or lambskin, even when hallowed with a monarch’s
oath, against the torrent of regal and ecclesiastical
absolutism. It was on the reception in the provinces
of the new and confirmatory Bull concerning the bishoprics,
issued in January, 1560, that the measure became known,
and the dissatisfaction manifest. The discontent
was inevitable and universal. The ecclesiastical
establishment which was not to be enlarged or elevated
but by consent of the estates, was suddenly expanded
into three archiepiscopates and fifteen bishoprics.
The administration of justice, which was only allowed
in free and local courts, distinct for each province,
was to be placed, so far as regarded the most important
of human interests, in the, hands of bishops and their
creatures, many of them foreigners and most of them
monks. The lives and property of the whole population
were to be at the mercy of these utterly irresponsible
conclaves. All classes were outraged.
The nobles were offended because ecclesiastics, perhaps
foreign ecclesiastics, were to be empowered to sit
in the provincial estates and to control their proceedings
in place of easy, indolent, ignorant abbots and friars,
who had generally accepted the influence of the great
seignors. The priests were enraged because the
religious houses were thus taken out of their control
and confiscated to a bench of bishops, usurping the
places of those superiors who had formally been elected
by and among themselves. The people were alarmed
because the monasteries, although not respected nor
popular, were at least charitable and without ambition
to exercise ecclesiastical cruelty; while, on the
other hand, by the new episcopal arrangements, a force
of thirty new inquisitors was added to the apparatus
for enforcing orthodoxy already established.
The odium of the measure was placed upon the head
of that churchman, already appointed Archbishop of
Mechlin, and soon to be known as Cardinal Granvelle.
From this time forth, this prelate began to be regarded
with a daily increasing aversion. He was looked
upon as the incarnation of all the odious measures
which had been devised; as the source of that policy
of absolutism which revealed itself more and more
rapidly after the King’s departure from the country.
It was for this reason that so much stress was laid
by popular clamor upon the clause prohibiting foreigners
from office. Granvelle was a Burgundian; his
father had passed most of his active life in Spain,
while both he and his more distinguished son were
identified in the general mind with Spanish politics.
To this prelate, then, were ascribed the edicts, the
new bishoprics, and the continued presence of the
foreign troops. The people were right as regarded
the first accusation. They were mistaken as to
the other charges.