LEO AND LUTHER: THE NEW SHEPHERDS OF CHRISTENDOM
When Pope Julius II died everyone knew how he wanted to be remembered. Every Pope was obsessed with glory and power and Julius was no exception.
His vehicle of choice to attain both was the machine of war.
He wanted to be remembered sitting astride his horse in his gold-plated armor besieging the Venetians, or the French or whoever it was that he was picking a fight with at any given moment.
The Warrior Pope.
His successor was somewhat different. Leo X was a Medici, which meant that not only was he power hungry and obsessed with glory he also had expensive tastes.
Julius had begun the laborious task of renovating St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome but he died before he could see it completed. When Leo took the Papal throne he pounced on the half-finished job with glee.
Leo loved a good makeover project and St. Peter’s was the mother of all makeovers.
Unfortunately for Leo, the Papal treasuries were in shambles. Julius had been busy dumping money on his war efforts which left very little money to do anything with.
Leo had grand dreams for St. Peter’s but they were a little difficult to accomplish when he was also somewhat broke.
But Leo was resourceful and he soon began to work out ways to channel money back into the Papal bank accounts.
A deal with France which brought in all the revenue of the French church was a good place to start and then a most appealing offer presented itself to him.
Albert of Brandenburg, the son of the Elector of Brandenburg, a small state in Germany, reached out to Leo.
He wanted to be Archbishop of Mainz and he was willing to pay a reasonable sum for it. Now Albert was already Archbishop of Magdeburg but Mainz was a more powerful seat to hold and Albert was greedy, mostly for the power but also for the money that would go with it.
The thing was though that Albert had no money.
He was bankrupt. Broke.
So how was he going to pay to be Archbishop of Mainz? Ah, this is where the plot thickens and gets delightfully and perhaps, jaw-droppingly twisty.
Albert offered the Pope, 48,000 ducats for the office of Archbishop of Mainz. A small fortune that Leo was more than happy to tuck into his little building fund. Albert then went to Jakob Fugger in Augsburg. The Fuggers were venture capitalists and bankers. Jakob Fugger agreed to lend Albert of Brandenburg the 48,000 ducats he needed to buy off the Pope. Everything was done and dusted in the five seconds it took to complete a handshake. Albert despatched the money to Rome and happily assumed office as brand new Archbishop of Mainz.
But Albert still needed to pay back the Fuggers. And Albert was still bankrupt.
Enter John Tetzel.