The Queen's Agent: Francis Walsingham at the Court of Elizabeth I (10 page)

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Authors: John Cooper

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Walsingham had been reluctant to ring the alarm bell too soon. He knew he lacked experience, hence the caveats in his letter to Cecil of December 1568. But his source in Paris was insistent: the monarchies of France and Spain were conspiring to undermine English security. As the northern rising and events in London soon proved, he had every reason to be concerned. Within days of Walsingham’s warning, de Spes had called on the French ambassador in London with a bold proposal. The two powers should sink their differences and force Elizabeth to get rid of her chief minister. De Spes said he knew ‘of no greater heretic in this world’ than William Cecil. Even more remarkably, the queen should be told to return to the Catholic fold or face a total trade embargo. De Spes exceeded his brief, and soon found himself confined to quarters. But he had a collaborator, a man whose story would be told by English propagandists long after de Spes had been forgotten. His name was Roberto di Ridolfi, and his manoeuvring was so deft that we still cannot be sure whose side he was on.

To the London merchant community, Ridolfi was a respectable
Florentine banker and a financial agent for William Cecil. Unknown to the English, however, he was also a secret envoy of the pope. Since 1566 he had been handling the money sent by Pius V to fund political Catholicism in England. Ridolfi was the ideal choice for this kind of work. His profession as a merchant gave him freedom of movement around the courts of Renaissance Europe. Banking contacts in Florence enabled him to move money around by bills of exchange, avoiding the problem of transporting large quantities of coin. In September 1569 he used this method to transfer the best part of £3,000 from de Spes to the Bishop of Ross, Mary Stuart’s representative in London. But a transaction on such a huge scale was hard to conceal. Suddenly nervous that Ridolfi might be more than he seemed, Cecil and Leicester ordered him taken to Walsingham’s house for questioning.

In 1569 Walsingham’s London home was the building known as the Papey in Aldgate ward, a converted medieval hospital for the relief of poor chantry priests. Here Ridolfi could be interrogated while his cover, which might prove useful to the English government, was preserved intact. Cecil and Leicester wrote to Walsingham as ‘our very loving friend’, illustrating how high he was rising in their confidence. Gradually Ridolfi began to talk to his captors. He knew about the conspiracy to marry Mary to the Duke of Norfolk. The money which he passed on to Norfolk’s servants and the Bishop of Ross had originated with the pope. Elizabeth herself became involved in the investigation. Observing that some of Ridolfi’s answers were ‘far otherwise than the truth is’, she offered to be lenient in exchange for a frank disclosure of his dealings with the Queen of Scots. Walsingham was authorised to search his house for evidence. Finally, a month after he had taken Ridolfi into custody, Walsingham was told to free him on bail with a lecture not to meddle any more in affairs of state.

Elizabeth claimed to be acting out of clemency, the love which she bore to Ridolfi’s countrymen. Something about this does not ring true. Ridolfi was freed two days after peals of church bells in Yorkshire and Durham had raised the countryside in revolt – sheer folly, unless Cecil and Walsingham had some purpose in mind. Nothing is made explicit, but the shadow of a deal lurks behind Ridolfi’s order of release: the promise of information in return for a suspended sentence, perhaps, or the prospect of advancing in royal service. If this did not persuade him, there was an unmistakable note of threat behind the queen’s words. A harsher examination, she said, would reveal more than Ridolfi had so far volunteered. Walsingham was to impress on him just how fortunate he was.

Was Ridolfi turned during his weeks in Walsingham’s house? There are two contrasting ways of reading the rest of his story. Before the northern rebellion ignited, Ridolfi had told the French ambassador that he held a commission from the pope to work with sympathetic English nobles, specifically the Duke of Norfolk, to restore Catholicism to England. On regaining his liberty, he apparently returned to the task he had been set. In March 1571 he made his way to Rome, where the pope endorsed his plan for another Catholic uprising, led by Norfolk and backed by Spanish troops, to put Mary on the English throne. But when the Bishop of Ross’s courier Charles Bailly was arrested at Dover, the web of threads between Ridolfi and Mary Stuart’s agents was severed. Norfolk was beheaded on Tower Hill in 1572. Mary survived for the time being, protected by the queen from a Parliament which was baying for her blood. Ridolfi slipped away to serve the Medici dukes in Florence, where he retired many years later as a senator.

Maybe Walsingham and Cecil made a catastrophic error of judgement in November 1569, leaving Ridolfi at liberty to plot against queen and state. Philip II was genuinely won over to an
active policy against England. Had the Duke of Alva not been such a sceptic, it is possible that a Spanish armada could have been launched in the early 1570s rather than 1588. If Ridolfi was working as a double agent, then his cover was exceptionally deep, and his handlers were playing a dangerous game. And yet there are indications that this is just what he was doing. Ridolfi left England for Rome after a personal interview with the queen, who gave him a passport and two horses as her blessing. He was surprisingly lax about security, writing to Mary in plain text. Other letters were ciphered, but Elizabeth somehow got hold of a key. The Ridolfi plot precipitated Norfolk’s downfall, which suited Cecil, and it might have done the same for the Queen of Scots.

There is another snippet of evidence that Walsingham persuaded his man to change sides. A year after the northern rebellion, Ridolfi and Walsingham were in conversation once again. The subject this time, so he reported to Cecil, was England’s relationship with Flanders and France. Evidently he still thought of Ridolfi as an asset. The way Walsingham wrote about him suggests that the two men had discovered a rapport during their strange experience of sharing a house. They were direct contemporaries after all, both from merchant families, and they had Italy in common. Walsingham told Cecil that Ridolfi ‘would deal both discreetly and uprightly, as one both wise and who standeth on terms of honesty and reputation’. Honesty and reputation seem like curious words to use of Roberto di Ridolfi. Either Walsingham had begun his career in royal service with an intelligence coup of major proportions, or he had been utterly and humiliatingly fooled. The queen, at least, seems to have believed his side of the story. By the time that he wrote this letter, Francis Walsingham had been named as the new English ambassador in France.
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English attitudes towards the French during the sixteenth century mingled fear with admiration. The ‘auld alliance’ between France and Scotland meant that English monarchs often faced a war on two fronts. Henry VIII revived the ancient claim that kings of England were rulers of France as well, but the footholds which he won in Normandy were fleeting. Boulogne was sold back by the government of Edward VI, while the garrison town of Calais was reconquered by the French in the dying days of Mary’s reign. France was a great power, boasting a population six times that of England. Its taxation system could sustain lengthy campaigns overland and a modern naval base at Le Havre. Yet centuries of war had bred something else between the two nations, a shared belief in chivalry and a common language of power. King Charles IX was inducted into the Order of the Garter early in Elizabeth’s reign, while the English were keen to copy the ceremonial of the French court. The religious gulf, too, was less than it might appear. The French Calvinist Church was one of the largest in Europe, with artisans and nobles proving the quickest to convert. The crown may have remained Catholic, but it was also resistant to any increase in the power of the pope. As a centralised monarchy ruling over a religiously plural people, France was more akin to England than either Spain or the Holy Roman Empire. It was also the most likely place for Queen Elizabeth to seek a husband.

English Protestants had particular reason to keep a close eye on France. By the early 1560s a million Huguenots, as French Calvinists were known, were engaged in bloody struggle for survival. The French wars of religion were played out against a dynastic backdrop uncannily similar to that of Tudor England. Like Henry VIII, King Henry II of France was succeeded by three of his children in turn following his death in a jousting accident in 1559. Francis II became king at fifteen but died in
December 1560, leaving Mary Stuart as a widow. His brother Charles inherited the throne aged just ten. The seizure of the regency by the queen mother, Catherine de’ Medici, prompted a struggle for power which soon slid into civil war. Catholic churches were despoiled from Rouen to the Rhône. A vicious guerrilla campaign was fought in the Midi. As France tore apart along fault-lines of faith, communities fell into grisly crowd violence. Not content with violating devotional images and Protestant Bibles, people began to turn on their neighbours. Atrocity stories gained rapid currency, inflated by propaganda but based on murders and mutilations which were only too real. On progress through Maine in 1564, the king was told about a widowed Protestant noblewoman slaughtered in her own house alongside her children and chambermaids, their corpses left for pigs to feed on. Gangs of young Catholic men patrolled the towns of Provence, stoning Protestants to death and burning the bodies. Huguenots were dehumanised as vermin, a polluting stain which had to be washed out of French society.
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The French wars of religion were a mixed blessing to the English. A nation divided against itself was less capable of pursuing an aggressive foreign policy, and more likely to seek accommodation with its ancient enemy. But there was also the possibility that the uproar in France would foretell, or even spark, a similar conflagration in England. The fear that France represented an alternative destiny was fed by rumours of Catholic armies waiting to be mobilised in the north and west of England. It was also heightened by English memories of their own civil wars a century before. An obvious remedy was to ally with the Huguenots, and a deal was duly struck in 1562 with their leader the Prince of Condé. English troops would occupy Le Havre and Dieppe in exchange for the return of Calais when the Protestants won the war. But the towns proved difficult to hold, the Huguenots made peace with their Catholic countrymen,
and the expedition collapsed amid a savage bout of plague. English honour had been hazarded and forfeited, while the queen’s aversion to war had been vindicated. Persuading her to pursue a hawkish foreign policy would henceforth be more difficult than ever.

Francis Walsingham landed in France on New Year’s Day 1571 and made his way to Paris for an audience with Charles IX and his mother. There were no permanent embassy buildings in this period; ambassadors had to make their own arrangements. It has always been assumed that Walsingham lived in the Faubourg Saint Germain, an expensive suburb colonised by nobles retreating from the bourgeois values of the city. In fact a document written by the soldier and agent Tomasso Sassetti reveals that Walsingham’s house was in Saint Marceau. South of the city walls and on the left bank of the Seine, this was a very different place from the fashionable Saint Germain. Cloth-workers and tanners toiled in small workshops, where the smell of dyestuffs and animal hides hung heavy in the air. Its location and industrial character made Saint Marceau a natural centre of Protestant activism. Calvinists could worship openly in the building they called the Temple, while the English ambassador could entertain aristocrats and intellectuals like Hubert Languet and Petrus Ramus without arousing too much attention. Captains Sassetti and Franchiotto also visited the embassy, implying that Walsingham was already building up a network of operatives in Paris.
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Sixteenth-century ambassadors were more than civil servants. They represented the person of the prince as well as the state, and were treated with the courtesy which their dignity demanded. The French court was widely hailed as the most splendid in Europe, although Walsingham’s letters home typically focused on policy more than pageantry. Describing a dinner put on to welcome him, he noted that ‘we lacked no store of good meat’;
pomp and ceremonial did not come easily to him. Sir Thomas Smith partook of French hospitality with much more relish when he joined the embassy a year later:

Nine or ten cooks in my kitchen, butlers, victuallers, and officers of the king’s house appointed to serve me. Of meat, wine, bread, candles, plate, and all such things as if I were a young prince, and all of the king’s charges. Minstrels and music more than I would have and a controller of the king’s house to see me served, from time to time attending on me as if I were a duke; two messes [meals] a day served with all delicacies.

 

The Spanish ambassador in Paris, admittedly not an unbiased witness, described Walsingham as blunt and uncourtly, a man who dressed entirely in black. Yet he was also a natural negotiator, and he soon managed to achieve a clear line of communication with Catherine de’ Medici.
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