Sack of Rome
The Sack of Rome refers to the violent invasion and plundering of the city that began on May 6, 1527, led by the troops of Charles III, who were aligned with Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. The event unfolded as rebellious, unpaid soldiers, comprising both Spanish Catholics and Protestant forces, besieged the city for nine months, ultimately looting and pillaging for eight days. This brutal occupation resulted in widespread suffering, particularly for those associated with the Catholic Church, including priests and nuns. Notably, the soldiers engaged in acts of sexual violence and destroyed significant cultural and religious artifacts, reflecting both their desire for wealth and the religious tensions of the time. The Pope, Clement VII, fled the Vatican and was eventually taken prisoner, leading to his release through negotiations that included financial reparations to Charles V. The sack marked a pivotal moment in history, signaling a decline in Rome’s status as the cultural heart of the Renaissance and contributing to the rise of Protestantism, notably influencing future ecclesiastical decisions such as King Henry VIII's marriage annulment request. The event not only altered the religious landscape of Europe but also had lasting effects on the power dynamics between the papacy and emerging Protestant states.
Sack of Rome
Locale Rome and Florence (now in Italy)
Date May 6, 1527-February, 1528
Troops of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V sacked Rome, directly challenging the power of the Catholic Church and helping to advance Protestantism in Europe. The siege also marked the virtual end of the Italian Renaissance and, in the eyes of some historians, the end of the High Renaissance.
Key Figures
Charles V (1500-1558), Holy Roman Emperor, r. 1519-1556Clement VII (Giulio de’ Medici; 1478-1534), Roman Catholic pope, 1523-1534Charles III (1490-1527), eighth duke of Bourbon and governor of MilanFrancis I (1494-1547), king of France, r. 1515-1547Leo X (Giovanni de’ Medici; 1475-1521), Roman Catholic pope, 1513-1521, and son of Lorenzo de’ MediciLorenzo de’ Medici (1449-1492), influential Italian merchant prince
Summary of Event
The sack of Rome began on May 6, 1527 when an army of Spanish Catholics and Lutherans beholden to Charles V and led by Charles III marched rebelliously into Rome, a city the troops held in a state of siege for nine months. When marauding, unpaid troops entered the city, they plundered, looted, and pillaged ceaselessly for eight days, inflicting harsh treatment upon those who were directly associated with the Roman Catholic Church, most notably priests, monks, and nuns.
![Sack of Rome by Alaric - sacred vessels are brought to a church for safety By Maïtre François (illuminator) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons 89453668-73688.jpg](https://imageserver.ebscohost.com/img/embimages/ers/sp/embedded/89453668-73688.jpg?ephost1=dGJyMNHX8kSepq84xNvgOLCmsE2epq5Srqa4SK6WxWXS)
The rampaging invaders raped nuns as well as other female residents of Rome. They destroyed many of the city’s most valued and beautiful frescoes and smashed priceless statuary. This destruction resulted in part from the growing ascendancy of Protestantism in northern Europe. Though Charles V himself was a staunch Catholic and his reasons for conflict with the pope were secular, many of his troops were Protestant, and it is thought that their choice of targets was informed both by the desire to pillage Rome's wealth and by their religious convictions.
Pope Clement VII, protected by his cadre of Swiss Guards, fled the Vatican just one step ahead of the invaders, taking refuge in the castle of Sant’ Angelo. Many of Clement’s guards were killed. The invaders from the north charged through the streets, humiliating the Romans in every possible way. They mocked them by dressing their leader in papal garb and leading him around the streets of the Vatican on a donkey. They ravaged the sacred tomb of Saint Peter and stole its riches. One soldier plundered the head of the lance that was supposed to have punctured Christ’s side as he hung dying on the cross. The soldier then attached the lance head to his own weapon.
Pope Clement VII, the illegitimate son of Giuliano de’ Medici, was orphaned at an early age. He was raised in the household of Lorenzo de’ Medici, whose son, Leo X, was the boy’s cousin. When Leo became pope in 1513, overlooking his cousin’s illegitimacy, he named Clement archbishop of Florence and made him a cardinal. In this capacity, Clement was regarded as one of the most effective personages in the papal court. He served through Leo’s papacy, which ended with Leo’s death in 1521. He continued to serve through the papacy of Adrian VI, who was an unpopular pontiff and served less than two years before his death in 1523.
When Clement was elected pope on November 19, 1523, Italy was immersed in a struggle between Francis I, king of France, and Charles V, king of Spain and Holy Roman Emperor. Clement attempted to appease Charles V, but he had to make a choice eventually. Clement, concerned about the Holy Roman Empire's growing dominance over the Papal States and hoping to shift the balance of power in the region, cast his lot with Francis and joined the League of Cognac with him in 1526, thereby infuriating Charles V.
Clement fully expected Francis to provide troops to help protect the Vatican. This, however, did not happen. Francis, deeply in debt, could not afford to deploy troops to Italy when they were most needed to defend the Vatican in 1527.
From the time Clement became pope to the spring of 1527, wars racked Italy and destroyed much of the country. The troops of Charles V gathered in Milan. Charles III, governor of Milan and a close ally of Charles V, was their leader. Francis I was unwilling and unable to assist the pope, who was seeking a truce with Charles V, but this was impossible because Charles’s troops were becoming rebellious; they had not been paid for several months. Hungry for plunder, they marched south toward Rome, arriving on May 6, 1527. The sack of Rome ensued.
The carnage was considerable. During the occupation of the city, more than two thousand bodies were disposed of in the Tiber River and another ten thousand were buried in Rome and its environs. The losses on both sides were substantial. Many of the invaders succumbed to the plague that swept through Rome in the summer of 1527. The occupation continued until the following February.
Pope Clement surrendered shortly after the invasion began and was a prisoner of the invaders until December 6, 1527. Upon his release, which was negotiated by paying Charles 400,000 ducats and surrendering several cities to him, Clement fled to Orvieto and then to Viterbo, staying in these cities for most of the next two years, essentially evicted from the Holy See. Clement eventually reached an accord with Charles V and acknowledged him as the Holy Roman Emperor, making official in the eyes of the Church the title that Charles had been granted through inheritance in 1519. Charles returned many of the spoils of the invasion, said to have a combined value of more than 4,000,000 ducats, to the Vatican.
Significance
The sack of Rome marked the end of Rome’s distinction as the unofficial capital of the Renaissance world, although the city recovered with remarkable speed from the northern invasion. Some historians think that the sack of Rome marked the end of the Renaissance altogether. Certainly, the age of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo had passed, but the sixteenth century advanced in art and music nonetheless. One could say that the sack of Rome marked the end of the High Renaissance.
More significantly, Charles V’s invasion challenged the authority of the Roman Catholic Church and marked a considerable advance for Protestantism. In 1533, Clement had to make the delicate decision about whether to grant King Henry VIII of England an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon in a manner the Church could sanction. His decision was as significant in the annals of Protestant advancement as was the sack of Rome.
Keenly aware that Catherine was the aunt of Charles V, who had a decided interest in Henry’s petition, Clement denied the request, which caused Henry to withdraw from the Roman Catholic Church. The Church soon excommunicated him, leading to the formation of the Protestant Church of England. Without the sack of Rome and without Clement finding it necessary to consider how Charles V would react to his decision about the annulment, the pope might well have acceded to Henry’s request, which would have had a profound effect on the course of European history.
Bibliography
Connell, William J., ed. Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence. Berkeley: U of California P, 2002. Print.
Gouwens, Kenneth, ed. The Italian Renaissance. Malden: Blackwell, 2004. Print.
Gouwens, Kenneth, ed. Remembering the Renaissance: Humanist Narratives of the Sack of Rome. Boston: Brill, 1998. Print.
Guicciardini, Luigi. The Sack of Rome. Translated, edited, and introduced by James H. McGregor. New York: Italica, 1993. Print.
Hook, Judith. The Sack of Rome: 1527. 2nd ed. New York: Palgrave, 2003. Print.
Stinger, Charles L. The Renaissance in Rome. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1985. Print.
Van den Oever, Joost. "Cultural Trauma, Prophetic Discourse and the Sack of Rome." Journal of Religion in Europe 8.3–4 (2015): 444–74. Print.
Zimmermann, T. C. Price. Paolo Giovio: The Historian and the Crisis of Sixteenth Century Italy. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1995. Print.