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CLEMENT VII

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 486 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CLEMENT VII  . (Giulio de' Medici), pope from 1523 to 1534, was the son of Giuliano de' Medici, assassinated in the conspiracy of the Pazzi at Florence, and of a certain Fioretta, daughter of Antonia . Being
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left an
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orphan he was taken into his own house by Lorenzo the Magnificent and educated with his sons . In 1494 Giulio went with them into exile; but, on Giovanni's restoration to power, returned to Florence, of which he was made archbishop by his cousin Pope Leo X., a
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special
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dispensation being granted on account of his illegitimate birth, followed by a formal declaration of the fact that his parents had been secretly married and that he was therefore legitimate . On the 23rd of September 1513 the pope conferred on him the title of cardinal and made him legate at Bologna . During the reign of the pleasure-loving Leo, Cardinal Giulio had practically the whole papal government in his hands and displayed all the qualities of a good
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administrator; and when, on the
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death of Adrian VI . —whose election he had done most to secure—he was chosen pope (Nov . 18, 1523), his accession was hailed as the dawn of a happier era . It soon became clear, however, that the qualities which had made Clement an excellent second in command were not equal to the exigencies of supreme power at a time of
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peculiar peril and difficulty . Though
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free from the grosser vices of his predecessors, a man of taste, and economical without being avaricious, Clement VII. was essentially a man of narrow outlook and interests . He failed to understand the
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great spiritual
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movement which was convulsing the Church; and instead of bending his mind to the problem of the Reformation, he from the first subordinated the cause of Catholicism and of the
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world to his interests as an
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Italian prince and a Medici . Even in these purely secular affairs, moreover, his timidity and indecision prevented him from pursuing a consistent policy; and his
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ill fortune, or his lack of
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judgment, placed him, as long as he had the power of choice, ever on the losing side .

Clement's accession at once brought about a

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political change in favour of France; yet he was unable to take a strong
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line, and wavered between the emperor and Francis I., concluding a treaty of
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alliance with the French king, and then, when the crushing defeat of Pavia had shown him his mistake, making his peace with Charles (
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April 1, 1525), only to break it again by countenancing Girolamo Morone's
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League of Freedom, of which the aim was to assert the independence of Italy from
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foreign powers . On the betrayal of this conspiracy Clement made a fresh submission to the emperor, only to follow this, a
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year later, by the
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Holy League of
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Cognac with Francis I . (May 22, 1526) . Then followed the imperial invasion of Italy and Bourbon's
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sack of Rome (May 1527) which ended the Augustan age of the papal city in a horror of fire and
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blood . The pope himself was besieged in the castle of St Angelo, compelled on the 6th of
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June to ransom himself with a payment of 400,000 scudi, and kept in confinement until, on the 26th of November, he accepted the emperor's terms, which besides
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money payments included the promise to convene a general council to
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deal with Lutheranism . On the 6th of December Clement escaped, before the day fixed for his liberation, to Orvieto, and at once set to
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work to establish peace . After the signature of the treaty of
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Cambrai on the 3rd of August 1529 Charles met Clement at Bologna and received from him the imperial
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crown and the iron crown of
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Lombardy . The pope was now restored to the greater
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part of his temporal power; but for some years it was exercised in subservience to the emperor . During this period Clement was mainly occupied in urging Charles to arrest the progress of the Reformation in Germany and in efforts to elude the emperor's demand for a general council, which Clement feared lest the question of the mode of his election and his
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legitimacy should be raised . It was due to his dependence on Charles V., rather than to any conscientious scruples, that Clement evaded Henry VIII.'s demand for the
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nullification of his
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marriage with Catherine of Aragon, and so brought about'the breach between England and Rome . Some time before his death, however, the dynastic interests of his
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family led him once mcre to a rapprochement with France . On the 9th of June 1531 an agreement was signed for the marriage of Henry of Orleans with Catherine de' Medici; but it was not till
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October 1533 that Clement met Francis at
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Marseilles, the
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wedding being celebrated on the 27th .

Before, however, the new political alliance, thus cemented, could take effect, Clement died, on the 25th of September 1534 . See E . Casanova, Lettere di Carlo V. a Clemente VII . (Florence, 1893) ;

Hugo Lammer, Monumenta Vaticana, &c . (
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Freiburg, 1861) ; P . Balan, Monumenta saeculi X VI. hist. illastr . (
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Innsbruck, 1885) ; ib . Mon . Reform . Luther (Regensburg, 1884) ; Stefan Ehses, Rom . Dokum. z . Gesch. der Ehescheidung Heinrichs VIII .

(

Paderborn, 1893) ;
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Calendar of State Papers (
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London, 1869, &c.) ; J . J . I. von Dellinger, Beitrage zur politischen, kirchlichen and Kulturgeschichte (3 vols., Vienna, 1882); F . Guicciardini, Istoria d'Italia; L. von Ranke, Die romischen Papste in den letzten vier Jahrhunderten, and Deutsche Gesch. im Zeitalter der Reformation; W . Hellwig, Die politischen Beziehungen Clement's VII. zu Karl V., 1526 (
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Leipzig, 1889) ; H . Baumgarten, Gesch . Karls V . (
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Stuttgart, 1888) ; F . Gregorovius, Geschichte der Stadt Rom, vol. viii. p . 414 (2nd ed., 1874) ; P . Balan, Clemente VII. e l' Italia de' suoi tempi (Milan, 1887) ; E . Armstrong, Charles the Fifth (2 vols., London, 1902) ; M .

Creighton, Hist. of the Papacy during the Period of the Reformation (London, 1882); and H . M . Vaughan, The Medici Popes (1908) . Further references will be found in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie, s . Clemens VII . See also Cambridge
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Modern
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History, vol. ii.
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chap. i. and bibliography . (W . A .

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