The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 08 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 559 pages of information about The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 08.

The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 08 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 559 pages of information about The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 08.

Having thus humbled the Colonni, he only waited an opportunity for destroying the Orsini.  It was not long before one offered, of which he did not fail to avail himself.  The Orsini, perceiving too late that the power of the Duke and the Church must be established upon their ruin, called a council of their friends at Magione, in Perugia, to concert measures of prevention.  The consequence of their deliberations was the revolt of Urbino, the disturbances of Romagna, and the infinite dangers which threatened the Duke on every side, and which he finally surmounted by the aid of the French.  His affairs once reestablished, he grew weary of relying on France and other foreign allies, and he resolved for the future to rely alone on artifice and dissimulation—­a course in which he so well succeeded that the Orsini were reconciled to him through the intervention of Signor Paolo, whom he had gained over to his interests by all manner of rich presents and friendly offices.  And this man, being deceived himself, so far prevailed on the credulity of the rest that they attended the Duke at an interview at Sinigaglia, where they were all put to death.  Having thus exterminated the chiefs, and converted their partisans into his friends, the Duke laid the solid foundations of his power.  He made himself master of all Romagna and the duchy of Urbino, and gained the affection of the inhabitants—­particularly the former—­by giving them a prospect of the advantages they might hope to enjoy from his government.  As this latter circumstance is remarkable and worthy of imitation, I cannot suffer it to pass unnoticed.

After the Duke had possessed himself of Romagna, he found it had been governed by a number of petty princes, more addicted to the spoliation than the government of their subjects, and whose political weakness rather served to create popular disturbances than to secure the blessings of peace.  The country was infested with robbers, torn by factions, and a prey to all the horrors of civil commotions.  He found that, to establish tranquillity, order, and obedience, a vigorous government was necessary.  With this view, he appointed Ramiro d’Orco governor, a cruel but active man, to whom he gave the greatest latitude of power.  He very soon appeased the disturbances, united all parties, and acquired the renown of restoring the whole country to peace.

The Duke soon deemed it no longer necessary to continue so rigorous and odious a system.  He therefore erected in the midst of the province a court of civil judicature, with a worthy and upright magistrate to preside over it, where every city had its respective advocate.  He was aware that the severities of Ramiro had excited some hatred against him, and resolved to clear himself from all reproach in the minds of the people, and to gain their affection by showing them that the cruelties which had been committed did not originate with him, but solely in the ferocious disposition of his minister.  Taking advantage of the discontent, he caused Ramiro to be massacred one morning in the market-place, and his body exposed upon a gibbet, with a cutlass near it stained with blood.  The horror of this spectacle satisfied the resentment of the people and petrified them at once with terror and astonishment.

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The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 08 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.