The Swiss and Their Neighbours, 1460-1560. Between Accommodation and Aggression

(Amelia) #1

The Year of the French 139


persistent foot-dragging. What credence to lend to this report is unclear, since


Baudichon’s mission was to raise troops on Geneva’s behalf.603


The tripartite negotiations dragged on through the closing months of 1535 with


no prospect of success, since each party was defending an irreconcilable position.


Bern and Savoy agreed on a truce in October, but Geneva was in no mood to


follow suit. That prompted Duke Charles to riposte that Geneva had no locus


standi in the negotiations as it was not a free city but a subject of Savoy; in any case,


there was no point in Geneva’s invoking the treaties of St-Julien and Payerne since


the duke had never ratified them. Far better, he suggested, if Geneva were simply


to forsake its Burgrecht with Bern.604 Bern naturally took the opposite view, though


it regarded Geneva’s refusal to subscribe to the truce as high-handed, the city’s


Great Council having defiantly boasted that it would never negotiate with traitors


(the refugees in Peney castle). But in other respects Bern would not budge on the


issue of treaty recognition and protection for the Gospel in Geneva.605


To cut the Gordian knot Bern then proposed that it should enter bilateral talks


directly with Savoy, to which end a meeting was arranged for late November in


Aosta. If Geneva refused to attend (presumably as an observer), Bern threatened to


withdraw its support and cancel the Burgrecht since, as it sighed, it was ‘tired of the


whole affair’.606 Geneva, too, had had enough—of Bern’s foot-dragging, and of


the interminable discussions at Thonon, Luzern, and Baden—but faced with this


ultimatum it promised to attend, though it was quickly pleading that the meeting


should be abandoned, since Duke Charles’s assurances could not be trusted.607 For


its part, Savoy understandably wished the invitation to Aosta to be extended to its


ally Fribourg.608


But Aosta was born under a fateful sign. Duke Charles claimed he was too ill to


attend in person; he had learnt, in any case, that a French army was approaching


(this presumably refers to Verey’s escapades). Bern’s envoys espied a deliberate delaying


tactic and refused to journey further to Turin to meet the duke face to face.609 To


move matters along Savoy’s envoys suggested relegating the religious issue to later


in the agenda, while Duke Charles offered to consult Emperor Charles V in person


(clearly his illness did not preclude a visit to distant Naples, warmer in the winter


than snowy Aosta). Above all, he proposed an extension of the truce for another six


months.610 In the light of Geneva’s continuing breaches of the truce (however


excusable given its predicament), Bern’s commissioner in the city, Hans Rudolf


Nägeli, asked to be stood down.611 His parting shot was to point out that if Bern


603 EA IV, 1c, 595–6 (no. 360) (Dec. 1535).
604 EA IV, 1c, 576–8 (no. 340: I, 1; I, 2; I, 2, 1; I, 2, 2; I, 2, 3) (Oct. 1535).
605 EA IV, 1c, 576–8 (no. 340: II, 2a; II, 3; III) (Oct. 1535).
606 EA IV, 1c, 579–80 (no. 342: II, 1; II, 2) (Oct. 1535).
607 EA IV, 1c, 597–8 (no. 362) (Dec. 1535). 608 EA IV, 1c, 583 (no. 346) (Nov. 1535).
609 EA IV, 1c, 589–92 (no. 354: 3) (Nov. 1545).
610 EA IV, 1c, 596–7) (no. 361: 1) (Dec. 1535).
611 EA IV, 1c, 600 (no. 365: 2) (Dec. 1535). In November Bern had reminded Nägeli of the
implications if Geneva broke the truce. SABE, Teutsche Missiven-Buch 24 W, pp. 85–6 (22 Nov.
1535). Nägeli had previously been bailiff of Aigle.

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