The treaty was designed by Cardinal Wolsey and so came to be signed by the ambassadors of the nations concerned in London.[4]Pope Leo X originally called for a five-year peace while the monarchs of Europe helped him fight back the rising power of the Ottoman Empire, which was encroaching into the Balkans.[3] Wolsey was very keen on instead making lasting peace and persuaded Henry VIII to avoid war and to take a more diplomatic route in foreign affairs.
The mostly-peaceful period came to an end with the French invasion of 1494. A succession of small wars followed, and in 1518, the political possibilities of a peace treaty seemed a realisation.
Terms
All European countries were invited to London (the Grand Duchy of Moscow and the Ottoman Empire are not European). The treaty hoped to bind the 20 leading states of Europe into peace with one another and thus end warfare between the states of Europe.[5]
In October 1518, the Treaty was initiated between representatives from England and France. It was then ratified by other European states and the Pope. The agreement established a defensive league based upon certain terms. The central tenet was that states with an active foreign policy needed to commit to a stance of non-aggression. As a corollary tenet, signatory states also needed to promise to make war collectively upon any state that broke the terms of the treaty.[5]
At the time, the Treaty was considered a triumph for Thomas Wolsey. It allowed Henry VIII to increase his standing greatly in European political circles.[5]
Some historians have been skeptical that the signatories of the treaty genuinely intended to comply with the commitments of the treaty, while other historians have argued that there was a genuine sense of Christian unity at the time and a common sense of threat posed by the Ottoman Empire.[1]
^ abGlenn, Richardson (7 January 2014). The Field of Cloth of Gold. New Haven. pp. 5–6. ISBN9780300160390. OCLC862814775.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)