The Carnival, properly so called, apart from these great triumphal marches, had nowhere, perhaps, in the fifteenth century so varied a character as in Rome.There were races of every kind--of horses, asses, buffaloes, old men, young men, Jews, and so on.Paul II entertained the people in crowds before the Palazzo di Venezia, in which he lived.The games in the Piazza Navona, which had probably never altogether ceased since the classical times, were remarkable for their warlike splendor.
We read of a sham fight of cavalry, and a review of all the citizens in arms.The greatest freedom existed with regard to the use of masks, which were sometimes allowed for several months together.Sixtus IVventured, in the most populous part of the city--at the Campofiore and near the Banchi --to make his way through crowds of masks, though he declined to receive them as visitors in the Vatican.Under Innocent VIII, a discreditable usage, which had already appeared among the Cardinals, attained its height.In the Carnival of 1491, they sent one another chariots full of splendid masks, of singers, and of buffoons, chanting scandalous verses.They were accompanied by men on horseback.
Apart from the Carnival, the Romans seem to have been the first to discover the effect of a great procession by torchlight.When Pius IIcame back from the Congress of Mantua in 1459, the people waited on him with a squadron of horsemen bearing torches, who rode in shining circles before his palace.Sixtus IV, however, thought it better to decline a nocturnal visit of the people, who proposed to wait on him with torches and olive-branches.