^ LIBRARY OF THE University of California. Cliiss PALIO AND PONTE PALIO AND PONTE AN ACCOUNT OF THE SPORTS OF CENTRAL ITALY FROM THE AGE OF DANTE TO THE XXT» CENTURY BY WILLIAM HEYWOOD AUTHOR OF "the ' ENSAMPLES ' OF FRA FILIPPO : A STUDY OF MEDIEVAL SIENA" "A PICTORIAL CHRONICLE OF SIENA" ETC. ETC. WITH TWENTY-SEVEN ILLUSTRATIONS UNIVERc i OF ^LIFO'' METHUEN & CO. 36 ESSEX STREET W.C. LONDON a6 First Published in igo^ TO R. LANGTON DOUGLAS WHO ALONE AMONG ENGLISH WRITERS HAS PROVED HIMSELF EQUALLY MASTER OF BOTH THE POLITICAL AND ARTISTIC HISTORY OF THE FAIREST OF TUSCAN CITIES THIS WORK IS GRATEFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR 209993 PREFACE SOME years ago, I wrote a short account of the annual Sienese horse-races under the title of Otij^ Lady of August and the Palio of Siena. That work, which was published and sold almost exclusively in Siena, met with so favourable a reception at the hands of the public and of authoritative Italian reviewers, that I might not unreasonably flatter myself that a second edition is needed. I have, however, preferred to re-write the entire book, and that for two reasons : the first, that there is much to omit ; the second, that there is more to add. Thus, the publication of Professor Langton Douglas' learned volume has enabled me to dispense with a large amount of matter which was only indirectly connected with my subject, and only necessary because no English History of Siena had, as yet, been written ; while, on the other hand, fui .er study and research have taught me that I took too narrow a view of the Palio when I regarded it merely as a Sienese institution. A Sienese institution it is ; but it is something more. It is the last survivor of those old chivalric games which were played on all the piazze of Tuscany in the Middle Ages ; and it can no more be under- stood, if viewed alone, than the history of any one Italian Commune can be understood, if divorced from the history of its neighbours. In the present work, I have treated of many Palii besides viii PREFACE the Palio of Siena, as well as of many kindred o-ames notably those of Florence, Pisa and Perugia. I have, in fact, endeavoured to trace the history of athletic sport in Central Italy from the days of Dante to the present year of grace 1904. W. H. Villa Ventena, Siena, July 1904. TABLE OF CONTENTS FACB Introductory ........ i BOOK I THE PALIO ALLA LUNGA CHAP. I. The Palio of the Medieval Communes .... 6 II. Sena Vetus Civitas Virginis . . . . . .24 III. Of* the Festival of Our Lady of August . . , -55 IV. Of the Palii of the Blessed Ambrogio Sansedoni and of San Pietro Alessandrino . . . . . .68 V. The End of the Palio alla Lunga . . . . .85 BOOK II THE GIUOCO DEL MAZZASCUDO I. The Giuoco del Ponte of Pisa . . . . .93 II. The Battaglia de' Sassi of Perugia . . . .138 III. The Giuoco del Calcio. . . . . . .161 IV. The Elmora and the Pugna . . . . . .177 BOOK III THE PALIO ALLA TONDA I. Of the Contrade of Siena, and herein of the Evolution OF THE Palio ........ 197 II. The Modern Palio . . . . . . .231 Index ......... 261 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1. Madonna and Child. By Benvenuto di Giovanni. A picture in the Galleria delle Belle Arti of Siena . Frontispiece (^From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 2. Siena. A View from the Tower of the Cathedral . Facing page i [From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 3. Pisa. View of the Baptistery Cathedral and Lean- ing Tower ...... „ 14 {From a Photograph by Messrs. Alinari.) 4. Perugia. View of the Piazza del Municipio and the Church of San Lorenzo .... „ 21 {From a Photograph by Afessrs. Alinari.) 5. Madonna and Child. From the Ancona of Duccio Buoninsegna ...... „ 42 {From a Photograph by Messrs. Alinari.) 6. Interior of the Cathedral of Siena . . . „ 60 {From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 7. The Effects of the Good Government of Siena. From the afifresco of Ambrogio Lorenzetti in the Palazzo Pubblico of Siena .... „ 66 {From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 8. Frontispiece from the "Vita del Beato Ambrogio Sansedoni da Siena" ..... „ 73 9. The Ponte di Mezzo. From an engraving of 1634, in the Museo Civico of Pisa ..... „ 109 {From a Photograph by Mr. H. Burton.) 10. Diagram showing the Position of the Players at the Commencement of the Giuoco del Ponte . „ 118 11. Armour worn by the Players in the Giuoco del Ponte. From the "Oplomachia Pisana" . . „ 118 12. The Giuoco del Ponte. From an old print in the Museo Civico of Pisa ...... „ 124 {From a Photograph by Mr. H. Burton.) 13. Perugia. General Viev/ . . . . . „ 138 {From a Photograph by Messrs. Alinari.) LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 14. Perugia. The Palazzo Pubblico . (From a Photograph by Messrs. Alinari.) 15. Perugia. The Palazzo Pubblico and the Fonte Maggiore ....... (From a Photograph by Messrs. Alinari,) 16. Diagram showing the Disposition of the Players at the Commencement of the Giuoco del Calcio ...... 17. View of the Piazza di S. Croce at the Commence MENT OF THE GlUOCO DEL Calcio. From the " Memorie del Calcio Fiorentino " 18. BULL-FIGHT IN THE PlAZZA DEL Campo. From an old picture ..... 19. PaLIO of July 2nd, 17 17. From an old print [From a Photograph by Mr. H. Burton.) 20. Macchine AND Carrl AUGUST i6th, 1786 . 21. Costumes of the Contrade. August 1786 22. A Prova . . ' . . . (From a Photograph by Mr. H. Burton.) • 23. Page of the Contrada dell' Istrice . (From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 24. Group of Contadine, showing the Straw Hats WORN IN the SeNESE . . . . . (From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 25. The Procession ...... (From a Photograph by Mr. H. Burton.) 26. Page of the Contrada del Bruco (From a Photograph by Messrs. Lombardi.) 27. Map of Siena, showing the Boundaries of the Seventeen Contrade . . . . . . Facing page 146 155 169 170 206 221 224 228 238 241 244 246 ■255 258 PALIO AND PONTE INTRODUCTORY Hie est locus, Campus celeberrimus hie est, lUud grande forum, Romani more theatri, Quo fiunt Ludi varji ; et celebrantur honores Virginis et curru Tauri cervique trahuntur Viscera, et armatus sonipes, pro munere, certat. ViTTORio Campanicense, De ludo pugncB, AT the junction of the three hills whereupon Siena torreggia e siede, in the very centre of the city, stands the many-memoried Piazza del Campo. The same site was probably occupied by the vanished forum of the Roman Colony ; and here, peradventure, it was that the old Senensium pledes, as fierce, intractable and tumultuous as their mediaeval descendants, laid violent hands upon the senator Manlius Patruitus. Here, after the taking of Grosseto, on the day of St Mary of August, in the year of grace 1224, *' the Sienese, for joy of that victory, held high festival and lighted bonfires and closed the shops " ; while before one of those same shops, on another gala-day, nearly a century later, Dante Alighieri stood, so absorbed in the study of an ancient codex that he read on undisturbed in spite of a great tournament that was going on and the mighty din of those who were round about. Here, four days after the battle of Montaperti, the men of Montalcino made submission before the victorious carroccio, "and were reconciled and accepted as subjects of the Magnificent Commune of Siena." Here Provenzano Salvani humbly begged alms of his fellow-citizens . . . per trar I'amico suo di pena. A I PALIO AND PONTE Here, in later times, the barattieri set up their booths, walled with branches and roofed with canvas, wherein the good citizens of Siena might lawfully play ad ludum zardi ; and here the candidates for knighthood erected their pavilions, and feasted all who came, giving and receiving gifts. Moreover, down to 1884 — in which year the mercato nuovo was built where of old the criminals of the Republic were mutilated and put to death — the daily market was held in the Piazza, the positions to be occupied by the vendors of the different wares being fixed by statute as early as the 14th century. Nor has the Campo lacked its scenes of carnage and of tumult. Again and again have its stones been crimsoned with blood and blackened by fire ; and, little more than a century ago, its beautiful old palaces looked down, calm and unmoved, — pray God for the last time, — upon such a scene of ferocity and suffering as can never have been surpassed throughout all the "splendid, stupid, glorious" Middle Ages. For here, on Friday, 28th July 1799, in the name of the Blessed Virgin of Comfort and to the cry of Viva Maria ! a howling mob of fanatics, drunk with wine and slaughter, burned in one vast fire nineteen Jews, men and women together, using for the purpose the fragments of the Tree of Liberty, which had been set up before the Fonte Gaia, little more than three months earlier. In a word, the history of its Piazza is the history of Siena. That with which we are at present concerned is, however, the Palio ; and, for us, the Piazza is chiefly interesting in view of that fact, since it is here that the Palio is run twice yearly, on the 2nd July and the i6th August. And what manner of thing is this Palio ? Most of the Guide Books describe it as a horse-race. So it is in a sense ; but such a definition, although perhaps verbally correct, is eminently calculated to mislead, and certainly implies, in one direction more, and in another less, than the truth. In fact, a single glance at the spot selected for the contest will show that, if indeed the Palio be a horse- race, it must of necessity be a very strange one. 2 INTRODUCTORY The Piazza consists of a semicircular area paved with brick and surrounded by a roadway composed of flagstones. The central or paved portion is shaped like a shallow cup, and has been not inaptly compared to the concave of a huge sea-shell ; the ten converging lines of stone, which divide its superfices, indubitably bearing some resemblance to conchyli- aceous striations. For our purpose, however, I conceive that it may best be likened to a colossal barber's basin, inclined at a considerable angle and flattened on the lower side. It is round the rim or margin of this basin — which, of course, corresponds to the roadway spoken of above — that the Palio is run. No course more manifestly unfitted for the urging of high- mettled animals to their full speed could well be imagined ; and its steep descent towards the Via di San Martino, with the dangerous turn in front of the Palazzo Piccolomini, have been responsible for many accidents. In August 1898 one horse was killed outright, and two were so seriously injured that they died shortly afterwards. It is, however, no part of the mission of the Palio of Siena to encourage the breeding of high-class stock, and what little emulation is displayed by the animals which take part in it is generally purely artificial. Moreover, if we ignore, for the nonce, the peculiar unfitness of the Sienese Piazza to be used as a race-course, we shall find a further anomaly in the fact that the Palio has a distinctly religious character ; the banner which is given to the winning contrada being invariably ornamented with a representation of the Blessed Virgin, in whose honour the race is run. Indeed, throughout the Middle Ages, the organization of a palio, a tournament, or a bull-fight seems to have become so usual a method of paying honour to the celestial powers, that, when it was resolved, in 1526, to hold a more than ordinarily solemn festival of thanksgiving, it was felt necessary to declare that it was not intended to be a feast day "of bulls, or other games devoid of evil, but of spiritual things, such as confessions, communions and the like."^ * Delib. di Balia, ad annum, n°. no, c. 61-63, published by A. ToTi, in his AtH di Votazione della Cittd. di Siena e del Senese alia SS. Vergine madre di G. C. (Siena, 1870), 3 PALIO AND PONTE Then, too, the horses which take part in the Palio are distributed by lot, and the contest is quite as much a battle as a race. The riders seek to dismount one another, and are armed with helmets to protect their eyes and faces from the rain of blows which will be showered upon them. All that civic patriotism and religious fervour can do to stir men's minds to furious rivalry finds vent in these annual struggles, where each competitor represents not a single individual, but a whole Contrada or ward of the city. Facts such as these put us upon enquiry, and may well lead us to suspect that not only is the Palio something more than a "horse-race," but that it may, perhaps, even possess other and more enduring features of interest than those which are suggested to our minds by the statement of the excellent Baedeker, that it "presents a very attractive scene." ^ What it really is, it is the object of the following pages to explain. The subject is a wide one, and I warn the reader that, in order to obtain a clear understanding of the orio-in and meaning of this strano;e mediaeval custom, which has been handed down to us across the ages, it will be necessary to follow many and devious ways, some of which, at first sight, may seem to have no connection with our goal, but all of which will, I think, be found to converge at last towards a common centre — the Palio of Siena. Thus, after a preliminary chapter, dealing with the Palio of the Mediaeval Communes in its more general aspects, I shall treat of Siena as " the Virgin's City," speaking of the various dedications of the Commune to the Queen of Heaven. Next, I shall describe the great annual festival of Mid- August, celebrated in memory of Our Lady's Assumption, when, from the 13th century onwards, a horse-race was run in her honour. Thereafter I shall touch, but more briefly, Votazione iv. p. 40. In La Citth diletta di Maj-ia, GiROLAMO GiGLl says: "Debbesi riferire a conto di tributo verso Maria la festa del Corso del Palio in Piazza nel giorno della sua Visitazione ;" while, a few pages earlier, he attributes the " frequenti castighi del Cielo, o di carestie, o di spopolazioni, o di altre rovine " to the fact that the Festival of the Assumption was, in his day, no longer honoured as of old. In this connection he mentions " quelle magnifiche rappresentazioni di quei pubblici insigni spettacoli, che ad onore della gran Signora si preparavano nella piazza del Campo ; ci6 erano Bufalate, Cacce del Toro e simili." 1 See Baedeker's Central Italy (edition of 1893), p. 22. 4 INTRODUCTORY upon the Palii of the Blessed Ambrogio Sansedoni and of S. Pietro Alessandrino ; thus, I trust, sufficiently accounting for the reliorious character of the modern contest. With regard to its material features, we shall, however, find that we have followed a blind trail, and it will be necessary to retrace our steps and to study the ancient Sienese pastimes which filled the Campo with clamour from the earliest days of the Republic. With a view to illustrating these, I shall be compelled to touch upon the games of neighbouring cities — the Giuoco del Ponte of Pisa, the Battaglia de Sassi of Perugia, and the Calcio of Florence. For, just as the history of one of the Communes of Central Italy is, in its main outlines, the history of them all, so the popular games of the free cities sprang from one common source, and developed, for over two hundred years, on parallel lines. Nor shall we, I think, be greatly mistaken if we conclude that the Palio of to-day has drawn much of its fierce inspiration from the old Gmoco del Mazzascudo, which, in the 13th and 14th centuries, was played on almost all the principal piazze of Tuscany. Then, returning to Siena, I shall speak of the Elmora, the local form of Mazzascudo, and of the Pugna which usurped its place. I shall show how, with the rise of the contradey at the close of the 15th century, these were gradually abandoned for Bufalate, Asinate and Bull-fights, until at last, they, in their turn, dwindled down to the modern Palio — half battle, half horse-race. / BOOK I THE PALIO ALLA LUNGA CHAPTER THE FIRST THE PALIO OF THE MEDIEVAL COMMUNES THE Italian /^/^ is a corruption of the hatm pal/ium ] and it will perhaps help us to a better understanding of the various meanings of the word, if we recall the fact that the English c/oa^, which is generally adopted as the translation of pallium, conveys a very imperfect idea of the form, material and use of the ancient Roman garment. With the making of the pallizcm the tailor had nothing to do ; it was worn in the very form in which it came from the loom, and was, in fact, simply a rectangular piece of cloth.^ Such, too, was the Italian/a/?'^, a rectangular piece of stuff, whether of wool, silk or velvet. All the other meanings are secondary to this. Thus the square canopy or "baudekin,"^ which was held over the heads of princes and potentates to do them honour, was called a palio from its shape and from the material of which it was made.^ In like manner, the rich stuffs which in the Middle Ages were offered by subject towns and seigniors to the patron saint of the city to which they owed fealty, were called palii ; and perhaps, because these were ' See Smith's Dictionary of Antiquities. ^ " Baudekin," or " baldacchino," is from Baldacco, the Italian form of the mediaeval name of Babylon, from whence the costly silk of this canopy originally came — pannus sericus babylonicus.—^QQ Trench, On the Study of Words (London, Macmillan & Co., 1878), P- 153- * Thus M. ViLLANi {Cronica, iii. 84) tells us how, in 1353, the Cardinal legate was received in Florence "con grande onore, e con solenne processione e festa, con ricco palio di seta e d'oro sopra capo portato da nobili popolani," etc. Compare iv. 44, and the contemporary chronicles passim. 6 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIAEVAL COMMUNES often borne aloft on lances, like banners, "in sign of subjec- tion,"^ the v^ord palio itself came to mean a flag or banner.^ The prizes which were offered for the mediaeval horse-races usually consisted of divers yards of silk or woollen stuff, and were consequently known ^s palii (Lat. bravia). At first, probably, men spoke of "running to win the palio — correre per vincere il palio,'' later on of " running the palio — correi'e il palio ^' or " correre al palio'' So that the vford palio came to signify not only the prize, but the contest for that prize, the race itself. Occasionally, indeed, the word is used to describe both the one and the other at the same time, as where Giovanni Villani tells us that it was ordained che si corresse uno palio di sciamito^ These races, or palii, seem to have originated in the 13th century;* and probably the most famous of them all was the Palio of St John the Baptist of Florence, to which Dante refers in the sixteenth canto of the Paradiso, where he makes Cacciaguida say : Gli antichi miei ed io nacqui nel loco, Dove si trova pria I'ultimo sesto Da quel che corre il vostro annual giuoco. This Benvenuto da Imola explains as follows : — Est de more Florentice, quod singulis annis in festo Johannis Baptistce ctirrant equi ad bravium in signum festivce Icetitice . . . Cur- rentes, ad bravium transibant ante domos Helisceorum in principio ultimi sexterii et prope Mercatum vetus, qui est locus mercatorwn antiquus et famosus Florentice. Thus we see that the race was run from San Pancrazio, the western ward of the city, through the Mercato Vecchio, to the eastern ward of San Piero. ^ Montepulciano, for example, when she submitted to Perugia, in 1355, promised quolibet anno in festo beati Hercolani de mane presentare . . . unutn pallium de velluto sirici rubey valoris saltern- xxv Jlor. auri, equester et publice dislenstim in quadam aste in signum subjectionis, etc. — Cronaca del Graziani, in the "Arch, stor. it.," torn. xv. parte i. p. 181 nota. * Thus a Florentine annalist of the 14th century speaks of the Banner of the Guelfs as il paglio delta Parte Guelfa {Diario d" Anonivio fiorentino, in the Documenti di Storia Italiana, published by the Royal Commission for Tuscany, Umbria and the Marches, vol. vi. p. 298. ' G. Villani, Cronica, i. 60. * " Truovasi usata nel Secolo XIII. la Corsa de i Cavalli : se prima, altri lo cerchera." — MlJRATORl, Disscrtazioni sopra le AntichitH Italianc (Milano, 175 1 ), torn. ii. p. 27. 7 PALIO AND PONTE In his celebrated description of the "gran festa di San Giovanni Batista, che al mondo non si ha paraggio," Goro di Stagio Dati gives the following account of this palio : — " Thereafter, dinner being over, and midday being past, and the folk having rested awhile, according to the pleasure of each of them ; all the women and girls betake themselves whither the horses which run the palio will pass. Now these pass through a straight street, through the midst of the City, where are many dwellings, beautiful sumptuous houses of good citizens, more than in any other part thereof. And from one end of the City to the other, on that straight street, which is full of flowers, are all the women and all the jewels and rich adornments of the City ; and it is a great holiday. Also there are always many lords and knights and foreign gentlemen who come every year from the surrounding towns to see the beauty and magnificence of that festival. And there, through the said Corso, are so many folk that it seemeth a thing incredible, the like whereof he who hath not seen it could neither believe nor imagine. "Thereafter, the great bell of the Palagio de' Signori is tolled three times, and the horses, ready for the start, come forth to run. On high, upon the Tower, may be seen, by the signs made by the boys who are up there, that is of such an one, and that of such an one {qziello e del tale, e quello e del tale). And all the most excellent race-horses of the world are there, gathered together from all the borders of Italy. And that one which is the first to reach the Palio is the one which winneth it. Now the Palio is borne aloft upon a triumphal car, with four wheels, adorned with four carven lions which seem alive, one upon every side of the car, drawn by two horses, with housings with the emblem of the Commune thereon, and ridden by two varlets which guide them. The same is a passing rich and great Palio of fine crimson velvet in two palii, and between the one and the other a band of fine gold a palm's width, lined with fur from the belly of the ermine and bordered with miniver fringed with silk and fine gold ; which, in all, costeth three hundred florins or more ; but, of 8 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIEVAL COMMUNES late, for a space, it hath been made entirely of brocade of gold, very beautiful to see ; whereon are spent six hundred florins or more. All the great piazza of San Giovanni, and part of the street, is covered with blue hangings with yellow lilies ; the church is a thing of marvellous form, whereof I shall speak at another time, when I shall describe the beauties of that City. ..." That time, alas ! never came. Dati finished his history, and died in September 1435, without returning to the subject.^ Besides the Palio of St John the Baptist, which was celebrated on the 24th of June, the Florentines ran other horse-races, on other anniversaries. Thus the battle of Campaldino, which was fought on the nth June 1289, the same being the Feast of St Barnabas, was commemorated by a palio run on that day in honour of the Apostle. A curious record of the race is still to be found in the name Ponte alle Mosse, borne by the bridge over the Mugnone ; from which the start was made. Another palio was run on St Peter's day, the 29th June. On the 26th July was the Palio of St Anne, instituted in memory of the expulsion of the Duke of Athens, in 1343. The day of St Victor was honoured in like manner, to celebrate the rout of the Pisans at the Borgo di Cascina, on July 28th, 1364;^ while, in 1353, it was ordained by the Priors that, on the festival of the Blessed Virgin Santa Re- parata, a palio should be run for 1 2 braccia of fine scarlet cloth. Probably, however, the most curious of all the Florentine palii was that known as the Palio de Tintori^ which was run in honour of Sant' Onofrio (or, as the lower classes ^ The Storia di Firenze of GORO Dl Stagio Dati was published in Florence in 1735 by G. Bianchini. The description of the festival of St John the Baptist will be found on pages 84-89. It has, however, frequently been quoted in extenso in more modern works, and may be read, for example, in D'Ancona e Bacci, Manuale delle Lett. Italiana (Firenze, Barbera, 1899), vol. ii. pp. 125-128; and in C. Guasti, Le Feste di S. Giovanni Batista (Firenze, Loescher e Bocca, 18S4), pp. 4-8. ^ FiLiPPO Villani, in his continuation of his father's Chronicle (xi. 97), states that this battle was fought on the 29th July. He, however, corrects himself in cap. 99, where he tells us that it took place on the day of St Victor, which, of course, falls on the 28th. — Compare the Diario d' Ati07iimo Fiorentino, op. cit., p. 297. ^ See G. CoNTi, Fatti e Aneddoti di Storia Fiorentina (Firenze, Bemporad, 1902), cap. iii., " II palio dell' Universita dci Tintori e altre corse di barberi," pp. 17-20. 9 PALIO AND rONTE called him, Santo Noferi), the patron saint of the Dyers' Guild. The length of the course — from the Palazzo degli Albert! to the Torre della Zecca — will give some indication of the quality of the animals which took part in the race — old and worn-out, and only fit for the knacker's yard. Every wool-dyer kept a horse to carry the newly-dyed cloth to be rinsed in the Arno, and thence to the liratoi, where it was hung and stretched. These horses were ridden by boys, who generally sat or stood on the top of the piles of cloth with which their charges were laden, and who, from their employment, acquired the name of cavallini. This was the first step in the dyeing trade, and every " maestro " of the Universita de' Tintori had begun his career as a cavallino. On the first Sunday after the nth June, the Dyers kept holiday in the Church of their Arte, in the " Borgode' Tintori and at Sant' Onofrio " in the Piazza dell' Uccello. This festa seems to have been instituted in 1331, when "the artificers of Florence, to wit those of the Compagnia di Santo Noferi, clad five hundred and twenty men all in white, who held high festival through the city ; and, on the day of Santo Noferi, the 15th June, they caused a white palio to be run; and therefrom the said palio had its origin." Thenceforward, it became an annual event, and, as a result, the Borgo de* Tintori changed its name to the " Corso de' Tintori." The race itself was nothing better than a brutal burlesque. The wretched animals which took part in it scarcely staggered along under showers of blows, jeers, abuse, and insults of every sort. Infinite were the witticisms, the practical jokes, the doubles entendres, the gesticulations and the laughter, of the ever sceptical and lively Florentine populace, who, no doubt, thoroughly enjoyed themselves. Even to-day, animal suffering appeals but little to the Italian. This palio, which in its first year was white, was subse- quently made of scarlet cloth, at the expense of the ** maestri " of the Arte. And here we may remark that red, in all its shades — 10 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIEVAL COMMUNES rosso, rosato, ckermisi, vermiglio, scarlatto — seems to have been the usual colour for a palio. For red and green, and especially the former, the mediaeval Italians showed a marked predilection/ In the 13th century, the Florentines had already acquired considerable skill in dyeing cloth red.^ The official robes of the magistrates were red ; their carroccio was one blaze of red ; red was the body of the car, red the antenne, and red the housings of the oxen which drew it. The women frequendy wore red dresses. When Dante first beheld his Beatrice, she was attired in a garment of most noble colour, a subdued and goodly crimson ; and when Ribi, the buffoon, asked the wife of Messer Amerigo Donati for un poco di scarlatto to piece his tunic with, she found it for him immediately.^ Nor was the preference for red confined to any one city. The oxen which drew the carroccio of Pavia were covered cum rubro pa7ino, those of Parma with picrpura et zendah^ The Sienese magistrates, like those of the Florentines, wore red robes ; ^ and the banditores, or heralds of the Commune, were clad de panno viridivel rubeo \^ while, in 1232, Bishop Buonfiglio was obliged to forbid his clergy to dress in red or green, enacting quod nullus clericus portet vestivientum de viridi panno ve I rubro? In 1268, Corradino offered a purple palio {quadam purpura) on the altar of Our Lady of Grace, in the Sienese Cathedral.^ It would be easy to multiply examples ; but these should suffice. Besides the Palio of St John the Baptist, at Florence, ^ See L. Zdekauer, La vita privaia dei Seiiesi nel dugcnto (Siena, Tip. Lazzeri, 1896), p. 45. " P. ViLLARi, I primi due secoli della storia di Firenze (Firenze, Sansoni, 1898), vol. i. p. 281. ^ F. Sacchetti, Nov. 50. * MuRATORi, Ant. Ital. viedii cevi.. Diss. xxvi. ° C. Falletti-Fossati, Costumi Senesi nella seconda methdel Sccolo XIV. (Siena, Tip. deir Ancora, 1881), p. 122. ^ Constituto del C. di Siena deW Anno 1262, pubblicato da L. ZDEKAUER (Milano, Hoepli, 1897), Dist. i. Rubr. 296. ^ See the "Constitutions" of Bp. Buonfiglio, in Pecci, Storia del Vescovaao della Cittci di Siena {L.\icca., 1748), p. 209. ^ See A. Professione, Corradino di Svevia cil suo passaggio per Siena (Verona, Fratelli, Drucker, 1892), p. 19. II PALIO AlVD PONTE another palio Is referred to in the Divina Commedia, that of Verona, which was run for the drappo verde} Poi si rivolse, e parve di colore Che corrono a Verona il drappo verde Per la campagna ; e parve di costoro Quegli che vince e non colui che perde.^ On the first Sunday in Lent, it was the duty of the Potesta of Verona "to place or cause to be placed, for the Commune of Verona, two palii, in such place as might seem to him most suitable" — '' ponere seu poni facere pro communi Verone duo bravia in loco ubi titilius ei videbihcr." One of these was of scarlet, the other of green cloth. The first was destined as the prize for a horse-race ; the second for a foot-race. Both contests took place outside the city, per la campagna ; and he who was last in the foot-race was presented with a cock, guem pala^nportare debeat tisque in civitatem, thus advertising the unenviable result of his exertions for the amusement of the spectators — a fact which gives added force to the words, e non colui che perde. Later on, at the end of the 14th century, Gian Galeazzo Visconti introduced a third race, for women — per muliei^es el pedester} Thus we perceive that a foot-race, equally with a horse- race, might be a palio. So, for that matter, might a donkey- race, a buffalo-race, a chariot-race or a boat-race. Enough that the prize contended for was a palio. Among the most picturesque of those mediaeval festivals which were connected with the running of the palio, was the Fesia dell' Assu7ita of Pisa.* In the Annali pisani of Paolo ^ il drappo verde \s, not very happily, translated by Longfellow, "the Green Mantle." That, however, was over thirty-five years ago, and, as is clear from his note on Faradiso, XVI. 42, he did not feel himself upon very firm ground when treating of the Palio. Much has been written since then, and Mrs. Wiel can plead no excuse for falling into the same error. That she is profoundly ignorant of the whole subject seems clear, or she would never have spoken of " the game of the Palio" !— See The Story of Verona, by Alethea Wiel (London, Dent, 1902), pp. 130, 263. ^ Inferno, xv. 1 21-124. ^ See herein Gaetano da Re, / tre primi stattiti sulk corse d^ Palii di Verona, in the "Rivista critica della letteratura italiana," vii. 80-87. * For full details of this festival the reader should consult the learned monograph of Cav. Prof. PiETRO Vigo, Unafesta popolare a Pisa nel medio evo, Pisa, Tip. Mariotti, 1888. The work contains an invaluable appendix of documents. 12 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIAEVAL COMMUNES Tronci,^ we read that, on the 15th July, a month before the date of the festa, twenty youths, clad in rich raiment, and mounted on horses covered with scarlet housings emblazoned with the arms of the Commune, rode through the city, accompanied by trumpeters with silver trumpets, by fifers and by other musicians, proclaiming the approach of the festival, and announcing to the citizens the palii which were to be contested on land and water. The horsemen who formed the cavalcade rode two and two. Of the first couple, one bore the banner of the Commune, the other that of the People. The next two held silver staves inwrought with gold and surmounted by Imperial Eagles ; while the third pair carried, upon their wrists, live eagles, crowned with golden crowns.^ On the I St August, three banners were set on each of the innumerable towers of the city^ — one painted with the ^ Ad anmim 1292. 2 The original arms of Pisa seem to have been identical with those of the modern city, a White Cross upon a red ground ; this device, if we may believe the chroniclers, having been assumed in 1017, when the galleys of the Commune sailed against the Saracens of Sardinia, at the bidding of Pope Boniface VIII. (See the Cronaca pisana di Ranieri Sardo, in the "Arch. stor. it.," torn. vi. parte ii. p. 76.) In the following century, however, the Imperial Eagle was adopted as the emblem of the Commune, Early in the 13th century, the Pisan arms were a Black Eagle upon a gold field ; while, a little later, the same bird . appears perched upon two columns rising out of the sea, with the motto : Vrbis me dignvm PiSANE NOSCITE SIGNVM. (See Le Armi dei Municipi Toscatti illustrate dal Cav. L. Passerini (Firenze, Tip. Ducci, 1864), p. 208.) Fazio degli Uberti, who wrote in the following century, speaks of Pisa, in his Dittatnondo (iii. 6), as ... la bella citta, che ha per insegna L'arma romana. Just as the Sienese kept a tame wolf, and the Florentines lions, the living counterparts of their Marzocco, so the Pisans kept eagles. To this custom we find an allusion in InfertWy xxxiii. 22, where Count Ugolino calls the tower, in which he was imprisoned, "/a inuda — the Mew," presumably "because it was there that the eagles of the Commune were kept to moult." In 1364, after the victory of Borgo di Cascina, the Florentines advanced to the walls of Pisa, and one of these eagles made its escape and flew into their camp, where it was killed. In his Guerra di Pisa, Antonio Pucci thus records the incident : . . . un' aquila, di Pisa, tutta nera Dimestica, per fare altrui vergogna, Usci volando ; ma cred' io ch' ell' era Venuta a pascer di quella carogna ; La qual da' Guelfi fu presa con furia. So ch' a' Pisan non parve buona aguria. ' TronCI, loc. cit,, says sixteen thousand ; and the same number is given by Navarretti, in his Metnorie pisane, MS. in the R. Archivio di Stato in Pisa, vol. iii. c. 155. The Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela, who visited Pisa in the second half of the 12th century, calls it : civitas maxima decies milk turribus instructa, quibiis in cedihis extruciis, orto disidio, ad muiua bella utuniur. (Cited by P. ViGO, op. cit., p. 6, note.) 13 PALIO AND PONTE Eagle ; the second with the arms of the Commune, the White Cross upon a red ground ; the third with those of the People. In like manner, three banners waved over the facade, sides and cupola of the Duomo, over the Baptistery, and over the Camposanto. Not only the summit of the Campanile, but each of its six colonnades were decked with banners. In like manner, all the churches, all the public buildings, the palaces of the Consoli del Mare, of the Consoli de' Mercanti, of the Sette Arti, and of all the other Magistrates, were ornamented with flags. The Contado followed the example of the City. Judging from contemporary documents. Professor Vigo is inclined to believe that the Cathedral must have been practically covered with flags ; the staffs of which were painted saffron and red, at the expense of the Operaio del Duomo ; while certain great banners, bearing the arms of the Commune, of the Potesta or of the Captain of the People, were fastened to poles made from the trunks of very lofty chestnut trees, and set upon the Campanile and the cupola of the Duomo. In 1380, a banner which waved above the latter bore the arms of Pietro Gambacorti, then Captain of the People in Pisa. With regard to the proclamation which, according to our annalist, was made on the 15th July, we have no corroborat- ive evidence. What is certain is that, both on the Vigil of the Assumption and on the day of the festa itself, the public heralds went through the city, accompanied by trumpeters and other musicians, who were provided by the Commune with new red liveries — aim indumentis novis vermileis. It would, however, be dangerous to affirm that this was the first announcement of the festival ; and Tronci may have had access to sources of information with which we are unacquainted.^ Of the offerings of wax candles made by all the Magis- trates, citizens, arti and military companies of the city, and by all the subject towns and villages;^ of the great silver girdle, 1069 braccia in length, wherewith to the sound of 1 p. Vigo, op. cit., pp. 7-9. - Ibidem, pp. 9-27, and Doc. xi. 14 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIAEVAL COMMUNES music, the Duomo was encircled ; ^ of the Hberation of the twenty prisoners selected by the sapientes de misericordia ; ^ of the processions and other religious ceremonies ; of the vast crowds which flocked to the city on this most solemn festival ; ^ I shall not speak. Enough for us that, among the other celebrations whereby the Pisans sought to do honour to Our Lady, were included palii, both on land and water. The prizes for these races were of a sufficiently hetero- geneous character, consisting, besides the palii, of various animals, such as an ox, a ram, a cock, a goose, and a pig ; some of which, at any rate, appear to have been draped with red cloth. Thus we read of money being expended in pretiwn tunice bovis, and pro pretio panni vermilei empti . . . ^ro vestimentis dictormn bovis et montonis} According to Tronci, "the most valuable prize for the land race was of red velvet, lined with vair, with a great eagle of silver. This the competitor received who first reached the goal. To the second was. given silken stuff of the price of thirty golden florins. The third was pre- sented, by way of ridicule, with a bunch of garlic and a pair of geese. On the water, the race was rowed in little galleys and boats ; the vessel which arrived first at the winning post obtaining, as a prize, a bull covered with scarlet and fifty scudi. The second and third prizes were the same as in the land race." ^ * p. Tronci, loc. cit. — In an old document, this girdle is thus described : cinttilam unam magtiam de argento deaurato cum figuris relevatis cum pietris et perils stiperfecta vermllla cum jiblalio de argento rotutido cum petra et perils in quo est Incoronata ponderis llbrarum octo et unclarutn quatuor, — Bonaini, Memorle inedite intorno la vita e i dipinti di Francesco Traini, etc. (Pisa, Tip. Nistri, 1846), p. 47. ^ P. Vigo, op. cit., p. 32, and Doc. xxi. * Ibidem, p. 40. — Compare also F. Sacchetti, Nov. 140, where we read that it was customary for the blind beggars of Florence to andare alia festa delta Nostra Donna a Pisa . . . ciascuno con tin sua cane a mano atnfnaestrato, come fanno, con la scodella , . . cantando la Intemerata per ogni borgo. * P. Vigo, op. cit., pp. 36-37, and Doc. xvii. ^ P. Tronci, loc. cit. — From the documents published by Professor Vigo, it seems tolerably clear that there were three races — a horse-race and a foot-race on land ; a rowing- race on the river. Thus we read of 170 lire paid, in August it^T-t,, pro pretio palii vellosi et fregiof-um ibi adplicatorum . . . per homines cum equis ; and of 40 lire paid pro pretio duorutn paliorum de sirico et auro . . . que curri fecerunt unum per aquam et alium per terram more solito. As to the animals, the following entry would seem to imply that they were all used as prizes for the boat-race : Feo Gualfrei tabernario pro pretio unius bovis, unius montonis et unius porci, unius 15 PALIO AND PONTE Such and such Hke prizes were by no means uncommon. For the horse-race at Verona (which was run on the same day as the foot-race for the drappo verde ^) the prizes were unum palimn et tma baffa ; et prius currenti detur palium scarleti et tiltinio currenti detur baffa, de qua licitum sit cuilibet incidere et tollere postquam currens habuerit ad colhini equi ligatum. That the prize for the last place was not without its attractions, in spite of the derision which accompanied it, may, perhaps, be inferred from the provision of the statute which prohibited the entry of any animal which was not sound in all its limbs — non debeat quis currere cum aliqua equa nee eciam cum aliquo equo qui non sit integer omnibus suis membris} At Ferrara, on St George's day, there was a horse-race ad pallium et porchetam, et gallum ; while, by the ancient statutes of the same Commune, it was provided that "to the end that the citizens may obtain recreation on the festival of Saint Mary of August, it shall be the duty of the Potesta, for the time being, to enquire the pleasure of the members of the Consiglio Maggiore touching the running of a horse- race for a palio, on the said festival, to wit for a palfrey, a falcon and two hounds — de faciendo equos currere ad Bravium . . . scilicet ad unum Rtmcinum, Ancipitrem et duos BracosT ^ Padua commemorated yearly the anniversary of her deliverance from the tyranny of the ferocious Ezzelino da Romano, with devout processions, and with a palio, for which the prizes were duodecim brachia sckarleti, et unus spariverius, cuj'us pretium non excedat stimmam soldorum sexaginta, et ducB chirotkecce : * while at Bologna, the festivals of St Peter and St Bartholomew were celebrated by horse- races which were run, the one for a palio of red velvet and a live cock ; the other for a richly caparisoned horse, a falcon and sometimes also a pair of hounds. The second prize was a sucking-pig.^ f apart et unius galli quos curri fecerunt die festivitatis cum vachettis per A mum more soHto sine cabella, libras viginli octo et soldos quatuordecim denariorum pisanorum, 1 See p. 12 supra. 2 Gaetano da Re, / tre primi statuti sulk corse d^ Palii di Verona, op. cit. 8 MuRATORi, Antiq. ital. med. avi. Diss. xxix. ^ Ibidem. ^ L. Frati, La vita privata di Bologna dal secolo XIII al XVII (Bologna, Zanichelli, i6 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIAEVAL COMMUNES The century which witnessed the birth of the Palio was a century of strange contrasts. To those generations which had seen ferocious and implacable ecclesiastics, like the Innocents, seated on the papal throne ; which had heard the second Frederick, albeit di tutte virtudi copioso^ pro- claimed as Antichrist from a thousand pulpits ; which more than half believed that "fierce Ezelin, that most inhuman lord,"^ was, in very truth, a devil's son; which had beheld the Guelfs, despite the benedictions of the Church, again and again worsted by excommunicated and heretic Ghibellines ; it might well have seemed that Italy had become a battle-ground for wild beasts ; that all authority was dead, and that human wickedness had reached its utmost limit. The whole Peninsula was torn by factions and by wars ; sangtds italicus effunditur velut aqzia} In September 1259, Ezzelino passed away, fierce and Impenitent to the last, tearing the bandages from his wounds, — as evil a man as the world has ever seen ; but strong and virile ; unenervated by love of women. Eleven months later, his brother Alberico was horribly tortured to death, after having been first compelled to witness the slaughter of all his house. His six sons were hewn to pieces before his eyes, and fragments of their yet quivering flesh were cast into his face ; his wife, and all his daughters, " albeit they were noble, and the most beauteous maidens in the world, and innocent," were stripped stark naked and dragged through the Guelf camp, amidst the ribald jeers of a brutal soldiery ; their breasts and noses were hacked off, and they were burned alive, while priests applauded the ferocious vengeance. Lastly, Alberico himself was slowly torn to pieces with pincers.* Nine days later, the Arbia ran red with Guelf 1900), pp. 148-149. The Palio of St Bartholomew continued to be run annually, until it was supplanted by the celebrated Festa della Porchetta. ^ G. ViLLANi, Cronica, vi. i. ^ Ariosto, Orlando Ftirioso, iii. 33. Ezzelino immanissimo tiranno Che sia creduto figlio del Demonic. 3 MONACH. Patav. in Rer. Italic. Script., viii. 699. * C, Cantu, Ezzelino da Romano, in the Storie Minori (Torino, 1864), vol. i. p. 240. See also the Chronicle of Fra Sahmbene of Parma. This work was published in the original Latin, in 1857 ; and, in 1882, it was translated into Italian, by C. CantarellI (Parma, Luigi Battei). The death of Alberico da Romano is described in vol. i. p. 255. B IJ PALIO AND rONTE blood, and the strongest infantry force ever collected In Tuscany was butchered "as beasts are butchered in a slaughter-house." ^ Yet, in this very year, "while all Italy was stained with many wickednesses, a sudden penitence invaded, first the Perugians, then the Romans, and thereafter well nigh all the peoples of Italy. On such wise and so greatly did the fear of the Lord fall upon them — In tantum itaqne tinior Domini irruit sziper eos — that nobles and common folk, old men and youths, yea, even children of five years old, marched in procession unashamed, through the piazze of the city, naked save only for those parts which decency forbids to be exposed, two and two, bearing in their hands leather thongs, wherewith, amid groans and weeping, they cruelly scourged their backs even to effusion of blood. With tears rolling down their cheeks, as if they beheld the passion of the Saviour with their bodily eyes, they implored the mercy of God and the help of His Mother, beseeching that they repenting their sins might receive pardon, even as countless other sinners had been pardoned. And not only by day, but also by night, with lighted candles, during an exceeding bitter cold, by hundreds and thousands and tens of thousands, they went from church to church, humbly prostrating them- selves before the altars, preceded by priests with crosses and banners. After the same manner did they in the villages and little towns, so that plains and mountains alike resounded with the voices of them who cried upon God. Then were instruments of music and love songs silenced ; only the dismal chaunt of the penitents could be heard on every hand, whether in the city or in the country. . . . Then were well nigh all discords healed ; hatred was turned to love, and war to peace. Usurers and robbers eagerly sought out those whom they had wronged to restore their ill-gotten gains ; men steeped in crime humbly confessed their sins and amended their lives ; prisons were opened, prisoners were liberated, and exiles were permitted to return to their homes." ^ ^ See the chronicle attributed to Niccol6 di Ventura, in the Miscellanea Storica Sanese of G. PORRI (Siena, 1884), p. 73. - MONACH. Tatav., Chronic, lib. iii. in Rer. Italic. Script., viii. 712. 18 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIEVAL COMMUNES Neither, in all this, was there any hypocrisy or in- consistency. The men of that age were neither weak nor fickle, they were simply completely natural, and open, as all versatile races are open, to the influence of circumstance.^ Except in sickness or old age, the mediaeval Italian was conscious of few restraints. His belief in a literal burning hell had done much to sap the foundations of his morality and to render him callous and selfish ; while the Church had established an impassable gulf between the religious and the ethical duty. Capable of great crimes and of great virtues, the man of the Middle Ages loved and hated, worshipped and blasphemed, with equal passion, and gave free vent to the best and worst sides of his nature. Yet, sin, revel, riot as he might, in the background of his thoughts, the Unseen World was ever present — definite, almost palpable. His saints were very accessible and very real, with human weaknesses and human prejudices. The veil between the visible and the invisible was of the thinnest ; he might sell his soul to the devil as easily as he could betray his faction ; he might approach the celestial powers as frankly as he would appeal to the Potesta of his native city.2 What wonder, then, if it was an age of contrasts ! And these contrasts are as manifest in the history of the Palio as they are in any and every other phase of medi- aeval life. As we have seen already, the Palio was intimately con- nected with religion. It was generally run on some festival of the Church, or in honour of some saint ; and, like the ancient Roman hidi^ often constituted the principal part of the solemnities. In seasons of pestilence or of special peril, it was regarded as a convenient mode of placating the Divine vengeance.* Yet, in spite of its ceremonial and almost sacred character, it was habitually employed as a means of heaping insult and opprobrium on defeated enemies, and was not ^ See E. Armstrong, Lorenzo de' Medici (London, G. P. Putnam's Sons, igcx)), pp. 289-290, where this feature of the Italian character is ably discussed. ^Compare my ^' Ensamples" of Fra Filippo. A Study of Mediceval Siena (Siena, E. Torrini, 1901), chaps, v., vi. ' Thus, as I shall have occasion to notice more fully hereafter, the Sienese, in 1363, ordered a palio to be run in honour of Our Lady, tit suis intercessionibiis a vigenii epyiimia liberentur. See the Deliberazioni del Consiglio Gcnerale, ad annum ^ fo. 39*. 19 PALTO AND PONTE unfrequently celebrated with circumstances of startling indecorum. In the Communal wars of the 13th and 14th centuries, the first decisive battle generally resulted in the retirement of the defeated army within the walls of its city. The victors ravaged the country round about, and then, advancing to the very gates, coined money in memory of their triumph, hurled asses over the walls with their mangonels, and generally conducted themselves in such a manner as might serve to convince the vanquished of the supreme contempt in which they were held. In 1230, when the Florentines burst through the Porta Camollia and penetrated into Siena as far as S. Pietro alia Magione, the Count Alberto di Mangone hung his shield upon the gate in token of victory ; ^ and, thereafter, they cut down a pine tree *' of inestimable greatness," which stood upon Monte Cellesi, distant hardly a mile from the city.^ However, perhaps the most usual insult was the running of a palio in full view of the beleaguered garrison. Thus, in 1264, the Pisans ran a palio beneath the walls of Lucca.^ In the summer of 1289, the Florentines laid siege to Arezzo, "and there they caused to be run a palio for the festival of St John . . . and they hurled asses into the city with mitres on their heads, for despite and scorn of the Bishop thereof."* In 1325, Castruccio Castracane, lord of Lucca, broke the Florentine host at Altopascio in the Val di Nievole, and devastated the Florentine contado up to the gates of the city. *' Thereafter, on the day of St Francis, the 4th October, he caused to be run three palii from the Ponte alle Mosse^ even to Peretola, one by folk on horse- back, one on foot, and one by prostitutes ; nor was there any man so bold that he would issue forth from the city of Florence."*^ In the same year the Modenese, assisted by the troops of Passerino, Seignior of Mantua, of Azzo Visconte and of the Marquises of Este, signally defeated the Bolognese ^ Cronica Fiorentina^ published by P. Villari in I prinii due secoli della slon'a di Firenze (second edition), vol. ii. p. 240. 2 Ibidem. See also Malavolti, Historia de^ fatti e giurre de' Sanest (In Venetia, 1599), parte i. c'^'^ 55, 2 MuRATORl, Rer. Italic. Script., vi. 194, 195. * G. ViLLANi, Cronica, vii. 132. . ^ See p, 9 supra. * G. ViLLANi, Cronica, ix. 317 ; and compare the Cronaca Sanese in MuRATORl, xv. 71. 20 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIAEVAL COMMUNES at Zappolino, and advanced with their victorious army to the gates of Bologna, where they caused to be run a paHo ad cBternam memoriam prmnissorum et CBternu'm Bononiensium scandalum} The siege of Arezzo, in 1335, was marked by a strange mixture of rehgion and indecency ; for the victorious Perugians not only caused the prostitutes who followed the army to run a palio in a peculiarly shameless way,^ but actually supple- mented the performance with a solemn mass in the captured Cathedral, above which waved the Perugian standard, the red lion of the Party Guelf on a white field. Money was coined within the sacred precincts, " and (says the chronicler) there were also done many other despites which are not here set down." Lastly, the victors returned to Perugia. "And the prostitutes who had run the palio at Arezzo returned ; and they came all clad in rosy red, they and their horses ; and they brought with them the said palio. Moreover many marble images were brought which were found in the said Cathedral, the which images were drawn on waggons by oxen ; and the oxen and the waggons were covered with red cloth ; and the said images were set before the wall of the Church of San Lorenzo of Perugia, toward the piazza ; and, in like manner, the said palio was placed there, perpetue rei memorie" The Perugians were frankly pagan. Just as ancient Rome, when she extended her sway over distant nations, enlarged the boundaries of her mythology, and found ^ Rer. Italic. Script..^ xi.: Cronica Modenese, ad annmn. 2 Cronaca del Graziani in the " Archivio storico italiano," torn. xvi. parte i. p. 113. — " Anco ce fecero currere el palio denante a la porta de Arezzo da le putane alzate fina alia Centura." — This performance, though frankly indecent, probably offended the modesty of none of the spectators, and can hardly be termed immoral. It was simply an insult to the Aretines. We may, I conceive, fairly compare it with an incident in RadwelVs Case, 18, E. i, as reported in Rollers Abridgment. There a woman, desiring to prove that she was not pregnant, uncovered herself in open Court. ' ^ Jurametito asserebat se non esse pragnantem ; et, ut hoc omnibus vianifeste liqtceret, vestes suas usque ad tttnicavi exuebat, et in plena curia sic se videri per?nisit." Mr. Hargrave, commenting upon the case {Co. Lit. 123b, n. 190), says that " it reflects great discredit on the lord's court which permitted such gross indecency." That, however, is obviously an i8th century view of the matter, and one which would have been quite incomprehensible to the medireval mind. Enough to prove this, the fact that, when thirty noble ladies of Treviso, whom Alberico da Romano had stripped and driven out of the city, took refuge with the Cardinal Legate in Venice, he brought them, naked as they were, into the Piazza of St Mark, and made use of them as an argument to point his exhorta- tions to take up arms against the tyrant. — See the Cronaca di Fra Salimbene (edition cited), vol. i. p. 258. — The result of that sight and that sermon we have already seen — p. 17 supra. 21 PALTO AND PONTE room in her Pantheon for the gods of Egypt, of Syria and of the further East, so Perugia adopted as her own the saints of the cities which she conquered. From Bastia she brought the relics of S. Corrado ; from Bettona the body of S. Crispolto, which was placed in her Duomo, and from Arezzo these inmagine de pietra, o volemo dire de marmo, of which we have just spoken,^ In 1363, "the Pisans made an incursion even to the walls of Florence, and there they halted and abode three days, doing great damage with many insults. They caused three palii to be run, well nigh to the gates of Florence. One was on horseback, another was on foot, and the third was run by loose women {Je femmine mundane) ; and they caused newly made priests to sing Mass there, and they coined money of divers kinds, of gold and of silver ; on one side thereof was Our Lady with Her Son in her arms, on the other side was the Eagle with the Lion beneath its feet. . . . Thereafter, for further despite, they set up a pair of gallows over against the gate of Florence, and hanged thereon three asses; "^ *'and, for derision, they placed upon the necks thereof the names of three citizens of Florence, to each of them a name." ^ The next year the Florentines had their revenge, for they routed the Pisans at the Borgo di Cascina,^ and returned home with forty-two waggons^ full of prisoners, all packed together "like melons," and with a dead eagle, tied by the neck, and dragging along the ground. E vennene a P^irenze in sulle carra Trencentotrenta a modo di poponi. E I'aquila impiccata per la gola Dinanzi a tutti meno la carola.*' With this incident I will conclude the chapter, for I think ^ Cronaca del Graziani, op. ciL, pp. 88, 166. See also L. BoNAZZi, Stoj-ia di Perugia dalle Origini al j86o (Perugia, Tip. di Vincenzo Santucci, 1875), ^o^* '• P- 399> - Cronaca Sauese in Muratori, xv. 177. * See the Cronica of M. ViLLANi, continued by his son, xi. 63. * See p. 9 supra, ' So the Anonimo fioreniino, Diario cit., adanniim. ViLLANi, loc. cit., cap. 98, says that there were forty-four waggons, and the Cronichetta of Manni, forty-three. The Diario of MONALDI agrees with the Anonivio fioreiitino. ^ Antonio Pucci, Guerra di Pisa, in the Delizie degli Eriiditi Toscani, torn. vi. Compare note 2, p. 13 supra. 22 THE PALIO OF THE MEDIAEVAL COMMUNES that I have written enough to afford the reader some notion of what the PaHo was in the first two centuries of its existence. I now propose to turn my attention to the origin of the various Sienese paHi, and more especially to the greatest of them all, that of Mid- August, which was run in honour of Our Lady, the City's Protector and Advocate. 23 CHAPTER THE SECOND SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS Maria advocata Mediatrix optima Inter Christum Et Senam suam. Assembled is in thee magnificence, With mercy goodnesse, and with swich pitee, That thou, that art the sonne of excellence, Nat oonly helpest hem that preyen thee, But often tyme, of thy benygnytee, Ful frely, er that men thyn help biseche, Thou goost biforn and art hir lyves leche. Chaucer, Second Nun^s Tale. I IT is well known that at the dawn of the Communal Era the institutions of Italy, like those of the rest of Christendom, were soaked and permeated by feudalism, and that feudal also, at least in their inception, were the Communes themselves. Indeed, the feudal theory was even extended to things celestial, and the Emperor, as lord paramount of the world, was said " to hold direct from God." Bearing this in mind, we are the better able to understand the peculiar feelings with which the Sienese regarded the Blessed Virgin after the solemn act of dedica- tion whereby, in 1260, they constituted themselves her vassals, and Her the suzerain of their Commune and of its contado. The occasion was one of special peril. The Florentines, who had invaded the Sienese territory, without opposition, by the way of the Val di Pesa, were advancing upon the city, and had sent ambassadors from their camp at Pieve Asciata to demand immediate surrender. The hostile army included levies from Bologna, Prato, Volterra, Samminiato, * 24 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS Colle di Val d'Elsa and San Gimignano, and was further augmented by troops from Orvieto, Perugia and Arezzo, to say nothing of a thousand knights under the Count Aldobrandino Rosso of PitigHano, and six hundred Sienese fuortisciti under Pepo Visconti da CampigHa. In all, they must have numbered close upon forty thousand fighting men. One chronicler says fifty-six thousand ; while Malavolti, without committing himself to any particular cipher, tells us that the army was "tremendo per la moltitudine, se non per altra qualita sua."^ It was the 2nd of September, and the Council of the Ventiquattro, the heads of the State, were in session in the Church of San Cristofano in the Piazza Tolomei, when the Florentine envoys arrived, and, "without making any reverence or obeisance," delivered their message in these words : " We will that this city shall be forthwith dismantled, and that all the walls shall be levelled with the ground, that we may enter and depart at our pleasure, and that we may so enter and so depart in such place as we may choose. And further, we will to place a Signoria in every Terzo of Siena at our pleasure ; in like manner to build forthwith a strong fortress in Camporegi, and to garrison and provision it, and to maintain the same for our magnificent and potent Commune of Florence ; and this right quickly without any delay. As for you, if ye do not do all that we have com- manded you, ye may await with certainty to be besieged by our potent Commune of Florence. And we warn you that, in such case, we are resolved to have no pity. Give us then your answer at once." And, continues the chronicler,^ "the Ventiquattro, having heard at the mouths of the ambassadors these iniquitous and wicked demands, replied to them after this manner : ' We have heard and understood that which ye have demanded, ^ Malavolti, ii. at c^^ 14, 15. ^ La sconfitta di Montaperto secondo il nianoscritto di Niccolb di Giovanni di Francesco Ventura, published by Giuseppe Porri, in his " Miscellanea Storica Sanese" (Siena, 1844). According to the best opinion, the chronicle was written very shortly after the battle. In all the versions which have come down to us, there are, however, numerous interpolations and glosses of a later date. See the Alanuale della Lett. Ital. cotnpilaio dai professori A. D'Ancona e O. Bacci (Firenze, Barbera, 1903), vol, i. p. 184. Ventura's version was written in 1442. 25 PALIO AND PONTE and we bid you return to the captain and to the commissaries of your Commune, and to say unto them that we will give them an answer face to face.' Then the ambassadors departed from Siena, and went to the camp of the Florentines, which was now near to Montaperto. For, while the am- bassadors were in Siena, they had departed from Pieve Asciata, and had pitched their camp between the Malena and the Valdibiena, in the level spot which is called le Cortine. And thither went the Florentine ambassadors, and delivered their message to the captain and to the commissaries as the Ventiqiiattro had said unto them, that they would answer them face to face. And then, the said troops, in the said place, bethought them to encamp and to abide, awaiting the said reply of the Sienese." Meanwhile, in Siena was great dread, and more than one of the councillors, whether through treachery or through fear, advised that "in something the Florentines should be pleasured and contented, lest worse things come upon us." Nor can we greatly marvel at their pusillanimity, when we remember that, for well nigh a century, the City of the Lily had pursued her triumphant course, vanquishing all her enemies. At Asciano, at Montalto, at Calcinaia sull' Arno, at Montaia and at Pontedera, the Sienese had been hopelessly routed ; their contado had been overrun and devastated until the country folk had begun to migrate into Florentine territory, leaving their flame-blackened home- steads and ruined vineyards ; ^ while Montalcino and Monte- pulciano had shaken off their allegiance and had allied themselves with the Guelf Commune. Verily the statement of Sanzanome, that he had never seen or heard that the Sienese had defeated the Florentines, was, with all its exaggeration, something more than an empty boast.^ However, there were gallant spirits in Siena who did not yet wholly despair ; and by the influence of Provenzano Salvani and of the Count Giordano, who had been sent to ^ See Professor L. Zdekauer's edition of the Consiituto del Comune di Siena deW anno 1262 (Milano, 1897), Distinction iii. Rubric 340. ^ Gesta Flo7-e7itinonim (Florentine edition), p. 134. "Hoc tamen affirmo quod senenses superare fiorentinos non vidi nee audivi quod in bello fuissent in tabula cum eisdem." 26 SENA VETUS CTVITAS VTRGTNIS the assistance of the city, by King Manfred, with a force of eight hundred German men-at-arms, it was finally resolved to give battle to the enemy. " Now the citizens of Siena had heard of the cruel demand of the Florentines . . . and all the city was moved. And all the people left their dwellings and came to S. Cristofano ; and so great was the multitude of the people who were in the Piazza Tolomei and through all the streets, that scarcely were they able to contain them. "And when they beheld this, the Ventiquattro, who ruled and governed the city of Siena, forthwith assembled a council ; and it was proposed to make a syndic, who should have full pre-eminence and power, and should embody in his own person the authority which belonged to the whole body of the citizens collectively ; and that he should be empowered to give, grant, sell and pledge Siena and its contado as to him might seem advisable. " As if inspired by God, the said Councillors, by common consent, chose for syndic a man of perfect and good life, and of the best qualities which at that time could be found in Siena, by name Buonaguida Lucari. To him was given full and free authority and power, as much as had the whole body of the city, as is said above. And, while this man was being elected syndic, our spiritual father, Misser the Bishop, caused the bell to be rung to call together the clergy of Siena, priests, canons and friars, and all the religious orders, in the Church of the Duomo of Siena.^ And all the clergy being gathered together, as you have heard, Misser the Bishop spake briefly to those clerics who were there, and said : Tantum est ministri Virginis Dei, etc. And in his discourse he taught all those clergy how it was their duty to pray ^ At this time Tommaso Balzetti degli Scotti de' Grandi was Bishop of Siena (i 254-1273). Learned, zealous and of holy life, he is often decorated with the title of Beatus by the early chroniclers, and the expression "our spiritual father, Misser the Bishop" was no mere formal recognition of episcopal rank.* It may, however, be interesting to note that, while the temporal sovereignty of the Bishop had long since passed away, he still held a position of great authority and influence, possessing what almost amounted to an indirect power of legislation. Compare // Constituto del C. di Siena delV anno 1262 (edition cited), Dis- tinction i. Rubrics 128, 141, 192. * See Pecci, Storia del Vescovado, op. cit., p. 216. 27 TALTO AND PONTE to God, and to His most holy Virgin Mary, and to all the Saints, for the people and for the city, that God would vouchsafe to preserve them from so great ruin and sub- jection ; even as He delivered Nineveh through fasting and prayer, that so it might please God to deliver Siena from the fury of the Florentines and from destruction at their hands. And he commanded that every man should go in procession, bare-footed, through the Duomo, singing in a loud voice psalms and spiritual songs, with litanies and with many prayers. " Now, while Misser the Bishop was, as you have heard, making procession with his clergy in the Duomo, God, by reason of the prayers of the clergy and of all good people who prayed to Him throughout the city — God, moved to compassion by the prayers of His Mother, suddenly put it in the heart of the syndic, namely of Buonaguida, to rise and speak as follows. And he spake in so loud a voice that he was heard by those citizens who were without in the Piazza di S. Cristofano. ' As you, Signori of Siena, know, we have prayed the protection of King Manfred ; now, it appears to me that we should give ourselves, our goods and our persons, the city and the contado, to the Queen of Life Eternal ; that is to Our Lady Mother, the Virgin Mary. To make this gift may it please you all to bear me company.' " As soon as he had said these words, Buonaguida stripped himself to his shirt, and bare-footed and bare- headed, with a rope around his neck, came forth into the presence of all those citizens, and, in his shirt, betook himself toward the Duomo. And all the people who were there followed him ; and those whom he met upon his way went with him ; and, for the most part, they were bare-footed and without their cloaks, and no man had anything upon his head. And he went bare-footed repeating over and over : ' Glorious Virgin Mary, Queen of Heaven, aid us in our great need, that we may be delivered out of the hand of our enemies the Florentines — those lions who wish to devour us.' And all the people said : ' Madonna, Queen of Heaven, we entreat thy compassion.' And so they reached the Duomo. 28 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS "And Misser the Bishop went through the Duomo in procession. At the high altar, before Our Lady, he began to sing the Te Deum laudamus in a loud voice. And as he began, Buonaguida reached the door of the Duomo, with the people following him, and commenced to cry with a loud voice : Misericordia — the said Buonaguida and all the people, Misericordia. — At which cry Misser the Bishop turned himself about with all his clergy, and came to meet the said Buonaguida. When they were come together, each man made reverence, and Buonaguida fell upon his face upon the ground. Misser the Bishop raised him up and gave him the kiss of peace ; and so all those citizens kissed one another on the mouth. And this was at the lower part of the choir of the Duomo. ''Then, holding one another by the hand, Misser the Bishop and Buonaguida went to the altar before Our Mother, the Virgin Mary, and kneeled down with great crying and continual tears. This Buonaguida remained stretched out upon the ground, and all the people and women, with very great weeping and sobbing, waited for the space of a quarter of an hour. Then Buonaguida alone raised himself upon his feet and stood erect before Our Mother, the Virgin Mary, and spake many wise and discreet words, among which were these : ' Gracious Virgin, Queen of Heaven, Mother of sinners, to thee I, a miserable sinner, give, grant and recommend (ti do e dono e raccoi7tando) this city and the contado of Siena. And I pray thee, Mother of Heaven, that thou wilt be pleased to accept it, although, to one so powerful as thou art, it is but a little gift. And likewise I pray and supplicate thee to guard, free and defend our city from the hands of our enemies the Florentines, and from whomsoever may desire to injure us or to bring upon us anguish and destruction.' ** These words being said, Misser the Bishop ascended into the pulpit and preached a very beautiful sermon, teach- ing the people of unity and exhorting them to love one another, to forgive those who had done them wrong, and to confess and communicate. And he entreated them to unite to place this city and their persons under the pro- 29 PALIO AND PONTE tection of the glorious Virgin Mary, and to go with him and with his clergy in procession. " And in this procession, before them all was carried the carven crucifix which stands in the Duomo, above the altar of S. Jacomo Interciso, beside the campanile/ Next followed all the monks and friars, and then came a canopy, and under the canopy was Our Mother, the Virgin Mary. Hard by was Misser the Bishop, and he was bare-footed ; and at his side was Buonaguida, in his shirt and with a rope about his neck, as you have heard. Then followed all the Canons of the Duomo, bare-footed and bare-headed. They went singing holy psalms and litanies and prayers. And behind them came all the people, bare-footed and uncovered, and all the women bare-footed, and many with their hair dishevelled, ever recommending themselves to God and to Hs Mother the Virgin Mary, and saying Pater nosters and Ave Marias and other prayers. . . . And so they went in procession even to the Church of San Cristofano and into the Campo, and returned to the Duomo, where they remained to confess and to receive the sacrament and to make peace with one another. And he who was the most injured sought out his enemy to make with him perfect and good accord. " And thereafter, when he had confessed and was in perfect charity with all men, the said Buonaguida left the Duomo with a little company, and returned to San Cristofano ; and there, together with the Ventiquattro, as if inspired by God, they deliberated well and wisely. '* Now these things befel on Thursday the 2nd day of September. And, nearly all night long, the people thronged to confess and to make peace the one with the other. He who had received the greater injury went about seeking his enemy to kiss him on the mouth and to pardon him. In this they consumed the greater part of the night. "And when the morning was come, the Ventzquattro, who ruled and governed Siena, sent three criers — into every Terzo one — proclaiming and crying : * Valorous citizens, ^ This crucifix is said to be the one which is to be seen to-day above the altar of the first chapel in the northern transept of the Duomo. The legend, however, is untrustworthy, as the crucifix in question seems to be a work of the early Quattrocento. — See the new Guide to Siena, by W. Heywood and L. Olcott (Siena, E. Torrini, 1903), p. 241. 30 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS make ready ! Arm yourselves ! Take your perfect armour ; and let each man, in the name of Our Mother the Virgin Mary, follow his proper banner, ever recommending himself to God and to His Mother.' " And hardly was the proclamation finished when all the citizens flew to arms. The father did not wait for the son, nor one brother for another ; and so they went toward the Porta San Viene.^ And thither came all the standard- bearers. The first was that of San Martino, first from reverence for the Saint, and also because that Terzo was near to the gate. The second was that of the City, with a very great army of people and well equipped. The third was the royal banner of Camollia, which represented the mantle of Our Mother, the Virgin Mary, and was all white and shining, fair and pure.^ Behind that banner came a great multitude ^ The Poi-ta San Viene is, of course, the same as the Porta Pispini. — See Guide to Siena, op. cit., p. 20. — In this connection it is curious to note that that "malignant detractor of the Sienese," Giovanni Villani, did not even know the topography of the city he so systematic- ally slandered. He speaks of the army of Siena as issuing through i)\Q porta di San Vita, — Cronica, vi. 79. ^ The city of Siena is still divided into three Terzi or Terzieri, viz. the Terzo di Citta, the Terzo di Camollia, and the Terzo di San Martino. The banner of the Terzo di Citta dis- played a white cross on a red field ; that of the Terzo di Camollia was, as we have seen, all white ; while the banner of the Terzo di San Martino was red, the Saint being depicted thereon, in the act of giving his cloak to a beggar. In a poem of the 1 6th century, which celebrates the victory of Camollia (1526), we have the following description of these standards : — El primo Gonfalon che 'n Piazza venne Fu di Citta, quel valoroso Terzo, Che fuoco tutto acceso par ch' accenne Di bianca purita la Croce alterzo ; Tremila cinquecento pedon tenne Di gente d' arme, e non da ciancie, o scherzo, Divisi tutti in variate schiere, Dette Compagne con le lor Bandiere. EI secondo che in Piazza venne avanti Fit '1 bel Terzier chiamato San Martino, Dove a cavallo dipinto innanzi Lui, che si spoglia, e veste un poverino, E sotto questo son tremila fanti Di stare a paragon col suo vicino. L' ultimo venne quel di Camollia, Ch' e tutto bianco quel ch' a Monte Aperto A Fiorentini cavo ben la pazzia Quando el lor Campo rimase diserto, Tremila cento fanti questo havia AI morir per la Patria ognun esperto. . . . (See G. A. Pecci, Mcmorie slorico-criliche delta Citth di Siena, ii. 224.) 31 PALIO AND PONTE of people, citizens, foot-soldiers and horsemen ; and with this company were many priests and friars, some with weapons and some without, to aid and comfort the troops ; and all were of good will, of one mind and of one purpose, and well disposed against our enemies the Florentines, who with so great vehemence had demanded things unrighteous and contrary to reason. " Now, all the men having gone forth, those devout women who remained in Siena, together with Misser the Bishop and the clergy, commenced betimes, on Friday morning, a solemn procession with all the relics which were in the Duomo and in all the churches of Siena. And they went from one church to another ; the clergy singing divine psalms, litanies and prayers, and the women all bare-footed, in coarse garments, ever praying to God that He would send back to them their fathers, sons, brothers and husbands. And all, with great weeping and wailing, went on that procession, ever calling upon the Virgin Mary. " Thus they went all Friday, and all that day they fasted. When even was come, the procession returned to the Duomo, and there they all knelt, and so remained while Misser the Bishop said the litanies, with many prayers, to the honour and glory of God and of His and our Mother. Thereafter, they made confession ; and also there were offered up many fervent prayers to the glory of God and of the Virgin Mary, always entreating her for the city of Siena, and for all its contado : ' Especially we beseech thee. Mother most holy, that thou wilt give assistance and valour and great courage to us, thy people, to the end that we may, by thy aid, obtain the victory over our enemies and over those who wish or are able to injure us ; whereby the so great pride and wickedness of those accursed dogs and iniquitous Florentines may be abased and brought to naught. And also we pray thee, oh. Our Mother, that the Florentines may not have strength, nor courage, nor valour, nor any power of resistance against the people of Siena, who are thy people. And thou. Madonna, our Mother, give help and wisdom to this thy city.' " And now that we have told of Misser the Bishop, our spiritual father, and of the devout citizens and women, how 32 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINTS they besought God and His Mother, Saint Mary, to give victory to the city of Siena and to its people, we will speak of the ordered legions of all the army. " The day commenced to break ; and it was that blessed day Friday, the third of September, in the year aforesaid ; so, being drawn up in battle array, they commenced their march towards the Bozzone. Ever the squadrons kept close together, that of the Captain of the Commune of Siena, and that of Misser the Count Giordano. ... So one company followed the other, always close together. And they held on their way towards the Bozzone. All went calling on the name of our Lord God, and of His Mother, the Virgin Mary ; and to her they ever commended themselves, beseeching her to give them help, and strength, and courage, and power against those wicked and perfidious Florentines. Thus praying, they came to the foot of a hill which is called the Poggio de* Ropoli ; which hill was over against the camp of the Florentines." And, says Giovanni Villani, when the Guelf army, which was expecting with confidence the surrender of the city, " beheld the Germans and the other knights and the people of Siena come towards them as though they intended to give battle, they marvelled greatly and were sore afraid"^ — a statement which is corroborated by the Sienese chroniclers, who embellish their narratives by the introduction of super- natural incidents; for they tell us that the Captain of the Florentines had with him a familiar spirit — il diavolo rinchiuso in una lampolla — who, being interrogated, informed him that he was foredoomed to die between the evil and the good {^fra 7 male e 7 bene) — a saying which disquieted him greatly, when he learned that the two streams between which he had encamped his army were called respectively la Biena and la Malena} Moreover, that night the Florentine ^ G. Villani, vi, 79. ^ It may be observed that Giovanni Villani returns the compliment with interest when he recounts the Guelf victory of Colle di Val d'Elsa, in 1269, declaring that Provenzano Salvani, the Sienese general, was deceived by a devil, whom he had consulted as to the result of the battle, and who paltered with him in a double sense, and lured him to his death {Crontca, vii. 31), Florence could give Siena many points in the game of calumny, and beat her badly. — Compare my " Ensamphs " of Fra Filippo, etc., op. cit., p, 28 note ; and see Professor Langton Douglas' History of Siena (London, John Murray, 1902), pp. 80, 352. C 33 PALIO AND PONTE sentries " beheld as it were a mantle, most white, which covered all the camp of the Sienese and the city of Siena. And thereat they marvelled greatly ; and some said : * It is nothing but the smoke of the great fires which the Sienese have made.' But others said : ' Not so, for if it were smoke it would drift away, whereas this abideth ever in the same place, as ye see. Wherefore this must be more than smoke.' And there were those who said that to them it seemed to be the mantle of Our Mother, the Virgin Mary, the guardian and defender of the people of Siena. So said many in the camp of the Florentines. . . . ** And when this mantle was seen by the Sienese over the camp and over the city of Siena, they fell upon their knees upon the earth, with tears, saying : * Glorious Virgin, we beseech thee that thou wilt protect us and deliver us out of the hand of our enemies, and that they may not have force or courage against us.' And all said : ' This is a great miracle ; this is an answer to the prayers of our father Misser the Bishop, and of his holy clergy, and of the righteous women and men who have remained in Siena in his company ; and ever they are praying to God and to His Mother, the Virgin Mary, beseeching them to give us help and strength against those dogs, the Florentines.' " With the more minute details of the battle itself : lo strazio e il grande scempio Che fece I'Arbia colorata in rosso, we are not concerned. Indeed, the story has been told so often that it is not necessary to repeat it.^ Suffice it to record the closing scenes of the grim tragedy. After the treason of Bocca degli Abati, when the men-at-arms had ridden amain out of the battle, and the foot-soldiers were scattered abroad in their flight, like seed cast by the hand ^ Probably the best description of the battle is to be found in Professor Langton Douglas' History of Siena, op. cit., pp. 91-104. Quite as important is the Battaglia di Montaperti by C. Paoli, published in the " Bullettino della Societa Senese di Storia Patria Municipale," vol. ii. This, in connection with the Libra di Montaperti (yo\. ix. of the " Documenti di Storia Italiana "), should fiirnish all the information which can be demanded by the most exigent of students. Sismondi, in his History of the Italian Republics (vol. i. p. 411 of the Italian edition), gives a long list of the chroniclers and historians who have dealt with the subject. 34 SENA VETUS CTVITAS VIRGINTS of the sower, the flower of the Florentine army collected around the carroccio, and the banners which they had been given to guard ; and there, at the foot of the Poggiarone, made their last memorable stand. Above them still floated the proud standard of the people of Florence, and better was it to die at its foot than to see it fall into the hands of the hated Sienese, or their own still more hated fuorusciti. Then spake they comfortable words the one to the other, each man bidding his fellow to be of good courage and to defend that carroccio and those banners which, In so many wars in the days that were past, they had followed to victory. They reminded each other that by no means must they bring shame upon the haughty name of Florentine, and that to survive were infamy. They kissed those honoured trophies, and covered them with their bodies, and, long after all hope was dead and their allies and the bulk of their fellow-citizens were already in headlong flight, they still fought on, disdain- ing to yield. So determined was their resistance and so furious their valour, that the whole Sienese army failed to conquer them, and the carroccio was only taken when the last of its defenders lay stark in death at its side.^ Then, all being over, the victors, and more especially the Germans, vied with one another in befouling the Guelf ensigns, and in trampling them into the mire, thus revenging the great despite done to the royal standard of King Manfred on the day of Santa Petronilla.^ And from all the Sienese army arose a great shout : ** They are broken ! They are broken ! Smite them, smite them, O valorous host ! Let not one of them escape ! " " And," writes the fierce old chronicler, " it was astonishing to see the great butchery that they made of those dogs of Florentines. . . . And the slaughter ever increased, and so furious was the press that, if one fell to earth, he might by no means regain his feet again, but was trampled to death. And so great were the ^ Leonardo Aretino, 1st. Fior., lib. ii. Even the Sienese chronicler Aldobrandini, albeit in words of scant courtesy, testifies to the gallantry of the Florentines. " Ma come el peccatore, che h indurato nella mala vita, e che s' avvede della sua ruina e non la fugge, cosi s' avollieno lore come se fussero ciechi, tanto che capitavano male." See PoRRi's Misc. Star. Sanese, p. 21. 2 See Langton Douglas, op. cil., p. 78. 35 PALTO AND PONTE piles of slaughtered men, and of horses, that it was difficult to pass them to smite what remained of the enemy. And the blood stood ankle-deep as it were a lake. Think ye how many were dead ! . . . Then rose the Malena and ran bank-high with blood, and flowed so strongly that it would have sufficed to turn four orreat water-mills. Such was the abundance of the blood of the Florentines and of their adherents which was shed that day. . . . And the valorous people of Siena ever followed them, butchering them as a butcher slays the animals in a slaughter-house.^ And seeing this, those of Lucca, of Arezzo and of Orvieto, and like- wise those of the Val d'Elsa, namely, the men of Colle, of S. Gimignano and of Volterra, and certain folk of Prato and of Pistoia, and especially what few were left alive of the people of Lucca and of Arezzo — seeing this, to wit the great slaughter that was made of them — suddenly turned aside and fled towards Montaperto ; and there they made a stand, wotting well that they could not escape, so hotly were they pursued by the Sienese. And all those others fled this way and fled that, and knew not whither to go to save themselves. And each man cried : * I surrender myself prisoner ; ' but there was none that would accept his surrender, for they smote them all with the sword. Wherefore it availed them nothing to say : ' Misericordia, I surrender ; ' for no man attended thereunto. And worse was their fate who prayed for mercy than theirs who died fighting. '* And beholding these things, the Captain of the Sienese ^ By " the valorous people of Siena," in this connection, we must, I apprehend, under- stand the foot-soldiers {popoli or pedites) as opposed to the milites {cavalieri) or men-at- arms. It had been a battle of cavalry ; and the old chronicles read like a piece out of Malory's Morte d^ Arthur. Only when the milites had done their work, and the Florentine host was broken, did the valoroso popolo di Siena become useful. — Compare P. ViLLARl, Niccolh Machiavelli e i szioi tempi (Milano, Hoepli, 1895, second edition), vol. i. pp. 16-17. In Siena, in the 13th century, the fundamental division of the body politic, both for civil and military purposes, was that of Milites and Populus. Cavalieri and People alike, were divided into three companies ; each of which marched under its own banner ( VI gonfalonesy tres ad opus milituni et Ires ad opus peditunt). The number of these companies was undoubtedly based upon the division of the city into Terzi (see p. 31 supra, note 2). The banners, both of milites and populi, were given in public parliament, assembled either in Cafiipo post Sanctum Paulum, or in platea ante Ecdesiam 7naiorem ; but, while the people took oath before the carroccio, the milites swore upon their standards. — See page xxxxiv of the Dissertazione sugli Statuti del Comune di Siena, which precedes the text of the Constituto in Professor Zdekauer's edition. 36 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS held council with the standard-bearers, and with the Count Giordano, and with those valiant knights ; and there spake the Captain after this manner : ' See ye what great butchery of men and horses hath been made, and is being made here ? ' And he was moved to compassion ; and that all might not die, he said : ' To me it seems that we should do well to send a proclamation, that they who wish to surrender shall be taken prisoners, and that he who will not yield shall be slain without pity.' And so was it done incontinently. And right glad were they who fled when they heard the pro- clamation to yield and to be received as prisoners. And they helped to bind themselves, so joyful were they to escape death. . . . And the number of the prisoners was twenty thousand ; and there were not then in Siena as many men as there were prisoners. Think ye then how many were dead. The number was incredible, for there were ten thousand dead, besides the horses which were slaughtered to the number of eighteen thousand. And, by reason of the great stench from the rotting corpses, they abandoned all that dis- trict. And for much time no one dwelt there, neither did any living thing come nigh it, save only wild and savage beasts." Thus was the ancient people of Florence broken and brought to naught — rotto e annullato. — The words are Villani's ; and thus fu distrutta La rabbia fiorentina, che superba Era in quel tempo si com' ora e putta. The night after the battle the victorious army encamped upon the hill of Ropoli, and, on Sunday morning, returned to Siena, having, according to the Diario of Gigli, first made a breach in the walls, in order that the carroccio might enter the city without lowering its great banner. Then " went they all to the Duomo, and there, with great reverence and devotion, gave praise and honour and glory to the Most High God ; and all returned thanks to Our Mother, the Virgin Mary, for the great honour and victory which she had given to her people." The antenne of the Sienese carroccio were set up in the 37 PALIO AND PONTE Cathedral/ and new money was coined, whereon, in addition to the ancient legend Sena Vetvs, appeared the words, CiviTAS ViRGiNis. Moreover, in after yeaus, it was provided by law that, when the great bell of the Mangia tower — the campana comunis — should be rung to assemble the magistrates of the Republic, its summons should commence with three distinct and separate strokes, in memory of the Angelic Salutation, and that if this formality were omitted, the proceedings of the session so irregularly convened should be null and void. So too, by a further statute, it was enacted that : Nulla mulier meretrix nomine Maria possit in Civitate stare aut morari ;^ while Professor Zdekauer informs us that, in the 13th century, when, according to the mediaeval ritual, the sacrament of Baptism was administered only on the vigils of Easter and of Pentecost, the first female infant who was christened invariably received the name of Mary.' Nor did it remain unnoticed by later writers that two of the earliest victories of the Sienese — those of Montemaggio and Rosaio — had been gained upon a Saturday — the day especially sacred to the Madonna. Touching this same battle of Rosaio, Girolamo Gigli, in his Citta diletta di Maria, tells us that, among the ancient seals of the Commune of Siena, in the archives of the Spedale della Scala, there was one of the 12th century, whereon was depicted the city, surrounded by the legend : Salvet Virgo Senam veterem quam signal amenam, together with a repre- sentation of the Virgin, seated above an altar, with the Holy Child in her arms and a rose in her right hand. On either side was an angel, and under foot a great and horrible serpent. This serpent (says he) is symbolical of the enemies of the Republic trampled under foot by the Blessed Virgin, and possibly has special reference to Frederick Barbarossa, upon ' True it is that, according to the popular tradition, the two great antenne, which may still be seen in the Duomo of Siena, are those of the Florentine carroccio. But the pre- ponderance of evidence is strongly in favour of the statement made in the text. See, on this subject, the remarks of A. LisiNl, in the Atti e memorie della R. Accademia de' Rozzi, Sezione di Storia Patria Municipale (new series), vol. iii. pp. 177-180; and compare C. Paoli, in his preface to the Libro di Montaperti, page xliiii. ' GiGLi, Diario (edition of 1854), vol. ii. pp. 186-187. ^ La Vita pi-ivata dei Senesi nel dugento (^lem., 1896), p. 11. 38 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS whose head the great Pope of the Lombard League had set his heel, exclaiming, Super aspidem et basiliscum ambulabis, et conculcabis leonem et draconem ; while the rose, in the hand of the Madonna, may have been an allusion to Rosaio, where the armies of the same Frederick were routed by the Sienese, who fell upon them and slew them, "follow- ing them until they found no one."^ And thus, he argues, Buonaguida was encouraged to dedicate the city to the Queen of Heaven, by memories of past protection and deliverance. Nor shall I enquire into the correctness of that conclusion, because, if we accept it, the charming story of what followed the taking of Campiglia d'Orcia, in 1234, is altogether be- lievable. And it I would not doubt. " And the said Campiglia (so runs the old chronicle) was sacked, destroyed and burned, because the defenders thereof refused to surrender. And they came all of them to a bad end, save only the women, who were sent to Siena ; and no injury was done to them. And many of them were widows, in that their husbands had been slain in the battle. . . . And to those women, such of their husbands as had been made prisoners, were for pity's sake restored, because they had no means wherewith to pay a ransom. . . . And they were all led, bound with a rope, into our Duomo ; and there, for the love of the Virgin Mary, who had given us so great a victory, they were released before the high altar." ^ A fine contrast this, to the frantic grief of the poor women on the field of Montalto,^and to the terror and despair of the Sienese ladies carried away to a life of shame, in Florence, after the attack upon the Porta Camollia, in 1230.* I am afraid, however, that some of the statements made by the excellent Gigli are hardly to be received with implicit confidence, since, in his hands, everything has reference to ' See RONDONI, Sena Veins, o il Cofiiune di Siena dalle origini alia Battaglia di Montaperti (Torino, Bocca, 1892), p. 21. 2 Croniche Senesi, by an unknown author, preserved among the Sienese Archives in the Palazzo del Governo. It is a paper codex of the 1 8th century, which appears to be a copy of 14th century chronicles, ' RONDONi, op. cii., p. 43; Sanzanome, Gesta Jlorentinorum (Florentine edition), p. 138. * Cronica fiorentina, published by P. Villari, loc. eit., p. 240. 39 PALIO AND PONTE and becomes typical of the Queen of Heaven.^ Thus the white and black stripes on the marble walls of the Holy Sienese Church are emblematic of the purity and humility of the Virgin ; or of those joyful and sorrowful mysteries whereby, as she told Saint Bridget, her life was ever divided between happiness and grief. The Balzana, the great black and white banner of the Commune, expresses the same idea ; and even the livery of the servitors of the Palazzo Pubblico was adopted out of reverence for two miraculous images of Our Lady — the one in Fontegiusta, which was covered with a blue veil ; and the other, known as the Madonna del Belverde, in the Church of the Padri Serviti. Nevertheless, La Citta diletta di Maria should be studied by all those who would realize what the worship of the Blessed Virgin meant, and still means, to the Sienese. While to such of my readers as cannot easily obtain access to that work, the following poetical invocation (therein quoted) may give some idea of the childlike confidence with which the people of Siena looked for assistance and protection to their Sovereign Lady and Advocate — the Mother alike of the Most High God and of their native city : — Tu, che per dar tutto il tuo latte a Siena, II celeste Figliuol non tieni allato. A strange metaphor ; but full of tenderness, and reverence, and simple faith. II Of the first dedication of the City, that of 1260, I have spoken somewhat at length. The four others, which took place respectively in 1483, in 1526, in 1550 and in 1555, may well be passed over with less particularity of detail; although they too are instructive, if we would realize the ^ " Ed io per me stimo, che non sia giudizio temerario il giudicar Mistero di Maria in tutte le cose del popolo Senese." Girolamo Gigli, in La Citth diletta di Maria. Uberto Benvoglienti, one of Muratori's correspondents and annotator of the Cronica Senese {Rer. Italic. Script., xv. 32, 33), speaking of Gigli, and particularly of his statements regarding the above-mentioned seal, says : — '* In veritk questi sbagli sono talmente massici, che per iscusarlo altro non saprei dire, ch' egli era solo Poeta, e non Istorico." 40 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS twofold nature of the reverence which Siena has ever paid to Our Lady, first as the Queen of Heaven, and secondly, as the feudal superior and advocate of the city, and which has coloured alike her laws, her traditions and her art. And first, of the dedication of 1483. In October 14S2 the Monte de/PoJ>olo heca.me predominant in the State ; and shortly afterwards the Noveschi were condemned to perpetual banishment/ On the night of the ist February 1483, the y^^^r/^i^aV^ surprised the strong fortress of Monteriggioni, and held it for more than two weeks. Thereafter, when Florence refused to permit them any longer to take refuge in her territory, they sought shelter in the States of the Church ; and, in August, having obtained the assistance of Rinaldo Baglioni and other gentlemen of Perugia, they invaded the Sienese Maremma and encamped near Saturnia. They were known to have with them only five hundred horse-soldiers and two thousand foot- men, but the very smallness of their number created the greater alarm, since it was believed that they would not have had the audacity to undertake such an invasion unless they were assured of effectual and speedy succour. In their panic, the civic magistrates bethought them to once more dedicate the city to the Virgin Mary, who, in time past, had so signally preserved it from peril ; and this, it was urged, was the more necessary, because the admission of the suzerainty of the Duke of Milan, in 1399, had in a manner deprived Our Lady of her feudal rights, and might have justly moved her to indignation. It was therefore unanimously resolved that Siena should be " restored and anew given and conceded to the Most Glorious Virgin, than whom ' It is, perhaps, superfluous to remark that, from the 14th century to the i6th, the internal history of Siena is, in fact, the history of those celebrated factions which were known as Ordini or Monti, and which represented at one and the same time, not only the political parties of the Republic, but also its social divisions. They have been happily characterized as " successive strata of dominant factions whose horizontal formation was disturbed by chronic seismic upheaval." — E. Armstrong, The Emperor Charles V. (London, Macmillan, 1902), vol. i. p. 124. These Monti were five in number, viz. the Monte de' Gentilnomini, the Monte de' Nove or Noveschi, the Monte de' Dodici, the Monte de Riformatori, and the Monte del Popolo. The reader who is interested in the subject will find it fully treated in an article by the late Professor Paoli, / Monti Fazioni nella Repubblica di Siena, published in the " Nuova Antologia" of August 1891. See also Guide to Siena, op, cit., pp. 45-91. 41 PALIO AND PONTE there can be no more effectual or stronger protection and safeguard.^ At this period, as in 1260, the high altar of the Cathedral still stood beneath the cupola ; and above it rose the celebrated ancona of Duccio, which Agnolo di Tura declares to have been "the most beautiful painting ever seen or made," and which "cost more than 3000 florins of gold." On the main panel was represented the Virgin enthroned, surrounded by saints and angels, while, at her feet, was inscribed the pious and proud legend : MATER . SANCTA . DEI . SIS . CAVSA . SENIS . REQVIEI . SIS . DVCIO . VITA . TE . QVIA . PINXIT . ITA . 2 This, however, was not the same picture before which Buonaguida had " kneeled down with great crying and continual tears." That had been removed to the Chapel of S. Bonifazio, and is the same which now stands in the so- called Cappella del Voto. It was known as " Our Lady of Grace," or as " Our Lady of the large eyes " {Madonna degli occki grossi), by reason of the number of silver eyes which had been presented as votive offerings, and which, up to the year 1458, had been hung about the picture, in much the same manner as the trinkets which now adorn the Madonna del Bordone in the Church of the Servi di Maria.^ And, since " this Our Lady was she who had hearkened unto the people of Siena what time the Florentines were routed at Montaperto," * it was resolved that to her the renewed dedication should be made. ^ The original documents with regard to this and subsequent dedications are preserved in the Archives of Siena. They have, however, been collected and published by A. ToTi, in his Atti di voiazione della Ciiti di Siena, etc. (Lazzeri, 1870). ^ Of this picture Miss L. Olcott {Guide to Siena, op. cit., p. 255) says that it is " not only the most important work in the annals of Sienese painting, but one of the most remarkable in the history of Italian art." It has been admirably criticised by Mr. Bernhard Berenson in his Central Italian Painters of the Renaissance. See also E. C. Norton, Historical Studies of Church Building in the Middle Ages (New York, Harper Bros., 1880) ; Langton Douglas, op. cit., pp. 345 seq., and A. Lisini, Notizie di Duccio Pittore e delta sua celebre ancona, in the Bullettino Senese di Storia Patria, vol. v. (1898), pp. 20-51. 'See Misc. Stor. Sen., vol. i. (1893), pp. lo-il. * Anonymous Chronicle, MS. in the " Biblioteca Comunale di Siena." Others, however, declare that the Madonjia delle Grazie was painted by Guido da Siena, immediately after the battle, and in gratitude for the victory. Cf. the Chronicle of Ventura (cited supra), p. 46, and note. 42 MADONNA AND CHILD FROM TIIK ANCONA or DUCCli) IIUOMNSEGNA SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS Accordingly, on the 24th August 1483, the Magnificent Signori and the Captain of the People went in procession from their Palace to the Cathedral, accompanied by all the magistrates of the Commune and by a great multitude of the citizens ; and they came even to the choir, where were the lord Cardinal and divers Bishops. Thereafter, was celebrated a solemn mass, upon the conclusion of which Master Mariano da Ghinazano ascended the pulpit and preached an eloquent sermon in praise of Our Lady. Then the lord Cardinal, walking between the Magnificent Prior and the Captain of the People, and followed by the others, approached the Cappella delle Grazie (Capella que vulgariter nuncupatur la Madonna de le Gratie ubi est ejus diva Jigura) ; and there, surrounded by a crowd of persons of both sexes, Andrea Sani, the Magnificent Prior, reverently deposited the keys of the gates of the city, laying them upon the altar before the holy image of the Glorious Virgin. The Cardinal offered up a devout prayer especially composed for the occasion {oratio quaedam devotissima ad propositwn facta) ; and the notary of the Concistoro formally published the contract of the presentation of the keys, whereby it was expressly stipulated that no one, of whatever rank, dignity or pre-eminence, whether ecclesiastical or temporal, should acquire or be deemed to have acquired any right by reason of the said ceremony, save only the Glorious Virgin herself ; who was thereby constituted the " true feudal lady, guardian, defender and safeguard " of Siena and of the Sienese — vera domina, custos, de/ensio, et presidium nostrimt — while the Magnificent Signori, the Governors of the City for the time being, and their successors, were declared to be her immediate vassals and repre- sentatives, and to hold their offices direct from her. Then the Prior, rising to his feet, once more drew near to the altar, and with his own hands reassumed the keys, while the choir broke out into a loud Te Deu77i, which rolled and thundered up- wards to the star-spangled roof of the Holy Sienese Church. Of this ceremony, besides the proceedings oixho. Concistoro and of the Consiglio della Campana, we have a very curious record in the shape of one of the Tavolette Dipinte, preserved 43 PALIO AND PONTE in the Palazzo del Governo, among the Sienese- Archives. As every visitor to Siena knows, these Tavolette, which were originally used as covers for the Books of Biccherna and of Gabella, constitute a kind of pictorial chronicle of the Commune.^ On the Tavolettaoi 1483, the Virgin is depicted as leaning forward to receive the keys at the hand of the Prior. Nor, in fact, did it seem for the moment that the renewed dedication of the City had failed of its purpose. The attack upon Saturnia failed ; and the fuorusciti^ being forbidden to enter the dominions of the Church, were compelled to take refuge in the contado of Perugia. Four years later, however, in July 1487, the Noveschi returned glorious and triumphant, with Pandolfo Petrucci at their head ; and the people, who a few years before had expelled him from the city, welcomed the exiles with shouts of joy. The public books record their return as being brought about " by the grace of God and of his Glorious Mother, the Virgin Mary, Lady of this City ; " ^ and, for a memorial of so auspicious an occasion, the conquerors caused to be painted, on a Tavoletta di Gabella, a ship bearing the arms and banners of the Commune, which is buffeted by contrary winds on a rocky coast. On high, the Virgin clothed all in gold, and surrounded by angels, guides it into port. And so, with constant change, we see the celestial patronage adapt itself to the pleasure of the opposing factions, according to the momentary predominance of the one or the other. Ill We must now pass over a period of something more than a generation, and come to the year 1526. With the murder of Alessandro Bichi (6th April 1525) the predominance of the Noveschi had come to an end, and many of them fled the city. The cause of the exiles was warmly espoused by the Medicean Pope, Clement VII. ; and, after the formation of the Holy League (22nd May 1526), when Siena, by reason of her position on the great Via Francigena ^ See my A Pictorial Chronicle of Siena (Siena, E. Torrini, 1902). • Delib, di Cons, Generale della Campana del 27 luglio, 1487. 44 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS between Rome and Florence, became a point of considerable importance to the allies, he actively intervened on their behalf. The papal and Florentine troops invaded the Sienese territories, and, advancing even to the walls of the city, occupied the suburb of Santa Petronilla, outside the Porta Camollia ; while, at about the same time, Andrea Doria appeared off the coast of the Maremma, with a fleet of eight galleys, and, without opposition, possessed himself of Grosseto, Portercole, Santo Stefano and Talamone. What, then, could the good citizens do but appeal once more to their Advocate and Defender, Our Mother, the Virgin Mary ? On Sunday, the 22nd July, the magistrates of the Republic went in solemn procession to the Duomo, ac- companied by a great silk standard, upon which was painted, above, the assumption of the Madonna, and, below, the city of Siena ; and there presented themselves before the altar of Our Lady of Grace, to whom they consigned the keys of the gates according to the ancient rite. She was solemnly proclaimed the Lady and feudal Seignior of the Commune, and entreated to intercede with her Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ, on its behalf, that he would vouchsafe to deliver it from "the Florentines and from Pope Clement VII., his enemies and ours " [a manu inimicorwm ipsius florentinorum et pontificis dementis VI J inimicorum nostrorum} Then, on the Wednesday following, the Sienese sallied forth from the Porta Camollia and from the Porta Fontebranda, and fell upon the enemy with such fury that they put them to the rout, killing more than a thousand of them. It was a second Montaperto. Women and priests joined in pursuing and slaughtering the fugitives ; and, if after the battle of the Arbia, Usiglia, the huckstress, "took and bound, with the band which she wore upon her head, thirty and six prisoners, all of the city of Florence," ^ there did not lack a 1 A. TOTI, op. cit., " Votazione IV." '^ " E essa Usiglia ne prese e lego a una sua benda trenta e sei prigioni tutti del corpo de la citta di Firenze." — Cronica di Ventura, loc, cit., p. 75, Compare La Scotifitta di Montaperto tratta dalle cronache raccolte da Dovienico Aldobrandini (also in the Miscellanea of G. PoRRi), p. 23. — Since a very scholarly and, as a rule, extremely accurate writer has fallen into the error of translating benda, in this connection, by the English word "garters," it may be well to emphasize the fact that benda is equivalent to the Latin vitta or taenia. Like the vitta, it was an insigne pudoris, worn only by virtuous women, and it was conse- 45 PALTO AND PONTE girl of twenty-one, by name Betta, who, after the battle of Camollia, "returned to Siena, leading with her a prisoner, whom she had taken and bound and laden with a barrel of wine, compelling him, at the point of her dagger, to walk whithersoever she would." ^ Nor were divine manifestations wanting. Warriors clad in white raiment were seen fighting on behalf of the victors ; the picture of Our Lady, above the Antiporto of Camollia, was illuminated with an unearthly radiance ; and, as in 1260, the mantle of the Virgin, in the form of a cloud, spread itself over the city and the combatants.^ In the face of these portents no one could doubt the celestial interposition ; and the Sienese, in the hour of their triumph, did not forget to return thanks to her who had succoured them. Moreover, there may still be seen in the Church of San Martino, the patron of soldiers, a painting by Giovanni di Lorenzo Cini, who himself took part in the battle, representing the miraculous intervention of the Madonna on behalf of her faithful city. IV The Sienese helped in the great siege which restored the Medici to Florence, in 1530; and, six years later, welcomed the Emperor with wild enthusiasm as he passed throuo-h their city.^ Nor were they content with such fleeting demonstrations of regard as triumphal arches and flower- strewn ways. Within a week after the departure of their quently held a deadly insult to snatch it from the head or cause it to fall to the ground — bindam imUieri tollere vcl de capite cadeix facere. (See L. Zdekauer, La vita privata, etc., op. cit. p. 45 ; // Framinefito degli ultimi due libri del pin antico Coiistitiito Senese, V. 216, in the " BuUettino Senese di Storia Patria," vol. iii. p. 85; and // Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato nel MCCCIX-MCCCX, Siena, Tip. Lazzeri, 1903, vol. ii. Dist. v. Rubric 279.) 1 GiGLl, Diario Senese (edition cited), ii. 625. 2 Ibidem, p. 626. The same author, in his Citth diletta di Mai-ia, says that the Madonna of the Antiporto of Camollia was painted by Simone Martini, the friend of Petrarch, and that the face was that of Madonna Laura. — Compare the " Misc. Stor. Sen.," vol. ii. (1894), p. 3 et seq. ^ See Aquarone, Gli Ultimi anni della Storia Repubblicana di Siena (Siena, Lazzeri, 1869), pp. 125-159 ; P. ViGO, Carlo Quinto in Siena (Bologna, presso Gaetano Romagnoli, 1884). 46 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS imperial guest, it was resolved by the Collegio di Balm that a column should be erected in commemoration of the joyful event ; 7d (so runs the record) ad posteros transeat et a cunctis viatoribus videatur, et erigi unam colunnam cum pilastro in spatium porte nove et porte veteris} A column in Siena to the honour of Charles V. ! Surely, in the light of subsequent events, no greater incongruity can be conceived. And yet, who shall say? If the Emperor did not prove the Praesidium Libertatis Nostrae, which the applauding multitudes proclaimed him that April afternoon, he was at least destined to save the city from the anarchy and violence which had so long oppressed it ; and, after all, it is difficult to deny that personal security, equal laws and peace to prosper in, afford more true liberty to the individual, even under il governo dun solo, than all that fierce fever of Communal freedom, which, in those old days, made it so terribly easy a thing for a citizen to oversleep himself some fine morning, and, on his awakening, to find the government changed, the gutters running blood, and the streets piled with hacked and battered corpses. This, however, the Sienese could not understand ; and when, a few years later, the city was garrisoned with Spanish troops, and Don Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, having ordered a general disarmament of the people, proposed to build a fortress upon the hill of San Prospero, they absolutely declined to believe that its only object was, as the Emperor assured them, ** the conservation of justice, liberty and peace in Siena," or that it constituted, as he declared, "the only efficacious medicine for the disease from which their city suffered."^ In vain they besought him to respect their ancient liberties. The work was begun, the necessary materials being obtained by the destruction of those towers with which, at that period, Siena was so thickly studded that, as an old writer quaintly remarks, la citta pareva un canneto^ Charles "^ Deliberazioni di Batia del 3 Maggio 1S36 ; "Misc. Stor. Senese," vol. iii. (1895), p. 75- 2 With regard to these events the reader may profitably consult E. ARMSTRONG, The Emperor Charles V. (London, Macmillan, 1902), vol. ii. pp. 282 et seq. ' Ugurgieri, Le Ponipe Sanesi, part ii. p. 307. It would, however, be a mistake to 47 PALIO AND PONTE replied to the expostulations and prayers of the ambassador that, " if the towers did not suffice, the palaces also should be levelled to the ground and used for the building of his fortress." Then, those poor Sienese, disarmed and helpless, over- awed by a brutal and licentious soldiery, and knowing not whither to turn for aid, resolved, in their terror and despair, once more to dedicate their city to the Queen of Heaven. On the 15th December 1550, the Signoria betook them- selves to the Duomo, " without sound of trumpets or other pomp," clad all in violet, and wearing their cloaks, as on Holy Friday. Before them went two pages, one bearing the banner of Our Lady, and the other a silver basin, wherein were all the keys of the city. And all the people followed them. Then, high mass having been sung without sound of organ or other instrument of music, the creed said and the offertory taken, the Magnificent Prior, laying aside his cloak, bare-footed and bare-headed, approached the high altar, whereon stood the picture of Our Lady of Grace, brought thither from its chapel in order that in all things the ceremony might conform with that que facta fuit tempore sconficte Montis Aperti} And there, upon his knees, he presented the keys to Misser Antonio Bensi, the Canon who that morning sang the mass, beseeching the Virgin to have mercy upon them, in these words : " Mother of God Immaculate, Our Lady and Advocate, suppose that Don Diego reduced Siena to her present comparatively towerless state. We have the testimony of Richard Lassels, who wrote his Voyage of Italy, in the 17th century, that, in his day, Siena had " many high towers in it " ; while the edition of the first part of the Historic di Siena of Orlando Malavolti, which was published in 1 574 by Luca Bonetti, was embellished by a frontispiece representing the city as still full of towers. It may be remarked that, although this edition has now become extremely rare, the frontispiece has been reproduced in the " Misc. Stor. Sen.," vol. ii. (1894), p. 17, and in my " Ensamples " of Fra Filippo, op. cit. ^ It may be well to note, in passing, that, at the time of the dedication of 1550, the high altar was the same as that which we see to-day, and occupied the same position ; being flanked by the same bronze angels and surmounted by the same elaborate tabernacle. The old altar was pulled down in 1506 ; and at the same time the picture of Duccio was divested of its ornamental framework and transferred to the Opera del Duomo. Later on, it was sawed in two and brought back to the Cathedral, half being placed in the Cappella del Sagramento and half in Cappella di S. Ansano. (Compare J. L. Bevir, Guide to Siena and San Gimignano, London, 1885, pp. 80, 82.) It is now in the Opera del Duomo, in the company of discordant modem paintings — a juxtaposition which is " an offence to the good taste of the visitor, and a reproach to that of the Sienese themselves." 48 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS if ever in time past Thou didst, with compassionate prayers, move Thy Only Begotten Son to pity toward this Thy city, we beseech Thee to-day, more than in any former time, to intercede with Him on its behalf. For, albeit Thou hast saved it, many a time and oft, from unforeseen dangers and from terrible wars, as on the day of Montaperto, and in that other and last battle of Camollia, yet never heretofore hath it stood in so great peril and necessity as it doth to-day, when its sole benefactor and protector, Charles V., is minded to build in it a fortress. And we, who have neither the power nor the will to resist him in any other wise than through Thy all-prevailing prayers, beseech Thee to plead with Thy beloved Son on our behalf, that He may vouchsafe to endue him (the said Charles) with a more pitiful spirit towards this his most loyal city, which hath never very greatly failed in duty either towards his Majesty or towards the Holy Empire. " Change, we beseech Thee, this his purpose, whereby our fealty is but ill requited, and which, if carried into effect, must destroy not only our honour and our dignity, but also that dear liberty, which even unto this day we have preserved, under Thy powerful guardianship and merciful protection. " Behold, Virgin Most Holy, the hearts and minds of this Thy Sienese people, who, repenting them of all their past sins, beseech Thee, kneeling and prostrate before Thy throne, to have mercy upon them, and to save them from the proposed fortress. And I, Thy servant and the least of Thy servants, in the name of the Republic, and by the decree of the most Honourable Senate, make unto Thee an everlasting vow, that so long as, by reason of Thy intercessions, our dear and sweet liberty shall endure, so long shall there be wedded yearly, at the public cost, fifty poor maidens, with a dower of twenty-five florins each, to Thy honour and glory. " Anew I consecrate to Thee our city ; anew I present to Thee, who art all powerful to guard them, those keys which have been entrusted to our keeping. "Open therewith the Imperial heart; remove from it the D 49 PALIO AND PONTE unnecessary project ; and dispose it rather to protect and succour us, who have ever been, and ever will be, the faithful vassals of Caesar and of the Holy Empire. Finally, we pray Thee, enable this Thy people utterly to forget every injury which hath been done unto them, and unite Thou them in eternal peace and concord, that, so united and in amity with one another, they may be able, with quiet minds, to serve God and Thee and his Imperial Majesty, and may for ever enjoy their cherished liberty." Thus prayed the Magnificent Prior, and when he had finished, Misser Antonio Bensi, the Canon, replied after this manner, turning himself toward the people : " Your great and profound humility. Illustrious Signori, shows itself to be founded in faith, hope and charity. Your faith ye have shown by your desire to unite yourself in spirit with Our Saviour, receiving His most holy body ; your hope, by the consignment and restitution of the keys of your city to the Most Glorious Queen of Heaven ; your charity, by your vow touching the marriage of the young maidens so long as your free Republic shall endure. "We, although unworthy of so high an office, accept your vows and oblations in the name of the Ever Blessed Christ and of His Immaculate Mother; and we remind you that faith without works is dead ; that he who trusts in God with all his heart shall be as immovable as Mount Zion ; and that charity knits us to God. Be ye, therefore, of lively faith, of firm hope and of ardent charity, that so your desire may be fulfilled and your city preserved in true liberty, to the honour of God and of the Immaculate Virgin, Our Advocate, and of all Christian people." Then, after they had communicated, and the Mass was finished, Ser Giusto, priest and sacristan of the Duomo, beckoned to the Lord Prior that he should go and take the keys which had been presented : wherefore, together with the Captain of the People and the other Magistrates, he drew nigh unto the high altar, and Misser Antonio restored to him the said keys in the said basin, bidding him guard them well. So returned they to the Palazzo, even as they had come. 50 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS On the morning of the day following, the same being Tuesday the sixteenth day of December, the Illustrious Signori, the Captain of the People, the Standard-bearers, the Conservatori and Assistenti, the Judges, the Balia, and all the other Magistrates of the City, betook them to the Cathedral Church. Before them went the banner of Our Lady ; and after it were carried, in a silver basin, a silver crown, most beautiful to see, and, wrapped in a cloth of white taffeta, the fifty warrants [decreti), to be presented to the fifty damsels, for their marriage dowries of twenty-five florins each. They were all clad in fair apparel ; and the trumpeters blew upon the trumpets ; and they went to hear high Mass, sitting in their accustomed seats. When the Creed was said, the Lord Prior, at the time of the offertory, offered before the high altar the said crown, which the officiating priest received with befitting words, in the name of Our Lady. Then the fifty damsels, who had been in the Chapel of S. Giovanni, came and kneeled down before the high altar. They were all clad in white, with garlands of olive upon their heads. To each of them the notary of the Concistoro presented her warrant ; and there they abode until the Mass was finished. Thereafter, the fraternities and all the religious orders passed in procession through the city, bearing before them the picture of Our Lady of Grace,^ under a canopy. And the fifty damsels followed after, and the Signoria and all the magistrates, together with all the people of the city (con I'universo populo de la cittd). And, when the said procession was finished, the Signoria returned to their Palace, and there they dined in state, together with the Standard-bearers, the Assistenti, the Conservatori, and the other persons whom it was usual to invite upon such occasions.^ Now, while these things were being done in Siena, Don Diego was in Rome ; and when he heard thereof he was ^ It seems that this picture was originally much larger. At any rate, we know that it was cut down in the year 1455, by the order of the Government, ita comode portari possit ad processionem (Archivio di Stato in Siena, Delib. Concist., ad annum, at c*^ 17. '« Misc. Stor. Sen,," vol. i. (1893), p. 11). • A. TOTI, op. cit., " Votazione V." 51 PALIO AND PONTE moved to anger, and wrote to the Signoria that he hoped before long to present to the Virgin the keys of the new fortress, upon which, at that time, about a thousand Spanish workmen were labouring. In January, three more companies of soldiers arrived from Lombardy ; and, at the end of the following month, the new envoys who had been sent to the Emperor returned with the tidings that he was immovable in his purpose. The Consiglio Generale were in despair, and knew not what to do or whither to turn for aid. With sobs and tears the whole assembly fell upon their knees, beseeching the Virgin to succour them, vowing processions and prayers and offerings of every sort. That same night, bands of dis- ciplinants and flagellants went through the city scourging themselves. The half crazy Brandano — the pazzo di Crista, as he was called — wandered about, prophesying and in- voking the wrath of God upon the Spaniards ; and the people, wrought up to a frenzy of grief and superstition, looked every day to see some miracle wrought on their behalf. But the heavens were dumb. The work of destruction went on ; tower after tower was levelled to the ground, and the hated fortress rose stark and grey, overlooking all the city. For seventeen long months, Siena lay supine under the heel of the oppressor. Then, in a moment, all was changed. The ancient Republic remembered her youthful prowess, and, shaking off her lethargy, rose and burst her bonds, and fought and triumphed as of old. After three days of furious conflict, the Spaniards were driven ignominiously from the city ; and the great black and white banner of the Commune once more floated from the Mangia tower over a free Siena. The abhorred fortress was razed to the ground ; men, women and children labouring to demolish it with such ardour that, as an eye-witness has told us, " more of it was destroyed in an hour than could have been rebuilt in the space of four months." Thirty great cannons, which the fugitives had left behind them, were ranged as trophies in front of the Palazzo Pubblico, and the picture 52 SENA VETUS CIVITAS VIRGINIS of Our Lady of Grace was borne in solemn procession through the streets/ V It is related that, when the Spanish garrison departed from Siena, Misser Ottavio Sozzini saluted their captain, Don Franzese, and said : " Signor Don Franzese, whether we be friends or whether we be foes, this much I say, that in good sooth thou art a gallant gentleman, and, in all such things as touch not the welfare of the Republic, Ottavio Sozzini is ever thy friend and servant." Whereto, with tears in his eyes, Don Franzese made answer : " Much do I thank thee for thy kindly thoughts of me ; nor will I ever give thee reason to think otherwise." Then, turning to the other Sienese youths who stood by, he said : " Valorous gentlemen, verily ye have done a great feat of arms to-day ; but be ye prudent in time to come. Ye have offended too great a man." Words which proved all too true ; for this was the last triumph of Siena; and, in 1554, the armies of Charles and of Cosimo closed around the devoted city. I have no intention of describing the death throes of the Republic. Traces of the devastations wrought by the Spaniards are still visible in the neighbourhood of the city ; and, even to-day, the name of Marignano is one of evil augury in Sienese ears. Thinking to break the courage of the besieged by sheer brutality, he perpetrated such revolting cruelties that his very soldiers could scarcely be forced to carry out his orders. The trees about Siena seemed to bear dead men rather than leaves ; the weaklings and children, who were thrust forth from the gates, in order that what little food remained might be given to the warriors, were ruthlessly slaughtered ; and peasants who were found hiding some scanty fragment of bread were burned to death over slow fires. The battle of Scannagallo determined the fate of the ^ In connection with the destraction of the fortress, two of the Tavolette Dipinte, of the year 1552, are interesting, both for their topographical particulars, and for the accustomed allegory of the protecting Madonna. 53 PALIO AND PONTE Commune ; but, however greatly we may blame the reckless- ness of Piero Strozzi, he at least fought valiantly, and the result might well have been otherwise but for the treachery of the French cavalry, who, bought with Spanish gold, fled without striking a blow. Meglio dei vili cavalli di Franza Le nostre donne fecero provanza, sang the Sienese. And assuredly never have women showed themselves more capable of heroic deeds than did the ladies of Siena. But neither courage, nor valour, nor self-sacrifice availed anything, and, in the spring of 1555, the garrison was forced to capitulate. During the last days of that great siege, when, wasted with toil and hunger, "those who might not die, greatly envied those who were dead," the people turned yet once more to the Madonna, and, on the 24th March, again dedicated to her their city and its contado, according to the ancient ritual.^ But, angered, as some said, by the merciless expulsion of the non-combatants — le bocche inutili — Our Lady refused to hearken, and, little more than a month later, the end came — and the Republic of Siena was no more. Since then nearly three centuries and a half have passed away, but the Sienese have not forgotten. They rejoiced, as at the consummation of a vengeance long deferred, when the great Republic of the West annihilated the once mighty navies of Spain ; and the modern Florence is hardly more beloved than she was four hundred years ago, when, by manifest proof of answered prayer and of celestial inter- position, Siena knew herself *'the city beloved of Mary," and accounted the Florentines and the Medicean Pope as equally the enemies of the Almighty and of her free Commune. * A. Ton, op. cit.y *' Votazione VI." 54 CHAPTER THE THIRD OF THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST i OF the numerous religious festivals which are celebrated in Siena, that of Mid-August, in honour of the Assumption of the Virgin, has ever been the most important. Then, during all the days of the free Commune, homage was solemnly paid to Our Lady by the city and by its contado. Then, too, was held a great fair, which lasted for seven days — tribus diebtts ante festuvi Sancte Marie de Augusto et tribus diebus post''' — whereof a faint and far-off echo may yet be heard, on the 12th and 13th of Angust, when the contadini drive their long-horned oxen to the cattle- market, in the Piazza d'Armi, outside the Porta CamolHa. And then was run the most splendid and solemn Palio of all the year. Preparations for the coming festivities commenced early in July, when a commission of prominent citizens was appointed to carry out the instructions of the Signoria, in order that the day commemorative of the beatification of the Mother of God and Advocata civitatis Senarum might be celebrated with befitting pomp. And so great was the desire displayed by successive magistracies to excel their predecessors in magnificence and ostentation, that, finally, it was found necessary to prohibit the expenditure of more than ^ For the purposes of this chapter I have availed myself largely of the invaluable work of Professor C. Falletti-Fossati, Costumi Senesi nella seconda meth del secolo XI F (Sienz, Tip. deir Ancora, 1881) — a book which no visitor to Siena should fail to read. 2 // Constituto del C. di Siena deW anno 1262 (edition Zdekauer), Dist. i. Rubric 195, p. 80; // Cosiituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato nel ijog-ijio {op. ciL), Dist. i. Rubric 212. — In 1309 it was resolved, " to the honour and reverence of Our Lord Jesus Christ and of the Blessed Virgin Mary His Mother," that no shops should be kept open or merchandise sold on the day of the festival {Ibidem, vol. i. pp. 360-361); so that from that date, at any rate, the fair was only held for six days — viz. on the 12th 13th 14th, i6th 17th and i8th of August. 55 PALIO AND PONTE 400 lire (equivalent, in modern money, to nearly five thousand francs) over and above the sum of 100 florins which was allowed for the purchase of the palio/ " Nevertheless (so runs the resolution) it shall be lawful, for the honouring of the said festival, to spend on fifers, trumpeters and buffoons such amount as shall seem right to our Magnificent Signori and Gonfalonieri Maestri, according to the number of such persons who shall be employed. And the money, so due to the said fifers, trumpeters and buffoons, shall be paid by the Camarlingo di Biccherna personally, into the hands of them, the said fifers, trumpeters and buffoons."^ On the first Saturday of August,^ the banditore of the Commune, clad in a red tunic, with the arms of the Republic on collar and sleeve, rode through the city, announcing, to the sound of the trumpet, the approach of the annual fair ; and, from day to day, as the month advanced, the good people of Siena beheld an ever-increasing number of strange faces on their streets, already thronged with foreign merchants and their attendants. On the 7th the Campo was cleared of the piles of stone and brick from which, during the latter years of the 13th and a large part of the 14th century, it can hardly ever have been free, since in those days the work on the Palazzo Pubblico and the Torre del Mangia was steadily progressing.'* The festival itself began on the morning of the fourteenth. At the appointed time, the Priori, with the other magistrates of the Republic, left the Palazzo Pubblico and betook them- selves to the Cathedral, ranging themselves in order as their names were called by the notary of the Concistoro. They were preceded by trumpeters wearing the blue and green livery of the Signoria, and by servitors of the Palace, who cleared a passage for the procession through the assembled multitudes. These were followed by the palio, borne on high above a great car, which, according to popular tradition, 1 At first, as we shall see, the palio only cost 50 lire. In all matters of pomp and display the magistrates of the Commune were tempted to an ever increasing expenditure. Compare, for another instance, my Pictorial Chronicle of Sietia, op. cit., p. 34 note, - R. Arch, di Stato in Siena, Tesoretio, f. 203. 8 Costituto del C, di Siena volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., vol. i. p. 178, Dist. i. Rubric 212. * Ibidetn, vol. ii. p. 30, Dist. iii. Rubric 40, and compare Rubric 53, p. 34. 56 THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST was none other than the carroccio of Florence, captured at the battle of Montaperto/ Next came those who carried the cero istoriato — a votive candle painted with Scriptural or allegorical scenes, having a more or less direct reference to the Madonna.^ Lastly, accompanied by the banners of the Commune, of the People, and of the Terzi, marched the Signori, the RettojH forestieri, the Vessilliferi, the Consiglieri, and all the other officials of the Republic.^ Each man bore in his hand a candle, which he was bound to offer as a private citizen ; and, on reaching the Duomo, all this mass of wax was deposited with the person appointed to receive it. Then, on the conclusion of the religious services, the procession re- formed and returned to the Palazzo Pubblico, in the same order as it had come. According to the Diario of Gigli, the cortege was further increased by the presence of the horses which were destined to take part in the palio of the following day, and which were led to the door of the Cathedral to be blessed. This was, however, I conceive, an innovation of comparatively modern times, and probably originated about the middle of the 17th century.* The Signoria having returned to their Palace, the ^ As a matter of fact, the Florentine carroccio was probably broken up and burned, shortly after its capture. Such was the usual custom ; and its almost sacred character, combined with the fact that every injury and affront which was offered to it, was considered as touching the honour of the city to which it belonged, naturally rendered it the subject of studiously offered indignities. " The coverings were dragged in the mire, the standard cut down, and the car itself hacked to pieces, the banner alone being preserved to adorn the triumph. In one of the small rival contests, a Guelph carroccio was taken by the Ghibellines, and the Guelph annalist bitterly complains that the ' insolent ' foe slew the oxen, roasted them with the wood of the carroccio, and offered to the captives a portion of the repast." — See M. A. Mignaty's Sketches of the Historical Past of Italy ; and compare C, Paoli's edition of the Libro di Montaperti, op. cit., pp. xliii, xliv. ^ GiGLi, Diario (second edition), ii. 104.— With regard to these candles, it may be interesting to compare the Pisan celebration of the same festival. There, upon the cert offered by the Anziani were placed fimbria et pcnnones ; while the candles generally were istoriati and painted, made de bona cera, cttfii fustibus, tabulis, et castello sive leone et cum banneris. The cero offered by the Console de' Mercanti was " tutto quanto fiorito con due mele sopra dipinte, e cum torcellis albis intus." — See Una Festa Fopolare a Pisa by P. ViGO, op. cit., pp. 21 seq., and Document xi. ^ C. Falletti-Fossati, op. cit., p. 209. * Among the Deliberazioni di BaVia of August 1666, we read : — ' ' Ordenormo al Coadiutore Vaselli che facci imbasciata al Cancelliere di Biccherna che facci sapere a tutti li Barbireschi che la vigilia dell' Assuntione della Beatissima Vergine Nostra Signora sieno con i lor Barberi doppo I'lUustrissima Signoria con el torchietto conforme I'ordini." 57 PALIO AND PONTE compagnie or parocchie of the city, one by one, to the sound of music, and each with its proper banner displayed, proceeded to the Cathedral ; because every inhabitant of the city and the suburbs,^ save only the poor, the sick and those who had grave personal enmities,^ was obliged, on the Vigil of the Assumption, to offer to the Opera del Duomo a wax candle, the weight whereof was proportioned to the lira^ of the individual who presented it. In the 13th century offerings of candles were also obligatory for the festivals of St Boniface, and of St George, who, after the battle of Montaperto, was considered as one of the protectors of the city ; while it would appear that, about the year 1234, candles were regularly presented on the vigils of St Nicholas and St Andrew, and at the feast of Candlemas {S. Maria Candelora). Possibly the latter offerings had no other sanction than that of custom, but it is beyond question that those which were made on the 14th of August were compulsory. In fact the Costituto of 13 10 explicitly provides that "each and every person, to whatsoever contrada or regis- tration district [libra) he may belong, who dwells in the city of Siena, be held, and is obliged to go on the Vigil of St Mary the Virgin of the Month of August, to the said church * " della citta, del borghi e dei sobborghi." — In Siena, after the suburbs had been enclosed within the walls of the city, they were still known as the borghi. Thus Agnolo di Tura, in a well-known passage, speaks of the *' borghi dentro alia citta'''' {Cronica Sanese, in MURATORI, XV. 124). At the northern end of the town, for example, the Arco Antico di S. Donato seems to have divided the city proper from the suburbs. On one side thereof was the citth, on the other the borgo di Caniollia. — See P. Rossi, Siena Colonia Romana (Siena, Lazzeri, 1897), p. 49 ; and compare, for a similar state of things, S. BONGI, Bandi Lucchesi del secolo decimoquarto {'Qo\ogx\2i, Romagnoli, 1863), p. 269. ^ So C. Falletti-Fossati, op. cit., p. 210. In the Costituto of 1309-1310, op. cit., vol. i, p. 65, the last exception is not mentioned : " Excetti li povari et li gravati da Dio et d'infermit^." The later addition is a notable indication of the increase of factional rancour. Compare, however, the "exceptis pauperibus et hodio vel infirmitate gravatis," of the older statute. 'According to Andrea Dei, the first Li7-a was "made" in 1202 {Cronica Sanese in MuRATORi, XV, 19) ; but, in a manuscript chronicle of Agnolo di Tura del Grasso, preserved among the Sienese Archives, the date of the institution of the Lira is given as 1 198, in which year "e' Sanesi fero la prima Lira che mai piu era stata " ; while, in 1202, "si comincio a pagare gravezza per la Lira, nuovamente fatta in dietro." (R. ARCH. DI Stato IN Siena, Croniche Sanesi, MSS. T. i, pp. 96, 100.) The Lira or Estimo was based upon the principle of assessment, each individual being taxed according to the declared value of his property. The great authority on the subject of the Sienese Lira is, of course, L. Banchi, who, in 1879, published his well-known treatise on the Lira Estimo, in the Atti della R. Accadetnia dei Fisiocritici di Siena, series iii. vol. ii. (Siena, Tip. dell' Ancora). 58 THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST (to wit, the Duomo), in company with those of the contrada wherein he dwells ; and, although he may be registered for the purpose of taxation in another registration district (allibrato in ultra libra), yet every man shall go with those of the contrada in which he dwells. And he who shall do otherwise shall be punished with a fine of xx soldi in money ; and the persons aforesaid shall go to the said church, with candles and without torches, by day and not by night. . . ." ^ These processions lasted the greater part of the day ; and, thereafter, while the principal officials of the Commune, to the number of ninety-seven, banqueted in the Sala del Consiglio,^ the populace danced in the piazze, and held high revelry throughout the city. The next morning, the magistracy, with great pomp, once more betook themselves to the Duomo, and, on their return to the Palazzo, the processions recommenced ; but no longer the inhabitants of the city. For now it was the massari^ of the subject towns, who, in the names of their respective communities, and according to the terms of their submissions to the Republic, bore offerings of candles, ornamented and plain,^ and of palii, some of which were of the costliest. ^ Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., vol. i. pp. 64-65, Dist. i. Rubric 36. Compare also // Frammento degli tiltimi due Libri del pm antico Constituto senese, pub- lished in the " Bullettino Sen. di St. Patria," vol. i. (1894), p. 149, Dist. v. Rubrics 36-37. 2 As to the banquets of the Signoria, see C. Falletti-Fossati, cp. cit., p. 149. In the "Misc. Stor. Senese," vol. iii. (1895), p. 177, is printed the bill paid, in 1538, for the dinner of the Signori del Collegio della Balia, on the 15 th August of that year. With regard to the cuisine of the Sienese in the 13th and 14th centuries, consult La vita privata dei Senesi nel dugento hy 'L. Zdekauer, pp. 25-32, and authorities there cited. Compare also A. COUGNET, I piaceri della Tavola (Torino, Bocca, 1903), parte ii. p. 149 seq. 3 " Massari si dicono in molte ville e terre del contado di Siena i priori o i primati del luogo." — POLITI, Diz. Tosc.,^. 419. The more general sense, however, appears to be "heads of families," "householders." In the Costituto of 1309-1310, Dist. i. Rubric 52, it is provided that the "massari," sent by Montereggione to the festival of St Mary of August, should be " di quelli e' quali piu cittadineschi et mellio paiano, et li quali abiano cittadineschi costumi." Compare, for the various meanings of the word, the glossaries at the end of volumes i. and iii. of the Statuti Senesi in the " Collezione di opere inedite o rare dei primi tre secoli della lingua," under the heads " massarizia," " massaro." *"Anco che ciascuna comunanza del contado et giurisditione di Siena sia tenuta et debia offerire nel di della festa de la beata Maria Vergine ne la mattina, tante libre di cera in ceri, in quante centenaia di libre di denari la comunanza e allibrata al comune di Siena. In questo modo et ordine, cioe, che de le tre parti de la detta cera si faccia uno cero folliato, secondo che piu bello fare si potra ; et del rimanente di tutta la detta cera si facciano tanti ceri quanti fare si potranno. Ma pertanto che ciascuno cero sia d'una libra, et portinsi et offarinsi all' uopera sopra detta per tanti massari quanti saranno liceri sopradetti." — Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., vol. i, p. 66. 59 PALIO AND PONTE Thus, in 1359, the city of Cortona undertook to send annually, for thirty-five years, a palio of scarlet lined with miniver, together with a horse with scarlet housings. Chianciano, the Counts of Giuncarico, the Farnesi, Montalcinello, Montepulciano, Gerfalco, Radicofani, the Abbey of S. Salvatore, Cotono, Monticello, and other towns and other Seigniors, were obliged to furnish palii of the value of from ten to a hundred florins of gold, which were carried to the Cathedral and hung from iron rings, placed there for the purpose. Other communities were only compelled to pay certain annual sums, together with a candle ; while others, yet again, brought money, palii and candles. For example, the Abbey of San Salvatore, besides the palio and a cero fiorito, paid 400 florins ; Casole 40 lire and a candle of 200 pounds ; Grosseto 400 florins, by way of tribute, and 50 florins of gold in wax ; Montalcino 30 lire and a candle of as many pounds ; Massa 1700 florins, without counting the wax. And so, in like manner, all the tributary towns paid proportionately according to the tassagione} In those days, it is said that, at the second pillar to the right, as one enters the Duomo, there stood a marble pulpit, from which were summoned the tributary cities in the order of their submission.^ Verily, from the 1 3th century onward, it must have been a goodly sight to behold, filing off among the poor massari, and answering to the call of the Camarlingo dell' Opera del Duomo, the Counts of Santa Flora, the Seigniors of Campiglia, of Baschi and of Sciarpenna, the Cacciaconti, the Cacciaguerra, the Ardingheschi, the Aldobrandeschi, the Pannocchieschi, and the other feudatories of the Republic — Counts Palatine, Frank and Longobard barons, of noble blood and ancient lineage, but all of them forced to bow ^ R. Arch, di Stato in Siena, Biccherna; Corredo, vfi. 746 ; C. Falletti-Fossati, op. cit., pp. 211-212. — It seems almost superfluous to remind the reader that this custom of exacting offerings of candles from tributary towns and seigniors, for the festival of the Assumption, was by no means peculiar to Siena, although there the presentation was made with unusual pomp and circumstance. — RoNDONi, Sena Vettis, p. 18. Cf. P. ViGO, op. cit.y and p. 14 supra; L. Fumi, Codice Diplomatico delta Citta d^Orvieto (Firenze, G. P. Vieusseux, 1884), Doc. xli., Ixx., etc. ; A. F. Giachi, Ricerche storiche volterrane (edit, of 1887), pp. 78, 79, and Document xi., in the Appendix to part i. * GiGLl, Diario, cit., ii. 105. 60 THE CATHEDRAL OF SIENA THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST their haughty necks and do reverence to the free Commune, with its upstart aristocracy of traders and of artisans.^ Moreover, when we recollect that, in the 14th century, the inhabitants of each little community were distinguishable by their special costumes ; that the number of subject towns and cities amounted to considerably over two hundred ; and that some of them were compelled to send as many as twelve or more massari to represent them, we can imagine, if only dimly, what a kaleidoscopic display of colour and of form that thronging multitude must have presented, with its infinite diversities of apparel, varying from the rich silks and velvets of the nobles to the coarse stuffs worn by the contadini. Nor can we doubt that every good citizen must have felt his heart swell with pride, as he beheld, in the ever- increasing mountain of candles, heaped up beneath the ample vault of the Sienese temple, an indisputable proof of the power and greatness of his beloved Republic. On that day, as on the preceding one, the portatori of the Cathedral were subjected to unusual fatigue, for it has been calculated that, on those two occasions, they had to handle more than 30,000 pounds of wax, which was devoted to the benefit of the Opera del Duomo.^ The religious ceremonies being finished, the Signoria gave a second banquet, to which were invited the Vessilliferi Maestri, the Centurioni, and other officials, together with the representatives of Grosseto, Soana, Sarteano, Chianciano, Orbetello, and twenty-four other communities. Upon what grounds the rest were excluded I cannot say. On the evening of the 15th, the city was illuminated, tar-barrels were lighted in the Piazza ; and, between the lofty battlements of the Mangia tower, the ruddy flames of ^ To complete the picture, it is well to recall the fact that some, at any rate, of the old feudal families would be unrepresented among their peers, reduced to destitution by the new order of things, and excused, as povari, from bringing candles. Thus, for example, before the end of the 13th century the once proud Counts of Tintinnano were begging their bread, and glad to receive doles from the Commune. See L. Zdekauer, La ^^ Carta Libertatis " e gli statuti della Rocca di Tintinnano, in the *' Bullettino Sen. di St. Patria," iii. (1896) 361. " C. Falletti-Fossati, (P/. cit., p. 213. — As to the disposition of these ceri, we read : " Et li predetti ceri foUiati si debiano ponere et acconciare in alto ne la delta chiesa, si che per uno anno si debiano guardare, et ne la seconda festa si levino et pongansi li nuovi ceri. . . . Et tutti li ceri . . . sieno et essere debiano de la decta uopera Sancte Marie. , . ." — Costituto del C, di Siena volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., vol. i. p. 67. 61 PALTO AND PONTE great torches waved and sputtered in the wind. On the surrounding hills were kindled bonfires, as upon the vigil of St John ; while, on far-off Amiata, a mighty pyre flared to heaven in token of her subjection to the Republic.^ For three days longer the fair continued ; then, little by little, the amusements ceased, the jugglers and buffoons received their pay and betook themselves elsewhere, the foreigners left the city, and the good people of Siena returned to their ordinary mode of life. Such was the festival of Our Lady of Mid- August, which was celebrated at least as early as the year 1 200.^ In 1 3 10, the General Council resolved that from thence- forward, the occasion should be further honoured by a solemn Palio, to be run annually, in the city of Siena, to the honour and reverence of God and of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Al nome di Dio, amen. — So runs the rubric of the Costituto — Anno Domini Mcccx. Indictione viij\ die xvij\ del mese di giugno. Lo generale consellio de la Campana et de L. per Terzo de la radota del comune di Siena, fue in concordia, volse, stantio, fermo et riformb . . . che si faccia festa et alleo-reza, ad onore et reverentia di Dio et de la beata Vergine Maria, ne la citta di Siena, ne la festa de la detta Vergine Maria, ogne anno del mese dagosto d' una palio di valuta di L. libre di denari ; al quale palio si corra solennemente ne la detta citta di Siena, secondo che di volonta de r officio de li signori Nove procedara et alloro parr a che si convenga. . . . Et le predette cose si comincino a fare del mese d'agosto prossimo che verra, el quale sara ne I' anno presente Domini Mcccx ; et ad essecutione si mandino. . . .^ This, as far as I am aware, is the earliest mention of the Palio of Mid- August to be found in the Sienese Costituto ; but it would be a mistake to suppose that it owed its origin to that enactment. As early as 1238, we find it recorded in the Libro dei Pretori, that, during the term of office of the 1 C. Falletti-Fossati, op. ciL, p. 217. The custom is still observed on the evening of the 14th of August. 2 RoNDONi, Sena Vetus, p. 18; A. TOTI, op. cit., "Votazione I."; and compare // Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzaio, etc., op. cit., vol. i. p. 66, line 9. » Costituto cited, Dist. i. Rubric 586. 62 THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST potesta Pietro Parenzi, a certain Ristoro di Bruno Ciguarde was fined forty soldi quia cum ctirrisset palitmt in festo Sancte Maria de Augusto^ et fuisset novissimus, non accepit sune ^ sicut statutum fuit pro novissimo. What was precisely his offence is not very clear, but the penalty was by no means a mild one, if we take into consideration the value of the soldo of that period ; and it seems that it would have been even more severe, had the amount not been decreased ex qualitate persone who was condemned to pay it.^ For the rest, it appears that the nerbate^ which are so vigorously administered on the 2nd of July and the i6th of August by the modern fantini, have an ancestry, which, if not noble, is certainly extremely ancient, since it is provided, by the Constituto of 1262, that those qui currerent eques shall not be held responsible for the homicide or wounding of a fellow-citizen, provided /r^^zWa maleficia non committerent studio se.^ Where, or precisely at what hour, the Palio was run I do not know ; although it is quite certain that, in the early days of the Commune, nobody had conceived the idea of adopting the Campus Fori as a race-course. Later on, when Gigli wrote his Diario, it seems that the starting-point was the Monastery of Santuccio, near the Porta Romana, and that the race terminated in the Piazza del Duomo.^ In the 13th and 14th centuries, however, it was probably often run outside one of the gates of the city, possibly in the great Via Francigena, towards the Porta Camollia. This I deduce from the fact that by the Statuto of the year 1337, it was provided that, on the day of the Palio, no one should ride through the city or the suburbs, ne per alctma strada dal luogo dove si dava la mossa sine alia cittd, di Siena ^ — an en- actment which shows that the race was run towards the city ; * It has been suggested that sune is possibly the same as swim's, which in mediaeval Latin is equivalent to obstaatlum, being derived, according to Wendelinus, from the German sun or son. 2 Arch, di Stato in Siena, Lib. del Pretori, 1232-42, at c** 137. ^ The word nerbata means a blow given with a nerbo or whip, made " dal membro dei bovi o vitelli staccato sbucciato e seccato." * Edition Zdekauer, v. 191. ' Diario cited, ii. no. " See C. Falletti-Fossati, op. ci(., p. 207. 63 PALIO AND PONTE and most likely over a straight course, where the speed and endurance of the horses could be tested. True it is that, in 1 310, it was declared that the palio should be run "in the city of Siena," but much was left to the discretion of the Signori Nove, and it may well have been found impracticable.^ Indeed, what information we possess concerning the condition of the city up to the beginning of the I4tli century, is of a character to entirely preclude the notion that the palio could have taken place within its walls. Many even of the principal streets were still so crooked and irregular that it was difficult to traverse them at all, and certainly not on horse- back. A good example of the existing state of things may be found in the Statuto dei Viari, which provides for the enlargrement of the road leading^ to the Church of the Minor Friars, which, we learn, was so narrow and low that, when the friars came forth to accompany a funeral, they were con- strained to lower the cross which they carried before they could pass through it.^ ** In the Valle Piatta is a certain narrow street (where dwells Pennuccio, the baker) which is exceeding dark ; and it is said that in that place, in the evening, are done many grievous and dishonest things, and that assassins lie in wait there to fall upon passers-by and to slay them : ideo this street shall be closed at both ends and sold to the highest bidder."^ Names such as Malfango, Pantaneto, Malborghetto, Malcucinato, and the like, speak for themselves as to the condition of the thoroughfares to which they were applied ; while the fact that the statute per- mitted the building of loggiati, supported upon posts or piles, and overhanging the public highways for a third part of their width, affords some idea as to the conveniences which they offered for equestrian exercise.* ^ It may be noticed that if the race was, in fact, run outside the gates of the city, there would be nothing unusual in the matter. The Ponte alle Mosse was, as we have seen, some distance from Florence (p. 9 supra), and the Palio of Verona was run per la campagna (p. 12 supra) ; while the Palio of St Bartholomew at Bologna started at the Ponte di Savena, outside the Porta Maggiore (Frati, op. ciL, p. 148). 2 Arch, di Stato in Siena, Statuto dei Viari, R. xxiiii : " tantum arta quod quando Fratres exinde cum croce transeunt pro aliquo morto sepeUiendo, oportet ipsam crucem flectere." ' Statuto dei Viari, Rubr. cclxviiii. * L. Zdekauer, La vita pubblica dei Senesi nel dugcnto, pp. 33-37. — See also the Constitute of 1262, iii. 32: "Quod omnibus sit liberum hedificare super viis comunis." 64 THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST Moreover, in those days, when everything was done in the streets, what an interruption of all the ordinary avocations of life a palio run through the city would have caused. In the streets they piled up timber for sale ; in the streets they loaded their mules ; in the streets the tanners hung out their leather to dry ; while in the streets also, and preferably in the neighbourhood of the Church of the Frati Predicatori and in the Piazza del Campo, the people satisfied certain un- mentionable but necessary functions^ — a habit which the Constituto of 1262 endeavoured to restrain, and not without good reason, when we remember that the swine, which roamed freely through the city for the greater part of the year, were then practically the only scavengers.^ In these matters the 14th century was an epoch of rapid progress, and before it ended Siena was, perhaps, not so very different from the Siena of to-day. The long period of peace and prosperity which she enjoyed under the rule of the Nove afforded ample leisure for the beautifying of the city ; and, as early as 13 10, we find that not only were all the principal streets (strade) paved with brick,^ but there was a well organized system of cleansing them ; each citizen being held responsible for the space in front of his house or shop, which he was compelled to sweep every Saturday, under pain of a fine of 12 denari.* Later on, it was resolved that The following addition to Ruhr, iii. (p. 276) is suggestive : " Item cum valde sint inutiles vie et strate coperte, et maximum impedimentum prestent transeuntibus, et maxime tempore exercitus et in festivitate beate Marie, statuimus et ordinamus quod strata, que incipit a porta de Stelleregi et vadit usque ad portam de CamoUia, debeat esse aperta et scoperta usque ad celum ; et strata, que incipit a porta Sancti Mauritii et vadit usque ad portam de Camollia, ad minus pro tertia parte dictarum stratarum, exceptis pontibus et archonibus, factis super stratis, qui non debeant inde propterea elevari vel elevari {sic)." ^ Confronted with the same problem at Perugia, the Government relied rather upon superstition than legislation ; and sub voUa Palatii Comunis, where the nuisance was habitually committed, the magistrates caused to be painted pictures of the Madonna, of S. Lorenzo, of S. Ercolano and of S. Cristoforo, before which a lamp was kept burning at the public expense. — See A. Mariotti, Saggio di Memorie istoriche civili ed ecclesiastiche della Cittd. di Pertigia e suo Cotttado (Perugia, 1806), tom. i. parte i. p. 22. 2 L. Zdekauer, La vitaprivata, etc. , p. 23. Compare also my "Ensampks " of Fra Filipfo, etc., op. cit., chap. ii. — It is true that all these things were forbidden by the Constituto of 1262 ; but I take it that the very fact of such prohibition satisfactorily proves the anterior existence of the thing or habit prohibited. * Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., Dist. iii. Ruhr. 84. — The work of paving the streets had been begun in the 13th century. Compare L. Zdekauer, La vita pubblica, etc., p. 32 and note. * Costituto, Dist. V. Ruhr. 171. E 65 PALIO AND PONTE the lesser thoroughfares (me) which opened into the strade should be paved also, because from them the mud and filth was carried into the strade} At the same time many blind alleys and narrow lanes {chiassi) were closed by locked gates, because " many sins are committed therein, and many stink- ing things are thrown there." ^ Much work was done in straightening the streets^ (the strata recta linea had long been the ideal aimed at) ; and there was a wholesale removal of ballatoia, which, in some cases, darkened all the smaller thoroughfares, and largely increased the danger of fire.* The bridges and arches, which, at short intervals, spanned even the main streets, were destroyed when not at a sufficient height above the roadway ; '^ and restrictions were placed upon the custom of setting up tables, counters and tents out- side the shops.*^ In this connection, we may profitably study the celebrated affresco of Ambrogio Lorenzetti, in the Sala della Pace. The scene which he there depicts may be an ideal one ; but it is not impossible that, when he painted it, the " Good Government " of the Nove had, in fact, transformed the old foul, swine-haunted Siena of the first half of the pre- ceding century, to something nearly approaching the city of the picture. Certainly, if such was the case, there would be no longer anything to prevent the running of a palio " ne la detta citta di Siena." That the palio lost none of its religious character as the century grew older, is proved by the following resolution of the General Council, passed in the terrible year 1363, when the pestilence devastated Italy for the second time : — Item cufji potius presenti tempore alio tempore requiratur festum> gloriose Virginis Marie ipsamqzie a senensibus honorari, ut suis intercessionibzis a vigenti epytimia liberentur ; Igitur si dicta consilio et consiliaris dicti consilii videtur et placet providere et iuridice reformare, quod Camerarius et quactuor provisores Biccherne possint et teneantur emere palium facereque, quod pro eo curratur in proximo festo vencturo sancte Marie ^ Costiluto, Dist. iii. Rubr. 84. "^ Ibidem, Dist. iii. Ruhr. 74. ^ Ibidem, Dist. iii. passim, * Ibidem, Dist. iii. passim, and especially Rubr. 252. ^ Ibidem, Dist. iii. Rubr. 5. ^ Ibidem, Dist. iii. Rubr. 39, 88. ^ Ibidejn, Dist. iii. passini. * Ibidem, Dist. iii. passim, ar ^ Ibidem, Dist. iii. Rubr. 5. ^ Ibidem, Dist. iii. Rubr. 39, 66 O 3 O -. THE FESTIVAL OF OUR LADY OF AUGUST de mense Augusti, secundum modum hactenus consuetum^ et in eo expendere id quod anno proximo preterit o costitit. Similiter facere tenea^itur et solvere expensas quactiior ceroruvt, qui corburuntur et in manu angelorum teneantur in maiore ecclesia Senensi captedrali, iuxta tabulam maioris altar is, prout est hactenus osservantum ; et faciant continue et quolibet anno aliquo modo obstante et non obstante ecc} ^ R. Arch, di Stato in Siena, Cons, getterah^ ad annum, fo. 39^ ; "Misc. Stor. Sen.," vol. iv. (1896), p. 202. 67 CHAPTER THE FOURTH OF THE PALII OF THE BLESSED AMBROGIO SANSEDONI AND OF SAN PIETllO ALESSANDRINO Devils pluck'd my sleeve, Abaddon and Asmodeus caught at me. I smote them with the cross ; they swarm'd again. In bed like monstrous apes they crush'd my chest : They flapp'd my light out as I read : I saw Their faces grow between me and my book ; With colt-like whinny and with hoggish whine They burst my prayer. Alfred, Lord Tennyson, St Simeon Stylites. AFTER the Palio of Our Lady of August, the two most important Sienese palii were those of the Blessed Ambrogio Sansedoni and of San Pietro Alessandrino. The former dates from the beginning of the 14th century, although the events which it commemorated took place more than thirty years earlier. The latter was instituted in 14 1 4. I It was the year 1273. Siena was literally full of devils. With only one short interval, she had been excommunicated since 1260. Ghibelline of the Ghibellines, she had incurred the anathemas of Holy Church ; now she was Guelf, but too wholly Guelf, and therefore not to be pardoned. Gregory X. had awakened to the fact that Charles of Anjou was likely to prove as dangerous to the Papacy as ever the Hohenstaufen had been, and he refused to remove the interdict until Siena had consented to recall her exiles. This she would not do, and so, deprived of the offices of the Church, she was given over to the spirits of evil. ''The city," says an old writer, "was frightfully infested by nocturnal phantoms and dreadful visions, by sounds of demons and horrible infernal furies in 68 THE PALIO OF THE B. AMBROGIO, ETC. the air, with multitudes of demoniacs, who raged and raved on such wise that the unhappy Siena was above measure afflicted and terrified."^ In those days, as I have said, the veil between the seen and the unseen was, at the best, exceeding thin. The gambler who cursed his luck might, at any moment, feel upon his shoulder the grip of demon claws.^ It behoved the fair lady, who sought to enhance her charms by the arts of the toilet, to stand perpetually on her guard against diabolic treachery ; ^ and the merchant, who had taken interest on his money and who was therefore branded by the Church as a usurer, must expect his last hours to be vexed by fiends, who, if he took over long in dying, might become impatient and strangle him/ Sometimes the neighbours of such a man would hear, above the howling of the wind and the beating of the rain, a trampling of horsemen, in the narrow streets, and, when they peeped shudderingly through the cracks of their closely shuttered windows, would see a hellish company, "terrible beyond all human imagining," awaiting the end. Lastly, the feeble, naked, wailing ghost would be hurried through the black portals into the black night ; the spectre throng would close upon it ; shrieks, as of a creature in torture, would ring shrilly through the darkness, and then grow faint and fainter in the distance, as the demons swept it away to hell, " biting and smiting and rending and tearing it." ^ Even when a good man died, the powers of darkness often sought to possess themselves of his corpse, to reanimate it for the damnation of the unwary. Was it not stated in Holy Writ that Michael, the archangel, contended with the devil for the body of Moses ? And did not the Ordo Officiorum Ecclesice Senensis provide that the dead should be buried with the cross upon their breasts, and that holy water should be sprinkled on their tombs, propter illusiones DcBinonum f ^ 1 Vita del Beato Ambrosio Sanscdoni da Siena, deW ord. dc' Predicatori, discepolo del Beato Alberto Magna, e cottdiscepolo di S. Tomaso d' Aquino, etc., da GiVLlo Sansedoni, Vescovo di Grosseto. In Roma, Appresso Giacomo Mascardi, i6li, p. 6l. — As to the devil-lore of the period generally, see my " Etisamples" of Fra Filippo, etc., op. cit., pp. 257-330. - See Gli Assempri di Fra Filippo da Siena per ciira del D. C. F. Carpellini, being vol. ii. of the " Piccola Biblioteca Senese," Gati, 1864. Assempri 13, 60, 61. ' Ibidem, Assempro 2. * Ibidem, Assempro 6. * Ibidem, Assempro 5. « See the Ordo Officiorum Eccl. Sen., edited by Trombelli, pp. 487-505. 69 PALIO AND PONTE These were dangers which always threatened, and now Siena was excommunicate, deprived of the offices of Holy Church and given over to the powers of darkness. Fortunately, in those days, there dwelt in the city a friar of the order of the Predicatori, who, from his youth up, had had much experience of the wiles of the Evil One. Four times had the Devil appeared to the Blessed Ambrogio Sansedoni, in divers forms, and four times had he been ignominiously put to flight. From his earliest childhood, Ambrogio had led a saintly life, and his biographer assures us that, even in his cradle, he would turn away his eyes from pictures of birds and trees and flowers, to contemplate those which represented religious subjects. A little later, when his companions built houses and pies of dirt {caselle, cavallucci e simiglianti cose di terra), he made altars and crosses ; " thereafter kneeling before them with clasped hands, which he had first carefully washed, in humility and reverence." While still very young, he found great delight in giving alms, in visiting the sick, in fasting and in prayer. He eschewed all worldly pleasures, and looked forward with joy to entering the religious life. Now it befel that, ere yet he had assumed the cowl, he was invited to the wedding of a near kinsman ; but, knowing that many young women would be present, and that the banquet would be jocund and merry, he preferred to wander forth alone toward the Badia di San Michele a Quarto, there to hold converse with the good monks. With this intent, he had passed out of the Porta Camollia, and was wending his way along the Via Francigena, wrapped in holy meditation, when anon he was aware of an aged friar, grey-haired and of reverend mien, clad in the well-beloved Dominican habit, who first begged alms and then entered into conversation with him, persuading him not to do so unkind a thing as to absent himself from his kinsman's marriage feast, urging that, if he so strictly shunned all temptation, he was like to lose the crown of life which is promised to those who are tried — Qui probatus est, erit illi gloria csterna. The good things of this world should, he said, be used though not abused ; and the beauty of fair ladies, rightly considered, might well serve 70 THE PALIO OF THE B. AMBROGIO, ETC. to turn the thoughts of those who looked upon them to the celestial beauty of the Creator Himself; for, as saith the Apostle, the invisible things of God are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made. There- after, he hinted that peradventure the life of the cloister might not be the young man's true vocation, and bade him remember the words of St Paul, Melius est nubere quant uri. Then Ambrogio realized with whom he had been speaking. So foul a temptation could only come from one source. His hair arose erect with horror, and, trembling in every limb, he made the sign of the Holy Cross, at the same time pronouncing those words of might which no spirit of evil may withstand : In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti. Amen. The baffled demon vanished, and the terrified youth fled amain, never stopping to take breath till he fell, well nigh swooning with fatigue and fear, at the threshold of the Badia a Quarto, still convulsively signing himself, over and over again, with the sacred symbol which had saved him. A little later, and the Devil tempted him a second time. A favourite resort of Ambrogio's was the Convent of Lecceto, or, as it was then called, Selva di Lago ; and one day, as he was passing through the haunted ilex groves which girt the monastery round about, he heard cries of terror and bitter weeping. Moved by lively charity, he pushed his way through the undergrowth in the direction of the piteous sounds, and soon found himself in the presence of two damsels of noble carriage and incredible loveliness, who lamented and made grievous moan. At that sight, he turned back and endeavoured to escape from such parlous company, but the girls entreated him, for the love of God, to abide with them until he had conducted them to a place of safety. Lost in those gloomy woods, they knew not whither to direct their steps, fearing every moment to be assailed by evil men, who might rob them of that which, as virtuous maidens, they held dearer than life itself. There was, however, nothing of the knight-errant about the future Beatus. He was thoroughly impregnated with the monastic horror of women, devoutly believing them to be the chief source of spiritual danger to 71 PALIO AND PONTE man,^ and, careful of the precious jewel of his own virginity, he was not minded to put himself in the way of temptation for the sake of any lady, howsoever fair and honest. " My company," he said, "is not convenient for you. Hope in God, who will not leave you unprotected. What I can do that I will. I will pray Christ and the Blessed Virgin for you, and will get me to one of the neighbouring villages to seek out some aged and discreet person, more suited than I am to bear you company." Therewith he turned to depart, when anon, one of the girls caught him by his cloak and begged him not to leave them. Upon that, he became suspicious, and, fearing that she was not what she seemed, cried aloud in terror, " Lord Jesus Christ, my Saviour, deliver me from the enemy ! " As he spake he made the sign of the Cross ; and, in an instant, the two damsels vanished away. Ambrogio fell on his knees, and with streaming eyes and hands raised toward heaven, gave thanks to God for so great a deliverance. "From that hour," says his biographer, "by reason of the abhorrence which he felt for that diabolical temptation, he ever avoided all women, and held their conversation, yea and the very sight of them, in fear and loathing." On the 1 6th day of April, 1237, that being his seventeenth birthday, Ambrogio, in spite of the opposition of his family, assumed the habit of St Dominic. A few years later, his superiors, seeing his great aptitude for theological study, sent him to the University of Paris. On his journey thither, accompanied by other friars, the Devil appeared to him for the third time, assuming the form of a hermit, and endeavouring to persuade him to return to the secular life. The sign of the Cross again put the Tempter to flight. He, however, left behind him so intolerable a stench that, although ^ See herein my " Ensamples " of Fra Filippo, etc., op, cit., pp. 131-132, and 136 note. — Later on, however, all this was changed. The unnatural vices of the Renaissance brought about a violent reaction ; and, in the 15th and i6th centuries, love of women and commerce with women was regarded with approval by the strictest moralists. Love poems and love stories were encouraged and praised. No man was blamed for begetting illegitimate children or for keeping concubines ; while even in the pulpit the beauty and grace of women were extolled to the skies. — See Bandi Lucchesi del Secolo decimoquarto, etc. , per cura di Salvatore BoNGi [op. cit.), p. 380; and compare Le prediche volgari di S. Bernardino da Siena, dette nella piazza del Campo Vanno MCCCCXX VII era primamente edite da L. Banchi (Siena), vol. ii. p. 108, et passim. 72 *1 WMM" JB HS s=5!--- BB^ ■■IBBSB ilH ^ T^ j^B ^^ ^5 IJijfj- — ■^5. f% DEL BEATO AMBK05IO . ,SAN5ED0KI DA iTEMA . DeJI'ord.de'Predicatori diiccpolo del Beato ALBERTO Magno.e condifcepolo di .*i. TOM A50 d Aquino. (Haccolta daali Autori cie/cHtti ndle noMioni al Martirolonio ^Romano il cii xxdi AlavZ^o, ne^l quale c^ po/lo il dctto (^^eato , e da aliri araui ScnUori Jeanaii nella carta Jean ente" . DA GIVLIO i-ANSEDONI YESCO^O DI GR055ETO . IN ROJVIA Ajjj^rcjso Qiacomo ^{ascardi- i6')f. Con ficenid deisupn-iori c coPrt'uifcgio rliN^ ^J'-'^y^} THE PALIO OF THE B. AMBROGIO, ETC. Ambrogio was not affected by it, it nearly poisoned the other friars, who, up to that moment, had not suspected the imposture. For many years thereafter, Fra Ambrogio was unmolested by the fiend. He studied in Paris under Albertus Magnus, the greatest thinker of his age, and St Thomas of Aquin was his fellow-pupil. He became a mighty preacher, and was entrusted by the Pope with important missions to Germany and to Bohemia, where the heretical sects of the Bogomilians and Waldenses had already taken deep root — a veritable Domini canis, and doing just such work as we see depicted in the affreschi of the Spanish Chapel. More than once, while he was preaching, his hearers beheld a white dove descend from heaven and fly to his right ear, where she stationed herself until he had finished his dis- course. The Pope offered him a bishopric, and so great was his fame that he might well have aspired to the highest ecclesiastical honours. He, however, steadfastly refused all advancement, preferring to remain a simple friar. Herein the Devil saw his opportunity, and appeared to him for the last time, in the form of a pilgrim who sought to move him to accept the vacant bishopric, laying much stress upon the need of holy men in the offices of the Church, and rebuking him for resistance to the Pope's will. Upon this occasion, the snare was so skilfully laid, that Fra Ambrogio suspected nothing until the fiend, seeing that he could not prevail, gave up the argument in disgust and vanished. With so large and exceptional an experience' of the wiles of the Evil One, Ambrogio Sansedoni was the very counsellor whom the excommunicated Sienese had need of. He advised them to make trial of the weapon which he had himself found so efficacious, and bade them affix waxen crosses — croci di cera benedette — to the doors of their houses, upon sight of which, he assured them, the fiends would fear to enter. The relief thus afforded is said to have given rise to a custom which has lasted even to our day, and the priests of Siena still bless the houses of the faithful, n PALIO AND PONTE sprinkling holy water and distributing wax crosses at Eastertide.^ Nor did the good offices of the Saint end here. By his exhortations he moved the people to repentance. The Ghibellines, who had languished in prison since the surrender of Montepertuso, in 127 1, were at last released, and am- bassadors were sent to Charles of Anjou, to beg him to withdraw his opposition to the papal demands. Ambrogio himself undertook to plead with Gregory on behalf of his fellow-citizens, and his eloquence prevailed to obtain the removal of the interdict. In memory of this event, the Blessed Ambrogio is always represented as holding in his hands the City of Siena, which he thus delivered from the spirits of evil.^ The good news was welcomed with the wildest demonstra- tions of joy and gratitude. In a life of the Beatus, which is to be found in the Acta Sanctorum of the Bollandists, and which is said to have been written by four of his contemporaries, we read : Perveniens itaque vir sanctus Senas cum apostolicis litteris, factcs sunt in populo non parvcB reprcBsentationes et processiones solemnes, cum campanarum festivo sonitu et missarum celebratio7iibus. Singulis quoque annis, eo die quo servus Dei Ambrosius urbem est ingressus, braviuni pro cursu equorum decernitur, cum reprcesentatione solemni ; quce omnia ad diem transitus viri Dei postmodum sunt translata.^ And, although this passage is certainly an interpolation,^ there is, perhaps, no inherent impossibility ^ Compare Gigli, Diario cited, i. 465, " In questa settimana terminate le feste, sogliono i Parrocchiani Sanesi entrare in tutte le case a benedire, e contare il Popolo, e lasciar delle croci di cera benedette per affissare alle porte ; la qual cosa fu instuita a consiglio del B. Ambrogio Sansedoni in tempo che la Patria era interdetta dalle censure e si vedeano da pertutto molte larve spaventose." ^ It seems almost superfluous to point out that there is no authority for the statement made by W. D. Howells, in his Tuscan Cities (Leipzig, Heinemann & Balestier, 1891), p. 171, that the Blessed Ambrogio "stole a blessing from the Pope for his city by having concealed under his cloak a model of it when he appeared before the pontift' ! " ' BOLLAND, XX Mart., vol. iii. col. 188. — The Commission of the foiir contemporaries (Gisberto Alessandrino, Recuperato da Pietramala, Aldobrandino de' Paparoni, and Odoardo de' Bisdomini ; the last two being Sienese) was appointed by Honorius IV., who died in April 1287. * The Bollandists themselves note that the Life contains several interpolations ; and that the passage under consideration is one of these is, as they observe, proved by the fact that expressions are used therein which annorum aliquot supponunt experientiam ; for example, where it treats de hidis ad diem Ambrosio festum translatis. Further evidence is to be 74 THE PALIO OF THE B. AMBROGIO, ETC. in the statement that the anniversary of the Blessed Ambrogio's return to the city, with the papal brief releasing it from the interdict, was from thenceforth celebrated cum reprcesentatione solemni. Miracle plays and religious spectacles were already be- coming common. Milanesi records a Rappresentazione which, in the 13th century, certain women "made" in the Piazza of Siena, on Good Friday, at the expense of the Commune ; ^ while, in the Deliberazioni of the General Council, of April 7th, 1257, we find the following ■proposta recorded: Item, si placet vobis quod ob reverentiam Jesu Christi dentur illi puero qui fuit po situs in critce loco Domini die veneris sancte? Moreover, if we may believe Ventura, who wrote in the second quarter of the 15 th century, the Rappresentazione which celebrated and symbolized the removal of the inter- dict, took the place of the older Giuochi Giorgiani.^ These, he tells us, had been instituted in 1260, in honour of the glorious Misser St George, who was the patron saint of the German mercenaries who fought at Montaperto, and who, by his merits and intercessions, had, it was believed, contributed to the victory. To him was erected a church, in the Via Pantaneto,* with a fair and great campanile ; " and since there are in Siena xlviii companies, so there were found in the mention of the palio — braviuni pro cursii eqtiornm — which, as we shall see, was run for the first tinie in 1307 — Compare C. Mazzi, La Congrega del Rozzi di Siena ncl secolo XVI (Firenze, Successori Le Monnier, 1882), vol. i. p. 9 ; A. D'Ancona, Origini del Teatro Italiano (Torino, E. Loescher, 1891), vol. i. p. loi note. ^ Quoted by C. jNIazzi, op. cit., vol. i. p. 5 note. * R. Arch, di Stato in Siena, Dclib. del Consiglio Geturale della Canipana, ad annum, vii. 58*50. ^ See Ventura, op. cit.,m the Porri Miscellanea. The account of the Giuochi Giorgiani is evidently a 15th century addition, being inserted after the words "Qui finisce la sconfitta di Montaperto, Deo gratias, amen. Iscritta per me Nicolo di Giovanni, di Francesco Ventura da Siena, e finita a di primo di Dicembre MCCCCXLII." It was, in fact, a postscript due to the copyist. Professor Langton Douglas, who is now engaged in editing the KrvAixosx'i.n coAe.-^ oi La battaglia di Montaperti (Biblioteca Ambrosiana, Cod. F. S. V. 23), which is believed to be a copy of some nearly contemporary manuscript, informs me that it contains no mention of the Giuochi Giorgiani. It may perhaps be well to remark that the MS. version of Ventura, contained in the Communal Library of Siena, compares not unfavourably with the Ambrosian version. The corruptions and additions of the printed text are due largely to Porri. Another account of the Giuochi Giorgiani has been printed by Sig"" A. LiBERATI in the Miscellanea Senese of April 1903. It is taken from an anonymous chronicle of the 15th century. * See // Const ituto del C. di Siena dcW anno 1262 (edition cited), i. 123-126. 75 PALIO AND PONTE made xlvlii windows to the said campanile." ^ On the 23rd of April, the same being St George's day, the Giuochi Giorgiani were celebrated before the said church, after this manner : " In the first place, a wood ; then a man armed, in the form of St Georsfe, fights with the Dracron, and the Damozel continues in prayer. This was done to represent St George, who, in Libya, in the City of Silence, liberated the King of the City of Silence and his daughter and all the people from the Dragon ; and so, having been delivered from such evil Fortune, the Sienese ordained, for an allegory, that every year a counterfeit dragon should combat before the Church of St George, and a damozel should stand in prayer, and that this dragon should combat with a man armed. Now it was decreed that this festival should be held every year, for a perpetual memorial ; but thereafter, it came to pass that by reason of the straitness of the place it was trans- ferred to the Campo of Siena, and was celebrated on the festival of St Ambrogio of Siena of the Order of St Dominic, because he brought us into the grace of the Pope, by whom we were excommunicated ; and also, for decorum toward our neighbours, was this festival and combat transferred to the Campo ; and so may it continue for ever in ssecula sseculorum, Amen. Deo gratias."^ Thus, as we shall see, the Dragon, which at first repre- sented the Florentines, became symbolical of the Devil ; the place of St George was taken by two Angels, armed and on horseback ; while, for the Damozel (Siena), who " continued in prayer," was substituted a Dominican friar, the Blessed Ambrogio, who interceded with the Pope for the Sienese. In the Legend o{ xht Blessed Ambrogio, printed in 1509,^ we have the following description of the festivities : — ^ Anonymous chronicle, cited supra. - Ventura, loc. cit. ^^^La Leggenda overo tractato della sancta vita del beato Ambrosio da Siena et di sue sancte et admirabili operationi et mit-acoli nella vita et doppo la morte sua, compilata da frate Gysberto Alexandrino. ..." Printed in Siena "■per laccurato homo Symeone di Nicolao, Cartolaro Satuse. Adi xxiii di Agosto. Anno Dili M.D. Villi.''' — The printer states : " Et questa opera impressa e stata scuperta duno anticho exemplare per la cui anticha scriptura si pu6 iudicare essare del uero originali deli sopradecti compilatori." 76 THE PALIO OF THE B. AMBROGIO, ETC. "Cap. XII. Delia Representatione et festa di Siena per essa absolutione " Now when the Nuncio arrived in Siena, with the brief of release from the interdict and rebenediction of the City, all the people were exceeding glad and held high festival. Then was mass celebrated and solemn processions were made ; and there were bonfires and sound of bells through all the city. And it was decreed that, on the day of the entry of Ambrogio into Siena, a Representation and Festa should be made, on such wise as is hereinafter written, upon the piazza of Siena, to represent that which befel at the audience and hearing which Ambrogio had from the Pope ; and that on the same day should be run a fair Palio ; the which festival should be celebrated yearly, for all time to come, in memory of the mercies received in the aforesaid miraculous manner. " Thereafter, the said festa was transferred to the day of the death of the Beatus. " The Palio was offered, together with great quantities of wax, to the Church of San Domenico, with procession of all the Rules, accompanied by all the Magistrates and Governors of the City, with candles in their hands, and by all the Arts with their offerings. ** Now Ambrogio, by reason of his humility, was un- willing to be present at the said celebration, and delayed his return. " For the said Representation and festival, was erected upon the Campo a great stage {tin palco grande), covered above, as it were with arches supported upon columns, with other structures representing the richly adorned audience chambers of the Pope. Within were persons who repre- sented the Pope and the Cardinals and other attendant secretaries, with all the splendours of the said audience ; and there were also young children, clad after the manner of Angels, at the said audience ; and, outside the chambers, were represented prelates and ambassadors and courtiers of divers sorts. " In the midst of the piazza, were made caverns of wood, painted to resemble great rocks, with a forest round about ; and, in the caverns, were men clad and formed like unto devils and dragons, and others, like unto serpents, made of thick leather. The which caverns and chambers of the stage 77 PALIO AND PONTE remained closed so that nothing could be seen of the said Representation. " Now they commenced the festa after this manner. First, a white dove appeared from a place hard by the edifice, and descended by a wire, with flames of fire in her mouth, finishing her rapid flight in a great closed flower, set upon the top of the edifice ; wherefrom, on a sudden, came flashes of fire and great explosions, with an Angel announcing the festival.^ Then all the edifice of the Representations was un- covered, where were recited, reverently and in clear tones, all the words spoken by the Blessed Ambrogio.^ Thereafter, the Angels sang certain passing beautiful verses, very devoutly, setting forth the gratitude of the people, giving thanks and praise to God and to the Virgin Mary for the mercies vouchsafed, and promising that, for all time to come, the said people would not again be disobedient to Holy Church. Then another Angel appeared, singing verses in honour and praise of the Blessed Ambrogio ; and he who represented the Blessed Ambrogio came forth from the audience hall, accompanied by the secretaries and the courtiers ; and, having humbly entreated them to leave him, he withdrew into a chamber to avoid the multitude that would have followed him. Afterward, the Angels descended and mounted upon a chariot, singing and making music around the piazza. Here- upon, an Angel appeared upon the summit of the said edifice, and descended very swifdy, by a great rope, toward the caverns of the devils and over them, singing certain verses against the said devils {cantando certi vei^si contra essi diavoli). Suddenly a great discharge of artillery was heard ; ^ and the devils and dragons and serpents issued forth from their caverns ; and 1 To such of my readers as have had the good fortune to be in Florence, on the Saturday before Easter, this dove, confiamme di fnoco in bocca, descending ^w /^r uiw filo di ferro, will no doubt recall " Lo scoppio del Carro " and "La Colombina." — Compare W. D. HowELLS, Tuscan Cities (edition cited), pp. ii6, 117. 2 " The festival . . . was substantially a representation of the manner wherein Fra Ambrogio, . . . having obtained audience of the Pope, prostrated himself at his feet, and set forth tiie embassy of his native city, in an eloquent discourse, full of compassionate words, efficacious to dispose the mind of the Pope to pity and mercy ; together with the welcome answer which he brought back, embellished with that poetic licence which is generally permitted to the composers of similar Representations." — G. Sansedoni, Vita del Beato Ambrosio, etc.f op. cit., p. 64. ^ " Uno grande scoppio di spingarda." — In ToMMASi's account of the Rappresentazione, he speaks of " un colpo d'artigliaria " {Hist. ii. 69). This Giulio Sansedoni explains as follows : " Before ' bombards' were invented, they made, as I believe, a very great booming noise by some other artificial means; but, after the said discovery (which took place in 1330), they could more conveniently effect their purpose by discharging artillery."— F/Va del B. Avihrosio, op. cit., p. 65. 78 THE PALIO OF THE B. AMBROGIO, ETC. the Angels pursued after the devils ; and two, armed and on horseback, came forth and fought against the dragons and serpents. Finally, the devils departed from the piazza, and the dragons and serpents lay dead, slain by the Angels. Thus was represented the deliverance of the souls of the people of Siena, who had been excommunicated, from the power of the demons. "In the meantime was represented upon the edifice of the stage the return of Ambrogio to the palace of Pope Gregory, what time he was summoned by him and ordered to go through the nations of Europe to preach a crusade for the re- covery of the Holy Land. Also they represented how, during the said journey, the Devil appeared to Ambrogio in the form of a hermit, tempting him with many plausible reasons and subtil arguments, to aspire to high ecclesiastical dignities. . . . And, when the Tempter had vanished, the Angel proclaimed the end of the festa, singing and making music. All the Angels of the chariot, with all the company of the Representation, betook themselves to the Convent of San Domenico ; and so the festa ended." It is, of course, obvious that the spectacle here described belongs to a much later period than 1273. Professor DAncona is disposed to attribute it to the latter half of the 15th century, and it probably exhibits the latest development of the feste with which the good news brought by Fra Ambrogio was welcomed. To say nothing of the discharge of artillery, and the dramatization of actions of the protagonist which took place subsequent to the absolution, the whole form and apparatus of the Rappresentazione is far too elaborate for the 13th century.^ There was, no doubt, merrymaking and rejoicing, ringing of bells and lighting of bonfires ; jousts and dancing, with maskers and buffoons in plenty.^ Perhaps, too, the deeds of Fra Ambrogio were celebrated in song, even as the taking of ^D'Ancona, op. cit., pp. 103-105. ^ " E tutte le campane suonarono a gloria, che prima non si solevano sonare ; e i Signori Nove fecero fare festa otto di continui e giostre e balli e molte mascare e scutubrini, e a riverentia di tal festa si fecero molte solennita." Such are the words of an ancient chronicle which Professor D'Ancona believes to have been written in the 14th century. That it was written some time after the events which it describes, seems clear from the mention of the Signori Nove, In 1273, the Trentasei, and not the Nove, governed Siena. 79 PALIO AND PONTE Torniella had been celebrated eighteen years earlier.^ Of course, all the citizens thronged the churches to receive the sacraments of which they had so long been deprived ; and, possibly, there may have been some rude representation of the slaying of the devil, in the form of a dragon — something popular and pantomimic, like the scene which Giovanni Villani describes upon the Arno, below the Ponte alia Carraia, in May 1304.^ Be this as it may. It is enough for us that, at whatever date the Rappresentazione was actually instituted, it was so instituted in commemoration of the delivery of Siena " from the power of the demons," in 1273. Ambrogio Sansedoni died on the 20th of March 1287, to the great grief of all the City. He was buried at the public expense, and, twenty years later, it was decreed that a solemn palio should be run annually in his honour. Item, statuimus et ordinamus quod fiat festivitas et gaudium in festo beati Afubrosii de civitate Sen. de uno palio valoris XX lib. den. : ad quod palium curratur solepnitur, more solito, in civitate Sen. et ut maris est in civitate Sen. ad palium curri : quod palium Domini Camerarius et iiii"*' provisores Comunis de pecunia ipsitis co77iunis enter e debeant cum effectu et procuraix ut singulis annis in dicto festo predicta esecutioni 7nandentur. Et hoc capitulum factum est M^CCOVI indictione quarta de mense mai.^ In the Libro di Biccherna, of the following February, we find registered a payment of 20 lire a Berto e a S020 di Neri Machiti zendadari : i quali denari Id de77zo per lo paglio de la festa del beato santo Ambruogio, el quale paglio si die chorire el di de la sua festa : e detti denari paghamo sechondo la forma de lo stattitto : el quale istatuto inchomincia or a : ed e el primo paglio.^ 1 In the IJbri di Biccherna, we find it recorded that, in 1255, C. sol. den. were paid to a certain Guidaloste, joculatori de Pisioria, pro tino pario pannorum quia fecit cantionetn de captione Tornielle, or, as it is more definitely described in another place, quandam Ballatam de Torniella. — Compare D'Ancona e Bacci, Mamtale della Lett. Italiana (Firenz Barbera, 1903), vol. i. p. 34. * G. Villani, Crotiica, viii. 70, Compare D'Ancona, Oripni del Teairo, etc., op. cit., vol. i. pp. 94 seq. ' Arch, di Stato in Siena, Statuti del C. di Siena, xviii. 135^20, * Ibid., Libri di Biccherna, cxi. 43 : zZfebbraio 1306 (1307 stile com.). 80 THE PALIO OF S. PIETRO ALESSANDRINO In May, 1309, the law was amended and the price of the palio raised from twenty to twenty-five lire/ II Of the Palio of S. Pietro Alessandrino but little need be said. The good Gigli speaks of the festival of which it formed a part, as celebrated in memory of a victory over fellow-citizens, and one which were, therefore, best forgotten." It is, however, well to remember that that victory represented also the frustration of Florentine intrigue — a just cause for public rejoicing. In 1387, Florence cast longing eyes upon Montepulciano, the old apple of discord between the Communes, and, by the most shameless treachery, achieved her ends. The result was open war. Siena, unable to resist the aggressions of her stronger neighbour, allied herself with the ambitious Duke of Milan, Gian Galeazzo Visconti, and, in the last year of the century, accepted his overlordship and did him homage as her seignior. The event was celebrated by *' II Saviozzo " da Siena, in a canzone which he composed a laude di Giovan Galeazzo, duca di Milano, and which Carducci has called the last cry of Ghibellinism. It begins as follows : Novella monarchia, giusto signore, Clemente padre, insigne, virtuoso, Per cui pace e riposo Spera trovar la dolce vedovella. . . . Excessive praise, no doubt ; but it is clear that the Sienese poet was, in fact, belauding not the man, but the enemy of the hated Florentines ; and because the Florentines them- selves had continually upon their lips the sacred name of Liberty, no longer boasting, as Antonio Pucci had done, that the cities which they annexed were recate al lore mulino, but declaring with cynical insolence that they were ridotte in 1 Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., Dist. i. Ruhr. 56. See also C. Mazzi, op. ciL, vol. i. pp. 16-19, where a large number of documents referring to the Palio of the Blessed Ambrogio are printed. 2 Diario cited, ii. 546. F 81 PALIO AND PONTE liberta, II Saviozzo invoked the justice and vengeance of the Almighty against that detestabil seme Nimico di quiete e caritade Che dicon libertade E con pill tirannia ha guasto il mondo. Costor coi loro inganni han messo al fondo Gik le cose di Die E conculcato c^uasi ogni vicino. Ch' el sangue fiorentino Purghi ogni sua piii velenosa scabbia E noi siam franchi da cotanta rabbia ! ^ Even now, it is difficult to read the history of Pisa, of Siena, of Volterra, or indeed of any Tuscan city, without feeling the blood boil at the rapacity, ruthlessness and treachery of Florence. What then must have been the wrath and hatred with which her weaker neighbours re- garded her in the days of her power ? Siena was between the devil and the deep sea, and she chose the lesser evil. In September 1402, Gian Galeazzo died of the plague. There were commotions in many of the subject towns, and Florence, no longer alarmed for her own independence, leagued herself with the Pope, and once more attacked Siena, under the pretext of liberating her from the yoke of the Visconti — "" premendo a* Fiorentini^'' says Ammirato, ^' di ridur Siena in liber th^ ^ The Dodici and the Salimbeni, who had been the principal authors of her servitude, conspired with her enemies, and, on the 26th of November 1403, the day of S. Pietro Alessandrino, they rose in revolt against the Government. The insurrection was repressed, after a long and obstinate conflict, which strewed the Campo with corpses ; and, as a result, the Supreme Magistracy was reformed to the exclusion of the rebels, who were forbidden to bear arms. ^ A. FranchETTI, I primordi delle Signorie e ddle Conipagnie di Ventura, in " La vita italiana nel Trecento" (Milano, Fratelli Treves, 1897), p. 52. * htoriijiorentine di SciPiONE Ammirato (Firenze, Batelli e compagni, 1848), vol. iv. lib. xvii. p. 130. 82 THE PALIO OF S. PIETRO ALESSANDRINO In the following year, a special Balia, which had been created in consequence of these disturbances, made peace with Florence and annulled the Ducal suzerainty. The Dodici, however, were not pardoned ; their violence and dissensions, during the latter half of the 14th century, had brought the Commune to the brink of ruin ; without either ability or patriotism, they had justly earned the suspicion and contempt of their fellow-citizens ; and a solemn annual festival was decreed to commemorate their overthrow ; while, to render it more splendid, a palio was inaugurated a few years later. On December the nth, 141 3, the officials of the Republic, assembled in Concistoro, ^^vigore remissionis in eos facte a generali Consilio Campane dicti Comunis . . . solepniter et concorditer deliberaverunt et decreverunt quod festum sancti Petri predicti fiat in perpetuuni per Comunem Senarum eo modo et forma et cum ilia expensa quibus fit festum, sancti Ambrosij : videlicet: quod debeat fieri unumpalium^et currere facere ad ecclesiam catedralem: et quod dicta die deb eat fieri ablatio seu offerta decern doppleriorum per Dominos Priores et Capitaneum poptili dicte ecclesie catedrali: et dicta dies debeat venerari solenniter pro ut fit dies pascatis. . . ."^ San Pietro Alessandrino was thus a saint of some importance in Siena, and he was early taken by the Arte degli Speziali for its protector. As such, we see him depicted upon a Tavoletta di Gabella of 1440. In that year the Camarlingo was an apothecary — Antonio di Francesco, speziale — and he naturally caused the cover of his register to be ornamented with the picture of the patron saint of his guild.^ Ill We have now discussed the origin of the three principal palii of the Sienese year. The earliest of these, and unques- tionably the most important, was that of the 15 th of August, which was run in honour of Our Lady, the City's Protector and Advocate, and which, for that reason, was intimately ^ Delib. del Concistoro, Bim. novembre e dicembre 1413, fo. 25'eo ; C. Mazzi, op. cii., p. 18 note. ' See my Pictorial Chronicle of Siena (Siena, E. Torrini, 1902), p. 56. PALIO AND PONTE connected with the greatest triumphs of the Republic. The second, that of the Blessed Ambrogio Sansedoni, was, as we have seen, instituted in remembrance of the deliverance of the people from spiritual censures ; while the third, that of S. Pietro Alessandrino, commemorated nothing more glorious than the suppression of civic tumult, and the over- throw of a rebellious faction. Other palii were run on other holy days and in honour of various saints ; as for example in festo sancte Marie Magda- lene, on Corpus Domini, and on the festival of S. Ansano and of the other patrons of the city ; while in the autumn of i359> ^ special palio was held to celebrate the arrival of certain sacred relics which had been procured for the Spedale della Scala.^ In one respect they were all alike. They all possessed a distinctly religious aspect ; and although it may be possible to lay too much stress upon this fact, since religion may often have been nothing more than an excuse for merrymaking and excitement, it is none the less certain that, if we altogether ignore it, we shall hopelessly fail to understand one side, and that not the least important side, of the Modern Palio. ^ R. Arch, di Stato in Siena, Delib. del Consiglio Generale, 22 Ottobre 1359. Com- pare the Cronica Sanese in Muratori, xv. 164. S4 CHAPTER THE FIFTH THE END OF THE PALIO ALLA LUNGA WHATEVER may have been the case at an earlier period/ there can be no doubt that, from the 15th century onward, the palii were run within the city.^ Starting from the Convent of Santuccio, near the Porta Romana, the course traversed the Via di Pantaneto (now Via Ricasoli) for its entire length, and then followed the Via di Citta as far as the Piazza di Postierla. There it turned sharply to the right, through the Via del Capitano, and finished in the Piazza del Duomo. This, in later years, gave to these races the title of the Palio alia hmga, to distinguish them from the Palio delle Contrade, which, since' it was run in the circular Piazza del Campo, was called the Palio alia tonda. The prize almost invariably consisted of gold brocade ; of rich " cut " velvet, in which the pattern was formed in relief by pile raised above pile, mixed with gold ; or of other stuffs of great value. The dress of the Madonna, in an altar-piece of Benvenuto di Giovanni in the Sienese Gallery,^ will, I think, afford some idea of the sort of material employed. We have already heard Goro di Stagio Dati's description of il 7710 It grande e ricco Palio, di velluto cker7Jtisi JiTte, i7i dtte palii, which was run for at Florence on the feast of St John;* and, in certain verses which were written between 1407 and 1409, we read of il paglio gientile D'un velluto di grana bello e fino, Con ermellini e vai in tal lavoro Con fregi e gigli d'oro, Un per lo mezzo e I'altro in su la cima.* * See p. 63 supra. ^ In the Deliberazione di Concisioro, of 1413, it was provided, as we have seen, that the Palio of S. Pietro Alessandrino should be run ad ecchsiam catedralem. ^ See Frontispiece. For other specimens of such work, see the Etuydopadia Bntannica (ninth edition), vol. xvii. p. 46, fig. 14, and vol. xxiii. p. 209, fig. 6. * Page 8 supra. ^ C. Guasti, Le Feste di S. G. Batista in Firenze, op. cit., pp. 13-14. 85 PALIO AND PONTE Mutatis mutandis, these descriptions will doubtless serve to give the reader a fairly adequate idea of the palii which were offered as prizes at the Sienese horse- races. In Florence, the craftsmen who made the palio laboured thereon for two months.^ In Siena the time seems to have been a little shorter, if we may judge from a contract of 5th July, 1447, which is printed among the Milanesi documents,^ ad faciendtcm unum fregium aureum pro palio cttrendo in festo sancte Marie Atcgusti, fifteen braccia long, and as wide as the sample provided by the officials of Biccherna. It was to be made de bono auro et cum com- passis similibus dido saggio, velmelioribus; et in dido fregio the maestri to whom the work was entrusted promised /acere et in- serere septem arma sive insignia, videlicet : arma Imperii et arma Comufiis, et Populi civitatis Senarum. For this work sixty-seven florins (268 lire) were to be paid, et illud phis, quod declarabitur per dictum cameraritim. Thus we perceive that much larger sums were expended on the palii than formerly. It will be remembered, for example, that the palio which was contended for on the feast of the Blessed Ambrogio originally cost only 20 lire. Half a century later, the Quattro Provveditori were authorized to expend depecunia Comunis Senarum usque in quantitatem quadraginta flore- norum auri for the buying and making of an honourable palio, pro honorando festu^n sandi ATnbrosii de Senis; ^ while, in 1480, as much as fifty florins was disbursed for this purpose.^ In like manner, the palio for the 15th of August, which in 13 10 had cost only 50 lire, at the end of the 15th century, involved an annual expenditure of about a thousand lire.^ Nor should we forget the fact that that sum represented ^ "Mesi due innanzi si comincia a fare il palio." GORO Dl Stagio Dati, Storia di Firenze, op. cit., p. 84. — Florence, Genoa and Venice were celebrated for their "cut" velvets ; and it is not without interest to note that, in 1337, the palio for the feast of the B. Ambrogio Sansedoni was bought in Florence. On the 9th April of that year, we find an entry in the Libri di Biccherna of a payment of 25 lire to Chiaro Vivianj bancherio quos soluit Florentie pro palio festivitatis sancti Ambrosij. 2 Documenti, ii. 246, N^. 1 79. ^ Delib. del Coiicistoro, Bim. marzo e aprile, 1356, fo. 26''8o. * Delib. di Balia, Bim. marzo e aprile, 1470-80, fo. 4*8° ; C. Mazzi, op. cit., vol. i. pp. 17, 19. * See the note at the end of the chapter. For the extracts from the Books of Biccherna, 86 THE END OF THE PALIO ALLA LUNGA a far greater purchasing power than is possessed by the same number of Hre, at the present time ; since, until the economic conditions of Europe were changed by the importation of bulHon from America, the extreme scarcity of money rendered prices extraordinarily low. Thus, in Florence, ordinary wheat cost only 5 soldi the staio, that of the Valdichiana and of Cortona 10 soldi ; capons and fat geese cost a lira each; pullets 10 soldi the pair; a barrel of common wine could be bought for £1. 20, of Chianti for ;^i. 80; a priest, according to a contemporary chronicle, lived decently for 25 lire a year ; and 20 lire was the annual wage of a working man/ Under these circumstances, we can well understand that a nobile bravium rosaceum, which would cast no discredit upon the Commune or its rulers, could be provided for so respectable a sum as a thousand lire. The horses which took part in the race were of the finest quality. The Commune itself possessed an excellent breeding ground in the Maremma ; ^ and, in those days, princes, cardinals and wealthy citizens kept barberi, which they sent from city to city for the various feste. As early as 1373, we find it recorded, in the chronicle of Neri di Donato, that Misser Piero Gambacorti of Pisa sent a horse to run for the Palio of Sant' Ambrogio Sansedoni ; ^ while, towards the close of the 15th century, we meet with many illustrious names among the competitors for the Sienese palii. Such were Lorenzo de' Medici, the Seignior of Camerino, the Marquis of Mantua, the Marquis della Sassetta, the nephew of Cardinal di Ruan ; to say nothing of many private citizens of Florence, Lucca, Arezzo and Cortona. Nor must we forget the youthful Cesare Borgia, whose commanding per- sonality served, at a later period, to inspire the patriot Machiavelli with his conception of an ideal prince, and there printed, I am indebted to my friend Professor E. Casanova, until recently Sub- Director of the Sienese Archivio. ^ A. Jehan de JoHANNis, Sitlle condizioni delV economia politica, etc., Conferenza nella •* Vita italiana nel Cinquecento" (Milano, Fratelli Treves, 1897), p. 140. " C. Falletti-Fossati, op. cil., p. 208. ' Cro7iica Sanest in Muratori, xv. 239 : "Ser Renaldo di Ser Deo, avendo fatto uno inganno alia mossa de' Barbareschi del Palio di santo Ambruogio in Siena, fu condennato nella menda del Palio, e pagoUo, e dessi al cavallo di Misser Piero Gambacorti, che I'aveva perduto per lo detto inganno. ..." 87 PALIO AND PONTE Giovanni Antonio Bazzi, typical decadent and much over- rated painter, who frittered away his splendid natural abilities upon works which, for the most part, merely serve to show how much he might have accomplished had he realized the dignity of Art. With regard to the latter, it is enough to mention that, among the eoods and chattels on which he was assessed in 1 53 1, were eight horses, which he whimsically listed as " kids " — Trovomi al presente otto cavalli ; per sopranome son chiamati caprette et io sono un castrone a governarli ; ^ — and that his name occurs more than once in the registers of the period as an owner of barberi, which he entered for the various Sienese palii. The extracts from these registers, which are published in the Nuovi Documenti^ are well worthy of study, and throw considerable light upon the subject of the present chapter. Of Cesare Borgia we may notice that his earliest re- lations with the Commune of Siena were in connection with the palio of August 1492. His jockey having won the race by questionable tactics, the Deputati della festa refused to award him the prize. The news reached Cesare at Caprarola, a few miles south of Viterbo, as he was travelling to Rome to be present at his father's coronation ; and thence, on the i8th of August, he wrote to the Governors of Siena demanding the palio, which he maintained was rightfully his. This letter has been recently printed by Cav. A. Lisini,^ and bears the autographic signature, M.S. ordinationi paratus C. Electus Valentie. What answer the Governatori returned to the youthful prelate's request we do not know ; but the fact that such a letter was written at such a time, by such a man, is interesting as showing what importance was attached in those days to the result of a horse-race. If, in modern England, the possession of a Derby winner is a subject of congratula- tion for a Prime Minister, in Italy, in the Quattrocento, an Archbishop elect, even at the turning-point of his life, when ^ Ntiovi Documeiiti per la Storia dclV Arte Senese, raccoUi da S. BORGHESI e L. Banchi (Siena, E. Torrini, 1898), p. 456, Doc. 228. 2 Pp. 408-410. ^ A. LisiNi, Relazionifra Cesare Borgia e la Repubblica Senese, in the Biillettino Senese di St Patria, vol. vii. (1900), pp. 91-92. 88 THE END OF THE PALIO ALLA LUNGA he might reasonably indulge in high hopes and far-reaching ambitions, was deeply concerned about the winning of a palio. As touching the race itself, we learn that the horses which took part in it were ridden by boys dressed in the liveries of their employers ; while, as an additional means of identifica- tion, each of them was ticketed with a card (or, as it was then called, un breve), upon which was inscribed either some nickname, such as '' Spron di gallo'' ; '' Gativello" ; '' Zam- pogna"; '"'Scaramuccia,'' and the like; or some more or less appropriate motto ; as, for example, " Spera in Dioe in nostra Donna' ; ^''Fatti avanti die bisogna' ; ^^ Fa conto senza roste"; '' Ho paura d'esser Vultimor When the race was over, these names and mottoes were shouted through the streets, by the crowd of young rascals who followed the victorious horse and jockey. At this period the annual Sienese palii were four in number, i.e. the Palio of the Blessed Ambrogio Sansedoni, on the 30th of March ; the Palio of St Mary Magdalene, on the 22nd of July ; the Palio of Our Lady of Mid- August, on the Festival of the Assumption ; and the Palio of San Pietro Alessandrino, on the 26th of November. After the fall of the Republic, three of them seem to have been abandoned ; whether by degrees or at once, I cannot say. The Palio of Mid-August, however, continued to be run until the latter half of the 19th century; although the character of the race was materially altered. As the elder Sienese remember it, it was run by riderless horses, which were kept to the proper course by canvas curtains, stretched across the Piazza di Postierla and many of the side streets. The visitor to Siena may still see, affixed to the walls, on either side of the Via de' Pellegrini where it joins the Via di Citta, certain pieces of iron which were used to support the posts to which the canvas was hung. The race, which took place in the morning, and which, of course, entailed a complete cessation of all traffic for the time being, created no special enthusiasm, and was kept up simply 89 PALIO AND PONTE as a time-honoured custom. From the nature of the course, nobody could catch more than a passing gUmpse of the horses as they swept by ; and when, some thirty-five years ago, it was proposed to suppress it, no objection was offered, and thus a survival of the 13th century passed silently into oblivion. ■ NOTE Extracts from the " Libri di Biccherna." Registro. N°. 346, a carte cxxxvj 1492. giugno 19 (Uscita generale) A El palio di Santo Ambruogio, che si corse fino adi . . . d'aprile, lire ciento-ottan- tatre soldi quindici, paghamo conttanti a li infrascritti, cioe : a Giovanni Fonghai lire 146 soldi o per costo di canne iiij°. di rosato fino et bello, a lire 36, soldi 10, canna, et soldi 40 per la cierra a li detti, et lire i e s. 10 paghati conttanti a Jacomo Umidi settaiuolo per costo de le bande et nappe et altri fornimenti d'esso palio . . .^ et lire iiij. s. o paghati a m^ Neroccia per la pigione delle sue case dove stero lo di li iiij di Bicherna et giudice delle riforma- gioni et del podesta, sicome e usanza fare ogni anno . . . . £. clxxxiij, s. xv Ivi, a.c. cxl 1492. agosto 27 A El palio di Santa Maria d'Agosto, adi xxvij d'aghosto, lire noveciento novanta sette soldi quindici, sonno per lo costo et spese d'esso palio, cioe : a Poggi di Lucha, per costo di braccia 30 di cremexi a fiorini ij larghi il braccio, ;^390 ; a Andrea del Giocondo da Firenze per costo di libre 4 d'oro fino bello a £6 soldi iiij° foncia, cioe lire 74 s. 8 la libra, in tutto i^.297 s. 12 ; e per kabella del drappo a Lucha e in Siena in tutto £.\2 s. 12 ; e per kabella di lib 4 d'oroa Firenze e in Siena e andataal Camarlingo in ij volte a Lucha et Firenze in tutto ;^I9 s. 19; e per costo di pancie 1100 a £.\o s. 5 il ^ I omit the expenses relative to the colazione, 90 THE END OF THE PALIO ALLA LUNGA ciento in Firenze a Pasquali sensale et per cabella d'esse pancie a s. 26 il ciento ;!{^. 1 1 2, s. 15 le pancie et ^.14 s. 06 Kabella ; et per fattura del fregio de I'oro a madonna Margherita de lo spedale £.^0; et s. 40 a m* Romana per cucitura d'esso fregio, et ;^.72, s. i, a Luigi Pepi setaiuolo per costo di bande et tutto il forni- mento di nappe et naponi e atachatura d'armini ^ del fregio ; et ;!^. 15 s. 10 a Giovanni di Christo- fano dipentore ^ per dipentura de I'asta Hone et bande; et ;^g. s. 10 a quelli tiraro il carro;^ et ;!^.4, s. 8 a' maestri che andaro insul carro; Gt ;^. 13 a m* Romana degli Azioni che ficie li schudi che andaro nel fregio de I'oro ; et ;^. 12 s. o a Jacomo di Taddeo pelliciaio per foderatura del palio. . . . ^ Registro. N°. 347, a.c. cv tergo i495- iri^ggio 5 El paglio di Santo Ambruogio oferto questo anno a San Domenicho e dipoi chorso adl detto, j£. ciento sesantaquatro soldi dieci per tanti si sono spesi in detto paglio choli suoi fornimenti e altre spese e cholazione chome si chos- tuma . . . . . ^. clxiiij°. s. x Ivi, a.c. cxj. 1495- agosto 30 El paglio di S'^ M^ dAghosto ofertosi a la nostra donna al Duomo della festa di S. M* prossima passata, adl 30 d'aghosto* £. mille cinquantacinque soldi otto paghamo a piu e diverse persone per lo chosto e spese di detto paglio, cioe : Antonio Gaselli setaiolo per braccia 30 di veluto cremisi per lire 13 braccio monta ^ This must have been the same Giovanni di Cristofano, who some twelve years earlier had, together with Francesco d' Andrea, painted the afifresco of the Battle of Pc^gio Imperiale in the Sala del Mappamondo. See the Nuovi Documenti, pp. 226-227. - See p. 56 supra. ' I again omit the cost of the colazione. * When, as occasionally happened, there was no race, the palio seems to have been presented to Our Lady. Such was the case, for example, in 1546, when the Festival of the Assumption was celebrated by a bull-fight, and the palio, un grandissimo di velluto cremisi, con fodera divaio e fregio d^oro, was carried in state to the Duomo. — See La Magnifica ed onorata festa fatta in Siena per la Madonna d^ Agosto, I'anno 1^46. Lettera di Cecchino, cartaio, a Madonna Gentile Tantucci (published in 1879, per le nozze Fumi-Cambi, Siena, Tip. Lazzeri), p. 13. 91 PALIO AND PONTE /'.390 s. o e per oncie 47 d'oro filato auto e chomprato qui in Siena da piu nostri setaiuoli a ;!^.6 I'oncia e ^.6 s. 5, chome apare partita, etc. . . . ^ che in tutto fa la somma di ;!^. 1055, s. 8. E se a voi riveditori ^ paresse che detto paglio monti piu che non suole, n e chagione el oro del fregio ch e quello chonprato in Siena, che non si pote fare altro, piu charo che non suole li altri anni e a[n]cho le fodere. Dette fodere le chonpramo lire 20 piu per chomandame[n]to della Balia perche si volsero valere di tanti piu perche li tanti denari no andaro a I'opera ma li adopero detta Balia . . . ;^. M° Iv. s. viij Registro. N°. 348, a.c. ccxxv 1500. maggio 30 El paglio di Santo Ambruogio passato adi iiij di magio £. cientosettantauna s. due sonno per lo costo di detto paglio cioe canne 4 di rosado et per le bande nappe Hone et maze et per la colasione si fe' a' 4 di Biccherna et Giudice il di si chorse . . > £• clxxj s. ij [For the Palio of St Mary of August of the same year the expenses were ^1113, s. 16, of which ;^200, s. 15 were spent on the banquet {colasione). The palio was of crimson velvet, 30 braccia in length. "Antonio dipentore" painted it (Ivi, a.c. ccxxxiij). In 1501 the August Palio cost ;!^ 1040 (Registro N°. 349, a.c. cxiij), and, in 1502, ;^i023, s. 16., of which ;^835 were paid for cremisi e fregio \ £1^0 for the pance', £\2^ manifattura di dette pance, and ^20 to Antonio the painter (Registro N°. 350, a.c. cxxxviiij tergo).] ^ The items of expense which refer to the same objects as have been set forth in detail in the entry regarding the palio of 1492, are omitted. The painter employed was once more Giovanni di Cristofano. ^ As to the Approvatori e Riveditori della ragione del Camarlingo e dei Quattro Prov- veditori, see // Costituto del C. di Siena volgarizzato net MCCCIX-MCCCX (edition cited), Dist. i. Rubric 69 ; and compare my Pictorial Chronicle of Siena, pp. 26-27. 92 BOOK II THE GIUOCO DEL MAZZASCUDO CHAPTER THE FIRST THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA Qui si rinnovano gli esempj arditi Dei scontri fervidi dei campi El^i ; Tutti gia sognano danze, e conviti, Pugne, e trofei. TO Pisa, great and powerful while yet the Greeks fought beneath the walls of Troy/ whose more than thirty centuries laugh to scorn the pinchbeck antiquity of other cities ; beside whom, even Rome is young ; to Pisa, Lady of the Sea,^ the mart of all the West and all the world,^ the conqueror of the Balearic Isles, of Sardinia and of Corsica, the scourge of the Infidel, . . . al ferire invitta, al vincer nata; to Pisa, TuscicB ProvincicB caput * for twelve generations ere yet the upstart Florence dared to contest her hoar su- premacy ; to whom the Emperor of the East paid tribute ; ^ whose consuls owned no less or lower fount of their authority 1 yEneid, x. 179. 2 Quando Pisa nell' ultimo Oriente Donna del inar, le stjuadre sue spingea. ' "In questi tempi, la citta di Pisa era in grande a nobile stato di grandi e possenti Cittadini dei piu d'ltalia . . . e per la loro grandezza erano signori di Sardigna, e di Corsica e d'Elba . . . e quasi dominavano il mare co' loro legni e mercatanzie." — G. ViLLANi, Cronica, vii, 84. See also G. VoLPE, Studi sulle istituzioni coimmali a Pisa (Pisa, Tip. Successori Fratelli Nistri, 1902), cap. iv., and more especially pp. 220-221. ■* So called by Liutprand, Bishop of Verona, in 925. Compare, for similar expressions, VoLPE, op. at., p. 166 and note 3. ° See SiSMONDi, Storia delle Repubbliche Italiane dei Secoli di Mezzo (Milano, Pagnoni), vol. i. cap. xi. p. 217. 93 PALIO AND PONTE than the Almighty Himself;^ to Pisa, the Imperial, GhibelHne to the last, — like Abdiel, faithful found Among the faithless, faithful only he ; Among innumerable false, unmoved, Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified, — belongs, of right, the foremost place ; and therefore, first among Italian games, would I speak of that . . . illustre avanzo e immago unica altera Del Tosco Marte, e dell' Elea tenzone, the ever memorable Giuoco del Ponte. I On the floor of a certain bare and dusty room, in the Museo Civico of Pisa, are to be seen some hundreds of ancient iron helmets and cuirasses, together with a quantity of wooden shields, in shape not unlike those which are depicted in the Bayeux tapestry — broad and rounded at one end ; narrowing towards a point at the other. Behind these, in an almost inaccessible corner, is a heap of ragged quilted material, which, at first sight, looks as if it might have been swept out of some long-forgotten lumber room, or picked up off some rubbish heap. In another part of the same building, a number of huge banners hang upon the walls; while a third and smaller apartment is occupied by the model of a bridge, the space at either end of which is surrounded by a miniature fence or palisade ; the entire surface of the bridge itself being covered with roughly carved wooden figures, fashioned after the manner of ninepins, arranged in ordered files, according to their various colours. On the walls are several old prints, and a large and badly executed oil painting. Here, too, are to be seen more shields, helmets and cuirasses. * So in a document of 1119, we read: " Ildebrandus, nunc Dei gratia Pisanorum consul;" and, in another, of 1153: "Nos in excellenti pisanae urbis specula, disponente domino, consules constituti ;" while, in a third, of 1164, we again meet with the expression "consules Dei gratia Pisanorum." — See VOLPE, op. cit., p. 135 and note I p. 136. 94 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA Such is all that remains to keep alive the memory of that once famous pastime, which aroused such fierce enthusi- asm among the Pisans, and inspired so many poets to sing il glorioso, r immortal Ponte} Since the Giuoco del Ponte was celebrated in Pisa for the last time in 1807, it behoves him who would speak thereof to explain how it was played, by what rules it was governed, and with what festivities connected ; describing both the ar^fiiv and the kopTr). The Giuoco del Ponte, then, may be defined as a mimic battle, fought upon the central bridge of the city — the Ponte di Mezzo — which still bears the following record of the game, carved upon one of the pilasters, at its northern end : EN MOLES OLIM LAPIDEA— VIX AETATEM KERENS NUNC MARMOREA PULCHRIOR ET FIRMIOR STAT SIMULATO MARTE VIRTUTIS VERAE SPECIMEN SAEPE DATURA This inscription dates from the year 1660, when the present bridge was completed, during the reign of Ferdinand de' Medici, the second of that name. Undoubtedly, the most authoritative work on the Giuoco del Ponte is the Oplomachia Pisana of Camillo Borghi, who wrote at the beginning of the i8th century, when the game was at the height of its popularity.'^ He divides his book into thirty-five '' Quesiti" or "Questions," the first of which naturally is : Qual sia VOrigine del Giuoco del Ponte; and, following in his footsteps, we too may well make the origin of the game the subject of our first enquiry. ^ Da cento, e mille penne celebrate, Son pur di Pisa il glorioso Ponte, . . . I'immortal Ponte io sono. ' V Oplomachia Pisana^ ovvero la Battaglia del Ponte di Pisa descritta da Camillo Ranier Borghi, Nobil Pisano, etc. In Lucca, 1 713. — The copy which I possess contains the following inscription on the title page, presumably in the hand of Camillo Borghi himself : " L'Autore all' Ecc^o Sigr Dott. Afito Franco Giovannelli." 95 PALIO AND PONTE By some writers it is maintained that the Giuoco del Ponte was a direct offshoot of the Olympic Games, having been instituted by Pelops, the son of Tantalus, the son of Zeus, when he came from Pisa in Elis, and founded the Italian Pisse. Others declare that it was introduced by the Pisaei who fought under Nestor at Troy, and who, fearing to return to Greece, lest, by reason of the number of their prisoners, they should not find sustenance for so many folk, turned their prows toward the Etrurian shores, where they knew there was already a Greek city. Arrived at Pisse, they were warmly welcomed, and established themselves upon the southern bank of the Arnus, whereacross they built bridges, connecting the old colony with the new. Upon one of these, it is pretended that they used to meet in mimic battle, thus initiating a form of pastime which subsequently developed into the Giuoco del Ponte. Others, yet again, attribute the origin of the game to the Romans ; some to Nero, some to Hadrian ; although such evidence as we possess upon the subject seems to be quite opposed to the idea that either of those emperors ever visited Pisae. Nor is the tradition which ascribes the institution of the game to the year 1005 much more reliable. At that period, Pisa, like so many other Italian cities, was un walled ; and it is related that, while her army was absent at the siege of Reggio in Calabria, Mogahid (or, as he is generally called by the Italian chroniclers, Musetto), King of the Saracens, came from Sardinia, and attacked the town, in the night-time, while all the Pisans slept. He sacked and burned the southern portion, and then advanced to cross the bridge. Here, however, he was confronted by the citizens, who had been aroused by a noble matron called Chinsica Gismondi, and so furiously did they assail the invaders that they put them to an ignominious flight. Henceforward, the southern part of the city bore the name of Chinsica, in memory of that courageous lady, whose statue may still be seen in the Via S. Martino ; and the Senate commanded that, for all time to come, the victory should be commemorated by a mimic battle, to be fought upon the bridge whereon the 96 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA combat had commenced. Thus it is that Nozzolini, in his Sardegna recuperatay sings : Anzi perch^ I'altr' jer Ik su quel ponte, Incontro ai Saracin le vostre spade Si mostrar si valorose e pronte, Ch' alia vittoria lor troncar le strade, Accio divengan manifeste e conte L'alte prodezze alia futura etade Su quel ponte medesmo a vostra gloria Eterna altrui se ne fark memoria. Now, although there is, perhaps, no reason to deny that Mogdhid, King of Sardinia, did actually surprise and sack the southern portion of the city, it seems extremely doubtful whether he met with any resistance from the Pisans. As a matter of fact, all the fighting men were absent, only the aged and infirm, the women and children, having been left behind. These appear to have taken refuge in the neighbour- ing mountains at the first alarm ; and, according to Lorenzo Tajoli and others, the whole town would have been destroyed, had not the Saracens feared to cross the river, terrified by the ringing of the tocsin on the opposite bank. If there was no battle, the whole story at once falls to the ground ; while, even if we admit the truth of the legend, another difficulty immediately confronts us in the form of a discrepancy of date. From time immemorial, the Pisan game was played on the 17th of January, whereas the in- vasion of the Saracens must have taken place in the summer ; since, if we may believe the chroniclers, the Pisans departed for the siege of Reggio on the 6th of June 1005, and returned on the 6th of August of the same year. The fact is that these legends probably owe their existence to much the same method of research as derived the name Pistoia from pistolenza, a pestilence ; Lucca from lucerCy to shine, because she was the first Tuscan city to receive the light of Christianity ; Siena from senex, because Brennus left his aged warriors in that place ; and Pisa from pesare, to weigh, because the Romans received their tributes there.^ ^ See P. ViLLARl, I primi due secoli della Storia di Firenze (Firenze, Sansoni, 1898), vol. i. pp. 53-54; and compare Buckle's History of Civilization in England (London, 1867), vol. i. p. 313 ; Trench, On the Study of Words (seventeenth edition), pp. 292 et seq. G 97 PALTO AND PONTE Thus, in endeavouring to ascertain the origin of the Giuoco del Ponte, the name of the game was accepted as the point of departure. It was played on a bridge, and was called " the Game of the Bridge " ; obviously its origin must have had something to do with a bridge. It was also perfectly clear that, as the origin of Pisa was ancient and glorious, that of her national pastime must be ancient and glorious too. The next step was to ransack the chronicles for some incident of sufficient antiquity and splendour connected with a bridge. If Horatius Codes had been a Pisan, the Giuoco del Ponte would undoubtedly have been traced back to him. Unfortunately for this method of investigation, the Pisan game appears originally not to have been played upon a bridge at all ; while, according to the best authorities, it only acquired its name of Giuoco del Ponte towards the close of the 15th century, at which period it commenced to be cele- brated on the Ponte di Mezzo. Indeed, as a matter of fact, it would seem to have been merely a local development of the ancient Giuoco del Mazzascttdo, which, with various modifications, was played in almost all the cities of Tuscany and Umbria,^ during the 13th century, and which was so called because those who took part in it were armed with a club (mazza) and with a shield {scudo). Essentially a military game, it was, for the foot-soldiers who formed the bulk of the Communal armies, what the tournament was to the old feudal nobility, who, after their subjection and admission to citizenship, constituted the cavalry branch of the service. Nor does it appear to me unreasonable to suppose that the various Companies, which, each under its separate banner, took part in the Giuoco del Mazzascttdo, had a more or less intimate connection with the societates armoj'uni, which, in the aggregate, constituted the civic militia. In Pisa, the first half of the 13th century saw the ancient system of division by Gates {poi'te) superseded by division by Quarters {tjuartieri) and by Churches {cappelle\ The ^ I do not, of course, intend to state that the game was confined to these two provinces. Thus, early in the 14th century, we have an example of a similar pastime in Pavia. — See MURATORI, Antiquitates, Diss, xxix., and compare the Rer. Italic. Script,, xi. 22. 98 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA Quartieri were delimited shordy after 1164,^ under the names of Chinsica or Cinzica, Foriporta^ di Mezzo and Ponte ; and, in like manner, the contado was divided into four parts. It was, however, in the main, upon the division of the population by cappelle that the organization of the military companies was based ; and thus, in a sense, we may regard the societates armorum as parochial institutions. At the same time, it is necessary to remember that, in the Middle Ages, men of the same trade generally lived together in the same part of the city ; ^ so that the several military companies were also largely representative of different Arti — a fact which must have tended to increase their cohesion and discipline, because each Arte naturally exercised jurisdiction over its own members. In 1237, we have record of over twenty of such societies : the Compagnie della Spada, della Resta, degli Orbelli (?), di Porta a Mare, di Ponte nuovo, della Rosa, della Lancia, del Leone imperiale, del Cervo, della Viola, della Tavola rotonda, del Sanguigni, dei Bingotti (?), della Luna, del Giglio, dell' Aquila, della Branca, degli Spiedi, della Ciabrera (?), della Croce di S. Sebastiano, della Croce di S. Cristina, della Croce de Vite (?), and di San Paolo — their names being taken either from a church, or from the device upon the standard of the 'Company, just as was the case with the Bolognese societies.* In the 14th century, many of these Companies still con- tinued to exist ; as, for example, the Compagnia della Spada in the Quartiere di Ponte near the Porta del Leone ; those of the Tavola rotonda, and of the Rosa, in the neighbourhood of the Ponte Vecchio; and that of the Spiedi in Cinzica.^ Others ^ BONAINI, Statuti, i., Br. Constilum, ad annum 1164, p. 30. "De coaequatione ac divisione civitatis in quatuor partes facienda etc. consilium quaeram etc." - Foriporta or Forisporta, as the name indicates, was once outside the gates (compare p. 58 note I supra). The Quartiere di Mezzo probably contained almost the whole of the original city. — See G. Volpe, op. cit., p. 6. * In Cinzica and Foriporta, the Arte della Lana was predominant ; the apothecaries {speziali) clustered around S. Paolo in Cinzica ; the shops of the sword-cutlers {spadai) were, for the most part, on the Lungarno ; the shield-makers (scudai) had a district of their own, known as the " scutaria" ; the tanners {atoiai ; pellai) dwelt around their proper church ; while S. Viviana appears to have been the cappella of the bow-makers [arcari). * G. VoLPE, op. cit., p. 389. ° Documenti per servire alia Storia della Milizia Italiana in the " Arch. stor. it.," torn. XV. pp. xvi, 10 ; G. Volpe, op. cit., pp. 389-390. 99 PALIO AND PONTE had changed their names ; but they were simply societates novae de hominibus veteribus ; for, although the formation of new societies had been forbidden, the members of the old societies were permitted esse in soc. nova filiola ipsius soc. veteris tantufu} In the latter half of the 13th century, the contado also was divided into military companies, of which, in 1303, there were eight.^ Having premised thus much of the military organization of Pisa, we may now turn our attention to the Gittoco del Mazzascudo, concerning which we are able to glean many important details from an old poem, apparently written in the 15 th century,^ and which, from internal evidence, seems to belong to that class of compositions which were sung by jongleurs or canta-storie, in the castles of the nobles and on the piazze and streets of the cities. It is headed as follows : ^^ Inchomincia il giocko del massa-schudo lo quale si so lea fare impisa restossi di gio chare in del a.d. mccccvij.'' The first three stanzas consist of an invocation to the Deity, to whom the poet gives praise and glory, si che p[r]incipio bel bello delle mie rime a ciascun piaccia e il mezo e la fine. This he follows by an appeal to his audience for a favourable hearing : E voi singnori, li quali mascholterete, s' i' dicho chosa che impiacier vi sia, per vostra chortezia miloderete. In the fifth stanza, he commences to sing the Giocho del Massasckudo, che veramente non credo che almondo fusse mai ne sia di quella pari da levante al ponente, ne fra i chrispiani ne imseracinia. ^ G. VoLPE, op. cit., p. 390. ^ IbidSfi, p. 388 note 5 ; Doaimenti, etc, op. cit., pp. xvii, 5. ^ // Giocho del Massa-Schudo ; poemeilo del sccolo X F, per le nozze del Cav. Conte Agostini Delia Seta colla Contessa Teresa Marcello. Pisa, Nistri, 1882, in 8°, di soli 50 esemplari. — The poem consists of 43 stanzas of 8 lines each. 100 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA Like all similar games, it was a winter pastime, and seems to have been played from Christmas-day until Lent : e chominciossi il giorno di natale, e dura infine al di di charnasciale. The armour used by the players is thus described : Chi vuol nel guocho, bei singnori, entrare chonvien che vada per tal gniza armato : buona chorassa, ghambiere e chosciale, elelmo intesta fortemente alaciato, el forte schudo li [con]viene imbracciare che giusto imfine in terra e appuntato, e dala destra mano porta un bastone chonun ghuanto atacchato perragione. The game was played in the Piazza degli Anziani, or, as it is now called, de' Cavalieri — the same where once stood the celebrated Moulting Tower.^ From Christmas to Shrove Tuesday the central portion of the square was fenced in by a circle of chains {ten cierchio di ckatene), with an opening, at either end (dtie bocche), to allow the combatants to enter. The arena was kept clear by the attendants of the Potesta and of the Signoria, who remained on duty the whole day, so that individual players might be able to try conclusions with one another at any hour which suited their convenience. E sempre vi sta dentro la famiglia Del potestk e dela singnoria del chapitano e non lassano entrare nessuno se gia non fusse giochatore cha uno a uno si volesse provare. Questi possono entrare a tutte lore. These single combats seem to have been especially appreciated by our poet, for he tells us that . . . sopromgnaltra bellessa mi pare vederli insieme a uno a un provarsi cho lanne indosso e per forsa bracciarsi. For the battle royal the players were divided into two parties, called del Gallo and della Gazza, the Party of the Cock, and the Party of the Magpie. The first wore gilded helmets, the second vermilion. These the wearers might decorate with what devices they pleased ; but the red and the * See p. 13 note 2 supra. lOI PALIO AND PONTE gold must always remain visible, because they were the dis- tinguishing colours, by which alone it was possible, in the heat of the combat, to know friends from foes. Posson daglielmi infuora tutti portare quella diviza chaloro e impiacere ; ma lelmo non si puo trasfighurare, chel giallo el rosso si chonvien vedere, si che quando e impiassa per provare lun laltro si chonoscie e puo vedere a chui elli da, si che non si credesse dare animici e a suoi propij desse. Each side was again subdivided into companies, with their proper banners and devices. The names of some of them are already familiar to us, in connection with the societates ar^norum ; and, for all that I know to the contrary, they may have been actually identical with those associations, some of which, as we have seen, did undoubtedly change their names from time to time. Thus, besides the Tavola rotonda and the Rosa, we have the Cervo nero, the Cervo bianco, the Drago, the Spina and the Cappelletto (all five of them being enumerated in a rubric of the Statutes of the Companies of the People of Pisa, of the year 1302,^ while we shall encounter the Drago again, among the Companies which took part in the Giuoco del Ponte), the Allegra donna, the Uo7Jio selvatico, the Falcone, the Leocorno, the Ribaldo, the Saracino, etc. etc. All the piazza was decked with gala trappings, and the balconies were crowded with fair ladies, richly dressed and resplendent with jewels. Vedevi intorno aparir razi doro, tanto lucienti chapena ghuardare ti soferiva imverso di loro ; e vedi di sopra a que balchoni stare que vizi belli adorni di tezoro che lingua domo nol poria chontare le gran ricchesse e le veste pompose di drapi perle e pietre presiose. In the Palagio Maggiore were the magistrates with all the principal citizens. The Companies entered the piazza, to the sound of music ^ See the Archivio storico italiano, torn. xv. pp. 9-12. 102 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA and with waving banners ; each side taking up its position at its own bocca. Then began a series of single combats, among lovers, upon whose shields were painted the faces of their ladies, and each of whom was minded to prove his mistress fairest of the fair, by dint of blows and strength of arm, after the old knightly way. Bern si chonoschon quelli innamorati, i quali non posson loro amor cielare, chon vigi di lor donne disengnati ne belli schudi di cholor portare, poi sopra larme i drappi lavorati chomque cimieri chuna nobilta pare o quanto ongnuno si sforsa di provarsi arditamente, sol per dimostrarsi. Le lor donne che stanno a vedere li smizurati cholpi che si danno do quante ve ne chel vorrebeno avere inanti imbracio che in chotanto afanno vederli im quelle arme sostenere e non monstran di fuor quel che dentro anno. Then, a blast of trumpets recalled the combatants to the ranks ; a second blast, and both armies entered the lists, and took up their positions in ordered files, amid the waving of countless banners and pennons. At the third blast, the battle joined, chon si gran furore che fanno imfine al cielo le vocie andare, tanto nel chominciare el gran romore e chomgran forsa choli schudi urtare poi chole masse provar chon vighore. The struggle continued until one side or the other was beaten out of the field ; e que cheschon fuora del cierchio son perdenti, e rimanghon dentro que che son vincienti. Such a game was no child's play, and must often have resulted in serious injury to those who took part in it ; but it does not seem to have produced ill-blood. E sono stati quel giorno nimici nella battaglia, e poi chan dezinati, tutti rimanghon fratelli e amici, e poi insieme si son ritrovati piu fratevolemente e piu felici che fussen mai, e anno dimentichati tutti gli oltraggi che nel di fattanno e serban la vendetta inelaltranno. 103 PALIO AND PONTE Nor was it only in the Piazza degli Anziani that the Pisans played at Mazzascudo. In 1168, according to the chroniclers, a game took place on the ice-covered surface of the Arno, which that winter was frozen so hard that ox- waggons traversed it in safety ; while, in 1264, the Ghibelline allies having ravaged the country up to the walls of Lucca, the Pisans not only ran a palio,^ but also played a game of Mazzascudo within sight of the beleaguered city. The incident is thus described by Roncioni, in his Istorie pisane : " On the fourth day of October, the Pisans, with their Sienese and Pistolese allies, burned the Borgo di San Pietro, and re- passing the bridge in triumph, they came even to the Prato di Lucca,^ and there, beneath the walls of the city and on its very gates, they coined money, and no man said them nay ; pieces of the value of two soldi of that ancient alloy, on one side whereof was stamped the Eagle victorious and crowned. Also they knighted divers knights ; and they shot many quarrels out of their cross-bows into the city, together with many verghe sardesche.^ Moreover, in that same place, for a sign of victory, and to the passing great joy of them that looked thereon, the Pisans played among themselves a game of Mazzascudo, most ancient and most rare, and worthy of any prince how great soever he might be — antichissimo e rarissimo, e degno di gualsivoglia gran principe.'' ^ It is perhaps worthy of notice, in this connection, that the ^ See p, 20 supra. ^ The Prato di Lucca was an open space outside the walls to the west of the city, between the modern gates of 8. Pietro and S. Donato. It extended as far as the Serchio, and was used as a public recreation ground. There the palii were run, and there also was held the fair or market of San Regolo (see S. BoNGi, Bandi Lucchesi, op. cit., p. 340 note). Fazio degli Uberti seems to have regarded it as a special beauty of the town. Andando noi vedemmo in piccol cerchio Torreggiar Lucca a guisa d'un boschetto E donnearsi col prato e col Serchio. — Dittamondo, iii. 6. Of the value which the Italians of the 14th century attached to such a prato vera luogo a deletto et gaudto, we may gain some idea from a section in the Costituto del C. di Siena — volgarizzato, etc., op. cit., Dist. iii. Rubr. 291. "Di fare uno prato intra le porte di CamoUia." * "The verga sardesca (says Canestrini) was classed among arms of the genus ^/(«/?V, such as spate, pennati, dardi, made di ferro, etc. It must have been an iron lance of a special form, ordinarily used in Sardinia ; from which fact it took its name after its adoption in other localities. See Du-Cange, under the word Sardeschus ; virga sardischa." — "Arch. stor. it.," torn. IV. p. XV. note. * "Arch. stor. it.," torn. vi. parte i. p. 555 ; Her. Italic. Script. , vi. 195. 104 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA Giuoco del Mazzascudo passed into Sardinia ; but the Pisans, either because they believed that the playing of such a game in any part of their dominions, except in Pisa itself, would imperil the public peace, or because they considered it a special glory of their city, prohibited it, and ordered the Consuls of the Castello di Castro, " whenever they should see or hear that, in the said Castello di Castro, men were minded to play or combat at Mazzascudo, to go incontinently with those citizens whom they could trust, and seek to the utmost of their power to prevent that game or battle being made on anywise." ^ II Alas for Pisa, when that Ludus ad Massa-Scutum was played beneath the walls of Lucca, her days of victory were nearly over. The obstinacy of Farinata at the Parliament of Empoli had frustrated the wise plans of the Ghibelline chiefs who desired to tor via Fiorenza ; and no Tuscan Cato arose during the all too brief period which intervened between the glorious day of Montaperto and the death of Manfred on the field of Benevento, to weary out a short-sighted and sentimental opposition, by the persistent enunciation of the only saving policy : Delenda est Florentia. Even during the Ghibelline domination (i 260-1 266) Florence was too powerful ; for, albeit regarded in its military aspect the victory of the Arbia was complete and crushing, politically its results were transitory ; and when, ten years later, Siena forsook her ancient faith to join the Guelf Taglia, Pisa was left alone to be slowly crushed by Genoa and Florence. Yet, though half her fleet was destroyed at Meloria {1284), and though so many of her noblest sons were carried captive by the Genoese that it became a common saying that "to see Pisa, you must go to Genoa," the proud city would not yield. By sea she was almost impotent ; Corsica and Sardinia were lost to her for ever, and even the newly-built navies of Florence insulted her with impunity ; * Dissertazioni sopra VIstoria Pisana del Cav. Flaminio dal Borgo (Pisa, 1761), torn. i. Diss. vi. p. 400. 105 PALIO AND PONTE but by land she was still formidable, and, in 13 15, her military prestige was restored by Uguccione della Faggiuola, who made himself master of Lucca, and broke the Florentines and their Guelf allies at Montecatini, However, if still warlike, Pisa was no longer free. In 1328, she was compelled to submit to the signory of Castruccio Castracane, and, after his death, was misruled by a succession of petty tyrants, until, in 1399, she was ignominiously sold to the Visconti. The end came seven years later, when, by the treachery of Giovanni Gambacorti, she passed, at last, into the hands of Florence. From that moment, Pisa ceased to be a republic even in name. In the Palazzo degli Anziani sat Gino Capponi, the Florentine Governor. Mr. Howells informs us that "the Florentines treated their captive as well as a mediaeval people knew how, and addressed themselves to the restoration of her prosperity " ; ^ but it is difficult to understand how he reconciles this state- ment with the instructions given by the Dieci di Balia to Averardo de' Medici, Commissary in Pisa for the Republic of Florence, who was ordered " con usare ogni crudelta et ogni asprezza, . . . di votarla di cittadini e contadini Pisani."^ This was in 143 1, and, even in 1419, the once rich and powerful Pisa, who, in the old days, had been wont to make display of her wealth by shooting clouds of arrows tipped with silver against her enemies, "for pageantry and for an everlasting memorial,"^ was mendicant and deserted. Many of her citizens had died by the sword, and many by famine ; many had abandoned their homes rather than submit to servitude ; and not a few had been carried off by the pestilence, which seemed to have become endemic through- out the Peninsula. Compelled to populate an almost empty town, the victors issued a proclamation inviting foreigners to take up their residence there, and promising exemption, for twenty years, from every impost both real and personal. Many Germans took advantage of the privileges offered them ; and while the new-comers were permitted to bear arms, ^ Tuscan Cities ("The English Library" edition, Leipzig, Heinemann & Balestier, 1900}, p. 210. * See the " Arch. stor. it.," torn. vi. parte i. p. 973, n. 2. ' Cronaca di Fra Salimbetie Parmigiano, etc, , op. cit. , vol. ii. p. 89. 106 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA both by day and by night, in the city and in the contado/ the Pisans themselves were forbidden to possess weapons of any kind. Indeed, as we learn from the manuscript chronicle of Ubaldo Arrosti, preserved among the Pisan archives, the citizens, at the time of their surrender, had even been deprived of the wooden clubs with which they used to play at Mazzascudo. Nor, if this harsh policy was subsequently relaxed, is it likely that, in those evil days, the Pisans can have had the heart to celebrate their ancient game. For them, the century of the Renaissance was little less than a prolonged agony ; and nearly three hundred years later, when Richard Lassels visited the town, the grass still grew in the streets, and he hurried away, fearing that it was plague-smitten.^ As late as the first quarter of the 19th century, Shelley saw there nothing but the desolation of a city Which was the cradle, and is now the grave, Of an extinguished people, so that pity Weeps o'er the shipwrecks of oblivion's wave. There, as elsewhere, slavery to Florence destroyed not only scholarship, painting, sculpture, architecture and free- thought, but also civic energy and wealth. Yet, thanks to the literary genius of her filial panegyrists, Florence has gained the ear of Christendom, and only within the last few years have men begun to perceive that many of her glories are borrowed glories, and all her crimes are her own.^ In the last half of the 15th century, the saying of Guicciardini that, while a republic confers the benefits of ^ Ammirato, Isiorie Fioretttine (edition cited), torn. iv. p. 2S6 ; Annali Pisani di Paolo Tronci, riftisi, arricchiti di vwlti fatti e sequitati fino alP anno 1839 (seconda edizione, 1871), torn. ii. p. 235. 2 The Voyage of Italy (edition of 1670), part i. p. 228. ' Compare Prof. L. Douglas' History of Siena, op. cit., pp. So, 352, and an article by the same author on The Real Cimabue, in the "Nineteenth Century and After" of March 1903. — It is interesting to note that Professor L. Zdekauer, perhaps the greatest living authority on Tuscan history, has arrived at very similar conchisions. In a recent letter to me he thus expresses himself: "Bono profondamente convinto che Langton Douglas in sostanza ha ragione, perche cio che egli ha osservato nel campo dell' Arte io I'ho ri- scontrato indipendentemente in molti altri campi, in mode che la conclusione di L. D. assomiglia a quella del mio Constitute (p. cvii)." See also the Bullettino Senese di Storia Patria, vol. x. (1903), pp. 126-130. 107 PALIO AND PONTE liberty only upon its own citizens, a monarchy " e piu comune a tutti," was illustrated in the case of Pisa ; and the yoke of the oppressor was somewhat lightened. Lorenzo the Magnificent showed himself benevolent towards her, as indeed did most of the Medicean princes. Cheap Lombard woollens, before prohibited, were admitted to Pisan territory, a great boon to the labouring classes; and, in 1491, a treaty was entered into with England, whereby she engaged to supply wool for all Italy, except Venice, through the port of Pisa. The five "Consoli del Mare" now became an important Florentine magistracy, and one of their principal duties was to revive the prosperity of Pisa.^ Already her University had received generous endowment from the State, and this was supplemented by Papal benefaction, and by the private generosity of Lorenzo.^ It was then too that Benozzo Gozzoli executed his frescoes in the Campo Santo (1469- 1481). Agriculture throve, and Pisa was galvanized into life. It is to this period that Camillo Borghi attributes the development of the Giuoco del Mazzascudo into that of Ponte. By Lorenzo, he tells us, the targa was substituted for the ancient scudo ; while, shortly afterwards, Giovanni de' Medici, the father of the Grand Duke Cosimo I., " caused the targhe to be exchanged for targoni or pavesi^ of the same form and fashion as we still see in our day." Ill Since the Giuoco del Ponte was, as I have said, a mimic battle, fought on the central bridge of the City of Pisa, it may not be without interest to devote a few words to the history of that bridge. Originally, it seems to have been constructed entirely of timber ; but Roncioni informs us that, after the conquest of the Lipari Islands, the Pisans returned home loaded with spoil, and "commenced, at vast expense — con magniJiceniissi?no mano — to build of stone the Ponte Vecchio, which aforetime * E. Armstrong, Lorenzo di Medici (edition cited), pp. 250-251. ^Ibidem, p. 386. 108 O " THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA was of wood." It appears, however, from the account which the chroniclers have left us of the erection of the new bridge, some three centuries later, that, in 1046, the foundations only were made of stone. Thus we read, in the Annali pisani, that, "in the month of January, in the year of Our Lord, One thousand three hundred and eighty two, Messer Piero Gambacorti,^ with certain citizens of Pisa and with the Signori Anziani, resolved to cause the Ponte Vecchio of Pisa to be destroyed. Now this bridge was made all of wood, save only the foundations {eccetto eke lo fondamento di sottd), which were of stone. And thereupon stood many shops, which paid a yearly revenue to the Pontenaro of the Commune of Pisa of more than 500 florins. Now they were minded to remove these shops, to the end that they who went upon the bridge might be able to behold the Lungarno freely, and that the view of the Arno and of the houses of the Lungarno, the fairest sight in Pisa {il bello di Pisa), might no longer be obstructed, the same being best seen from this bridge, standing, as it doth, in the centre of the City of the Arno of Pisa. And to reconstruct the said bridge all of stone, they sold many possessions which formed the source of revenue of the bridges {li quali erano deW entrate delli ponti) ; and they levied two prestanze also, for it was a great and costly labour. And, on the xivth day of April MCCCLXXXIII, they began to destroy the said Ponte Vecchio." ^ Of this new bridge, we have a representation in a seven- teenth-century print, preserved in the Museo Civico, from which it appears to have been perfectly level ; while, although the wooden shops, which fenced in the roadway of the ancient structure, had been demolished, the summits of the buttresses, * The attentive reader will doubtless remember that, on p. 87 supra, I wrote, " Misser Piero Gambacorti," while here I have adopted the form Messer. In so doing I am simply following the orthography of the chronicles from which I quote. Missere is the Sienese word, Messere the Florentine and Pisan. — Compare Uberto Benvoglienti's note to the Cronaca Sanese, in Muratori, Rer. Italic. Script., xv, col. 137, nota 8. '^ In this connection, it may be as well to mention that, according to the Pisan method of computation, the year commenced with the 25th of March dating ab incarnatione. This was the case also with the Sienese and Florentine calendars ; but, while the two last-mentioned peoples dated their year from the 25th March following the commencement of the common year, the Pisans dated it from the 25th March preceding the commencement of the common year. 109 PALIO AND PONTE on either side of the piers which supported the three arches of the new bridge, were crowned with small single-storey houses. This bridge was swept away by floods, in the winter of 1635, and was replaced by a single arch, which spanned the Arno for its entire breadth. At this time, many houses were pulled down, at either end of the bridge, thus forming, on the north, the Piazza del Ponte, and, on the south, the Piazza de' Banchi. The new structure, however, soon shared the fate of its predecessor, and fell into the river, a little after midnight, on the ist of January 1644. To it succeeded the modern Ponte di Mezzo, which was designed by Francesco Nave of Rome, and was completed, as I have said, in 1660.' According to Camillo Borghi, as a result of these disasters, the Giuoco del Ponte was played from 1637 to 1659 in the Strada de Setaioli.^ IV In the Giuoco del Ponte, the citizens who dwelt on the northern bank of the Arno contended against those who dwelt on the southern bank ; and not the citizens only, but also the inhabitants of the country districts. For the contado, as well as the city, was divided into two regions for the purposes of the game ; and Cav. Felice Tribolati informs us that, some quarter of a century ago, it was no uncommon thing to see, hanging, above the doorway of a contadino's house, the targone with which his sires played at Ponte, or to hear from the lips of some grey-headed peasant tales of the last great battle in which he himself had taken part, as well as of those many earlier contests in whose toils and glories his father and grandfather before him had had their share. ^ The players on either side were divided into six companies or squadrons (squadre), each containing from thirty to sixty 1 See MORATORI, Rer. Italic. Script., xv. lo8o ; Roncioni, tihicit., pp. 8l, 934 ; Sardo, "Arch. stor. it.," vi. ii. 207; MORRONA, Pisa illustrata nelle Arti del desegno (Livorno, Marenigh, 1812), iii. 352 seq.; Repetti, Dizionario geografico fisico storico delta Toscana {Firenze, 1833), iv. 366; Annali Pisani di Paolo Tronci, rifusietc, op. cit., ii. 183-184. ^Op. cit., p. 72. 3 F. Tribolati, // Gioco del Ponte (Firenze, Tip. della Gazzetta d'ltalia, 1877), p. 5. no THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA soldiers (soldati) ; and every squadron possessed its own distinctive colours and ensign. The squadrons of the South were called Sanf Antonio^ San Martino, San Marco, Leoni, Dragoni, and Delfini. Sanf Antonio s banner was flame colour ; San Mar lino's white, black and red ; San Ma^^cos white and yellow ; that of the Leoni was black and white ; that of the Dragoni green and white ; and that of the Delfini blue and yellow. The squadrons of the North were Santa Maria, whose colours were blue and white ; San Mickele, white and red ; the Calci, green, white and gold ; Calcesana, yellow and black ; the Mattaccini, white, blue and peach-blossom ; the Satiri, red and black. The banners were of silk and of a goodly size, each painted with the device of its proper squadron. Thus, on the banner of Sant' Antonio there was a pig ; on that of San Marco, a winged lion with a book in its paw, bearing the legend. Pax tibi marce ; on that of San Mickele, the Archangel overthrowing the Dragon ; and, in like manner, each banner was ornamented with some figure allusive to the name of the squadron to which it belonged.^ The period at which these squadrons were first instituted, the reason why they were so called, and their original numbers, are as uncertain as is everything else connected with the earliest stages in the evolution of the Giuoco del Ponte. In 1569 and 1574, each side was divided into ten squadrons ; while, in 1589, in the game played to celebrate the wedding of Ferdinand I., the third Grand Duke of Tuscany, the South had eight squadrons, the North nine. In 1608, when the Pisans celebrated a Giuoco del Ponte in Florence, on the occasion of the marriage of Cosimo II. with Donna Maria Maddalena of Austria, there were ten squadrons on each side. As to the names of the squadrons, Camillo Borghi is inclined to think that some of them, such as Santa Maria, Sanf Antonio and San Martino, were called after the ^ In the Narrazione succinta del fainoso Giuoco del Ponte of Frosini (Codex 230 of the R. Biblioteca Universitaria of Pisa) will be found 12 water colour paintings of these banners. They have been reproduced in the Emporium, Rivista mensile illustrata, etc. (Bergamo), vol. xii. N°. 72, Dicembre 1900. Ill PALIO AND PONTE parishes or districts of the city to which those who composed them belonged ; while the rest he supposes to have taken their names from their devices. He bases this opinion upon the manuscript Orationes of Valerio Chimentelll, from which he quotes the following sentence : Sex utrinque Cohortes variis nominibus, partim ab ea urbis regione, quam incolunt, partim a tesseris sive imaginibuSy quas gestanty sic Leones, Satyros, Dracones se vocant. This statement, of course, immediately carries our thoughts back to the old military companies. Neither does it seem unreasonable to suppose that, when the game of Mazzascudo was revived In its more modern form of the Giuoco del Ponte, the Pisans, mindful of their ancient glories, sought to con- stitute the new squudre as nearly as possible upon the same lines as the old societates armorum. Moreover, we must not forget that the descent of Charles VIII. into Italy broke for a time the Florentine yoke, and that, between 1499 and 1505, Pisa, once more free, heroically withstood three sieges and repulsed three attacking armies. What more likely than that the military companies of that period, based in all probability on the earlier societates armorum, should, in their turn, have given birth to the squadre of the Pisan national game ? Originally, as I have said, the Giuoco del Ponte was played on the 17th of January, the Feast of St Anthony; but, in course of time, it became usual to play two games, or, as the phrase went, " to make two Battles — di fare due Baitaglie,'' in each year; the first on St Anthony's day, to which the name of the Battagliaccia was given, and which served as a sort of ** colts' match " for new players ; while the second, which was called the Battaglia generale, took place at such subsequent date as was agreed upon between the parties. The Battagliaccia being over, and the permission of the Government having been obtained to fare il giuoco di Battaglia generale, two pavilions were set up, one on either side of the river, and the business of the challenge or disfida was proceeded with. The pavilion of the Northern party, the Cavalieri di Tramontana, seems as a rule to have stood 112 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA at the Sette Colonne ; that of the South, the Cavalieri di Mezzogiorno, in the Piazza di Banchi. First, the party which had lost the last game held a council of war, and despatched a drummer to the hostile confines, namely, to the centre of the Bridge, where he sounded to battle. He then retired, returning, after a short interval, to repeat his musical defiance. This he did three times. Thereupon the opposing party, having in its turn held its council of war, answered in like manner. Two days were then fixed by common consent, upon the first of which the challengers should formally present their cartel of defiance (ca7'tello di sfida), while, upon the second, the challenged should, with equal formality, present their answer. During the time which elapsed between the fixing of the day of challenge and its arrival, or, in the technical phrase- ology of the game, "dalla prima intimazione all' attacco del cartello," the two parties proceeded to the election of their Generals and other officers — Lieutenant Generals, Field Marshals, Councillors, Ambassadors, Captains, Sergeant Majors, Standard-bearers, Corporals, and so forth, each of whom had his especial duties ; a matter into which Camillo Borghi enters at great length, and which he discusses in no fewer than sixteen different Quesiti. Then followed the selection of players and the distribution of colours. In the palmy days of the game, this must have given rise to much heart-burning ; for those youths who did not play at Ponte were regarded as effeminate and worthless ; while the laurels won in that conflict often proved the surest passport to the favour of the Pisan ladies. In 1699, so great was the discontent of those who had not been chosen to take part either in the Battagliaccia or in the Battaglia generate^ that, in order to pacify them, it was found necessary "to build a wooden bridge in the Piazza di Santa Caterina, upon which they might exhaust their martial fury." A hundred and ten players took part in the game. On the evening of the day on which permission was obtained di fare la battaglia, the town was lighted up with bonfires ; and each succeeding function was hailed as a fresh occasion for holiday-making and general festivity. The H 113 PALIO AND PONTE perpetual processions, waving of banners, sound of drums and trumpets and roar of cannon, roused the enthusiasm of the populace to fever heat. The Signori Co77tandanti Generali of either party were carried in triumph upon the shoulders of the crowd, and the standard-bearers marched to the centre of the Bridge to flaunt their colours in the faces of the enemy. The women, at least as excited as their sons and husbands, exchanged shrill defiances whenever they met ; while even little children could not pass other children of the opposite party without doubling up their chubby fists, and giving proof of their patriotism by assault and battery, rolling together in the gutters, cuffing, biting, and kicking, with a fervour which left nothing to be desired.^ On the day destined for the formal presentation of the cai'tello di sfida, each party once more reared its pavilion, whereunder the Deputati, the General and the other officials sat in state, surrounded by the nobility of the city and the most approved and prudent warriors. Outside, the street leading from the pavilion to the Bridge was thronged with an expectant multitude. Here were to be seen the majority of the soldiers with swords at their sides, and here all the adherents of the party of every rank and condition, men, women and children, in their thousands. Through the centre of the crowd, a pathway was kept clear for the heralds ; and, at the appointed time, the herald of the challengers, who was always a youth of illustrious lineage, issued from the pavilion of his party, accompanied by two other gentlemen and by a numerous body of attendants armed with swords. Scarcely had he passed the centre of the Bridge, and set foot in hostile territory, than his coming was welcomed by a discharge of artillery. He was conducted with all due ceremony to the pavilion of the enemy, where he presented his cartel of defiance, and departed.^ The same formalities ^ C. BORGHI, Op. cit., p. 56. " I piccoli fanciulli in quei giorni che sono interposti dalla disfida alia battaglia, con pugni, con calci, con morsi, con sassi, e simili si percuotano e malamente si trattino per il Viva del loro partito." * In the Relatione delle funzioni fatte iti Pisa in occasione del Gioco del Pont e (an 1 8th century MS. quoted by Tribolati, op. cit., pp. 22-23) we read that the herald of the challengers was " ricevuto al solito con tutto I'onore al campo nemico, e condotto nella 114 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA were observed by the challenged party in sending their acceptance to the challengers. The following specimens will serve to indicate the style in which these documents were conceived : " To the Valorous Knights of the North. " Your victory, O Knights of the North, redounds also to our glory, in that we generously contended with your puissance. Nevertheless, the doubtful result of a fierce Battle, which gave to you the advantage by a few scant feet of hardly-disputed ground, inspired us also with the belief that your victory was mainly due to chance. Therefore, more confidently than ever before, do we challenge you to a new trial of strength, prepared to prove that, without the aid of Fortune, your utmost courage cannot resist our valour. The day which you shall propose will be also the day of our triumph, and will demonstrate that, of a truth, we yielded not to any force of yours but to an inauspicious Destiny. " From the Pavilion of the Party of the South, this day of " The Knights of the South." "To the Valorous Knights of the South." "You deceive yourselves, O Magnanimous Knights of the South, when you think to diminish the lustre of our glory by attributing your defeat to inconstant Fortune. Remember that the laws of that Goddess have never had any validity in the Realm of Valour, under whose banners never is he overcome who fights manfully. The repeated victories which we have obtained over your brave Squadrons suffice to prove your assertions false. Confess yourselves defeated, therefore, but console yourselves with the hope of future success. We accept your challenge, and behold therein a new opportunity for triumph. We await you, then, on the day of the present month, with the usual weapons, and on the accustomed battle-ground, where we will compel tenda avanti il Signor Comandante ed uffiziali "; while the Breve e distinta Relazione, which precedes the Raccolta di Poetici Componinienti, etc. (published in Pisa in 1785, to celebrate the victory of the " valorosi ed intrepidi Cavalieri di Mezzogiorno" on the 12th of May of the same year) distinctly speaks of the " cartello " as *' presentato al Generale." On the other hand, C. Borghi (Quesilo vi.) assures us that the herald "avanti il suddetto Padiglione si porta e senz' altri complimenti che d'un tacito saluto, ad una Statua, che si pone alia destra del Padiglione medesimo, affige il Cartello, e poi di buon passo, con tutti i suoi sequaci, spargendo a nembi copie del medesimo, con voci strepitose d'allegrezza, fa nel suo Campo ritorno." "5 PALIO AND PONTE you to confess that Valour, united to the strength of our good right arms, alone leads to Victory. " From the Pavilion of the Party of the North, this day of "The Knights of the North." The last cartelli are dated the 6th of February 1807, that being the year in which the Giuoco del Ponte came to an end, and therein we find the names of the Generals and other officials. This, however, seems to have been quite a new departure, since in earlier times, when names were used at all, it had always been customary to adopt pseudonyms, which were taken, as a rule, from the old Romances. The benediction of the banners — velitationis signa, as they are fancifully called in the Oremtis of that office — afforded an opportunity for further feste, which were celebrated with great pomp in the Church of S. Niccola or of S. Michele in Borgo by the combatants of the North ; and in that of S. Martino, of S. Lorenzo in Chinsica, or of Santa Cristina by the combatants of the South. In the Northern churches, they sang the Mass of the Blessed Virgin ; in the Southern, that of St Catherine of Siena, who was regarded as the patron saint of the game, and to whose intercession the Pisans believed it to be due that it was played for so many years without any fatal accident. The religious rites having been duly performed, the Alfieri, or standard-bearers, were conducted, one by one, to their several houses, where the banners were hung from the windows to strains of martial music. V At earliest dawn on the Day of Battle, the city was alive with thronging crowds, with blare of trumpets and rolling of drums. After dinner, the Squadrons assembled at the houses of their various Alfieri, and then, some three hours before sunset, marched to join their comrades at the Luogo del Rendevos, or Mustering Place, which, for the Northern combatants, was the Studio or University of Pisa (commonly 116 THE GIUOCO DEL PONTE OF PISA called La Sapienza) ; and for those of the South the Portici and the Piazza di San Sepolcro. Here the General briefly addressed his army, and then gave orders for the march.^ This March of the Armies — il Far le Mostre, as the Pisans called it — must have been one of the most imposing of the many pageants connected with the Giuoco del Ponte. At the head of each army were led two richly caparisoned horses, for the use of the General. These were followed by six mounted trumpeters, clad in the colours of the six Squadrons. Next, preceded by six pages on foot, wearing his livery, and followed by his Councillors and Ambassador, on horseback, rode the General himself, gorgeous in gleaming cuirass and jewelled helmet surmounted by waving plumes. In his hand he held a gilded baton, the emblem of command. Behind the Councillors came six horsemen, riding three on either side. Next followed the six pages of the Lieutenant General, and then the Lieutenant General himself, mounted and armed in the same manner as the General. After him rode the Sergeant Major and the Field Marshal, each attended by four pages, the former to the left, the latter to the right. Four more pages preceded the Captain of the first Squadron, who advanced on foot, clad in armour, with the Mazsa and Scudo in his hands, for a perpetual memorial of the origin of the Pisan game. Behind him, to the sound of the drum, and with their Alfiere in their midst attended by two pages, marched the Soldiers and Celatini of the Squadron, either two and two, or four abreast. They were clad in tunics, and bore shields of the same colours as were displayed upon their banner; while from the points of their shields hung their morions, crowned with plumes. In the same order followed all the other Squadrons, each with its Captain, its Drummer and its Alfiere. Each Squadron had its fixed place in the procession. The order of the Northern Squadrons was as follows : 1. Santa Maria. 4. Calcesana. 2. San Michele. 5. The Satiri. 3. The Mattaccini. 6. The Calci. * For examples of the kind of speeches made by the Generals to their armies, on these occasions, see the Raccolta di Poetici Componimentiy etc., op. cit., pp. 37-40. 117 PATJO AND PONTE That of the South : 1. San Martino. 4. The Leoni. 2. SanC Antonio. 5. The Dragoni. 3. San Marco. 6. The Deljini. When the Grand Duke was in Pisa, the Army of the North, after leaving the Sapienza, proceeded along the Lungarno Reggio to the Palazzo Reale, and, having marched round it, returned, by the same way as it had come, to the Piazza del Ponte. Simultaneously, the Southern Army marched down the Lungarno Gambacorti, on the other side of the river, until it was opposite to the Palace, when it wheeled to the left, and, passing through the Via delle Conce, returned by the Lungarno to the Piazza di Banchi. When no member of the Grand-ducal family was present, the Armies generally marched direct from their respective mustering places to the Bridge. Both the Piazza del Ponte and the Piazza di Banchi were enclosed with palisades ; the former constituting the camp of the Northern, the latter of the Southern Army. In the centre of the Bridge, raised upon a lofty antenna or flag- staff, was displayed the ancient Pisan Standard, with its white cross upon a red field. As the Squadrons moved into position, this was lowered, until the antenna lay across the Bridge, from parapet to parapet, dividing the hostile ranks. The reader who is curious as to the precise disposition of the players, is referred to the accompanying diagram, adapted from the Oploniachia Pisana of Camillo Borghi. In the same work are also to be found three sketches (here reproduced), marked respectively "Tau^ pma" ^'fau^ 2%" and "Tau^ 3^" which illustrate the various pieces of armour used by the combatants. The head of the soldier [soldato) was covered by d^falzata, or coif, of quilted cotton (Fig. B), over which he wore an iron helmet (Fig. A), furnished with a movable vizor. This the Pisans called by the Spanish name of morion. Breast- piece and back-piece were of iron (Fig. C), and were put on over a doublet of leather or quilted cloth. The shoulder- pieces were either of iron (Fig. D), or of quilted canvas 118 «■ «? u 1 g :^ ^ 3 51 E El IE ca o > > > BBBB H tu 1 < o o o H < z < X 0) bo pp "o o c c ^ o o .P Si bfl w O U .2 -o o 03 I W ;2 o -d c 'S H g -^ S, . ^ t; w .:; CQ O ^ b -^ ~ OJ -M jH « ^^ C o ^ *" ° IJ" (U 1^ Cl, " bfl I*- '^ O -r; O i: c - OT >::; >- i2 (L) '+-' d tH C rt •r; j-i CI. a; •£ o d "^ S rt o ^ S o o .S ^ d .> o -t-" •" (U 3 o « 53 O o •S Ji CO o O."^ -^ d i2 i3 ., -- (U m o o Oh -z; cq pq ^ o qn < < pL, o ^ -^ .ti S*^ CO ~. ^ OJ > ^ 13 .*-» O OJ X3 'S CO '> *d ^o a O JH :d ?: S % 6 braccia wide, which was fenced in by posts and rails some two braccia high. One side of this enclosure was called " il nmro — the wall " ; the other, ''la fossa — the ditch." The object of the players was to drive the ball, with feet or fists, over what, for convenience sake, we may term the enemy's "goal-line," although, as a matter of fact, in the Florentine game there were no goals, the whole line of posts and rails, at either end of the field of play, being open to attack. In order to score, it was necessary that the ball should be driven over this line by a direct punt or a fist blow. This was called a caccia \ and the game was won by the side which gained the greatest number of caccie. The players were allowed to run with the ball, to kick, strike or throw it ; but if, when thrown or struck with the open hand, it rose above the height of an ordinary man, this constituted a fallo^ or fault ; and two falli were equal to a caccia. There was also 2. f alio when the ball was driven out of the field of play, on the side of the Ditch, by a direct punt or fist blow ; if, however, it bounced out off the ground, there was no penalty. After a caccia or two falli had been scored, ends were changed. The players were twenty-seven on a side. Their quali- fications are thus described in the Discorso : — " They should not be children, because childhood is too tender, nor old men, because senility is dried up and may not suffer the sweats and endure the fatigues which must be incurred, running, charging and striking. Neither of young men are all suitable, since those who are lean, or ugly, or deformed would make a ridiculous show in the piazza. Moreover, even as every kind of man was not admitted to the Olympic Games, but only men of standing [padri) in their native cities and kingdoms ; so, in the Calcio, all kinds of rascallions are not to be tolerated, neither artificers, servants, nor low-born fellows, but honour- 165 PALIO AND PONTE able soldiers, gentlemen, lords and princes. Therefore to play at Calcio there will be chosen gentlemen, from eighteen years of age to forty-five, beautiful and vigorous, of gallant bearing and of good report, to the end that such champions may be in all respects admirable and welcome. " As to the season in which the Calcio should be played, that is taught by the Sun, the lord of the hours, and the captain of the year ; because, even as every season doth not give birth to beauteous flowers, so every season doth not invite young men to the delights of the Calcio ; inasmuch as this game, being one of extreme fatigue, may not be con- veniently continued after the cold weather is past. Therefore doth it run its course from the Calends of January until March, and then ceaseth, to return again to us every year, even as doth the Sun, at the same point. But because the Calcio is a spectacle which is more beautiful in proportion to the number of the spectators, therefore, among other days, those of the festivals of Bacchus, to wit the Carnival, are dedicated to the most solemn representations thereof. Moreover, even as a bow, which remaineth too long strung, becometh weak and over flexible, so is it with all contests, in that they cannot be carried on from morning until night. Hence the game should commence when the Sun beginneth to descend toward the West, and end when Twilight showeth that he is about to yield to Night. Since scarcely is it possible to sustain such sweats, onsets and blows for more than an hour or two.^ " The dress of every player should be such as not to hamper or impede his movements. Thus it is not convenient that he should wear anything save a doublet and cap, stockings and light shoes, because the less he is encumbered, the better will he be able to use his limbs, to turn and to run swiftly. Above all doth it behove every man to wear goodly raiment and seemly, well fitting and handsome ; because the fairest ladies of the City, and the principal gentlemen are there, to look upon the game ; and he who appeareth badly clad ^ In the 17th century the game seems to have lasted rather less than an hour; thus in the description of the Calcio of ist May 1691, published by Cav. P. GoRl, in his Giuoco del ' Calcio e le Signorie festeggianti (Firenze, F. Lumachi, 1902), we read: " Termino la detta Mostra alle ore 23, e poco dopo comincio la battaglia, che dur6 circa tre quarti d'ora, e termino alle ore 24 conforme il solito." 166 THE GIUOCO DEL CALCIO maketh but an ill show and acquireth evil report thereby. Much more should the players be well dressed and adorned on the solemn Giorno delta Livrea} because, on that day, the theatre is more than ever full of people. Wherefore let each of the sides be clad in different colours, in satin, in velvet or cloth of gold, as the Maestri del Calcio nominated by your Highness shall command." Without its concomitant aesthetic splendours, the game would have had but small attractions for the pageant-loving Florentines. For them, life under the Medicean princes had become one long masquerade. The players on each side were divided as follows : — 1. Fifteen innanzi, or "forwards," who followed the ball (quali corrono la palta), dribbling it for the most part. They were also called corridori. 2. Five sconciatori, or "half-backs." It was their duty to break the rush of the innanzi ; and they were called sconciatori from the sconcio or check which they gave them. 3. Four datori innanzi, or "three-quarters," "who give strong and direct blows to the ball." The phrase dare alia palta, in the terminology of the game, means to strike the ball with the fist. 4. Three datori addietro, or "full-backs." " When the game of Calcio is played senza livrea, drums sound, and Tuscan trumpets, with cheerful blasts, invite every gentleman and seignior to take his place in a great circle which is formed on the field of play — a far cerchio e corona net mezzo del campo ; clad in doublets and stockings, as I have said above. Then, from this circle, are elected two captains, players at Calcio, men of judgment and experience, who, since it will be their duty to choose the teams, ought to know all the youths of the city, and be acquainted with the nature and worth of each one. . . . First they choose four datori innanzi for each side, beginning with the one who shall rule the side or wing of the Ditch, and one who shall ^ Livrea, livery. Giorno della Livrea, Day of Livery, i.e., a day on which the game is played in full dress, Calcio senza livrea, Calcio without livery ; an undress performance — " scratch match." 167 PALIO AND PONTE rule that of the Wall. Thereafter, they choose the other two, whose places are in the centre. Next, the datori addietro are chosen, three for each side. The datori innanzi should be large of limb and strong. Above all should he of the Wall be strong and of measureless striking powers {di smisu- rato colpo) ; whereas he of the Ditch should be an experienced player and very agile. The datori addietro should be swift runners, of high courage and great hitting capacity. ** All the datori being chosen, the next business is the selection of five sconciatori for each side ; powerful men, big, fierce and muscular, and of great skill. Especially should he who plays next the Wall be the biggest and heaviest man of all the team, w^hile he who plays next the Ditch should be agile and dexterous, with long experience of the game. The sconciatore in the centre should have good legs [buona gamba) ; and the remaining two must be, for reasons which shall be set forth hereafter, most ferocious [ferocissimi). Thereafter, the innanzi are picked, one by one, until there are fifteen on each side. They should be young and agile, swift, long- winded and very courageous." Such was the method of choosing the teams for an ordinary game. When, however, it was proposed to fare il Calcio a Livrea, the selection did not take place in the piazza, but in the house of one of the principal gentlemen of the city. Thither all the best players resorted, and the choice was only made after careful discussion. Sometimes there were two or three trial matches before the teams were finally settled and the day of the contest published. Each side was provided with an Alfiere, or standard- bearer, whose duties appear to have been very similar to those of the Alfieri in the Pisan game. It was their business to draw lots for choice of positions before the match began ; and, after it was over, they were expected to invite their respective sides to a sumptuous banquet, the anticipation of which seems to have insured them, at any rate, a temporary popularity.^ * " Ben h ragione, che ciascuna parte vada a cavar di casa I'Alfier suo, e corteggiandolo per la Citta si diporti ; perch^ I'uno, e I'altro fa poi alia sua schiera un bel convito." — // Discorso, op. cit., pp. lo-ll. This was obviously the Alfiere's only merit, as he did not 1 68 ^ t ^ -•^ ^ o s 1 6 6 04 dD O • e • e o • tt • • • I. ^ i<:o n2 So ^, 15, 9, 18, and so forth — and it was, as a rule, composed of an equal number of citizens taken from each Terzo ; while in the Constituto del Comune of 1262, it was provided that "si contigerit potestatem Senensem stetisse vel habitasse in uno tergerio civitatis per annum, non debeat eius successor in eodem ter9erio habitare, nisi duobus annis mediantibus." ^ And all this was necessary because the interests of the three Terzi were often opposed ; ^ Dist. i. Ruhr. 211. M 177 PALIO AND PONTE although, as a rule, in all cases of discord, the Terzi of Camollia and of San Martino were leagued together against that of the City/ According to the legend of the origin of the City, this antagonism began at a very early date ; and it is said that the arms of the Commune, the party-coloured shield known as the Balzana, owes its adoption to a portent which occurred at the first reconciliation of the rival fortresses.^ Other writers tell us that, in the year 935, the French nobles {i nobili Franzesi) who had succeeded to the castles of the Longobards in the Sienese contado, and who lived in a perpetual state of warfare with one another, were compelled to compose their petty quarrels by reason of the ravages of the Mohammedan corsairs, who, having surprised and destroyed Genoa, passed into the Maremma of Tuscany and sacked Roselle. Alarmed by this common peril, the said nobles resolved to unite their forces and to take refuge in some strongly fortified city. For this purpose Siena was selected ; and that the more readily, because the descendants of the French gentlemen, who had settled there in the days of Charlemagne, were willing to extend a welcome to their fellow-countrymen. The Sienese, however, refused to admit them, " fearing that this new folk, being unaccustomed to obey the laws and the magistrates, would afford an occasion of disunion and division among the people." Nevertheless, in the end and after much insistence, they were permitted to build huts in the neighbourhood of the city, and to hold a market for the necessities of life outside the gates. Before long, ill blood was engendered between the townsfolk and their new neighbours, who, according to Bartolommeo Benvoglienti, inhabited the two castles of Camollia and Val di Montone. ^ See my Historical Introduction to Miss Lucy Olcott's Guide to Siena, op. cit., pp. 44- 45 note. ^ For the legendary origin of the City generally, see Langton Douglas, History of Sie?ia, chap. i. — This work, as I have already hinted, no student of mediaeval Siena can afford to neglect ; and this is equally the case whether he understands Italian or not, for no Italian book exists which covers anything like the same ground. Thus one of the greatest living Italian historians has not hesitated to welcome Professor Douglas' book as one which comes "a compiere ed a dare I'ultima mano alle ricerche regionali degli ultimi vent' anni." —See the Bullettino Senese di Storia Patria, vol. ix. (1902), pp. 385-392. 178 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA The Piazza del Campo, or Campus Fori, as it was then called, was situated in the midst of these resedi, and was divided breadthwise by a great wall, and lengthwise by the rain-water. Here were held the markets ; and here, the Sienese and the French frequently quarrelled and fought ; for, when the citizens came thither to sell their merchandise and ventured to encroach upon that part of the Campo which the new comers had appropriated as their own, these latter were ill content to behold them vending their wares within their boundaries ; so that from words they came to blows and bloodshed, the people hurrying from every side to give support and assistance to their respective factions. These conflicts were long and stubborn ; and, after one party or the other had been put to the rout, the victors naturally plundered the booths of the vanquished, seizing as booty such eggs, cheese, fowls and other edibles as they found therein. And this, says Benvoglienti, occurred especially inanti ai giorni della quaresima, qitando le robe si comprano pitc care. Later on, when the original city — the ancient Castel Vecchio (Castelhim Vetus) — and its suburbs were all united within one circuit of walls, these time-honoured conflicts long continued to be commemorated at Carnival time, in the same spot, by means of divers popular games, all of which retained the semblance of actual battles ; and Benvoglienti informs us that, as late as the 1 5th century, the victors were still wont to sack the shops of the cheesemongers and wine-sellers according to the ancient usage — a custom which, one would suppose, can hardly have commended itself to mere trades- men ; and which we may, perhaps, compare with the strange prescriptive right claimed by the Roman populace, of plundering the palace of a newly elected Pope. The earliest of these games was probably that of Mazzascudo, or, as the Sienese called it, from the helmets which were worn by the players, il giuoco dell' Elmora. From the Costihito of 1309-13 10, we learn that besides the elmora those who took part in the combat wore cestarelle and cuffie, both of which seem to have been used to protect the head. If I am not mistaken, however, the cestarella was used as an alternative for the elmora, being made either of 179 PALIO AND PONTE basket-work, or, perhaps, like the head-pieces adopted in the Pavian game,^ of wood ; while the ctiffia was probably worn under the elmora or cestarella, and corresponded pretty closely to the Pisan falzata? The body was protected by a cuirass or breastplate {corazza, lammierd), the thighs by cuisses (cosciaroni), and the lower part of the legs by greaves [gamberuolt). The scudo, which seems to have been made of wood covered with leather, and the mazza completed the player's equipment.^ Stone-throwing was, as far as we can iudo-e, a reeular concomitant of the grame, but does not seem to have been systematized, as in the Battaglia de Sassi of Perugia. Fatal results were by no means uncommon, and the same statute to which we have already referred, as excepting the riders in the Palio from the ordinary penalties for wounding and homicide,* extends the like immunity to those qui vulnerarent pro ludo et in bataglia que fieret in Campo Fori, ut consuetum est. In 1238, Pietro Parenzi of Rome, Potesta of Siena, in order as far as possible to prevent accidents, instructed Orlandino, Castaldus comunis, not to permit such of the citizens as were insufficiently armed to take part in the contest; a restriction which seems to have been highly resented by a certain Adota di Canaccio, who doubtless considered that, as a free-born Sienese, he was entitled to get his head broken at his own good pleasure. At any rate, he attempted to join in the game without his shield, and clad only in a leather jerkin. Orlandino requested him to retire, and, in his indignation at so outrageous a curtailment of his liberty, he so far forgot himself as to exclaim : " A fine Potesta this of ours ; bad luck to him ! " — a piece of dis- respect to the First Magistrate of the Republic for which he was condemned to pay a fine of sixty soldi.^ ^ " Habent enim in capitibus galeas ligneas, quas Cistas vocant, pannis et moUibus interius exteriusque partitas, habentes in superficie decisa vel depicta suae Societatis insignia, et ante faciem cratem ferream circumflexam, etc." — Muratori, Dissertazioni sop7-a le Aniichith Italiane (edition cited), torn. ii. p. 3. "^ See p. 118 supra. ^ In addition to the extracts from the Constituio, printed at the end of the chapter, see the Miscellanea Storica Senese, vol. ii. (1894), p. 92. * P. 63 supra. ' R. Arch, di Stato in Siena, Libri dd Prdori del T23S, a c^"* 136. " Item Adotam 180 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA However, notwithstanding all precautions, one or more citizens lost their lives every year ; and, in 1253, a statute was passed forbidding the throwing of stones,^ while, before the last quarter of the century, the Ebnora was prohibited altogether ; ^ although it continued to be played for some years longer in spite of the law. The incidents which preceded its final abolition are thus described by Agnolo di Tura, and are generally attributed to 1291 : ^ "In Siena there was a great battle of Elmora, after this manner, that the Terzo of San Martino and the Terzo of Camollia fought with the Terzo di Citta, on such wise that the Terzo di Citta was driven back even to the Chiasso delle Mora. And there did they receive succour from the Casato, and from the Piazza Manetti, and of Casa Scotti and of the Forteguerri. Then began they to cast stones, and afterward they fought hand to hand with great assault of battle. And thither came well nigh all Siena ; either to join in the fray or to interpose to separate the combatants. But so great was the confusion and shouting that no man might hear himself speak ; neither were they able to stop the battle. Whereby it befel that there were slain x gentlemen, besides many of the baser sort ; and many were wounded ; until, at last, the Terzo di Citta was victorious, and drove back the Terzo di San Martino and that of Camollia, until they thrust them forth from the Campo. And in good sooth, if Misser Pino, the Potesta, had not forced his way into the melde with his folk and compelled those men to lay down their arms, there would have been a greater slaughter. And, by reason of this battle, it was ordained that, from thenceforth, the game should not be played with staves and with stones, but that they who joined therein should use their fists alone {E per questa battaglia si levo via, eke non si giocasse con battaglia di Canaccii in Ixsol., quia, cum Orlandinus Castaldus Comunis, mandato Potestatis, ivisset ad custodiendum ne homines inhermes intrent intra armatos in bactallia in Campo fori, et invenisset dictum Adotam cum mantello vel pelle inter armatos, et redarguisset eum quod ita manebat, et dixit ei quod Potestas preceperat ei quod faceret admoveri inhermes ab armatis ; dixit ei dictus Adota : Vada cum mala fortuna ! Ecce pulcre Potestates ! " ^ Constituto Senese (i 262-1 270), Dist. v. Rubr. 33. ^ Ibidem, Rubr. 194. ^ Cronica Sanese in Muratori, xv. col. 42. 181 PALIO AND PONTE pertiche, tie di sassi, ma si giocasse a le pugna per meno scandalo), and, on this wise, had the game of the Pugna its commencement in Siena ; and so they abolished the other battles. And it was perilous ; and it seemed that the State itself was endangered, in that the passions of the people were aroused by much fighting. And this befel on All Saints day." Such is one account of the origin of the Giuoco delle Pztgna ; ^ but, according to other writers, it is much more ancient ; and the latter view is supported by the statute of 1253, already referred to. From it we learn that, at the date of its enactment, the Pugna was habitually played z;z Campo Fori; while the fact that it alone is specifically mentioned, the Elmora and the other " battles " being only alluded to in general terms, — pugna et alii ludi, — gives colour to the position that it was even then the principal Sienese game. " Some think (says Tommasi) that this pastime was permitted because it was less dangerous and barbarous than those others which were prohibited, and also as being of some public utility — not only as affording an outlet whereby old enmities might harmlessly evaporate, which otherwise would have led to the drawing of weapons and to death, but also as accustoming the citizens to range themselves in order of battle, to attack and to stand upon the defensive . . . thereby rendering them valiant and ready to fight, and to ^ It may not be without interest to note that a very similar account is given of the origin of the Pugna in Gubbio, which is said by Reposati, in his Vita di S. Ubaldo, to have been substituted for an older and more sanguinary battaglia, which was abolished, by the efforts of the Saint, in the second quarter of the 12th centur)'. In Gubbio the Pugna seems to have continued to flourish up to the i8th century. "After the octave of Easter, I know not whether for eight or for fifteen days, this game [lizza) continued. As the city was divided into four quartieri, so were these divided, two against two ; to wit, the Quartiere di San Giuliano and the Quartiere di San Martino, which were called di sopra, against those of Sant' Andrea and San Pietro, which were called di sotto. The victory was won by those two quartieri, which drove their rivals and enemies, by force of fist blows, forth from their respective districts, compelling them to take shelter in their houses and streets. It was a pleasant sight to look upon from the windows and other high places, where one could not be hurt ; and thus have I seen this battle when a child. Thither came every class of persons of the male sex, nobles, citizens and artisans, either to begin the fight, or to assist their partisans when they began to give way. That which was excellent about the game is this, that, albeit the majority of the combatants returned to their homes, bruised, beaten and disfigured, never- theless they bore no grudge, but were as good friends with their adversaries as before the combat, blaming themselves alone for their own and their faction's lack of prowess." {Op. cit., edition of 1760, p. 130 ct seq.) Is it possible that this game has any connection with the Fesia dei Ceri, which is still celebrated at Gubbio, at about the same season of the year ? 182 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA a certain extent inuring them to bloodshed, all of which things make men more apt and eager for military service. But I believe that the reason why our ancestors favoured the Pugna, and allowed it to obtain the countenance both of law and of custom, was that it was an obvious token and record of the antiquity of the city. For we read in the History of Livy, that Tarquinius Priscus, after the defeat of the Latins and the sack of Apiolae, constructed the Circus Maximus ; and that, among the other spectacles and public games then exhibited to the people, was that of the Pugna — he having sent for players from Tuscany.^ And because, in Tuscany, to play at the Pugna is, and ever hath been, the prerogative of the Sienese people, I am persuaded that these players came from Siena. Hence it is, by reason of this tradition, that the game hath ever been held in such high esteem by our city, and was so greatly favoured by the people. And it hath ever been deemed a seemly thing to play thereat, yea, even for a noble or a magistrate.^ "This game of the Pugna," says Gigli, "... is certainly one of the most beautiful and attractive which hath ever been practised in Tuscany, because it is noble, it doth not weary the mind, neither causeth it terror nor dread of any ill, but giveth great joy to them that look thereon. And it may be watched without fear, because they who play thereat use not weapons wherein lyeth danger, but their fists alone. Herein doth it differ from the Pisan game, wherein the targhe which are employed may occasion very grievous injury. . . . Neither doth our game demand great mental application like those of Florence and of Lucca, which are too studied, ordered and precise. . . . Nathless it is lively and spirited and needeth some skill, if only to know how to smite at the right moment ; not to miss the mark nor to be taken unawares ; to withdraw at the right time ; to run wilily, so as to deceive the enemy, and to adopt other similar stratagems. . . . And the spectators, if well the game be used, may recognize therein the vivacious and cheerful disposition of our folk, who have ever been dowered with kindly and courteous manners ; observing that, ^ T. Livius, Hist., i. 35. •' Equi pugilesque ex Etruria maxime acciti." 2 ToMMASi, i. ii. 83. 183 PALIO AND PONTE if any man be badly smitten and beaten, he changeth not therefor his ancient friendship for his companion into hatred. And for this gentle spirit the Sienese were greatly praised by San Bernardino in his preachings. Moreover, it is a tradition among us that the Saint urged the citizens to play at the game of the Pugna ; albeit, in his sermons, which are preserved in manuscript and which contain many wholesome teachings, there is naught to be found touching this matter. . . . ^ It cannot, however, be denied that our Brandano indirectly lauded the game when he spake and prophesied, saying, ' Woe unto thee, Siena, when thou shalt no longer play the Pugna — Guai a te^ Siena^ quamdo non farai piii alia pugna! Yet, peradventure, this saying was put into his mouth by some one unto whom it seemed a thing impossible that this amusement should ever be abandoned by the Sienese, since it was beloved by them and suited to their tastes."^ However, in spite of all which the diarist has to tell us of the gentle and innocent nature of the game, it seems hardly to have been a drawing-room diversion, and, on more than one occasion, proved well nigh as sanguinary and violent as the Elmora. Thus, in 13 18 (old style), "the City being in peace and in tranquillity, the last Thursday of Carnival drew nigh ; and all the people held high festival for love of Carnival. Wherefore, many gentlemen resolved to strip themselves and to play at the Pugna, the one part against the other. And when they had gotten them ready, they came into the Campo, with many stripped and with many companies. And when they were in the Campo the shopkeepers closed all the shops and went each of them to give assistance to his own party. And, company to company, they fought so fiercely that, on no wise, might either side obtain any ^ These forty-five sermons, which were preached in the Piazza del Campo in 1427, were published a few years ago by Luciano Banchi, under the title oi Le prediche volgari di San Bernardino da Siena dette nella Piazza del Campo Panno MCCCCXXVII. In vol. ii. p. 55, the following expression occurs : Aitati e difendeti con darli de' pugni, words which heard without the context, by an inattentive or sleepy listener, might possibly have given rise to the tradition above referred to. There is another, but metaphorical allusion to the Pugna, in vol. iii. p. 156. ^ GiGLl, Diario (edition cited), ii. 484-486. ^184 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA advantage over the other. And so greatly were their passions inflamed that no man was willing to hold his hand. Then began they to throw stones, and many heads were broken. And so many were the folk that ran thither with stones that it was a marvel to behold. Now, when he saw this, Otaviano della Branca da Gobio, the Potesta, and likewise the Signori Nove, commanded that every man should go to his own house or suffer such penalties as they should ordain. But their proclamation availed nothing ; and ever the folk who brought stones increased, so that all men marvelled thereat, and especially those who stood looking on. Whereupon, the Potesta, fearing lest the City should rise in tumult, came forth with his attendants and strove to part the combatants and to send them every man to his own home. But they obeyed him not. Also they began to cast stones at him, so that the heads of some of his household were broken. Thereat was the Potesta exceeding wrath ; and, if the night had not come, there would have befallen very great evil. Now all this battle befel at the foot of the Palazzo. And there were stones enoug-h there to have sufficed for the building of half a house ; and the bear- ing away of the said stones cost the Operaio del Comune eight lire. And all men marvelled to behold so many stones at the foot of the Palazzo, for it seemed as if it had rained stones there. And it is reported that, by reason of this battle of stones, ten persons died ; but more than a hundred were wounded therein. And also thereby was excited great enmity. And on this wise, for that time, they played a fair game of Pugna, albeit, God wot, for many it was grievous." ^ Although the magistrates do not appear to have interfered until they were compelled to do so, the whole game, ab initio, was clearly illegal ; for the law provided that " no man should play at pugni et boccate (boccate being slaps given with the open hand, as opposed to pugni, fist blows) in any part of the city of Siena"; while, as recently as 1306, in order to remove any temptation to stone-throwing, even so innocent ^ The above account is to be found in an anonymous chronicle in the Communal Library. Compare the Frammento di una Cronachetta Senesc published by N. MengozzI and A, LisiNi (Siena, Lazzeri, 1893), p. 24, and Malavolti, parte ii. eta. 79. 185 ' PALIO AND PONTE a pastime as snowballing had been prohibited in the Campo.^ In 1324, "on the Sunday before Carnival, the same being the third day of February, a game of Pugna was played in Siena. Those of the Terzo of San Martino with those of the Terzo of Camollia numbered 600 each ; and there came against them the Terzo di Citta ; whereby it befel that there was in the Piazza of Siena much folk stripped to their doublets, with caps of cloth upon their heads ; and these were furnished with cheek-pieces which covered the cheeks and were worn for the protection of the face and head. Also they wrapped handkerchiefs about their hands, accord- ing to custom. And playing at the Pugna on this wise, the two Terzi cast out the Terzo di Citta from the Campo ; and they commenced to throw stones. Then certain persons took staves ; and so they fought in the Campo. Thereafter, they armed themselves with shields and helmets and with lances and swords and spears ; and so great was the uproar in the Campo that all the world seemed upside down for the multitude of folk that was therein. And all the soldiers of the Commune came armed into the Campo, and likewise the Potesta of Siena with his attendants. And the Signori Nove made proclamation that the battle should cease ; but so great was the uproar that they took nothing thereby, nor could they separate the combatants. The Capitano della guerra with his folk and the Potesta of Siena thrust them- selves between those that fought, but nothing could they do to stop the conflict. Then were slain certain horses of the soldiers, and thereafter died one of the soldiers also. And ever there came more people into the Campo by all the ways that led thereto, with cross-bows and with axes and with bills. And the battle ever increased ; and neither the Signori nor any others that were there were able to remedy so great ruin. Wherefore the Bishop of Siena,^ with the priests and friars of all the orders in Siena, came into the Campo in procession, bearing the cross before them ; and they commenced to pass through the battle. . . . And at * See extracts from the statutes, printed at the end of the chapter. ^ Donusdei Malavolti.— See Pecci, Storia del Vescovado della Citta di Siena, p. 267. 186 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA last, they who fought were separated by reason of the prayers of the said Bishop and of all the priests and friars. And so the battle ceased. And while yet the batde continued, or ever the Bishop had come, the Saracini and the Scotti cast many stones from their windows, on such wise that they who were struck thereby were minded to set fire to the houses of those folk on the side of the Campo. And a son of Ser Martino da Gallena slew a worker in wood {un Maestro di manaja) of the Terzo of San Martino ; wherefore they of San Martino twice set fire to the shops. So that when the battle was done, it was seen that four men had been killed therein. Now therefore, when the tumult was over, the Signori Nove took counsel concerning the said battle and slaughter and arson. . . . And it was resolved that from henceforth they should play no more at the Pugna." ^ Nevertheless, we may doubt if this resolution had any- thing more than a temporary effect. Among the Novelle of Gentile Sermini, who wrote about the year 1425, is to be found a vivid, but quite untranslatable description of the "Game of Fisticuffs." It is entitled '' Apre apre al giuoco delle ptigna" and it clearly demonstrates how dangerous was the character of the sport, even when the rules were observed and there was no stone-throwing. The following is a para- phrase of the concluding sentences : — " Now let us go. To-morrow you will see lovely black eyes (le belle occhiate) and fine pale faces, and plenty of bandaged hands and arms, and plenty of missing teeth, to say nothing of those who have received internal injuries and whom we shall not see for several months from now. Of course it's no use talking of the bruised sides and sprained backs which we shall hear of for so many days, nor of those poor artisans who, being dependent for their livelihood upon the labour of their hands, will be prevented by their injuries from earning their daily bread. Look you, there is nothing to be gained by this game but blows and bruises ; and though we too played it when we were younger, now we are well content to let those in whose veins the blood boils play 1 Agnola di Tura, MS. chronicle, quoted by GlGLl, Diario, ii. 488-489. Cf. Tommasi, ii. lib. ix. p. 218. 187 PALIO AND PONTE it. If I am anything of a prophet, there will be half a dozen deaths or more, from the effects of to-day's sport, before Easter is here. Well, well, men must be born and men must die, and we can't help it ; but if you want my opinion of the matter, I tell you that the lookers-on get two- thirds of the amusement which is to be found in such a game as this. The players get the other third, and in addition to that they have their bruised sides, their cut foreheads, their dislocated and broken bones, hands, arms, ribs and jaws."^ Allegretto Allegretti also mentions the Pugna, and records " un bellissimo giuoco " which was played on the ist of March 1494;^ while, when Charles V. visited Siena, in April 1536, a game of Pugna was played in his honour, which he watched from the window of the Sala del Concistoro, and "in which he took marvellous orreat delipfht."^ Another favourite pastime of the Sienese was the Giuoco del Pallone, which appears to have been sometimes played in connection with the Pugna. It was, I think, a species of football ; the ball, or pallone, being thrown into the Piazza from the Torre del Mangia ; ^ and if not identical with the Florentine Calcio, it certainly belonged to the same genus.^ We, however, know but little about it ; and, in Sozzini's account of the game which took place in 1555, during the last great siege, he speaks as if it were a common amusement in his day, and gives no particulars whatever as to the method of play. On the 13th January, says he, "at midday, many Sienese youths met together in the Piazza del Campo ; and, having stripped themselves to their doublets, they joined hands and danced, forming a circle so grreat that it filled more than ' Zc Novelle di Gentile Serinini da Siena ora per la prima volta raccolte e piibblicate nella loro integrith (Livorno, Tip. F. Vigo, 1874), p. 109. ^ Diari Safiesi, in MuRATORl, Her. Italic. Script., xxiii., ad annum. ' See the last part of the Historia of Tommasi (MS. in the Communal Librar}'), and P. Vigo, Carlo Quinto in Siena nell' Aprile del ijs5, relazione di un contemporaneo (Bologna, G. Romagnoli, 1884), pp. 43-45. * C. Falletti-Fossati, op. cii., p. 193. ' The Calcio was by no means confined to Florence, Compare L. Frati, La vita privata di Bologna, op. cit. , p. 1 38. 188 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA half the Piazza.^ Thereafter, two captains having been chosen, the said youths were by them divided into two equal parties ; and they played a very beautiful game of Pallone for two hours or more. All those French gentlemen stood looking on ; and they were amazed at our madness (e stttpivano delle nosti'-e pazzie), in that the same youths, who the very day before had done battle with the enemy, to-day played at Pallone. " Now Bernino the cheesemonger, a valorous youth, had three days before made prisoner a Spanish gentleman, the same being a goodly man ; and it was his whim to go and fetch him ; and he caused him to strip to his doublet and to put on the banda rossa^ and to play at Pallone. And he was more admired than all the other players because he was swift of foot ; ^ nor was there any man that could run as he did. " When the game of Pallone was finished, the trumpets sounded, and each man went to his Terzo ; and they played a fair game of Pugna, whereof Monsignor Montluc took so great pleasure that he well nigh wept for very joy, saying that never had he beheld more gallant youths than they. And there were those that answered him, saying : * Bethink you how we shall encounter our enemies, when thus we do among ourselves who are friends.' And, when the game of the Pugna was ended, a voice was heard crying : A lie gttardie, alle guar die. And anon they de- parted all from the Piazza to take their arms ; and each man went to his appointed post."* ^ '■^ Fecero un grandissimo ballo tondo che empiva piu di viczza la Piazza.''^ — In this ballo tondo, Miss Olcott {Guide to Siena, op. cit., p. 211) finds a survival of the old Rigoletto or Ridda, "a sort of round dance, in which the dancers moved in a circle, hand in hand, singing." A representation of such a dance will be found in the Lorenzetti frescoes, in the Sala della Pace. ^ Referring, as I suppose, to the colours worn by the opposing sides. See GiGLi, Diario, ii. 491 ; Aquarone, Dante in Siena (Citta di Castello, Tip. Lapi, 1889), p. 34. In MURATORI, Rer. Italic, Script., xv. col. 96, note, we find mention made of Bande da Terzi. It may, however, be well to compare SuzziNi, Diario, p. 113, where it is stated that other prisoners, who had no thought of playing any game, were allowed to "andare a spasso per la Citta con le loro bande rosse." ^ Era benissimo itt gambe. The expression will doubtless strike the reader as familiar. Compare p. 168 supra. * A. SozziNi, Diario delle cose avvenute in Siena dai 20 Luglio ijjo ai 28 Agosto iS5S, PP- 353. 354. 189 PAI.IO AND PONTE Possibly the reader will share in the amazement of the French gentlemen who watched that game of Pallone, if he recalls the privations which the Sienese were suffering at the time, and remembers that, only the day before, the captains had been compelled to give the Sienese companies a few hours of repose "because they were utterly worn out by continual labour by day and also by night ; which thing (adds the diarist) was passing grateful to the soldiers and more especially to me."^ Perhaps, too, we may find in these facts the reason why, by comparison with those gaunt and war-wasted Sienese, the Spanish prisoner of Bernino, the cheesemonger, em benissimo m gambe, and why there was no man che faces se li cor si che faceva lui} Si2"ismondo Tizio tells us that Siena was founded under the influence of the second sign of the Zodiac, and that she owes thereto the affability and hospitality of her inhabitants, the beauty and allurement of her women, and, above all else, the love which her populace hath ever borne for festivals and games.^ And, indeed, it was never possible for those old Sienese to remain depressed for long. Scarcely was the great siege at an end, than we find this strange people making merry because the Fonte Gaia, after having been dry for many months, was once more running water. Ne fece festa ed allegrezza, writes Sozzini ; while, a few pages farther on, he relates how the entire city was moved to laughter by the waggery of certain Germans, who, being on guard in the Piazza, clothed with corselets and morions the marble saints which adorn the Cappella. That same August, the refugees in Montalcino commemorated the Assumption of Our Lady with all the accustomed pomp, and on the evening of the 15 th, si fece una caccia di ton neila Piazza grande da basso^ avanti il Palazzo con gran letizia generale e giostre, livriere, balli e canti p£r tutta ^ A. Sozzini, Diario, etc., p. 352. — After Professor Douglas' masterly description of the siege of Siena {op. cit., chap, xv.), it is obviously unnecessary for me to enter into details. ^ Is it possible that he picked up the ball and ran with it ? Compare, for a similar incident, Memorie del Calcio Fiorentino, op. cit., pp. 41-43. 2 BiBLlOTECA Com. di Siena, MS. B. iii. 6. Titii Histor. Senens., tom. i. ; Ron DON I, Tradizioni popolari e leggende di un cotnutte medioevale e del sua coniado (Firenze, 1886), pp. 31-32. Compare Tommasi, i. 55. 190 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA la terra} A year or two later, the good Sienese, forgetful of their vanished liberty and of their friends and relatives who were still languishing in exile, celebrated the Carnival season with more than ordinary abandon, and "with so great familiarity and licence between the young men and women, that — as the Florentine Niccolini wrote to his master — the city appeared to be a kingdom of Venus.^ Of the other pastimes of the Sienese but little need be said in this place. The more ancient are enumerated by Falletti - Fossati in his Costumi Senesi ; while, with regard to such of them as are intimately connected with the evolution of the Palio, I shall have something to say in the following chapter. Suffice it here to mention that from very early times we have record of tournaments being held in Siena. In a chronicle by an unknown author, preserved among the archives of the city, we read, of una nobile e bella giostra, which was held in 1225, "in the great and beautiful meadow of the Porta Camollia." The victor was a certain Buonsignore of Arezzo ; and he received "an exceeding swift horse, all clothed on with silk, together with armour of fine steel, befitting an approved and prudent warrior." The second prize was a helmet with the arms of the Commune ; and the third a sword and steel gauntlets. All the other competitors were unhorsed.^ Later on, it seems that tournaments were held in the Piazza ; and it is obviously to this form of diversion that Folgare da San Gimignano refers in the sixth of his sonnets to the members of the Brigata Spendereccia. 1 I give you horses for your games in May, And all of them well trained unto the course, Each docile, swift, erect, a goodly horse ; With armour on their chests, and bells at play Between their brows, and pennons fair and gay, ^ See Misc. Star. Senese, vol. iii. (1895), PP- ^2, 13. * The letter bears date the 23rd of February 1557, and is preserved in the Archives of Florence. (See Misc. Stor. Senese, vol. iii. pp. 42, 43. ) " Qui s' e fatto per I'universale un allegro Carnovale con molti parentadi, comedie et banchetti, non pero di grande spesa, ma con tanta domestichezza et licentia di giovani con le donne che pare che sia il regno di Venere," etc. ' MURATORI, Rer. Italic. Script., xv. 23, note ; RONDONI, Sena Fetus, p. 70. 191 PALIO AND rONTE Fine nets, and housings meet for warriors Emblazoned with the shields ye claim for yours, Gules argent, or, all dizzy at noon day : And spears shall split, and fruit go flying up In merry interchange for wreaths that drop From balconies and casements far above ; And tender damsels with young men and youths Shall kiss together on the cheeks and mouths ; And every day be glad with joyful love.^ In 1392, a tournament was held in the Campo, in honour of Gian Galeazzo Visconti, Count of Virtu ; and there, accord- ing to Tizio, the youth of the Terzo di Citta clad in red, those of San Martino in green, and of Camollia in white, gallantly jousted together.^ Solo aspettan che squilli la tromba quel campioni nell' ampio steccato : d'ambo i lati gik il suono rimbomba, gia le sbarre per essi cascar. Con le lance appuntate ai cimieri e col volto dall' elmo celato incitando co' sproni i corsieri I'un suir altro quei prodi piombar. In January 14 16, a silver helmet was offered as a prize, and the Florentines were especially challenged to compete. The result was a drawn match, a Sienese and a Florentine having scored an equal number of points. The former thereupon generously relinquished his claim in favour of the foreigner.^ Other tournaments are said to have been held to celebrate the election of Enea Silvio Piccolomini to the Papacy, and on the occasion of the visit of Frederick III. to Siena.* In 1503, the Festival of the Assumption was observed with especial pomp ; and in addition to the Palio, there was a great jousting which lasted three days, "to the praise • Le Rime di Folgore da San Gemignano e di Cene da la Chitarra d'Arezzo (Bologna, Romagnoli, 1 880), Sonetti de' Mesi, Maggio, p. 13. ' ". . . Cydoniis indutis sericis, armisonos ludos, et hastiles celebrarunt ; Ludentium ex regione Civitatis purpurei coloris vestes fuere, viridis S. Martini, albi vero Regionis Camollia;, alia quoque exultationis signa, numquam amplius temporibus elapsis fuere celebrata," ^ A. rROVEDi, Relazione delle Pubbliche Feste date in Siena negli ultivii cinque Secoli, etc. (In Siena, 1791), pp. 21-22. * A. Professione, Per un Sonetto delP Alfieri, in the Bullettino Senese di Storia Patria, vol. vi. (1899), p. 3?9- 192 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA and honour of Almighty God and of the Virgin Mary, Advocate and Liege Lady of this City."^ It may be noticed that among the Tavolette dipinte, in the Archivio di Stato, that of 1610 depicts a tournament in the Piazza del Campo. NOTE Extracts from the Sienese Statutes. Constitutum Comunis Senensis 1262-1270.^ Dist. V. Rubric 33. Et cum mala sequantur occasione lapidum, qui pro- iciuntur in Campo Fori pro pugna et aliis ludis, qui ibi hunt annuatim, quod multi homines moriuntur, et tegule franguntur et domus, cogar ego potestas cogere homines civitatis Senarum non proicere lapidis in Campo Fori predicto, nee. in domibus, que sunt circa Campum, cum pugne ibi hunt ; et qui contra fecerit, tollere tenear ego potestas ei pro qualibet vice .xl. sol. pro pena. Et cum fiunt ibi pugne, tenear ponere custodes ex utroque latere Campi, qui teneantur proiectores mihi denuntiare vel iudici vel camerario meo, quam citius poterunt. Et proiectores rinvenire tenear modis omnibus, quibus potero : et dictam pugnam fieri non per- mittam ad .vi. annos, quod est .M°CC°LIIL indict, .xii. de mense Septembre, sine licentia et parabola duarum partium hominum de consilio campane. Ibid. Rubric 191. De predictis excipiantur minores .xiiii. annis [et] illi, qui currerent eques et predicta maleficia non committerent studiose, et illi, qui vulnerarent pro ludo et in bataglia, que fieret in Campo Fori, ut consuetum est, si fieret, et illi qui offenderent aliquem exbampnitum pro maleficio vel pro rebelle domini regis et populi Senensis. ^ Misc. Senese di erudizione Storica, Anno VI,, pp. 15-16. — The " Capitula jostrefaciende," there printed, gives an excellent idea of the method of scoring. Thus we notice that if a combatant was unhorsed, he was compelled to withdraw from the lists ; while he who had unhorsed him scored 10 points (colpi dieci) as well as all the points of him who was overthrown. 2 L. Zdekauer, // Framtnento degli ultimi due libri del piU antico Constituto Senese. N 193 PALIO AND PONTE Ibid, Rubric 194. Item statuimus et ordinamus, ad hoc ut occasione battalHe, que consuevit fieri in Campo Fori, non fiat aliquod maleficium, quod dicta battallia non fiat. Et Potestas et Capitaneus teneantur non facere fieri dictam battalliam. IlCostituto delC. di S. volgarizzato nel MCCCIX-MCCCX} Dist. V. Rubi'ics SS et seq. LV. — Che neuno giuochi nel Campo con elmi vero ce stare lie. In prima, statuimo et ordiniamo che neuno de la citta et contado di Siena, o vero altra persona undunque sia, possa o vero debia intrare nel Campo del mercato con elmo o vero cestarella, o vero scudo, o vero maza, o vero cuffia da armare, ne in alcuna parte de la citta, o vero de' borghi, o vero presso a la citta di Siena, per uno millio. Et chi contrafara, cioe chi entrara nel Campo del mercato con elmo, cestarella, scudo, o vero maza, o vero cuffia da armare, sia punito et condannato al comune di Siena, per ciascuna volta, in C. libre di denari senesi. Et chi combattara o vero giocara in alcuna altra parte de la citta di Siena, o vero de' borghi, o vero di fuore de la citta, o vero de' borghi, per uno millio, con elmo o vero cestarella, scudo, o vero maza, sia punito et condannato al comune di Siena per ciascuna volta, in L. libre di denari senesi. Et chiunque vista di combattere o vero di giocare fara con elmo, o vero cestarella, o vero scudo, o vero maza, in alcuna parte de la citta o vero de' borghi, sia punito e condannato al comune di Siena, per ciascuna volta, in XXV. libre di denari senesi. Et intendasi di fare vista chi avara elmo o vero cestarella in capo o vero in mano, o vero scudo in braccio o vero in mano, o vero cuffia da armare in capo o vero in mano, o vero avara alcuna giubba, o vero coraze, o vero lammiere in dosso, o vero gamberuoli a le gambe, o vero cosciaroni a le cosce. LVI. — De lapena di chi gittasse pietre nel Campo del mercato, Anco, che neuno debia gittare pietra o vero pietre nel Campo del mercato o vero altrui, in alcuna parte de la citta 1 op. di. 194 THE ELMORA AND THE PUGNA di Siena o vero de' borghi, per cagione di giuoco o vero per altra cagione, in quelle modo et forma che si fa al giuoco, quando si combatte nel Campo del mercato con I'elmora, o vero cestarelle. Et chi contrafara, sia punito, per ciascuna volta, in XXV. libre di denari al comune di Siena. LVn. — Di chi giocasse a! pugni et boccate. Et, che neuno debia giocare a' pugni et boccate, in alcuna parte de la citta di Siena o vero de' borghi ; et chi contrafara sia punito, per ciascuna volta, in X. libre di denari al comune di Siena. Et neuna persona ardisca giocare co la nieve, o vero nieve gittare, in alcuno modo o vero cagione, nel Campo del mercato, o vero in alcuna parte d' esso Campo, o vero sopra la selice del detto Campo. Et qualunque persona contrafara sia punita et condannata per missere la podesta, per ciascuna volta, in X. libre di denari. Et ciascuno possa li contrafacenti accusare et denuntiare a la Corte di missere la podesta et abia la metia del bando. Et questa agionta, cioe : Et neuna persona ardisca etc. fatta e, Mcccvj. Inditione iiij, del mese di magio. LIX. — De la pena di chi percotesse alcuno al giuoco de I'elmora. Anco, che se alcuno percotara alcuno nel Campo del mercato o vero altrui, 've si giocasse, contra la forma de li sopradetti ordinamenti, con maza o vero pietra, o vero elmo o vero in altro modo, sia punito de la percossione et ferita, secondo la forma del costoduto di Siena, non ostante alcuno capitolo di costoduto, et spetialmente el capitolo el quale comincia : De le predette cose excettiamo, etc. LX. — Che neuna dipentore dipenga alcuno elmo. Et, che neuno dipentore o vero scagiolaio o vero tavolacci- aio, fabro, o vero ciascuno altro de la citta di Siena, possa o vero debia fare dipegnere, acconciare o vero rifare o vero armare alcuno elmo o vero cestarella, o vero scudo, o vero maza acconcia al detto giuoco ; et, se alcuno contrafara, sia punito, per ciascuna volta et per ciascuno elmo o vero scudo, in X. libre di denari senesi al comune di Siena. 195 PALIO AND PONTE LXII. — De la pena di chi dimandasse licentia, a la podesta, del gitioco de I'elmora. Anco, che neuna persona, di qualunque conditione et stato sia, debia . . . adimandare licentia di fare giuoco : et se alcuno contrafara, per ciascuna volta, sia punita in XXV. libra di denari al comune di Siena. LXII I. — De la pena di chi faces se fare alcune rampogne a grido, Anco, che neuna persona debia nel Campo del mercato, far fare a grido alcune rampogne o vero vitoperi del detto giuoco et per cagione del detto giuoco ; et se alcuno con- trafara, sia punito per ciascuna volta in X. libre di denari, al comune di Siena. [See also Rubrics L VIII., LXI, LXIV., LXV., LXVL, and LXVIL, which, although they add nothing to our know- ledge of the game itself, suffice to prove how determined the Government was to leave no loophole for any evasion of the law.] 196 BOOK III THE PALIO ALLA TONDA CHAPTER THE FIRST OF THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, AND HEREIN OF THE EVOLUTION OF THE PALIO Cavalcare h I'arte nostra, Ma vogliam la bestia nuda ; Perche quando siamo a giostra E piu destra, e manco suda ; E s' ell' fe di schiena cruda, Regge meglio alle perosse. Canto di giostranti a cavallo. I WE have now traced the evolution of Tuscan sport from the 13th century to the i6th, and have thus reached the point where the history of the modern Palio may be said to commence. At this period, the old palii, although still nominally religious celebrations, had, no doubt, felt the effect of that deep and contemptuous aversion for the Church and its teachings which the Renaissance had implanted and fostered in the breasts of the upper and middle classes/ Moreover, the secularization of Sienese horse-racing had been, as we have seen, accompanied by a great increase in the value of the prizes offered, and this had undoubtedly tended to make it almost as much a rich man's sport as is horse-racing in England at the present day. The masses were mere spectators. Meanwhile the tournament had been revived. During * BURCKHARDT, The Keitaissaiue in Italy (London, Kegan Paul & Co., 1878), vol. ii. p. 250. 197 PALIO AND PONTE the Communal era it had fallen into sad disrepute, and had become a laughing-stock and a farce, a pastime for cooks and kitchen-knaves,^ mounted on dyers' hacks,'^ which were stimu- lated to strange activities by thistles thrust beneath their tails.^ Now, however, in this age of petty princelings, it was once more in high favour. The Medici, in particular, displayed a real passion for the joust ; and the combat in the lists offered a favourable opportunity for display of strength, skill and courage, in an epoch which laid especial stress upon personal merit/ At the same time, the old popular games had grown less ferocious. Between the Giuoco delle pugna of 1555, in which nobody was injured, or even, it seems, over-fatigued, and the sanguinary " battles " of two centuries and a half earlier, the difference was enormous. Siena was about to become a part of the Duchy of Tuscany, to be intimately connected with the pageant- loving Florence, and to be ruled by princes whose main panacea for all the irritation which their oppressions caused was to be found in the Machiavellian prescription of tenere Zy occupati i popoli con feste e spettacoli.^ Thus, the modern Palio is, in its origin, a blending of the Pugna, the tourna- ment and the horse-race, embellished and glorified by all the pomp and pageantry of the Trionfo and of the masquerade — a Sienese sport, it is true, but a Sienese sport which owes something also to the influence and example of neighbouring cities, and which, possessing, therefore, a more than local interest, may be fairly regarded as a survival of the old strenuous games which were played, during the Middle Ages, not in Siena alone, but in all the Communes of Central Italy. ^ In the Orlandino of FOLENGO (ii. str. 7), speaking of a tournament of Charlemagne, it was felt necessary to state that, " qui non combattevano ne cuochi, ne guatteri, ma re, duchi e marchesi." 2 Compare p. lo supra. ^ Franco Sacchetti, Nov. 64. '• BURCKHARDT, Op. cit., vol. ii. part V. chap. i. — I have already pointed out that as the tournament was the military exercise of the nobility, so the old Battaglie — the Mazzascudo and the Pugna — were the natural military exercises of the People — the mechanics and artisans, who, in the days of the greatest civic freedom, formed the bulk of the Communal armies. As the foot-soldier became of less and less importance, the Battaglie naturally died out, being finally regarded merely as dangerous games, subversive of order and good govern- ment. The first tournament of which we have record in Siena, that of 1225, may be fairly regarded as a relic of feudalism ; while that of 1392 heralded in the dominion of a despot. ® // Principe, cap. 21. 198 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. The first Cosimo was no fool. He realized that his new subjects had been vanquished by famine and not by the sword of Marignano ; that their love of freedom was as strong as ever, and that their loss of independence had only increased their hereditary hatred of Florence. His yoke they might bear, that of their detested and often worsted rival never. Indeed, the rule of the Medici would have been impossible had not Siena believed that while she was chastised with whips her old rivals were chastised with scorpions — a thought which lightened all her miseries and almost reconciled her to her fate. Cosimo took advantage of the fact that he had received Florence from the Empire and Siena from Spain. In his early edicts, he entitled himself Duke of Florence and of Siena, as if his dominion over the two cities was separate and diverse, and he left to the Sienese a separate administration, together with many of their old magistracies, and much of the outward form of republican government. In his policy of amusing the populace with spectacles and games, he found a convenient instrument in the Contrade, which, in Siena, played very much the same part as the Signorie or Potenze festeggianti filled in Florence ; and as, one by one, their old institutions were abolished, the passionate patriotism of the Sienese, deprived of every other outlet, narrowed and intensified into a spirit of parochial partisanship, which, even to-day, retains much of its ancient fervour. As to the origin and raison d'Hre of the Contrade, it has usually been presumed that they represent the divisions of the city which were made for military purposes ; and this theory appears to be accepted by no less an authority than Professor Zdekauer, who, in his learned " Dissertation on the Statutes of the Commune of Siena up to the Compilation of 1262," identifies the Contrade with the ancient sub- divisions of the pedites of the various Terzi, which were known by the name oi popoli^ — a position which, if it can ^ See p. xxxxv of the Dissertazione which precedes the text of the Constituto of 1262 (edition cited), and especially note 2 ; and compare note i , p. 36 supra. As to the subdivision of the Companies mio popoli, it may be remarked that, in the middle of the 13th century, 199 PALIO AND PONTE be sustained, goes far towards proving the correctness of the statement of the chronicler Andrea Dei that the Sienese commenced a far le co7npagnie per la citta delle contrade in the year 1209. Before the great pestilence of 1348, there are said to have been at least sixty contrade ; while, in the first quarter of the 1 8th century, they still numbered forty-two/ Other writers, however, reject entirely the idea of any connection between the Contrade and the ancient military companies, declaring that the former are a product of the 15th century, and were, in their inception, practically what they are to-day, i.e. associations formed for the purpose of assisting at the public festivals of the city, and of increasing their splendour and popularity.^ In support of this view, it is pointed out that the two earliest records which we have of the Contrade are assignable respectively to the years 1482 and 1494,^ and have reference, the one to a Palio run in honour of St Mary Magdalene,* and the other to un bellissimo giuoco delle pugna, which was played on Carnival Sunday, in the Piazza del Campo.^ Moreover, it is noticeable that even so voluminous a writer as Sigismondo Tizio makes no mention whatever of the Contrade — a circumstance from which no other deduction the Terzo di S. Martino and the Terzo di Citta contained \2 popoli each, while the Terzo di Camollia had only ii. ^ Relazione distinta delle quarantadue Contrade solite far comparsa agli spettacoli, nelle quali militarmente vien distribtiito tutto il Popolo di Siena, dedicata dall' Autore alia Contrade della Chiocciola (Siena, nella Stamp, dell' A. R. della Sereniss. Gran Principessa Gov. presso Francesco Quinza, 1723). It is a rare pamphlet of 55 pages, in which is discussed the origin of the city, its division into Terzi and Sestieri, the origin of the Contrade, and the various games in which they took part. See especially pp. 7 and 10. ^ A. LisiNi in the Misc. Stor. Senese, vol. i. (1893), PP- 26-27 ; vol. iv. (1896), pp. 67-69. ^ In order to sustain this assertion, such passages as the following have to be explained : " Missere Piero fratello de' re Ruberto vene in Siena mezedima quatordici di d'agosto, la viglia di santa Maria d'aghosto, e ricievete el magiore onore che fuse mai fato a signiore ; . . . e tute le chontrade balaro con tortizi e con dopieri e andavano a rendagli onore al deto 3htr^b."—Framtnento di una Cronachetta Senese d' Anonimo del Secolo XIV, published by N. Mengozzi and A. LlsiNl (Siena, Tip. Lazzeri, 1893), p. 11. — The learned editors define chontrade as finsiefne degli abitanti di U7ia medesima via — a definition which hardly differs from the meaning of the word as used in the Relazione. * The document referred to is a loose sheet of paper placed within the Libra di Biccherna of 1482. The Contrade mentioned therein are those of the Giraffa and the Chiocciola. * Allegretto Allegretti, in Muratori, Rer. Italic, Script., xxiii. 840, The Contrade mentioned are the Giraffa, the Drago, the Chiocciola and the Onda. 200 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. appears to be possible than that in his day they were institu- tions of very little importance ; while we are still more inclined to admit that this must have been the case when we find that later on, in the i6th and 17th centuries, public documents and contemporary chronicles, alike, abound with references to jousts, bull-fights, pugna, and races both of horses and of buffalo, in which the Contrade intervened with their proper comparse and ensigns. Neither should the fact be overlooked that, for some time after the Contrade had assumed their modern form, the military companies continued to exist as distinct and separate bodies, the ofificials, organization and banners of the former being entirely different from those of the latter, who still acknowledged their subordination to the three Gonfalonieri of the Terzi, and looked to the Capitano di Popolo as their supreme head. Finally, it is argued that it is quite impossible that the origin of the Contrade can be traced back to the military companies, because, by the statutes of those companies, as reorganized in 13 10, it was expressly provided quod nullus de civitate Senarum vel burgis, facial soiieiatem cum aliquibus personis pro ridda vel ballis seu corleis faciendis. El quod aliqui de civilale Senarum vel burgis non induanl se de novo de aliquo panno neque ad modum Scolobrini -^ neque ad alium modum. allerius ludi vel forge, et quod ballando vel riddando vel aliquo modo ludendo, non vadanl per civitalem Senarum vel burgos, under a penalty of 25 lire.^ However this may be — and the question is by no means as yet settled — for the last four hundred years, the Contrade have been a distinctive feature in Sienese life, the like of which is not to be found in any other Italian city. In the 1 6th century, when the Contrade began to take a prominent part in the promotion and management of the public festivals, the Caccia de lori seems to have been a ^ A Scotobrimis is a buffoon. — Compare p. 79, note 2, supra. ^ The enactment quoted is from the Siatuto del Capitano di Popolo of 1 3 10, at eta, 26. — The argument does not appear to me to be altogether convincing. I give it for what it is worth. 201 PALIO AND PONTE favourite Italian diversion, and one to which the youth of Siena were especially addicted.^ The Contrade were wont to enter the Piazza clad in the most gorgeous costumes, each leading its own bull, and accompanied by huge macckine, made of wood, which as a rule represented gigantic birds or beasts, but were, in fact, miniature fortresses wherein those who took part in the game might seek refuge from the infuriated animals. Each Contrada was naturally desirous of outdoing its rivals, not only in the dexterity and courage of its players, but also in the sumptuousness of its livrea and equipments ; and since these macchine often cost considerable sums, two or more neighbouring Contrade sometimes combined together for the purpose of appearing with one macchina, of extraordinary magnificence ; and thus, their partnership being continued for several years, became, in fact, a single contrada, adopting the name of the animal which had been represented by their joint macchina ; ^ — a state of things which seems to account very satisfactorily for the nomenclature and banners of the modern Contrade. These, it may be mentioned once for all, are seventeen in number, namely : — Tartuca, Chiocciola, Selva, Aquila, Onda, Pantera, Val di Montone, Torre, Leocorno, Civetta, Nicchio, Drago, Oca, Giraffa, Bruco, Lupa and Istrice. For the Carnival of 15 13 the citizens and the students of the University competed in a Caccia di tori, at which the Contrade intervened with their macchine^ In 1 5 16 the Feast of the Assumption was celebrated by a bull-fight, and the victorious Contrade hung the limbs and entrails of the slaughtered animals to their macchine in sign ^ "A Siena c' ^ la guardia co' bravi, lo studio co' dottori, fonte Branda, fonte Becci, la piazza co' gli uomini, la festa di mezzo Agosto, i carri co' ceri, co' becchetti, i pispinelli, la caccia dei tori, il palio, et i biricuocoli a centinaja co' marzapani da Siena." — PlETRO Aretino, La Cortigiana, act i. scene i. 2 Relazione distittta delle quarafitadue Contrade, etc., op. cit., pp. 16-45. I' ^''^ ^^ ''^" membered that this work is dedicated by the author, not to the Contrada della Chiocciola, but to the Contrade della Chiocciola ; for the reason that (as he explains on pp. 20 and 21) three contrade combined to appear with utia Macchina in ?nodo di Chiocciola. Compare also A. Provedi, op. cit., p. 47. ' Flaminio Rossi, Le Contrade della Citthdi Siena, MS. in the Communal Library, cited by A. Professione, op. cit., p. 380. 202 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. of triumph. The next day a Palio was run, and, on the 17th, a combat was fought with lances and pikes, after the manner of a tourney, two rich prizes being presented to the winners/ Among the most memorable Caccie was that of August 15th, 1546, which is described at length by Provedi.^ " Near the fountain of the Piazza," he says, "was prepared a great enclosure, made of ilexes like a wood, for a park for the wild beasts ; and therein were put hares, foxes, porcupines, badgers, stags, wild boars, bulls and a bear. At some distance there- from, round about the Piazza, was a strong palisade, with seats for the spectators, while, behind them, all the windows, balconies and roofs of the houses were decked with tapestries and gala trappings, forming a vast and splendid amphitheatre. Near the public Palace was reared a beautiful structure, adorned with figures of men and women, celebrated in fable and in history, who were remembered for their ill-directed courage, in that they had slain themselves with their own hands, and from whose wounds gushed forth constant streams of water. In the midst of the great Piazza stood a table whereon were set food and wine for the combatants, who, in the battle which they fought with their swords alone against the wild beasts, were compelled always to keep one hand upon the table, under pain of losing all hope of the prize. " Now when the Signoria had dined, and had come forth upon the balcony, a signal was given by the trumpeters who were stationed upon the battlements of the Palace, and forth- with three richly bedecked cars appeared in the great Piazza. In the first was Our Lady ascended into Heaven, surrounded by little angels who came leaping down from above, moved by hidden mechanism. On the second was a God the Father, with many fair adornments ; and the third was full of Prophets and of Sibyls.^ "These were followed by a very great quantity of trumpeters, together with the banner of the Selva, which in all such pageants connected with hunting {spettacoli di caccie) ^ Pecci, Metnorie storico-critiche dclla Citta di Siena, parte ii. p. 57. - Provedi, op. cii., pp. 47-55. ^ The Sibyls take their place beside the Prophets as forerunners of Christ. (See Mr. R. H. HoBART Gust's Pavement Masters of Siena, p. 32; and D'Ancona, Origini, etc., op. cit., in Index, s.v. "Sibille.") 203 PALIO AND rONTE took precedence. Thereafter came more than 150 mules, with loads fashioned to represent animals slain in the chase, and adorned with branches. Mingled with these were little lads and men, naked save only for a covering of feathers, playing upon tabors and whistling about Cecco Bau ; ^ and ever they cast bread to the populace. When they had made the circuit of the Piazza they gat them thence, departing on the opposite side to that by which they had come. Finally, the Contrade appeared, waving their banners. " The first Contrada was the Bruco, whereof the ccmparsa had for livery black garments with white stripes ; while Its chief hunter (capocaccia) rode on horseback, clothed on with blue satin embroidered with gold, and attended by four foot- men clad in white. " Next marched the Contrada della Lupa, in white liveries, with swords and bucklers, and wearing gilded morions upon their heads. Their banner was yellow and green, and their Capocaccia was clad in crimson, trimmed with gold and adorned with pearls and jewels, " Then came the Contrada del Drago, its folk clad in yellow satin faced with green taffeta, and its Capocaccia in crimson bordered and lined with cloth of gold. Its banner was all yellow with a dragon in the midst thereof. Therewith was a car drawn by divers nymphs, and on it was a dragon which vomited fire from his mouth. " This was followed by the macchina of the Giraffa, accom- panied by a numerous C077tparsa in liveries of blue cloth, with halberds, and with caps upon their heads, together with their Capocaccia clad in crimson embroidered with gold, with hose of crimson velvet, with gold lace, and with linings of cloth of silver. Their banner was blue and red in stripes. ^ The fringe of most men's knowledge verges upon crass ignorance ; and I am painfully aware that, n endeavouring to explain who or what Cecco Bau was, I am more than likely to prove a blind leader of the blind. I find that the word Bau is thus defined by the Delia Cruscans : Voce usata pei- far pazira a' bambini, quasi significhi una cosa terribile ; while in the Malmautile riacquistato of LoRENZO LiPn, we read : Ove la notte al noce eran concorse Tutte le streghe anch' esse sul caprone, I diavoli col bati, le biliorse A ballare, e cantare, e far tempone. Should we then be far wrong if we take Cecco Bau to be an Ogre or Bogy ? 204 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. "The macchina of the Istrice came next, accompanied by its inhabitants in purple and yellow, with caps of the same colour upon their heads, led by a Capocaccia in crimson velvet with hose of purple velvet. . . . " Followed the Civetta, whereof the comparsa was in rustic garb of purple cloth, to wit, shoes and breeches, the sleeves of their shirts wound about with bands, and red wagoners' frocks tied with yellow ribbons. On their heads they wore caps crowned with white plumes and in their hands they carried olive boughs. Their Capocaccia was dressed in black satin, splendidly adorned with pearls and gold, and on his head a cap sewn with pearls and jewels. He was preceded by a youth, richly clad, and carrying a silver vase whereon sat a live owl. The macchina represented Minerva; and the banner was red, blue and white." It were ove;^ lor^g to follow our author through his detailed description of the co7nparse of all the Contrade, each clad in richer livrea than its neighbour. Suffice it then to say that the iJtacckina of the Leofante (the modern Torre) was in the form of an elephant with a tower on its back, whereon were trumpeters blowing on their trumpets, in the midst of fireworks. The macchina of the Leocorno repre- sented a unicorn, that of the Oca a goose, and that of the Chiocciola a snail. The cmnparsa of the Onda seems to have been especially elaborate, its members being dressed as shepherds, part of whom were on foot, while the rest were mounted and accompanied by nymphs on horseback. There too was to be seen Actaeon changed into a stag, and many other nymphs, crowned with flowers and with leaves, who danced about a car in which was Diana with more nymphs and with a little bound Cupid. Ever, as they advanced to the sound of musical instruments, they scattered flowers and copies of verses (compoHzio7zi) among the spectators. They were followed by two Moors richly apparelled and riding upon cows. As the Selva had led the procession, so, in like manner, did it close it "per privilegio della caccia." Its macchina was "very lofty and represented a rhinoceros." 205 PALIO AND PONTE It is interesting to note that the colours and banners of the Contrade, as here described by Provedi, are almost invariably different to those of modern times. The animals which were then represented in the macchine have now become the devices of the banners. " Now, when all this fair and numerous company had entered the Piazza — the comparsa of each Contrada numbering over a hundred persons — they made several circuits of the same. Thereafter, all the Contrade went to their appointed places, which were marked out by enclosures made of branches {steccaii contornati di frasche) ; thus forming a passing brilliant and rich display, like unto a laughing garden gay with flowers. Next, to the sound of trumpets and of drums, was added that of bugles and other instruments of the chase ; whereupon, hares, foxes and other little animals, pursued by hounds, were seen to issue forth from the park of the wild beasts. Of the incidents of that hunting I will not speak ; neither will I describe the cunning of the foxes or the swiftness of the roe-bucks and the deer, which caused much mirth, and sometimes terror also, to the spectators, by reason of the leaps which they made over the palisades, and which afforded diversion for the space of more than half an hour. Merely will I mention, in passing, that a buffalo caused much trouble to the hunters who ate at the table, because, after they had divers times provoked him, he made such an onslaught on one end thereof that the splinters flew in all directions ; while another bull, having attacked a swordsman with his horns, caused him to make a not too graceful passage through the air. Great was the audacity of a certain Moretto, who leaped upon the back of a ferocious bull which deafened the air with its bellowings, and which he rode and slew, ere he was cast to earth. Finally, after many bulls had shown themselves but little minded to do battle, there issued forth one which seemed a very Diomede of bulls. Like a thunderbolt he rushed upon the hunters, increasing ever in fury, and raging ever more and more against those who dared to offend him. Never- theless, a certain Meo delle Bale fired a couple of charges at him, hard by the gavina, and then, having retired into the 206 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. gavina^ undertook to irritate him with two puppets, made of straw and dressed in red. Scarcely had the Buffalo seen the puppets than he charged them, and, in a moment, became entangled in the nets. By a tremendous effort he broke loose and rushed at his insulter, who would have paid dearly for his joke, had he not been saved by the narrow opening of the gavina. The ferocity of so terrible an animal, which lacked but little of emptying the Piazza, compelled the hunters to sound a general attack and to assail him upon every side. Thus only did they finally send him to Charon, and not before many of them had been tossed in the air, to say nothing of the smashing of a cask and of the table. A little buffalo, with his hide stuck full of fireworks, caused long and hearty laughter ; and his death, which was not inglorious, put an end to the hunting." The next day there was a dance in the Piazza, followed by games of Pallone and of Pugna ; after which the players betook themselves to the Cathedral, to render thanks to Most High God for so enjoyable a festival — di una giornata SI bella.'^ The Caccia de tori flourished in Siena for more than a century, and then, having been forbidden by the Council of Trent as too perilous, was finally suppressed in 1590 by an edict of the Grand Duke Ferdinand I.^ But those good Sienese, after so many centuries of Pugna, Elmora and bull-fighting, could not settle down to any sport which did not possess at least a spice of danger, and races on buffalo- back became the fashion. Colla bufola siamo Usciti, Donne, questo giorno fuori ; Perch^ fra gli altri onori, Correndo al palio, ancor vincer vogliamo. 1 Compare SozziNi, Diario cit., p. 85, where "la gavina di piazza" is spoken of. According to Gaetano Milanesi, the word is derived from the Latin cavea, and, in the Sienese dialect, means a subterranean conduit for rain or other water. 2 See for another account of this Caccia de' tori, ' ' La magnifica ed onorata festa fatta in Siena per la Madonna d'Agosto, I'anno 1546. Lettera di Cecchino Cartaio a Madonna Gentile Tantucci," oJ>. cit, ; and compare p. 91, note 4, supra. ^ See Misc. Star, Senese, vol. i. (1893), p. 12. * Antonfrancesco Grazzini, Canto d' uomini che andavano a correre il palio colla bufola, in Tutti i Trionfi, Carri, Mascherate, etc., op. cit., p. 464. — Grazzini, better known by his nickname of II Lasca, died in 1583 ; but, long before that date, races on buffalo-baclc 207 PALIO AND PONTE The course was three times round the Piazza ; sometimes, perhaps, all the Contrade entered for the race ; and the regulations which were made with regard to buffalo, which had broken through the barriers, being brought back to the track at the same spot at which they had left it,^ seem to imply possibilities which must have been extremely un- pleasant for nervous spectators. Occasionally, and more especially in the Carnival season, the Bufalate were superseded by Asinate, a species of enter- tainment which was, I believe, described for the first time by Signor Cav. Alessandro Lisini, in the Miscellanea Storica Senese, of May 1896.^ " These Asinate (says he) were, in fact, merely a variation of the ancient giuoco delle ptigna, being, in all essential re- spects, nothing more nor less than fist fights. As a rule, they were promoted by one of the Contrade; and the promoters, of course, made themselves responsible for the cost of the prizes. '♦ On the day appointed for the spectacle, those Contrade which desired to compete — to the number of not less than six, nor more than ten — entered the Piazza in a body, with their banners displayed and with their Capitani and Alfieri, or, as it was then expressed, with their Sargentina. Each of them was followed by a band of thirty pugillatori; and they brought with them an ass, bare-backed and without any trappings whatever, but painted all over, instead, with the colours displayed by the Contrada. *'Th& pugillatori were lightly clad, and with caps upon their heads ; their doublets and hose being of various colours, according to the livery of the particular Contrada to which they belonged. They were not permitted to carry weapons of any sort ; consequently staves and whips and even the wearing of finger-rings were strictly prohibited, under a penalty of fifty scudi in gold, accompanied by the administra- tion of the strappado — due buoni tratti di corda. The rope had been common. The abolition of bull-fighting merely brought them into greater prominence. For some verses celebrating a bufalata of August 1584, see A. Professione, Per un Somtto delV Alfieri, loc. cit., p. 382. 1 Misc. Stor. Senese, vol. iv. (1896), pp. 54-56. ^ Pp- 7o-7i- 208 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. to be used for that purpose was always in evidence upon such occasions, as a tacit admonition not only to the players, but also to such of the spectators as might feel disposed to infringe the regulations laid down for the seemly observance of the festival. Thus was justice rendered both speedy and efficacious. " The various companies made the circuit of the Piazza, displaying their banners, throwing them aloft and catching them, as is done at a modern Palio. Thereafter, at a given signal, each Contrada deposited its flag in a position assigned to it by lot, and then the Capitani and Alfieri retired, together with the rest of the spectators, into the centre of the Piazza, which was surrounded for the occasion by a palisade. Each group took up its position opposite to its own banner ; and thus a circular track was left clear for the players. "A second signal was given; the asses were led to the starting post, while the players disposed themselves at their pleasure around the Piazza or behind their own animals, taking up such positions as appeared to them most likely to conduce to victory in the impending struggle ; and then com- menced the race, if race it can be called. " A third signal, and those unfortunate asses were taken by storm. The whole body of piigillatori flung themselves upon them, all endeavouring to mount at once — these trying to thrust them onward, those to drag them back. And so the opposing parties swayed now this way and now that, fought and rolled on the ground, and showered blows upon one another's heads and bodies, amid the deafening yells, hisses and applause of the spectators. Rarely did a player succeed in keeping his seat for more than a few paces before he was hurled to the ground, and this in spite of a regulation which existed against soaping the animals. Some- times a hostile company succeeded in surrounding ass and rider alike, and in carrying them bodily out of the Piazza — thus excluding them from further participation in the contest, unless both the ass and his rider should succeed in re- entering at precisely the same spot as they went out. " The animal to which the prize was awarded was that one which had first made two complete circuits of the Piazza, o 209 PALIO AND PONTE in the midst of all this confusion and tumult ; and if the pugillatori reissued from the contest bruised and bleeding, the pitiable condition of those wretched asses can well be imagined. The game, which often lasted nearly an hour, being over, the winning Contrada received 40 scudi ; while an additional 20 scudi was disbursed as prize-money among the members of the victorious team." ^ Meanwhile, throughout the i6th century, the Caccie de* tori, the Bufalate and the Asinate were frequently varied by horse-races ; and, in the summer of 1581, in particular, the Contrade vied with one another in running palii of every description. In that year, on the occasion of "a Palio which is run by ancient custom on the day of San Bernardino," a number of accidents occurred, which left the real merits of the horses contending therein quite an open question. Thereupon, a new race was organized, and a new palio offered by one of the Contrade, to which was added a prize a chi usciva con piu bella inventione. "And there (writes Federigo of the Counts of Montauto, Governor of Siena) were seen divers fantastic devices, whereby was born a friendly emulation among all the other Contrade, so that there were but few that desired not to promote the running of a separate palio, some with horses, and some with mares, and some with mules taken from under (levate di sotto) the foremost doctors and principal ecclesiastics of the city, and others, yet again, with buffalo, in imitation of the ancient Roman custom. And there remains not any fable or history which hath not been represented in some form, accompanied ever with beautiful music and in- genious compositions. . . . Moreover, there prevaileth extra- ordinary and universal gaiety, so that, after the races be over, ^ It may be remarked in passing, that the Asinate did not altogether supplant the giuoco delle pugna\x\ the affections of the Sienese ; and, indeed, it seems that the old game con- tinued to be played by the students of the University as late as the first quarter of the 19th century. For this information I am indebted to my friend Professor Pietro Rossi, who very kindly called my attention to the manuscript Diario of Bandini, in the Communal Library — a document which contains numerous notices of attempts made by the students to play at the Pugna between 1785 and 1816 — attempts which, for the most part, were promptly suppressed by the authorities. See also N. Mengozzi, // Monte del Paschi da Siena e le aziende in esso reunite (Siena, Tip. Lazzeri, 1891-1900). Index to vols, v., vi., under the title : " Giuoco dcUe Pugna del Pallone.'''' 210 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. the victors go in triumph through the city, visiting the most ancient Contrade, and holding almost open house — tenendo quasi corte bandita de vini e tavolacciy Nor, in the midst of all this revelry and riot, were the poor and needy forgotten. Young maidens were lavishly dowered, and prisoners were set free, their debts being paid by the Contrade. However, the sensation of the year was afforded by a race run on the 15th of August for un palio superbo di broccato, che superi il valor di tutti gli altri, and which was presented by the Contrada dell' Aquila ; for, on that occasion, the horse of the Contrada del Drago was ridden by a peasant girl named Virginia. So novel and unexpected an event almost produced a revolution in Siena. Not a few youths became enamoured of the fair contadinella, and the Governor himself, albeit jestingly, professed to have been smitten by her charms, re- marking, in allusion to her suitors, that he doubted not that she was capable not only of managing old race-horses, but also of breaking young and unruly colts. In her honour, an anonymous poetess composed certain verses, which were published in 1581, ''alia loggia del Papa,'' in a little book which also contained divers other rhymes relative to the festivities of the year. In those verses it is declared that Tal fu dell' ardir suo, del senno il saggio Che almo diletto niun porse e stupore Maggior non si potea mostrar coraggio Di Lei, destrezza n^ mostrar maggiore. Come gli occhi in Lei sola fisi e intenti Fur de la moltitudine infinita, Cosi haven tutti i cuori anco le menti (Tanto la sua vii-tute era gradita) Rivolte al Ciel con caldi preghi ardenti Perche salva rendesse a Lei la vita Et nel corso portando al fin vittoria N'allegrasse di tal novella gloria. This, however, was not to be. " For la piit bella invenzio- ne the Contrada del Drago received una collana di scudi ^o pitL. A silver cup of the value of about 20 scudi, the prize for la pile bella livrea was carried off by the Contrada del 211 PALIO AND PONTE Montone ; and lastly, the palio itself went to the Onda." But the contadinellay although she did not win the race, was presented by the Governor with a fine horse, which was pro- bably about as acceptable a gift as he could have chosen for that vergin nudrita in aspri boschi} It is to be observed that none of these races were run in the Piazza, but probably, in most cases, over the same course as continued to be used for the Palio of the 15th of August, up to the time of its abolition. And, in this connection, it is well to recall the fact that, neither in the i6th century nor afterwards, had the Contrade anything whatever to do with the promotion or management of those ancient palii which were run annually on the festivals of St Mary of Mid-August, of San Pietro Alessandrino, of St Mary Magdalene and of Sant' Ambrogio Sansedoni. These were under the exclusive control of the Commune, and were what in modern parlance we should call open events, entries being accepted from all parts of Italy.^ The earliest notice which we have of a horse-race in the Piazza is attributable to the year 1605, when it was proposed to measure the course over which the Palio of Mid- August was ordinarily run, dalla Chiesa degli Angeli, sot to porta Roinana, dove si da lo: mossa, sino alia colonna del Dtiomo, fine del corso, and to ascertain how many circuits of the Piazza it would be necessary to make to cover the same distance.^ This project seems to have been duly carried out, but it would be a mistake to suppose that the race thus run had any connection with the modern Palio, since it was not until after the abandonment of the Bufalate, about the middle of the 17th century, that the Contrade inaugurated the contests which we see to-day. And these, if we ignore their religious ^ See two letters from Federigo delli Conti da Montauto, Governor of Siena, to Antonio Serguidi, the Grand-ducal secretary, preserved in the R. Archivio di Firenze, Filza Medicea, n. 1875 (carteggi di Siena). They are printed by Carlo Carnesecchi, in the Aftsc. Stotica Senese, vol. ii. (1S94), pp. 72-75. Compare also C. Marzocchi, Nel Secolo XVI la fanciulla Virginia nella piazza del Campo di Siena giostrando con grande viaestria riporlava lavittoria di tin Palio sul cavallo della Contrada del Drago (Siena, Nava, 1883). It is a pamphlet of 27 pages, not altogether to be relied upon in all its statements, as may be inferred from the title, since neither was the Palio run in the Piazza, nor was it won by Virginia. 2 See p. 87 supra. 3 ^i^c. Star. Senese, vol. iv. (1S96), pp. 71-72. 212 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. aspect, are much more closely connected with the Pugna and the Asinate than they are with the ancient palii. II Heretofore the spectacles and games promoted by the Contrade had been almost entirely secular ; and although their palii, their bull-fights and their bufalate were often held on the 15th of August and on other festivals recognized by the Church, this was rather due to the fact that those days were public holidays than to any special reverence for their sacred character. Now, however, a series of calamities was about to arouse the often dormant but always easily awakened religious fervour of the Sienese, and the Palio alia tonda was destined, like the Palio alia lunga, to have a distinct and definite connection with a great religious festa. The short-sighted policy of Francesco I. had greatly impoverished Tuscany. Industry and commerce declined, and the high taxes on corn, which had rendered its cultiva- tion unprofitable, completed the work which the devastations of Marignano had commenced, and converted the Maremma into a desert. Nor were all the efforts of his successor effectual to undo the harm which Francesco had done. Towards the end of the century, Siena was afflicted by a very grievous famine, which was followed by a pestilence ; and, in 1594, the people rendered almost desperate by their prolonged sufferings, resolved, as their fathers had done before them, to implore help of the ever pitiful Mother of God. They naturally desired to make their vows and supplica- tions to the same Advocata Senensium whose intercessions had so often availed to save their city in the days of the Republic ; but this, to the great scandal and grief of all pious folk, proved to be practically impossible, by reason of the furious contest then raging between Monsignor Ascanio Piccolomini, Archbishop of Siena, and the historian Giugurta Tommasi, at that time Rector of the Opera del Duomo. And thus it came to pass that, while peace was banished from the sacred walls of the Holy Sienese Church, the people flocked to prostrate themselves before Our Lady of Pro- 213 PALTO AND PONTE venzano, an image which stood between two windows of a humble dwelling in the Via de' Provenzani di sotto, and which had already acquired a certain reputation for working miracles/ And now, on the ist of July, the Vigil of the Feast of the Visitation, while workmen were engaged in decorating her shrine, she once more displayed her power. Seated in the same street was a certain Giulia di Orazio, a woman of notoriously evil life, who was tormented by an incurable malady. She, beholding these preparations, com- menced to scoff at those who made them, and at the Blessed Virgin, That same evening, about dusk, she felt herself compelled by some mysterious force to go and kneel before the sacred image, beseeching pardon and health. On the following day, she returned once more to offer up the same petitions, and, a few hours later, was made perfectly whole ; and when her doctor arrived, as was his wont, to treat the sore produced by her illness, and removed the bandages which covered it, he found, to his amazement, that every trace of disease had entirely disappeared. The woman hastened forth to offer praise and thanks- giving for the mercy vouchsafed, narrating with emotion, to all those who stood by, the great salvation which had been wrought on her behalf. The tale passed from mouth to mouth, and, ere night fell, the whole population thronged to the Contrada di Provenzano to pray to the miraculous Madonna. For the rest, I am not concerned to speak of the infinite number of votive offerings and oblations which poured into that humble dwelling ; varying, as they did, from the silver- gilt gob-let sent by the Prince of Transylvania, Moldavia and Wallachia to a straw hat con trina turchina e oro con unfiore; from a pair of buffalo to a load of charcoal." Nor ^ Of the history of this image I have already spoken in my Our Lady of August and the Palio of Sietia, chap. v. — For a fuller account, see F. Bandini Piccolomini, La Madonna di Provenzano e le origini delta siia chiesa (Siena, 1895), PP' 4^ ^^1' A representation of the house where it stood — the Casa de' Miracoli, as it was afterwards called — may be seen in the Tavoletta di Biccherna of 1594. It depicts the visit of the Signoria to the wonder-working Madonna. -Arch, dell' Opera di Provenzano, Libra delle Oblazioni, commenced 12th July 1594; F. Bandini-Piccolomini, op. cit., p. 77. 214 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. is it necessary, in this place, to detail the steps taken to construct a fitting temple for the reception of the wonder- working Madonna. Suffice it to state that the Church of Santa Maria di Provenzano, commenced in the autumn of 1595, was completed sixteen years later, and that, on the 23rd of October 161 1, the sacred image was transferred thither with all due pomp, the Grand Duke Cosimo II. himself being present at the ceremony/ Thus, from the beginning of the 17th century, the Feast of Our Lady of Provenzano became well nigh the principal holiday of the Sienese year. It was celebrated on the 2nd of July, the day of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin ; and, on the evening of the festival, a display of fireworks was wont to be given in the Piazza di Provenzano in front of the newly constructed church. The neighbour- hood, however, was none of the best. Writers of the 1 6th century tell us that the few respectable people who lived there were compelled to keep their windows closely shuttered, that they might not hear or see the execrable and shameful things that were done therein ; and if a man did an ill deed, it was usual to say, Staresti bene hi Provenzano^ or Tu set stato in Provenzano. Thus the celebrated prophecy of Brandano — Siena vedrai hitte le tue donne anda^'e a Provenzano — which was fulfilled in 1594, had originally been taken as a prediction of universal immorality. Nor was the character of the district entirely changed by the build- ing of the new temple. Such transformations are always a question of time, and every year the celebration of the 2nd of July gave rise to so much disorderly conduct that it was deemed prudent to seek out some other method of commemorating the occasion. Accordingly, towards the middle of the 17th century, the Signori Nobili, to whom was entrusted the superintendence of the festa, resolved to inaugurate annual horse-races in the Piazza del Campo, to be run between the various Contrade. It is to this decision that we owe the modern Palio ; but it is impossible to state with any certainty the precise date of its commencement. Girolamo Macchi, who occupied the ^ See the Tavoletta di Biccherna, 1610-1613, 215 PALIO AND PONTE office of Scrittor maggiore in the Spedale della Scala during the last twenty years of the century, tells us that questo Palio, che si corre pC7' il 2 di hig/io, viene daW anno 16^6 in qua ; ^ while some of the Contrade possess catalogues of winners of races which go back to 1651. These, however, are of more than doubtful accuracy, and bear every appearance of having been compiled in the i8th century. Moreover, our faith in them is still further shaken when we remember that no Palio could be run without the permission of the magistrates of Biccherna, who were obliged to enter a minute thereof in their official books, and that the first of such entries has reference to the race of July 1659. In this connection we may recall the fact that in April 1655 (the year preceding that in which, according to Girolamo Macchi, the annual horse-races promoted by the Contrade had their origin) there were great rejoicings in Siena by reason of the elevation to the Papacy of Cardinal Fabio Chigi (Alexander VII.). Cannon were fired, bells rung from all the towers, and the city was illuminated. High mass was sung with extraordinary pomp, and the Veil of the Blessed Virgin, Our Advocate, together with the relics of the four Protectors of Siena, S. Ansano, S. Savino, S. Vittorio and S. Crescentio, were carried in solemn procession from the Cathedral to the Church of St Mary of Provenzano. Nor were more mundane celebrations lacking. Copious streams of wine spouted from the mouths of the wolves on the fountain in the Piazza, while the populace splashed and struggled in the basin below, as they attempted to fill their jugs and pitchers — "a merry and delightful spectacle for the bystanders." A bull- fight was once more held in the Campo, and "a fierce and terrible battle " was fought between two squadrons of ten men each, armed with swords filled with fireworks. Cars crowded with alleoforical figures were dragfored round the Piazza, to be subsequently attacked by " a fierce dragon of immeasurable greatness, with three horrible heads," who came through the Chiasso Largo, spouting fire through his mouths, ears, eyes and nostrils, and finally exploded and ^ The Zibaldoni\o{ G. Macchi are preserved among the Sienese Archives. — See Misc. Star. Senese, vol. v, (1898), pp. 93-95, where some interesting extracts are printed. 216 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. disappeared, shooting fireworks in all directions. Lastly, on the 9th of May, a full month after the good news had arrived, the protracted merry-making was crowned by a Palio of Brocade of Gold, run over the same course which was used for the Palio of Mid- August, the horse of the Prince Matthias of Tuscany proving victorious. It is, however, more to our purpose to note that these festivities were opened by a contest of another kind, a Palio of Crimson Velvet, which was run in the Piazza on the 27th of April. Thirteen horses entered, and three circuits were made. There is no reason to suppose that the Contrade had anything to do with the matter, and the race, which seems to have been organized by the Commune, was won by a private individual.^ Neverthe- less, it is quite possible that the successful issue of the entertainment may have suggested to the greatly harassed Sig^ Nobili della festa delta B. V.M. di Provenzano an excellent method of escape from their difficulty. This is, of course, mere conjecture ; but fortunately the matter is one of minor importance, and while it would be interesting, if possible, to ascertain in what year the Contrade commenced to run their palii in the Piazza, we may turn without regret to the consideration of the manner in which those races were conducted — a point upon which we possess ample information. When the time of the festival drew near, the two Signori Nobili, who were elected annually, presented their petition to the Governor of Siena, who, during the 17th century, was almost always one of the princes of the house of Medici. To him they set forth "the desire of the Contrade to run a palio in the Public Piazza on the day of the feast ; and, to that end, they prayed his Serene Highness to be pleased to command the magistracy of Biccherna to give orders to the Coimmita delle Masse to carry sand into the said Piazza, on the day of the festival, sotto pena della Cattura ; and also to cause public proclamation to be made that no one should ^ Diario delle Cerimonie e Feste fatte in Siena nella creatione del Santiss^" Vicario di Crista Papa Alessandro Settivio, published by P. A. Alessandri "per le nozze Chigi- Zondadari Colonna," Siena, Tip. Lazzeri, 1900. It is a pamphlet of 29 pages. 217 PALIO AND PONTE venture to molest the horses during the race " ; and then concluded with the formula that di tanta grazia ne sarebbero rimasti in pcrpetjco obbligati. His Highness, in order to save paper, or labour, or both, was wont to write, at the foot of the petition, Concedesi ; and, thereafter, all further formalities became the business of the officials of Biccherna, who forthwith nominated two deputies and a starter (mossiere) with full authority in the premises, and sent a public crier through the city, to announce the forthcoming race ; the text of such proclamation being afterwards affixed to the principal door of the Ufficio di Biccherna. Such of the Contrade as desired to take part in the race were obliged to give notice of their intention so to do two hours before sunset (prima delle ore 22) on the 22nd of June, depositing 8 lire for the hire of a horse. And woe to that Contrada which sought to enter its name after the appointed hour had passed. Complaints and protests poured in from every direction, and its exclusion was almost a matter of course. On the 29th of June, after Vespers, the selection of the horses which were to take part in the Palio was made outside the Porta Camollia.^ A larger number of animals than were actually needed for the race were in attendance at the so- called Palazzo de' Diavoli [Palatium Turcoruni) ; and their speed was tested over a course extending from that place to the little church dedicated to San Bernardino, just outside the Antiporto. The winning horse was awarded a testone, but was excluded from the race ; and the two deputies immediately proceeded to select from the remainder a number equal to that of the Contrade which desired to compete. The animals, so chosen, were then distributed by lot — the ceremony taking place on the steps of the said church. If any Contrada to which a horse had been assigned refused to accept it, the right of taking part in the Palio was thereby lost for ten or twelve years. If, after the horses had been distributed, any of them were injured or crippled during ^^ prove, the Contrade were held responsible therefor to their proprietors ; the damages being assessed by the pubblico Stimatore del Tribunale delle Colletie Universali. ' GiGLi, Diario (edition cited), i. 378. 218 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. An animal once received could by no means be exchanged for another. In 1706, the horse of the Contrada dell' Istrice became so lame that the Istriciaioli requested to be given another in its stead. More than seven Contrade entered their protests, and although, after the most violent opposition, the Governor finally permitted an exchange to be made, on this particular occasion, he expressly stated that his action must not be regarded as creating a precedent. Up to the beginning of the i8th century, the Contrade were allowed to try their horses in the Piazza at any hour of the day ; but so greatly did they abuse their privilege, that it became almost impossible for the merchants and shop- keepers to attend to their business, and was the cause of considerable peril to those citizens whose avocations com- pelled them to pass through the Campo. At last the nuisance became so intolerable that, in the year 1707, the Quattro Provveditori di Biccherna decreed t\ia.t prove should be run only twice daily, at specified hours in the morning and afternoon, and that each prova should be limited to three or four rounds, exception, however, being made with regard to the morning of the day on which the Palio was run. Until 1 72 1, the number of the Contrade which took part in the race varied from year to year, since it was a purely voluntary matter whether they entered their names or not, although too persistent an abstention was apt to lead to dis- qualification. In 1693, the Contrada di Spadaforte demanded permission to compete, but the other Contrade contested its right to do so, on the ground that not only had it not been represented at any of the public festivals for many years past, but further had never heretofore taken part in the Palio. Their opposi- tion was successful, and the Spadaforte was suppressed.^ ^ It has been stated, but apparently without any foundation in fact, that, on the occasion of the Palio of July 1675, ^ dispute arose between the Spadaforte and the Lupa, each claiming the victory ; and that the former together with the men of the Contrade of the Vipera, of the Orso, of the Leone, of the Gallo and of the Quercia, raised a tumult and insulted the judges ; (for which insubordination they were suppressed) (RicCARDO Brogi, // Palio di Siena (Siena, 1894), p. 22). — However, of all this the public documents contain no record ; while Girolamo Macchi, who has left us a fairly complete catalogue of the palii which were run in his day, makes no mention of any such event. — See the Misc. Star. Senese, vol. v. (1898), p. 94. 219 PALTO AND PONTE About a quarter of a century later, the Aquila narrowly escaped a like fate, when, in August 171 8, it claimed a right to run for the first time — and this, although it had held a high position among its peers more than a century earlier, and was the first of the Contrade to be ennobled, having (it is said) received that distinction at the hands of Charles V., when he visited Siena in 1536.^ Its admission was vehemently opposed by the Onda, the Tartuca, the Pantera and the Selva, the four conterminous Contrade ; for it is noticeable that, in the case of these civic divisions as in that of the Mediaeval Communes, propinquity often meant hostility. The Aquila was, however, eventually recognized by the magistrates of Biccherna as a true and legitimate Contrada. In 1702, a regulation was passed that from that date no Contrada should be permitted to take part in the Palio unless it was able to bring into the Piazza, on the day of the race, a following of at least- twenty persons. On the occasion of the arrival in Siena of the Princess Beatrice Violante of Bavaria, when all the Contrade were ordered to take part in the procession which went forth from the Porta Camollia to welcome her, the Leocorno finding it impossible to obey the summons by reason of its extreme poverty, the Collegio di Balia resolved forthwith to suppress it ; and although milder counsels subsequently prevailed, the delinquent Con- trada was suspended for ten years, and was even forbidden to display its banner. Nor was this its first offence, since, in the preceding year, it had been unable, for the same reason, to contribute towards the cost of a triumphal arch which was erected near the monastery of Santuccio on the arrival of Alessandro Zondadari, the newly appointed Archbishop of Siena.^ However, in 1718, on the petition of the inhabitants of Pantaneto, the remainder of its punishment was remitted. In those days, as at the present time, the 2nd of July found the whole population astir. All the Contrade were ^ The Contrade Nobili are four, to wit, Oca, Nicchio, Bruco and Aquila. — Compare C. Marzocchi, NelSecoloXVIlafanciuUa Virginia^ etc., op. cit., p. 22. - Compare Provedi, op. cit., pp. 92-99. 220 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. busy with their preparations, which were often of the most elaborate description, for in the i8th century it was usual to award prizes not only to the winner of the race, but also to the Contrada or Contrade which made the most seemly appearance in the Piazza. Thus, in 171 7, the Torre won the race with a horse called Gioia ; and, in addition to the palio, the same Contrada obtained the first prize for its comparsa ; while other prizes were bestowed upon the Onda, the Chiocciola, the Tartuca and the Giraffa, all of which had entered the Piazza with elaborately appointed cars ; for, in that year, great efforts were made to render the Palio especially splendid, by reason of the presence of the above- mentioned Princess Violante of Bavaria.^ The prizes for the comparse generally consisted of silver goblets, and, when no comparsa was of sufficient merit to entitle its Contrada to such a reward, the silver cup was either given to that Contrada whose horse had run second in the race for the palio, or a new race was run immediately after the first, from which the winning Contrada was excluded. At a convenient hour, the Contrade assembled before the Church of Sant' Agostino, and, on the arrival of the Governor in the Piazza, the Deputies, having received from him buo7ia licenza, gave the signal for the procession to start. The Contrade debouched from the Via del Casato, and, having made the circuit of the Piazza, waving their banners, retired, together with their cars, into the centre ; thus leaving the course free. In the meantime, the fantini^ having mounted their horses, and received their whips (which were made of leather, and whereof the handles were not allowed to exceed a third of a braccio in length), moved towards the starting post. At the sound of a trumpet the rope fell, and the race commenced. That horse which, at the third circuit, first passed the judges' stand was declared the victor. The palio was never presented to the men of the winning • PrOVEDI, op. cit., pp. 99-110. 2 Fantmi, jockeys. 221 PALIO AND PONTE Contrada themselves, but to their Prolettori\ and to them only provisionally, since they were held responsible for its safe-keeping, and were obliged to restore it to the Commune, after two or three days, receiving, in its stead, a silver basin or its equivalent in money, which varied from forty to sixty scudi, according to the munificence of the Deputies appointed for the Feast of S. Maria di Provenzano. Rarely was the palio itself given as a prize to the victorious Contrada/ As a rule, the victors deposited the silver basin in the church of their Contrada ; but, not unfrequently, they petitioned the Governor to permit the race to be run anew, by the other Contrade, on the day after the Festival of Our Lady of August ; offering as a prize the silver basin which they had themselves won. The Contrada which promoted the race naturally assumed the direction thereof, and bore all the expenses. By it were nominated the Deputies, and by it the horses were distributed in such place as suited its convenience, while the prize was increased or diminished at its pleasure. The honour of initiating these palii seems to belong to the Oca, which, having won the race of July 2nd, 1701, offered to defray the cost of another race to be run in the following month, and added a prize for the second horse. By degrees this practice grew to be so common, that, before the end of the i8th century, the Palio of the i6th of August had become as regular an event as that of July ; and finally, after the abandonment of the Palio alia lunga, was recognized as the principal festival of the Sienese year. The Commune assumed the management of the August Palio in 1802. For the rest, by reason of an accident which happened on the 2nd of July 1720, and which caused the death of two of the spectators, the regulations governing the Palio ^ A similar custom seems to have existed at Jesi, where, on the Feast of St Florian, the Corsa air anello was anually contested. The silver ring, which was given as a prize to the victor, was invariably redeemed by the Commune, in order that it might be used again in the competition of the following year. — See A. Gianandrea, Festa di S. Floriano, Marttre, in Jesi, e Tiro a Segno colla Balesira instituiio in occasione della medesima, Fanno I4S3 (Ancona, G. Aureli, 1879), pp. 17-18. 222 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. were altered ; and thereafter, only ten Contrade were per- mitted to run at one time. The new rules came into force in July 1721.^ It may be remarked that on the banner destined for the victorious Contrada in the Palio of August is painted a picture of the Assumption, while on that which forms the prize for the race of the 2nd July is represented the Madonna della chiesa collegiata di Provenzano. Ill It only remains to give some account of the comparse, and of those carri, or cars, which had long ago superseded the old macchine. The primary object of the macchine was, as I have said, that of affording refuge to the players in the Caccia di tori ; and when that form of sport was prohibited, their utility as miniature fortresses naturally came to an end. In their stead were introduced triumphal cars, which had no other scope than pageantry and display. In the Spanish procession, such cars filled so important a place, that its usual name seems to have been the Fiesta de los carros ; while in Florence, at least as early as the middle of the 15 th century, the edifizi had become one of the most prominent features in the celebrations for the Festa of S. Giovanni.^ Of the Sienese cars many descriptions have come down to us, and it may well be doubted whether anything save her comparative poverty prevented Siena from rivalling or even surpassing her richer neighbour in splendour and in- genuity of device.^ Let us take the Palio of 1786 as an ^ In the foregoing pages I have availed myself to a considerable extent of an article by Sign' Cav. Alessandro Lisini, entitled Notizie su Ic Contrade di Siena, published in the Miscellanea Storica Senese of 1896. This work contains several important documents illustrative of the Palio, and is accompanied by an Elenco dei Pali corsi dalle Contrade nella Piazza del Campo dal j6g2 al 1800 (signed Al). No reader of Italian who is interested in the subject should fail to purchase it, as it affords access to a vast amount of valuable information which it is difficult to obtain elsewhere. * See D'Ancona, Origini del Teatro Italiano, op, cit., vol. i. pp, 228, 244, * Federigo dei Conti da Montauto, in his letter of 9th August 1581 (above referred to) says : " Se i Senesi havessero cosi potere come hanno accutezza e volunta, credo non sarebber secondi ad alcun' altra nazione in questo genere di spettacoli : ma dove la spesa h debile, le cose perdono lo spiritoet il nervo dell' apparenza." — See Misc. Stor. Senese, vol. ii. (1894), P- 73- 223 PALIO AND PONTE example. In that year the festivities of Mid-August were celebrated with extraordinary pomp by reason of the presence of the royal princes in the city. The Contrade vied with one another in endeavouring to make a seemly appearance in the Piazza ; and we not only have a full account of their carri and comparse from the pen of one who was present on the occasion, but also — and this is almost more important — a series of contemporary prints, which enable us to form a really adequate notion of the pageant.^ The Contrade which took part in the race were the Oca, Drago, Istrice, Bruco, Leocorno, Chiocciola, Onda, Torre, Giraffa and Tartuca. " The first to enter the Piazza was the Contrada dell' Oca, which represented the triumph of Manlius, who, aroused by the cackling of geese, saved the Capitol from the attack of the Senonian Gauls. First, to the strains of martial music, proceeded the fasces and military trophies ; then came a cohort of Roman soldiers, bearing in their midst the Banner of the Contrada, green, white and red, together with the Captain of the same, who represented Manlius, clad in the classical Roman garb, and who was mounted upon a magnificently caparisoned horse. The Contrada del Nicchio, which was allied to that of the Oca, united with the latter to render its comparsa more splendid, forming a second cohort, destined to escort the captive Senones and the Car. The Car itself, drawn by six richly decked horses, represented the Tarpeian Rock with the Capitol on its summit. Upon the battlements were to be seen two geese, with the motto Anseres non fefellere. At the foot of the hill reposed the Tiber, and above him sat Rome, to whom Mars extended the Crown of Empire. All the members of the comparsa of the Contrada dell' Oca were magnificently garbed as Roman soldiers, with plumed helmets and breastplates, their skirts being green and white adorned with silver. The dress of the cohort of the Contrada del ^ Diario della faustissima venida, c pervianenza nella Citta di Siena dei Reali Arciduchi d' Austria Ferdinando Giuseppe, Carlo Luigi, Alessandro Leopoldo, e Giuseppe Antonio, Primipi di Toscana, ec. ec. ec. Con la descrizione delle Feste Pubbliche fatte dai Sanesi per cosl lieta occasione, con tutti i Componimenti, e Rami allusivi alle Feste medesinie. In Siena, MDCCLXXXVI. Dai Torchj di Vincenzo Pazzini Carli, e Figli. 224 Macauni v Carri rafpresentati nclLa Piazza di M'ff. A^oj-tc duoceiola JUiia dalle Conb-adc nciia Cor/a del Polio ^/:3L^ Tarttica CAKKI OF THE CONTRADK, 10 AUdUST, 1781! THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. Nicchio was identical with that of their allies except that their skirts were yellow and blue, laced with gold. . . . " From the Car the following sonnet was distributed broadcast among the spectators : Infra il silenzio della notte oscura Tacito il Gallo in suo pensier risolse Di sormontar le non vegliate mura E franco alia grand' opra il pi^ rivolse. Ma noi di Giuno Ostia diletta, e pura Noi ti svegliammo o Manlio ; a te si volse Ogni Falange, e in tua virtu sicura Le disperse fra il sonno armi raccolse. Pugnasti, h ver, da forte, ampia ruina Recando ovunque all' inimico altero, Che ancor rammenta la fatal collina ; Ma se salvasti col valor guerriero La vacillante Libertk Latina A noi tu devi il tuo trionfo intero.^ " Next, the Contrada del Drago presented itself in the Piazza, part of its company being on foot and part on horseback. They were dressed in green uniforms with red facings, shoulder-scarves and cuffs, and with yellow waist- coats. They all followed their banner, which has for its device a dragon on a green field with divers red and yellow arabesques. This troop escorted a well designed car, representing a grotto, in the mouth whereof was a wounded dragon, with the motto Del par famoso o vincitore o viNTO. Beneath the dragoon were to be seen the remains of the unhappy companions of Cadmus slain by the monster. Hard by stood Cadmus himself, in classic costume, in the act of giving the death - blow to the already moribund dragon, as, in fact, he did give it, when the Car approached the balcony of the Casino ; ^ where, the teeth of the dead dragon being extracted, and sown in the ground, armed men were seen to rise from the furrows, as they did in the fable. "Although unaccompanied by a car, the comparsa of the Istrice was not less rich and tasteful than those of the other Contrade. It represented a troop of Swiss foot- soldiers, with plumed helmets and halberds, wearing the * I give this sonnet as an example of the rest. All the Contrade distributed sonnets or madrigals, conceived in a similar strain. They are duly reported in the Diario, etc., cited in the preceding note. ^ The Casino de' Nobili, whence the royalties watched the show. r 225 PALIO AND PONTE striped uniforms proper to that nation ; a costume to the beauty of which the multitude of colours which are united in the banner of that Contrada, greatly contributed. The said banner displays a porcupine upon a white field with beautiful arabesques in blue, red and black. " The fourth Contrada to present itself was the Bruco. Its co7nparsa consisted of a group of gardeners, dressed in green, with yellow breeches, and shoulder-belts of flowers. Their hats were adorned with green and yellow ribbons and cords (nastri e ciniglie), allusive to their banner, which bears for device a caterpillar on a green field with divers yellow arabesques, relieved, here and there, with a touch of blue. This troop of gardeners escorted a car, which was drawn by six horses, . . . and which represented a pleasant garden full of flowers, with a pretty arbour approached by a flight of steps. In the highest part of the garden there were four gardeners tastefully apparelled, and on the stairway a number of musicians, playing on wind and string instruments, who, during the circuit of the Piazza, discoursed sweet symphonies. " Even the Contrada del Leocorno, which was the fifth in order, contrived to present a decent appearance, in spite of its poverty and the limited number of its inhabitants.^ Its comparsa represented a troop of Europeans newly returned from America. They were clad in gold-coloured uniforms, with white facings, cuffs, waistcoats and small- clothes ; those being the same colours as are seen on their banner, which displays a Unicorn on a white field with gold arabesques. They led with them a number of savages in chains, and a unicorn which was supposed to have been captured in the New World." In the Anacreontica, which they distributed, a battle with the aborigines was described. Veggiamo in fuga volgersi, Quell' inimico armento : Noi li siamo alle costole E ne uccidiamo un cento. Schiavo con altri fecesi Nel memorabil giorno, II Duce lor, che impavido Montava un LlOCORNO. . . . ^ Compare p. 220 supra. 226 THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. " The sixth to enter the Piazza was the Contrada della Chiocciola, which represented the triumph of Charles V. of Lorraine, after the Hberation of Vienna from the Turks. The members of the compai^sa were richly clad in red uniforms, with yellow cuffs, waistcoats and breeches, and blue shoulder- belts laced with gold ; these colours corresponding with those of their banner, which displays a snail upon a red field, with yellow arabesques and blue trimmings. Preceded by a military band, a numerous company, on foot and horseback, escorted a magnificent triumphal car, whereon, in the post of honour, was the Captain of the Contrada, who represented Charles V. With him were other generals, and below were certain captive Turks, whose dejected aspects expressed their profound grief and humiliation. " After the Contrada della Chiocciola came that of the Onda, which had undertaken to represent the celebrated fable of Acis. The numerous comparsa of this Contrada was pre- ceded by bassoons, hautboys and bugles. Their uniforms were blue, with white cuffs, facings, waistcoats and breeches, laced with silver ; thus corresponding with the colours of their banner, which bears as its device Waves on a white ground with blue arabesques. In the midst of this company was a beautiful car drawn by six horses superbly caparisoned. It represented a cliff overlooking the sea, together with part of the adjacent plain. On the highest point of the cliff, beside a gnarled and ancient tree trunk, stood the Cyclops Polyphemus ; while lower down was to be seen Galatea, with various nymphs, bewailing- the untimely fate of her lover." Among the various composizioni distributed by this Contrada was one which describes the death and resurrection of Acis, who, clothed on with immortality as a river god, predicts for himself a higher immortality, and a renown Ancor piCi glorioso, Quando su le Sanesi alme Contrade Nella futura etade Dall' onda mia 1' Onda prendendo il nome N' andrk cinta le chiome Di vincitrice palma Ne' giuochi equestri, e 1' offrir^ devota, Qual grata Figlia in dono, De' gran Regi Toscani al piede al Trono. 227 PALIO AND PONTE " Eighth in order, came the Contrada della Torre, which represented the old story of Hero and Leander. First marched a numerous troop of horsemen, accompanied by a band of military music, and all dressed in red uniforms with white facings and cuffs. Their banner displayed an Elephant carrying a Tower, upon a red ground, with a few white trimmings. The comparsa terminated with a car drawn by four horses, which represented the beach of Sestos, with a tower, from the summit of which Hero, with a burning torch in her hand, directed the course of the amorous Leander, who was seen swimming towards her, through the waves. " After the Torre came the Contrada della Giraffa, which, for the novelty and beauty of its rappresentanza, was unsur- passed by any of its rivals. The members of its comparsa were superbly dressed in Moorish costume, and were pre- ceded by a band of musical instruments peculiar to that nation. The car, which was drawn by four horses, repre- sented a spacious enclosure surrounded by iron railings, wherein was a great giraffe, of the size of nature as described by Signor de Buffon.^ Its hide was white and it was spotted with red, like the banner of the Contrada, which bears for its crest a Giraffe on a red field, with innumerable white trimmings and arabesques. " The last to enter the Piazza was the Contrada della Tartuca, with a car modelled on the system of the Chinese philosophers. It consisted of four huge tortoises, placed at its four angles, on whose backs stood four elephants, which, in their turn, supported a square platform, in the centre whereof stood a globe [Mappamondo), and, in the corners, four statues representing the cities of Jerusalem, Nancy, Vienna and Prague. When this car reached the Casino, the globe opened and divided into four parts, disclosing, in the midst thereof, a fair obelisk, which, on each of its faces, represented the four principal cities of Tuscany, with the respective inscriptions : Firenze la bella, Siena l' antica, Pisa la Florida, Livorno il potente. At its angles there were four statues, representing Science, Justice, Religion and ^ The publication of the first edition of the first fifteen volumes of Buffon's Histoire Naturelle had been completed in 1767. 228 ModcUi vejtiario delleJdte- Con trade. Bruce detle divise dellc Ccmtradc Oca "ICC- Grirajfa- Liocovno ChioccioLa Toi re Drago COSTUMES OF THE CONTKADE, 1« AUGUST, 178« THE CONTRADE OF SIENA, ETC. Agriculture. This car was accompanied by a numerous company richly clad in yellow uniforms, with black facings, cuffs and breeches. Their banner displayed a Tortoise on a yellow field, with black arabesques, relieved here and there by a touch of blue." The allegorical meaning of the car is best explained by the sonnet which was distributed by those who accom- panied it. Son quelle pur 1' alte Cittk, che dome Fuion dagli Avi vittoriosi un giorno ; * Queste son quelle a cui 1' Austriaco nome In dolcissimo tuono echeggia intorno.i' Di Giove il messaggier le pinte chiome Scuote, e di Etruria accenna il bel soggiomo. Astrea qui siede, e le bell' Arti, oh come ! Rendono il loco alteramente adorno. In altra parte in maestoso aspetto La Religion si sta. Quindi la testa Alza il commercio dall' algoso letto. La Mole dunque spaziosa e questa, Che a noi del nostro-ben mostra 1' oggetto, E deir antiche imprese idea ci desta. * Gerusalemme, e Nancy. * *> Vienna, e Praga. Besides the eight cars already described, there was a ninth, which had headed the procession. The seven Con- trade which did not compete had united to produce a car symbolical of the universal enthusiasm with which the royal princes were welcomed. There was to be seen a figure re- presenting the Arbia reposing at the foot of the pleasant hills of Siena. On their summit stood the Temple of Public Felicity, and their slopes were covered with flowers, which shepherds were weaving into votive garlands. Upon this car were borne the banners of the seven Contrade and the palio destined for the winner. /-- The race was won by the Drago. Nor is it without interest to note that, in the Corso dei barberi, of the day before, the crimson velvet banner,^ instead of being carried off by some prince or noble, went to a certain Signor Bianchi 1 " Un Drappo di velluto cremisi con bordo d'oro," or, as our diarist calls it, "la ricca bandiera di velluto cremisi." 229 PALIO AND PONTE of Massa Marlttima. Indeed, our diarist treats the event as of very small importance, merely mentioning that twelve horses were entered and that the royal archdukes watched the finish from the balcony of their palace. Already, at the close of the 1 8th century, the Palio alia tonda had well nigh usurped the place of the Palio alia hmga. 230 CHAPTER THE SECOND THE MODERN PALIO As if some maiden dead for centuries past, Drawn from the dusty couch whereon she lay, And slowly gathering life, should rise at last, Warm with the breathing beauty of to-day ; As if some planet lost for many an age ^ Could light the world with its forgotten gleam, And take through heaven its shining pilgrimage To its old place ; so dawns on us this Dream. Miss Gertrude Ford. Narrano che Pietro Leopoldo, pregato dai Senesi a favore del Manicomio, rispondesse : " Chiudete le porte, e il manicomio h bell' e fatto." Ma oh che bel manicomio da fare invidia ai savi ! Prof. Giuseppe Rondoni. SIENA slumbers amid her olive groves and vineyards, her fierce hates and fiercer loves forgotten long ago. Yet, twice a year, she wakens into life again ; and the Faery Prince, who has power to snap the charm that binds her, is none other than the Palio. At its coming, the mediaeval city is herself once more ; the old passions blaze forth anew — a little softened, perhaps, by their modern setting, but, none the less for that, the same ; and the rivalry between the Contrade recalls the clamorous years of the free Commune. For, in modern Siena, the patria is no longer the city but the Contrada ; and between hostile Contrade the strife is as bitter and the enmity as unappeasable as ever it was between the cities of the Balsana and the Lily, in the days of Farinata and of Manfred. In his inimitable work, // Palio di Siena^ Signor Riccardo Brogi, by whose wit and wisdom I would not thank- ^ It is a description of th modern Palio. For its origin and historj', the serious student must seek elsewhere. 231 PALIO AND PONTE lessly profit, relates that a certain panterino (to wit, an inhabitant of the Contrada della Pantera), being laid up by a very painful complaint, and desiring to express to a sympa- thizing visitor how intolerable were his sufferings, declared, with perfect seriousness, that he would be moved to pity if God should inflict the like even upon a Selvaioio, that is to say upon an inhabitant of the Selva — the Contrada which is conterminous with the Pantera and its most jealous rival — a statement which is thoroughly typical of those ani- mosities, and which, I think, clearly indicates their depth and malignity. Quite recently — the story was told me a few days ago by my friend the Rev. P. A. Alessandri, himself the "Curato" referred to — a strong partisan of the Oca lay at death's door. His women-folk urged him to send for the Curato, who happened also to be the Vicario of the Contrada della Torre, between which and the Contrada dell' Oca there has long been bitter enmity.^ " Come f " exclaimed the dying man. " Verrebbe quello della Torracciaf Of old the Sienese and the Florentines fought not only with the sword and with the lance, in the hills of Chianti and in the valley of the Elsa, but with rappresaglie and intrigues ; with slanders, gibes and insults ; in prose and in verse ; in novels, in legends and in history ; ^ and so, to-day, the Contrade contend not only with ne7^bate in the Piazza, but with bribes and menaces. They speak evil things of their rivals, and lose no opportunity of doing them despite and injury. Thus it is told how, in the early eighties, there being a feud between the Tartuca and the Chiocciola, certain persons belonging to the former Contrada went by night to the church of the latter, and emptied a sack full of snails on the steps of the sacred edifice, with the result that, on the following ^ In his Story of Siena and San Gimignano, Mr. E. G. Gardner says (p. 201) : " In this present year of grace, 1902, on the day in which the popolani of the Oca celebrated the feast of their glorious patroness, there was a solemn reconciliation between them and the rival Contrada of the Torre, the healing of the famous feud of many years' standing. I am writing too soon after the event to know whether the peace has proved durable ! " Those who know Siena know that such reconciliations do not prove durable. They last, as the Contradaioli say, "till the sand is in the Piazza." The reader has no reason to fear that the old picturesque feud is dead.— Compare Note I., at the end of the chapter. 2 See my " Ensamples" of Fra Filippo, etc., op. cit., p. 28. 232 THE MODERN PALIO morning, the whole faqade was covered with clinging molluscs and with slimy tracks. The insult, of course, gained point and venom from the fact that the snail is, as the name of the Contrada itself implies, the device of the Chiocciola. There had, it is said, been treason. One of the P^'otettori of the Chiocciola had given assistance to its enemy, and, in like manner, the portals of its church were beslimed by its own emblem. To my mind, I confess, the insolent jest possesses a distinctly mediaeval flavour, and differs rather in degree than in kind from the methods of the 13th century, when, for example, in 1233, Florentini fecerunt exerdtmn contra Senenses . . . et appropinquaverunt civitatem cum machinist et projecerunt asinos in civitatem} Some half dozen years ago, to the unbounded delight of the Ocaioli, the Torre, which had made quite certain of winning the Palio, lost the race by a mischance. The youth of Fontebranda hurried up the steep hill to S. Domenico, and, having overpowered the sacristan, rang the great bell of that church with a vigour which cannot have failed to impress upon their disappointed rivals how keenly their discomfiture was appreciated. The following year the Torraioli had their revenge ; for the Oca, having won the Palio of July, thought to repeat their victory in August, and might have done so, had not thefantitii of the Bruco and of the Torre flung them- selves in front o{ th.Q fantino of the Oca, and utterly spoilt his start by a perfect hail of blows. Then, the race being over, the women of the Torre demonstrated their joy by waving banners in the Piazza. In this connection it is perhaps worth mentioning that neither the Bruco nor the Torre had the smallest chance of winning themselves. It was purely a question of paying off old scores ; and^ although, as a matter of fact, the Tartuca carried off the palio, the Torraioli were quite contented. The nerbo, which had done such good work in the hands of their fantino, was presented, as a suitable token of respect, to the priest of their Contrada ; and he, having already more than one of such souvenirs of satisfactorily executed vengeance, kindly offered it to me. It hangs on the wall of my study, as ^ Ptolemaei Lwensis Annales, ad annum. — Compare p. 20 supra. PALIO AND PONTE I write. Later on, I saw the helmet of \.\\q fantino, and the numerous dents which adorned its superficies adequately demonstrated that the nerbate which were given upon that occasion were entirely reciprocal. It is said to be extremely rare for a girl to find a lover in a hostile Contrada ; and, should she marry such an one, husband and wife will separate on the day of the race ; the woman returning to her father's house, there to exult or weep over the Palio which has been won or lost. Reader, if these things seem incredible, and if you wish to ascertain for yourself whether this enthusiasm and these animosities really exist, you can very easily do so. Go down into Fontebranda, a day or two before the Palio, and talk with some good Ocaiolo. Lead him to speak of the Contrada della Torre, and you will hear strange things. Even the names of its streets condemn it. What self-respecting person would live in a Via Pulceto? Cleanliness, honesty and righteousness are unknown among its inhabitants. In a word, they are Torraioli, and their very fountain, at the foot of the Piazza del Mercato, is a fonte putrido. Then, when you have heard enough, adjourn to some wine-shop in the Via Salicotto, and enquire into the character of the Ocaioli. I think you will be satisfied. But It Is time to turn to the race Itself. On the evening of the 12th of August, the Piazza presents a scene of unusual animation. In preparation for to-morrow's prove, cartloads of sand are being emptied and scattered on the paved roadway, which forms its circumference, while in front of the shops which occupy the basements of the sur- rounding palaces, workmen are erecting wooden seats, which rise one above another like steps, until they reach more than half way to the balconies overhead. Primitive enough in structure, they are, nevertheless, sufficiently strong to bear the weight of the crowd with which they will be packed on the day of the race, and give to the ancient Piazza all the appearance of a vast amphitheatre.^ * The best seats are those in front of the Casino de' Nobili. Here, for a few francs (the prices are fixed), chairs can be obtained which are duly rwimbered and which will be reserved THE MODERN PALIO On the morning of the 13th, the good people of Siena are early astir, and by eight or nine o'clock, the pia^iata ^ is thronged with persons awaiting the o^qa^X prove, which must be run before the horses can be assigned to the ten Contrade which, whether by right or by good fortune, are destined to take part in the race.^ As the minutes slip by, the crowd increases, and, taking advantage of the shade cast by the Torre del Mangia, extends itself across the Piazza in a wedge-shaped mass. Ever and anon, a horse is led past and disappears into one of the gateways of the Palazzo Pubblico — a sorry looking animal enough, as a general rule, and smacking more of the lineage of Rosinante than of Bucephalus ; for, as I think I have hinted before, the Palio of Siena is an institution but little calculated to afford encouragement to the raising of thoroughbred stock. When all the horses have arrived — to the number of between fifteen and twenty — three or four of them are mounted by jockeys [fantini), in the pay of the Commune, and ridden towards the Costarella ; whence, at a given signal, they start to race round the Piazza. In the prove, no more than in the Palio itself, are the animals saddled. Th&fantini must ride bare-backed or not at all ; and the spectacle is often a sufficiently amusing one. The old horses, who know the Piazza, follow the track without giving much trouble ; but those which have had no experience of the game, on reaching the dangerous corner opposite the Palazzo del Governo, generally display an uncontrollable desire to pursue their wild career in a straight line, and, in spite of the frantic efforts of their riders, rush headlong down the Via San Martino.^ Here, in front of the shops, between that street and the Cappella for the hirer. Elsewhere, it is practically a question of first come first served : two or three people are crowded into a space which would not be excessive for one, and the foreigner, unless he is an expert at bargaining, will pay dearly for poor accommodation. * The Sienese term that part of the Piazza del Campo which is immediately in front of the Palazzo Pubblico la pianata. ^ In each of the two Palii, seven Contrade run because it is their turn to do so {(Tobbligo), and three because their names have been drawn to take part in the race {a sorle). ^ From this incident, repeated annually, the phrase E andato a San Martina has come to be used metaphorically among the Sienese. For example, it might be applied to a man who had taken a wrong train. Indeed, a short residence in the city should suffice to convince the visitor how greatly the Palio has coloured the language of the common people. PALIO AND PONTE di Piazza, is erected a hoarding which is faced with heavy mattresses ; and rarely is it that their existence fails to be justified by the event, for at this spot there is nearly always a fall or two. More than one of the fantini generally part company with their horses and go to spianare materasse, as the phrase is. Sometimes, too, a horse will bolt up the Via del Casato, flinging his rider on the hard ground, amid the laughter, yells, jeers and derisive comments of the spectators, who, with charming impartiality, distribute their abuse about equally between the unruly horse and his luckless rider. When, at last, all the horses have been tried in batches of three or four at a time, the Captains of the Contrade retire to discuss their respective merits or demerits, and to select such ten of them as may appear best fitted to take part in the Palio. The object, of course, is to obtain ten animals of as nearly equal speed as possible, and therefore, if, in the prove which have just been run, any horse should have shown himself manifestly superior to his companions, he will promptly be discarded. Finally, after more or less discussion, the necessary ten are agreed upon, and are forthwith decorated with large numbers painted upon their hind quarters. Two urns — made of glass, in order that no suspicion may arise concerning the dona fides of so delicate and important an operation — stand upon a table just within the central entrance of the Palazzo. In one of these are deposited the names of the competing Contrade ; in the other, numbers from I to lo, corresponding to the numbers on the horses. Each name and each number has been previously enclosed in a small wooden box of cylindrical shape, not unlike a needlecase ; and the two urns, which are so constructed as to be capable of receiving a rotatory motion by the turning of a handle, are made to perform several rapid revolutions, thus thoroughly mixing their contents. The moment is a solemn one. The Captains of the Contrade, and such of the crowd as can squeeze themselves into the narrow hall-way, press around the table. Expect- ation is visible on every face, and only the 14th century saints of Bartolo di Fredi look down unmoved. 236 THE MODERN PALIO And here let us pause. The theme is too lofty for my grovelling Northern wits. It is a tale which a Sienese should tell ; and I will avail myself once more of the vivid pen of Signor Riccardo Brogi. "A number is extracted, and one of the Communal servants calls in a loud voice : Quattro. — A murmur runs through the crowd. It is a well-known horse. — Last year, it won the Palio for the Chiocciola. '' ' Dio landi ! It's a no account beast, that,' exclaims a vendor of fish, as he lights his pipe. The old fellow wants it for the Torre, and then, ye Saints ! he would sino- another tune. " The name of a Contrada is drawn. There is a moment of intolerable suspense. At last the servitor shouts : Oca ! And immediately the cry of Oca ! Oca / is taken up and repeated by a hundred voices. The horse, which is, in fact, the pick of the whole lot, or, to adopt the expression which is generally used upon these occasions, a cavallo bono, is led off in triumph by the Ocaioli, who proceed through the streets towards their Contrada, shouting Oca / Oca I until they are hoarse. — As a matter of fact, what they really shout is Oa ! Oa ! for the Sienese, albeit they speak the purest Tuscan, never sound a hard c if they can avoid it.^ "The boys fling their hats into the air. The Captain, as self-satisfied and important as if the satisfactory result of the draw were due exclusively to his own personal merits, turns his steps also in the direction of Fontebranda, where the horse, which has arrived before him, is now reposino- in a comfortable stall, provided with excellent forage, and tended with loving care. Certainly, he has never fared better in his life ; but then it is he, poor beast, who must win the Palio. There is, it is true, another almost equally good ; but that matters nothing, the Ocaioli will bethink them to provide a fantino of the best, and one especially 1 "Veramente si grida solo Oa! Oa! perch^ i Senesi . . , mangiano i e come le ciliegie." — Such are the words used by Signor Brogi ; and I beg to state, once for all, that I cannot pretend to translate him literally. To attempt to do so would be an injustice both to him and to myself. I very strongly recommend those who appreciate good Italian, and who would enjoy the humours of the Palio from a Sienese standpoint, to purchase his work. Laughter they will not lack. PAT JO AND PONTE gifted in the use of the nerbo ; for, this year, the race is likely to be fiercely contested. " * Look,' cry the women, as the horse passes. * How sweet he is ! Pretty dear, if only he could speak ! ' (Badate come e carina ! Gli mane a il parlare, piccinino /) " But their vocabulary fails them. They cannot find words strong enough to sing his praises. "If, however, as often happens, the fickle goddess had sent them a bad horse — a cavallaccio — his reception would have been very different. All available invectives and every kind of abuse would have been heaped upon him and upon his unhappy proprietor. Nor would that have been the worst of the matter. He would possibly have been kicked and cudgelled, and, perhaps, even left in his stable forgotten and unfed, until such time as his owner, seeing that Sant' Antonio was helpless to succour his prot^gd, should have had recourse to the authorities. In Siena there is no Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.^ On the evening of the 13th there is a prova. This is succeeded by another on the following morning, and so on, twice a day, until the i6th. But none of the six prove which precede the Palio need any description. They are all very much alike, being simply a series of trial races, run by ten horses ridden by fantini, wherein sometimes one Contrada is victorious and sometimes another. Only xh^ prova gener ale, which takes place on the evening of the 15th, is run with any degree of solemnity. For, for it the Municipality offers a prize. On the morning of the Feast of the Assumption, high mass is sung in the Duomo, where the boards, which usually cover so large a part of the pavement, have been removed.^ ^ That this custom of treating a bad horse with disrespect is one of considerable antiquity, is proved by the following incident related by Girolamo Macchi, under the year 171 1 : — " A di 2 luglio 1 71 1 in giovedi si corse il solito palio in Piazza con le Contrade in n". di 16, e fu per mostra il Baccino d'argento, e la piu corriera e brava di tutte fu la Contrada del Bruco che vense il Palio ; e invece del suddetto Baccino, dai Signori della Festa gli fu dato n°. 60 Talleri ; e la Contrada della Tartuca, che hebbe gattivo cavallo, lo niessero in barroccio con un pagliaccio e lenzuola, e ce lo posero a diacere legato e ci era il medico manescalco e dottore Asino, E la Contrada della Lupa erano da n°. 50 uomini a cavallo e fu bella festa." ^ The pavement seems to have been thus protected for more than two centuries. Thus Richard Lassels, in The Voyage of Italy, tells us that " the Pattement is the best in the 238 THE MODERN PALIO From the columns hang the banners of the Contrade, and the face of the Madonna delle Grazie is disclosed to view. A vast crowd throngs the sacred edifice, and Our Lady of Mid-August is worshipped as of old. That night the Sienese do not sleep. Instead, they prepare for the Palio with a banquet, and, until the dawn of day, celebrate the Festival with wine and wassail ; even as, centuries ago, King Olaf and his Vikings drank ^' Skoal to the Lord !'' And let it not be thought that this drinking is slight or perfunctory. The Queen of Heaven is not so dishonoured. It is true that, like the poet Wordsworth, most Italians have "a miserably low standard of intoxication"; but no such slur can be cast upon the Sienese. They drink, and drink deeply, as becomes the men whose forefathers prepared for the battle of Montaperto with a breakfast of roast meats, washed down with perfetti e solenni vini e bene vantaggiati. Iiideed, all the consolation which I can offer to the total abstainer in this regard, is to be found in the fact that, in the latter half of the 14th century, Siena, with a smaller population, consumed nearly two and a half million litres of wine more than she does to-day.^ However, the supply is still perfectly adequate for the seemly observance of the Festival of Our Lady of Mid-August. And now, at last, the east is whitening into dawn, and the day of the Palio has begun. All is excitement and bustle. There is no time to eat. The hours are passed in going from house to house, through the streets, through the shops, and through the piazze, in taking counsel together, and in stimulating the hate which exists between Contrada world ; and indeed too good to be trode on ; hence they couer a great part of it with bords hansomely layd together, yet easy to be taken vp, to show strangers the beauty of it" (i. 237). ^ The calculation is based upon the returns of 1879, since which time the population has, of course, increased. — See C. Falletti-Fossati, op. cit., p. 67. In order that I may not be suspected of overestimating the capacity of the modern ContradaioH for liquid refreshment, I beg to refer the reader to the following statement of Signor Brogi (p. 53) : Le Contrade si preparano al Palio con nn banchetto. Tutia la notte si beve . . . e come si beve ! 39 PALIO AND PONTE and Contrada ; while overhead the Campanone * roars forth its summons to all the country round. In the afternoon, the whole population is afoot, — men, women and children, old and young, rich and poor, — their numbers being augmented every minute by the vast crowd of country folk who are pouring into the city through all its gates. About two o'clock, a deafening beating of drums begins in each Contrada. Knights in armour, accompanied by pages with flowing locks and clad in bravery of silk and velvet, are seen passing to and fro. It seems as if the years had rolled backwards, and the long dead warriors of the old Republic had left their graves in San Francesco and the Duomo to gladden the world yet once again with sheen of satin and flash of burnished mail. DestrLer e corsiere, Masnkte e bandiere Coraccie e^lamiere Vedrai rimutare. And now, it is high time for the visitor to decide whither he will go to see the ceremonies which precede the race. Of course, if he is behind the scenes and is very certain which Contrada will be victorious, he had better take advantage of that knowledge. But let him not be so mistaken as to imagine that the horse which has won the majority or even all of the prove will necessarily win the PaHo. Hitherto the fantini have ridden without their nerbi. There have been treaties and alliances made, which may render it impossible for the best horse to win. For this is no common race. It is warfare. And, if the victory cannot be obtained by speed and strength, it must either be purchased or stolen. As for me, I shall go down into Fontebranda ; for the good Ocaioli always want to win if they can. They are a stalwart folk, and worthy descendants of the men who fought in the forefront of the battle on the day of Camollia,^ and ^ The great bell of the Mangia tower, which is rung on civic festivals and days of national rejoicing. 2 " Per la Porta Fonteblanda spedirono le Squadre del Massaini, e del Palmieri, una 240 PAGE OK THK CONTKADA IU'l.], ISTKICE THE MODERN PALIO who, some quarter of a century later, being thrust forth from the city on the night of the 27th of July 1552, marched round the walls to join Misser Piccolomini at San Lazzaro, and, a few hours afterwards, burned down the Porta Romana, in spite of a sharp fusillade from some fifty musketeers who stood on oruard there — thus commencino- the revolt as^ainst the Spaniards.^ Nor are their methods less strenuous to-day. With them the end justifies the means ; and if any efforts of theirs can accomplish it, the Palio will be brought to Fontebranda. The Church of the Contrada dell' Oca, in the Via Benincasa, is none other than the lower chapel in the house of St Catherine ; and hither is led the horse which is about to compete for the Palio to receive the priestly benediction. Does the idea shock you? It need not do so. The service is a reverent one enough, and the people pray earnestly to God and to "the sweetest of the saints" to grant them that which is very near their hearts, the victory of their beloved Contrada.^ The priest, in surplice and stole, waits at the foot of the high altar. Hard-by stand the members of the comparsa, gorgeous in their mediaeval costumes ; while, here and there, kneeling figures, in postures of earnest supplication, testify that the ceremony about to take place is no empty formality. Above the panelling which runs around the sacred edifice, are set numerous shields, painted with the coats of arms of the Protettori of the Contrada — an office once of banda d'Uomini di Monticchicllo, e una grossa Comfaptia di Giovani Fonteblattdesi, sempre nelP armi corraggiosi e intrepidi." — Pecci, Memorie, etc., op. cit., ii. 221. ^ SozziNi, Diario, pp. 76-78. - The faith of the people in the power of their patron Saint is real enough. In 1898, when the horse of the Drago was killed in one of the prove, a youthful seminarist was heard to declare that, in his opinion, the death of the unfortunate animal was due to the inter- vention of St Catherine, who was doubtless aware that the Drago had always been hostile to the Oca. The Saint, moreover, is expected to live up to his or her responsibilities, and Signer Brogi relates how a Contrada, which suspected its celestial patron of having accepted a bribe from its rival, in the shape of a grosso veto d'argento, removed the sacred image from its place in the church, and flung it into one of the public wells. The hint appears to have been taken, for the Contrada in question won the next Palio. The penitent Saint was then fished out and reinstated in his whilom dignity. Q 241 PALIO AND PONTE great importance, but which, in these days, is bestowed upon any gentleman who is willing to pay a small annual subscription. And now the horse is led into the house of God, accom- panied by the faniino, who stands erect with his helmet on his head, like one of the grandees of ancient Spain in the presence of his Sovereign. The prayers are short, and, of course, in Latin. Trans- lated, they run as follows : Our help is in the name of the Lord ; Who made heaven and earth. Lord, hear my prayer ; And let my ay cone unto thee. The Lord be with you ; And with thy spirit. Let us pray. O God, our refuge and strength, who art the author of all godliness ; be ready, we beseech thee, to hear the devout prayers of thy Church ; and grant that those things which we ask faithfully we may obtain effectually ; through Christ Our Lord. Amen. Let us pray. Almighty and everlasting God, who didst preserve thy glorious Saint Anthony, though tried by manifold temptations, unharmed amid the tempests of this world ; grant, we beseech thee, that we, thy servants, may profit by his bright example, and, by his merits and intercession, may be saved from the dangers of this present life ; through Christ Our Lord. Amen. Let us pray. Let this animal receive thy blessing, O Lord, whereby it may be preserved in body, and freed from every harm, by the intercession of the blessed Anthony ; through Christ Our Lord. Amen. Then the priest sprinkles holy water over the horse, and the people leave the church. Of course, there are some persons who regard the belief in supernatural interference with the affairs of life as "eminently irreligious."^ To them this service may seem childish, or worse ; but not, I think, more so than many of the petitions embodied in our own Book of Common ' Compare Buckle's Historj' of Civilization in England (London, Longmans, Green & Co., 1S67), vol. iii. p. 365. 242 THE MODERN PALIO Prayer. And indeed, if God be "the only giver of all victory," and, in truth, a father, to whom we may make known all our needs, both spiritual and temporal, then there is no word to be said against it. To my mind, I confess, the irreverence, if any there be, is to be found in the mental attitude of those foreigners — English and Americans, for the most part — who, entering God's house, make no attempt to understand the prayers offered up, and, prejudging the whole ceremony, regard it merely as a curious instance of puerile superstition, forming part of the afternoon's amusement. In our crude youth, many of us, probably, prayed for very similar blessings. We are wiser now; but are we any the better for our wisdom ? The benediction being over, the various members of the comparsa betake themselves, in ordered array, to the Piazza di Giordano Bruno, in front of the Church of Sant' Agostino. This spot, besides being the official rendezvous of the Contrade, whence they will pass through the Via del Casato into the Piazza del Campo, is the place established by custom for the so-called partiti. Here the magnates of the Con- trada which expects to win the Palio make verbal stipula- tions with the fantini of friendly Contrade, and bargain as to the sums to be paid in the event of victory — sums which not unfrequently run to some thousands of francs ; — here, by the power of gold, a horse which has shown itself of the swiftest, in the preparatory races, is suddenly trans- formed, as if by magic, into as sorry a jade as that whereon Petruchio came to claim his bride, unable to crawl round the Piazza at more than a snail's pace. — Here, contracts are entered into touching the price to be paid for each blow of the nerbo well and truly administered to the fantino of a hostile Contrada, and this often with no hope of victory, but merely to destroy the chances of an enemy. — Here ancient treaties are ratified and new alliances made, over the excellent wine of Beppe dell' Arco. — Here, in a word, it is arranged who shall win the Palio. 243 PALTO AND PONTE Meanwhile, the whole population is pouring into the Piazza del Campo, and filling it, from end to end, with motion and with colour. Minute by minute the crowd increases, until it seems, at last, as if even that vast amphitheatre could hold no more. The windows and balconies are gay with tapestry and hangings of a thousand hues ; and there, looking down from their ancient palaces upon the seething throng beneath, may be seen fair and gracious figures, whose mien and carriage make us think regretfully of the dear dead ladies of long ago ; — of the Lady Forteguerra, with her following of damsels dressed in violet ; of the Lady Piccolomini and her company clad in rose-coloured satin, and of the girls in white who were led by^ the Lady Livia Fausta, singing that song in honour of France, which Blaise de Montluc regretted so greatly that he had not heard ; of those twenty -two ladies whose incomparable loveliness was hymned by Eurialo Morani Ascolano ; of Onorata Saracini, with her great grey eyes and golden hair ; of her blond and gracious namesake, that other Onorata, whom Fabio Petrucci loved ; and last, of the unhappy Pia, whose piteous ricordati di me Comes tender as a hurt bird's note across the centuries, and moves to tears to-day. Nor need we confine our attention to the high-born ladies. Rank holds no prerogative in the Court of Beauty. There are lovely women among the common people too. Let us descend into the vast concave of the Campo, and seek out the pretty Becchina, whom reckless, spendthrift Cecco Angiolieri sung ; fierce, black-browed, shrill-voiced Betta, with her dagger, and the bella Salicottina, whose love the great Pandolfo bought so dearly. Perhaps, under one of those wide, flapping hats which all the country women wear, we may catch a glimpse of the delicious bride Fortini saw, walking with her lover-husband in that pleasant wood, where he had dreamed away a summer's afternoon ; or of that other, even fairer yet, bella quanto un sole, ancora che villana fusse, 244 GROU P OF COxNTADlNK, SHKWINC THK HAIS WORN IN THE SENESE THE MODERN PALIO with whom he journeyed so merrily to Florence, almost four hundred years ago.^ Past and present are so closely interwoven in Siena that it is hard to sever them ; and of this I am quite certain, that the more thoroughly we can recall the vanished years, the more we shall enjoy the Palio. But it is time to return to the modern crowd. Did you ever lie upon your back in the woods and watch the shimmer of the sunlight through the quivering leaves ? Did you ever see a field of wheat, besprinkled with poppies and ox-eyed daisies, swaying wave-like in the wind ? Did you ever look into a kaleidoscope ? If so, and if your imagination is strong enough to combine all of the impressions so received, you will have some idea of what the Piazza of Siena looks like on the evening of the 1 6th of August, when every foot of its broad surface is thronged with an expectant multitude. Colour there is in abundance. But that is not all. That which especially strikes the eye is the great straw hats worn by the contadine, combined with the perpetual and unwearied waving of fans — fans of all sizes and of every hue. The effect is absolutely unique. It is a scene which I cannot describe. Only by the three questions which I have asked above can I hope to convey to my readers any idea of that wonderful sight ; ^ The charm and beauty of the Sienese women is proverbial. Even the enemies of their city praised them. Thus Antonio Cammelli (1440-1502) sings : Che dirai tu delle donne da Siena? Che ne diro ? che le fur fatte in cielo : Acconce, sconce, in cuffia, in treccia, in velo Formose sono, e la citta n'e piena. Niuna di costor non par terrena. Se tornasser gli Dei fra '1 caldo e il gelo Apollo lassarebbe il carro e Delo, E Giove la sua patria alta e serena. Queste tutte hanno latte e sangue il viso ; Neri gli occhi di lor, candidi i denti, Dolce '1 sguardo, il parlare, e dolce '1 riso : Le trecce paion fili d'or lucenti : Se Ganimede fu bello o Narciso Al par di lor parrebbon lumi spenti. E simili present! Per lor disgrazia son qua giii concessi In man di quel Sanesi porci bessi. 245 PALIO AND PONTE unless, indeed, it may be likened to a parterre of gorgeous flowers, hovered over by a thousand butterflies. But while we have been talking time has flown. Hark ! the first gun is fired, and the Carabinieri on horseback are clearing the course. There is no ill-temper and no jostling, for an Italian crowd is as courteous and obliging as is the individual Italian ; and soon the circular track runs clear and bare, like a broad ribbon, encompassing the huge shallow basin of the Piazza. Then a second gun is heard, and, entering from the Via del Casato, the Contrade appear, one by one, splendid with the many-hued costumes of their various comparse. First comes the standard-bearer of the Commune, richly clad and gallantly mounted ; the great black and white banner of Siena flouting the breeze as proudly as it did of yore when more than ten score towns and cities owed fealty to the old Republic. Next march the trumpeters in the livery of the Palazzo, with plumes in their caps, and alle trombe i paventi di Ermisino divisati a 7iero e bianco, as has been the custom, if we may believe the chroniclers, ever since the days of Count Bandinello.^ Then follow the comparse of the ten Contrade which are to compete for the palio ; each comparsa being composed of a Capitano or Duce, of two Alfieri, of five pages, of a drummer, oi xhe. fantino on horseback, and of a barbaresco, who leads the horse which is to take part in the race. As each comparsa in turn enters the Piazza, the Alfieri display, to the roll of the drum, their two banners, gay with various colours, and ornamented with the crest of their Contrada. These are manoeuvred with extraordinary agility and grace. The Alfieri cause them to revolve about their necks, pass them between their legs, and whirl them around their bodies in a thousand fantastic ways ; ever and anon throwing them into the air and catching them again ; and, through all these complicated movements, manage to keep them displayed and fluttering. ^ TOMMASI, i. 121. 246 THE MODERN PALIO This sbandierata continues during the whole of the procession, and forms one of the most picturesque sights which it has ever been my lot to witness, the entire circuit of the Piazza being filled with waving banners, now sweeping gracefully along the ground, and now rushing upward thirty feet in air. In Siena there is a kind of school for instruction in this art, where novices may be initiated into all the secrets of the business. Immediately after the first ten Contrade, comes the carroccio drawn by four horses and decorated with the municipal oriflamme, with the banners of all the Contrade, and with the palio, ornato secondo Vantica foggia, da con- segnarsiin pre7nio alia Contrada vincitrice ; for, in these days, the palio itself is retained ; the silver basin, which surmounts it, being returned to the Commune. Lastly, the comparse of the seven Contrade which do not take part in the race make the circuit of the Piazza, with the same pomp and circumstance as did the other ten.^ And now, the question arises, whether or not I shall de- scribe the comparsa of each individual Contrada. It seems the proper thing to do, but it would occupy several pages, besides giving me a good deal of trouble ; while I doubt if it would particularly interest the reader, who has, probably, already heard more than enough of such matters in con- nection with the Palio of 1786. If he is in Siena, he can see the thing for himself. If he is elsewhere, I don't believe that he will care a rap to be acquainted with the fact that the colours of the Contrada dell' Oca are red, white and green, and that it displays upon its banner a goose sur- mounted by the royal crown, and decorated with the cross of Savoy ; or that the crest of the Torre is an elephant with a tower on his back, and that its colours are blood red with white and blue stripes. Moreover, a description of that sort ' I have described the procession as it is upon ordinary occasions. Sometimes it is more elaborate. In August 1898, for example, the cortege represented faithfully a popular festival of the 15th century, the costumes being reproduced from contemporary documents and designs. Of the procession in 1887, when the King and Queen visited Siena, a fall account will be found in the work of Signer Brogi. In his Storia e costuvti delle Contrade di Siena (Firenze, 1845), Hercolani says that the car which appears in the procession is intended to represent the carroccio taken from the Florentines at Montaperto. Compare p. 57 sttpra. 247 PALIO AND PONTE conveys nothing to the mind unless one states the relative proportions of the various colours, and the exact size and direction of the stripes ; and that would waste far too much time. Suffice it then to say that it would be difficult to name a colour or shade which is not represented in one or other of the comparse, and that an average rainbow would seem a hueless and pallid thing beside the scene in the Piazza of Siena on the evening of the Palio. The great clock in the Torre del Mangia strikes seven. Two stout ropes are stretched across the track close to the Costarella, of which one is long enough to entirely obstruct the course/ while the other is somewhat shorter, leaving a gap of, perhaps, a couple of yards in width, through which the horses and their riders may enter. Then, when they are all between the two ropes, the longer one will, at a given signal, be permitted to fall, by means of an ingenious piece of mechanism called the verrocchio ; and a start, as equal as possible under the circumstances, will be afforded to the several competitors. A drum sounds, and the ten fantini mount their horses and issue forth from the Corte del Potesta. But how different is their appearance now from that which they presented during the procession ! Then they were " gorgeous as the sun at midsummer," clothed on with samite and with gold. Now, all their bravery is discarded in favour of coarse canvas doublets, decorated on the back with the emblems of their several Contrade, and of trousers of the same humble material. Now, instead of glittering helmets crowned with nodding plumes, which, so lately, we admired, ^ This is the ieso canape of Alfieri's sonnet. Oh quai due snelli corridori alati Venir io veggio impazienti, alteri Al career, donde piu che stral leggeri Poi voleran da gara saettati. Eccoli al teso canape schierati. . . . It seems to correspond exactly enough with the calx or alba Imea of the Roman Circus. — See Smith's Did. of Antiqtnties, s.v. "Circus." As to Alfieri's sonnets on the Palio, compare A. Professione, op. cit., in the Bulkttino Senfsedi Storia Pairia for 1S99. 248 THE MODERN PALIO they wear plain metal head-pieces, painted with the colours of their Contrade — ugly enough, it is true, but affording an adequate protection against the nerbate which will so soon assail their wearers. And look ! Each man holds in his hand the famous nerbo — grasped, be it understood, not where, with paternal forethought, the municipal authorities have attached a string, intended to be wrapped about the wrist, but by the thin end, in order that the blows dealt may not lack in effectiveness and force. And here, I must perforce indulge in a digression if I would stand well with the ladies. I know that for them the number of blows exchanged between the jockeys matters nothing. A fantino with an eye more or less is an affair of infinitesimal importance. He is only a man. It is the fear lest the poor dear horses should suffer which wrings their tender hearts, and may rob the race of half its enjoy- ment. In fact, their mental attitude is very much that of the little girl, in one of the old Punch pictures, who is standing before a painting of the martyrs thrown to the wild beasts in the Coliseum, and bit"terly complaining that " there is one poor lion who hasn't a Christian to eat." I can, however, assure them that, in spite of the nerbate, there have been horses which loved the Palio, and, in a measure, shared in the general enthusiasm. Among these was the celebrated Stornino, whose name, some quarter of a century ago, was a word to conjure with in Siena. For, had he not won innumerable races? And did he not enter into the spirit of the sport as keenly as any Contradaiolo of them all } He was a small white horse, the property of a country curato, and generally as well behaved and docile a beast as you would wish to find. But when the time of the Palio drew near, he changed his habits and manifested extreme excitement and uneasiness. He ate little and at irregular intervals, refused to be ridden, and became fretful and hard to handle. Nor did he recover his wonted equanimity until such time as he was led into the Piazza. Then he realized that the long - sighed - for moment was at hand, and by every equine gesture displayed his satisfaction and delight. 249 PALTO AND PONTE It is a pretty story and a true one, being vouched for by no less a man than the author of the Nuova Guida} The horses move toward the starting post. The signal is given. The rope falls ; and they spring forward under a perfect hail of blows — blows, be it remembered, which are administered not by their own riders to stimulate their efforts, but by oxki^v fantini^ anxious to retard their progress. And this, notwithstanding Article X of the regulations governing the race, which prohibits the jockeys percuotersi jino a che, data la mossa, non saranno arrivati alia Fonte Gaia. Sometimes — so little is this rule regarded — they take time by the forelock to the extent of fiercely attacking an ad- versary even before the signal for the start is given and the rope has fallen. " Hold on ! " cried \h^fantino of the Oca, in August 1898, to the fantino of the Bruco, who had commenced a prema- ture assault. "Hold on! Wait till we've started." "Not I," replied the other, who had a cavallaccio of the worst. " If I don't hit you now, I'll never get a chance to." And so the race begins. Words fail me to describe the scene which follows. "That human ocean" — the expression is Signor Brogi's — " gives vent to a yell, so loud and so prolonged that it would be safe to wager that it can be heard for a mile around the city. "It is a fearful din ; a veritable crack of doom. . . . " Men and women scream ; leap into the air ; shout encouragement to the competitors; curse the laggards; invoke the Saints, especially S. Antonio, calling upon them to guide the horse of their particular Contrada to victory and to break the neck of the horse of the Contrada which they hate. The air is rent with the howls of a crowd beside itself with excitement, compared to which the blare of the trumpets and the shout of the people before Jericho must have been a whisper. Verily, if noise could shatter them, the palaces of Siena would have toppled long ago. " The most fanatical actually lose their voices with shout ^ E. A. Brigidi, Le Contrade, Siena, 1875. 250 THE MODERN PALIO ing, and, no longer able to speak, gesticulate like men possessed, and stamp upon the ground. . . . " In the midst of all this babel, the horses string out in a long line, and the fantiniy even when they know that they have no further hope of victory, strike out furiously with their nerbi, slashing and cutting at their neighbours, as if their lives depended upon the vigour of their blows." Not so many years ago, the jockeys were not confined to the use of the nerdo alone, but were permitted also to seize their opponents and to drag them off their horses. Then, often enough, \.-^o fantini, in a close, if unfraternal embrace, would fall together and fight out their battle on the ground, while their horses continued their wild career, with the result that occasionally one of them would succeed in winning the palio by his own unaided efforts.^ In this connection a story is told — whether it be legend or fact I do not know — of a small and ancient horse, which had run in so many palii that it knew every foot of the ground and every trick of the game, but which was unable to keep up with the others when weighted with a rider. To obviate this difficulty, the Contrada which received him constructed a bridle and reins of cardboard, carefully fashioned to look like leather, and directed their fantino to fall off as early in the race as possible. This he did, and the old horse carried off the prize alone ; all efforts to seize and stop him being rendered futile by the fragile character of his head-gear, which, of course, broke to pieces at the slightest pull. Formerly, behind the mattresses (which, as I have already explained, skirt the lower side of the track between the Via San Martino and the Cappella) it was customary to erect a stand, the occupants of the front seat of which were able to ^ R. Brogi, op. cii., p. 85. — At an earlier period, it would appear that such a victory would have been impossible. In the Falio alia Itinga of 1492, the horse of Cesare Borgia had won bare-backed, the jockey having flung himself off on purpose ; and the Deputies re- fused to award him the prize — See p. 88 supra. — While in the Zzda/doni of GiROi.A}>io M ACcm we read : " CiviETTA, 1664. — II 2 luglio, cioh dato che fu la mossa, casco il fantino della Lupa e il cavallo, era il primo, attese a correre e si mantenne primo, e perche quello della Civietta era il secondo fu ordinato dal Serenissimo Principe Mattias, fu ordinato, darsi a questa Con- trada ; perche 11 Palio fu risoluto lo venca il fantino e no il cavallo." 251 PALIO AND PONTE rest their elbows upon the top of the said mattresses. Here, in 1864, a curious incident occurred. The Montone and the Torre were well ahead of the ruck ; and the latter was gaining. As they rounded the so-called voltata di S. Mariino, the abruptness of the turn, of course, sent them close under the mattresses ; and there, the Torre attempting to take the lead, the fantino of the Montone naturally began to use his nerbo with vigour and precision. But, fortunately for the former, immediately above their heads sat a good lady whose sympathies were entirely with the Torre ; and she, leaning forward, caught the jockey of the Montone by his helmet, ad- juring him not to smite. The unexpected check dismounted him, and in his fall he brought his rival down as well. The two horses finished the race alone, that of the Torre being foremost — a fact whereof sufficient evidence is to be found in the lists of the winners of the Palio, preserved in the archives of the various Contrade ; since, in most of these, under the date of August 1864, we may read the significant words : " Torre, rtcbato" Memorable, too, among palii was the race of July 2nd, 1788, which was run by seven Contrade only, since the Giraffa and the Pantera were so determined that the Lupa, which had a cavallo bono, should not win, that they willingly sacrificed their own chances of victory to prevent their enemy from even starting. First, they held him back with a tempest of nerbate, and then, as if that were not sufficient, all three fantini descended from their horses, and fought with such fury in the middle of the track that they had to be separated by the soldiers ; while the Chiocciola, which had been looked upon as a rank outsider, carried off the prize. And now the gun has been fired for the last time, and the race is lost and won. In a moment the track is filled with the people of the victorious Contrada. They crawl under or vault over the barriers ; they rush wildly forward from every part of the Piazza, and, at the risk of being trampled under foot by such of the horses as have not yet been pulled up, fling themselves 252 THE MODERN PALIO upon their fantino. They embrace him ; they kiss him ; they struggle to clasp his hand ; they raise him upon their shoulders, and, with deafening shouts of exultation, bear him to the judges' stand, where hangs the coveted palio, around which are already waving all their banners, mingled with those of the allied Contrade which have come to do honour to their triumph. "This enthusiasm," says La Farina, "enables us to understand how a victor in the Olympic Games could be deemed worthy of statues and of temples, of the songs of the Greek maidens, of the adoration of the whole of Greece, and of the odes of Pindar, worthy of Zeus alone. ... In this mediaeval Sienese festival still lives the vivacity, the warmth, the energy, which made us great in art and in civilization, which set a Cathedral in every little town, and which reared those many public and private monuments, in whose presence the foreigner still stands speechless with wonder and with delight." ^ At last, the silken palio, surmounted by its silver basin, is lowered. A hundred hands are held out to receive it, and a fresh roar of triumph breaks forth from the delighted crowd. Preceded by the drummers, and followed by the Alfieri with their flags, the glorious proof and fruit of victory is borne to the Church of Santa Maria di Provenzano, where thanks are rendered to Our Lady, and where the fantino and his horse are blessed a second time, while the sacred edifice is filled with waving banners, and resounds to delirious cries of joy and exultation.^ And so. Our Lady of Provenzano having been duly honoured, the triumphal procession departs for its own Con- trada, to render thanks once more ; and this time to its own especial Saint, in the church where a few hours before the horse ^ See the Storia e costiiini ddle Contrade di Siena del Conte Antonio Hercolani, Firenze, 1845. - This visit to the Church of Santa Maria di Provenzano, although undoubtedly as much a part of the ceremonies proper to the day as even the benediction of the horse (see Aquarone, Dante in Siena, edition of 1889, p. 35), is often omitted ; and that too on the 2nd of July — the Festa of that Madonna — since the victors, in their excitement, not unfrequently carry the palio direct to their own church, to give laud and honour to their own Saint, entirely forgetting the claims of Our Lady. PALIO AND PONTE ^ndfaniino received their first benediction. Thus, if it be the Oca that is victorious, the palio will be carried to the house That saw Saint Catherine bodily, Felt on its floors her sweet feet move And the hve light of fiery ov Burn on her beautiful strange face, and will there be left upon the high altar close to Neroccio's exquisite statue of the Saint. Nor do I think that she will be troubled thereby. She was too full of kindliest human sym- pathy for that ; while, if the story which the Pisans tell of her be true,^ she may even rejoice that the good people of Fonte- branda have brought home their trophy to her shrine without injury to life or limb ; for surely, if, amidst the joys of Paradise, she still remembers this world of sorrow and of sin, the home of her childhood, the sheer street and the pungent smell of its tanneries must be nearer to her heart than the alien city, for all its magnificent sweep of quay and broader and more level ways. The Contrada is full of men with fiaschi in their hands, for the Captain has given orders that all comers shall drink at his expense, and wine flows like water. Merriment reigns supreme, and the fantino is the hero of the hour. And, in fact, the poor devil deserves some compensation for all that he has gone through. Very rarely is he a member of the Contrada for which he rides, and generally not even a Sienese. His employers fully realize that he is not stirred by the same patriotism as they are, and that for him the only considerations are pecuniary ones. Accordingly, he has been practically imprisoned ever since he entered the service of the Contrada, and has never, under any circumstances, been allowed to go about alone. Otherwise attempts would have been made to corrupt him, and he would probably have sold the race for a larger sum than he could have hoped to make by winning it. Like the Condottieri of the 14th century, who were hired by the Commune to fight their battles for them, he has been the subject of profound distrust ; but, like them, in the hour of ^ See p. 134 supra. 254 PAGE OF JHE COM KAl>A L»K1, BRUCO THE MODERN PALIO victory, he becomes a hero — nay, almost a demi-god. Nor are the women less willing than the men to show their appreciation of his merits. Kisses he may have in abundance from pretty girls who, on any other occasion, would repulse his advances with scorn ; and perhaps, if he be so minded, even dearer favours yet. On the morning following the race, all the members of the comparsa, dressed as they were at the time of the procession, and accompanied by the horse and the fantino, carry the palio through the city — avoiding, however, those Contrade with which they have old scores to settle. They perform sbandierate under the windows of the Signori Protettori, and distribute sonnets in praise of their Contrada and of its invitto campione, to whom are imputed a world of noble qualities.^ As to him, poor fellow, he does not seem much puffed up by the praises so lavishly showered upon him, and that, often enough, for the best of reasons, that he is quite incapable of reading them. Everywhere money and drinks are given to the youthful hero, until, before evening, he has acquired a little hoard which should suffice to support him for the best part of a year, and a headache which will keep him in bed for several days. Lastly, a week or two after the race, a banquet is given by the victorious Contrada. Tables are set out in one of the streets, which is ornamented for the occasion with banners and with lights ; ^ while from the windows are hung tapestry or brightly coloured tablecloths or spotless linen. Sometimes, too, the horse himself, decked with gala trappings, and exquisitely groomed, graces the festivities with his presence, standing at the foot of the table, before an improvized manger filled to overflowing with the most succulent and enticing forage ; and always, if it be the Oca which has won the Palio, one or more live geese form a prominent feature in the decorations, irresistibly recalling to our minds the days of the * See Note IV. , at the end of the chapter. ^ As to the mediaeval custom of closing up the streets and using them for feasting, compare G. CONTI, Fatti e Atteddoti, etc., op. cit., p. 7. PALIO AND PONTE free Communes, when the Signoria of Siena kept a wolf in the Sala del Mappamondo, and when the Marzocco of Florence was typified by uno giovane e bello leone, which was confined nella corte del palagio de Priori legato con una catena} The geese, too, are tied in some manner, and I imagine that, of all those who are present, they are probably the least gratified by the proceedings of the evening. The people feast till midnight. All is mirth and jollity ; and even if, by accident, some too patriotic Ocaiolo should drink a glass of wine more than is good for him, it does no harm whatever ; for the wine of Chianti is no breeder of enmity or strife, but rather tends to fill him who uses it with love and charity to all men. Such, Reader, is the Palio ; and, in reviewing its curious mixture of religious rites and purely secular enthusiasms, it is well not only to remember its origin, but also to bear in mind the fact that, in the words of a modern writer, " Italy is above all lands the home of human nature — simple, unabashed even in the presence of its Maker," and that "perhaps we do not sufficiently account for the domesticity of the people of the Latin countries in their every-day-open church. They are quite at their ease there, whereas we are as unhappy in ours as if we were at an evening party ; we wear all our good clothes, and they come into the houses of their Father in any rag they chance to have on, and are at home there." ^ And, strano-e as their tumultuous method of giving praise to God and to His Mother must necessarily seem to our colder Northern temperaments, they are quite as likely to be right as we are. Indeed, I have little doubt that most of us would be as much scandalized as Michal was, should we behold another David ''leaping and dancing before the Lord." For us, perfunctory praises offered up in the words of a rigid and monotonous liturgy are more respectable, and therefore, of course, more pleasing to the Almighty. 1 GiGLl, Diario, ii. 260 (edition cited); Misc. Stor. Setiese, vol. i. (1893), pp. 28, 29 ; G. ViLLANi viii. 62 ; Diario d' Anonimo Fiorentino, vol. vi. of the Documenti di Storia italiana (cited supra)^^. 453 ; etc. etc. Compare also p. 13 note 2 supra. 2 W. D. HOWELLS, Tuscan Cities (The English Library edition, 1891), p. 107. 256 THE MODERN PALIO NOTES I In connection with the perdurable character of the enmity between the hostile Contrade, the following poem is interesting. It is attributed to Girolamo Gigli, and was written in August 17 13, on the occasion of a solemn peace made between the Torre and the Onda. The two Contrade had been at open warfare ; a Torraiolo had been stabbed, and his assailant had taken refuge in the Church of S. Salvatore. The friends of the wounded man attempted to break into the sacred edifice ; and the Illmo. Sig. Auditore, together with the Governor of the Fortress, interfered to make peace. A solemn contract of friendship was drawn and attested by a notary ; and in memory of the event the Onda changed the colours of its banner from black and white, to blue and white. The poem in question bears the following title : — // Sindaco cT Asciano e quello di Sovicelle ritrovandosi in piazza in tempo che si faceva pace fra le due contrade Onda e Torre, Asciano parla : Sovicille risponde : La Torre in piazza e 1' Onda ? Messer si. fan pace fra di loro? o questo no. se ne roga il notaro? o questo si. dunque e pace solenne ? o questo no. Si cambiano 1' insegne ? o questo si. dunque son fatti amici ? o questo no. h pace di Marcone? o questo si. h affronto a' protettori ? o questo no. II Prence lo comanda? o questo si. temeranno la fune ? o questo no. hanno piu braccio che cuore? o questo si. Havranno 1' armi in mano? o questo no. in culo tutti i paceri ? o questo si. si daranno sul capo ? o si o no. (See the Miscellanea Se7tese di Erudizione Storica, Anno VI. Marzo-Aprile 1903, pp. 62-64.) It is curious to note that the Torre and the Onda are still at enmity. R 257 PALIO AND PONTE II The Seventeen Contrade Terzo di Citth. 1. CoNTRADA BELLA Tartuca — The Ward of the Tortoise. 2. CoNTRADA BELLA Chiocciola — The Ward of the Snail. 3. CoNTRABA BELLA Selva — The Ward of the Wood. 4. CoNTRABA bell' Aquila — The Ward of the Eagle. 5. CoNTRABA bell' Onba — The Ward of the Wave. 6. Contraba BELLA Pantera — The Ward of the Panther. Terzo di San Martino. 7. Contraba bi Val bi Montone — The Ward of Val di Montone. 8. Contraba bella Torre — The Ward of the Tower. 9. Contraba bel Leocorno — The Ward of the Unicorn. 10. Contraba bella Civetta — The Ward of the Owl. 11. Contraba bel Nicchio — The Ward of the Shell. Terzo di Camollia. 12. Contraba bel Drago — The Ward of the Dragon. 13. Contraba bell' Oca — The Ward of the Goose. 14. Contraba bella Giraffa — The Ward of the Giraffe. 15. Contraba bel Bruco — The Ward of the Caterpillar. 16. Contraba bella Lupa — The Ward of the She-wolf. 17. Contraba bell' Istrice — The Ward of the Porcupine. [Such of the Contrade as are called by the names of animals have adopted those animals as their emblems. Thus the Lupa bears as its cognizance a she- wolf suckling the Twins, the Civetta an owl, and the CJiiocciola a snail. The Selva displays upon its banner a rhinoceros beneath a tree, the Onda a dolphin, the Val di Montone a ram rampant, and the Torre an elephant with a tower on its back. Of all the Contrade, the Nicchio alone is not represented by any living thing, assuming as its device a shell surmounted by the Grand-ducal crown.] 258 jnuz THE MODERN PALIO III Benedictio Equorum et Animalium Adjutorium nostrum in nomine Domini ; Qiti fecit ccehcm et terram. Domine, exaudi orationem meam ; Et clamor metis ad te veniat. Dominus vobiscum ; Et cum> spiritu tuo. Oremus. Deus refugium nostrum et virtus : adesto piis Ecclesiae tuse precibus. Auctor ipse pietatis, et praesta, ut quod fideliter petimus, efficaciter consequamur. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. Oremus. Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui gloriosum beatum Antonium variis tentationibus probatum, inter mundi hujus turbines illsesum abire fecisti ; concede famulis tuis, ut et prseclaro ipsius proficiamus exemplo, et a praesentis vita; periculis ejus, mentis et intercessione liberemur. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen, Oremus. Bene ^ dictionem tuam, Domine, ha;c animalia ac- cipiant, qua corpore salventur ; et ab omni malo per inter- cessionem beati Antonii Hberentur. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. [Deinde aspergatur aqua denedicta.) 259 PALIO AND PONTE IV XVI AGOSTO MDCCCXCVIII AL MERITO E VALORE IN ACERBA ETA INCOMPARABILI DEL FANTINO ANGELO VOLPI cognominato BELLING CUI LA CGNTRADA BELLA TARTUCA DEVE l'oNORE E l'aLLEGREZZA INSPERATI DELLA 34^ VITTORIA NELLA CGRSA ALLA TGNDA TRIBUTO Dl GRATITUDINE E DI LODE. SGNETTG Nuovo trionfo nell' equestre agone onor, letizla alia Tartuca accresce ; ed ai fervidi evviva il tuo si mesce nome, o invitto di noi gentil campione. Grecia di lauro profondea corone agli Olimpici eroi : 1' alta or ne cresce fama 1' eta, fama che all' ardue e sprone opre onde ignavia e codardia rincresce. Festoso a Te dei nostri cori il grido che r affetto appalesa e 1' esultanza, fabbro per noi d'onor, concordi alziamo. Sempre memore Tu, sempre a noi fiido quel plauso renderai ch' oggi a Te diamo di novelle vittorie alma speranza. 260 INDEX Abbadia, S. Salvatore, 60. Adota di Canaccio, 180. Advocata Senensiurn, 24 seq., et passim. Affronti, 122, 123. Aguto, Giovanni. See Hawkzuood, Sir John. Alba lifiea, 248 n. Alberico da Romano, 17, 21 n. Albertus Magnus, j'^. Aldobrandeschi, the, 60. Alessandrino, S. Pietro, 5, 68,81, 83, 84, 89, 212. Alexander VII., celebrations in Siena on the occasion of his elevation to the Papacy, 216. Alfieri, or standard-bearers, 116, 117, 168, 169 n., 246. Alfieri, Vittorio, 129, 130, 136, 248. Ambrogio Sansedoni, the Blessed. See Sansedoni^ Ambrogio. Amiata, Monte, 62. Andrea Doria, 45. Angiolieri, Cecco, 244. Anguillesi, Dott. Giovanni, 129. Animals kept by the Communes, I3n., 256; used as prizes for palii, 15, 16. Ansano, S., 84, 216, Antenne, 11, 37, 38 n., 118, 122. Aquila, the Contrada dell', 211, 220, 25S. Aquinas, Saint Thomas, J^)' Arbia, the, 17, 105. Ardengheschi, 60. Arezzo, 25, 87 ; besieged by the Perugians, 21-22. Armati, 148. See Battaglia de' Sassi. Armour used in the Giuoco del Ponte, 1 1 8-2 1 ; in the Battaglia de' Sassi, 148-49 ; in the Giuoco di Elmora, 179-80, 194. Arms of Pisa, 13 n. ; of Siena, 178 ; of the Emperor, the People and the Commune, 86. Arfi, the, 99. Asciano, 26. Asina/e, 5, 208-10. Asses, hurled from mangonels, 20, 233 ; hanged by the Pisans, 22. See Asinaie. Assumption, the Festival of the. See Fesia deW Assunta. Athens, the Duke of, 9. Azzo Visconte, 20. Backgammon, I54n. Badia di S. Michele in Quarto, 70, 71. Baglioni, Astorre, 143. Baglioni, Rinaldo, 41. Baldacchino, 6 n. Balearic Isles, 93. Ball, the game of. See Palla, Pallone, etc. Ballad on the taking of Torniella, 80 n. Ballo tondOj i89n. Baloon, the game of, I74n. Balzana, the, 178. Balzetti, Tommaso, Bishop of Siena, 27 n. Bande da Terzi, 1 89 n. Banditores, 11, 56. Banners of the Terzi, 31 n. Banners, benediction of. See Benedic- tion of banners. Baptism, mediaeval ritual of, 38. Barbarossa, the Emperor Frederick, 38, 39- Barberi, 87, 229. Barbireschi, 57 n., 87 n. Bardi, Giovanni de', his Discorso, 163, and Bk. II. c. \\\. passitn. Baschi, 60. Bastia, 22. Battaglia de' Sassi. A form of Mazzascudo, 138 ; played in many cities, 138-39; its connection with the Ludus graticulorum, 1 39 ; played in Perugia between the Parte disopra and the Parte disotto, 145 ; where played, 145-46 ; at what season of the year, 146-48 ; descrip- tion of the game, 148-52 ; super- stition concerning it, 153; its revival by Braccio da Montone, 153 ; its abolition, 154-60. Battaglia generate and Battagliaccia. See Giuoco del Ponte. Bazzi, Giovanni Antonio. See Sodoma. Beatrice Portinari, 11. 261 INDEX Beatrice Violante of Bavaria, 220, 221. Becchina, 244. Beggars at the Festival of the Assump- tion of Pisa, 15 n. Benda, the, 45 n. Benediction of banners, 116, 129, 137 ; of horses, 57, 241-43, 253,259. Benevento, battle of, 105. Benincasa, Caterina. See Catherine^ St, oj Siena. Benozzo Gozzoli, 108. Benvenuto di Giovanni, 85. Bernardino, San, 154 seq..^ 162 n., 184, 210. Bernino, the cheesemonger, 189. Betta, 46, 244. Betton a . Biccherna, the officials of, 56, 57 n., 219 ; entrusted with the management of the Palio, 216, 218, 219, 220 ; ex- tracts ixQva. the Books of, 90-92. See Tavolette dipinie. Bichi, Alessandro, 44. Biena, La, 26, 33. Bishops of Siena, their indirect power of legislation, 27 n. Boat-racing, 12, 15. Bocca degli Abati, 34. Bogomilians, the, 73. Bologna, 16, 21, 24, 64 n., 139. Bombarde^ invention of, 78 n. Boniface VIII., 13 n. Borghi, 58 n. Borgia, Cesare, 87-88, 251 n. Bozzone, the, 33. Braccio da Montone, 153. HxandaLno, \.h.Q pazzo di Crisio, 52, 184, 215. Bravium, 7. Brennus, 97. Brevi, 89. Brigata spendereccia^ 191. Bruco, the Contrada del, 204, 226, 233, 238 n., 250, 258. Bufalate, the, 4 n., 5, 12, 207-8, 212. Buffoons, 56, 79. Bull-fights, 3, 4n., 5, 216. See Caccia de* tori, Ludus tJiauri, etc. Buonaguida Luccari, 27 seq., 39. Buonfiglio, Bishop, his "Constitutions," II. Burning of Vanities, 155. Caccia de' tori, 190, 201-7. Cacciaconti, the, 60. Cacciaguerra, the, 60. Cacciaguida, 7. Calcinaia sull' Amo, 26. Ca/r/^, the, 5, 134, 161-75, 188, i9on. ; Giovanni de' Bardi's work on the game, 161 ; principal authorities. 163 n.; revived in 189S, 164 ;. its resemblance to football, 164 ; its origin, 164 ; where played, 165 ; description of the game, 165 seq. ; the Canto del fare al Calcio, 171-72 ; Richard Lassels' account of the game, 172-74 ; various famous games, 174 ; instance of player running with the ball as in the Rugby game, igon. Calendar, the Pisan, different from those of Florence and Siena, 109 n. Cammelli, Antonio, his sonnet on the Women of Siena, 245 n. Camollia, the battle of, 45-46. Camollia, Porta, attack upon the, 20, 39- Campaldino, the battle of, 9. Campiglia d'Orcia, 25, 39, 60. Campiglia, Pepo Visconti da, 25. Campo, the. See Piazza del Campo. Cajnpo di Battaglia, 145-46. Campus Fori, 179, 193. ^qg Piazza del Catnpo. Candles, offerings of, 60 n. ; at Perugia, 142 n., 146 n.,; at Pisa, 14, 57 n. ; at Siena, 57 seq. ^ Capiiula jostre faciende, the, 193 n. Capponi, Gino, 106. Carmignani, Giovanni, 129. Carri, the, of the Contrade, 223-29. Carroccio, the, i, 11, 35, 36 n., 37, 38 n., 57 n., 247, 247 n. Cartella di sfida, 114-16; how pre- sented, 114 n. ; its form, 115, 116. See Giuoco del Ponte. Cascina, Borgo di, Pisans routed at the, 13 n., 22. Casole, 60. Castel Senio, 177. Castel Vecchio, 177, 179. Castruccio Castracane, 20, 106. Catherine, St, of Siena, 1x6, 134, 241, 254. Cattle market, 55. Cavalcanti, Guido, 161. CavaUi7ii, 10. Cecco Angiolieri, 244. Cecco Bau, 204 n. Celatini, 117, 124, 134. Cestarella, the, 179, 180, 194, 195. Charlemagne, 178. Charles of Anjou, 68, 74. Charles V., the Emperor, 46, 47, 49, 50, 53, 188. Charles VIII., 112. Chianciano, 60, 61. Chianti, 87, 256. Chiassi, 66. Chigi Fabio. See Alexander VII. Children's Battle, the, 150, 151. See Battaglia de^ Sassi. 262 INDEX ChimentelH, Valerio, the Ofatiojtes of, 112, 129. Chinsica Gismondi, 96. Chiocciola, the Contrada della, 200 n., 202 n., 205, 221, 227, 232-33, 237, _ 252, 258. Chiusi, 147. Cini, Giovanni di Lorenzo, 46. Citici dilctta di Maria, the, of Girolamo Gigli, 4 n., 38, 40. Civetta, the Contrada della, 205, 258. Clement VII., 44, 45. Clergy forbidden to dress in red or green, 11. Colle di Val d'Elsa, 25, 36 ; battle of, 33 n- Colotuhfia, La, 78 n. Colonna, Lavinia, 143. Colours preferred by the mediaeval Italians, the, lo-ii. Comnndanti, 121, 122 n., 124. CompagJiia del Maggio, 141, 142, 143. Cojiipagnia della Monteluce, 147, 159. Compagnia del Sasso, 141, 142, 143, 147, 159- Conipagnie della Citta of Perugia, i4on. Compagnie delle Porte, 141-44, 156. Companies, Military, in Pisa, 99, 100, 102, 112 ; in Siena, 200-1. Coinparsa. See Contrade of Siena, Consuls of Pisa, 93, 94 n. Contrade of Siena, the. Origin and earliest records of the, 199-201 ; the part taken by them in civic festivals and games, 202-30 ; names of the modern Contrade, 202, 258 ; the Palio of July inaugurated by them, 215-16 (see Palio) ; their macchine, coniparse and carri, 202-5, 223-28, 247 ; their mutual enmities, 231 seq., 257 ; emblems and banners, 258 n. Corradino, 11. Corrado, S., 22. Corsa air anello, 222 n. Corsica, 93, 105. Cortine, le, 26. Cortona, 60, 87. Cosimo de' Medici. See Medici. Costanzo, S., 144 n. Cotono, 60. Crespolto, S., 22. Croci di cera bencdette, 73. Cuffia, 179-80, 194. Cuisine of the Sienese, 59 n. Dancing. In Perugia, its origin, 144 n. ; suppressed by Fra Bernardino of Siena, I56n. ; in Siena, 188, 189 n., 200 n., 201, 207. Dante Alighieri, quoted or referred to, I, 7, II, 12, 34, 37, i43n., 153. Dati, Goro di Stagio, his account of the Festival of S. Giovanni in Florence, 8-9, 85. Dedications of Siena to the Virgin, Bk. I. c. ii. Devil, the. See Familiar Spirits. Devil-lore, 68, 69. Devotion. See Devozione. Dcvozione, 143 n., 144 n. Disfida, wz. See Cartella di sfida. Dodici, the, 82-83. » Domini canis, 72)- Don Franzese, Captain of the Spanish garrison, 53. Drago, the Contrada del, 200 n., 204, 211, 225, 229, 241 n., 258. Dragon, St George and the, 76. Drappo verde, the, 12 n. Duccio di Buoninsegna, the Ancona of, 42, 48 n. Eagle, the emblem of Pisa, 13, 13 n., 22, 104. Ececheiria, the, 125. Edifizi, 223. Elba, 93 n. Elmora, Giuoco delV. Origin of the game, 179 seq. ; the name derived from elmora, " a helmet," 1 79 ; armour worn by the players, 179- 80, 194 ; stone-throwing a con- comitant of the game, 180; the Battle of 1291, 181 ; supplanted by the Pugna, 182 ; statutory pro- visions concerning the game, 194 - 96. Emblems of the Contrade, 258 n. Empoli, the Parliament of, 105. Ercolano, S., 7 n., 65 n., 144, 146. Este, Marquises of, 20. Estit/w. See Lira or Estimo. Etymology, mediaeval, 97. Eurialo Morani Ascolano, 244. Ezzelino da Romano, 16, 17. Familiar spirits, 33. Fantini, nicknames of the, 89. Farinata, 105, 231. Far le Mostre, II. See Giuoco del Ponte. Ferrara, 16. Ferrari, Ferruccio, his bibliography of the Giuoco del Ponte, 131. Festa deir Assunta, at Ferrara, 16 ; at Pisa, 12 seq. ; at Siena, 55 seq.^ et passim. ^ Festa de'' Ceri at Gubbio, 182 n. Festa di S. Floriano, at Jesi, 222 n. Festa di S. Giovanni Battista at Florence, 7-9. 263 INDEX Fesia della Porcheita, 17 n. Festa di S. Ranieri at Pisa, 130. Feudal nobles, reduced to indigence, 61 n. ; formed the cavalry branch of the Communal armies, 98. See Milites et populus. Feudal service rendered by Siena to the Virgin, 24, 41, et passim. Fiesta de los carros, 223. Fisticuffs, game of. See Pugna, Giuoco delle. Flagellants, the, 18, 52. Florence, rapacity of, 82 ; bad faith and cynical insolence of, 81 ; evil results of subjection to, 107 ; her calumnies of Siena, 33 n. See Festa di S. Giovanni Battista, Giuoco del Calcio, Palio, Potensc, etc. etc. Folgare da S. Gimignano, 191. Fontebrandini, the, 240-41. Fonte Gaia, 2, 190, 216, 250. Football. See Calcio. Football in America, 151, 164 n. Forti, 122. Fortini, 244. Francigena, Via, 44, 63, 70. Frederick I. See Barbarossa. Frederick II., 17. Frederick III., 192, Gabella, the Books of. See Tavolette dipinte. Galece lignecr qiice Cistas vacant, i8on. Gallo, the Contrada del, 219 n. Gambacorti, Giovanni, 106. Gambacorti, Pietro, 14, 87, 109. Games. See Giuoco. Gavina, the, 207. Genoa, 105. Gentile Sermini, 187. George, St, Protector of Siena, 58, 75. Gerfalco, 60. Geri del Bello, 153. Gerson, 151. Giordano, the Count, 26, 33, 37. Giraffa, the Contrada della, 200 n., 204, 221, 228, 252, 258. Girdle, the, with which the Cathedral of Pisa was surrounded, 14, I5n. Giuncarico, 60. Giuochi Giorgiani, 75-76. Giuoco del Calcio. See Calcio. Giuoco del Mazzascudo, 5, 98, 100-5, 138, 139, 140, 198 n., and Bk. II. passi/n. Giuoco del Pallone. See Pallone. Giuoco del Pome, 139, 162, 175-76. Giuoco del Ponte. Played on Ponte di Mezzo of Pisa, various opinions concerning the 95; its of the game of Mazzascudo, 98. (See Giuoco del Mazzascudo.) The Battagliaccia and Battaglia gene- rale, 112, 113; Council of War, 113; election of officers, 113; the cartel of defiance, 113-16; the benediction of the banners, 116; Luogo d4:l Rcndevos, 116; // Far le Mostre, 117; armour of the players, 11 8-21 ; the Battle, 122- 25 ; IlTrionfo, 125-27 ; the banquet of the victors, 127-28 ; literature of the game, 128-31 ; reason of its abandonment, 131-36. Giuoco delle Pugna. See Pugna, Giuoco delle. Giuoco de' Sassi. See Ba a g ia ' Sassi. Gonzaga Vincenzo, 139. Gregory X., 68, 74. Grosseto, i, 45, 60, 61. Guarini, G. B., 129. Gubbio, 138, 182 n. Guicciardini, 107. Guilds. See Arti. Hawkwood, Sir John, 164. Henr>' II. of England, ordinance of, 152. Holy League, the, 44. Horatius Codes, 98, 129. Hunting, 163 n. apocryphal Istrice, the Contrada 225, 258. deir, 205, 219, origin, 96-98 ; a local development Jesi, the Festival of St Florian at, 222 n. Jews burned in Siena, 2. Jockeys. See Fanti7ii. Knights, the creation of, 2, 104. Lanciatori, 148. See Battaglia de' Sassi. Lasca, II, 139, 140. Lassels, Richard, his account of the Giuoco del Calcio, 172-74. Lauds, dramatic, 144 n. Lecceto, the Monastery of, 71. Leocorno, the Contrada del, 205, 220, 226, 258. Leofante, the Contrada del, 205. See Torre, Contrada della. Leone, the Contrada del, 219 n. Lipari Islands, the, 108. Lira or Estivio. 58 n. Liutprand, Bishop of Verona, 93 n. Livrea, 167 n., et passim. Loggiati, 64. Longobards, the, 178. Lorenzetti, Ambrogio, 66, i89n. 264 INDEX Lorenzo de' Medici. See Medici. Lucca, 20, 36, 97, 104, 105, 106, 14611., 183. Ludi, 19. Ludi Perusini. See Battaglia dd Sassi. Ludus ad Massa-Scutum. See Giuoco del Mazzasctido. Ludus g}-aticuloru>n, 1 39, Ludus thauri, \ii,'j, 159. Ludus zardi, 2. Luogo del kendevos. See Giuoco del Ponte. Lupa, the Contrada della, 204, 23811. 252, 258. Lyons, Giuoco del Calcio played at, 175- Macchi, Girolamo, 215, 2i9n., 238 n., 251 n. Macchifie, 202, 205, 206, 223. Machiavelli, 87, 198. Madonna, the. See Advocata Se7ien- siuni. Madonna del Bel Verde, 40. Madonna del Bordone, 42. Madonna di Fontegiusta, 40. Madonna delle Grazie, 43. Madonna Laura, 46 n. Madonna degli occhi grossi, 42. Madonna of the Porta Camollia, 46. Madonna di Provenzano. See Proveii- zano, Our Lady of. Madonna del Voto. See Madonna delle Grazie. Malborghetto, 64. Malcucinato, 64. Malena, the, 26, 33, 36. Malfango, 64. Manfred, 27, 28, 35, 105, 231. Mangia, the. See Torre del Maiigia. Mangone, Count Alberto di, 20. Mantle of the Virgin spread over Siena, 34, 46. Mantua, 20. Maremma, the Sienese, 41, 87, 178, 213. Maria Luisa, Queen of Etruria, 136. Maria Maddalena of Austria, iii. Mariano da Ghinazano, 43. Marignano, 53, 199, 213. Mary, the name of, 38. Mary Magdalene, St, the Palio of, 84, 89. Mary, the Virgin. See Advocata Senefisiuni, Madonna, etc. Marzocco, the, 13 n., 256. Massaini, Onorata, 244. Massa Marittima, 60, 230. Mas sari, 59 n. Matthias, Prince, of Tuscany, 217, 251 n. May-day, 141 n. Mazzasctido. See Giuoco del Mazza- scudo. Medici, Averardo de', 106. Medici, Cosimo L de', Duke of Florence and Siena, 53, 108, 199. Medici, Cosimo II. de', iii, 215. Medici, Ferdinando I. de', iii, 207. Medici, Ferdinando II. de', 95. Medici, Francesco I. de', 139, 161, 213. Medici, Giovan Gastone de', 133. Medici, Giovanni de', 108. Medici, Leonora de', 139. Medici, Lorenzo de', II Magnifico, 87, 108. Meloria, battle of, 105. Mendozza, Don Diego Hurtado de, 47, 51- Michelotti, Biordo de', 143. Milites etpopulus, 36 n. Miraculous images of Our Lady, 40. Mirror of Justices, The, 152. Missere, the word, 109 n. Modena, 20, 145. Mogdhid, 96, 97. Money, the purchasing power of, in the Middle Ages, 87. Money coined to commemorate victory over enemies, 20-22, 38, 104. Montaia, 26. Montalcinello, 60. Montalcino, 26, 60, 190. Montalto, battle of, 26, 39. Montaperto, battle of, i, 17-18, 2,}^ seq., 105, 239. Montauto, Federigo, of the Counts of, Governor of Siena, 210-12, 223 n. Montecatini, battle of, 106. Monte Cellesi, 20. Montemaggio, battle of, 38. Montepertuso, siege of, 74. Montepulciano, 7n., 26, 60, 81. Monteriggione, 41, 59 n. Monti (A 'Siitnd,, the, 41 n. Monticello, 60. Montluc, Blaise de, 189, 244. Morions bequeathed by will for use in the Giuoco del Ponte, 120 n. Mottoes on Targoni, 120. Museo Civico of Pisa, 94, 109, 120. Musetto, 96, 97. Mustiola, S., in Chiusi, Convent of, 147. Mutilation of criminals, 146, 146 n. Nerbo, nerbata, 63 n., and Bk. III. c. ii. passim. Nero, 96. Nestor, 96. Nicchio, the Contrada del, 224, 258. Nove, Monte d^, 41, 41 n., 44. Nove, the Signori, 62, 64, 185. Novcschi. See Nove, Monte de\ 125, 265 INDEX 224, 250, 205, Oca, the Contrada dell', 205, 222 232, 233, 234, 237, 241, 247, 254, 255, 256, 258. Olympic Games, 96, 125, 253. Onda, the Contrada dell', 200 n., 212, 221, 227, 257, 258. Onofrio, Saint, Palio of, 9-10. Opera del Duovto, 58, 59 n., 61. Oplomachia pisana, the, of Camillo Borghi, 95. Orbetello, 61. Ordo officiorum ecclesia senensis^ 69. Orso, the Contrada dell', 219 n. Orvieto, 25, 36, 138, 147. Our Lady of August, P^estival of, Bk. I. c. iii. Our Lady of Grace. See Madonna delle Grazie. Our Lady of Provenzano. See Proven- zano, Our Lady of. Paint for the face, 154. Palio, derivation and various meanings of the term, 6-7. The mediseval Palio. At Bologna, 16, 17 n., 64 n. ; at Ferrara, 16 ; at Florence, 7-10; at Lucca, 104 n. ; at Pisa, 12-15; at Padua, 16; at Verona, 12, 16, 64 n.; and see Bk. L c. \. passim. Palii of Siena. The Palio of S. Ansano, 84 ; of S. Bernardino, 210; of S. Pietro Alessandrino, 83 ; of St Mary Magdalene, 84, 89 ; of Mid - August, 62-66 ; of the B. Ambrogio Sansedoni, 68 seq. Prices paid for Palii^ 56, 56 n,, 62, 86, 90-92. The Palio alia lunga and the Palio alia tonda, 85 seq., 213, 230. The modern Palio, its origin, 215. See Bk. IIL cc. \.-\\. passim. Palla, 162. Palla gonfiata, La, 162 n. Palla della Livrea, 169. Palla al maglio, 162 n. Palla al trespolo, 162 n. Pallaio, the, 170. Pallone, 162 n. ; in Siena, \ZZseq., 207. Pannocchieschi, the, 61. Pantaneto, 64, 75, 220. Pantera, the Contrada della, 220, 232, 252,258. Parasotto, the, 119. Parenzi, Pietro, Potesta of Siena, 63, 180. Paris, the University of, 72. Parma, 11. Parte di sopra and parte di sotto, 144, 145. Partiti, the, 243. Party Guelf, the, 7 n., 21. Passerino, Seignior of Mantua, 20. Pavement of the Sienese Cathedral, 238, 239 n. Pavia, 1 1, 98 n., 180. Paving of streets, 65. Pedites, 199. St^ Milites et populus. Peretola, 20. Perugia, 7 n., 2t, 22, 25, 65 n. See Battaglia de' Sassi, and Bk. IL c. ii. passim. Pestilence, Palio run to avert the, 19 n., 66-67. Petrucci, Fabio, 244. Petrucci, Pandolfo, 44, 244. Piacevoli and Piatelli, 163 n. Pianata, the, 235. Piazza del Campo, 1-3, et passim. Piccolomini, ^neas Sylvius, Pope Pius IL, 192. Piccolomini, Ascanio, Archbishop of Siena, 213. Piccolomini, Misser Enea, 241. Picture of Our Lady cut down ita coviode portari possit ad processionem, 51 n. Pictures of Samts pamted m Perugia sub volta Palatii Cotniinis, 65 n. Pietro Leopoldo I., 130. Pieve Asciata, 26. Pisa. See Festa delV Assunta, Giuoco del Mazzascudo, Giuoco del Ponte, etc., and Bk. IL c. '\. passim. Pis^ei, the, 96. Pistoia, 36, 97. Pitigliano, Aldobrandino Rosso di, 25. Poggiarone, the, 35. Pome. See Giuoco del Pome. Ponte alia Carraia, 80. Ponte alle Mosse, 9, 20, 64 n. Pontedera, 26. Ponte di Mezzo, 95, 108-10. Ponte di Savena, 64 n. Ponte, Giuoco del. See Giuoco del Ponte. Populi, 199, 200 n. See Milites et populus. Popolo, Monte del, 41. Porchetta, Festa della, ijn. Porta Pispini. See Porta S. Viene. Porta S. Viene, 31 n. Porta S. Vito, 31 n. Portercole, 45. Poienze or Signorie Festeggianti of Florence, 139, 169 n,, 199. Prato, 24, 36. Prato, the, at Florence, 165, 171, I72. Prato, the, of Lucca, 104 n. Pratum de Bataglia, 145. Prelium lapidum, prelimn de lapidibus. See Battaglia de'' Sassi. Prisoner's base, 162 n. 266 INDEX Prostitutes, Palii run by, 21, 22. Prostitutes not permitted to bear the name of Mary, 38. Prottetori of the Contrade, 222, 233, 241, 255, 257. Prove, the, 219, 235-36, 238. Provenzano, Our Lady of, 214-15, 223, 253- Provenzano Salvani, i, 26, 33 n. Pucci, Antonio, 13 n., 22, 81. Pugillatori, 208-10. Pugna, Giuoco delle. Its origin in Siena, 182 seq. ; in Gubbio, 182 n. ; the national game of the Sienese, 183-84; the Battle of 1318, 184- 85 ; of 1324, 186-87 ; its prohibition, 187, 195 ; Gentile Sermini's descrip- tion of the game, 187-88; played in connection with the Giuoco del Pallotie, 188-89, 207; statutory provisions concerning the game, 193 ; still played by the students of the Sienese University in the last century, 210 n. Pugni et boccati, 185, 195. Quartieri of Pisa, 99. Quattro Provveditori di Biccherna, 219. Quercia, the Contrada della, 219 n. Radicofani, 60. RadweWs Case, 18. E. i, 21 n. Rappresentazioni, 75-80. Raspanti, the, 144, 145. Reggio, the siege of, 97. Renaissance, the, 72 n., 197. Reparata, Sta, 9. Revenge, the sacred obligation of, 153. Ridda, 189 n., 201. Rigoletio, i89n. Ropoli, Poggio de', 33, 37. Rosaio, battle of, 38, 39. Ruan, Cardinal di, 87. Ruskin, an advocate of female illiteracy, 151 n. Salicottina, La bella, 244. Saltare a cavallo, 163. Samminiato, 24. San Cristofano, the Church of, 25, 27. San Gimignano, 25, 36. Sani, Andrea, 43. San Lorenzo, the Cathedral Church of Perugia, 21, 22. San Pietro alia Magione, 20. San Prospero, hill of, 47. Sansedoni, the Blessed Ambrogio, 5, 68, 70-81. Santa Flora, 60. Santa Petronilla, battle of, 35 ; occupied by the Florentines, 45. Santo Stefano, 45. Sanzanome, 26. Sapiefites de misericordia, the, 15. Sapiensa, the. See University of Pisa. Saracens, 13 n., 97, 178. Saracini, Onorata, 244. Sardegna recuperata, the, of Nozzolini, 97- Sardinia, 13 n., 93, 105. Sargentina, 208. Sarteano, 61. Sassaiolcs ludus. See Battaglia de' Sassi. Sassetta, Marquis della, 87. Saturnia, 41, 44. Saviozzo, II, 81. Savonarola, 156-57. Sbafidierata, 247, 255. Scannagallo, battle of, 53. Sciarpenna, 60. Scoppio del ca7'ro, Lo, 78 n. Scotobrimcs, 79 n., 201. Seats for the Palio, 234 n. Selva, the Contrada della, 203, 205, 220, 232, 258. SencE, Senaruj/i, 177. Se7ta Veins Civitas Virginis, 38. Sibyls, the, 203. Siena. See Contrade, Elmora, Palio, Pugna, etc. etc. Snowballing, 140, 186, 195. Soana, 61. Societates armorum. See Companies, Military. . Sodoma, 88. Soldato in the Giuoco del Ponte, armour of .the, 11 8-21. Sozzini, Ottavio, 53. Spadaforte, Contrada di, 219. Spaniards in Siena, 47 seq. Spanish Chapel, affrescoes in the, ^^ 151 n. Spina, the, 142 n. Squadrc, 111-12, 1 17-18, 122. See Giuoco del Ponte. Sirade, 65-66. Strappado, the, 124, 208, 257. Streets of mediaeval Siena, the, 64-66. Strozzi, Piero, 54. Swine, 65. Talamone, 45. Targa, 108, 183. Targone, 108, 119, 120, 124, 135-36. Tarquinius Priscus, 183. Tartuca, the Contrada della, 220, 221, 228, 233, 238 n., 258, 260. Tavolette dipiiite, 43, 44, 53 n., 83, 193, 21*4 n., 215 n. Terzi of Siena, 31 n., 36 n., 57, 177-7S. Time, computation of, 131 n. Tintinnano, Counts of, 61 n. 267 INDEX Tiniori, Palio dc\ 9-10. Tolomei, Pia, 244. Tommasi, Giugurta, 213. Torniella, 80. Torre, the Contrada della, 205, 221, 228, 232, 233, 234, 237, 247, 252, 257, 258. Torre del Mangia, 52, 56, 61. Tournaments, 98, 191-93, 197-98- Tower, the Moulting, 13 n., loi. Towers of Siena, 47, 48 n. ; of Pisa, 13, i3n. Tree of Liberty, 2. Trent, Council of, 207. Treviso, 21 n. Trionfo, the, 198. Ubaldo, Sant', 138, i82n. Uguccione della Faggiuola, 106. Universild de' Tin tori, 10. University of Pisa, 108, 116, 127. Usiglia, 45. Valdichiana, 87. Val di Montone, the Contrada del, 212, 252, 258. Valle Piatta, 64. Vendetta. See Revenge. Venice, 21 n., 108. Ventiqitattro, the, 25, 27. Vergha sardesca, the, 104 n. Verona, 12, 16. See Palio. Verrocchio, 248. Vie, 66. Villani, Giovanni, detractor of the Sienese, 31 n., 33 n. Virginia, the contadinclla, 211-12. Visconti, Gian Galeazzo, Duke of Milan, 12, 41, 81-82, 106, 192. Volterra, 24, 36. Waldenses, the, T"^. Wax crosses distributed at Easter, 'Jit 74- Witches, the burning of, 146. Wolf, tame, kept by the Sienese, 13, 256. Women in the Middle Ages, 71, 72 n. 151-52 ; Sienese, 244, 245 n. Yale and Harvard match, 151 n. Zondadari, Alessandro, Bishop of Siena, 220. UNIVERSITr y OF '. C.. ^,,\. /' :^(Fonri\; Printed by Morrison & Gibb Limited, Edinburgh RETURN TO the circulation desk of any University of California Library or to the NORTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY BIdg. 400, Richmond Field Station University of California Richmond, CA 94804-4698 RE1 ALL BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAYS • 2-month loans may be renewed by calling (510)642-6753 • 1-year loans may be recharged by bringing books to NRLF • Renewals and recharges may be made 4 days prior to due date DUE AS STAMPED BELOW SEP 07 2006 DD20 12M 1-05 5^^ fORl^ V^Q.OOfe. bO^ VD 06459 , «(,TvSo55s8)4185 — S-87 U.C. BERKELEY LIBRARIES CQDbQ7MS32 20999:?*