Conclave 1559 by Hollingsworth Mary
Author:Hollingsworth, Mary
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781800244726
Publisher: Head of Zeus
Published: 2021-09-02T00:00:00+00:00
⢠Spanish led by Sforza and Madruzzo
17 votes
⢠New cardinals led by Carafa and Farnese
15 votes
⢠French led by Ippolito dâEste and Guise
16 votes
two-thirds majority needed: 32 votes
Vargasâs campaign for Carpiâs election began in earnest on Wednesday, 15 November. Sforza, Madruzzo, Farnese and Carafa were now all working together, if not in complete amity then at least with a degree of agreement between them, no doubt assisted by Vargas who was regularly in attendance at night-time meetings with all four party bosses. They knew that if they could get all their supporters behind them, then they had exactly the thirty-two votes necessary to secure Carpiâs election and the key to success would be to build up momentum in Carpiâs favour. However, Carpi only received a disappointing nine votes in the scrutiny that day and, though he had eleven the next morning, the vote count had only increased to twelve on Friday.32 Even the stubborn Vargas had to admit that the strength of the opposition to Carpi, spearheaded by Ippolito, made him unelectable and the campaign was abandoned on Sunday. Carpi accepted the decision with good grace and agreed to withdraw from the race.
In the space of a week, the two candidates who had dominated the conclave since it had begun in early September were both out. âWe are still adjusting to the factâ, Ippolito and Guise informed their king on Monday, 20 November, âthat Carpi, just like Gonzaga, has declared that he no longer has any pretensions to the papal throne.â33 With these two favourites out of the race, Ippolito could now start to build up support for his own ambitions for the papal tiara. As he had also been excluded by Philip II, he could not expect to make an alliance with the Spanish cardinals and he knew he needed Carafaâs votes to succeed. Ippolito and Guise, who had extracted a promise from Carafa that he would join the French after Carpiâs campaign was over, were now waiting for him to honour his word. Carafa, however, continued to prevaricate. âFor our part, we have not been losing timeâ, they continued in their letter to the king of 20 November. âWe are trying to come to some agreement with Carafa, who replies to us with favourable words, that he will do what he promises in good time.â Ippolito and Guise must have been very aware that it would not help to force the unpredictable Carafa into a corner. âWe are both prepared to give him more timeâ and âto conduct ourselves with him in the most patient way possible,â they added, judiciously.
Ippolito must also have been buoyed up to hear of the safe landing of his nephew Alfonso on the coast of Tuscany. On 18 November he wrote to Renée: âYesterday evening there was news here that the duke landed at Livorno on 14 November, which is an enormous relief to me⦠and if this is true your excellency will have been informed earlier than me, though I have heard nothing from him.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Machine Learning at Scale with H2O by Gregory Keys | David Whiting(4185)
Never by Ken Follett(3794)
Fairy Tale by Stephen King(3220)
The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman(2997)
Reminders of Him: A Novel by Colleen Hoover(2952)
Will by Will Smith(2794)
Rationality by Steven Pinker(2291)
Can't Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds - Clean Edition by David Goggins(2228)
It Starts With Us (It Ends with Us #2) by Colleen Hoover(2199)
Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing by Matthew Perry(2119)
The Becoming by Nora Roberts(2088)
The Stranger in the Lifeboat by Mitch Albom(2050)
Love on the Brain by Ali Hazelwood(1965)
New Morning Mercies: A Daily Gospel Devotional by Paul David Tripp(1877)
HBR's 10 Must Reads 2022 by Harvard Business Review(1777)
The Strength In Our Scars by Bianca Sparacino(1776)
A Short History of War by Jeremy Black(1762)
Never Finished: Unshackle Your Mind and Win the War Within by David Goggins(1641)
515945210 by Unknown(1599)