Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Witnesses Against Marina Gonzalez: February 1494

At least ten statements from witnesses are included, whole or in part in 'Document 5' of Lu Ann Homza's The Spanish Inquisition. They answer the questions as prepared and presented by defense lawyer, Diego Tellez throughout February, 1494. In January, the chief prosecutor had called witnesses and they had been questioned. One of these was Marina Gonzalez' husband, Francisco de Toledo, spice merchant. Another witness, a 'good friend' of his, Pedro de Teva swore she had refused to eat pork even after her husband told her to. Another was a visitor at their house, when formerly the couple were living in Almagro, a couple years before who testified that Marina did no work on Saturday, but then was 'working linen' on Sunday.

After nearly two months of this, the defense attorney asked a 'reverend lord inquisitor' for the proof lobbied by the prosecution to be published. This request, on February 26, 1494 shows how unsure that the defense was as to any outcome of the case. We also have no record, as our translator and editor points out, if the prosecutor even had a sworn witness notarized in his deposition, accusing Marina Gonzalez of the crime of silent-conversion away from the Catholic Church. But to find out that at this late stage, after the witnesses had interrogated for and against, the defense lawyer had to ask for a published record of proof, seems so out of place. No, this was how they did it.

"... reverend lord inquisitor Fernando Rodriguez del Barco was in the hearing, and defense lawyer Diego Tellez appeared before him and requested the publication of the proof offered in this trial. His reverence ordered the publication of the witnesses' statements that were presented by both parties, and ordered that both parties be given a copy and transcript, with a limit of nine days in which to respond, etc." [p. 39]

When her husband was called to testify he gave a mostly positive picture of her life and actions.
"Francisco de Toledo, spice merchant, resident of Ciudad Real, sworn witness, under charge of the oath he had sworn, said that after her reconciliation, Marina Gonzalez, his wife, sometimes refused to eat pork when they had it. And because this witness scolded her for not eating it, she certainly only stopped eating out of concern for her health, not on account of any religious ceremony. She ate everything that was cooked in the house, and even ate pork sometimes."[pp 37-8]
 But he said he warned her that she would have to 'answer to God and the world' for leaving the house on Saturday to do errands, that 'she was thumbing her nose at God and the world'.

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notes from Document 5, pp 37-39 in The Spanish Inquisition 1478-1614: An Anthology of Sources, edited and translated by Lu Ann Homza, Indianapolis, Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. 2006

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Milan Had Reasons For A French Invasion

Motives never seem scarce for people. All over. There are the stated motives and goals and then the ones they actually believe or use. There is God and country, faith and family or ethos, or all the above, as well as for honor and justice and property or wealth. So it was a mix of motives that led people when the French army and their king marched to Italy. Not just the French, but the Italians of all the different cities, with all their alliances and patronage and commercial links to fend for, defend and maybe even benefit from. This can only be a barest of outline, as there are far too many sources and commentaries about such a watershed event, for Italy and for France, in those times. For us, it is the consequences of these disruptions that would have much greater impact. The tales of what would follow, the fallout, would reverberate and take on aspects of their own. But this adventure over the Alps is what set Europe astir in ways that it would not settle for centuries.

Modern takes tend to revolve around Milan as the instigator, the one who pulled the trigger, so to speak that gave impetus for the young French King to take his gigantic army first into Italy, and then down the length of the whole peninsula. Charles VIII didn't come to conquer the whole place, though he well could have, but to reassert an old claim as King of Naples and maybe teach the new pope a lesson. After he was done, if he got the right support, maybe he might go on a further crusade to retake Jerusalem. But the Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza, called 'il Moro' from his supposedly darker skin had advised, it is told, to the king he might not get a better chance, that the time was right in early 1494. But what motive did Sforza have?

The Duke of Milan, technically was merely acting as regent and had not been crowned duke in name since his brother died. Ludovico, 'il Moro' was taking care of things in Milan and her lands and protections, instead of his nephew, the rightful heir. These occupations were fine as far as this young, but now grown up, Gian Galeazzo thought (that very different younger brother of Caterina Sforza), and he would stay at the castle near Pavia. Not being bothered by affairs of state, for him, meant riding and hunting and avoiding angering his young wife. They had three children together, but his young wife, Isabella of Aragon was not happy, and seemed to want a way out.

Isabella was the granddaughter of the King of Naples, Ferrante who died, January 1494. Prior to this she had seen her husband's uncle, the regent Ludovico groom his own son for the dukedom and marry him off to another d'Este daughter, while her own husband Gian Galeazzo spent his hours with more favorite pastimes. In fact, Ludovico had married his son to the sister of his own wife, Beatrice d'Este, the opinionated and strong-willed daughter of Ercole d'Este, the duke of Ferrara. Those four, the two d'Este daughters and 'il Moro' and his son easily outshone her and her husband who was supposed to be duke.

Isabella wrote home to Naples and complained at length. But there was little her father or his father the King could do despite their relations in Spain. When the King died January 1494, her father Alfonso became king but he had no money and little more than promises of friendship with Rome and the Borja pope. By early 1494, with the new pope Alexander VI suddenly finding his Rome cool and even prickly in it's behavior toward him and 'his Spanish ways', Alfonso began hearing gossip of the French king amassing an army.

In one way, Ludovico was betting that with Naples taken by a friendly French king, that alliance could be renewed and founded on something more solid than the marriage forged years before between his nephew and Isabella of Aragon. The Kingdom of Naples had been poor and weak for some time. But the death of Ferrante and the accession of the Borja pope, signalled to many in Italy and beyond that the Spanish were making their move after building their network for decades. Venice and Florence could agree more quickly, it was thought, to French control of Naples, and Ludovico saw a way this could happen. Guicciardini seems to think this was the plan all along. Macchiavelli makes the case in stronger terms, foretelling the impending doom of Italy with 'il Moro' being the catalyst. Wanting to save Italy from Spain, Ludovico could excite the young French king of the glorious honors waiting for him in Naples, as well as the fruits of a long term Franco-Milanese alliance.

In these years, Leonardo da Vinci had found patronage with Ludovico Sforza, generating machines and wonders for festivals, holidays, parties and parades. He had spent a lot of time going back and forth between the Milanese and French courts delighting one and then the other. He would see all of these changes at close range. It would be interesting to know what he thought, if anything about them.

Of course there were still other points of view, in the prelude, in the middle of the 'action', and in the results.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Ukraine and Venezuela on the edge; what's a T-bill; some music

The huge demonstrations full of violence and conflict in the center of Kiev have gone on for days until last night, a kind of cease-fire and temporary understanding was accepted, leaving this Friday full of questions and a more subdued mood. Pictures and video, commentary are all over the internet.

Also very troubling is the state of turmoil that Venezuela suffers in this week. The photos in the link will bring things generally to date as of yesterday. But last night and today were supposed to be worse in ominous ways.

In these times, a ten-year T-bill: what's it for and what it shows, gets explained in under six minutes, comically from marketplace.

February is Black History Month. February 20, 1969, Miles Davis and his group recorded a couple songs. Early Minor and The Ghetto Walk (which now reminds me is a lot like Pharoah's Dance). A couple days before, this band had recorded what is now known as the classic album, In A Silent Way. One of the very first times Miles mostly used electric instruments in the studio. Mostly that is a couple electric keyboards, guitar and bass. But what a group! Wayne Shorter, Chick Corea, John McLaughlin, Dave Holland, Tony Williams. Six months later he would have a bigger band and begin recording the famous Bitches Brew. Early Minor in particular is a lot like the sound of the later record.

more music? Something completely different, from the last decade, the somehow seasonally appropriate Remote Controller, and this one for Carnival Kuroi Orufe which is on a playlist if you want even more Shiina Ringo

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

A Birthday; Money Needed To Dredge Rialto: February 19, 1517

Today is the birthday of Nicholaus Copernicus, in 1473. His father, a Krakow merchant helped negotiate a settlement for the famed Polish King, Kasimir Jagiello, keeping this part of Prussia, along the Vistula river, in Polish hands, rather than go over to the Teutonic Order of those times. This settlement, the second peace of Torun/Thorn happened in 1466.

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There were several increases in the number of Venetian officials charged with keeping the flows of streams in the city clear of debris, starting in 1501. Our Editors tell us the appointments can be traced to at least 1415, but in 1501, three officials provedadori were named to the Magistrato all' Acque, and in 1505 a committee was appointed to aid the three in charge. They were not paid positions but specifically were entrusted with keeping silt from building up in, and that no one interfered with, the multitude of streams that carried all traffic and sewage, in every part of the city. The magistrate offices still exist and are carried out to this day, to a greater or less degree. The history of the modern plans to build a protective barrier around the lagoon - a huge unprecedented effort that is beset by all sorts of challenges - is just the kind of thing such a magistrate would incline toward.
On February 19, 1517, Sanudo tell us, three such provedadori came before the College asking for funds to dredge the Rialto, a massive undertaking. A machine had been built to do this but more money was needed. [p. 85]

notes here from 'our editors' from Venice, Cita Excellentissima, Selection from the Renaissance Diaries of Marin Sanudo translated by Linda L Carroll,  editors: Patricia H LaBalme and Laura Sanguineti White, published by Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008

Current List of Topics: A Back and Forward Look

To continue with the theme of housekeeping, a look at stories started, finished, promised here and those left still in suspense, is in order. A brief ammendable listicle or table of contents follows. This is by no means complete and does not list topics on art, architecture or the many selections from Marin Sanudo, Geoffrey Chaucer, or Francois Rabelais. TBC means 'to be continued'.

"Peasant Fires" review/summary: November 2012 to October 2013

The Pazzi Conspiracy: A Familial Conflict in Italy: November 2012 and November 2013

War of Ferrara: An Italian Conflict: October 2012 and October-November 2013

Columbus Returns: February to May 2013
Second Voyage of Columbus: May 2013: TBC

Burckhardt and Shepherd on Poggio, Nobility: December 2012: TBC

Life and Times of Poggio Bracciolini:

The History of Italy of Francesco Guicciardini: review, summaries, excerpts, analysis

Advancing Credit: A Means for Venice, Genoa, French Markets, the de'Medici of Florence and the Borja in Rome: October 2012 and May, December 2013 and January 2014: TBC

Nahuatl Remembrances: Some Mesoamerican Perspective: February 2013 to December 2013: TBC

Cortes Goes to Yucatan: summary: February 2013 to April 2013

Cortes Advances On Mainland: summary, discussion: March 2013 to December 2013

Tales of Bernal Diaz: summary, discussion: February 2013 to November 2013: TBC

"Malintzin's Choices": summary/review: September to November 2013: TBC

Modern Interpretations/Gleanings of Meso-American Conquest: February to December 2013: TBC

Stories From the Spanish Inquisition: selections: February 2013 to February 2014

The Life of Celestina: A Bawdy Spanish Play

The Life of Lorenzo de Tormas

Luther and Lutheranism in Europe: February, April 2013: TBC

Some Interps and Effects of the Devotio Moderno:

Life and Times of Popes Sixtus IV, Innocent III, Alexander VI, Julius II, Leo X

Life and Times of HREmperors Frederick III, Maximilian I, Charles V

French, English, Spanish Kings

Dutch Confederate Alliances: Trade Routes and Goods

Education In Italy, England, German lands and Holland

Growth of Humanists: Lives and Times of Colet, Erasmus, More etc.

The Book of the Courtier: review, discussion

Nicolo Macchiavelli: Public Servant, Playwright

Life and Times of Nicholaus Copernicus

The Monasteries, Convents and Some Divisions in Faith

Life and Times of Caterina Sforza: "The Tigress of Forli": a review October 2013 to January 2014: TBC

Life and Times of Felicia della Rovere: "The Pope's Daughter": review January 2014: TBC

Friar Savonarola: Fire of Faith In The Balance

Books, Science, Perspective in Art: Global Changes


Again, this is a quick list of some of the areas to look at initially here, each with much of their own internal topics to expand on. It should take years and the list will grow.



Cardinem Fecit

As the months and years pile up here, this blog has attempted to highlight almost as many stories, places, times and personalities as possible that inhabited the european renaissance world in the brief period 1476-1526. This era was chosen as subject matter mostly because of its many similarities with our own period in the west of 1976- 2026. The similarities seem to be both macro- - thus affecting and effecting large masses or movements of people - and micro, as related to ceremony, culture, and even internal, or pychological motives, even 'feelings'.

However any of these are defined, the similarities we have with those in the past - this much must be assumed - show us ourselves. But even with these and especially, the wide gaps in our learning - theirs about them and ours about us - these too can also point out both. The stark differences on the larger scale of people, but also sometimes the weaknesses that we all share. Definitions and direct comparisons will have to come at some other time, while hinted at previously. For now, they must be set aside, as a bit of housekeeping is in order.

A way of describing what is here then is a collection of edits. Such a drawing together, this collecting of the disparate threads, under a single heading - even without giving hint to the multitudes that lay beyond, the pages and pages of interlocking story and many rises and falls of people, set out in years- could simply be here to call this a hinge. This post is a hinge. In latin that is, cardo; this post then becomes Cardinem Fecit, 'a hinge made'.

Many stories and texts and links offered, here, by way of introduction, analysis, summary or review are left suspended as more stories and texts and contexts come into view, as the days and months and years go by. Just as it is in our times and in real life. Stories of people or cities, conflicts, disasters, crime and holidays fill our news columns, as well as the pages of someone like Marin Sanudo. But hopefully, it is only the form of presentation that now and then, at times mimics that of such a 'diarist' like him. What this blog is attempting is something a bit different than daily logs of news as it reached Venice.

The motive here is comparative, the method is parallel. But as we moderns look at the world differently than Venetians or Spaniards of those days would, as Italians or the French would, so those in those days wanted to see what is known, as well. This was a new idea to many: to find out what is known, internally and externally, macro- and microsopically. This basic idea was huge in Europe then and made possible by the proliferation of books and the printing press. Today, the analogy is the 'digital revolution' and the internet. Of course, this simple observation is not new as many have made it before. Much has changed between now and then, but much has remained the same.

Looking at as many topics and stories, persons and places, as possible of those times, it is the similarities with us that are most common. But when there are differences, they are stark and far-reaching. Just a few examples makes the point.

The Catholic Church, in all its many forms was the final arbiter of justice and legal jurisprudence then. State governments, in most instances simply did not have the power or resources to do that, except when accomplished by Imperial, Kingly or Princely fiat. An idea that seemed both old and new to them, and then, used usually with religious confirmation or on advice from trusted clergy. Kings, Presidents, Parliaments and Courts seldom use religious advice or sanction now, of course. Instead, turns of phrase and simple declarations of 'religious understanding' are repeated in public pronouncements, as a kind of frame seemingly for public acceptance. Phrases like 'under God', 'God save', 'God Bless America', or 'so solemnly swear.'

In the arena of Security then, the advance of the cannon and the smaller arquebus as used by Turkish sultan and French king or a mercenary-proseletizer like Cortes, was to have epoch changing effects. A new form of defense became necessary that would change the scope and importance of the state itself, for centuries. In our times, the advance of the airplane, the drone and the terrorist bomb, has had many of the same effects.

In Venice, Genoa, and with a few other familial loan-concerns, new forms of creating and building credit were being explored, expanded, refined and yes, distributed all over Europe. Today, the extensions of these methods - of creating and spreading credit-wealth where it had not been before - have taken hold of all markets in the entire world. Everyone's future now is married to these global interests. Whether states, religions or people like the changes and advances, or not.

These basic ideas inform the selection of all the prior and future postings here. Both the similarities and the differences between them and us, now and then are, sometimes explicitly referred to and also, casually left unsaid. The intent and the method is not to form conclusions or opinions, but only to inform, showing also a  way toward seeing transparency of methods, so the reader can do one's own research. Primary sources are highly prized and most frequently used here, but modern scolarship also inevitably plays a large role in presentation, translation, discussion. We cannot live in any age but our own and with it comes the prejudices, linguistic and cultural biases and methods that surround us now. Hopefully we are lucky looking again to the future.

The multitude of advances in the means of uncovering and learning history that have been made in the 20th century, that in so many ways utilize so many techniques in understanding our past, give us much to do and look at. If only to sift thru and thereby try to understand ourselves. It is up to humanity to thus be able, hopefully as a whole, to provide a plain viewing platform for a digital world.


Monday, February 17, 2014

Calendar Jumble: February

The formal and official ceremony confirming the wedding of  Lucrezia, the daughter of the second Borja pope Alexander VI, occured six months before the wedding, February 12, 1493. Chris Hibbert gives a painterly description that I assume comes mostly from Johann Burchard, the pope's Master of Ceremonies.

The first and second weeks of February found several witnesses being called and questioned before the inquisition in the 1494 case of Marina Gonzalez of Ciudad Real. Pages of their testimony answering the questions lain out here, can be found in Lu Ann Homza'a amazing collection of documents showing many particulars and their extensions, The Spanish Inquisition.

By 1495, the French king had  left Rome and gone south to assume his claimed throne in Naples. His huge army was eating much of the stores and wasting fields and towns throughout Italy. Where to house his thousands of soldiers and their attendants, and how to feed them all became the problem that beset towns up and down the peninsula all year.

It was in February 1496 that Caterina Sforza began purchasing huge stocks of flour and one of salt to feed the poor and help preserve meat in Forli. A great famine had struck that winter, as few crops made it to harvest and then to the small towns after so much devastation the year before. [p. 189] Elizabeth Lev, in her bio of Caterina Sforza tells us this was the winter when syphillis, 'the French disease', first came to Italy and to Forli. [p. 188] Of course, they had brought that with them as well when they crossed the Alps the previous September. Or, so we are told. The doctors could find nothing that lessened it's symptoms.

Last year's jumble.

newsbrief mid-feb14

For nearly two weeks, news in the west has been overtaken by two stories. The Winter Olympics this year in Sochi, Russia is a big one, and the extreme weather witnessed all over the globe has localities floundering.

The Olympics have been a bit more wild than usual this year. At first blush it seemed a jarring series of social media faux pas of catastrophic proportions. This gave way to other controversies over security and, even, safety concerns. But after a week, most everyone just got on with the games. Holland and Norway seem to be doing well.
Another terrible blast furnace of a summer in Australia sends many for cover there and the drought in California sets records there in February. Two weeks of cold and several returning storms hit not just the US, but assailed north Europe with 'millenial flooding' there, as huge snowstorms shock the American south. Car drivers in North Carolina and Georgia actually had accumulated snow that left them ill-prepared in daily commutes. Flooding all over Britain makes transport and living uneasy. But volcanoes in Indonesia have been causing a great deal of havoc, too.

Wars and conflict continue to ravage the Central African Republic, Syria, demonstrations and chaos in Egypt, Libya, Venezuela. There is political intrigue in Turkey, Italy.

For reasons unknown, Republican leadership in both the US House and Senate last week had decided to go along with simply raising the debt limit without a fuss. The first time they have agreed to do that since Bush was president. The purpose of having a debt limit was to make the representatives pause and perhaps reflect on the increasing size of debt that the US agrees to accept, knowing that it and the interest must be paid at some point. But why the Republicn leadership gave up what they have been using as a bargaining chip, seems mostly a rebuke to the extreme wing of that party. They are the members complaining most about raising the debt ceiling. There is still the matter of some two million unemployment insurance checks that have yet to be renewed, paid for, or sent out this year. And that would be going to help those people still looking for work, many in the members' own districts and states.

Found an interactive map that shows energy production across the US. Zoom in and find out what's near you.

UPDATE: Thr very nex day, February 18, protests and demonstrations in Thailand and especially, Kiev, Ukraine become violent.

Friday, February 7, 2014

Sanudo Diaries: February 6, 1520; campo Santa Maria Formosa

In Venice there was a collapse of a viewing stand and several people were maimed and killed. A festival was planned for the 5th of February in the campo Santa Maria Formosa to include a chase and other entertainments. Sanudo included this humbling account the day after.

Sanudo Diaries: February 6, 1520: (28:239); "By chance a large stand placed off to one side collapsed. Many people were underneath it: seven were killed outright. Others were on it, and some were twisted, some were injured, and it was a horrible experience to see brains dashed out on the ground ... and pieces of bodies awful to behold.... and so the festa ended. The stand was built on barrels without boards being affixed to the top."

Fantastic seven minute video looking at this campo in the modern-day and comparing it's layout, uses and durability to a few others in the world. The church of Santa Maria Formosa itself is a wonder of the Renaissance. Designed and built by Mauro Codussi (begun 1492), it was based on the simplest of greek  models. A centralized plan that extended the arms of the nave, and with the internal space thus increased, the overall effect is almost that of a square inside. After many other designs and buildings in his carrer, Codussi reaches a mature efficiency in execution and utilization of space here. In materials it was merely stone and plaster. Though the church intrudes into the campo - as seen in the video by the rounded off-yellow apses - this was a wealthy church and neighborhood in Codussi's day and could well afford such harmonization within and without.

Architectural notes plucked from Richard Goy: Venice the City and its Architecture;  Phaidon Press Ltd, Hong Kong, 1997
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All quotes as Sanudo Diaries from Venice, Cita Excellentissima, Selection from the Renaissance Diaries of Marin Sanudo translated by Linda L Carroll,  editors: Patricia H LaBalme and Laura Sanguineti White, published by Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

some news 5feb14

Kids in Brazil flash mob shopping malls - called rolezinhos - and shut them down with their antics involving music, dancing...

Protesting journalists cry out over the arrest and detainment of ten AlJazeera journalists in Egypt this week.

What will Glenn Greenwald do in 2014? He's contributing with NBC to tell some stories on Anonymous UK today.

Today is William S Burroughs 100th birthday, local KCUR NPR reporter Frank Morris had a piece on him and his chosen midwest town of retirement, 5 min audio

Fantastic walk around Istanbul with native dissident Orhan Pamuk in nytimes mag, Sunday

Following Michael Beschloss on twitter @BeschlossDC who posts several photos of famous people, daily I'm often surprised by what he finds. Oftentimes it is 20th century filmstars and last week there were many from early sixties, Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable, Joe DiMaggio, The Beatles, the Kennedy and LBJ White House, cityscapes, etc.  Here's one from 95 years ago today, when Charlie Chaplin and a number of other stars of the day, officially opened their own studio:




The Congressional Budget Office gave an update on its projections of the effects following implentation of the Affordable Care Act, the massive health care exchange program, commonly known as Obamacare. The CBO is known for being non-partisan and is generally accepted by both US political parties as being 'neutral'. The rightward leaning press began claiming yesterday that the update proved 'for a fact' that the ACA would push jobs out of the economy, and later 'kill' two, then three, then millions of jobs. The left leaning press began calling foul on this characterization. So I went looking and found the update, here.
Reading only the first 2.5 pages (at most) of this single section, I felt I had enough info to counter the claims I was seeing from Reps and Senators on the right. It was that obvious to me, the kind of spin they were putting on this ball. The effect, the CBO says is that it will likely give workers more options, rather than less. Not surprised, I replied to a number of congressmen directly, to their tweets supplied by @LawMDF. Today, media like the Washington Post are blaming the 'error' on the media, not the right's purposeful manipulation.



Meanwhile the Right in Washington and across the country are planning their strategies for the year. At the end of the month the US Gov will again need to have the debt ceiling raised. Supposedly earlier this week the right had a huddle to determine one of two directions. One, whether to encourage Obama to sign off on - meaning demand that - the Keystone XL tarsands pipeline from Alberta to Oklahoma be at last begun. And two, keep hammering on the failures of the ACA. It seems they opted for the latter. In November there will be elections for many in Congress. A number of Senate seats are opening up with many longterm Democrat Senators retiring. Many House of Representative seats are up for grabs as well. The Right are also predicting a sweep of all these and more. Like they always do. They did well in 2010. Many but still a minority, are already saying that the Obama Administration is a 'lawless' one, and that he should be impeached. This tack is not likely to gain traction with most voters.

Far away, affairs seem beyond desperate in the Central African Republic. Bombs in Baghdad continue to disrupt everything there and Al Qaeda still claims Fallujah and other spots in Iraq. President Karzai of Afghanistan has been refusing to cooperate with the US and its allies, flirting with ideas of negotiating with the Taliban. In Pakistan an uncertain government wakes up to more bombings and the son of Benazhir Bhutto looking intently at the PM position. The Olympics in Sochi, on the Black Sea in Russia will start soon.

UPDATE: A string of banker suicides and a missing journalist in the last 20 days make some wonder if they are related.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Sanudo Diaries: Garzoni Bank Totters: February 1, 1499

One of the rare complex, mouthful of sentences our editors offer in supplying context to the times of Marin Sanudo, reveal some of the nested ties between family banks and the state of Venice. They say, the histories of family banks,
"... make clear the intricate familial and economic relationships between the patrician politicians who ran the government, the patrician traders whose economic activities made possible the armies and argosies upon which the reputation and viability of the city-state depended, and the bankers, who were either patricians or wealthy members of the citizen class and whose funds provided emergency loans to bridge the gap between what was collected in taxes and what was needed by the government to pay its mercenary forces."
The editors refer here to a 1990 book of Felix Gilbert "History: politics or culture? Reflections on Ranke and Burckhardt" and one of 1966 by Frederic C Lane, "Venetian Bankers, 1496-1533."

Then they give example of what some of these intricate relationships entailed, by documenting Sanudo's take of the drawn-out fall of one of the oldest family banks in Venice, that of the Garzoni.

On January 29, the doge had called the senior savi di Consiglio into the Ducal Palace and explained that the Garzoni bank had come to him the night before pleading the bank was without funds. It was important that word not get out to prevent a greater rush of funds but all day people were busy moving their money and liquid assets. The Signoria could not help as the state had already committed too much to fighting two wars.
So procurators, other banks and wealthy families were called on discreetly to help out. Sanudo himself saw money in sacks being carried to the doge's palace from the bank of ser Alvise Pixani and mentions funds also came from those of the Lippomani and Agustini. [pp. 235-36]

Editor's note: "The Garzoni were not popular at this time. Rumors circulated that for four years they had been buying silver at a aprice above the Mint's ratio to increase their specie reserves, and they had lost 30,000 ducats in that speculation. It was said that they had allowed their relatives heavy overdrafts and that a Florentine had been permitted to withdraw 45,000 ducats, although Venice was at war with Florence at this time. Yet the Garzoni were given safe-conduct by the Venetian government for a year for their persons and their goods, lest they be seized by angry creditors, an action that did little to reassure those same Venetian creditors." [pp 236-37]

On February 1, 1499 the Garzoni were late to come to the bank and a crowd grew all morning at Rialto as more and more people came to withdraw their money. "Therefore," Sanudo says, "everyone became suspicious and there was much grumbling throughout the city." Sanudo himself, because he had prior knowledge of the problem, was able to secure a 500 ducat legacy through an intermediary, his own brother. He thus gives evidence he would not lose out, as so many would in this instance.

Sanudo blames four wars - in 1499 they list the wars with Ferrara fifteen yrs earlier, the Austrian war of 1497, the French Invasion of Italy, and a current war with Florence- as well as extravagant purchases on credit for purchasing Monte Nuovo bonds, building of homes, and even luxurious dress for these "... financial straits." [p. 237]
This story would continue in several directions and is summarized here.

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All quotes as Sanudo Diaries or Editor's notes from Venice, Cita Excellentissima, Selection from the Renaissance Diaries of Marin Sanudo translated by Linda L Carroll,  editors: Patricia H LaBalme and Laura Sanguineti White, published by Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008

Questions For the Defense in Inquisition Trial of Marina Gonzalez: February 1, 1494

In Toledo, on February 1, 1494 one Diego Tellez, a defense attorney representing Marina Gonzalez submitted a list of questions to the court of inquisition.  Ten years previous, this woman had confessed her prior sins and sought reconciliation with the church. But now, in January, a prosecutor brought her before the tribunal to accuse her of being a relapsed conversa and returning to pre-Christian ways. In response, this defense lawyer used what was called an abonos strategy, calling witnesses to testify on behalf of his client Mrs Gonzalez, and submitting specific questions for the witnesses to be asked. This way, it was hoped, the client's reputation could be upheld by community testimony.
All this comes from the marvelous resource of Lu Ann Homza, The Spanish Inquisition 1478-1614: An Anthology of Sources a quick, plain and far-reaching exposition of the methods and means the court used to rectify it's concerns about their understanding of their Christian faith.  Translated into English from primary documents, the author's choice of materials brings fresh light on the clear differences between jurisprudence then and now. In this example of double jeopardy, the author notes how the prosecutor was using the very prior confessions that the accused had previously offered during the so-called Edict of Grace. Her own confessions were used as evidence against her after she had been accpted back into the church.
So summarized here, are questions for character witnesses that were submitted to the court on behalf of the accused.


  • Did the witness know the accused and for how long? 
  • Did the witness know that Marina Gonzalez had reconciled with the church and completed her penance? 
  • Did the witness know that after her reconciliation if they witnessed the accused of acting like a good Christian, observing Sundays, Christian festivals, and properly receiving the eucharist? 
  • Did the witness see her after her reconciliation do work on Saturdays as much or more than other days?
  • Did the witness notice that after her reconciliation, did she never drain fat from cooked meat, or throw pork into any pot along with other Christian foods?
  • Did the witness notice the accused ever praying with great devotion to the cross of St Anthony and pictures of St Catherine and any others she had?
  • Did the witness know if the accused never wore prohibited things, nor anything red?
  • Did the witness know if after her reconciliation the accused never said or did anything against the Holy Faith?
This story continues with responses from witnesses through the month of February.
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notes from Document 5, pp 27, 32-33 in The Spanish Inquisition 1478-1614: An Anthology of Sources, edited and translated by Lu Ann Homza, Indianapolis, Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. 2006