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THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST

READING HALL

THE DOORS OF WISDOM

THE CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE ACCORDING GENESIS

 

A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900

 

CHAPTER XLIV.

THE AFFAIRS OF POLAND AND TURKEY, 1733-1740

 

 

THE peace of Europe was next disturbed by what has been called the “War of the Polish Succession”. The throne of Poland was rendered vacant by the death of Augustus II, February 1st, 1733. It had been foreseen that on this event Louis XV would endeavor to restore his father-in-law, Stanislaus Lesczinski, to the throne of Poland, a project which Austria and Russia had determined to oppose. With this view they selected, as a candidate for the Polish Crown, Emanuel, brother of John V, King of Portugal; and they engaged Frederick William I of Prussia to support their designs by a treaty drawn up December 31st, 1731, and called the Treaty of Lowenwolde, from the name of the Russian minister who had the principal hand in its negotiation. The Duchy of Berg, the grand object of Frederick William’s ambition, was to be assured to him, and Courland to a prince of the House of Brandenburg, upon the death of the last reigning Duke of the House of Kettler. This article, however, was unacceptable to the Court of St. Petersburg. The Empress, Anna Ivanowna, wished to procure Courland for her favorite, Biron; she accordingly refused to ratify the treaty, and matters were in this state on the death of Augustus II.

When that event occurred, Frederick Augustus, the son and successor of Augustus II in the Saxon Electorate, also became a candidate for the Polish Crown; and, in order to obtain it, he sought the assistance of the Emperor Charles VI, which he hoped to gain by adhering to the Pragmatic Sanction. In the previous year the Emperor had brought that matter before the German Diet, when a great majority of the States had ratified and guaranteed the Act (January 11th, 1732). The Electors of Bavaria and Saxony and the Count Palatine had, however, protested against it. The Elector of Bavaria and the son of the Elector of Saxony, the prince now in question, had married daughters of the Emperor Joseph I, whose eventual claims to the Austrian succession, as children of the elder brother, might be considered preferable to those of the daughters of Charles VI; and, on July 4th, the two Electors had concluded, at Dresden, an alliance for the defence of their respective rights. But Charles VI availed himself of the ambitious views of Frederick Augustus to obtain from him a renunciation of his pretensions; and the new Elector now solemnly acceded to the decree of the Empire regarding the Pragmatic Sanction, and agreed personally to guarantee it, the Emperor, in return, engaging to assist him to the Polish throne. In the treaty concluded between them Charles VI promised his unconditional aid in excluding Stanislaus, or any French candidate; while he undertook to afford Frederick Augustus every assistance for the attainment of his object that might be compatible with the constitution of the Polish Republic; but on condition that the Elector should consult the wishes of the Empress of Russia and King of Prussia. When he should have done this, Charles promised to furnish him with money to procure his election, and to support him in it with arms; that is, first to corrupt, and then to constrain the Polish nobles. In consequence of this arrangement, a treaty was made in July, 1733, between the Elector of Saxony and the Empress of Russia, by which the agreement to elect a Prussian Prince to the Duchy of Courland was set aside; and it was agreed that when the anticipated vacancy should occur by the death of Duke Ferdinand, resort should be had to an election; doubtless of much the same sort as was now to be accorded to the unhappy Poles. The Empress promised to support the election of Frederick Augustus in Poland not only by negotiation and money, but also by arms, “so far as could be done without violating the liberty of election”; a clear impossibility. Thus the interests of the Portuguese Prince, who was, indeed, personally unacceptable to the Poles, were entirely disregarded. After the withdrawal of this candidate, the King of Prussia would have preferred Stanislaus to the Elector of Saxony for King of Poland, as less dangerous to Prussian interests; but he coquetted alternately with the French and Imperial Courts, and ended with doing nothing.

This conjuncture is principally important from the position now definitively taken up by Russia as a European Power. It had always been the policy of Peter the Great to nourish, under the mask of friendship, the elements of discord existing in the Polish constitution, and thus to render Poland’s escape from foreign influence impossible. It was only through the Tsar that Augustus II had been able to maintain himself on the throne. Russian troops almost continually occupied Poland, in spite of the remonstrances of the people, and Peter disposed as arbitrarily of the lives and estates of Polish subjects as if they had been a conquered people. Thus, for instance, when he was celebrating the marriage of his niece, Catharine, with the Duke of Mecklenburg at Danzig in 1716, his fleet threatened that town in the very midst of the solemnities, and he compelled it to make a contribution of 150,000 dollars towards his war with Sweden. This was done under the very eyes of King Augustus, who was present in the town. The Poles owed their misfortunes, as we have said, to their constitution, but also to their own faults. Frederick II, speaking of Poland shortly after this time, says : “This kingdom is in a perpetual anarchy. All the great families are divided in their interests; they prefer their own advantage to the public good, and only unite for the cruel oppression of their subjects, whom they treat more like beasts of burden than men. The Poles are vain, overbearing in prosperity, abject in adversity; capable of any act in order to obtain money, which they throw out of window immediately they have got it; frivolous, without judgment, equally ready to take up or abandon a cause without any reason. They have laws, but nobody observes them, because there is no executive justice. When many offices become vacant, the power of the King increases in proportion, since he has the privilege to dispose of them; but the only return he meets with is ingratitude. The Diet assembles every three years, either at Grodno or Warsaw; when it is the policy of the Court to procure the election of a person devoted to it as Marshal of the Diet. Yet, during the whole reign of Augustus II there was but one Diet which lasted. This cannot be otherwise, since a single deputy can interrupt their deliberations. It is the Veto of the ancient tribunes of Rome ... The women conduct political intrigues and dispose of everything, while their husbands get drunk ... Poland maintains an army of 24,000 men, but they are bad troops. In case of need it can assemble its arrière-ban; but Augustus II in vain invoked it against Charles XII. Hence it was easy for Russia, under a more perfect government, to profit by the weakness of its neighbor, and to gain an ascendant over it”.

France also employed money to secure the election of Stanislaus; but in fact, as a native Pole, he was the popular candidate, as well as by his personal qualities; and, had the Crown, nation been left to itself, and that liberty of election allowed to it which the Eastern Powers pretended to secure, he would have been the undisputed King of Poland. But as Austrian troops were massed in Silesia, while a Russian army was invading Poland from the east, it was necessary for Stanislaus to enter the Kingdom by stealth, in order to present himself to the electors. Had Cardinal Fleury, the French Minister, been more active, this necessity might have been averted; but he kept Stanislaus several months in France, and to insure his safety it became necessary to resort to an artifice. A person simulating Stanislaus was sent to Danzig with a small French squadron having 1,500 troops on board; while the real Stanislaus proceeded to Warsaw by way of Berlin, in the disguise of a merchant. He was a second time elected King of Poland on the plain of Vola by a great majority of the electors—60,000 it is said; and his election was duly proclaimed by the Primate of the Kingdom, Theodore Potocki, September 12th, 1733. Some 3,000 of the Palatines, however, gained by the Elector of Saxony, and having the Bishop of Cracow at their head, quitted the field of election, crossed the Vistula to Prague, and elected Frederick Augustus, who, being supported by the Russian army, was proclaimed King of Poland, with the title of Augustus III (October 5th), and was immediately recognized by the Emperor Charles VI.

Louis XV made some vain remonstrances to the Cabinet of Vienna. The junction of the Russian and Saxon troops compelled Stanislaus to fly from Warsaw, and take refuge at Danzig, where he was besieged by the Russians. That place, after a brave and obstinate defence, was at length compelled to surrender, June 28th, 1734. Stanislaus had previously escaped in the disguise of a peasant to Marienwerder, and thence to Konigsberg, where the King of Prussia afforded him protection. Thus Frederick William seemed to play an equivocal part; for while he sheltered Stanislaus, he sent 10,000 men to join the Imperial army which was to fight against his cause, but which did nothing but rob and oppress the people among whom it was quartered. The Crown Prince, afterwards Frederick the Great, accompanied these troops, and is said to have acquired some useful knowledge, by observing the bad discipline of the Austrians. All that the French did in favour of Stanislaus was to send a paltry expedition, consisting of three battalions, to Danzig, which landed on May 10th and reembarked on the 14th. These troops, on their return, touched at Copenhagen. Count Plelo, who was then French Ambassador in that city, was so indignant at their conduct that he led them back to Danzig ; but only to his own destruction and that of the greater part of his companions. This was the first encounter between the Russians and French. After these events, the Russians and Austrians began to dictate in Poland, and the seat of government seemed to lie rather at St. Petersburg than Warsaw.

The French Court seemed more intent on gaining advantages in the west than on supporting Stanislaus and the “dignity” of his son-in-law, Louis XV, or maintaining the balance of power. This last motive was indeed assigned in a secret treaty concluded between France and Sardinia, September 23rd, 1733, for the purpose of an attack upon the Emperor’s Italian provinces. The balance of power seemed rather to depend on the fate of Poland. Russia, however, notwithstanding her recent advances, does not yet appear to have inspired much alarm in Europe; at all events, France could gain little benefit from a war with that country. The Sardinian sceptre had now passed to Charles Emanuel III, through the abdication of his father, Victor Amadeus II, in 1730. It was the custom of the House of Savoy to make peace or war according to its political convenience; and in the secret treaty with the French Crown it was agreed that the Milanese should be attacked, and, when conquered, annexed to the Sardinian dominions. By a particular convention, when the King of Sardinia should also acquire Mantua, Savoy or Sardinia was to be ceded to France. The Austrian Netherlands were not to be attacked, unless the conduct of the Powers interested in their preservation rendered it necessary. So also the Empire was to be distinguished from the Emperor. Nothing was to be done to the prejudice of the former; and the King of Sardinia, when in possession of the Milanese, was to acknowledge that he held it as an Imperial fief. These arrangements were intended to prevent Holland and England from interfering on the ground of the Barrier Treaty, and to bring some of the German princes into the alliance. Further, by separate articles, it was agreed that it would be advisable to drive the Emperor from Naples and Sicily and the Tuscan ports; that is, to expel him entirely from Italy, when his Italian possessions were to be made over to Don Carlos and his heirs male, or, in their default, to the next sons of the Queen of Spain, and their male descendants, in the order of primogeniture; and, failing all male heirs, they were to be reunited to the Spanish Crown, and Charles Emanuel also stipulated that Spain should be confined to the Two Sicilies and the Tuscan Presidi or ports, and Fleury promised the unconditional adhesion of Spain to this treaty.

In consequence of this treaty, Louis XV declared war against the Emperor, October 7th, 1733. The Queen of Spain seized the occasion to push the interest of her family. She longed to see Don Carlos on the throne of Naples; and her pride was  hurt by the ancient forms of vassalage which bound him, as Duke of Parma and Tuscany, to the Emperor. She had also another son to provide for. By the skillful administration of Patino, called the Colbert of Spain, the army and navy had been brought into a flourishing condition; the former numbered 80,000 men, flushed with recent victories over the Moors in Africa. As soon as a rupture between France and Austria was certain, a defensive alliance was secretly concluded November 7th, at the Escurial, between France and Spain. The two Bourbon Powers mutually guaranteed their possessions which they held or claimed. While Spain declared that she would abrogate all exclusive privileges to the English, France undertook to attack Gibraltar if necessary. Thus the Treaty of the Escurial, though openly directed against the Emperor was in reality equally hostile to England. The Emperor endeavored to draw England and Holland on his side; but these Powers determined to remain neutral, provided France abstained from attacking the Austrian Netherlands. The English Ministry, embarrassed by domestic affairs, and engrossed by the prospect of a general election, contented themselves with offering their mediation, and, on November 24th, 1733, a convention was signed at the Hague, by which Louis XV engaged not to invade the Netherlands.

France began the war by seizing Lorraine, whose Duke, Francis Stephen, was destined to marry the Archduchess, Maria Theresa, and thus to become the founder of a new House of Austria. Marshal Berwick crossed the Rhine and captured Kehl, October 9th, 1733; but as this fortress belonged to the Empire, Louis, in order not to embroil himself with that body, declared that he would restore it at the peace. The conquest of the Milanese was entrusted to Marshal Villars, and, with the aid of the Piedmontese, was virtually effected in three months. Mantua, however, the stronghold of Lombardy, remained in possession of the Austrians, who were assembling in large masses in Tyrol. Villars besought Don Carlos and the Duke of Montemar, who had arrived in Italy with a Spanish army, to assist him in dispersing the Austrians; but they preferred marching to Naples, and in February, 1734, quitted North Italy. The German Diet, by a decree of February 26th, declared that France had violated the Peace of Baden by invading the Empire and the Duchy of Milan, as well as by levying contributions in the Circles; but the Electors of Bavaria, Cologne, and the Palatine remonstrated against this declaration, and determined to preserve a strict neutrality. In the campaign of this year, Berwick detached Count Belle-Isle against Trèves and Trarhach, which he took, while Berwick himself, with the main body, undertook the siege of Philippsburg, where he was killed in the trenches, June 12th. The command now devolved on Marshal d'Asfeld, to whom the place surrendered, July 18th. The Imperial army, under the command of the aged Eugene, now only the shadow of his former self, looked idly on during the siege. In Italy, the principal theatre of the war, the allies were everywhere successful. The conquest of the Milanese was completed by the capture of Novara and Tortona. The joy of these successes was damped by the death of Villars at Turin, June 17th, within a few days of that of Berwick. They were the last of the great commanders of the reign of Louis XIV. The Imperialists, worsted near Parma, June 29th, gained indeed some advantage over Marshal Broglie, near Quistello, but were completely defeated September 19th, between Guastalla and Suzzara. Charles Emanuel had, however, consistently refused to undertake the siege of Mantua, unless it was assigned to the Elector of Bavaria, or retained in return for concessions to France. He was determined to prevent it from falling into the hands of Spain. So Mantua was still untaken at the end of 1734.

The affairs of the Emperor went still worse in Southern Italy. Don Carlos and Montemar entered the Neapolitan dominions in May, 1734, and marched without resistance to the capital, which immediately opened its gates; for the Austrian sway was highly unpopular. Instead of meeting the enemy in the open field, the Emperor’s forces had been weakened by being distributed into garrisons; the only considerable body of them which had been kept together consisted of 9,000 or 10,000 men, entrenched at Bitonto, in Apulia, who were completely defeated by the Spaniards, May 25th. This victory decided the conquest of all Naples. Montemar then passed into Sicily and speedily reduced the whole of that island. Don Carlos was crowned King of the Two Sicilies at Palermo, July 3rd, 1735, with the title of Charles III. He was an enlightened Prince, and, under the guidance of his able minister, Bernardo Tanucci, a professor of jurisprudence at Pisa, the reign of the Spanish Bourbons in Italy began with a promise which was not subsequently realized.

In Northern Italy, the campaign of 1735 was as favourable to the allies as that of the preceding year. The Imperialists were driven out of Austrian Lombardy, with the exception of Mantua, and even this they preserved only through the dissensions of the allies. As Spain claimed Mantua for Don Carlos, and would give Charles Emanuel no guarantee for the possession of the Milanese, that Prince was unwilling to forward the reduction of Mantua. France also, satisfied with the possession of Lorraine, did not wish Spain to reap any further advantages; and by refusing to supply battering artillery and by other means, endeavored, in concert with the maritime Powers, to obstruct the progress of the Spanish arms. Nothing memorable occurred on the Rhine. Marshal Coigny held Eugene in check, and prevented him from crossing that river, though he was supported by a corps of 10,000 Russians under Count Lacy and General Keith.

The appearance of this corps, however, hastened the negotiations between Austria and France, which had already been commenced. The reverses experienced by the Emperor led him to desire peace, while England and Holland offered to mediate. Their proposals were in the Emperor’s favour, and he seemed at first disposed to accept them. The proffered mediation was rejected, not by him, but by the allied Crowns ; though Charles was indeed displeased with England and Holland, thinking that they had not afforded him that help which they were bound to give by the Second Treaty of Vienna. He listened, therefore, not unwillingly to the secret proposals of France, which were made to him at the instance of Chauvelin, the French Minister for Foreign Affairs; and preliminaries were signed at Vienna, October 3rd, 1735. France not only abandoned the cause of Stanislaus, the pretended object of the war, but also deserted Spain, whose subsidies she had received. A cessation of hostilities took place in November, but the signature of a definite treaty was delayed more than three years.

THE TIRD TREATY OF VIENNA, 1735-1738.

The Spanish Sovereigns were naturally indignant at the conduct of France; but the arming of the maritime Powers, and the appearance of an English squadron on the coasts of Spain, induced them to accept peace (May, 1736). By the Third Treaty of Vienna, November 18th, 1738, it was arranged that King Stanislaus should abdicate the Crown of Poland, but retain the Royal title. Augustus III was to be recognized in his stead, while the Polish Constitution and liberty of election were guaranteed. Tuscany, on the death of the Grand Duke, was to be assigned to the Duke of Lorraine, whose duchies of Bar and Lorraine were to be transferred to Stanislaus; the former immediately, the latter so soon as the Duchy of Tuscany should become vacant. Stanislaus was to hold these duchies for life; and upon his decease they were to be united to the French Crown. The County of Falkenstein, however, a small district separated from Lorraine, and situated at the foot of Mount Tonnerre, was reserved to the Duke Francis Stephen, in order that he might hold a possession under the Empire, and that it might not be objected to him, when he should hereafter aspire to the Imperial Throne, as son-in-law of the Emperor Charles VI, that he was a foreign Prince. The Diet subsequently agreed that the vote which the Dukes of Lorraine had hitherto enjoyed in their quality of Marquises of Nomeny should be attached to the County of Falkenstein. Naples and Sicily, with the Tuscan Presidi, were to remain in the possession of Don Carlos. The King of Sardinia to have the Novarese and Vigevanese, or the Tortonese and Vigevanese, or the Novarese and Tortonese, according to his option. Parma and Piacenza were to be assigned to the Emperor. France guaranteed the Pragmatic Sanction, and acquiesced in the marriage of the Duke of Lorraine with the Archduchess, Maria Theresa—a union which had hitherto been opposed by France, because Lorraine would thus have been ultimately added to the Austrian dominions. The King of Sardinia acceded to this treaty, February 3rd, 1739 ; and the Courts of Madrid and Naples in the following April. Thus terminated a war for which the question of the Polish Succession afforded only a pretence.

The Emperor was the chief loser by this treaty; yet, though Naples and Sicily were wrested from his dominion, he recovered, on the other hand, nearly all the possessions which had been conquered from him in Northern Italy, besides acquiring Parma, and, indirectly, through his son-in-law, Tuscany. The recognition of the Pragmatic Sanction by France was also no slight advantage to him. The loss of Lorraine did not concern him directly, but merely in its quality of an Imperial fief; whilst, on the other hand, it was a direct and very important acquisition for France. It was finally united to the French Crown on the death of Stanislaus, in 1766. England and Holland looked quietly on. The Spanish Sovereigns were highly discontented with the Treaty, though Naples and Sicily were hardly a bad exchange for Parma, Piacenza and Tuscany. The Grand Duke of Tuscany, the last of the Medicis, died July 9th, 1737; and thus, on the signature of the treaty, there was nothing to prevent the immediate execution of its provisions. Stanislaus had abdicated the Crown of Poland by an act signed at Konigsberg, January 27th, 1736, and Russia signified her Augustus adherence to the provisions about Poland in May. The peace finally arranged at the Diet at Warsaw, July 10th, 1736, between Augustus III and the Polish States, provided for the maintenance of the Roman Catholic religion, and the right of the Poles to elect their Sovereign. The Saxon troops were to leave the Kingdom in forty days, except the body-guard of the King, consisting of 1,200 men. The Russians were to evacuate the kingdom at the same time. Dissidents were to enjoy security of person and property; but they were not to be admissible into the public service, nor to the dignities of Palatines and Starosts; nor were they to be allowed to seek the protection of foreign Powers.

One motive which had induced the Emperor to accede to the terms offered by France was the prospect of indemnifying himself for his losses by a war with the Turks, which he had entered into, in conformity with treaties, in conjunction with Russia.

Peter the Great had never forgotten his humiliation at the Pruth, nor abandoned his favourite schemes for extending his Empire; but, so long as he was engaged in the Northern War, nothing could be done in the direction of Turkey. In contemplation of an expedition into Persia, which rendered peace with the Porte indispensable, he had renewed, in 1720, the treaties of the Pruth and Adrianople; and, in spite of the opposition of the English resident, Stanyan, he obtain id two important concessions, viz., the privilege of having a resident minister at Constantinople, and the abrogation of the yearly present or tribute made to the Tartar Khan of the Crimea. It is remarkable that on this occasion both the contracting parties guaranteed the Polish Constitution, and declared that none of its territories or towns should be severed from Poland. Hence, when the Russian troops entered that country in 1733 to support Augustus III, the Porte remonstrated against it as a breach of treaty; but being occupied with domestic dissensions, as well as with a Persian war, took no steps to prevent it.

It was the Tsar’s expedition into Persia, in 1722, which ultimately brought Russia into collision with the Turks. Persia was then in the throes of a revolution. The Throne of the Sefi Dynasty, which had reigned upwards of two centuries, was shaken by a revolt of the Afghans, and Hussein, the last of that Dynasty, was deposed by Mir Mahmoud in 1722. Peter complained of wrongs done to Russian merchants, and not being able to obtain the redress he demanded, declared war. In the summer of 1722 Peter embarked at Astrachan, and traversed the Caspian Sea, which he had previously caused to be surveyed, with a fleet carrying 22,000 soldiers. His real object was to obtain possession of Daghestan, and he captured and garrisoned Derbent, the capital of that province. He renewed the war in the following year, in spite of the remonstrances of the Porte, and made himself master of Ghilan and Bachu, while, on the other side, the Pasha of Erzerum broke into Georgia and seized Tiflis, the capital. A treaty with Turkey for the partition of Persia, and the restoration of some part of it to Shah Thamasp, Hussein’s son, was one of the Tsar’s last political acts. He died on February 10th, 1725, in the fifty-second year of his age. A man of the wildest and most savage impulse, yet capable of deep reflection and indomitable perseverance; submitting himself voluntarily, for the sake of his country, to all the hardships and privations of a common mechanic; bred up in what are perhaps the most obstinate of all prejudices, those of a half-civilized people, yet one of the most remarkable reformers of any age, and in the space of his short reign, the real founder of the Russian Empire.

Peter’s son Alexis, by his first wife, Eudoxia, had died in 1718, in a mysterious manner. The conduct of Alexis had never been satisfactory to his father. He was averse to all military exercises, the slave of the priests, and the tool of the Old Russian Party, which hated and opposed all Peter’s innovations and reforms. Hence, at an early period, the Tsar had seriously meditated depriving him of the succession and shutting him up in a convent. Peter, during his absence in the war of 1711, had left his son nominal Regent; but was so little content with his conduct that, in a memorable letter addressed to the Senate, he directed them, in case of his own death, to elect “the worthiest” for his successor. His discontent with his heir went on increasing. During Peter’s journey to Holland and France, in 1717, Alexis had fled for protection to the Court of Vienna. After a short stay in that capital, and afterwards in the fortress of Ehrenberg, in Tyrol, he proceeded under a false name to Naples, and found a refuge in the Castle of St. Elmo. His hiding-place was, however, discovered; the Viceroy gave him up on the demand of the Tsar’s envoys; and on February 3rd, 1718, he was brought back to Moscow. On the following morning he was arraigned before a great council of the clergy, nobles, and principal citizens of Moscow, in whose presence he was compelled to sign a solemn act of renunciation of the Crown. The confessions which Alexis made on this occasion led to the discovery of a plot which had been hatching seven years, and in which some of the leading Russian nobles were implicated. The objects of it were to massacre, after the accession of Alexis, all the chief Russians and Germans who had been employed in carrying out the reforms of Peter; to make peace with Sweden, and restore to that Power St. Petersburg and the other conquests which had been gained from it; to disband the standing army, and restore the soldiers to their original condition of peasants. On May 26th, 1718, a large assembly of the clergy, and of the highest civil and military officers, found Prince Alexis guilty on these charges, and pronounced sentence of death. The young Prince died on the following day, but the exact cause of his death is unknown.

 Alexis had left two children: a daughter, Natalia Alexejewna, born July 23rd, 1714, and a son, Peter Alexejewitsch, born October 22nd, 1715. These were his offspring by his consort, a Princess of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, whom he hated because she was a Protestant, and is said to have treated so ill as to cause her death after her second lying-in. According to the laws of hereditary succession, the son of Alexis, now nine years old, was entitled to the Crown on the death of the Tsar. But by a ukase, published in February, 1722, before proceeding on his expedition into Persia, Peter had asserted his privilege to settle the succession of the Crown; and, in May, 1724, he had caused his wife Catharine to be solemnly crowned in the cathedral at Moscow—a ceremony which he intended as no vain and empty pageant, but as an indication and pledge that she was to succeed him in the Imperial dignity. He does not seem, however, to have made any formal nomination of her; and after her coronation he appears to have discovered that she had been unfaithful to him. Catharine’s elevation to the throne was effected, partly through corruption, partly by force, by her partizans, the New Russian Party, in opposition to the Old Russian faction. The only evidence produced in favour of her claim to the Crown was Peter’s verbal declaration that he would make her his successor. Nothing of much importance occurred during the two years of Catharine’s reign, with the exception of a treaty made with Austria in 1726. She died May 6th, 1727. Soon after her accession she had married her eldest daughter, Anna Petrowna, then seventeen years of age, to the Duke of Holstein.

When Catharine I lay on her death-bed, an assembly of the great civil and military officers of the Empire determined that the Crown should be given to Peter, the son of Alexis. This grandson of Peter the Great was now in his twelfth year, and the assembly fixed his majority at sixteen. During his minority the Government was to be conducted by the Supreme Council, under the presidency of the Duchess of Holstein and the Princess Elizabeth, second daughter of Peter and Catharine. This arrangement, however, was somewhat modified by a pretended will of Catharine’s, which appears to have been manufactured by Prince Menschikoff and Count Bassewitz, and bore the signature of the Princess Elizabeth, who was accustomed to sign all documents for the Empress. It contained not, like the resolutions of the Assembly, any indemnity for the judges who had condemned Alexis. The decision of the Supreme Council was to be governed by the majority, and the Tsar was to be present at their deliberations, but without a voice. The Government was to effect the marriage of the Tsar with a daughter of Prince Menschikoff’s. Should Peter II die without heirs, he was to be succeeded, first, by the Duchess of Holstein and her descendants, and then by her sister, the Princess Elizabeth, and her descendants. Failing heirs of all these, the Crown was to go to Natalia, daughter of Alexis.

In spite of these regulations, however, Menschikoff, who was so ignorant that he could hardly read or write, virtually seized the Regency, and exercised a despotism even more terrible than that of Peter the Great. He was immediately made Generalissimo, and betrothed the Tsar to his eldest daughter, Maria. The only other member of the Council who enjoyed any share in the Government was Baron Ostermann, the Vice-Chancellor. The Duke and Duchess of Holstein lost all influence, and to avoid Menschikoff’s insolence, proceeded to Holstein, where the Duchess died in the following year, a few months after giving birth to a son, who, in course of time, became Peter III. But the overbearing conduct, the avarice and corruption of Menschikoff became in a few months so intolerable, that the youthful Tsar summoned courage to banish him to Siberia (September, 1727), where he died two years afterwards. Ostermann continued to retain his influence, and a struggle for power took place between the Golovkins, the Dolgoroukis, and the Golitsyns. Peter the Great’s first wife, Eudoxia, had returned to Moscow after the accession of her grandson, but she obtained no influence. There is nothing memorable to be recorded during the reign of Peter II, whose only passion was an extravagant fondness for the chase. He died of the small-pox in January, 1730, just as he was on the point of being married to the Princess Catharine Dolgorouki. His sister, Natalia, had preceded him to the tomb. The Russian nobles now selected Peter the Great’s niece, Anna Ivanowna, the widowed Duchess of Courland, to succeed to the throne, but on condition that she should sign a capitulation by which she engaged not to marry, nor to name a successor, besides many other articles which could have rendered her only an instrument in the hands of the Dolgoroukis and their party. But soon after her accession, with the assistance of the nobles who were opposed to that party, she cancelled this capitulation, and sent the Dolgoroukis into banishment. Baron Ostermann became the chief counsellor of the Empress Anna; but she was principally ruled by her favorite, Biron, the son of an equerry.

Under the reign of this Empress, the schemes of Peter the Great against the Ottoman Empire were revived. In consequence of the restoration of Azof and Taganrog to the Porte, and the destruction of the Russian forts, the Crim and Nogay Tartars had again become troublesome, and made incursions into the Russian territories; while disputes had also been going on respecting boundary lines on the Caspian and Black Seas and in the Ukraine. The Persian conquests of Peter the Great were, however, almost entirely abandoned. Besides the enormous sums required for their defence, these provinces were found to be but the grave of brave officers and soldiers. A treaty was, therefore, concluded in January, 1732, between the Empress Anna and the celebrated Taehmas Kouli Khan, by which a great part of the Russian conquests in Persia was restored. On the other hand, it was resolved to recover Azof and to chastise the Tartars; but this object was retarded a while by the Russian interference in the affairs of Poland, already recorded.

Turkey was now exhausted by her long war with Persia, as well as by the revolution which had taken place at Constantinople, and the consequent efforts of the Government to extirpate the Janissaries. These troops, alienated by the heavy taxes and the dearness of provisions, and more especially by the reluctance displayed by Sultan Achmet III to prosecute a projected expedition against Persia, had, in September, 1730, organized a revolt, under the conduct of an Albanian named Patrona Chalil, one of their body, and a dealer in old clothes; who, having spent his money in fitting himself out for the war, was vexed to be disappointed of his expected booty. Weak, luxurious, and good-tempered, Achmet negotiated with the rebels, and delayed till it was too late to strike a decisive blow. The rebels seemed to receive his proposals favourably; they wished him all prosperity, but required satisfaction of their demands and the surrender of those persons to whom they imputed the public distress, including the Mufti, the Grand Vizier, Ibrahim, the Sultan’s sons-in-law, and others. Finding that nobody would fight in his cause, Achmet caused the persons demanded to be strangled, and delivered to the Janissaries. But even this would not satisfy them. They had stipulated that their victims should be surrendered alive, and they pretended that the bodies of some slaves had been substituted for those of the persons they had demanded. Achmet was now compelled to abdicate in favour of his nephew, Mahmoud, son of Mustapha II. Nevertheless, Patrona Chalil continued several weeks to be the real Sovereign of Turkey. At first he affected the purest disinterestedness. He caused the treasures of the Grand Vizier and other victims to be fairly divided among his confederates, and he demanded the abolition of all the new taxes. But having incurred the suspicion of accepting bribes, he lost the confidence of his associates, and the Government was enabled to effect his destruction. Patrona was admitted to attend the sittings of the Divan; and on one of these occasions, he and two other of the principal ringleaders were put to death in the midst of the assembled ministers. After this, with the assistance of the citizens, the revolt was gradually extinguished.

The war with Persia, however, still went on. In 1733 and 1734 the Osmanlis made two most unsuccessful campaigns against that country, so that they confessed themselves “that they were never more embarrassed since the establishment of their monarchy”. The fate of the Turkish Empire had already become an object of solicitude to the statesmen of Europe. It was remarked that the Osmanli Dominion was supported, not by its own intrinsic power, but through the jealousy of Christian princes, who did not wish to see the States of others aggrandized by the partition of its provinces. It was at this time that Cardinal Alberoni amused his leisure hours by drawing up a scheme for the annihilation of Turkey as an independent Power, which is worth mentioning here only as a proof of the interest excited by the fate of Turkey among the politicians of that day. It does not appear, however, that any jealousy then existed of Russia aggrandizing herself at the expense of Turkey.

The French, opposed to Russia in the affairs of Poland, were seeking to incite the Porte to a war with that country through their resident Villeneuve and the renegade Count Bonneval, who had turned Mahometan, and become Pasha of Bosnia. England and Holland, on the contrary, endeavored to maintain the peace. These Powers desired not the ruin of the Turks, who were their best customers for cloths and other articles; nor did they wish to see a Russian commerce established in the Mediterranean through the Black Sea, which could not but be injurious to their trade.

The pretence seized by the Russians for declaring war against the Porte was the passing of the Tartars through their territories when marching to the war in Persia. Field-Marshal Münnich was appointed to command the army destined to operate against the Crimea and Azof. The first expedition took place in 1735, when the Russians penetrated into the Steppes, but were compelled to return with great loss. In the following year Münnich captured Perekop, forced the lines which protected the Crimea, and overran that peninsula, but was compelled to evacuate it again in the autumn. In the same campaign, Azof surrendered to Field-Marshal Lacy (July 1st). The operations of 1737 were directed more against the proper dominions of Turkey. Ochakov was taken, and Münnich entered the Ukraine.

Meanwhile the Emperor Charles VI had also begun to take part in the war, from causes which demand a few words of explanation.

The relations between Austria and the Porte had not been essentially disturbed since the Peace of Passarowitz; though Turkey, who thought that he had been injured by Austria, and who had leagued himself with the Transylvanian Prince, Joseph Ragotski, son of Francis Ragotski, used every endeavor to incite the Porte to an Austrian war. But, on the other hand, Russia claimed the assistance of Austria, under an alliance which had been concluded between them in 1726, the occasion of which was as follows. The Empress Catharine had, in 1725, demanded from Denmark the freedom of the Sound, and the restitution of Schleswig to the Duke of Holstein, and seemed preparing to enforce these demands by a war. The King of Denmark hereupon appealed to George I for help, according to the treaties existing between them; and early in 1726 a large English fleet, under the command of Admiral Wager, appeared in the Baltic. As it was suspected that the real design of the Russian Court was rather to support the partisans of the Duke of Holstein in Sweden than to invade Denmark, Admiral Wager informed King Frederick that he came to maintain peace in the North, and to protect Sweden against the enterprises of Russia. The Russian fleet did not venture to leave port. Catharine I, incensed by this conduct, joined the Alliance of Vienna by the Treaty of August 6th, 1726, already mentioned. It was under this treaty, by which Austria and Russia, besides guaranteeing each other’s possessions, had agreed in case of war to assist one another with 30,000 men, that Russia demanded the aid of Austria in her war with the Austria Turks. The latter Power sent the stipulated quota into Hungary as a corps of observation, and, in January, 1737, the treaty of 1726 was renewed. Austria undertook to furnish 50,000 men; with the aid of the Empire an army of 120,000 men was ultimately raised, and placed under the command of Count von Seckendorf, with whom the young Duke Francis Stephen of Lorraine, son-in-law of the Emperor, was nominally associated as commander-in-chief.

War was publicly declared against the Turks, July 14th, in 1737, after a solemn service in St. Stephen’s Church at Vienna. It was ordered that the Turks’ bell should be rung every morning at seven o'clock throughout the Empire, when all were to offer up their prayers for the success of the Christian cause. The Austrian arms were at first successful. Nissa capitulated June 23rd, and another division subdued Possega and Kassova. But the fortune of the Imperialists now began to change. Seckendorf had divided his forces too much; an attempt on Widdin entirely failed, and in October the Turks recovered NissaSeckendorf, who was a Protestant, was now recalled, subjected to a court-martial and imprisoned, and Field-Marshal Philippi was appointed to succeed him.

The campaign of 1738 was unfavourable both to the Russians and Austrians. The Russians again invaded the Crimea with the design of taking Kaffa, but without success, and Münnich’s campaign of the Dniester was equally fruitless. The Imperialists, under Counts Wallis and Neipperg, defeated the Turks at Kronia, near Mehadia, but with great loss on their part; while the Turks soon after took SemendriaMehadiaOrsova, and Fort St. Elizabeth; when the Imperial army withdrew behind the walls of Semlin and Belgrade. The unsatisfactory issue of this campaign, both for Russia and Austria, produced a coolness between those Powers. The Cabinet of Vienna complained that Münnich had not carried out the plan agreed upon by attacking Bender and Choczim; also that he had hindered a Russian corps of 30,000 men from joining the Imperial army in Hungary. Both Powers now began to meditate a separate peace, and Sweden and Prussia offered their mediation. The events of 1739, however, gave a new turn to affairs. Münnich crossed the Dniester, stormed and took the Turkish camp at Stawutschane (August 28th), and captured Choczim. Then passing the Pruth, he entered Jassy, while the Bojars of Moldavia signified their submission. His intention now was to march on Bender, and in the following year to penetrate into the heart of the Grand Signor’s dominions, when he was arrested by the unwelcome news that a peace had been concluded at Belgrade.

The fortune of the Austrians this year had been as ill as his own was good. On July 23rd, they had been totally defeated at Grozka with a loss of more than 20,000 men, and had abandoned the field in panic flight. The Turks, who compared their victory to that of Mohacs, now laid siege to Belgrade. The Imperial Cabinet saw no hope of safety except in making a peace by submitting to some losses, and Neipperg was commissioned to treat. The Empress of Russia, against the advice of Ostermann, and at the instigation of her favorite, Biron, now Duke of Courland, accepted, in conjunction with Austria, the mediation of France, through Villeneuve, the French ambassador at the Porte. This step is attributed to Biron’s envy of Münnich, and fear of the Old Russian Party, which was again raising its head, and necessitated peace abroad. On September 1st, 1739, Neipperg signed preliminaries in the Turkish camp, by which he engaged to surrender Belgrade and Schabatz, to evacuate Servia, Austrian Wallachia, and Orsova, and to raze Mehadia as well as the new works at Belgrade. These preliminaries were guaranteed by France. Villeneuve, it is said, had had the less difficulty to persuade Neipperg to surrender Belgrade, because he knew the Duke of Lorraine and Maria Theresa wished for peace at any price, lest, at the anticipated death of the Emperor, and through the troubles which were likely to ensue thereon, they should be hampered by this war. The Austrian Cabinet repented when it heard of Münnich’s victory at Choczim, but did not withhold its ratification of the definitive treaty, which was signed September 18th, and known as the Treaty of Belgrade. By the peace concluded between the Porte and Russia on the and same day, Azof was assigned to the Russians; but the fortifications were to be razed and the country around it wasted, in order to serve as a boundary between the two nations. Russia was authorized to build fortresses on the Don, and the Porte to do the same on the borders of the Kuban. The fortifications of Taganrog were not to be restored. Russia was to maintain no fleet either on the Sea of Zabach (or Azof) or on the Black Sea, and her commerce was to be carried on only in Turkish vessels. Münnich, irritated at this peace, which was partly due to the fear of a conspiracy in St. Petersburg, partly to the threatening attitude of Sweden, in contravention of orders from the Russian Court, continued the war a little while, and cantoned his troops in Poland and Moldavia; it was only on a repetition of the command to withdraw that he at length retired into the Ukraine.

 

CHAPTER XLV

THE WAR OF THE AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION,1740-1748