CONTENTS.

CHAPTER
I.Introductory
II.The Ambuscade
III.Chancellor Rinaldo
IV.The Battle
V.After the Victory
VI.The Court Fool
VII.Father and Daughter
VIII.The Abbot Conrad
IX.Filial Devotion
X.The Tempter
XI.The Journey
XII.The Toll
XIII.Castellamare
XIV.The Siege
XV.The Antipope
XVI.The Emperor's Slave
XVII.An Evil Spirit
XVIII.Confidential Secrets
XIX.The Consuls
XX.The Assault
XXI.The Emperor's Policy
XXII.Vanity
XXIII.The Meeting
XXIV.The Walk
XXV.The Capture
XXVI.Treachery
XXVII.The Betrothal
XXVIII.The Populace in the Twelfth Century
XXIX.Humiliation
XXX.Amusements
XXXI.At Rivoli
XXXII.Alexander's Ambassador
XXXIII.A Warning
XXXIV.The Divorced Duchess
XXXV.Laon
XXXVI.Knavery
XXXVII.The Spy
XXXVIII.The Queen of France
XXXIX.Under the Oaks
XL.A True Bishop
XLI.A Hardened Sinner
XLII.The Abbey of Cluny
XLIII.In the Cloister
XLIV.Pope Alexander III.
XLV.A Knave's Stratagem
XLVI.The Sermon
XLVII.The Duel
XLVIII.The Triumph of Force
XLIX.Hermengarde's Constancy
L.The Conspirators
LI.The Tribune
LII.Sedition
LIII.Barbarossa in Rome
LIV.The Triumphal Entry
LV.The Hand of God
LVI.Conclusion

BARBAROSSA.

CHAPTER I.

INTRODUCTORY.

Towards the middle of the 12th century, Milan had conquered for herself a powerful supremacy throughout all of Upper Italy, and with the exception of the proud Genoa and the maritime Venetian republic, all the cities of Lombardy acknowledged her sovereignty. Lodi, Pavia, and some few of the neighboring towns, had made bold attempts to assert their rights, but all their efforts were unsuccessful; and had only resulted in riveting more tightly their fetters, while the pride of the Milanese, and a desire for more extended power, increased in proportion to the failing strength of their adversaries. The majority bore in silence the yoke which they could not shake off preferring the advantages secured to them by prompt submission to the danger of losing in the unequal struggle every vestige of their former independence.

Lombardy, it is true, was an appanage of the Germanic empire, but the sovereignty of the Emperor was almost nominal, and only acknowledged by the turbulent Lombards, when forced so to do by his victorious arms; and whenever a war broke out between the Monarch, his great feudatories, or the Church, the smouldering embers of rebellion at once burst forth into open insurrection.

Scarcely had Frederic the First, of Hohenstauffen, mounted the throne, when his attention was attracted to Italy by an event of grave and unusual importance.

In 1158, whilst Barbarossa, as the Emperor was usually surnamed by the Italians, was presiding over a High Court of Justice at Kossnitz, and listening to the various cases submitted for his decision, two men, wearing upon their backs a wooden cross as a symbol of their misfortune, presented themselves before the throne with a long list of grievances against the Milanese, by whom, they alleged, the city of Lodi had been destroyed after the pillage and the exile of its citizens. They had come now to implore the intervention of the Emperor, whose power alone, they urged, could check the tyranny of the Milanese and save from utter ruin the other cities of Lombardy.

Frederic at once dispatched one of his nobles, Schwicker, of Aspremont, with a letter of reproof and menace to Milan. But on his arrival the consuls and the people refused to listen to the message. They tore the despatch to pieces, trampled it underfoot, and obliged the ambassador to seek safety in flight.