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    Gondomar: Ambassador to James I Author(s): Charles H. Carter Source: The Historical Journal, Vol. 7, No. 2 (1964), pp. 189-208Published by: Cambridge University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3020350Accessed: 07-11-2015 15:58 UTC

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  • THE HISTORICAL JOURNAL

    VOL. VIl I964 No. z

    I. GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I

    By CHARLES H. CARTER Tulane Unziversity

    DON DIEGO SARMIENTO DE ACURA, ennobled as Count of Gondomarin i6I7, served as Spanish ambassador to England from I6I3 to i6221 and continued thereafter in a sort of emeritus status as Spain's leading, almost only, expert on English affairs until his death in i626.

    In this tense, crisis-ridden time of uneasy peace prior to the Thirty Years' War and during the opening years of that war, when its course and its eventual extent were still much in doubt, what was going to happen in Europe, and to Europe, was very much in the hands of the relatively few men who guided or influenced affairs of state in a few key capitals. None were more important than such men in Spain and England, widely recognized as the heads of 'the two protectorats' over Catholic and Protestant Europe. Gondo- mar must certainly be counted among these few.

    He must also be numbered among the deepest-dyed villains of English historical tradition. There has probably never been a more able diplomat sent to England, nor a more influential one-nor one more passionately hated by so many Englishmen. Neither can one imagine anyone being more thoroughly misrepresented in his own time and after, the much abused James I not excepted. It is the purpose of the present essay to try to put the conventional (mistaken and misleading) historical conception of the man and his actions into somewhat more accurate perspective.2

    1 He was absent from England on a rather active 'sick leave' from July i 6 i 8 to May i 62o. 2 The following article rests primarily on several years' work in the original manuscripts of

    Gondomar's own dispatches to kings, ministers, etc., letters and dispatches to him, and docu- ments of the Council of State based upon or deriving from Gondomar's reports or otherwise relating to him. The main part of this material, in the Seccion de Estado at Simancas, is too voluminous for a complete list to be attempted here, but some 37 legajos which can be cited succinctly (2560-63,2571-73,2590-2603,2849,7023-35, 7037-38) provide more than ample documentation for the more general statements made in this essay. There is a small amount of Gondomar correspondence at the Biblioteca Nacional de Madrid, and a great deal in 'State Papers, Spain' at the Public Record Office (SP94, vols. 9-33 cover the reign of James I). In addition, use has been made of S. R. Gardiner's notes and transcripts (Add. 31,111-2), and corroborative evidence has been used in large quantities from the archives of the Spanish Netherlands at the Archives Generales du Royaume de Belgique.

    Whenever adequate documentation for a given point in the essay exists in published form, however, reference is made to the printed, rather than the manuscript, document, for the convenience of the reader who may wish to consult actual texts. Most frequent reference of this sort is to Documnentos ine'ditos para la historia de Espaiia (new series), vols. i-iv: Corres- pondencia oficial de Don Diego Sarmiento de Acuna, Conde de Gondomar, ed. Antonio Ballesteros Beretta, Madrid, 1936-45, hereafter referred to as DIE.

    Where specific manuscript sources are cited (in addition to the general references above) the

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  • I90 C. H. CARTER

    Gondomar had not been in England long before rumour and 'common knowledge' had him, by use of diverse diabolical tricks, in complete control of the king (he was not), with complete access to all James's thoughts and plans (he did have, in a way, but it was not much use to him), covering the ground with spies (he could not have afforded it even had he wanted to play spy- master), the guiding spirit of a 'Spanish party' at the English Court (a misleading name for an English faction with aims of their own), and the powerful paymaster in control of highly placed hirelings receiving Spanish pensions (none of which is true except the cost to Spain).

    This contemporary popular notion of Gondomar and his activities is preserved for us intact in the dramatical, tract and pseudo-historical literature of the time.3 The most conspicuous element of the picture found therein is the alleged sway the ambassador held over James, making him privy to the king's innermost secrets and allowing him to exercise satanical powers of control over the king's very thoughts and actions.

    The manner of presenting this picture sometimes varied, as in Thomas Middleton's play 'A Game at Chess', in which the key pieces are the White King (a strangely sympathetic role for any of these writers to give James) and the Black Knight, a wicked man in the service, of course, of the Black King. But this contemporary literature generally took the form of fantasies showing Gondomar performing his necromancy 'in the guise of Machiavelli' or, as Thomas Scott put it in the subtitle for The Second Part of Vox Populi, 'Gondomar appearing in the likeness of Matchiavell in a Spanish Parliament, wherin are discovered his treacherous & subtile Practises, to the ruine as well of England, as the Netherlands'.

    The frequent application to Gondomar of this label, 'Machiavelli', serves handily to characterize the nature of the more extreme treatment given him, which got not only into accepted tradition but into formal historical literature. The contemporary meaning of this noun form was roughly that of its adjec- tival form today, but its force was greater. Its connotation was not just that of partial disapproval but of absolute condemnation.

    Ordinary usage of 'Machiavellian' today, as represented in the catch phrase 'the end justifies the means', seems mainly concerned with employment of following abbreviations are used: Add., Additional Manuscripts, British Museum; BNM, Biblioteca Nacional de Madrid; Est., Secci6n de Estado, Archivo General de Simancas; PEA, Papiers d'1?tat et de l'Audience, Archives Generales du Royaume de Belgique, Brussels.

    3 See Thomas Middleton's play, 'A Game at Chess'; Richard Dugdale, 'A narrative of the wicked plots carried on by Seignior Gondamore for advancing the Popish Religion and Spanish Faction. Heartily recommended to all Protestants', reptd. Harleian Miscellany, III, 3I 3-26; William Prynne, Hidden works of darkness (London, I645); Thomas Scott, Vox populi, or newes from Spayne (York?, I620), and The second part of vox populi (York, I624); Anthony Weldon, History of the court and character of King Yames and of the intrigues and tragical events of his life. . first published in 1615, London, I8I7; and Arthur Wilson, The history of Great Britain, being the life and reign of King James the First (London, I653). One finds touches of this contemporary tradition even in works sympathetic to James, such as Godfrey Goodman, Bishop of Gloucester, The court of James I, ed. J. S. Brewer, 2 vols. (London, I839).

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I I9I

    undesirable means, with an implicit acceptance of the possibility that the end itself might be justifiable. But in usage of the time a 'Machiavelli' was not only willing to use 'bad' means to gain his end, he habitually did so and probably preferred it that way, in keeping with his evil, diabolical nature. This latter was almost a necessary assumption, for not only were the means evil; the end to be gained was evil too. One in fact gets a strong impression from contemporary usage of the term that it was actually the 'evil' end a person sought, not the means he used to gain that end, which identified him as a 'Machiavelli'; it merely followed that the means would be evil as well, for that was the way a 'Machiavelli' naturally went about his business.

    In the eyes of their English enemies, the end sought by Spain and her ambassador was twofold, encompassing the twin epitomes of political and religious evil: the enslavement of all men under a Universal Monarchy, and the destruction of the Reformed Faith and the subjugation of all True Believers under the despotic yoke of the Roman Anti-Christ. This evil design of the Papistical Spaniards, a vast conspiracy against the free and the Godly, was being advanced right in England by an ambassador who was Spanish, a papist, and apparently successful. Since the end was patently evil, both he and the means he employed must, by very definition, be diabolical. So Gondomar was 'the Spanish Machiavelli'.

    This picture was rather far from the mark, as will be seen. One might, therefore, ask two questions: what explains its ready acceptance and its gross inaccuracy? As to its acceptance, it had a ready audience filled with hatred for Spain and the Roman Church, and was often quite effectively done. Scott's Second Part of Vox Populi, for example, an imaginary account of the ambas- sador's diabolical workings against the good cause during his leave of absence in Spain (i6i8-20), 'Faithfully translated out of the Spanish coppie by a well- willer to England and Holland', is a masterpiece of false propaganda and was apparently widely accepted at the time as a true account.

    The question of accuracy remains. In order to make any sense out of this literature (and the unwritten rumour and diatribe which accompanied it), especially in view of its exaggerations, errors of fact, and ludicrous excesses, it is necessary to bear in mind both why it was written and by whom. As to the 'why', the fact that it was consciously intended as propaganda, designed to stir up anti-Spanish and anti-Catholic hatreds, goes far to explain its nature.

    The question of who, from among the more determined opponents of the Spanish ambassador and of James's 'Spanish policy', wrote these works is equally important regarding the relation of statement to reality. Spain and the Roman Church had no more implacable enemies in England, or anywhere, than Archbishop Abbot, Lord Chancellor Ellesmere and their followers in the Privy Council and elsewhere at Court. But these men were in close touch with affairs and knew perfectly well what the Spanish themselves recognized

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  • I92 C. H. CARTER

    clearly: that Spain's position in Europe was most tenuous, especially in view of the great latent power of France; that she would be doing well just to hold on to her present territorial position; and that thoughts of conquering the world for Spain and the Church were the work of idle dreamers.

    Given their familiarity with the facts, it is perhaps predictable that these men would not be the authors of the far-fetched propaganda vehicles in question. These things were written, not by the George Abbots and the Thomas Ellesmeres, but instead by the William Prynnes, the Thomas Scotts, the Richard Dugdales, the Thomas Alureds, and others of that sort: men who were hostile to the Crown, excluded from Court or at least with no access there, lacking close contact with affairs and first-hand information about them. In sum, they were in no position to have any accurate notion of what was going on, or in fact of what these matters were really all about.

    Yet modern literature, some of which is touched on later in this essay, has tended to accept and rehearse a good bit of the version of facts and events- distorted, exaggerated, even imaginary-which they presented.4 If one doubts how uncritical this acceptance has been, one need only note the occasional citations one encounters of even such a transparent fraud as Dugdale's 'Narrative of the wicked plots carried on by Seignior Gondamore for advan- cing the Popish Religion and Spanish Faction', which claims to be translated

    4 There is little modern literature written specifically about Gondomar. F. H. Lyon, El conde de Gondomar (in English) (Oxford, I9I0), is a compendium of silly traditions. Don Wenceslao Ramirez de Villa-Urrutia, marqu6s de Villa-Urrutia, 'La embajada del Conde de Gondomar', a I9I3 address to the Royal Academy of History in Spain, published in his Los embajadores de Espania en Paris de 1 883 a 1889 (Madrid, I927), is mostly a not-very-competent plagiarism of Lyon's unsatisfactory book, with some unacknowledged text taken almost verbatim from Gardiner as well, with frequent errors in translation, the whole twisted into a eulogy of Gondomar as untenable as the usual condemnations. Ciriaco Perez Bustamente, Espaiioles e Ingleses en Aue'rica durante el siglo XVII. El Conde de Gondomar y su intervencion en el proceso, prision y muerte de sir Walter Raleigh (Santiago, 1928), provides a detailed and quite useful filling-in of the man's antecedents and early career, but is of little value on the subject of the title, this part being based almost entirely on a chance sequence of about ioo consecutive folios of documents (BNM 6949/99-I90 V.) which are quite inadequate by them- selves. Francisco Javier Sainchez Cant6n, Don Diego Sarmiento de Acunia, Conde de Gondomar, 1567-1 626 (Madrid, I935), is a potentially excellent work whose form frustratingly precludes the fulfilling of its potential. Prepared as an inaugural address for the Academy of History, it paradoxically skips over Gondomar's English embassy-which is what makes the man historically significant in the first place-because that subject had already been treated in Villa-Urrutia's address mentioned above. Sinchez Cant6n seems not to accept that travesty but does not refute it before the same august body; instead he bows deeply (but one doubts sincerely) in the direction of Villa-Urrutia and diplomatically avoids Gondomar's diplomacy. The worst of the usual travesties are rather handily epitomized by Martin A. S. Hume in 'Un gran diplomatico espafiol. El Conde de Gondomar en Inglaterra', Nuestro Tiempo, II (1902), 397-4I4. Hume's other works (e.g. The Court of Philip IV, New York, 1927) carry on the same tradition. That this sort of thing is still with us is shown in such recent works as William McElwee, The Wisest Fool in Christendom (London, I958). Among modern works in English the present writer has seen nothing that comes even close to an accurate treatment except for the excellent chapter (entitled 'A Game at Chess' after Middleton's play) in Garrett Mattingly, Renaissance Diplomacy (Boston, 1955). G. P. V. Akrigg's Jacobean Pageant (Cambridge, Mass., I962) appeared after the above was written but its chapter on Gondomar is no exception: he is even indexed wrongly under his maternal name, which is misspelled.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I I93 from a 'relation' by Gondomar himself-though the Spanish did not even use this form of diplomatic reporting.

    Although Gondomar was surely one of the ablest diplomats who ever lived he is something of a disappointment as a villainous arch-intriguer. The usual traditions about him notwithstanding, he had little use for spies, partly because he did not trust anyone who would betray secrets for money and partly because few spies, properly so-called, had access to information important enough to interest him. He made exceptions in special cases where he had no other access, as in the case of the Anglo-French marriage negotia- tions at the beginning of his embassy, when he procured an agent in the French resident's household who made all of Buisseaux's correspondence available to him, and there were always functionaries around the Court (such as James's Master of Ceremonies, Lewis Lewkinor) who volunteered petty intelligence and presumably were paid for it. But with all of this taken together his accounts still show that he averaged only about ?350 per year for spies-a rather contemptible figure.5

    The ambassador did, however, have English support. One of the main foundations of Gondomar's diplomatic success was the group of well-wishers whom he referred to as the bien intencionados, and especially those with whom he was in most intimate contact, his confidentes. The most important of these latter, until his death in mid-i614, was Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton. Second only to Northampton in this group was his nephew Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk, after 26 December I613 father-in-law to James's favourite, Somerset, and after 9 July i614 Lord High Treasurer. Also important were Charles Howard, Earl of Nottingham, Lord High Admiral since before the Armada campaign; Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel; Suffolk's son-in-law Lord Knollys; and the Howards' protege, Sir Thomas Lake, Secretary of State from i6i6 to I6I9.

    For obvious reasons these people and their supporters were and are often referred to as the 'Howard party', perhaps even more often (for reasons which have seemed equally obvious but which do not stand up under examination) as the 'Spanish party'. This latter appellation has considerably obscured the important and very real difference between the aims of the Spanish and those of the Howard faction.

    It is true that these people were 'pro-Spanish', but in the rather special sense that they favoured an alliance with Spain over the one with France which their Scottish rivals for political influence favoured and over the open (though undeclared) war which the more zealous English Puritans wanted to wage against Spain in the Indies and elsewhere. But perhaps the best method of definition, so far as foreign policy is concerned, is by a modern analogy: if one were to label those who today advocate a general war against Russia as the

    ' See, for example, the scattered accounts in DIE, i-iv, passim. For Lewkinor see, for example, Lewkinor to Gondomar, 7 Jan. i6zi, Est. 7031/24 and v.

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  • 194 C. H. CARTER

    'anti-Russian party' and those who advocate a peaceful relationship and an attempt to maintain a status quo 'co-existence' as the 'Russian party' then one would closely approximate the nature of what passed for an 'anti-Spanish party' and a 'Spanish party' in England in the reign of James I.

    The same group was also referred to pejoratively as the 'Catholic party', with perhaps even less relevance. Most of them were, it is true, Catholics- but so were a good many other Englishmen. The members of the 'Catholic party' preferred that Catholics, including themselves, not be persecuted, but one searches in vain for religious zeal among them. They were not of course supporters of the policies, either foreign or domestic, of the more rabid Puritans-which somehow get treated as synonymous with the 'interests of England'-but neither were they a fifth column working for, or even hoping for, another Enterprise of England.

    As to the extent of the partiality of the Howard clan and their followers toward Spanish interests and the militant 'Catholic cause', the witnesses in the best position to know are their contemporaries on the Catholic, Spanish Habsburg side, because they felt the sting of their opposition. Shortly after the Gunpowder Plot, for example, when extradition of some of the Catholic plotters from their refuge in the Spanish Netherlands was being sought, the ambassador from Brussels reported that Northampton and Nottingham were 'those of the Council who insist the most' on it, against the advice of several other Councillors; during the negotiations for the Treaty of London an earlier Flemish envoy had found the Earl of Suffolk and Robert Cecil both 'very partial to the Dutch' 6

    The ambassador's reference to Cecil in this connexion is more relevant than would appear at first glance, for although James's chief minister (until his death in i 6I2) was neither a Howard nor a member of that faction, he was a Spanish pensioner, along with other highly placed English officials, a practice which requires a moment's attention.

    There had of course been no resident Spanish ambassador in England during the latter part of Elizabeth's reign. Regular diplomatic relations were resumed after James's accession with the arrival of the extraordinary embassy come to negotiate the Treaty of London, headed by Don Juan Bautista de Tassis, conde de Villamediana. In negotiating the peace, and looking forward to future needs, Villamediana dispensed a good deal of largesse, in both cash and promises. When he left he submitted a memorandum to Pedro de Zu'-niga, the first holder of the newly re-established permanent embassy, recommend- ing that a regular pension list be set up and suggesting particular names and amounts they should be offered.7

    6 Hoboken to Albert, London, I2 June i6o6, PEA 365/73 v.; Arenberg to Albert, i8 June I603, cited by Gardiner in Add. 3 ',III /I.

    7 S. R. Gardiner, History of England... 1603-1642, IO vols. (London, I901), I, 2I4. Gardiner's transcript of this memo (of 8/I8 July I605) is at Add. 3", III6 ff.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I 195

    This list of pensioners was duly set up, with some alterations in membership and stipends. The top-level pensions, for such as the Earl of Dorset, Lord High Treasurer, and the Lord Admiral Nottingham, were raised from Villa- mediana's suggested figure of 3000 felipes (1750) per year to 4000 felipes (,iooo); Robert Cecil's originally suggested 3000 felipes was doubled (to , I 500), giving him half as much again as any of the others, an apt recognition of his predominant position in the government. Counting the smaller fry, Villamediana's originally suggested total of 29,000 felipes (U7250) was swollen to 36,500 felipes (L9125) per year.8

    Inasmuch as Villamediana had recommended a pension of 3000 ducats for Robert Cecil and the latter ended up with double that amount, one may reasonably assume that Cecil himself forced the Spanish to raise the 'ante'. But that does not mean that he struck a traitorous bargain with them, for there was nothing unusual in an Englishman taking such money, nor in the Spanish giving it fairly readily.

    The English Court had a longstanding reputation as a place where it required money to open doors, and the only change in this situation after James's accession was that it required even more money than before, largely owing to the openhandedness of Dutch agents from the very beginning of the London treaty talks, which pushed prices upward. As one discontented ambassador observed, 'In this country, if one wants to negotiate a matter one has to put up the money'.9

    On the Spanish side, the giving of pensions and other money payments was common practice, though it seems impossible now to discover its exact extent. One observer in Madrid, generally reliable, reported, 'Those princes of Italy, the most take from the King of Spain; the Duke of Saxony takes from him... and even the Queen of England, I have heard, took 30,ooo ducats (750oo)'*10 Be the latter as it may, the Spanish themselves, pension or not, considered Cecil barely less hostile to their interests than Elizabeth herself had been."

    The truth of the matter is that Spain found herself with pension obligations she had assumed which did her little good but which she could not put an end

    8 For this first established list see Add. 3 1,1 I 1/10-I I. Gardiner uses the same ratio of four ducats (including the felipe) to the pound applied here: the ducat was sometimes of I I reales but generally of io, while the pound sterling was generally considered worth 40 reales.

    9 Arenberg to Albert [London], 27 June I603, in H. Lonchay, J. Cuvelier and J. Lef6vre, eds., Correspondance de la Cour d'Espagne sur les affaires des Pays-Bas au XVII' siecle, 6 vols. (Brussels, 1923-37), I, 298 ('il faut y mettre le prix').

    10 Simon Contarini, Relazione, printed in translation in Luis Cabrera de C6rdoba, Rela- ciones de las cosas sucedidas en la Corte de Espaina desde 1599 hasta 1614 (Madrid, I857), pp. 563-83, as 'Relacion que hizo a la Republica de Venecia Simon Contareni [sic], al fin del afio I605, de la embajada que habia hecho en Espafna'; p. 58I.

    11 See, for example, Add. 3I,III/5; and Sarmiento to Lerma, London, 5 Oct. I6I3, DIE, III, 125. For modern opinions in the same vein see J. Cuvelier, 'Les pr6liminaires du traite de Londres (29 aofut I604)', Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, II (I923), 294; and J. Willaert, 'Negotiations politico-religieuses entre l'Angleterre et les Pays-Bas catholiques (1598-I625)', Revue d'histoire ecclesiastique, VI-IX (905-8), VI, 572.

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  • I96 C. H. CARTER

    to. A conspicuous example is the pension originally offered to Cecil (Earl of Salisbury after I605) as a bribe, which he accepted as a lucrative windfall, and which came to be treated as an indefeasible perquisite of the position of chief minister. When Somerset succeeded to Salisbury's predominant position in government he made certain that he succeeded to his pension as well. He married into the Howard family and gave every sign of being willing to go along with that faction's policies (which coincided nicely with Spain's at that time), but he first held out for Salisbury's 6ooo ducats per year. The Spanish yielded to his demands ;12 as early as i6i8 they agreed that Buckingham in turn should succeed to this perquisite.13

    In the matter of pensions, the Howards themselves fail miserably to live up to their money-grabbing reputation. Suffolk refused from the beginning to accept one14 (though his wife, whose reputation seems only too well founded, readily enough accepted kiooo per year). Nottingham-conqueror of the Invincible Armada in '88 and still Lord Admiral of England-accepted in the beginning but apparently lost interest in the matter, for his name soon drops from the lists.'5 Northampton, leader of the clan, stayed on the list, but actual payment of his annual stipend was years overdue-a fact which was of little concern to him. He told Gondomar from time to time that he would indicate someone else the money might be given to; at the time of his death he had not even done this.'6

    The pensions were often of little consequence even among the lesser fry whose more limited means did not allow them to turn down a windfall with the ease of a Howard. Sir William Monson was Admiral of the Channel Fleet, and the thought of the commander whose job it would be to oppose another Armada being in the pay of Spain might seem shocking; but a decade after his pension had begun the Spanish still knew little about him or his attitude toward them. When he first met him Gondomar was pleasantly surprised to find that the Admiral was at least not openly hostile.17

    The Spanish went to great lengths to cultivate Queen Anne (who was a Catholic) and, to wield greater influence over her, they cultivated her confi- dante Mrs Drummond as well. The latter was a pensioner from the start; it was not until almost the time of the queen's death that it began to dawn on the Spanish that her influence on affairs was not worth mentioning. Thomas Lake, secretary to the king, then Secretary of State, was a Spanish pensioner, but he

    12 Somerset never actually saw the money, for by the time cash could be found to pay him he had fallen, was in prison, and seemed in danger of his life; Gondomar preferred paying his debts but withheld payment of this one, his concern transparently sincere, to avoid com- promising Somerset further. Sarmiento to Lerma, London, I7 March I6I4, DIE, IV, 33; same to Philip III, London, I5 Nov. I6I7, DIE, i, I30.

    13 Gondomar to Ciriza, London, 30 June I6I9, DIE, II, I78. 14 Gardiner, England, I, 2I4-I5. '5 Add. 3I,III/7. 16 Gondomar to Ciriza, London, 30 June I6I9, DIE, II, I79. 17 Sarmiento's relation of his voyage to and his reception in England in I6I3, DIE, III, 85.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I I97 was a long-time protege of the Howards and followed their lead, not that of Spain.

    In sum, the fact that there were Spanish pensioners at the English Court had very little effect on English policies or actions. In some cases, as that of Mrs Drummond, the pension was merely spent in a place where it could do no good, one way or another. The most influential of those 'well-inclined' toward Spain were too wealthy to take the pensions very seriously-Suffolk declined from the beginning, and Northampton never bothered about collecting. Lesser men such as Lake looked to the Howards as their patrons, not the Spanish.

    But the most conspicuous failure was in the case of those potentially or actually hostile to Spain. It was Spain's original intention to buy their friendship, but the result turned out to be just the reverse. The pensions did not buy friendship: matters simply reached a point, very quickly, where refusal to grant expected pensions would create more than normal hostility. Spain, far from being in control of hirelings who otherwise might have been expected to oppose Spanish interests, was rather in the position of a hapless diner who must 'bribe' a surly waiter with tips to avoid getting soup spilled on him.

    And this, so far as Gondomar was concerned, was the rub. It was easy enough to grant pensions-put another name on the list-but payment was a more difficult matter. For a person to be on Gondomar's pension list and 'in the pay of the King of Spain' did not mean that in practice he was actually paid, for Gondomar seldom had the money. He seldom had enough money, in fact, to pay his own expenses-he was one of the London money- lenders' best customers, including an account with Burlamaqui-and pay- ment of Spanish pensions at the English Court was always well in arrears. This caused him many anxious moments, for the disgruntled pensioners, whose good will the pensions were intended to buy, frequently threatened to become openly hostile to retaliate for the delay.18

    In the net reckoning it is safe to say that, even aside from the actual expense involved, Spanish pensions at the English Court caused the Spanish, including their ambassador, more headaches and hostility than any advantage

    18 See, for example, Gondomar's embassy account of I July I6I9, DIE, II, i82-9; Sar- miento to Philip III, London, 5 Oct. I613, ibid., iii, 122; same to Ciriza, London, 3 Jan. I6I8, ibid., 1, zoi. One who threatened him most frequently, interestingly enough, was Lady Suffolk, wife of a leader of the 'Spanish party'. Regarding the general practice of pensions the king of Spain was in fact in an odd position: he had many obligations of this sort in many countries, but even when he 'paid' them, no matter how late, it was often not in cash but by a warrant drawn on his generally empty treasury. Rather than go through the long, expensive process of collecting these in full the recipients would sell them at their discounted market rate, usually 4 to i ; the king was blamed, with some justice, for having paid only a quarter of what he had promised; as a result many friends were lost and many enemies were made, but the greatest irony lies in the fact that the king's treasury would eventually have to pay off the notes at face value all the same. See, for example, Gondomar to Ciriza, London, 13 March I6I9, ibid., ii, I26-7.

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  • I98 C. H. CARTER

    that ever accrued from them. At least Gondomar was convinced of it: he frequently recommended to Madrid that the money would be much better spent on warships to put down English pirates in the Indies.

    But if the practical implications of the Spanish pensions were either nil or negative, what of the moral implications? How much confusion there has been over the whole question of the servants of one king accepting money from another, and especially over how much treachery to the King of England this implies, is amusingly illustrated by an episode of i6I3, at the time of Gondomar's first coming to England. The current list of Spanish pensioners at the English Court formed a part of his instructions, and John Digby, James's ambassador to Madrid, managed to get his hands on it. Gardiner'9 describes Digby as shocked at this discovery, then draws a number of strange conclusions based on the assumption that James, too, was surprised to fiild that there were such highly placed Englishmen accepting pensions from the King of Spain.

    The fact is that John Digby, who was perhaps James's most dutiful servant and would never have withheld this information from his sovereign, may well have been shocked but was even more embarrassed by the duty of sending it. For although the pension list was of course in code, he had also managed to obtain the key to the code names the Spanish were then using; one of the pensioners was listed as 'Leandro'; and 'Leandro' proved to be the Spanish designator for the King of England.20

    A good many of the specific errors about Gondomar and his activities, however, can claim a much more recent and a much more honourable origin historiographically than those deriving from hostile contemporary writings: the classical work of S. R. Gardiner. These slips of almost a century ago can be found continued at all levels, even in D. H. Willson's splendid biography of James.

    For example, a key part of Gondomar's original mission was to do what he could to block completion of the negotiations going on for a match between Prince Charles and a sister of Louis XIII. Professor Willson's account states that 'His [Gondomar's] first impression when he arrived in London in I613 was that the French marriage could not be prevented. But he hinted in his insinuating way that the King could easily obtain better terms in Mad-rid than in Paris. '21 The situation was not that simple-much to Gondomar's despair.

    Spain's objective was to prevent a French marriage alliance in a second direction that would nullify Spain's own French marriage alliance then being rather shakily concluded, but for Spain to alienate France and lose the latter alliance (still very much in doubt) in the course of preventing a counterweight

    19 Gardiner, England, II, 2I6 ff. 20 See Mattingly, Renaissance Diplomacy, pp. 26OI . 21 D. H. Willson, King 3ames VI and I (London, 1956), p. 365.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I I99

    to it would be to gain nothing but a hostile neighbour. The 'Spanish faction' importuned Gondomar constantly to interpose himself in the matter, not least because a French marriage would be a victory for their Scottish rivals at Court, but he refused to touch it for fear of French reaction.

    The crux of the matter was that if he mentioned a Spanish marriage to James without formal instructions to do so the French would see his action not as a serious offer (which they probably would have accepted as legitimate competition for the Prince) but simply as malicious wrecking of their diplo- macy. Since he did not have the necessary instructions Gondomar spent his time not in hinting at a Spanish marriage but in constantly begging Madrid to send them so he could at least mention it.22

    This version of Gondomar's activities in the matter can be traced to the place from which a number of such errors originate:23 the very fount from which we get so much of our detailed, documented knowledge of the subject, the monumental researches of Samuel Rawson Gardiner. How mistakes of this sort occurred in Gardiner's work can be illustrated by reference to another of them, the still-accepted belief that James dissolved the Addled Parliament in I6I4 only after consulting with Gondomar-when in fact the ambassador had intentionally kept away from James for weeks and they did not see each other until several days after the dissolution.

    The explanation of Gardiner's error lies in the nature of some of the docu- ments among the vast quantity he consulted. It was the custom of the Spanish Council of State to read ambassadors' reports or summaries or minutes of them and then discuss the subject matter in Council. Gardiner drew heavily on this material; sometimes he saw the original dispatches but often all that was available to him were the minutes, which generally were third-person summaries of the ambassador's first-person reports of his activities (and of course of other matters), involving much compression and frequent omission of details, passages, or even entire sections which dealt with matters not felt relevant to the particular subject the Council was being called to discuss.

    In the case in question here Gardiner saw and used the minutes (only) of Gondomar's dispatches of 30 June and , 3 and 4 July I6I4, dealing with the recent dissolution of Parliament. It is possible, though not necessary, to understand these minutes to say that James saw Gondomar just prior to the dissolution. This was Gardiner's early opinion, and on the basis of this reading he credited the assumed interview, in an article in i 867, with James's decision to dissolve.24

    His interpretation was about the same two years later in the first edition of 22 See Gondomar's correspondence in DIE from his arrival in London to c. i6i6, passim. 23 Though Professor Willson independently derived the impression referred to above from

    the reports of the Venetian ambassadors. 24

    'On certain letters of Diego Sarmiento de Acufta, Count of Gondomar, giving an account of the affair of the Earl of Somerset, with remarks on the career of Somerset as a public man' Archaeologia, vol. xii (London, I867).

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  • 200 C. H. CARTER

    that portion of his great history of England in the period,25 but in the work's later editions his account is much more guarded, more precise, and more accurate. He continues to give Gondomar's influence the main credit for James's decision, but only through the agency of a go-between (John Digby) sent by James and involving only some platitudinous assurances of the vaguest sort on the ambassador's part. The famous and often-recounted audience which occurred about this time (the only one which did) Gardiner now has placed properly at 'a few days after the dissolution'.26

    In doing so Gardiner continues to cite the same document, which he had published in i869;27 one doubts that he ever had the opportunity to see the dispatches themselves, fuller and more precise, on which these minutes were based, which makes all the greater the honour due him for his judicious revision, for the dispatches themselves spell out clearly what actually happened: Digby came to see Gondomar on Friday, 3 June (OS), receiving only platitudinous expressions of Spanish good will; James consulted his Lord Privy Seal, Northampton, on Saturday night in Greenwich; Parliament was dissolved on Tuesday the 7th; but James, who had not seen the Spanish ambassador for some time, did not send for him until the following Saturday, i i June, and the audience was not held until Monday I 3th, six days after the dissolution. Though historians still sometimes assert that he did, Gondomar obviously did not use his diabolical presence to sway James's mind: he was not even there.28

    Given the enormous amount of new material Gardiner uncovered, it would be worse than petty to 'blame' him for such errors. It is lamentable that nearly a century has passed without their being corrected, but it is even more

    26 Prince Charles .and the Spanish marriage, 2 vols. (London, I869). 26 England, II, 247, 250. 27 Among the documents appended to his edition, in both Spanish and English, of Father

    Francisco de Jesus, Narrative of the Spanish marriage treaty (Camden Society, vol. ioi) (Westminster, I869), pp. 286-93.

    28 See DIE, Iv, 157 ff. Gondomar's reliability as a source of fact is of obvious importance to the question at hand. In support of his narrative Professor Willson frequently cites passages in Gardiner which are based mainly or entirely on Gondomar's dispatches or minutes of them, and he himself sometimes rests his account on Gondomar's own testimony (e.g. Ch. I 8, note 9; Ch. I9, notes 5, 8, io). Yet he says (p. 363): 'There was a great deal of bombast about him, but it was bombast that carried conviction; and his boastings not only imposed upon James, but upon the ambassador himself, upon his government, and upon historians who have taken his dispatches at their face value.' The present writer has, to date, seen several thousand folios of his dispatches, minutes of them, consultas on them, answers to them, etc., as well as parallel accounts of the same events, etc., written by independent observers. As with any source of information, it is necessary to make certain allowances: for example, Gondomar constantly refers to Prince Charles as 'a pearl 'but this need not be judged for its accuracy as a description nor as a measure of Gondomar's enthusiasm for the lad; he was simply trying to sell Madrid on the marriage itself. Gondomar's dispatches are, in fact, much more reliable than the highly respected Venetian diplomatic correspondence because, among other things, (i) he had access to more and better information than the Venetian envoys, and (2) the Venetians got much of their information from him (directly or indirectly), which he falsified freely. A convenient sample of the quality of his dispatches may be had in his report on the Addled Parliament, DIE, IV, 143 if.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I 20I

    regrettable to witness the distortion through unfounded extension of this judi- cious scholar's work. One of the more conspicuous examples of this (one involving another error of detail on Gardiner's part) is the affair of Donia Luisa de Carvajal. Dofia Luisa was a Spanish lady-a family connexion of Lerma's -of great religious zeal who had arrived in England about eight years before Gondomar, seeking martyrdom in the service of the counter-reformation in England. She busied herself in the job of conversion, preaching at times in Cheapside, going so far as publicly declaring the illegitimacy of the late Queen Elizabeth. She had been arrested in the past for these activities, but was released through Spanish influence, having come very early under the protec- tion of the Spanish ambassador.

    From the beginning Dofia Luisa was a nuisance, or worse, to the authorities in general; in time she became a particular thorn in the side of Abbot as well as Ellesmere and others of their faction. To strike at her would not only give them satisfaction in itself (for she was a genius at making herself obnoxious) but would provide a means of striking at Spain and at her ambassador, now Gondomar, especially since in recent times she had become, in a sense, a member of the ambassadorial household.

    Gondomar had in fact been in England only a few months when an opportunity presented itself to the Archbishop, who took the lead in the matter. Abbot procured a warrant for her arrest and she was seized at a little house she maintained in Spitalfields, on a charge of having set up a nunnery there. Gondomar was unable to procure her release by the Council and took the next step necessary, registering a protest with the King, demanding her release. James had no sympathy for the case-he was currently exercised in the extreme by the recent publication of Suarez's Defensor Fidei, and was in a mood to associate all Catholic agitators with the doctrine of tyrannicide-but was nevertheless inclined not to apply the full force of the anti-Catholic laws. The sequel, beginning with James's reply to Gondomar's messenger, is described by Gardiner as follows:

    He was, however, disposed to be merciful, and would give orders for the immediate release of the lady, on condition of her engaging to leave England without delay.

    The next morning a formal message was brought to Sarmiento, repeating the proposal which had thus been made. There are probably few men who, if they had been in Sarmiento's place, would not have hesitated a little before rejecting the offer. To refuse the King's terms would be to affront the man upon whom so much depended. Sarmiento did not hesitate for a moment. The lady, he said, had done no wrong. If the King wished it she would no doubt be ready to leave England at the shortest notice. But it must be clearly understood that in that case he, as the ambassador of his Catholic Majesty, would leave England at the same time. The answer produced an immediate effect. That very evening Donna Luisa was set at liberty, and Sarmiento was informed that her liberation was entirely unconditional.

    There is nothing in Sarmiento's account of the matter which would lead us to suppose that he acted from any deep design. But it is certain that the most

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  • 202 C. H. CARTER

    consummate skill could not have served him better. From henceforth the two men knew each other; and when the time arrived when James would be looking round him for the support of a stronger arm than his own, he would bethink himself of the Spanish stranger in whom he had so unexpectedly found a master.29

    As it happens, Gardiner was mistaken on a minor detail of this affair. Gondomar had indeed complained to James, who was in the country at the time, and James in turn had sent the message he said (and there is no reason not to believe him) he had already intended to send, ordering the Council to release her on the condition that she leave the country. This message was forwarded by the Council to Gondomar on the following day, as Gardiner's account indicates. But Gondomar's refusal to accept the terms of her release, and his ultimatum, threatening to leave the country with her if she were forced to go, were made to the Council, not to James. It was the Council, not James, who relented and ordered the lady's release without any provision for her leaving the country.

    It was some time before Gondomar heard of the matter from James again, when the King indicated he had only recently learned that she had still not left the country. James expressed surprise at having heard so, Gondomar offered a vague excuse about her health being too poor for travel, and the matter ended there. Any chance of its coming up again and affecting relations between the two men, one way or another, was conveniently avoided by her death shortly after.30

    As in other cases, such as that already mentioned of Gondomar's involve- ment in the dissolution of the Addled Parliament, Gardiner's account of the incident contains errors of minor detail which greatly alter the seeming nature of the episode-not because of any limitations on his part as an historian but because of limitations in his sources, as a comparison of the documents he cites and the original versions of Gondomar's reports shows clearly (e.g: the episode took quite a while longer than Gardiner thought; the lady was not released as quickly as his sources suggest). And, as in other cases, one must note that his conclusions, the inferences he drew from the imperfect evidence available to him, were after all comparatively guarded. These inferences, however, have been extended further and further by others in subsequent retellings, with no new evidence for support. As F. H. Lyon, for example, tells it,

    James sent him a message offering to release Dofia Luisa at once on condition that she should leave England as quickly as possible [correct, except that James intended that the ultimatum be delivered by the Council]. Sarmiento coolly [incorrect: he

    29 Gardiner, England, ii, 222-3. On her background see ibid., pp. 22I-2; and Ballesteros, DIE, iII, I27-8 n. Lady Georgiana Fullerton, The life of Luisa de Carvajal (London, I873), which is based on Mufioz's eulogy, is useful for details but of little further value to political history.

    30 For the text of the ambassador's own reports of the episode, which were unavailable to Gardiner and provide the basis for correcting his account, see DIE, iII, 145 ff.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I 203

    was furious] replied [incorrect: he replied to the Council] that... he would leave England too...James climbed down and ordered Donia Luisa be set at liberty [incorrect: he neither climbed down nor ordered her release; he did not even know it had been done].3'

    Others carry this even further. Gardiner at least sees the incident for what it was and does not assign any 'deep design' to the ambassador's actions. But Villa-Urrutia, uninhibited by the lack of evidence, embroiders with gusto on Gardiner, and even on Lyon's baseless overextensions (Villa-Urrutia's text is almost a direct steal from Lyon's book): when Sarmiento received James's reply that she had to leave the country,

    another ambassador, less expert and less spirited, would have been satisfied with this solution, describing it to his government as a diplomatic triumph; but our Don Diego looked higher and further, and understood that he could never attain any- thing in the long run with James if he did not subdue him in this; so he decided to give battle, and answered the King that...he would leave with her. That same afternoon they freed Dofia Luisa without conditions, and from that time on the King was at the mercy of the ambassador.32

    The fact is, of course, that not only was this single incident of no particular decisiveness in the development of the two men's relationship, but whatever influence or whatever degree of 'domination' the ambassador had over the King was the result of a long and intimate association and of many incidents in which the ambassador took a firm stand. This is not to say of course that Gondomar never won his point, using those methods often ascribed to him as 'bluff and bluster'. On occasion in fact he succeeded with these methods most resoundingly. One of the more famous examples of this sort took place on Gondomar's first landing in England, before the two men had even met face to face: the incident of the flags at Portsmouth.

    Gondomar conceived of his mission to England, although it was a diplo- matic one, as a warlike operation in an enemy country. In conformity with this view, the motto which he took to guide his actions (and which he repeated frequently in his writings) was a maxim taken from the battlefield: aventurar la vida y osar morir-risk your life and dare to die. Or, to phrase it in the sense in which he used it most effectively: if you have no resource but boldness, be bold; attack is never a better strategy than in the face of defeat. As Spain's diplomatic efforts in England had become increasingly ineffectual in recent years the first application the new ambassador meant to make of this precept was to establish himself (and through himself his king and country) as one not to be taken lightly, as one not to be pushed around, as one to be reckoned with.

    The incident in question came about because the Spanish warships bringing Gondomar to England had entered Portsmouth harbour without lowering their colours, contrary to custom, and after some hesitation the ranking naval

    31 See F. H. Lyon, op. cit. pp. 22-3. 32 Villa-Urrutia, op. cit. p. 97.

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  • 204 C. H. CARTER

    officer in port at the moment demanded that the colours be struck. Feeling that his sovereign's prestige was involved, Gondomar managed, however, to obtain time to send a message to James who was hunting not far away. He described the situation to the King, declaring that the flotilla had entered Portsmouth in a spirit of friendship and should be treated accordingly; he insisted that he could not strike his sovereign's colours with honour, and asked only that the English attack be delayed until he could go back aboard so he could take part in the fight himself and, if that was the way it must end, go down with the ships he felt responsible for.

    Although the Spanish ships of course had little chance of surviving such an engagement, there seems not the slightest reason to doubt the ambassador sincerely intended to die fighting rather than yield to what he felt to be a dishonour-the Spanish in the period in fact show remarkable readiness to die honourably in the service of their king. Yet, the ambassador did hope to get the order rescinded by the king. In this he had little to count on except James's love of peace; the event proved that he had gauged his man correctly. James had no intention of starting a war over a bit of cloth hanging from a masthead. He sent word immediately that the Spanish flag could stay at the masthead until the winds allowed the Spanish ships to leave, even in the presence of the captain's flagship.33

    There were a good many such cases in which Gondomar took a firm stand and the king acceded to his demands, and since Gondomar got his way this could, perhaps, be called 'domination'. On the other hand, when he was angry about Gondomar's activities or those of Spain, James was capable of calling the ambassador in for a full-fledged dressing down, sometimes going so far, as in the case of Spain's conduct in the Cleves-Jiilich controversy, as openly threatening war.34 And this 'firmness' on James's part did not only take the form of berating Gondomar to his face in the heat of momentary passion. Wheri Gondomar tried to guide James's judgement in one domestic matter, for example, James instructed Buckingham to ignore the ambassador's repeated attempts to interfere, adding, 'If Spain trouble me with suits of this nature both against my justice and honour, their friendship will be more burdensome than useful to me... . 35

    Incidents such as that at Portsmouth on the one hand or royal threats of war on the other are not only obviously extreme examples, but are also unusual-any 'relationship' could hardly last as long as this one did if made up, to any extent, of such episodes-and are thus by very definition not typical of these men's contacts with each other. The voluminous manuscript evidence on the subject confirms what one would suppose: that the true

    33 See above, note I17. 34 E.g. CSP Venetian, XIII, 398, 566. 35 James to Buckingham (n.p., n.d.), J. 0. Halliwell, ed., Letters of the Kings of England,

    2 vols. (London, I848), II, 149-50.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I 205

    nature of their relationship lay between the more dramatic extremes. On this subject the present writer has seen only one accurate statement in print: The real key to Gondomar's success in England lay in his relation to James I. It was not a simple one; certainly it was not, as has sometimes been represented, just the dominance of a weak character by a strong one; much less, the gulling of a fool by a knave. James was a complex character in whom elements of weakness were surprisingly mixed with traits of real strength; Gondomar, at least, never made the mistake of underrating him. Nor did he achieve his influence at a stroke, or storm the king's favor with a mixture of bullying and flattery. It wag a work of years. In part it was because Gondomar was able to make James like him....3,

    And like him James did. There is nothing strange about this, for Gondomar was good company, with a sense of humour compatible with James's, a well- informed, interesting, often witty conversationalist, and sharing many of James's personal interests. Gondomar, for his part, seems to have had a real personal liking for James. They became intimate friends and, although the ambassador never forgot that James was a king, they joked and laughed anld hunted together, called themselves 'the two Diegos', and drank from the same bottle.

    Their intimate relationship seems to have caused historians at least as much disapproving concern as the more flamboyant incidents mentioned above. In the case of Professor Willson, by far the finest biographer of James, the usual disgust is coupled with surprise (for he has a higher opinion of James's abilities than most writers) as he recounts how 'by some subtle art, Sarmiento contrived to convey an impression of candour and frankness and to convince the King of his personal integrity. It is astonishing that James, an experienced and sophisticated ruler, should have been deluded by such blandishments' (p. 364).

    One must demur on two important points. For one, the first part of the statement is misleading for it suggests that the impression was a false one. The truth is that Gondomar was as completely honest with James as security and other obvious considerations would allow. This was not, to be sure, just for the sweet sake of honesty, but because he recognized early that James was rno fool and that this was the most effective way of dealing with him. It was commonly understood that James 'ama gli uomini di virtui'37 and Gondomar, far from following the policy of deceit his enemies accused him of, made almost a fetish of dealing with James at every opportunity with 'la lianeza de Castilla la Vieja ',3 the sincere frankness considered traditional in Old Castile.

    This could not, of course, take the form of divulging full and true "I Mattingly, Renaissance Diplomacy, p. z62. 37 Relazioni degli stati europei lette al senato dagli ambasciatori veneziani nel secolo deci-

    mosettimo, eds. N. Barozzi and G. Berchet, vol. I (England) (Venice, I868), p. I72. See also Godfrey Goodman, The Court of King Yames I, I, i8.

    38 See, for example, Sarmiento to Lerma, 25 Jan. I614, DIE, III, 249.

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  • 206 C. H. CARTER

    information to the king on all matters. Diplomacy just does not work that way, especially between states at least nominally at the head of opposing inter- national factions. But he practised this llaneza as frequently and consistently as he could in all sorts of business with the king, and nowhere was it more effective than in his making it unequivocally clear that he was first and last, regardless of all else, the servant of the Spanish Crown, even when it meant that his actions would anger James and risk losing his friendship. This was a loyalty and consistency that James could well envy, for (with the exception of John Digby and a very few others) this was the sort of servant he himself needed but sorely lacked. It was this sort of 'personal integrity' on Gon- domar's part that the king was convinced of-and rightly so, for it was very real. Surrounded as he was by intriguing, self-seeking courtiers, it is small cause for surprise that James should have appreciated this quality in the servant of another.

    Which brings us to the second point in Professor Willson's statement with which one must disagree: the assumption that James really was deluded by the blandishments of this able, forceful agent of James's principal opponent in foreign affairs. Gondomar's embassy was a long one, and during this extended period the two men were together frequently, both on official business and as a part of a personal friendship that was sometimes rather close. This adds up to a very large number of occasions on which they discussed important matters involving the two crowns. In both formal negotiations and informal dis- cussions of these things, mutual reassurances of good faith and serious intent became a regular part of their talks.

    There were variations in detail as different occasions demanded, but these assurances developed soon into a repetitive formula-on both sides. This was especially true after the proposed Anglo-Spanish marriage alliance became the major topic of discussion. By the time the Bohemian crisis had arrived, and with it the most crucial period of these negotiations, Gondomar's assurances of the sincerity of Spain's desire for the match and James's declarations of eagerness to comply with Spanish wishes in all things had become so routine as to have achieved near-ritual status.

    Rather than being a one-sided matter of beguiler and victim, this was a serious diplomatic duelling match between two very able opponents; deceptive blandishments there certainly were, in profusion, but their exchange was a thoroughly mutual affair. In this very serious contest being played for high international stakes there were most definitely two players, and each had too high a regard for his opponent to feel any very lasting complacency about how the game was going. Contemporary 'observers' (who of course observed very little of what actually passed between the two men) stated with certainty that James indeed was deluded by Gondomar's blandishments, and most historians since have agreed. Gondomar, for his part, only wished he could be sure it was so: as often as not it seemed that James was deluding him.

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  • GONDOMAR: AMBASSADOR TO JAMES I 207

    There is of course no denying that James did sometimes reveal his plans, intentions, and various state secrets to Gondomar. Perhaps the most famous of these indiscretions was in the case of Raleigh's gold-seeking expedition to the Orinoco. Spain of course claimed the area, and though the two nations used differing and conflicting standards to establish a 'legitimate' claim to an area, if the Spanish had already established a settlement on the spot in question as they said they had (correctly, as it turned out), then this fulfilled even the English standard and there would be much justice, even by English standards (if applied), to objections to the enterprise.

    But James was in a quandary. He wanted to keep the peace with Spain, but he was under great pressure to let Raleigh make the trip. So he took the middle course of making Raleigh sign a promise not to violate any Spanish settlements, which Raleigh claimed did not exist there anyway. When Gondomar registered a protest, trying to get James to stop the expedition, James, in a moment of weakness, showed him the terms of Raleigh's charter and the promise itself, in which all responsibility for any violations of Spanish settlements was accepted by Raleigh.

    Although this indiscretion was much reviled by the English, when Raleigh did attack the Spanish settlement of San Thome the Spanish, for all their outrage, accepted the thesis that James and the English as a nation could not be held to blame. Raleigh lost his head (as he had agreed he should) but James kept his peaceful relations with Spain in spite of the provocation.

    A couple of years later when the Roger North expedition to the Amazon was projected, Gondomar raised the same objections. Once more the indiscreet king naively showed him the secret promise Captain North had signed not to violate Spanish territory. When North returned, his promise broken, Gon- domar demanded justice and North was thrown into prison. Once again the peace was kept-an increasingly important matter to James now, as he wanted no war until he had exhausted all possible means of recovering the Palatinate by negotiation-but Madrid noticed a certain resemblance between this and the Raleigh affair, and pointed it out to Gondomar.39

    Two further years later, Count Mansfeld raised a body of troops in England and proposed to land them in northern France, by agreement with that government, and march them directly to the Lower Palatinate. Under the rules of the game at that time this was legitimate enough, but both Madrid and Brussels were afraid that this was a collusive deception in which the French planned to join their forces to Mansfeld's and in which the object was not to recover the Lower Palatinate for Frederick V but to recover the County of Artois for France. Spain's resident in London, Jacques Bruneau at that time, of course protested, demanding that James not allow the force to leave England. But James had extracted promises from Mansfeld that he would march directly to the Palatinate without violating the territory of the Spanish

    39 Philip III to Gondomar, Madrid, io June i620, Est. 2573.

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  • 2o8 C. H. CARTER

    Netherlands, and additional promises from the subordinate commanders not to obey if Mansfeld gave orders in violation of his pledge. James confidentially revealed these documents to Bruneau. But by that time, after two successes, the trick had worn too thin. It was obviously the Raleigh gambit all over again.40

    It was this sort of business that Gondomar had to put up with. He was able to exercise considerable influence over James, partly by his intuitive genius at forcing an issue at just the right time, partly because he made it a set policy to deal openly with James (who was never in doubt that Gondomar served his own sovereign first of all, and respected him for it), partly because of a real mutual friendship, perhaps most of all because the courses they sought to pursue (though not the ultimate goals they hoped to attain) happened to coincide.

    But one thing we can be certain of: James's conduct with Gondomar was clearly not that of a puppet on a string. The contemporary critics of both claimed that James was putty in the hands of the ambassador, the Spanish Machiavelli, and historians since have repeated the tale. But Gondomar himself knew better. Toward the end of his embassy some French envoys in London, having failed to bring James into a war contemplated against Spain in the Alps, claimed they had found the king to be 'completely Spanish' and referred to him publicly as 'Don Jacques', a name the English Puritans quickly picked up (for cautious jocular use among themselves). Gondomar enjoyed the joke, but soberly told his sovereign that it would please him greatly if James more truly merited the 'Don '.41

    40 See, for example, Bruneau to Philip IV, London, 28 November and 8 December 1624, Est. 256I (unfoliated).

    41 Gondornar to Philip III, London, 8 Feb. I62I, Est. 7031/43-44. Since this article was submitted for publication, the relationship between James and Gon-

    domar has been the subject of extensive discussion-one might say amicable debate-between D. H. Willson and myself. Though it does not involve fundamentals, an area of honest disagreement remains-but I shall not attempt to state Professor Willson's position here, as he is preparing an essay on the subject himself. I look forward to its appearance, and expect to draw shamelessly on it in the preparation of my career biography of Gondomar, now in progress. Meanwhile, I have dealt with other of Gondomar's activities in The secret diplomacy of the Habsburgs, 1598-1625 (New York: Columbia University Press, I964).

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    Article Contentsp. [189]p. 190p. 191p. 192p. 193p. 194p. 195p. 196p. 197p. 198p. 199p. 200p. 201p. 202p. 203p. 204p. 205p. 206p. 207p. 208

    Issue Table of ContentsHistorical Journal, Vol. 7, No. 2, 1964Volume Information [pp. 347 - iv]Front MatterGondomar: Ambassador to James I [pp. 189 - 208]Matthew Boulton and the Art of Parliamentary Lobbying [pp. 209 - 229]The Medical Mission and the Care of the Sick Poor in Nineteenth-Century England [pp. 230 - 245]The Abolition of Patronage in the Indian Civil Service and the Closure of Haileybury College [pp. 246 - 257]British Policy in the Balkans, 1908-9 [pp. 258 - 279]Cairo and Khartoum on the Arab Question, 1915-18 [pp. 280 - 297]CommunicationSir Edward Stanhope's Advice to Thomas Wentworth, Viscount Wentworth, Concerning the Deputyship of Ireland: An Unpublished Letter of 1631 [pp. 298 - 320]

    Review ArticleHobbes's 'Leviathan' [pp. 321 - 333]

    Other Reviewsuntitled [pp. 333 - 336]untitled [pp. 336 - 338]untitled [pp. 338 - 340]untitled [pp. 340 - 344]untitled [pp. 344 - 346]

    Back Matter [p. ii]