstam 1996, p. 28.
  58. ^Taylor 1921, p. 53–54.
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