Chapter 10 - How the king had ordered the admiral to be put to death, and concerning the letter which the Doge and the Council of Commoners of Genoa wrote pleading for him
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 December 2023
Summary
King Pedro hated procuresses and witches, so that as a result of the punishments he inflicted upon them there were very few women who had such occupations. When he was in Beira, he found out that one by the name of Helena had procured a woman for Admiral Lançarote Pessanha and that he had slept with her. Her name was Violante Vasques. The king had the procuress burnt immediately and gave orders for the admiral to be beheaded. Although the members of his Royal Council strove to save the admiral from his wrath, they could never convince the king to agree, so the admiral fled. He was exiled and put from him for a long time, losing his royal allowance and all his benefits, as well as his position. Not knowing how to remedy this situation, the admiral decided to send a message to the Doge and the Council of Commoners of Genoa asking them to write to the king on his behalf, requesting him to grant the favour of a pardon. On seeing the admiral's message, the Genoese wrote to the king asking him to set aside his wrath. The letter from Gabriele Adorno, the Doge of Genoa, and the elders of that city's Council of Commoners read as follows:
Prince and most noble lord, of great and royal majesty, when kindness is observed, very often the method and severity of justice is tempered by gentleness, and compassionate consideration always undertakes to renew good friendships of yesteryear. If it is a good thing to make new friends and acquaintances, it is much better, as the wise man says, to renew and preserve old ones, for a new friend is neither equal nor similar to one of long-standing. Such reasoning leads us to trust that Your Supreme Highness will graciously listen to our humble entreaty, which now follows.
We have been informed of how the noble knight Lançarote Pessanha, your admiral, the son of the late illustrious nobleman Emanuele Pessagno, worthy of happy memory, and our friend and citizen, has fallen victim to Your Royal Majesty's wrath. Apparently, as rumours have it, that situation was due more to the envy of some who did not speak well of him rather than due to other serious misdeeds that he may have been accused of.
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- The Chronicles of Fernão LopesVolume 1. The Chronicle of King Pedro of Portugal, pp. 88 - 89Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023