NUMEROUS RELICS AND MEMORIALS INTMATELY ASSOCIATED WITH THE STORY
OF THE BORGIA'S—GRUESOME EXHIBITS IN THE CASTEL SANT' ANGELO—A
STRANGE LEGEND OF THE "ROGUE'S LANE."
More than four
centuries have passed since Alexander VI, the second of the Borgia
Popes, unwittingly drank of the poison brewed by his bastard son
and closed his career of unparalleled infamy. In any other country
or city four centuries sweep away sacred landmarks and alter even
the face of the earth. It is not so in Rome. There you may delve
into any age from the days of Romulus to the reign of the last pope
or king and with a little patience you can dig out your chapter
of history and in fancy re-animate the scenes of long ago. The statue
of Pompey, "which all the while ran blood," still stands.
You can set out on any fine morning and follow the steps of Caesar
on his flight into the mountains. Every emperor has left some vestige
of his power, and so has every pope. The yesterdays of Rome may
be taken almost literally.
Numerous are
the souvenirs of the Borgias. Of some of them I have spoken in other
chapters, but all of them are interesting and valuable to the historian.
Next to the Borgia apartments in the Vatican, mentioned elsewhere
at some length, the one building richest in Borgia memorials is
the famous Castel Sant' Angelo. Alexander, though he had not even
a conscience in embryo, never ceased to dread the Roman populace.
He constantly feared an uprising and took but little comfort in
the small Spanish garrison that was lodged near the Vatican. He
was haunted, too, by the fear of a foreign invasion, which, as events
proved, was by no means groundless. Hence, he lavished much money
and care on improving the fortifications which had been built around
the ancient tomb of Emperor Hadrian by other popes before him. Until
recently the straight street he built from the Castle to the Vatican
was known as Via Alexandrina. It was Alexander who built the secret
passageway between the Vatican and the fortress, for which so many
of his successors were duly grateful. Substantial remains of this
passage way may still be seen in the Borgo Nuovo and within the
walls of the castle itself. He took extreme care to prepare himself
for a long siege, and to this day the guides point out the cisterns
he built and the huge store rooms intended for the reception of
grain and oil.
All the underground
prisons with secret traps leading to the Tiber were constructed
by Alexander. During his reign the frightful holes were always filled
with his victims. It is worthy of note that none of his successors
ever dispensed with these hideous torture chambers, but kept on
using them even unto the day of Rome's final liberation from the
papal yoke. Everywhere the Borgia coat-of-arms is in evidence. It
was here in the grim pagan tomb, half fortress and half prison,
that Alexander and his depraved offspring Cesare were wont to meet
in safety and silence when they planned their murderous raids upon
those nobles and churchmen whose wealth excited their envy. All
the vast wealth he had accumulated by the sale of indulgences and
offices and especially through dispensations and annulments of marriage
bonds did not assuage Alexander's thirst for gold. Openly and without
pretense he seized upon the estates of wealthy men who died during
his reign. He simply disregarded the last will and testament and
the claims of relatives. Even these brazen robberies failed to content
his avarice. "All Romans of means," writes a contemporary,
"live in great fear and trembling and always see the hangman
around the corner." The fortress became a shambles.
The cup of poison,
the silken cord of the hangman, the dagger and the eternal bath
in the rushing river claimed their victims day after day. This is
not the place to record all the men who died in Sant' Angelo for
no other crime than being rich, but their names alone would fill
many a printed page.
Another well
preserved relic of the Borgia is the former palace of the pope and
his mistress, Rosa Vannozza, near the church in which are preserved
the alleged chains of St. Peter. This part of Rome had undergone
some changes in the early 70's, when a new street which was called
the Via Cavour was laid out leading from the Central Railroad Station
directly up to the northern side of the Forum. If you will start
from the railroad depot down the Via Cavour, a walk of less than
an eighth of a mile, will bring you to a cross street, which still
bears the name of Salita de' Borgia, or the Borgia ascent. Before
the Via Cavour existed, this ascent, mostly steps of granite, was
the main thoroughfare of the section, which had its other outlet
toward the Colosseum.
Looking toward
the Forum, turn to your left and you will see some distance above
an arched passageway, the remains of the southern wing of the Palace
of the Pope and later his mistress, Rosa Vannozza. You will see
a window of obviously finer architecture giving upon the Via Cavour.
Indeed the window and the balcony are as fine a bit of early Renaissance
as may be found in Rome. In the palace the mistress of the pope,
even after he had tired of her; kept a pretentious establishment
and entertained the cream of Roman society. It was in her palace
that the two Borgia brothers, Cesare and John, her own sons, sat
at supper on the evening which later had such a tragic end for the
younger of the brothers, as related in the foregoing chapter.
The steps which
lead from the Via Cavour up to the remains of the old palace are
known among the people to this day as the Via Scellerata, or the
Way of the Villain, or the Rogue's Lane.
There is a strange
legend connected with the balcony. Popular tradition says, and is
well confirmed by history, that the pope was a frequent visitor
there, not so much to see his mistress as to watch over his children.
It is said that when Lucrezia was scarcely seventeen, Alexander
attempted to violate her in the room, the window of which still
exists as shown in the picture. The story goes that in the struggle
which followed, the pope moved too near the railing of the balcony
and that the infuriated girl flung herself at him with full force,
making him lose his balance and fall into the street. Still unable
to control her anger, the girl watched her unnatural father as he
lay prostrate and groaning on the pavement. She would not allow
any help to be given him, but commanded that her carriage be brought
out and then rode over the body of the pope, cursing him fiercely.
The story, with an additional wealth of detail, passes current among
the common people to this day. It is by no means improbable. When
we recollect by what fiendish methods the father broke down the
natural modesty which is the birthright of every woman, the legend
of his first attempt and its failure appears entirely credible.
The coat-of-arms
of the Borgia is scattered all over Rome in great profusion. I have
mentioned the conspicuous presence of two of the biggest on the
walls of the Oratory of St. Peter, built by the Knights of Columbus.
The name of the Borgia, too, is mentioned frequently in inscriptions
in and out of churches.
In my walks
about the city I found the most complete and interesting heraldic
design of the Borgia under the Milvian Bridge (Ponte Milvio, or
Ponte Molle). It is a finely carved bas-relief in rich red marble
on the interior of the eastern wall. It represents three distinct
parts: The coat-of-arms of Callixtus III, the first of the Borgia
Popes and the uncle of the infamous Alexander; the coat-of-arms
of Cardinal Roderigo Borgia, afterwards Pope Alexander VI, and the
full coat-of-arms of the Borgia family as it still exists in Spain.
The representation under the Milvian Bridge is the only one of its
kind that exists in Rome. The reason for placing the bas-relief
on the bridge is not known. Across the way from the coat-of-arms
is a space now vacant, but at one time evidently filled in by some
inscription or commemorative tablet. All trace of this has disappeared.
In such inscriptions
as may still be seen referring to either the older or the younger
Borgia Pope, they are always spoken of as "Pontifex Maximus
beatae memoriae" “Sovereign Pontiff of Blessed Memory."
One rather tragic and sinister memorial is that of the tomb of Cardinal
Michiel, who, after having been bribed by Alexander to vote for
him, later fell a victim to the fatal poison of the Borgia.
There still exists but little altered the palace which Borgia built
for himself while a cardinal and where he kept his harem with little
attempt at concealment. It is today known as the Palazzo Sforza-Cesarini.