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The Devil's Broker: Seeking Gold, God, and Glory in Fourteenth- Century Italy
 
 
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The Devil's Broker: Seeking Gold, God, and Glory in Fourteenth- Century Italy [Paperback]

Frances Stonor Saunders (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 27, 2006
The second son of a minor English landowner, John Hawkwood chose to head south in 1360 after serving as a captain in the Black Prince’s wars against France. He and other freebooters besieged the pope at Avignon, and when they were paid to desist at Avignon and go to Italy, they discovered that the threat of force could be very profitable indeed. The Italian city states – Florence, Milan, Siena, and Pisa – offered the richest pickings in Europe. By alternately besieging and protecting them, Hawkwood became the most wily, reliable, and successful mercenary leader of his time, leading the Italians to conclude that “the Devil is an Englishman.”

This is the story of an age when everything came to have a price, when the mercenary companies werevastly rich corporations with their own accountants, lawyers, and orators. It was also a time of cultural greatness, creating the ferment that would give birth to the Renaissance. In The Devil’s Broker, Stonor Saunders creates a glittering and hard-edged evocation of an era peopled by characters ranging from the great poets Chaucer, Petrarch, and Boccaccio to St. Catherine of Siena, a succession of corrupt, incompetent, and venal popes, and the tyrannical Visconti family of Milan. Brilliant and drivingly readable, The Devil’s Broker vividly recreates a complex man and a fascinating era.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The career of Sir John Hawkwood, "the most audacious" of mercenaries active in Italy in the mid to late 14th century, provides a framework for this study of the era's religion, politics and warfare. Saunders (The Cultural Cold War) portrays a generation that swept aside tradition for several reasons: plague leveled the social playing field, threats of excommunication were often ignored and warfare moved south from the feudal-based northern Europe to the increasingly wealthy, money-based economy of Italy, where battle-hardened soldiers journeyed after a truce in the Hundred Years' War. Perhaps most fascinating are the mechanics of mercenary armies, such as the one led by Hawkwood, that roamed Italy: the nature of their contracts, their alliances and betrayals and their democratic decision making. Equally lively is Saunders's account of the great Schism of the Church, in which two (and later three) men contested the title of pope: from the vantage point of the hired armies, it is simply a vicious power struggle like all the others. Hawkwood, within this context, built for himself a fearful reputation, lost and won many fortunes and married himself into the illegitimate branch of the powerful Visconti clan. His is a dramatic life, set in a dramatic context. Illus. not seen by PW; maps.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

A Distant Mirror (1978), by Barbara Tuchman, reflected late medieval Europe in a French knight. With evocative texturing, Saunders avails herself of the same via the life of an English mercenary. His name was John Hawkwood (c.1320-94), and his profession flourished amid opportunities offered by the Hundred Years War, the Avignon exile of the papacy, and incessant warfare among Italian city-states. Saunders can track Hawkwood's career and clientele due to the survival of his scrupulously drafted, if less scrupulously honored, contracts. From their facts, Saunders forays into a multifaceted reconstruction of precarious fourteenth-century life, envisioning its muck, plagues, pillages, and massacres as well as its poets, such as Chaucer, and mystics, such as Catherine of Siena. With a sophisticated sensibility for the period, Saunders tilts her presentation toward the sardonic where Hawkwood's auctions of his services are concerned, archly observing the malleable loyalties inherent in the mercenary phenomenon while narrating attempts (as by Pope Urban V) to defeat it. Avid history readers will appreciate the solid work discernible through Saunders' stylishly embroidered narrative. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial (June 27, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060777303
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060777302
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #796,183 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Portrait of a Freebooter, May 24, 2005
In the cathedral of Florence is a large fresco of a surprising figure. It was painted in the fifteenth century by Paolo Uccello, as a measure of respect to a Florentine fighter. Oddly, the figure is that of an Englishman, not an Italian, and one who fought for Florence simply because it was paying better than any of the many other sides during his tumultuous times. Sir John Hawkwood died in 1394, and in _The Devil's Broker: Seeking Gold, God, and Glory in Fourteenth-Century Italy_ (Fourth Estate), Frances Stonor Saunders tells what she can of his life. It must have been a tough task to get this history together. Hawkwood was a military leader in a turbulent continent, and "long cultivated an aura of inscrutability." There are two brief letters he wrote in 1394, which happen to be the oldest extant letters in English, but he was, as Saunders admits, a man of few words. This is necessarily an incomplete portrait; we can't tell too much about his relationships with his family nor with those (sometimes on opposing sides) who hired him. Saunders has, however, thoroughly steeped herself in details of the history of an extraordinary time, and delights in laying them out at length. She mentions several times the famous work covering the same period in another fashion, Barbara Tuchman's _A Distant Mirror_, and anyone who enjoyed one will enjoy the other.

Hawkwood was born in Essex in 1320, and by the time he was forty, he was poor and unnoteworthy, and had a criminal record. Perhaps he had no other options than to become a mercenary soldier, a freebooter, and by luck or skill, he became the best there was. He was ready to be hired to the side that had the best offer for him, and to go over to the opposite side if it beat the first offer. He was amoral and greedy. When a pair of friars greeted him with "God give you peace," he snarled back at them, "God take away your alms." In peace, a soldier for hire has no trade. During Hawkwood's thirty year career, "...popes and princes would cringe before his approach, denounce him as the Devil incarnate, and rush to hire him nonetheless." As the head of his White Company, he had a reputation as the ablest military commander of the middle ages. The climax of his ruthlessness and cruelty came in the destruction of the Italian town Cesena in 1377. He happened at the time to be working for Pope Gregory XI. Gregory had been in France, and was returning the papacy to Italy, the subjugation of which was his obsession. Gregory took no steps to distance himself from Hawkwood's slaughter of 8,000 civilians who had given up their weapons because their cardinal told them to. Hawkwood was particularly fortunate in his final battle, where his troops had to retreat back to Padua. His army had been defeated, but he managed the "swift and precipitous flight" of the retreat so adroitly that it won him more fame than his greatest victories. It was greeted as a miracle, but it wasn't his first one. In combat against Verona in 1386, he had confronted the problem of poisoned wells by dipping into them the unicorn's horn he happened to have, and the water was purified.

These are the sorts of detail that Saunders obviously loves, and her book is enriched by digressions that examine the ways of life during this part of the middle ages. One of the players in the political and religious warfare was Saint Catherine of Siena, an anorexic who had frankly disgusting habits of pious degradation, but used them to become the only woman of power described here. Mystically married to Jesus, she was given by him his foreskin to wear as a wedding ring. Among the many engines of war described here was the stone-throwing trebuchet which had a throwing arm of fifty feet; it was called the _cacciapreti_ or "priest breaker". Rotting animal carcasses were often used instead of stones, and pigs were deemed to be of the best aerodynamics. In discussing Hawkwood's marriage, we learn about advice given to wives on the art of catching flies to keep a vermin-free home, and the religious proscriptions on sex for married people, which would have reduced couplings to less than once a week, in the approved male-dominant position only. It is a strange, confusing, and distant time, but the wealth of detail Saunders has given reminds us it was a time of greed, warfare, starvation, religious orthodoxy and controversy, and cleverness without wisdom. As Dickens said, of two other periods, the times were very like our own.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Routiers, Raiders, and the menace of the Condottiere, September 18, 2006
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This review is from: The Devil's Broker: Seeking Gold, God, and Glory in Fourteenth- Century Italy (Paperback)
A good introduction to the warring mess of the Italian Warring States era of the 14th Century, Saunders is very much in the tradition of Tuchmann in sweep and historical detail. If you enjoyed "A Distant Mirror" then you shall surely enjoy this read as well. No one can duplicate Tuchmann, but the technique of using a rather obscure historical personage as a counter point to explore the history, social habits, military strategy and artistic acheivments of a particular era, when done well, yeilds a good narrative treasure for the reader. Saunders delivers!

John Hawkwood, an English Freebooter who participated in the great cheveauches which wasted great parts of France migrates to Lombardy and realises the potential of selling his mercenary services to the courts of Milan, Florence, and the Papal League. Even when reading it is virtually impossible to keep track of the alliances, counter alliances, intrigues within enigmas that underly this era, but the end result -- a frothy, earthy bloodfest, is a delight for the reader. This is really a case studies for Machiavelli type of book (Althought the events in the book actually predate Machiavelli by about 50 yrs).

The book is particularly good at describing the schisms in the Church at the time and one is tempted to ask the question how the church held together so well in the face of this schism and needed another 100 yrs plus, before it eventually fractionated into Protestantism.


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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Devil's Broker: a brief review, August 24, 2005
Fourteenth century Italy was a maelstrom of political intrigue,military turmoil, and populated with deceiving and fascinating characters. Frances Stonor Saunders' new book uses Sir John Hawkwood, an English mercenary, as its center to create a world both thrilling and repugnant. To state that this is a book one "cannot put down" is risky, but it is nonetheless true. It is a captivating and well written account! The book moves rapidly through the era yet it does not sacrifice detail and description, but contains enough of both to hold the reader in its grasp. The character of Hawkwood is deftly interwoven into the fabric of medieval Italy. Although he was English he was a survivor. That was no mean feat as Sauders so impressively relates. It is superbly written and recommended most highly.
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First Sentence:
THERE WERE GOOD WAYS to die, and bad ways to die. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
antipapal league, mercenary companies, gold florins, cardinal vices, thousand florins
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
John Hawkwood, White Company, Sir John, Black Prince, Saint Peter, Catherine of Siena, Robert of Geneva, Saint George, Treaty of Brétigny, Bernabó Visconti, Great Company, Green Count, Holy Roman Emperor, Merchant of Prato, Sible Hedingham, William Gold, Raimondo da Capua, Eight Saints, Albert Sterz, Black Death, Charles Durazzo, Egidio Albornoz, Gerard du Puy, Battle of Poitiers, Fra Raimondo
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