[Henry VIII. by A. F. Pollard]@TWC D-Link book
Henry VIII.

CHAPTER III
18/76

(p.

052) Partly with these objects in view, partly to draw off the scent from his own track, Ferdinand had, in 1508, raised the hue and cry after Venice.

Pope and Emperor, France and Spain, joined in the chase, but of all the parties to the league of Cambrai, Louis XII.

was in a position to profit the most.

His victory over Venice at Agnadello (14th May, 1509), secured him Milan and Venetian territory as far as the Mincio; it also dimmed the prospects of Ferdinand's Italian scheme and threatened his hold on Naples; but the Spanish King was restrained from open opposition to France by the fact that Louis was still mediating between him and Maximilian on their claims to the administration of Castile, the realm of their daughter and daughter-in-law, Juana.
[Footnote 94: By Bergenroth in his prefaces to the _Calendar of Spanish State Papers_.


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