Following the defeat of his armies, Francis sought peace with Charles. The negotiations began in July 1529 in the border city of
Cambrai; they were conducted primarily between Francis's mother
Louise of Savoy for the French and her sister-in-law
Margaret of Austria for her nephew the Emperor (leading to its being known as the
Paix des Dames, Peace of the Ladies), Charles himself having sailed from
Barcelona to Italy shortly before. The final terms largely mirrored those of the Treaty of Madrid three years earlier; Francis surrendered his rights to
Artois,
Flanders, and
Tournai, and was obliged to pay a ransom of two million golden
écus before his sons were to be released. Removed, however, were both the humiliating surrender of
Burgundy itself and the various points dealing with Charles de Bourbon, who, having been killed two years prior, was no longer a candidate for leading an independent Kingdom of Provence. The final
Treaty of Cambrai, signed on 3 August, removed France from the war, leaving Venice, Florence, and the Pope alone against Charles. Charles, having arrived in Genoa, proceeded to
Bologna to meet with the Pope. Clement absolved the participants of the sack of Rome and promised to crown Charles. In return, he received
Ravenna and
Cervia; cities which the Republic of Venice was forced to surrender—along with her remaining possessions in
Apulia—to Charles in exchange for being permitted to retain the holdings she had won at
Marignano. Finally, Francesco was permitted to return to Milan—Charles having abandoned his earlier plan to place Alessandro de' Medici on the throne, in part due to Venetian objections—for the sum of 900,000
scudi. == Fall of the Florentine Republic ==