contatti : pierluigi18faber@libero.it
indice generale : http://www.carnesecchi.eu
Introductory Notes | March 17 |
Letters Aloud Explanation | March 17 |
Gossip, Background | March 2 |
Tidbits | March 4 |
Ward Politics and Names | March 12 |
Medici Bank Background | March 12 |
Kings and Trade Background | March 13 |
Florentine Government and Elections | March 14 |
Corrections to recent history, and Kings | March 14 |
Letter from Lorenzo to Florentine Embassy | March 14 |
Major holidays in Florence | March 14 |
The rough edges show some of the haste as well as the volume and editing. I
had hoped for finesse, but it occurred to me that few embassy people will have
memories with an historian's clarity and we should not sound like historians but
people who remembered the events themselves. Thus there was a focus on the past
20 years, 1465 -1485, one generation; and a less detailed recollection of the
previous hundred years as we might have heard of it from our elders.
I felt I had succeeded in getting enough from my researches to develop the
outlines of a mindset and familiarity with current events to approach a role as
a merchant-diplomat. I of course have no confidence that that mindset is at all
accurate, and it lacks much detail, immediacy, and feeling. The research route
provides too much detachment from most such mindsets, and does not provide the
attachments to family and city, guild and church, and religious beliefs.
Florence was unusually rich in tensions among these because the habits of mind
of traders and the new learning (and expose's of old claims and beliefs) show us
there was some distance between individual and church, etc. These I did not
write about -- the attachments -- and I would do that the next time.
Also, I'd write about the sense of threat and danger surrounding diplomatic
ventures in a way to build it into the mindset (and practices, if I could get
the information readily). Merchant diplomats were very aware of the dangers
surrounding their beloved city, families and fortunes. Their neighbor Milan had
been ruled by madmen for 6 generations, defensive wars could beggar the city,
and internal strife could hand it over to their enemies.
In the event, the Florentine Embassy was too busy with music, stories, and
demos to have a sustained discussion. A dinner party of 8 or 12 would have been
a better setting for that, and is a possibility for the future.
A serious attempt to negotiate with another embassy was out of the question
for this kind of event, although it took me a few days to get around to
realizing that; but once thought of, it was obviously not possible. That is more
like a live action role-playing game, with considerable pre-game study and
preparation to make it satisfying (the Staple Game of 10-15 years ago comes to
mind).
In addition, I had hoped to interview many people at the event about trade in
their countries and times (I always go over the top in my hopes for these
things, and after a fit of realism a few days before the event, try to carry out
some of my hopes anyway). Few people did know much, many were busy when I saw
them, but I did gather some information as a merchant at such a Faire might do
-- higher level than the real thing, more on types of goods traded and zero on
current tolls and road conditions. Exploring what Columbus might be up to (King
Joa~o of Portugal turned him down "last year", 1484), I did find out that the
Arabs had traditional sea routes down the *East* coast of Africa, and the Omani
Arabs sailed to India, and that piracy was withing acceptable levels of risk.
This was tantalizing, coupled with the knowledge that the Portuguese had gotten
down to Cape Cross, 22 degrees S latitude (not reached the Cape of Good Hope
yet), and wondering how we could invest in such expeditions securely, since
Florence had little hope of getting out the Straits of Gibraltar on her own if
Spain didn't want us to.
As part of this, I encountered Salamallah the Corpulent, showing games. He
frightened me by pointing out the chess variants played by the Byzantines, Arabs
and Indians, which had more complex rules than Western chess. He stressed that
these games revealed different ways of thinking and strategizing, that were
characteristic of their cultures. He backed this up with some examples from
Byzantine military (not game) practice. I left thinking that I did not want to
engage in intrigue with these peoples anytime soon, and that I would proceed in
trade and banking dealings with the utmost caution. A very nice interview
experience.
Other geopolitical questions raised in the notes, particularly "Kings", were
not explored successfully.
Naturally, I am in love with this approach to developing an interior persona,
a mindset and familiarity with recent experience, loyalties and habits, and
recommend it to everyone, wholeheartedly and irresponsibly. I am only dimly
aware that there are other approaches, as deeply held and practiced, and which
produce equivalent or superior results.
In anima Societatis,
--John of Canterbury / Giovanni di Cantibori
A letter was prepared with "instructions" to the Florentine Embassy staff to
gather information on several topics. The email version was much more extensive
than the written letter, which would be read aloud. The original idea was that
the Florentine Embassy people would be familiar with the background and have the
pleasant experience of getting the references in a brief letter. As it worked
out, I read a sentence or two aloud to visitors and then explained the
background to them, then read the next sentence, etc.
A second letter, containing gossip, was written and read aloud. Items
included a matchmaking and a dowry, Niccolini (Medici adherent) and Albizzi (out
of power, lost to Cosimo de' Medici 45 years earlier, slowly regaining high
status). Explanation of a patrilineal, patrilocal society, wife's property and
rights, dowry public knowledge), and brideprice (much more shadowy).
Guido Morelli's advice to his sons to marry within the gonfalon (ward)
(Morelli is a famous writer of memoirs). Rivalry with the letter-writer, a
secretary of Lorenzo's.
Diplomat's refusal to credit the belief that one can analyze a political
situation, identify the appropriate principle and apply it to find the correct
way to handle the situation (what Machiavelli will do in the Prince and other
writings). Insistence that it all is a matter of experience and cannot be
described further (Guicciardini's belief). Letter writer thinks he is being
snubbed by diplomat. Reference to what the diplomat missed while he was in
Greece (and buying 200 Greek books for Lorenzo, among other things). Rivalry
with the letter-writer.
Bernardo Machiavelli, prominent in government, and his shy son Niccolo, age
16 (who will write The Prince in another 40 years). Slighting reference to
"Chiovo" at a gathering (arrested 76 years ago for burglary), Bernardo calm,
Niccolo embarrassed.
Ficino and two of his Platonic-Christian ideas at an evening gathering.
Implied bragging by the letter-writer.
I have some notes on the organization of Florentine government and our
embassy, some notes on history, and a suggestion / question on organizing
ourselves for 'gossiping' about Florence and drawing in visitors.
Our embassy will purport to conduct business: Handle inquiries, provide
responses as short descriptions of Florentine government, business oportunities,
currency and banking, travel and hospitality, security and health. I will find
background on government, banking and trade, and notice items on the other
topics.
We need to ask visitors very easy leading questions to get the ball rolling;
expect little in the way of detail as answers. Models for this kind of activity
are Con bid suites at a Science Fiction Convention; Tourism tables at Gov Center
in Summer ("Ontario Invites You!" " Nova Scotia This Summer!" etc), minus the
brochures.
I propose a simple way to draw people in: gossip. We can have informal chats,
presented as if visitors are overhearing them, but clear enough to be intriguing
to visitors. I / We need to practice: how does one conduct 'private' gossip in
front of strangers? Simultaneously with 'business'?
(*I'm told there is a good textile shop 1 block from the commuter rail
station in Framingham.)
Support: I might prepare a closed book of gossip, as reminders.
Research: gossipy bits prepared on usual topics (see Table of Contents) from
Gene Brucker's Florentine Society. in the Renaissance (FSR), excerpts of
documents; the Dati and Pitti memoirs, excerpts (also edited by Gene Brucker);
and recent scholarly articles edited by Findlen.
Did we agree on a particular year, or even date? I have a notion that we
agreed on 1485, and I would then suppose the date is March 15. This would
simplify research into current events. Has Bosworth occurred yet, I think not? -
which puts 'paid' to Medici Bank London hopes of recovery of its loans to Edward
IV (Lancaster); Henry VII (York, Tudor) is not a generous king.
Research: rough and incomplete, but timely. I hope to improve and extend.
Florentine Mission structure
We six or so are drawn from the uppermost class of Florentine society, the
families of wealthy merchants and the major guilds. This does not mean that we
all are personally wealthy -- we are not heads of our respective clans, for the
most part? All are expected to serve in a number of civic positions throughout
life, and this diplomatic mission is one such. It is a temporary task. There is
talk that if there is enough of affairs to handle the mission could be come a
permanent post, as other countries are beginning to do at this time (1480's
1490's).
The Foreign Affairs Office is called the Eight of Practice (Otto di pratica),
and is a committee of merchants and members of the other major guilds, who serve
for a year, usually. We receive our instructions from them. They receive their
instructions from Lorenzo de' Medici after he and his able permanent
secretaries, among them, have made basic policy and sent it by letter to the
Eight of Practice. We are not likely to see a letter directly from Lorenzo.
I think we are offering the usual "do business with the Florentines"
information, encouragement, and services. We might arrange banking with the
Medici Bank or one of its allied Banks, like the Acciauouli, the Bardi... (more
later). Other banks are the Peruzzi (much larger, more conservative, and did not
fail when others will in the next several years), the Pitti.
The top level of government of Florence is Lorenzo de' Medici and his several
circles of friends and advisors -- this seems to be a leader-in-committees
system. It is not public. The next, public, level is a set of committees drawing
their members for a year's service from the merchants and members of the other
major guilds; service begins at staggered intervals to provide continuity. They
include the Eight of Security (municipal watch and police), ... more later.
Below them are civic functionaries, often drawn from junior branches of the
extended familes of the major guilds, but often from other families.
Appointments to quite modest positions were made for a year to assist an
unfortunate but capable individual.
The populace is organized into city 'quarters' - 16? of them; each is
subdivided into 'gonfalons' which correspond roughly to the parishes. The
population of the city of Florence, within the walls, at this time is about
30,000?; but the population of the city and its surrounding countryside,
including conquered cities and towns, the 'Commune of Florence', is about
750,000 people. This has grown since the plagues of 1346 and 1366, in which the
area lost 60% of its population. There has been immigration from the contryside
('contada') for over a century. A country family will send one person, then
another; the city family often maintains land ownership and a house or two in
the original land, and may buy others elsewhere.
The family is a patriarchial patrilineal structure. A young woman marrying
moves to her husband's house, usually in her father-in-law's house; her
mother-in-law runs the household. If her husband should die before she does, she
returns to her father's house, and if he is deceased, to her brother's house
(which may be the same building that she grew up in). A 'casa' is a group bound
by blood and marriage, often more people than live together under one roof.
About 10-12 people (not counting servants) share the same roof. Marriages for
the middle and lower classes usually are made within the 'gonfalon', then the
larger 'quartiere', or less often beyond that. A very wealthy family will select
from a wider range. All try to make the most advantageous marriage possible,
with an eye toward permanence and compatibility. Wedding contracts frequently
specify where the couple will live and how they will be supported, the dowry and
its disposition in case of death. Dowry is greater when marrying up, less when
marrying down. Dowry to marry in a family of one's peers is about 800 florins;
down, 700 (which could be to someone with half the income of a peer); up,
900-1000. Dowry is in relatively clear terms and the amount of money becomes
known. Less clear is the brideprice, the groom's family's contribution to the
estate of the new couple. This includes money, often on account, a position and
workplace and appropriate tools. It may include the use of a house and land, or
the income from them.
The family needs people to serve as intermediaries in purchases of real
estate, arranging sharing of expenses, and settling quarrels. These should not
be family members, who would be seen as biased; they should be persons familiar
with the family's affairs, and have good judgement. These 'amici' are drawn from
in-laws, then from unrelated friends. An outer circle of neighbors ('vicini')
are kept sweet with minor sharing of food and drink, but most are not candidates
for marriage nor trust in affairs.
A man and his family were members of several communal organizations besides
the family: the parish, the gonfalon, the guild, various special-purpose groups
devoted to maintaining shrines, supporting a parade or show or float on various
saints' days and civic occasions.
The economy of Florence is, besides subsistence, the luxury wool and silk
trade, including wool treatment, dyeing, weaving and finishing. There are nearly
300 shops ('botteghe') caryying one one or more of these steps. The major guilds
involved in this trade are the di Lana (of Wool) and the Calimati (cloth
finishers) there may be others.
The Medici Bank is a major, though private concern. Recent history:
* Medici Bank London has lent very large amounts to King Edward IV, House of
Lancaster, for the War of the Roses. Edward cannot repay. Somehow the Bank
absorbs the loss.
* Medici Bank Bruges has lent very large amounts to Charles the Bold of
Burgundy, who was trying to build a strong Burgundian State out of Northeastern
France to its west and Flanders & Brabant to its east. Somehow the Bank
absorbs the loss.
* Medici Bank Paris has lent very large amounts to Louis XI ("The Spider"),
who is fighting with Charles the Bold of Burgundy. Somehow the Bank absorbs the
loss.
--- More later.
John of Canterbury / Giovanni di Cantebou'ri (?)
Introductory Notes
Letters Aloud Explanation
Gossip, Background
Johannes Cantuariensis salutem dat.
Si vales,
valeo.
1. tie it to well-known names
This suggests shifts: 2 as Embassy staff, 2 as visitors, and 2 off-duty
(visit other embassies, shopping*) -and rotate our people among the shifts.
2. have a shill or two among the visitors
I
don't know how this would fit with the Schedule you have worked out. I like the
"Letters Received" idea.
Quartiere | Gonfalon | Leading Family(ies) |
---|---|---|
Santo Spirito | Scala | Canigiani |
Quarata | ||
Forza | Ridolfi | |
Drago | Soderini -- 57% | |
Santa Croce | Carro | Nardi -- 55% |
Ruote | Niccolini | |
Bue | Cocchi Donati -- 35% | |
Lion Nero | Morelli | |
S Maria Novella | Unicorno | Bartoli |
Lion Bianco | Ventura | |
Malengonelle | ||
Lion Rosso | Rucellai | |
Vipera | Acciaioli -- 44% | |
San Giovanni | Drago | Carnesecchi |
Chiavi | Pandolfini | |
Lion d' Oro | Medici | |
Dietisalvi | ||
Della Stufa --partners of Cosimo, ca. 1440 | ||
Vaio | Pucci | |
Medici |
(missing one gonfalon)
Most of the leading families were patrons, padrone, within their gonfalon and in the part of the countryside (contada) where they owned land, in 1437. By 1485 some had become far more influential. The Medici in 1437 had city-wide influence because Cosimo's bank provided so many more contacts, in high places all over Italy and Western Europe, than anyone else had. The patron was not an employer, primarily, nor ere those he helped his exclusively. A head of family might apply to 2-5 people for help, say with his tax assessment. The patron usually did not have the requested resources himself. He was a middleman for favors in exchange for services -- an unequal exchange favoring the middleman.
Buona sera encore, gentile signori e signore!
The Medici Bank is important to our trade mission. There are about 80 banks
in Florence, some such as the Peruzzi are much larger than the Medici. They
mostly are organized along similar lines. They have a few members of the family
as principals, but many are not part of the bank. This protects the bank from
family misfortunes, such as being involved in a failed coup (Pitti, vs, Piero
de' Medici, about 1465), and vice versa. Members of other families often are
principals; so "Banca Medici et sociorum".
As you know, Cosimo started the Medici bank about 1440 with a little of
everything -- money-changing on the street, merchant loans, and credit to people
who might rise. He was astute; he backed a local Dominican prior who became
Pope. He also conversed often with another who was the Apostolic official on
usury. Cosimo convinced him that many uses of money were 'fruitful', creating
value. By Lorenzo's time interest on merchant loans were not a problem, but thre
was no interest on Chruch deposits, and Church overdrafts were paid for by
overcharging the Church on goods sold to the Church through the merchant side of
the Bank. Further, the Bank acted as 'tax' collector and was paid a fee for
taking the risk, guaranteeing a certain return to the Church. it also handled
the tax as deposits and could lend against them.
Cosimo parted from the conservative Bardi family (whose bank had been broken
in the previous century, about 1350, by the default of Edward III, along with
the Peruzzi and the Acciaiuoli) and allied with the Ricci and Della Stufa
families, ambitious, able folk (both have chapels in San Lorenzo, the church of
quartiere San Giovanni, gonfalon Lion d' Oro, as do the Medici). The Medici bank
spread. By our time 1485 it had about 70 people in Florence, Rome, Venice,
Milan, Genoa, Ascona, Lyon, London, Bruges,and a corespondent in Luebeck,
Germany, on the Baltic (?) Sea. Cosimo kept tight control; the London agent
could purchase up to 500 pounds sterling in wool, could not engage in insurance
nor lend to royalty.
In Florence, banks lent money to landowners at harvest time. Apparently some
harvest workers were hired, and there might be hired carts and storage. This is
different from the feudal pattern of communal work for food.
Lorenzo's bank agents often were experts in fine arts and spotted things for
him -- books, paintings, scupture, jewelry, etc. He would make the final
choices. This was an extension of the committee system mentioned above.
Buona sera encore, cari collegi dell' ambasciata fiorentina!
Our new year begins March 25, with the Feast of the Annunciation, so be sure
to wish everyone "Auguri", Happy New Year!
Background on Heads of State and Trade
NEW for Thurs 3/13/03
These notes are rough. I hope they will serve as a background for our
embassy. I think it would be interesting to act as an embassy and gather as much
information as we can about trade conditions in the rest of the world from other
people at the Crossroads Faire.
We are interested broadly in other cultures, their customs, what they value,
and the possibilities of trade. Our own experience in Florentine culture and how
it differs from the feudal traditions of France, England and Germany, and
religious differences with the Ottoman Empire, have made us aware that an
appreciation of others' cultures increases our opportunities to understand them
as trading partners, and to enrich ourselves temporally and spiritually.
Broadly, we are interested in anything that changes our trading partners.
Specifically, news of Italian states, trade and wars; changes within the
Hanseatic League that we might improve our terms in the markets now controlled
by monopoly of the north; changes in trade along the Silk Road; and further news
of an ocean route to India, Cathaya, Java, or Cipangu. I have a purported copy
of a map of Toscanelli's, which he made in 1474 and sent a copy of to Columbus
in 1478.
International: Kings, Popes
Rome, Papal States: Pope Innocent VIII, just since 1484. Weak, indecisive,
controlled by his cardinals, who are mostly not Florentines. A relief from the
enemy Sixtus IV.
Milan: Ludovico ("il Moro") Sforza. Lodovico Sforza, 3rd Duke of that name.
Duke since his father Giangalleazzo died in 14__. Ludovico is intelligent,
treacherous, vicious; he is very fearful and secretive, and at times truly
insane. He is constantly involved in Italian intrigues and disorder all over
Italy. Milan is in a war with Venice; Florence is on the sidelines, hoping not
to be drawn in. A peace with Milan was signed about 3 years ago after a 2-3 year
war; we are recovering from the enormous expense. This trade mission is
important therefore.
Naples: Ferrante (Ferdinand) II, King of Sicily, King of Aragon, wed to
Isabella Queen of Castile and Leon. Currently in armed quarrel with his barons.
Florence wishes to remain neutral. Naples (and the South of Italy) is our major
supply of grain. Pope Innocent VIII tries to mediate, and seeks our aid.
Venice: Doge (yearly) War with Venice, wich sought our ally Ferrara.
concluded 1484; peace terms favorable to Florence but the war cost was enormous.
We are very anxious to recover trade.
Genoa: Doge (yearly) Declining fortunes since the fall of Constantinople
(1453). They call a Florentine when they need an excellent architect. Genoa is
still dangerous; Genoa took Sarsana from us in 1478.
Rome: Pope Innocent VIII, following Sixtus IV (Della Rovere, near Ligorno).
Florence: A rebellion in our city of Volterra was suppressed when Lorenzo de'
Medici sent Federigo da Montefeltro to punish it. There was a massacre, and many
people were exiled. Volterra is important for its extremely valuable alum mines,
essential in dyeing. Possible Venetian mischief: Alum is essential in dyeing,
and Venice has a large dyeing establishment, and would be happy to eliminate
Florence from the industry. Possible Papal mischief, but we doubt this. There
are alum mines at Tolto, near Civitavecchia and Rome, which broke the Venetian
monopoly on alum coming from the Byzantine Empire (since lost to us,
Constantinople, 1453).
Holy Roman Empire: Frederick III. The Austrians occupy the Netherlands. The
Fugger Bank, headquartered in Augsburg, serves the Holy Roman Empire; some
agents are in Bruges, Lyon, Rome, and other cities where Italian banks and
merchants operate.
Burgundy is now part of France; Charles the Good lost to Louis XI (Spider),
147_.
France: Charles VIII, a callow young man; since 1483, death of Louis XI
(Spider).
Holland: occupied by the Austrians; at odds with the Hanseatic League; handle
herring, French salt, Baltic grain (an alternative for Florence if Naples is
short).
Flanders & Brabant: returned to French after defeat of Charles the Bold
in 147(4?); Bruges is the compulsory Staple (port, tax, market, brokerage) of
the Hanseatic League; Florence, Venice, Genoa and others trade there as
outsiders.
England: Richard III, since 1483 . Lancaster has prevailed in troubled peace
for several years; Henry Tudor of York is on the Continent, raising an army. He
may cross this Spring. [Bosworth Field, August 1485]. The English war with
Bruges ended 1474, relieving pressure on trade. We are hopeful for a return of
fortunes. England supplies luxury quality wool, which is very lucrative to us
and to the Hanseatic Staple port of Bruges. We watch the English and Bruges
closely. Scotland: Alexander III.
Spain: Isabella of Castile & Leon (unified admin) and Ferdinand of Aragon
(separate admin) pursue the war against the Moors.
Portugal: King Joa~o. Concerned to remain independent of Spain. Explorations
down along the west coast of Africa, trading at Guinea there.
Sweden: Sten Sture (the Elder, as it will turn out) King since 1470 - Visby,
on the island of Gotland near Stockholm, is a member of the Hanseatic League
Norway and Denmark: Hans, just Hans, King since 1483. Bergen, member of
Hanseatic League: copper, iron, lumber, herring The Peace of Copenhagen, allowed
Holland to retain certain trading rights with the Hanseatic League and its port
at Bruges.
Poland: Kasimir Jagellon, King since 1447; dynastic family; Poland's nobility
elects its Kings.
Bohemia: Ladislas, son of K. Kasimir Jagellon of Poland, since 1471.
Religious unrest continues (since the previous century, with John Hus in power
for a while, later executed); Hussites resist Catholic power, threw a Catholic
mayor (of Prague?) out of a window to his death.
Hungary: Matthias Hunyadi "Corvinus" (crow), King since 1458, a strong
enlightened ruler; Budapest is very rich on Eastern trade with Minsk [White
Russia], Kiev [Ukraine]
Russia: Ivan III; extending his power by attacking Novgorod, eastern end of
the Hanseatic League; reducing its trade this year. The Italian Black Sea trade
has been closed by the Turks since the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
May we do our work well, and Florence prosper!
--Giovanni di Cantibori
Buona sera, tutti dell' abaciata Fiorentina!
Florentine government:
In addition to Kale's description of Florentine government in his webpage
Florence Carolingia, and my note of earlier this week, I add the following:
The population of the city is 30,000 to 50,000 people. Citizens are members
of guilds; about 6000 of them, out of about 14,500 males over 25 years of age.
They are eligible for election at 30; election is by lot.
The central government of the Commune di Fiorenza (City and its countryside,
about 3/4 of a million people) consists of a Signoria of the eight Priors and
the Podesta`. They are advised by two 'Colleges', the 16 Gonfaloniere of the
Companies (one from each gonfalon (ward), and the 12 buon' uomini ("good men").
The head of government is the Podesta`, a foreigner skilled in military matters
and government, who rules for a year at the pleasure of the Council.
Once the Signoria and the Colleges are in office they elect two legislative
assemblies, the Council of the People (300 citizens, including the Signoria, the
Councils, and some other officials) and the Council of the Commune (200). They
sit for four-month terms. A new Signoria is elected every two months. A proposed
law is introduced by the Signoria, and becomes law when it passes both Councils
by two-thirds majorities. Beans are used as tokens: A white bean for 'no', a
black bean for 'yes'.
Corrections to misgovernment were made by sounding an alarm bell; the
gonfalons would assemble and march to the Piazza della Signoria. A commision
(balia) would be formed which would made decisions and edicts to correct the
situation.
The elections are controlled by the prominent families in each gonfalon;
selected names are put into a bag and kept in the church of the gonfalon. The
bags are brought to the Signoria, where the Coucil for Elections, the
Accoppiati, review the names and reject those who are currently ineligible by
reason of being in arrears on taxes, or recent service in government, or close
relative to someone currently serving, or, well, not being a Medici adherent.
Since party strife in Florence frequently took the forms of riots,
assassinations, property seizures an condemnation to exile or death, this last
condition is not so absolutely intolerable. No violent party strife under Medici
rule, except for the occasional assassination attempt. Typically, out of 250
names in the bags they will approve about 30 for the "election" process. The
election is random selection from the bag, not a vote.
Some offices are for two months only. There is overlapping service, which
provides some continuity, but government changes too rapidly for long adherence
to a policy.
This is simple in comparison to the Venetian constitution.
-- Giovanni di Cantubouri
Buona sera, encore, gentili!
Corrections and additions
Recent history:
Not only was a Visconti (Giovanni Maria) assassinated, in 1447 , but also
Giangaleazzo Sforza, father of the current despot, in 1476, two years before the
Pazzi Conspiracy, engineered by Pope Sixtus IV, Francesco Della Rovere of
Liguria ( an area near Genoa and troubled by Florence) and his nephew Rafaello
Riario, with the Pazzi of Florence as their tools. The assassin of Giuliano de'
Medici was Bernardo Bertini, who escaped to Istanbul. Lorenzo de' Medici had
enough influence with the Sultan to have Bertini returned to Florence, where he
was tried and executed. His epitaph, "Here am I a traitor and a murderer in
church" written by Lorenzo de' Medici.
Kings:
Ottoman Empire:
Beyazid II, since 1479; controls Turkey, Greece, Macedonia, Bosnia,
Herzegovinia, Serbia, Wallachia (defeated Vlad the Impaler), Romania, Bulgaria.
He does NOT control Syria, Iraq, Persia, Lebanon, Palestine, or North Africa.
The Ottoman empire has a long border with Hungary and the Holy Roman Empire.
He is facing conflicts the Mamluk Empire in Egypt and Syria; he needs peace with
the West. Beyazid II has ratified the treaty of 1479 with Venice and a five-year
peace with Hungary (both in 1483). He has withdrawn from Otranto on the heel of
Italy, but still holds Scutari in the Adriatic, formerly Venetian.
30 years of war and expansion by his father Mehmet II has strained the
finances (heavy taxes, debased currency), the polity (seized private property)
and the army (it refused to fight on his next to last campaign).
1451 -- 1479: Mehmet II, conqueror of Constantinople (now Istanbul). The
Ottoman Empire expanded from Turkey to its present borders.
-- Giovanni di Cantibuori
Flor Embassy Letters
A brief version of this will arrive at the Embassy; this is the background
version.
Al' ambasciata di Fiorenze, Crossroads Faire, nella Ciampagnia, Francia
In addition to your excellent attention to all matters concerning the Commune
di Firenze, please attend to news about these matters.
Recently The King of Hungary Matthias Hunyadi "Corvinus" attacked the
Austrians. This affects trade, since Austria occupies Holland (which is outside
the Hanseatic League but strong enough to gain concessions from the League). Any
information how these developments affect trade and banking would be
appreciated. HRE Frederich III will certainly draw on the Fugger Bank for this
war. Ascertain the willingness of the Fugger Bank to invest in trade generally,
but not our wool nor silk, in order to ascertain its strength.
Last year, the King of Portugal Joa~o II declined to fund Cristoforo Columbo
on his project of ships provisioned for a year to sail West in search of the
Indies. He continues to seek funding. The settling of various wars, such as
England and Bruges, England and France, may free investment for such a project.
With the expansion of Milan, Florence's opportunities for trade in spices,
silks, and gems from the East are threatened. The possibility of joint
investment in such a venture should be explored cautiously (after the recent war
we are not in a position ot fully outfit such a venture, nor to keep the
advantage it would confer from the power of Portugal, Spain, or Naples, or
perhaps the Ottoman. But other involvements with European trade might keep
certain potential partners. Information about Westward navigation and geography
is wanted. Also, advance knowledge of sea routes beyond Africa are important;
the Portuguese are leading in this. Arab powers have traveled the *East* coast
of Africa for generations, and possibly to India. What news?
The consolidation of France and Burgundy may occupy Charles VIII's ministers,
and the English war his nobles and bankers (-- pray we are not among them!). Yet
he may begin to tax merchants, especially foreigners. This Faire and the cycle
of Faires, the ports of the south, Strasbourg, Marseilles are of interest. What
changes?
North Africa and the Ottoman concern us. Although the new Sultan, Beyazid II
has not followed the policy of his father Mehmet II (thirty years of war and
expansion, which weakened the Empire's finances and political structure), and
although he has made a treaty of five years' peace with Hungary, and ratified
the treaty of peace with Venice, a likely clash with the Mamluks of Egypt and
Syria coupled with growing Ottoman sea power increases our risk and limits our
trade. What changes, perhaps due to the plans of Beyazid II for defense or
opportunity, do we hear of?
Will Spain consolidate into one government under Ferdinand and Isabella?
After the war with the Moors, will they project power into middle and Northern
Italy from Ferdinand's Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily, as HRE Frederick II tried,
200 years ago?
With the very best wishes for your health and safety,
and with the greatest of hopes for a successful and profitable Ambasciata,
I remain,
Lorenzo
Buona sera, tutti!
New Years' Day is March 25, Feast of the Annunciation
Easter, a movable feast, March-April
St John Baptist (San Giovanni Battista), Feast of: June 24 huge processions,
floats and shos by guilds
Feast of San Lorenzo, August 10 -- well, you know, Lorenzo di' Medici, what a
guy! City-wide celebration.
Christmas, Dec. 25 Saints' days, weekly; your saint's name day (instead of your birthday)
Scegli la pagina ……………VAI ALL'INDICE GENERALE Medici Bank Background
Kings and Trade Background
Florentine Government and Elections
Corrections to recent history, and Kings
Letter from Lorenzo to Florentine Embassy
Major holidays in Florence
Feast of St. Stephen, Dec 26 (give to the poor)