A Noble Gangster
A Noble Gangster
There was
a time when the owners of shops and businesses in Chicago that to pay large
sums of money to gangsters in return for 'protection.' If the money was not
paid promptly, the gangsters would quickly put a man out of business by
destroying his shop. Obtaining 'protection money' is not a modern crime. A long
ago as the fourteenth century, an Englishman, Sir John Hawkwood, made the
remarkable discovery that people would rather pay large sums of money than have
their life works destroyed by gangsters.
Six
hundred years ago, Sir Johan Hawkwood arrived in Italy with a band of soldiers
and settled near Florence. He soon made a name for himself and came to be known
to the Italians as Giovanni Acuto. Whenever the Italian city-states were at war
with each other, Hawkwood used to hire his soldiers to princes who were willing
to pay the high price he demanded. In times of peace, when business was bad,
Hawkwood and his men would march into a city-state and, after burning down a
few farms, would offer to go away protection money was paid to them. Hawkwood
made large sums of money in this way. In spite of this, the Italians regarded
him as a sort of hero. When he died at the age of eighty, the Florentines gave
him a state funeral and had a picture with as dedicated to the memory of 'the
most valiant soldier and most notable leader, Signor Giovanni Haukodue.'
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