He immediately entered upon the path of the reformer. The 1908 edition of the
Catholic Encyclopedia characterised the task that faced him: :''"To extirpate inveterate abuses; to reform a court which thrived on corruption, and detested the very name of reform; to hold in leash young and warlike princes, ready to bound at each other's throats; to stem the rising torrent of revolt in Germany; to save Christendom from the
Turks, who from
Belgrade now threatened
Hungary, and if
Rhodes fell would be masters of the
Mediterranean - these were herculean labours for one who was in his sixty-third year, had never seen Italy, and was sure to be despised by the Romans as a 'barbarian'.'' His plan was to attack notorious abuses one by one; however, in his attempt to improve the system of
indulgences he was hampered by his cardinals. He found reduction of the number of
matrimonial dispensations to be impossible, as the income had been farmed out for years in advance by
Pope Leo X. In his reaction to the early stages of the
Lutheran revolt, Adrian VI did not completely understand the gravity of the situation. At the
Diet of Nuremberg, which opened in December 1522, he was represented by
Francesco Chieregati, whose private instructions contain the frank admission that the disorder of the Church was perhaps the fault of the
Roman Curia itself, and that it should be reformed. However, the former professor and Inquisitor General was strongly opposed to any change in doctrine, and demanded that
Martin Luther be punished for teaching
heresy. He made only one cardinal in the course of his pontificate,
Willem van Enckevoirt, who was made a
cardinal-priest in a
consistory held on 10 September 1523. Charles V's ambassador in Rome,
Juan Manuel, lord of Belmonte, wrote that he was worried that Charles's influence over Adrian waned after Adrian's election, writing "The Pope is 'deadly afraid' of the College of Cardinals. He does whatever two or three cardinals write to him in the name of the college." ==Death==