READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900CHAPTER XXXIII
THE SWEDES IN GERMANY
THE Peace of
Lübeck, and the withdrawal from the German Protestants of the protection of
Denmark, encouraged the Emperor to carry out the Edict of Restitution, which
had been published two months previously (March 29th, 1629). This celebrated
edict forms a turning point in the Thirty Years' War. Hitherto matters had gone
prosperously with Ferdinand; but this measure excited desperate opposition, and
was one of the chief causes that brought Gustavus Adolphus into Germany. The
general object of the edict was to restore ecclesiastical affairs to the state
they were in at the Peace of Passau in 1552; and the three main points in it
were: 1. That the Catholics were to receive back all the mediate convents and
other mediate ecclesiastical foundations, of which they had been deprived since
that treaty. 2. Members of the Confession of Augsburg holding immediate
bishoprics and prelacies were to surrender them back to the Catholics. 3.
Catholic States were to enjoy the right of making their subjects conform to
their faith, and of removing those who would not, after paying proper
compensation; just as the Princes of the Augsburg Confession had acted on that
principle. The Emperor further declared that the Peace of Passau, as submitted
to Charles V, included only Catholics and members of the Lutheran Confession;
and that all other sects, present or future, were not entitled to its benefits,
and ought not to be tolerated.
After the
promulgation of the Edict of Restitution, Ferdinand proceeded to appoint his
son, the Archduke Leopold, who already enjoyed so many bishoprics, to the
metropolitan sees of Bremen and Magdeburg. This last appointment attacked the
claims of the Elector of Saxony. When Wallenstein entered the Archbishopric of
Magdeburg in January, 1628, the Protestant Chapter, in order to conciliate the
Emperor, and at the same time to secure a Protestant head, had deposed the
Margrave Christian William of Brandenburg, the lay Archbishop in possession,
who had been put under the ban of the Empire; and had demanded in his stead
Augustus, second son of the Elector John George, then only in his fourteenth
year. Ferdinand, however, referred the matter to the Pope, who nominated
Leopold; and John George, though vexed and alarmed by the Edict of Restitution,
was soon pacified by the assurance that his ancient secularized possessions
should not be touched. In Augsburg, Kaufbeuren,
Würtemberg, Halberstadt, and other places, the edict
was forcibly carried out; the evangelical preachers were expelled, the
Protestant churches shut up, and even private worship forbidden under severe
penalties.
The Emperor had
been assisted in his plans by the want of spirit and patriotism displayed by
most of the German Protestant Princes. The Duke of Würtemberg, the Landgrave of
Hesse, and the Thuringian Dukes alone showed any anxiety to vindicate the cause
of their country and their religion: the political as well as the religious
liberties of Germany were to be saved by a foreign Prince. Gustavus Adolphus of
Sweden had viewed with alarm the progress of Wallenstein, and especially the
plan for extending the domination of Austria to the Baltic. He had been
offended by the exclusion of his ambassadors from the congress of Lübeck, and
by the help given to the Poles by the Imperialists. He was also, no doubt,
being himself a zealous Protestant, moved with indignation at the oppression
exercised against the Protestants of Germany : although this was properly no
casus belli, and was not even alluded to in the manifesto which he published
shortly after his landing in that country. Gustavus was also induced to engage
in the great German struggle by the help of France. Richelieu, to effect so
favorable a diversion to the war then carrying on in Italy between France and
the House of Austria respecting the Mantuan succession, had, through his
ambassador, Charnace, negotiated a truce between
Sweden and Poland, and promised to furnish Gustavus with an annual subsidy. It
must not, however, be supposed that the support of France, though of course
important, was the main cause of bringing Sweden into the field. Gustavus began
the war before he had concluded any agreement with that Power, in order both to
be and to show himself independent. The treaty of Barwalde between France and Sweden was not definitively signed till January 23rd, 1631,
several months after Gustavus had landed in Germany; nor, as Voltaire remarks,
was the stipulated subsidy of a million livres per annum alone sufficient to
have induced the Swedish King to enter on such a war.
Gustavus Adolphus
set sail from the harbor of Elfsnabben, May 30th,
1630. Before his departure he took a formal leave of the States assembled at
Stockholm, when he presented to them his little daughter, Christina, not yet
six years of age; and tenderly embracing her, commended her to their fidelity
as heiress of his Kingdom in a speech which drew tears even from those northern
eyes. To conduct the government in his absence, he appointed a Council of
Regency consisting of ten persons, who were to reside constantly at Stockholm.
After an adverse and tedious navigation, he landed with an army of some 15,000
men in the isle of Usedom, off the coast of
Pomerania, June 24th. Another division of his army was conveyed to Stralsund.
Gustavus prided himself on being the first to set foot on German soil. No
sooner was he landed than he seized a pickaxe and began to open a trench; after
which he fell upon his knees and offered up a prayer. In his army were several
thousand British soldiers, most of whom had served in the German wars. After taking
possession of the isles of Usedom and Wollin, which lie off the mouth of the Oder, Gustavus
proceeded towards Stettin, the residence of Boguslaus XIV, Duke of Pomerania Boguslaus after a vain attempt
to assert his neutrality, found himself compelled to submit to the Swedes; and
being old and childless, made little difficulty in promising that the Duchy of
Pomerania should remain in the hands of Sweden till the costs of the war were
paid. Gustavus caused Stettin to be fortified anew, and then proceeded to
occupy Damm and Stargard.
By the junction of the troops at Stralsund and others, his army was now
increased to upwards of 25,000 men, and there was no force competent to oppose
him; for the Imperial army was dispersed in various directions, and that of Tilly
was far from the seat of war, in the Upper Palatinate, Franconia, and
Westphalia. An imprudent step on the part of the Emperor increased the
advantages of Gustavus.
Ferdinand II had
convened a Diet at Ratisbon in July, 1630, for the purpose of procuring the
election of his son as King of the Romans. The opportunity was seized to thwart
and impede the Emperor's policy. Maximilian of Bavaria, jealous of the progress
of Wallenstein and having satisfied his own ambition by securing the Upper
Palatinate and the Electoral dignity, would willingly have seen an end put to
the war; and he resolved to clog the wheels of Austria by procuring the
disgrace and ruin of the Duke of Friedland, and establishing a secret
intelligence with the French Court. Wallenstein, in order to acquire new
principalities, under pretense of carrying out the Edict of Restitution, had
withdrawn his troops from Mecklenburg and the rest of Lower Saxony, thus
leaving North Germany open to the invader. After ravaging the Archbishopric of
Magdeburg, Wallenstein at last laid formal siege to that city; but as Ferdinand
was then contemplating the nomination of his son as King of the Romans, and
required for that purpose the votes of the Electors of Saxony and Brandenburg,
both of whom had claims on Magdeburg, Wallenstein was ordered to abandon the
siege. He then cast his eyes on the smaller lands and bishoprics. Wolfenbüttel,
from which Duke Frederick Ulrich of Brunswick had been deposed by a decree of
the Imperial Council, was to be made over as a principality to Wallenstein's
general, Pappenheim; Calenburg was to be given to
Tilly; Würtemberg had also felt the effects of military violence: and
everywhere, in carrying out the Edict of Restitution, no particular inquiries
were made whether the Church property seized had been secularized before or
after the Treaty of Passau.
These proceedings
had given great dissatisfaction, not only to Duke Maximilian, but also to other
Electors and Princes. Maximilian openly joined the party which demanded the
dismissal of Wallenstein and the reduction of the Imperial army as conditions
without which they would not consent to the election of the Emperor's son,
Ferdinand, as King of the Romans. The Emperor, the Elector of Bavaria, and the
spiritual Electors appeared in person at Ratisbon, but Brandenburg and Saxony
sent only deputies. At this assembly also appeared the French envoys, Leon Brulart and Father Joseph, ostensibly about the affairs of
Italy, but with secret instructions to do all in their power still further to
embitter Maximilian, who had already a secret intelligence with the French
Court, and the spiritual Electors against Wallenstein, to effect the
disarmament of the Empire, and to prevent the election of Ferdinand's son. In
all these objects they were completely successful. The Emperor, after a long
struggle, consented to dismiss Wallenstein, and to reduce the Imperial army to
40,000 men, while the League still kept on foot a force of 30,000; yet, so far
from securing the election of his son by these concessions, the Electors even
talked of making the Duke of Bavaria his successor on the Imperial throne.
Wallenstein, after remaining at Halberstadt till
January, had proceeded into Bohemia to reduce some of his Protestant peasants
to obedience, after which he returned to the headquarters of his army at Memmingen, in Swabia; and it was here that he received, in
August, the order of the Emperor to lay down his command. He surprised all by
his ready compliance with the Emperor's order, of which he had been previously
informed by his cousin. Max Wallenstein. When the Imperial envoys appeared, he
received them in a friendly manner, gave them a splendid entertainment, and
when, after long hesitation, they began a carefully prepared speech, he
interrupted them by reading a Latin paper, in which were indicated the nativity
of the Emperor, that of the Elector of Bavaria, and his own, adding, "You
may see, gentlemen, from the stars, that I was acquainted with your commission,
and that the spiritus of the Elector dominates over that of
the Emperor. I cannot therefore blame the Emperor; and though I grieve that his
Majesty should support me so little, I shall obey". He now again repaired
to his Bohemian estates, but spent much of his time at Prague, where he lived with
regal splendor. The dismissal of Wallenstein's army, which the policy of
Richelieu had not a little contributed to effect, was, of course, most
favorable to the operations of Gustavus Adolphus. Richelieu's envoys also
succeeded in adjusting the affairs of the Mantuan succession, of which we must
here say a few words.
The Mantuan
Succession
Vincenzo Gonzaga,
Duke of Mantua and Marquis of Montferrat, died December 26th, 1627. His next
heir in the Duchy of Mantua was the Duke of Nevers, descended with Vincenzo
from a common grandfather, Frederick II, though by a younger son of this Duke.
Vincenzo's successor in Montferrat was his niece, Maria Gonzaga, who shortly
before her uncle's death had been married to Charles Count of Rethel, son of the Duke of Nevers, in which House,
therefore, the whole inheritance was united, and the Duke of Nevers took
possession of it in January, 1628. The Court of Spain, however, was unwilling
to see so important an Italian possession fall into the hands of a Prince long
naturalized in France; and they raised up a counter-claimant in the person of
Caesar Duke of Guastalla, descended from Ferdinand, a
brother of Duke Frederick II, founding his pretensions on the circumstance
that, though of the younger branch, he was the offspring of the eldest son of
Ferdinand, while the Duke of Nevers sprang from the third son of Frederick. The
Duke of Savoy also disputed the title of his grand-daughter, Maria Gonzaga, to
Montferrat, and revived the claims of his house, made a century before, to that
marquisate, but condemned by the Emperor Charles V. The Spaniards incited the
Duke of Guastalla to appeal to the Emperor, as
Suzerain of the Mantuan duchy, and made an alliance with the Duke of Savoy,
promising to give him Trino and other places in
Montferrat adjoining his dominions. As the Emperor delayed to give his
decision, a Spanish force, under the Count of Montenegro, entered the Mantuan
territory, whilst another body laid siege to Casale,
the capital of Montferrat, Charles Emmanuel engaging to secure, meanwhile, the
passes of the Alps against the advance of the French. After the fall of La
Rochelle, Richelieu was hindered by the intrigues of the Queen-Mother from
immediately interfering in the affairs of Italy; but early in 1629 he persuaded
Louis XIII, whom he accompanied, to cross Mont-Genevre with his army; the Pass of Susa was carried against the Piedmontese (March), and the Duke of Savoy was compelled to accept a treaty, to which, as
the French were preponderant in force, the Spanish Governor of Milan was also
glad to accede.
The French, who
held Casale, leaving a garrison of 6,000 men in Susa
till the treaty should be ratified by Spain, now recrossed the Alps, in order
to reduce the last remains of the Huguenots, who, under the Duke of Rohan,
still held out in Languedoc and other southern parts of France. The hands of
Richelieu were left the more free for this undertaking by the peace concluded
with England, April 4th, 1629, by which Charles I, engrossed by his quarrels
with his subjects, consented to renounce his protection of the Huguenots. The
Court of Spain, despite its bigotry, entered into an agreement to assist Rohan
and his heretics (May), but it was too late; the Huguenots failed, and their
extinction as a political party was consummated by the reduction of Montauban
in August, 1629. Meanwhile an Imperial army, withdrawn, as already mentioned,
from North Germany, had entered the territory of the Grisons, had seized Chur
and the passes of the Upper Rhine, and on the 5th of June the French were
summoned by proclamation of the Emperor to evacuate the Imperial fiefs in
Italy. The summer was spent in negotiations, during which, with an eye to
future contests, the veteran captain, Spinola, was made Governor of Milan by
Philip IV. At the end of September the Imperialists, under Collalto,
descended into Lombardy, and laid siege to Mantua, whilst Spinola invaded
Montferrat. Richelieu now raised an army, composed chiefly of foreign
mercenaries, and, as Louis XIII was detained at home by domestic occurrences,
the Cardinal crossed the Alps at their head in February, 1630, with the title and
authority of Lieutenant-General of the King. The ravages of disease had
compelled the Imperial army to abandon the siege of Mantua; but the Duke of
Savoy was intractable, and to put an end to his evasions, Richelieu made a
feint on Turin, near which Charles Emmanuel was posted with his army. In this
march the Cardinal appeared as generalissimo at the head of the cavalry, with
cuirass, helmet, and plume, a sword by his side, and pistols in his holsters.
But instead of marching on Turin, Richelieu suddenly retraced his steps towards
the Alps, and seized Pinerolo after a three days'
siege, thus securing the key of Italy. Louis, in person, effected the reduction
of Savoy in June, whilst in Piedmont Charles Emmanuel was defeated at Vegliana by the Duke of Montmorenci,
July 10th. Grief and vexation at these events caused the death of the Duke of
Savoy, who expired July 26th, at the age of sixty-eight. To balance, however,
these successes of the French, the almost impregnable fortress of Mantua was
surprised and captured by the lieutenants of Collalto in the night of July 17th.
Victor Amadeus,
the new Duke of Savoy, who had married a sister of Louis XIII, was not so
uncompromising an enemy of France as his father. By the intermediation of
Giulio Mazarini, the Pope's agent, a truce was
signed, to last from September 8th to October 15th; and Victor Amadeus promised
to join the French if a reasonable peace were not effected by the 13th of October. The town of Casale was put
into Spinola's hands, who was at that time besieging
it; the citadel was still held by the French under Toiras;
who, however, engaged to surrender it, if not relieved before the end of
October. On the 17th of that month, the truce being expired, Marshals La Force, Schomberg, and Marillae marched to the relief of Casale. Spinola had died
during the truce. On the 26th of October, the French and Spanish armies were in
presence before the town; a battle was on the eve of commencing, when suddenly
a cavalier dashed from the Spanish line, and rode towards the French, waving a
white handkerchief, and exclaiming in Italian, "Pace! pace! alto! alto!"
(Peace! peace! halt! halt!) He advanced at the risk of his life, for several of
the French soldiers fired on him.
It was Giulio Mazarini, who was really the bearer of a treaty of peace
effected by Brulart and Richelieu's factotum, Father
Joseph, at Ratisbon. Richelieu, however, declared that they had exceeded their
commission; and it is not very clear whether they had been induced to hurry on
a treaty by the news of the King's dangerous illness, of the factions which
prevailed in the French Court, and the critical situation of Casale, the capture of which appeared inevitable, or
whether the Cardinal, by what a French historian calls “a somewhat
Machiavellian combination”, had furnished his Capuchin with secret instructions
to conclude a treaty which he might afterwards find a pretext to disavow. It
was, however, accepted by the French generals. It was agreed that both the
French and Spaniards should evacuate Casale and the
rest of Montferrat; the town and citadel were to be given up to Ferdinand,
second son of the Duke of Mantua; and the garrisons were to be composed
entirely of native troops. The French, however, with very bad faith, left
behind them some of their own soldiers, clothed in the Montferrat uniform; and
when the Spaniards had recrossed the Po, two French regiments returned and
introduced a convoy of provisions into Casale. Yet
hostilities were not resumed. The appearance of Gustavus Adolphus in Germany induced
the Emperor to abandon the war in Italy, in spite of the endeavors of Philip IV
to persuade him to continue it; and a treaty of peace was concluded at Cherasco, in Piedmont, April 6th, 1631. By this treaty
Ferdinand II agreed to invest the Duke of Nevers with Mantua and Montferrat, on
his ceding a large portion of the latter, including Alba and Trino to Victor Amadeus, to to whom also France was to restore all that she occupied in Piedmont and Savoy.
Richelieu, however, by a secret agreement with the Duke of Savoy, contrived to
evade this part of the treaty, in so far as Pinerolo was concerned, which he had resolved never to restore.
Such was the
conclusion of the war of the Mantuan succession, which forms a sort of episode
in the great drama of the Thirty Years' War. Richelieu did not mean to let the
Italian peace divert him from the less open warfare which he was pursuing
against the House of Austria in Germany. Intrigues against the Cardinal during
the dangerous illness of Louis XIII had threatened to overthrow his policy and
put an end to his ministry, perhaps even to his life. They were frustrated by
the unexpected recovery of the King. The failure of the plots against him
served to place his power and influence on a firmer basis, and to give him freer
scope to pursue his plans of foreign policy.
Progress of
Gustavus Adolphus
Having wrested
Pomerania, with the exception of a few towns, from the Imperialists under Torquato Conti, Gustavus entered Mecklenburg, after
concluding a treaty with the deposed Dukes of that country; but he in vain
endeavored to persuade the Elector of Saxony, and the Elector of Brandenburg,
his brother-in-law, to ally themselves with him in defence of their religion. Gustavus was detained some time at Stralsund, engaged in
negotiations with the French envoy, Charnace, which
ended in the treaty of Barwalde, already mentioned.
To the surprise of the enemy, the Swedes, according to their custom, continued
the campaign during the winter; and Greifenhagen was
assaulted and taken, under the conduct of Gustavus on Christmas eve. Early in
1631, Kolberg, Frankfurt-on-Oder, and Demmin yielded to his arms, before Tilly thought it prudent
to oppose him. The Leaguist general, distrustful of
the Elector of Saxony, whom the Emperor had offended in the matter of
Magdeburg, demanded this town, as well as Leipsic and Wittenberg, on the ground
that they were necessary for his operations on the Elbe; and, after taking New
Brandenburg and putting the Swedish garrison to the sword, he proceeded to Magdeburg.
Gustavus expected
that Tilly's attack upon a city to which the Electors both of Saxony and
Brandenburg had claims, would procure him the alliance of those Princes; but as
both of them continued to decline his proposals, he was compelled to leave Magdeburg
to its fate. Early in 1631, John George had assembled the Protestant Princes
and Free Cities at Leipzig to come to some decision respecting the Edict of
Restitution and the wrongs done to the Protestants; but the Conventus of Leipzig, as it was called, though it roused the indignation and resentment
of the Emperor, had, like most German meetings, little practical result. All
alliance with Gustavus, the only man who could save Germany, was declined; but
there was some talk, which ended in nothing, of applying to the already
vanquished King of Denmark. The King of Sweden had demanded from the Elector of
Brandenburg Küstrin and Spandau; George William would
grant only the former of these towns; and Gustavus finding, after an interview,
that he could not persuade his brother-in-law, determined to march on Berlin.
He approached that city with only 1,000 musketeers; but his whole army followed
and encamped round it; and the Elector found himself compelled to abandon
Spandau to the Swedes, on condition that it should be evacuated when Magdeburg
had been relieved. But this was too late to accomplish. Magdeburg, besieged
since March, was taken by storm, May 10th, and dreadfully handled. Count
Pappenheim, who served under Tilly, irritated by the prolonged resistance of
some of the citizens, is said to have caused their houses to be fired: in the
night the flames spread over the whole city, and left only the Cathedral, and
some houses round about it, undestroyed. Between 20,000 and 30,000 inhabitants
are said to have perished.
Battle of Leipzig
Gustavus was
forced again to threaten Berlin before his brother-in-law would consent to join
him; and at last, on the 11th of June, 1631, a formal treaty was concluded.
George William agreed to pay 30,000 dollars monthly to the Swedes, and to place
Spandau and Küstrin at their disposal. But Gustavus
could not plunge deeper into Germany till he had made terms with the Elector of
Saxony, who had now on foot an army of 18,000 men under the command of Arnim,
formerly a colonel of Wallenstein's. John George had refused to help the Swedes
in their attempt to relieve Magdeburg, and had even contested their passing the
Elbe. After the fall of Magdeburg, Gustavus therefore again marched northwards
into Mecklenburg and Pomerania, and wrested Greifswald from the Imperialists.
He and Tilly seemed to avoid each other; for Tilly proceeded into the middle
districts of Germany to rob and hector the Protestant Princes. Duke William of
Weimar fled before him to Leipsic; but Duke Bernhard, in conjunction with
William, Landgrave of Hesse, resolved on a stout resistance; and the latter
rejected Tilly's demands to surrender Cassel and Ziegenhain,
and to pay a contribution. Upon the approach of Gustavus, who had crossed the
Elbe, and established a fortified camp near the little town of Werbeu, opposite the confluence of the Havel, Tilly was
obliged to withdraw his troops from Hesse, and the Landgrave reoccupied his
fortresses. While the Swedish army was at Werben,
Duke Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar entered the service of Gustavus, and the Landgrave
of Hesse concluded with him at the same place the Treaty of Werben.
The Swedish King supplied the Landgrave with money to levy troops, and
appointed him general of all the forces that should be raised in the Rhenish
Circles and Upper Germany. In August, the Dukes of Mecklenburg were solemnly
reinstated in their dominions at Güstrow, although
the Imperialists continued to maintain themselves at Rostock till October, and
at Wismar till January, 1632. During the summer both Gustavus and Tilly had
received considerable reinforcements; the Swedish King had been rejoined by
General Gustavus Horn with 4,000 men, while the Imperial general had added to
his army many of the troops dismissed from the war in Italy. Tilly was repulsed
in an attempt to storm the camp of Gustavus at Werben;
and afterwards by an impolitic endeavor to overawe the Elector of Saxony, who,
as we have said, had excited the anger and suspicion of the Imperialists by the
Leipzig Conventus, he threw that Prince into the arms
of Gustavus. The Imperialists, 40,000 or 50,000 strong, entered Saxony; Tilly
proceeded with his usual ferocity, and when the Elector heard that 200 of his
villages were in flames, he formed an alliance with Gustavus, and on the 5th of
September joined the Swedes with an army of some 18,000 men. Tilly had entered
Leipzig, but on the approach of Gustavus and John George he offered them battle
at Breitenfeld, near that town. The Battle of
Leipzig, one of the most splendid victories of Gustavus Adolphus, was won
entirely by the Swedes, September 7th, 1631; the Saxons, consisting of raw
recruits, were speedily routed; the Elector, who had taken post in the rear,
joined the flight with his body-guard, and stopped not till he reached Eilenburg; where he refreshed himself with a draught of
beer. After an engagement of five hours, Tilly was completely defeated; he lost
his guns and half his men, and he himself narrowly escaped with his life.
After this
decisive victory Germany seemed to lie at the mercy of the Swedish King. Many
were of opinion that he should have marched directly on Vienna, and among those
who thought so were two of the most eminent statesmen of Europe, Richelieu and
Gustavus's own Chancellor, Oxenstiern. It does not,
however, follow that the capture of Vienna would have put an end to the war.
That capital had been taken before, yet Austria continued to subsist. Gustavus
resolved to march to the Rhine : a course to which he seems to have been
determined by the advice of the Duke of Saxe-Weimar, by a pressing invitation
from the Protestant States assembled at Frankfurt-on-Main, and by the prospect
of making the Catholic Bishoprics contribute to the support of his army. While
the Saxons under Arnim were to proceed through Lusatia and Bohemia into
Moravia, the Swedish King pressed on his march through the Thuringian forest,
often continuing it at night by the light of torches. Tilly retired with the
remnant of his forces by Halle into Westphalia; where he rallied all the
dispersed bodies of Imperialists, intending to intercept the Swedes on their
march through Franconia. A Swedish officer who preceded Gustavus, succeeded in
gaining to his alliance the towns of Nuremberg, Ulm, and Strassburg;
and Erfurt, Gotha, and all that lay on the road to Franconia, were occupied
before the end of September. On the 13th of October, the Swedes appeared before
Würzburg, which was soon captured, though the Castle held out till November
7th. Hanau was surprised; Frankfurt opened its gates; Gustavus passed through
the city, and on the same evening occupied Hochst (November 17th).
Tilly had in vain
endeavored to intercept the triumphant progress of the Swedes. He and
Pappenheim had quarreled; the latter went into Westphalia, while Tilly, after a
vain attempt to succor Würzburg, marched to Nuremberg. Gustavus heard, soon
after his arrival at Hochst, that his enemies had
separated : one portion of their force had been dispatched to Bohemia, another
to Bavaria, while the third and smallest portion remained in Franconia. Tilly,
with tears, complained that Maximilian of Bavaria had forbidden him to
undertake anything decisive, as his army formed the last reserve. Yet Gustavus,
who, on his march from Würzburg to Hanau, had only 7,500 foot and 4,000
cavalry, had never been seen so disturbed and indecisive as on the approach of
Tilly. Mainz surrendered to Gustavus, December 13th. Gustavus had been called
the "Snow-King", whose forces, it was said, would melt away as he
approached the south. It was therefore a surprise to see him established, at
Christmas, 1631, on the banks of the Rhine, the recognized head of Protestant
Germany, accompanied by his consort, and surrounded by a crowd of princes and
ambassadors. His Chancellor, Oxenstiern, who brought
thither some reinforcements from Prussia, viewed with dissatisfaction and alarm
the many princes who composed his staff. The Swedish arms appeared everywhere
successful. Tott had completed the conquest of
Mecklenburg by capturing Rostock, Wismar, and Domitz;
Horn, though beaten by Tilly at Bamberg, had succeeded in penetrating to the
Neckar; Baner had taken possession of Magdeburg after
its evacuation by Pappenheim; Duke Bernhard of Weimar had driven the enemy from
the Lower Palatinate, with the exception of Frankenthal and Heidelberg; the Landgrave William IV of Hesse had recovered his dominions,
occupied Paderborn and Southern Westphalia, and raised a considerable army.
Thus the greater part of Germany was in the hands of the Swedes and their
allies. The Catholic League had been dissipated. Some of its members had lost
their possessions to Gustavus; others had joined the Emperor, or thrown
themselves into the arms of France. In February, 1632, the Elector Palatine
Frederick V, at the invitation of Gustavus, joined that monarch at
Frankfurt-on-Main. He was received with great honor by Gustavus, whose
behavior, however, was equivocal. Frederick was in hopes that he should be
restored to his dominions; but Gustavus was angry and disappointed at getting
neither subsidies nor troops from Charles I, although that King was continually
pressing for his brother-in-law's restoration. Frederick, however, continued to
accompany the Swedish army, in the hope that he should at last obtain his
rights.
But
notwithstanding the apparently triumphant ascendancy of Gustavus Adolphus,
clouds had already begun to obscure his success. He found that he could not
rely upon the Electors of Saxony and Brandenburg, both of whom had joined him
by compulsion; George William’s minister, Schwarzenberg, a Catholic, was
privately sold to the Emperor; Arnim, the commander of the Saxon army, an
ex-colonel of Wallenstein's, remained secretly connected with his former
general. When Arnim marched with the Saxons to Prague he did not disturb his
old commander's tranquility; he left his palaces and lands untouched; and when
Wallenstein again assumed the supreme command, he made no attempt to hinder him
from levying an army. John George he cajoled with the idea of making himself
the head of a third party in Germany.
Lorraine
The success of
Gustavus had been more rapid and decisive than Richelieu had hoped or expected,
and seemed to threaten the existence of French influence in Germany. The
Cardinal would rather have fomented the divisions in Germany by a league with
the Duke of Bavaria and such other Catholic Princes and States as were opposed
to the Emperor, than by assuming the protection of the German Protestants; but
Maximilian still hesitated. The three ecclesiastical Electors had invoked the
mediation of France in November. Louis XIII and Richelieu had proceeded to Metz
to reduce to obedience the Duke of Lorraine, who had placed some of his towns
in the hands of the Imperialists, and had himself joined the army of Tilly. The
French Court arrived at Metz soon after Gustavus had entered Mainz; and here
Louis XIII received the submission of the Duke of Lorraine, who had been
advised to make his peace with the King. By the treaty of Vic, January 6th,
1632, Charles IV. of Lorraine descended from the rank of a Prince of the Empire
to something very like a French vassal. He abandoned all his relations with the
Emperor and the King of Spain, promised to contract no alliance without the
consent of Louis, and engaged not only to permit French forces to pass through
Lorraine, but also to join them with his own. At Metz also arrived the now
landless Bishop of Würzburg, to beseech the King and Cardinal for aid in the
name of religion. A more important suppliant was Philip Christopher von Sotern, Archbishop and Elector of Treves. By the approach
of Gustavus to the Rhine, and the entry of the French army into Lorraine, the
Electorate of Treves was threatened on both sides. The Elector, who was at
variance with his Chapter, by a treaty concluded with the French, December
21st, 1631, had made over to them the fortress of Philippsburg on the Rhine, in his Bishopric of Spires, also Coblenz and the opposite
fortress of Hermannstein, now called Ehrenbreitstein. The French thus obtained a footing on the
Rhine, which they maintained till the Peace of Westphalia. But the Chapter and
municipality of Treves called in the Spaniards from the Netherlands, who
anticipated the French in taking possession of Coblenz and Treves; and as
France and Spain were then at peace, they could not, of course, be driven out
without declaring war.
In this
conjuncture, in which the views and interests of Louis and Gustavus seemed to
clash, the Swedish King behaved with firmness and dignity. He declined an
interview with Louis and Richelieu. He would make no concessions to those
Princes of the Catholic League whose domains he had occupied, as the Elector of
Mainz and the Bishops of Würzburg and Worms; and he refused to restore them
anything till a general peace. He reserved the right of punishing the Bishop of
Bamberg, alleging that he had violated his capitulation. Towards the other
members of the League he agreed to observe neutrality, and to restore what he
had taken from the Duke of Bavaria and the Electors of Treves and Cologne,
except Spires; but he demanded in return that the Duke of Bavaria and his
allies should restore all that they had taken from the Protestants since 1618;
though a brief delay was to be accorded to arrange, under the mediation of
France and England, an accommodation between Maximilian and the Palatine.
Bavaria
The Duke of
Bavaria could not resign himself to these conditions; he beat about to gain
time and raise troops, and thus brought the storm of war upon his dominions.
Gustavus, after a rapid march into Franconia, where he punished the Bishop of
Bamberg, pursued Tilly and his retreating army into Bavaria. The Danube was
passed at Donauworth without opposition; but Tilly,
strongly posted at the little town of Rain, disputed the passage of the Lech.
The Swedes, under cover of their guns, with difficulty threw a bridge across
that rapid stream, and succeeded in passing, despite the furious resistance of
Tilly (April 15th) : a cannon-ball having carried away that commander's thigh,
the Bavarians abandoned their position. Maximilian who came up towards evening,
ordered a retreat to Ingolstadt, where on the following day the veteran Tilly
died of his wound. Maximilian now took the sole command, and determined to
struggle on till he should be helped by the Imperialists.
After the battle
of Leipzig Ferdinand II had looked around in various quarters for assistance.
He had invoked Spain, the Pope, the King of Poland, the Italian Princes, his
son Ferdinand, now King of Hungary; but none of these could afford him any
effectual succor. The only chance of safety seemed to be to recall the Duke of
Friedland. The Emperor had remained on friendly terms with Wallenstein after
his dismissal, and continued to address him as "Duke of Mecklenburg,
Friedland, and Sagan." Wallenstein was first sounded about resuming the
command in October, but he excused himself, pleading indisposition from gout;
and the Emperor was compelled to make the most humble and pressing appeal to
him for assistance. It was not till towards the end of December that he
consented to raise another army, when he engaged to serve for three months
only, declining, however, the title of generalissimo and all
the emoluments of the office. As the term of the three months drew nigh, and
the advance of the Swedes inspired fresh alarm, the Emperor's solicitations
that Wallenstein should continue in command were redoubled. The sound of his
drum attracted recruits from all quarters, and he was soon at the head of
40,000 men. The time was come when he might make his own terms. He drew up a
capitulation for the Emperor's signature which seemed to reverse the situation
of sovereign and subject. He insisted on being absolute commander, not only of
the Imperial, but also of the Spanish troops in Germany; he stipulated that the
Emperor's son, Ferdinand, should not appear in the army, still less hold any
command in it, and that when Bohemia was recovered he should reside at Prague,
under a Spanish guard of 12,000 men, till a general peace was effected.
Wallenstein demanded as his reward an Imperial hereditary estate, together with
many other rights and privileges. No Imperial pardon or reward was to be valid
except it was confirmed by Wallenstein, and he alone was to have the bestowal
of confiscated lands. The Duke and his private interests, particularly his lost
Duchy of Mecklenburg, were to be considered and provided for in any general
peace. In short, Wallenstein usurped some of his Sovereign's most important
functions; yet, such was Ferdinand's necessity, he submitted with apparent
cheerfulness to all his general's demands.
Before the end of
May Wallenstein had driven the Saxons under Arnim from the greater part of
Bohemia. Meanwhile Gustavus was pushing on his conquests. After a fruitless
attempt on Ingolstadt, where his horse was shot under him, the Swedish King
occupied Augsburg, and caused the citizens to do homage to him; and he prized
as one of his highest triumphs the restoration of Protestantism in this cradle
of its infancy. He then entered Bavaria, where, however, he encountered a
formidable resistance from the fanaticism of the peasantry, forming a strong
contrast to the reception he had met with in other parts of Germany. Munich was
entered May 17th, and the Elector Palatine, who accompanied the Swedes, had the
transitory satisfaction of passing a brief time in the capital of his
arch-enemy. Hence Duke Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar was dispatched with the van
towards Tyrol. Vienna was in consternation; even Italy began to tremble.
Wallenstein had now an opportunity to indulge his grudge against Maximilian,
the principal author of his disgrace. The Duke of Bavaria found himself reduced
to congratulate on his success the man whom he had so loudly denounced at
Ratisbon, and to solicit his aid. Prague had been recovered early in May, and
it would have been easy for Wallenstein to march into Bavaria; but he did not
stir a foot till towards the end of June, and then on conditions the most
humiliating to Maximilian. The Duke of Bavaria, who was in the Upper Palatinate
with his army, was obliged to put himself under the control of Wallenstein.
When they met at Eger all eyes were turned on two such enemies to note their
bearing; and the inquisitive remarked that his Serene Highness the Elector had
learned the art of dissembling better than the Duke of Friedland. After the
junction of their armies Wallenstein assumed the chief command. Gustavus, who
had in vain endeavored to prevent this junction, now hastened to seize
Nuremburg, leaving Bernhard of Weimar and General Baner to protect his conquests in Bavaria and Upper Swabia. Nuremberg offered him
many advantages both in a strategical and tactical point of view. He could
easily communicate there with his allies both in North and South Germany, while
the situation of the place rendered it easy of defence;
and the town, with its immediate environs, was converted into one vast
fortified camp, capable of sheltering 50,000 men. But Wallenstein, with equal
tact, took up a position which neutralized all these advantages. On a height
called the Alte Feste, a few miles north of Nuremberg, he also established
a fortified camp, whence he infested the convoys and communications of the
Swedes. Here the two great captains of the Thirty Years' War sat nine weeks
watching each other. Wallenstein's forces were the more numerous; but, being
mostly composed of raw recruits, he resolved to stand on the defensive.
Gustavus, whose army, after calling in Duke Bernhard, Baner,
and other generals, with their forces, amounted to the number mentioned, found
difficulty in feeding them; and having in vain offered battle at the foot of
the wooded height where Wallenstein was encamped, he was rash enough to attack
the position; but after an assault which lasted ten hours, and in which every
regiment in the Swedish army was successively engaged, he was repulsed with the
loss of several thousand men (August 24th), and the capture of Torstenson, one of his best generals. In this affair the
sole of Gustavus's boot was carried away by a cannon-ball. It was his first
failure of any importance, and increased the reputation of Wallenstein. How
critical the situation of the Swedish King was may be judged from the
circumstance of his sending to Wallenstein proposals for peace; and the
communications which passed between the two commanders on this occasion
afterwards afforded the Court of Vienna a pretext for charging Wallenstein with
having held a treasonable correspondence with Gustavus. A fortnight afterwards
(September 7th) Gustavus broke up from his entrenched camp, and again took the
road to Bavaria, in the hope of inducing Wallenstein to follow him, and of thus
saving Saxony. Maximilian separated from Wallenstein at Coburg, and marched to
Ratisbon to defend his dominions, while Wallenstein proceeded into Saxony.
Gustavus was preparing to besiege Ingolstadt, when he received a pressing
message for assistance from the Saxon Elector, and immediately took the road
through Nuremberg, sending his Queen with three brigades of infantry by
Schweinfurt. They met at Erfurt towards the end of October. When Gustavus
reviewed his army at this place, he found that he had only 12,000 infantry and
6,500 horse. He was never, indeed, desirous of large forces, and he was
accustomed to say that all above 40,000 men were an incumbrance; while
Wallenstein, on the contrary, had a maxim that the Deity favored strong
battalions. But though Gustavus's force was small compared with that of his
adversary, it must be remembered that the Swedish army was composed of veteran
troops of the best description, including a large body of British soldiers. In
the campaign of 1632 Gustavus had in his service six British generals, thirty
colonels, and fifty-one lieutenant-colonels.
Battle of Lützen
The Elector of
Saxony was in a critical situation. The Saxon army under Arnim was in Silesia
when the Elector's territories were entered by Wallenstein's troops, who had
occupied Leipsic before the approach of the Swedes. The march of the latter,
however, had been so rapid that Wallenstein was astonished to hear they were at Naumburg early in November. Gustavus had taken a
tender leave of his wife at Erfurt, apparently not without forebodings of his
impending death. Wallenstein had no idea that he would be attacked at that
advanced season: he was putting his troops into winter-quarters, and had
detached Pappenheim to the Rhine with a large force, though with orders to
seize Halle on his way; and he was at the latter place when he received an
order from Wallenstein to rejoin the main body. The Swedes had advanced through Weissenfels to Lützen, and
stood in battle array on the great plain which stretches from that place to
Leipzig (November 16th). Wallenstein's infantry was drawn up in heavy masses to
the north of the high road, the ditches of which had been deepened to serve as
breastworks; his right wing rested on the village of Lützen and the windmills before it; his left stretched far along the plain, almost to
the canal which connects the Elster and the Saal. It
was on this side that Pappenheim was to join. To the left of the infantry were
drawn up in strong squadrons Piccolomini's cuirassiers;
on the right were also large masses of cavalry, and again more infantry; while
at the extremities of each wing were posted the Croats. In front of the line,
on the high road, was planted a battery of seven guns; the remainder of the
artillery was spread along the front in an oblique direction from the
windmills. Wallenstein's strength has been variously estimated. He himself, in
a letter to the Emperor after the battle, rated it at only 12,000 men, which is
incontestably too low. It probably consisted of near 30,000 men. The Swedes
were drawn up, as at Leipzig, in two lines; the infantry in each six deep; the
cavalry on each wing, interspersed with platoons of musketeers. Gustavus
himself led the right wing, consisting of six cavalry regiments, and was thus
opposed to Piccolomini's cuirassiers; Bernhard of
Saxe-Weimar commanded the left wing, also composed of six cavalry regiments.
Behind the infantry were two regiments in reserve, under Henderson, a Scotsman.
Such were the preparations for the Battle of Lützen.
After offering up
a prayer, the Swedish troops sung Luther's hymn; and Gustavus then addressed
them; while Wallenstein by his looks alone, and the sternness of his silence,
gave his men to understand that he would either reward or punish them according
to his custom. Gustavus, after concluding his address, which was received with
loud cheers and the clash of arms, cried out, as he raised his eyes to Heaven,
"And now, my hearts, let us bravely on against our enemies! Jesu, Jesu,
let us fight today for the honor of Thy holy Name!" which said, he drew
his sword, and waving it over his head while he gave the word
"Forwards!" he himself advanced in front of all his army.
Just at this
moment Lützen was seen to be in flames; for
Wallenstein, as a contemporary writer observes, usually marked his advance
"like Jupiter in the poet, all in thunder and lightning, all in fire and
tempest". The sun, which broke through the fog about ten o'clock, enabled
the cannonade to begin. The Swedish infantry of the centre,
led by Count Nils Brahe, passed the high road under a murderous fire, broke two
columns of the enemy's infantry, and were attacking the third, when they were
repulsed by the reserve and the cavalry. Gustavus now ordered a charge against
the dark and threatening masses of the Imperial cuirassiers, clothed from head
to foot in black armour; and putting himself at the
head of the Smaaland horse, whose colonel had been
wounded, he led the attack in person. His ardor carried him beyond his troops,
and the fog again coming on, he got entangled, with two or three attendants,
among the enemy's cuirassiers. His horse was shot in the neck, and a pistol
ball having shattered his arm—for that day he wore no armor on account of a
recent wound—he besought the Duke of Lauenburg to conduct him from the field.
At this moment another shot brought him to the ground, and his horse dragged
him some way by the stirrup. Lauenburg fled; of the King's two grooms, one had
been killed, the other wounded; the only attendant who remained with him was a
German youth of eighteen, named Leubelfing, who died
a few days after of some wounds he had received. In his last moments Leubelfing testified that as the King lay on the ground,
some of the enemy's cuirassiers rode up and asked who he was? The youth,
pretending not to know, replied, he supposed it was some officer; but the King
made himself known, when a cuirassier shot him through the head; others gave
him some sword thrusts, and stripped him to his shirt. Leubelfing was also wounded. The battle was still raging when Pappenheim came up with part
of his cavalry. Soon after his appearance on the field, that commander was shot
by Colonel Stalhanske, who had just borne off from
the fray the dead body of Gustavus. The arrival of Pappenheim's troops served to prolong the struggle; but the Swedes, now under command of
Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar, enraged by the death of their King, fought with a fury
and desperation which nothing could resist; after a struggle of nine hours
Wallenstein's troops at last gave way, carrying away with them in their flight Pappenheim's infantry, which had come up about sunset.
Thus perished, in
his thirty-eighth year, Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, the greatest
Sovereign of his age. That his expedition into Germany was partly prompted by a
love of glory and conquest can scarcely be doubted; his incessant wars, the
part which he personally played in them, his professed admiration of Caesar and
Alexander, show him animated with the spirit of a conqueror. But his best title
to immortality is, that he set a limit to religious persecution; and it is for
this, as a Swedish historian observes, that all mankind may reckon him among
their heroes.
The Finnish
cavalry, under Stälhanske, who had rescued the King's
body from the field, brought it to the village of Meuchen,
whence it was afterwards taken to Stockholm.
The account of the
battle transmitted by Wallenstein to the Imperial Court, led Ferdinand to think
that he had won the day. A Te Deum was
sung at Vienna and other places "for the glorious victory at Lützen"; while at Madrid popular festivals were given
in honor of the occasion, and a melodrama, in which the death of Gustavus
Adolphus was represented, was performed a dozen times before the Court. But
meanwhile the reputed conqueror was glad to shelter himself behind the
mountains of the Bohemian frontier. After the battle, Wallenstein found it
necessary to evacuate Saxony in all haste; and, leaving garrisons at Leipsic,
Plauen, Zwickau, Chemnitz, Freiburg, Meissen, and Frauenstein,
he reached Bohemia without further loss, and put his army into winter-quarters.
After his arrival at Prague, he caused many of his officers to be put to death
for their conduct at Lützen, among whom were several
who belonged to families of distinction, nor would he allow them to plead the
Emperor's pardon. A few he rewarded. The harshness of his proceedings increased
the hatred already felt for him by many of his officers, and especially the
Italian portion of them, who gave him the name of Il Tiranno, or the Tyrant.
Oxenstiern
Axel Oxenstiern, the Swedish Chancellor, succeeded, on the death
of Gustavus Adolphus, to the supreme direction of the affairs of Sweden in
Germany, and was invested by the Council at Stockholm with full powers both to
direct the army and to negotiate with the German Courts. Duke Bernhard of
Saxe-Weimar retained the military command of the Swedish-German army, divisions
of which were cantoned from the Baltic to the Danube. After driving the
Imperialists from Saxony, Bernhard had hastened into Franconia, where the
Bishoprics of Würzburg and Bamberg, according to a promise of Gustavus, were to
be erected in his favour into a secular Duchy; but,
after taking Bamberg, his assistance was invoked by General Horn, on the Upper
Danube.
One of the first
cares of Oxenstiern was to consolidate the German
alliance; and, in March, 1633, he summoned a meeting at Heilbronn of the States
of the four Circles of the Upper and Lower Rhine, Franconia, and Swabia,
including of course deputies from Nuremberg, Strassburg,
Frankfurt, Ulm, Augsburg, and other Imperial cities. The assembly was also
attended by ambassadors from France, England, and Holland; and on April 9th was
effected the Union of Heilbronn. Brandenburg and Saxony stood aloof; nor was
France, though she renewed the alliance with Sweden, included in the Union. The
French minister at Heilbronn assisted, however, in the formation of the Union,
although he endeavored to limit the power of Oxenstiern,
to whom the conduct of the war was entrusted. At the same time the Swedes also
concluded a treaty with the Palatinate, now governed, or rather claimed to be
governed, by Louis Philip, brother of the Elector Frederick V, as guardian and
regent for the latter's youthful son, Charles Louis. The unfortunate Frederick
had expired at Mainz in his thirty-seventh year, not many days after the death
of Gustavus Adolphus. He had always rejected the hard conditions on which the
Swedish King had offered to restore him; nor were those now accepted by Louis
Philip much more favorable. Swedish garrisons were to be maintained in Frankenthal, Bacharach, Kaub, and
other places; Mannheim was to be at the disposal of the Swedes so long as the
war should last; and the Palatinate, besides paying a heavy contribution, was to
be subject to all the burdens incident to the quartering of troops. Moreover,
he was to give equal liberty to the Lutheran and Calvinist worship.
After the junction
of Duke Bernhard with Horn, the Swedish army—for so we shall continue to call
it, though composed in great part of Germans—endeavored to penetrate into
Bavaria; but the Imperial General Altringer, aided by
John von Werth, a commander of distinction, succeeded in covering Munich, and
enabled Maximilian to return to his capital. The Swedish generals were also
embarrassed by a mutiny of their mercenaries, as well as by their own
misunderstandings and quarrels; and all that Duke Bernhard was able to
accomplish in the campaign of 1633, besides some forays into Bavaria, was the
capture of Ratisbon in November. Meanwhile Wallenstein, engrossed with building
and planting at Gitschin and his other estates in
Bohemia, had not crossed the frontiers of that Kingdom; and hostilities there
were terminated by a truce which he concluded with Arnim, the commander of the
Saxon army, June 7th, 1633; a step taken both by Wallenstein and Arnim without
the knowledge of their respective Courts. Wallenstein also made proposals of
peace to the Swedes, by whom, however, they were regarded only as a blind; and
he entered into secret negotiations with the Marquis of Feuquières,
the French ambassador extraordinary to the Protestant Powers of Germany, in
order to obtain the help of France in procuring for himself the Crown of
Bohemia. These negotiations have been represented by Wallenstein's defenders as
only a snare laid for the French Court; but, however this may be, it is certain
that Louis XIII promised to assist him in his ambitious plans. After the
capture of Ratisbon, Wallenstein thought proper to display at least an attempt
to aid Maximilian by entering the Upper Palatinate; but though he drew Duke
Bernhard and Horn from Bavaria, the lateness of the season prevented any
operations of importance, and after a little while he returned into Bohemia.
His officers Wallenstein's unauthorized negotiations with Arnim, the
resignation. Swedes, and Feuquières, had naturally
roused the suspicion of the Imperial Court; a suspicion strengthened by the
rigid capitulation he had exacted on reassuming the command, and by the
jealousy he had displayed in excluding from any share of power the Emperor's
son Ferdinand, King of Hungary. Wallenstein had moreover a strong party against
him both at the Court of Vienna and in his own army, consisting of the priests
and Jesuits who directed the Emperor's conscience, and of the Spanish, Italian,
and Belgian officers who were subjects of Spain. He had given offence to the
Emperor by neglecting his express orders, and returning into Bohemia instead of
attempting to retake Ratisbon. Hence Ferdinand II. formed the resolution of
depriving Wallenstein of his command; though he seems to have adopted it with
reluctance, as he first of all sent Count Questenberg,
whom he knew to be acceptable to Wallenstein, to endeavor to persuade him to
march into Bavaria. Through his secret agents, Wallenstein was acquainted with
all the Emperor's plans. In order to defeat them, he called early in January,
1634, a council of his officers at Pilsen; and through Field-Marshal Ilow, who was entirely devoted to him, he obtained from
them an opinion that it would be impossible to march into Bavaria before the
spring. But Wallenstein went further than this. He told his colonels he was so
disgusted with the Court of Vienna that he was determined to lay down his
command; a communication which was received with great dissatisfaction and
anger. Most of his officers had spent all their substance in raising men and
fitting themselves out; they looked to maintain themselves by the war; and if
Wallenstein resigned they could expect no compensation from the Emperor. Led by Ilow and Count Terzka they
protested against such an act; they reminded their commander of his promise to
stand by them; and on the 12th of January they signed a paper requiring
Wallenstein to keep the army together, and promising to stand by him to the
last drop of their blood. This document bore the signatures of forty superior
officers, including Piccolomini's, who was no friend
of Wallenstein.
It was this step,
of which Wallenstein seems afterwards to have repented, that proved his
destruction. Wallenstein, as we have said, had many enemies. Not among the
least of them was Duke Maximilian of Bavaria, who had advised Wallenstein's
dismissal in December, and who, towards the end of January, sent to the Emperor
a detailed account of Wallenstein's practices, at the same time beseeching him
to adopt some "sudden and heroical resolution". The counsellors by
whom Ferdinand was surrounded, and who possessed his ear, offered the same
advice with perhaps more effect. Such were the Archbishop of Vienna, the
Emperor's confessor Lamormain, Counts Eggenberg, Trautmannsdorf, and Schlick, the Emperor's son Ferdinand, and others. The
Spanish ambassador Onate was one of the foremost in these counsels; he blamed
the Emperor's delays, and suggested that a dagger or a pistol ball would at
once untie the knot. It was some time before Ferdinand's confidence in his
general could be shaken. At length secret commands were issued to Piccolomini and some of the officers known to be
dissatisfied with Wallenstein, to withdraw from him the obedience of the
troops, to incite them against him, and to transfer the command to General Gallas. On the 24th of January the Emperor issued a
declaration, releasing the officers and soldiers of Wallenstein's army from all
allegiance towards their general, and granting a pardon to all who had signed
the document at Pilsen, with the exception of the Duke of Friedland himself, Ilow, and Terzka. This document
was despatched to Gallas,
with orders to seize the Duke of Friedland and bring him to some place where he
might be put on his defence; and at all events to get
possession of his person, whether dead or alive. Piccolomini,
whom Wallenstein held to be his best friend, as the astrologers had cast the
same nativity for both, and who could therefore, it was thought, the more
easily deceive him, was ordered to enter, in a friendly manner, the town of
Pilsen, with 2,000 cavalry and 1,000 dragoons, and there to lay snares against
the Duke's life. One of the worst features in this transaction is, that the
Emperor, with extraordinary hypocrisy, continued a friendly correspondence with
Wallenstein for three weeks after he had thus secretly deposed and outlawed
him; and in his last letter, dated February 13th. 1634, only twelve days before
Wallenstein's murder, particularly recommends Bohemia to his care, to the Crown
of which country he was accused of aspiring.
It was not till
the date of this last letter that Gallas issued
public orders to the army no longer to obey the commands of Wallenstein, or his
adherents Ilow and Terzka,
but instead of them either his own, or those of Altringer and Piccolomini. Soon afterwards (February 20th)
orders came from Vienna to employ force, and secret instructions were issued
for the confiscation of Wallenstein's possessions : the grounds assigned being
Wallenstein's and Terzka's "perjured rebellion
and flight to the enemy", though they were still at Pilsen. On that very
day Wallenstein had drawn up a document to explain and justify that of January
12th, in which he declared that it was not his wish that anything should be
undertaken against the Emperor, or to the detriment of religion. This paper was
signed by himself and many of his adherents. He also required that his officers
should continue to respect him as their generalissimo, as he had received no
dismissal from the Emperor, and the order of Gallas he could only regard as an act of mutiny against himself. A day or two after he
dispatched two envoys to Vienna to assure the Emperor "that he was ready
to lay down the command, and to appear and answer the charges against him
wherever the Emperor might appoint." But both these envoys were arrested
by Piccolomini and Diodati, and Ferdinand did not
receive the message till Wallenstein was already dead.
When Wallenstein
heard of the schemes against his power and his life—for he opened all secrets
with a golden key—he resolved to proceed to the fortress of Eger, near the
Bohemian frontier, where he thought he should be safer, as its commandant was
one Gordon, a Scotchman, colonel of a regiment of his devoted friend and
adherent Count Terzka. When tidings reached
Wallenstein that the Imperial declaration had been openly posted at Prague, he
left Pilsen, February 22nd, travelling in a litter on account of his gout, and
taking with him only a few troops. The generals of the Spanish-Italian party, Piccolomini, Gallas, Maradas, Caretto, Marquis of
Grana, and others, now broke up on all sides in order to follow him, and
Diodati and Tavigni entered Pilsen without opposition.
Wallenstein arrived at Eger on the afternoon of the 24th February with a few
coaches and baggage-waggons, accompanied by his
brother-in-law Count Kinsky, Terzka, Ilow, and Captain Neumann. He was escorted by two
troops of cavalry, and 200 dragoons, commanded by Colonel Butler, an Irishman,
who was already prepared to betray him, and who gave Piccolomini notice of all Wallenstein's movements.
At Eger,
Wallenstein was lodged in the house of the burgomaster on the market-place,
while apartments were assigned to Terzka, Kinsky, and their wives, in the back building which usually
forms part of a German dwelling. On his road from Pilsen Wallenstein had
determined to go over to the enemy, as his only chance of safety, and he had
opened communications to that effect with Duke Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar; which,
however, from a suspicion of his real intentions, were coldly received. On
arriving at Eger, he immediately opened himself to Gordon and his lieutenant
Leslie, another Scot, as well as to Butler, whom he thought to be his friends,
and especially Gordon, to whom he had given a regiment only a little while
before; he acquainted them with his intention of going over to the enemy, and
left them to decide whether they would follow him or not. Gordon and Leslie
promised to stand by him; but when, in Gordon's apartments in the Castle,
Butler acquainted them with the Imperial declaration, and the orders of Gallas and Piccolomini, and
painted to them in glowing colors the rewards and the booty they would obtain
by betraying their general, they swore, with drawn swords, to kill the Duke of
Friedland and the friends who accompanied him, and resolved that the
assassination of the latter should be accomplished at a carnival feast to which
they were to be invited by Gordon on the following evening.
Murder of
Wallenstein's friends
Butler engaged in
the plot Fitzgerald, the major of his regiment, with Captains M'Donald, Birch, Brown, and Devereux, and Pestaluz, a captain in Terzka's regiment; and Butler it was who also arranged all the details of the murder. At
six o'clock on the evening of February 25th, Terzka, Kinsky, Ilow, and Neumann went
together in a coach to Gordon's apartments in the Citadel, where they were
received by the three conspirators; the drawbridge was raised behind the
unsuspecting guests, who soon found themselves seated at a well-furnished
table. In an apartment adjoining the banqueting-room was stationed Captain
Devereux with twenty-four dragoons; in another, Major Fitzgerald, with six
more. The servants of the guests had been sent away; the dinner was ended, when
about eight o'clock a preconcerted signal was given to the soldiers. On a
sudden Fitzgerald, followed by his men, enters at one door, crying, "Long
live the House of Austria!", on the other side appears Devereux, shouting,
"Who's for the Emperor?". At these words Butler, Gordon, and Leslie
seize each a candlestick, and drawing their swords, cry, Vivat Ferdinandus. The dragoons now rush upon their victims; Kinsky falls first under their blows; Ilow is stabbed in the back while taking his sword from the wall; Terzka alone succeeds in reaching his weapon. Planting
himself in a corner of the room, he challenges in vain his treacherous hosts to
mortal combat; two of the dragoons he cuts down, breaks Devereux's sword, and,
protected by his doublet of elk-leather, holds out so long that his assailants
take him to be, like Wallenstein, "frozen," or wound-proof. At last
he falls. Neumann, after receiving some wounds, escaped from the apartment,
but, not knowing the watchword, was cut down by the guard. Butler, Gordon, and
Leslie then took counsel together, and resolved to complete their plot by the
murder of Wallenstein, who had remained at his quarters in the town. The
execution of it was entrusted to Devereux and six of his dragoons. Butler
undertook to guard the burgomaster's house and the marketplace; Leslie
meanwhile administered to the main guard, who belonged to Terzka's regiment, a new oath of fidelity to the Emperor, and a hundred dragoons patrolled
the streets to prevent any attempt at rescue.
Wallensteins's assassination, 1634
It was midnight.
Wallenstein had been engaged in surveying the stars, and considered the
constellations favorable; but Seni, his astrologer,
was of opinion that the danger was not yet over. The Duke had not long retired
to bed when he was startled by a noise in the street. Devereux had obtained
admission into the house on pretense of delivering a message to Wallenstein,
but was stopped in an ante-room by a valet, who begged him not to disturb his
master's sleep. Devereux demanded with threats the key of the Duke's
apartments; and, on the valet delaying, burst open the door by force, and,
followed by his dragoons, entered the Duke's room. Wallenstein, alarmed by the
shrieks of Terzka's and Kinsky's wives, who had just learnt the murder of their husbands, had rushed to the
window to inquire of the sentinel the cause of the tumult: at the entrance of
the soldiers he turned, and, as Devereux exclaimed, "You must die!"
received, with, outstretched arms, a mortal thrust in his "bosom. Next
came the scene of plunder. Wallenstein's property was divided like the spoils
of a conquered enemy. Piccolomini seized his military
chest, his plate wagons, his horses, his baggage; and from the proceeds every
man in the army was presented with two ducats. His officers vied with one
another in endeavoring to obtain some part of the Duke's vast confiscated
possessions; and among them Caretto, Marquis of
Grana, distinguished himself by the meanness and importunity of his
solicitations.
The death of
Wallenstein is one of the basest political murders ever committed by the House
of Austria. Not that we hold, with his German biographer, that Wallenstein was
innocent up to the last moment of his flight from Pilsen. We think, on the
contrary, that from the Duke's whole conduct after his resumption of the
command—the arrogant capitulation which he extorted, his constant refusal to
obey orders from Vienna, his inactivity in Bohemia during the campaign of 1633,
his negotiations and treaties with the Saxons, Swedes, and French, and, lastly,
the paper which he procured his generals to sign at Pilsen—the only inference
which can be drawn is, that, as he had clearly set himself above the duties and
obligations of a subject, it was his intention to extort from the Emperor,
either through fear or force, the position of a Sovereign and independent
Prince of the Empire, if not the Crown of Bohemia. But, on the other hand, it
must be recollected that such designs had not been proved against him; and that
Ferdinand was bound to observe the greatest forbearance and generosity towards
a man to whom he had twice owed the safety of his Crown. Yet he not only
sanctioned Wallenstein's assassination, but also publicly praised and rewarded
his murderers. Leslie, who brought him the report of what had been done at
Eger, was made a chamberlain, a captain in the Imperial bodyguard, and colonel
of a regiment belonging to King Ferdinand. Butler was also received at the Hofburg with distinguished marks of approbation and honor;
Ferdinand gave him his hand, caused the Archbishop of Vienna to place a gold
chain round his neck, created him a Count and chamberlain, and presented him
with some of the estates of Terzka in Bohemia.
Colonel Gordon obtained the possessions of Count Kinsky.
Devereux, who had stabbed Wallenstein with his own hand, received from the
Emperor a gold chain, a present in money, and some confiscated property in
Bohemia. Yet, while Ferdinand was thus rewarding the instruments of his crime,
his superstition made him tremble for the consequences which it might have
entailed on his victims; and, tortured by pangs of conscience, he paid for
3,000 masses to redeem the souls which he had hurried into Purgatory
unprepared, and with all their sins upon them!
A modern writer
has endeavored to clear Ferdinand's memory from the charge of having authorized
Wallenstein's murder. His principal argument is, that the Imperial warrant,
directing Wallenstein to be taken dead or alive, is not extant. It is hardly
probable that Piccolomini and the rest of Ferdinand's
officers should have taken upon themselves to authorize such a deed without his
sanction, as he himself would surely be suspected of it. It is a damning fact
that Ferdinand rewarded with honors and emoluments the actual murderers, thus
rendering himself an accomplice after the fact, and showing that he must have
considered it desirable beforehand; so that, in a moral point of view, the
difference in criminality is small.
The confusion
which necessarily ensued in the Imperial army upon the murder of the
generalissimo and his companions, and the apprehension of many other officers,
was at length calmed by the dismissal of all suspected commanders, and by
giving the dissatisfied regiments three months' pay; after which, the Emperor's
son, King Ferdinand, was appointed to the chief command, but under the
direction of General Gallas. Neither the Swedes nor
the Saxons took advantage of the conjuncture to attempt anything against the
Imperialists; and indeed the whole campaign of 1634 offers but few events of
importance besides the battle of Nordlingen. The
Saxons under Arnim, in conjunction with the Swedes under Baner,
gained a victory at Liegnitz, May 13th, which enabled
them to invest Prague; but Arnim, who was negotiating with the Emperor for a
peace, at length refused to assist Bauer, and both generals evacuated Bohemia.
Duke Bernhard had been more intent on establishing his Duchy of Franconia than
on the progress of the war; the Swedish general Horn had obtained some
successes in Swabia, and was preparing to invade the Austrian dominions when he
was compelled to join Bernhard, threatened by the forces of Maximilian. The
Duke of Bavaria assembled in the spring an army at Ingolstadt, which, under Altringer and John von Werth, took Straubing,
and proceeded to lay siege to Ratisbon, where they were joined by the King of
Hungary and Gallas with the Imperial forces. Bernhard
and Horn, after taking Landshut by storm, where Altringer was killed (July 22nd), marched to the relief of Ratisbon; but, hearing on the
road the fall of that place, they again separated, while the Imperial army
proceeded to Donauworth. Bernhard employed himself
with marches and counter-marches between the Danube and the Main, while Horn
proceeded towards Tyrol, to dispute the passes with a Spanish army that was
marching from Italy into the Netherlands. He had scarcely, however, reached Fussen, when the news that the Imperialists, after storming Donauworth, were threatening Nordlingen,
obliged him again to join Bernhard. This movement having left the passes free,
the Spaniards entered Bavaria, and formed a junction with King Ferdinand under
the walls of Nordlingen. They were under the command
of the Cardinal-Infant Ferdinand, brother of Philip IV of Spain, who was
proceeding into the Netherlands as successor of Isabella Clara Eugenia in the
government. He had the reputation of being the only Spanish Prince, since Don
John of Austria, who possessed any military talent.
Battle of Nördlingen, 1634
Bernhard and Horn,
after uniting their armies at Günzburg, had also
summoned from the Upper Rhine another force under the Rheingraf Otto Louis; but, as Nordlingen was hard pressed,
Bernhard, against the advice of Horn, determined on an immediate battle,
although their army was not only considerably less numerous than that of the
enemy, but also inferior in quality. The engagement commenced on the evening of
the 6th of September, and lasted through the following day, when the Spaniards,
who had taken only a passive part on the first day, lending a vigorous
assistance to the Imperialists, the Swedes were completely defeated, with the
loss of 12,000 killed, 300 standards, 80 guns, and 6,000 prisoners, among whom
were Horn and three other generals. Duke Bernhard narrowly escaped the same
fate. He was hotly pursued to Goppingen, where he met Otto Louis and his
division.
The Battle of Nordlingen was from its consequences one of the most
important and decisive in the Thirty Years' War. Bernhard of Weimar's
contemplated Duchy of Franconia vanished altogether from his sight, and instead
of being an independent Prince, he found himself compelled to enter the service
and accept the pay of France. Thus French influence acquired an immense ascendancy
in Germany; and it will be necessary to cast our eyes a little while on the
affairs and policy of that country.
The death of
Gustavus Adolphus was not altogether unwelcome to Richelieu, who had at first
willingly conceded to the Swedish King the leading part in the great political
drama; but the success of Gustavus had been more rapid and complete than was
agreeable to the French Court; his appearance on the Rhine had created both
jealousy and alarm; and after his passage of the Lech, Louis XIII had observed
to the Venetian minister, "It is time to set a limit to the progress of
this Goth". When Gustavus fell at Lützen,
Richelieu determined to seize the direction of the affairs of Europe. His
policy was, to maintain the alliance between the Swedes and the German
Protestants, to endeavor to effect a reasonable accommodation between them and
the Princes of the Catholic League, and thus compel the Emperor to treat for a
peace through the mediation of France. Maximilian of Bavaria was to be dazzled
with the prospect of the Imperial Crown, in order to which it was necessary to
prevent the election of a King of the Romans during the Emperor's lifetime.
Another object was to prevent the Dutch from making a separate peace with
Spain.
Besides his
schemes against the Emperor, Richelieu was busy with plans for extending the
French frontier towards the Rhine. Charles Duke of Lorraine had again given
trouble, and was again reduced, and on the 25th of September, 1633, Louis XIII
entered Nanci, his capital. Richelieu now announced
to the Duke that it was the King's intention to reestablish the French monarchy
in all its primitive grandeur, and with that view to annex Lorraine, as part of
old Austrasia, to France. Early in 1634 the French occupied the whole of
Lorraine, crossed the Vosges mountains, and obtained a permanent footing in
Alsace. A new Parliament, called the Parliament of Austrasia, was erected at
Metz, the jurisdiction of which was intended one day to extend to the Rhine.
Thus was broken the last effectual link which connected the Three Bishoprics
(Metz, Toul, and Verdun), with the Empire; appeals, which had been formerly
made to the Imperial Chamber at Spires, were now heard by the new Parliament,
and everywhere the Germanic eagle was displaced by the fleurs-de-lis.
Charles of Lorraine, finding resistance hopeless, abdicated the Duchy in favour of his brother, the Cardinal Nicholas Francis; and,
betaking himself with what soldiers still remained to him into the service of
the Emperor, became, instead of a bad Sovereign, a valiant adventurer and
skillful leader. From this period the house of Lorraine long remained fugitive.
Affairs of the
Netherlands
The Duke's sister,
Margaret, having escaped into Belgium, had married the King's brother, Gaston
Duke of Orleans, then an exile in that country; which so offended Louis that he
instituted a suit against the marriage. Both Gaston and his mother had retired
into Belgium after Richelieu's triumph over his political enemies, and Mary de'
Medici was received at Brussels with all the solemnity due to an illustrious
ally. She was never again to enter France. Spinola, who had been called to
Italy in 1629, was succeeded in military command in Belgium by Count van den Berghe, a good soldier. After Spinola's departure, Prince Frederick Henry of Orange resolved, by way of compensation
for the loss of Breda, to take Herzogenbusch (Bois-le-Duc). The siege, which occupied the years 1629 and
1630, is among the most remarkable of that period in a military point of view;
but the most important circumstance about it is, that by engaging the whole
Spanish forces in the Netherlands, it facilitated the conquests of Gustavus
Adolphus. Although Van den Berghe came to the relief
of the town with 30,000 foot and 10,000 horse, he could not prevent its
surrender. He was soon after superseded in the command by the Marquis of Santa
Croce, who neither possessed much ability nor enjoyed the confidence of the
Spanish Netherlanders. Hence Frederick Henry, whose military operations were
supported with the greatest ardor by the Dutch, although deputies were
appointed by the States to accompany all his movements, was able to find
sufficient employment for the Spaniards. In the years 1629 and 1630 the Dutch
had about 120,000 men in the field, who were partly supported by voluntary
contributions. After the capture of Herzogenbusch,
the Prince directed his operations chiefly against Gelderland, and in 1632 he
took Maestricht. While the Prince was besieging this place, Santa Croce, with
15,000 men, not venturing to attack his fortified camp, Cordova, with 20,000
men, was recalled from Germany to Santa Croce's help; yet such was the strength
of Frederick Henry's position that the Spaniards with their combined forces
declined to assault it. The Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia now besought the
help of Pappenheim, at that time in Westphalia with a considerable army.
Pappenheim led his veterans against the Dutch trenches, August 7th; but the
Spaniards, offended by his boast that he would relieve Maestricht, would give him
no aid, and coolly looked on while he suffered two bloody repulses on the same
day. The Infanta, who was much beloved by the Belgians, and showed as much
consideration for them as the Court of Madrid would allow, died in December,
1633, after which Belgium again fell under the direct government of Spain.
Richelieu had been
for some time desirous of entering into a close alliance with the Dutch; and in
April, 1634, Charnace had brought about a treaty by
which France engaged to pay a subsidy of two million livres per annum, besides
supporting a body of auxiliary troops. This treaty was followed in February,
1635, by a still more effective alliance, offensive and defensive, based on
Richelieu's plans for extending the French frontier. Each of the contracting parties
engaged to invade the Spanish Netherlands with an army of 30,000 men. The
Belgians were to be invited to form themselves into a free and independent
State; but a strip of land upon the coast, two leagues in depth, from Gravelines to Blankenberghe, besides
the towns of Namur and Diedenhofen, was to be ceded
to France; while the United Provinces were to have Hulst and the Pays de Waes, Breda, Geldern, and Stephanswend. If the Belgians persisted in their allegiance
to Spain they were to be conquered and partitioned: France was to have
Luxemburg, Namur, Hainault, Artois, Flanders, and the Cambrésis;
while the share of the United Provinces was to include Antwerp, Brabant, and
the coast of Flanders, north of Blankenberghe.
England was to be invited to neutrality.
Treaty between
France and Sweden, 1635
About the same
time Richelieu had also made a new treaty with the Swedes. The defeat at Nordlingen, and the knowledge that the Elector of Saxony
was endeavoring to effect a peace with the Emperor, left the Swedes no
alternative but to throw themselves into the arms of France; and in September
envoys were sent to Paris to request that the 6,000 men so often promised
should be dispatched to their aid, and to urge the French King to break openly
with Spain and Austria. Oxenstiern at length procured
a treaty to be executed at Paris in November, 1634, by which France engaged to
maintain 12,000 men, Germans or others, under the command of a German Prince,
and to keep a body of troops on the Rhine, to act in case of need. France was
to hold all fortresses conquered on the right bank of the Rhine, from Breisach to Constance; on the left bank she was to have
Alsace and its fortresses, and the free use of the bridge at Strassburg, till a future peace. The Swedes, in the places
which they should conquer, were not to molest the Catholics in the exercise of
their religion. By this treaty, France obtained a seat and vote in the
Heilbronn League. Oxenstiern was very much
dissatisfied with it, because Bennfelden was given up
without payment, and still more because the generalissimo of the allied armies
was to be a German Prince, a circumstance which lowered his position in the
Empire; he therefore refused to ratify it, dismissed Loffler, the
plenipotentiary who had made it, and early in 1635 sent Hugo Grotius to Paris
to procure that it should be altered. Grotius having failed in his mission, Oxenstiern himself proceeded into France in April, and had
an interview with Louis XIII at Compiegne. Richelieu, however, would not
consent to make any material alteration in the terms, and all that the Swedish
Chancellor could obtain was that a fresh treaty should be drawn up for his
signature. Oxenstiern arrived in Sweden in the summer
of 1636, and never returned into Germany.
In these transactions
Richelieu endeavored to avoid an open breach with the Emperor though the French
and Imperial troops could not avoid coming into collision. In December, 1634,
Marshals La Force and Brezé compelled the
Imperialists and Bavarians to raise the siege of Heidelberg, defended by a
Swedish garrison. In January, 1635, the Imperialists took Philippsburg from the French, and two months after a Spanish corps surprised Treves, cut the
French garrison to pieces, and carried off the Elector, Philip Christopher, a prisoner
to Antwerp. This event had important consequences. Richelieu immediately
demanded the Elector's liberation from the Cardinal-Infant, the new Governor of
the Netherlands, and on his delaying, on the pretext that he must await the
orders of the Imperial and Spanish Courts, war was openly declared by a French
herald at Brussels, May 26th, 1635. So haughty was the tone adopted by France
that the Spanish ambassador at Paris departed without taking leave, while the
French ambassador at Madrid was arrested. On the 6th of June Louis XIII
published a declaration of the motives which had led to this rupture, a prelude
to the colossal strife that was to follow. The Elector of Treves, who, like
several other Princes of the Empire, had been put under the Imperial ban for
admitting French troops into Ehrenbreitstein and
other places, was finally carried to Vienna, where he was kept a prisoner ten
years. Another grave cause of offence was his having named Richelieu his
coadjutor, a step by which that Cardinal might have eventually secured a vote
as one of the Imperial Electors; but his nomination was disallowed by Pope
Urban VIII.
Peace of Prague,
1635
In Germany,
meanwhile, affairs had assumed a new face by the Peace of Prague. After the
overthrow at Nordlingen, the only Swedish force
consisted of Baner's army, encamped at Leitmeritz in Bohemia, which immediately broke up and
proceeded into Thuringia. The difficulties of Baner's position were increased by his disputes with the Elector of Saxony. John George
had been long wavering, and the disaster at Nordlingen determined him to go over to the Emperor. Negotiations were opened at Pirna; better terms were offered to the Elector than he
might reasonably have anticipated, particularly the permanent cession to him of
Lusatia, which had been made over to him as a pledge in 1621; preliminaries
were signed at Pirna in November, 1634, and on May
30th, 1635, was definitely concluded the Peace of Prague. By this treaty it was
agreed, with regard to the affairs of religion, that all mediate possessions of
the Church secularized before the Peace of Passau should remain to the
Protestants for ever, and that all other mediate
possessions, and such immediate ones as had been confiscated since the Peace of
Passau, should remain to them for forty years, before the expiration of which
term a mixed commission was to settle how such property should be proceeded
with at the end of it. The immediate nobility and the Imperial cities were to
be allowed the Lutheran worship, a privilege, however, granted only to Silesia
among the lands subject to the House of Austria. With regard to political
affairs, the hereditary right of the House of Austria to the Bohemian Crown was
acknowledged; Lusatia was ceded to the Elector of Saxony as a Bohemian fief,
and his son was invested with the administration of Magdeburg; Pomerania was to
be made over to the Elector of Brandenburg, in case he acceded to the treaty; a
general amnesty was to be granted; all leagues were to be dissolved, and the
paramount authority of the Emperor was to be everywhere acknowledged. It was
also agreed that the Duke of Lorraine should be re-established in his Duchy.
The Emperor could not be induced to make any concessions respecting the
Palatinate or the Bohemian Protestants. By an express article, the Elector was
to assist in expelling the Swedes from Germany, and thus Saxony was pledged to
a war. Such was the return made by John George to the Swedes, whose King had
fallen in defending his Electorate!
This peace brought
a storm of obloquy on John George; he was accused of sacrificing the family of
the unfortunate Palatine to the vengeance of the Emperor, and of arming Germany
against the Swedes, who had thrice been the means of saving his dominions.
Nevertheless by degrees all the Princes and States of the Empire acceded to the
treaty of Prague, with the exception of Hesse-Cassel and the other Calvinist
States. The Swedish Government also desired peace, and Oxenstiern,
whom they accused of opposing it, while Richelieu was reproaching him with
having lost all courage for the prosecution of the war, was placed in a most
difficult situation. The Swedish States, however, assembled in the autumn of
1635, recognized the impossibility of acceding to the Treaty of Prague. The
Elector of Saxony, who had made it, was, after all, only a subject, and any
treaty that Sweden should enter into must, with regard both to her dignity and
safety, be made directly with the Emperor. But Oxenstiern's proposals to the Court of Vienna remained unanswered.
Towards the end of
May, 1635, the French, after defeating the Spanish forces under the Piedmontese Prince of Carignano,
who had endeavored to obstruct their passage, formed a junction with the Dutch
at Maastricht, when the Prince of Orange took the command in chief of the
allied forces. The campaign, however, went against the Allies. The brutality
displayed by both armies at the taking of Tirlemont exasperated the Belgians, who, instead of listening to the offers of
independence, threw themselves into the arms of the Spaniards. The Peace of
Prague enabled the Emperor to send Piccolomini, with
20,000 men, into Belgium; another division threatened the Isle of Batavia; and
the allies, instead of conquering Belgium, found themselves reduced to defend
Holland. The Imperialists, under Gallas, were also
successful on the Rhine. The French, pressed on all sides, were compelled to
abandon the Middle Rhine, the course of the Main and Neckar, and even of the
Lower Moselle and Sarre, without fighting a single
great battle.
Italy
The French
campaign in Italy was not more successful. A league had been concluded at
Rivoli, July 11th, 1635, between Louis XIII and the Dukes of Savoy, Parma, and
Mantua, for the invasion and partition of the Milanese. The share of each Power
was to be proportioned to the troops furnished, but France promised to renounce
her portion in consideration of receiving some places in Piedmont. In general,
however, the alliance of France was regarded in Italy with suspicion. Pope
Urban VIII was not disposed to join a league against the House of Austria, and
had, as we have seen, shown himself hostile to Richelieu in the matter of the coadjutorship of Treves. Venice also excused herself, and
Genoa was too closely connected by commercial and other interests with Spain to
undertake anything against her. The Duke of Rohan, who commanded some French
detachments in the Valtellina, distinguished himself against the Austrians; but
the projected invasion of the Milanese proved a failure, chiefly through the
tardiness and want of zeal of the Duke of Savoy.
The Italian
campaign in 1636 was not more glorious or important, while France herself was
threatened by the progress of the Imperialists. In September King Ferdinand
issued from his head-quarters at Breisach a manifesto
in which he detailed the acts of hostility committed by Louis XIII against the
Emperor, and expressed his determination to invade France, but promised to
protect the inhabitants. In pursuance of this declaration, Gallas and the Marquis of Grana entered French Burgundy, in October, with 20,000 men,
and took Mirebeau; but they were soon compelled to
retreat, chiefly through the lateness of the season and the nature of the
country, with great loss of artillery and baggage. At another point the Spanish
Imperialists, under Piccolomini and John von Werth,
had been more successful. They had crossed the Somme in August, and invaded
Picardy; bands of Croats and Hungarians wasted the country between that river
and the Oise with fire and sword, and filled Paris itself with terror. The
roads from that capital swarmed with fugitives. Richelieu was loudly accused of
having provoked the war; of his alliance with heretics; of leaving Paris
unfortified while he was building his "Palais Cardinal". But the
Imperialists, instead of marching on Paris, contented themselves with taking Corbie, whence, however, they were driven by a large force
quickly raised by Richelieu. Their retreat was unmolested. In the same year the
Spaniards made an abortive descent on Brittany. In the south they were more
successful, where, crossing the Bidasoa, they
occupied Hendaye, St.-Jean de Luz, and Socoa; but these places they were forced to evacuate in
1637 by their ill success in Languedoc. In the same year Rohan was driven from
the Valtellina.
With regard to
Germany, Duke Bernhard had concluded in October, 1635, a treaty with the French
Court, by which Louis XIII engaged to pay him annually 4,000,000 livres for the
maintenance of an army of 12,000 infantry and 6,000 cavalry. This was the
commencement of the short but brilliant career which ended with Bernhard's
death in 1639. His motives, in the situation of Germany at that time, could
only have been selfish. He hoped to cut out for himself, amidst the chaos of
confusion, a Kingdom, or at least a Duchy. By a secret article of his agreement
with France he was to be invested with the Landgraviate of Alsace, together
with Hagenau, and all the rights before possessed in
Alsace by the House of Austria. On the other hand he agreed not to molest the
Catholics in their religion.
After the Peace of
Prague, Baner found himself in a critical situation,
especially as the truce with Poland was on the point of expiring. King Wladislaus VII, who had ascended the throne of Poland on
the death of Sigismund III, in 1632, seemed inclined for war, and the Swedes
might thus be exposed to another enemy in their rear. The danger was enhanced
by the suspicion that Denmark would also resort to arms; but Christian IV was
propitiated by ceding the Archbishopric of Bremen to his second son, Duke
Frederick, who had been appointed coadjutor of the deceased titular Archbishop. Baner, to secure himself, determined on marching into
Mecklenburg, and amused the Elector of Saxony two months with negotiations
respecting his accession to the Treaty of Prague. He was relieved, in
September, from any danger on the side of Poland by the prolongation for
twenty-six years of the truce, effected through French mediation, assisted by
ambassadors from England, Holland, and Brandenburg, on condition of the Swedes
restoring West Prussia. Torstenson, the Swedish
commander in Prussia, was thus enabled to aid his countrymen with
reinforcements. Baner had marched through Magdeburg
to the Aller, where, on the west, he was threatened by Duke George of Luneburg,
on the south by the Saxons under Baudis. After Baner had concluded his pretended negotiations, the Saxon
Elector appeared personally in his army, and directed Baudis to attack the Swedes. This is usually called the "Saxon Blood-Order". Baudis, however, could not prevent Baner from crossing the Elbe; and the Swedes even obtained
a superiority over the Saxons by defeating, under the conduct of General
Ruthven, a Scotchman, a Saxon division of 6,000 or 7,000 men near the little
Mecklenburg town of Domitz. Baner himself also gained some advantages at Goldberg and Kiritz;
and, being joined by Torstenson and his troops from
Prussia, he not only compelled the Saxons to evacuate Pomerania, but also found
himself enabled to recross the Elbe. Early in 1636 he pressed forwards as far
as Halle, and even sent parties over the Saale. The Saxons remained quiet till
joined towards the end of March by the Imperial General Hatzfeld;
when they attacked and defeated the Swedes near Magdeburg, and forced that town
to capitulate. This reverse, however, was soon compensated by a decisive
victory. John George attempting to form a junction with the Brandenburg general
Klitzing, Baner attacked and completely defeated him
at Wittstock (October 4th), capturing all the
Elector's artillery, and even his baggage and plate. John George fled
precipitately to Meissen. Instead of pursuing him, Baner first proceeded into Hesse, where the Landgrave, William V, had been gaining
some advantages. William had been persuaded by his wife, Amelia Elizabeth,
hereditary Countess of Hanau, a zealous Protestant, to break off all
negotiations for acceding to the Peace of Prague, and to unite with Alexander
Leslie, a Scotch general trained in the service of Gustavus Adolphus, who
commanded, in Lower Saxony and Westphalia, some regiments raised with French
money. In December Baner proceeded through Erfurt
into Saxony, defeated the Saxons at Eilenburg early
in January, 1637, and captured several of their regiments; when all the men and
some of the officers entered the Swedish service. After a vain attempt upon
Leipzig, Baner crossed the Elbe and took up a
position at Torgau; but here he was surrounded by the
enemy, and for nearly five months lay in a most critical situation.
This period was
marked by the death of the Emperor, who expired at Vienna, February 15th, 1637,
in the fifty-ninth year of his age. He was, in the main, a well-meaning man,
but led into an ill-policy, arbitrary and illegal proceedings, and even crime,
by the bigoted and sophistical ideas instilled into him by priests and Jesuits,
and by mistaken notions of his duty as a Sovereign. He was succeeded by his
son, Ferdinand III, who had been elected King of the Romans in the cathedral of
Ratisbon only a little while before (December 22nd, 1636), by the Electors of
Saxony, Brandenburg, Mainz, Cologne, and Bavaria; but as the Elector of Treves
was then a prisoner, and as the son of the Palatine Frederick was also absent
from Ratisbon, France and Sweden took occasion to protest against the validity
of the proceedings.
CHAPTER XXXIVTHE PEACE OF WESTPHALIA
|