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 A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER XXVII.ESTABLISHMENT OF PEACE IN THE EAST AND WEST 
           IT has been seen
          in the preceding chapter that the King of Spain was at this period directing
          his whole attention to the affairs of France; a mistaken policy which, by
          diverting his money and resources from the Netherlands, fortunately enabled the
          Seven United Provinces to become an independent Power. The Austrian Archduke
          Ernest, who had been appointed Governor of the Netherlands after the death of
          the Duke of Parma, did not take possession of his office till the beginning of
          1594; and in the interval the government was conducted by Count Peter Ernest of
          Mansfeld. Philip, however, allowed the Count but little real power. He sent
          some Spaniards to watch over him; and appointed a council of war, in which were
          several of that nation, having for its president Pedro Henriquez, Count of
          Fuentes, who published some cruel decrees. In 1593 Count Mansfeld sent into
          France a small army under the command of his son Charles, which helped the Duke
          of Mayenne to take Noyon and a few other places in
          Picardy, and then returned into the Netherlands. During this period Prince
          Maurice succeeded in taking the important town of Gertruidenberg.
          In the following year (1594) Philip ordered the Archduke Ernest to despatch Mansfeld with a considerable body of troops to
          assist Mayenne in relieving Laon; the ill success of
          which attempt has been already related. Maurice availed himself of Mansfeld's absence to reduce Groningen, a place not only
          important as a fortress, but also as an indispensable member of the Dutch
          Republic. Groningen now obtained its place among the Seven United Provinces, of
          which Maurice was elected Stadholder. Maurice also crippled the power of Spain
          by supporting the Spanish mutineers in Brabant, whose pay was in arrear. The Archduke Ernest, having died in February, 1595,
          at the age of forty-two, Philip appointed in his place Ernest's brother, the
          Archduke Albert, formerly Viceroy of Portugal, and also substituted him for
          Ernest as the future husband of the Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia. Although
          Albert had been made Archbishop of Toledo and a Cardinal, he had not taken
          priest's orders, and a dispensation for his marriage might easily be procured.
          With Albert returned Philip William, the eldest son of William the Silent,
          after a captivity of twenty-eight years in Spain. By so long an exile his
          spirit had been completely broken; by the arts of the Jesuits he had been
          converted into a bigoted papist; and Philip now thought that he might be made
          an instrument for the recovery of the Netherlands.
   It was in January
          of this year that Henry IV declared war against the King of Spain. Besides the
          expedition of Velasco in the south, Philip II ordered the Spaniard Fuentes,
          who, till the arrival of Albert, conducted the government of the Netherlands,
          to invade the north of France; and Fuentes, having quelled the mutiny of the
          Spanish troops, and having left Modragon with
          sufficient forces to keep Prince Maurice in check, set off with 15,000 men,
          with the design of recovering Cambray. Le Catelet and Dourlens yielded to
          his arms; Ham was betrayed to him by the treachery of the governor, and in
          August Fuentes sat down before Cambray. It will be
          recollected that the Duke of Anjou had made over that place to his mother,
          Catharine de' Medici, who had appointed Balagny to be
          governor of it. During the civil wars of France, Balagny had established himself there as a little independent sovereign, and called
          himself Prince of Cambray; but after the discomfiture
          of the League he had been compelled to declare himself, and had acknowledged
          his allegiance to the King of France. His extortion and tyranny having rendered
          him detested by the inhabitants, they sent a message to Henry IV requesting him
          to dismiss Balagny, and receive them under his
          immediate authority. Unfortunately, however, Balagny and his wife had gained over Gabrielle d'Estrees; at
          her instance Henry declined the request of the citizens, who, to avenge
          themselves, delivered Cambray to the Spaniards,
          October 2nd. Fuentes now returned into the Netherlands, where the campaign had
          not been marked by any memorable event.
   The Cardinal
          Archduke Albert arrived at Brussels in February, 1596, when Fuentes resigned
          his command, and returned to Spain. Albert also directed his principal
          attention to the war against France, and sent a peaceful message to Prince
          Maurice and the United Provinces, which, however, met with no attention.
          Henry IV had been engaged since the winter in the siege of La Fère, a little town at the junction of the Serre and
          Oise. He had received reinforcements from England as well as from Germany
          and Holland. He had endeavoured to excuse his
          apostasy to Queen Elizabeth as an act of political necessity; and although
          she viewed it with indignation, her hatred of Spain induced her still to assist
          the French King, though her succours were no longer bestowed
          so liberally and so cordially as before. Albert marched to Valenciennes
          with 20,000 men, with the avowed intention of relieving La Fère; but instead of attempting that enterprise, he despatched De Rosne, a French renegade
          who had entered the service of Spain, with the greater part of the forces,
          to surprise Calais; and that important place was taken by assault, April 17th,
          before Henry could arrive for its defence. La Fère surrendered May 22nd; and Henry then marched with
          his army towards the coast of Picardy, where he endeavoured,
          but in vain, to provoke the Spaniards to give him battle. After fortifying Calais
          and Ardres, Albert withdrew again into the
          Netherlands.
   In the
          negotiations between Elizabeth and Henry in thepreceding year, the English Queen had demanded to be put in possession of Calais or
          Boulogne, as a security for thecharges of the war; a
          demand which Henry had rejected. During the investment of Calais by the
          Spaniards, Elizabeth had renewed her proposal, in case she should be the
          means of saving it, when Henry again refused. Nevertheless, Elizabeth,
          alarmed at the occupation by the Spaniards of a port which afforded such
          facilities for the invasion of England, soon afterwards concluded another
          offensive and defensive alliance with Henry IV (May 24th), in which the
          contracting parties pledged themselves to make no separate peace or truce with
          Philip II; and they invited all those States and Princes, who had reason to
          dread that ambitious monarch, to join the alliance. The treaty was acceded to
          by the Dutch; but the German Protestant Princes, offended by Henry's apostasy,
          and alarmed by the war then raging between the Austrians and the Turks, refused
          to enter into it. The treaty, however, had little effect. Elizabeth could not
          be induced to lend the French King more than 2,000 men, and that on condition
          of his maintaining them; nor would she allow the armament under Essex, which
          Henry had in vain solicited for the relief of Calais, to co-operate with him in
          the Netherlands, but despatched it to the coasts of
          Spain.
   Cadiz capture by
          the English
   The hostile
          preparations in the Spanish ports had for sometime back excited great alarm in England. Another attempt at invasion was
          apprehended, and a large armament was fitted out under Lord Howard of
          Effingham as admiral, and the Earl of Essex as commander of the land
          forces. The expedition was also accompanied by Sir Walter Raleigh. The fleet,
          which after the junction of twenty-two Dutch ships, consisted of 150 sail,
          with about 14,000 men on board, cast anchor in the Bay of Cadiz, June
          20th. On the following day, after an obstinate contest of some hours'
          duration, two of the four great Spanish galleons were captured, and two burnt.
          The rest of the Spanish fleet were driven into the harbour,
          and rather than pay the ransom demanded the Duke of Medina Sidonia caused
          them to be burnt—a third of the Spanish navy. Essex, then landing with
          3,000 soldiers, succeeded in penetrating into the town; and in the market-place he
          was joined by the admiral and another party, who had entered at a
          different quarter. The inhabitants now surrendered, purchasing their lives with
          120,000 crowns, and abandoning the city with its goods and merchandise to
          the conquerors. The bold, but perhaps not impracticable, plans of
          Essex, to penetrate into the heart of Andalusia, or, at all events, to
          hold possession of the Isle of Cadiz with 3,000 or 4,000 men, having been
          rejected by a majority of the commanders, the fleet set sail for England; and
          after making two descents of no great importance on the Spanish coast, arrived
          at Plymouth after an absence of about ten weeks. The loss suffered by the
          Spaniards was estimated at 20,000,000 ducats.
   Thus, while Philip
          II was affecting the conqueror, a severe blow was struck in his own
          dominions. The secret of hisweakness was revealed;
          and if the head of the Colossus was of gold, its feet were shown to be of clay.
          The English, on the other hand, acquired, even from the Spaniards themselves,
          the praise not only of bravery, but also of humanity and moderation, for the
          manner in which they had used their victory. The coolness of Essex's reception
          by the Queen and the intrigues which followed are well known. Infuriated by the
          insults received at Cadiz, Philip II prepared at Lisbon a new armada for the
          invasion of England, or rather Ireland. Essex, with Lord Thomas Howard and
          Raleigh, had been intrusted with a counter-expedition
          against Spain; but the fleets of both nations were defeated by the elements.
          The Adelantado of Castile, on sailing from Ferrol, was caught in a terrible
          storm, which dispersed and damaged his fleet. On again collecting his ships,
          instead of attempting to land in England, he made the best of his way back to
          the Spanish coast, but lost by another storm sixteen sail in the Bay of Biscay.
          The enterprise was then abandoned. On the other hand, Essex had also been
          driven back to the port by stress of weather, and his ships were so much
          damaged that most of the gentlemen volunteers refused again to put to sea.
          Essex himself, however, with a small squadron, sailed to the Azores, and
          captured Fayal, Graciosa, and Flores, but missed falling in with the Spanish fleet
          from the Indies, which was the chief object of the expedition. On their return
          with a few prizes, the English were enveloped, near the Scilly Isles, in the same storm which dispersed the Spanish fleet, but contrived to
          get safely into their own harbours.
   War in the
          Netherlands, 1597
   During Albert's
          absence in France in 1596 nothing of importance was undertaken by Prince
          Maurice, who had no great force at his disposal; and the Archduke on his return
          laid siege to Hulst, which at last surrendered to the Spaniards (August 18th).
          This disaster, however, was compensated early in 1597 by a splendid victory
          gained by Prince Maurice at Turnhout, where he defeated and destroyed a large
          body of Spanish troops. His success on this occasion is ascribed to his having
          furnished his cavalry with carabines; an invention which afterwards came into
          general use, and gave rise to that description of troops called
  "dragoons". Archduke Albert, however, soon afterwards consoled
          himself for this blow by taking Amiens. Its capture was effected by an
          ingenious stratagem of the Spanish general Puertocarrero.
   Henry IV, after
          holding an Assembly of Notables at Rouen, was amusing himself at Paris
          when he received the news of this terrible blow. The loss of Amiens,
          following so rapidly on that of Dourlens, Cambray, and Calais, had begun to shake all confidence
          in Henry's good fortune. A great deal of discontent existed in France,
          occasioned by the taxes which the King had found it necessary to impose;
          the Huguenots also were in motion; whilst the Duke of Savoy and the Duke
          of Mercoeur allied themselves with Spain, as we have mentioned
          in the preceding chapter. In the extremity of his distress Henry applied
          to Elizabeth to make a diversion by laying siege to Calais, offering now
          to pledge that town to her if she took it; but this time it was Elizabeth
          who refused. Henry, however, met his difficulties with vigour and resolution. He sent Biron with 4,500 or 5,000 men to blockade Amiens,
          and that body was soon converted into a regular army by recruits from all
          parts of the kingdom. After a siege of several months Amiens submitted
          (September 19th, 1597). Albert made an ineffectual attempt to relieve it:
          he was but ill supported by Philip II, who towards the end of 1596
          had made another bankruptcy, which had shaken credit and commerce
          throughout Europe. During the siege Prince Maurice had also gained several
          advantages in the Netherlands.
   The fall of Amiens
          and the ill success of his attempts upon France turned the thoughts of the
          Spanish King to peace. Pope Clement VIII had long been desirous of putting
          an end to the war between France and Spain, which, besides preventing Philip
          from succouring Austria against the Turks, promoted
          the cause of heresy in the Netherlands and elsewhere. In 1596 Cardinal
          Alexander de' Medici, the Papal Legate in France, made advances to the French
          King which Henry did not repulse; and Fra Buonaventura Calatagirona, the General of the Franciscans, was despatched to Madrid to try the ground. The negotiations
          were long protracted; and Philip made indirect offers of peace to England, and
          even to the United Provinces, but Henry IV alone showed any inclination to
          treat. He sent an envoy extraordinary to London to represent to Elizabeth the
          necessity of peace for France, and he tried to persuade the Dutch to enter into
          the negotiations; while on the other hand, Cecil, the English ambassador, and
          Justin of Nassau and Barneveldt, the Dutch envoys at Paris, did all they could
          to divert Henry from his design, but without effect. In February, 1598, the
          French and Spanish plenipotentiaries met at Vervins,
          and on the 2nd of May a treaty was signed. By the PEACE OF VERVINS the Spaniards restored to France
          Calais, Ardres, Dourlens,
          La Capelle, and Le Catelet in Picardy, and Blavet (Port-Louis) in Brittany, of all their conquests
          retaining only the citadel of Cambray. The rest of
          the conditions were referred to the treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis, which Henry had
          stipulated should form the basis of the negotiations. The Duke of Savoy was
          included in the peace. Thus Philip at length acknowledged the heretic
          Sovereign, against whom his arms had been so long employed and such vast
          resources squandered. By the treaty concluded with England and the Dutch in
          1596 Henry had bound himself to make no separate peace without the consent of
          those Powers; but he seems to have availed himself of a technical flaw in that
          treaty, purposely contrived by Du Vair, one of the
          negotiators on the part of France. One of the articles stipulated that the
          ratifications should be exchanged within six months, and Henry had delayed his
          signature till December 31st, more than seven months. Such a subterfuge could
          hardly have been allowed had the contracting parties found it expedient to
          contest the treaty of Vervins; but Henry succeeded in
          convincing Elizabeth and the Dutch that the peace was indispensable to him, and
          the good understanding with those Powers was not interrupted.
   The great political
          drama of which Philip II had so longbeen the
          protagonist was now drawing to a close. Philip,who felt his end approaching, determined to abdicate, before he died, the
          sovereignty of the Netherlands in favour of his
          daughter, thus destroying with his own hands the unity of those provinces for
          which he had so long been contending. On the 14th of August, 1598, the
          States-General of the southern or Catholic provinces took the oath of
          allegiance to the Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia, and to her destined husband,
          the Archduke Albert, who had now resigned the cardinalate. The Infanta was also
          proclaimed in the County of Burgundy (Franche-Comté). Isabella and her heirs
          were to recognize the King of Spain as lord paramount; any future Prince of the
          Netherlands was forbidden to marry without the consent of that monarch; and
          should he fall from the orthodox faith he was, ipso facto, to lose all his
          rights. The Netherlands were to have the same friends and the same enemies as
          Spain; to abstain from all commerce with the East and West Indies; and to admit
          Spanish garrisons into Antwerp, Ghent, and Cambray.
          Albert wrote to the several States of the United Provinces requiring them to
          acknowledge their lawful Prince, and offering to guarantee them in the
          maintenance of their religion, and the order of things established among them.
          But to this communication the States did not even vouchsafe an answer.
   Death
          of Philip II
   Philip did not
          live to see his daughter's marriage. He expired at his palace of the Escorial,
          September 13th, 1598, aged seventy-one years, of which he had reigned
          forty-two. Death was a relief to him. After his return to Spain in 1559, Philip
          had chiefly resided at Madrid; making rare excursions to Aranjuez or the wood
          of Segovia, and visiting more frequently the gloomy pile of the Escorial in a
          dreary, stony valley, the abode of the monks of St. Jerome. Even here he was
          mostly shut up in his apartments; and in these dismal solitudes he contracted
          an air of imperturbable tranquillity which froze all
          who approached him. None dared to speak to him before he was ordered. He very
          rarely showed himself to the people, or even to the grandees, except on fetes
          and holidays. His smile, however, is said to have been engaging, perhaps from
          its rarity; yet it was a saying at Court that there was no great distance
          between his smile and his dagger. He could long dissemble his resentments till
          the proper opportunity arrived for gratifying them.
   The reign of
          Philip II was disastrous to his subjects. The lord of both Indies died a
          bankrupt; Portugal was ruined under his sway; a great part of the Netherlands
          was lost, while the provinces retained were almost wholly deprived of their
          commerce and manufactures; Spain itself was impoverished and enslaved. Such
          were the results of near half a century of busy and ambitious, but misdirected
          policy. Philip left three children; namely, by his third wife, Elizabeth of
          France, two daughters, Isabella Clara Eugenia, now sovereign of Flanders, and
          Catherine, married to the Duke of Savoy; and by his fourth wife, Anne of
          Austria, a son, who succeeded him with the title of Philip III. He had also had
          by Anne two sons and a daughter, who died in infancy.
           With these
          revolutions of Western Europe the affairs of its eastern regions have afforded
          but few points of contact and connection, nor do these eastern affairs offer in
          themselves anything of very striking interest or importance.
           Accession of Rodolf II
           The death of
          Maximilian II in 1576, and the accession of his eldest son Rodolph II
          to the Empire, have been already recorded. Born in 1552, Rodolph had been
          educated by his bigoted mother during the first twelve years of his life in
          that mechanical devotion which passed for religion among the Roman Catholics of
          those days. He was then sent to Spain, and under the auspices of his kinsman
          Philip II received during the six years that he remained in that country a
          strictly Spanish education, superintended by the Jesuits. After the death of
          Don Carlos, Philip had, indeed, for a period designed to make Rodolph his
          successor on the Spanish thrones, and to give him the hand of his then only
          daughter in marriage. But these plans came to nothing; Rodolph returned into
          Germany, and was invested successively, as already recorded, with the Crowns of
          Hungary and Bohemia, as well as elected King of the Romans. At his father's
          death, besides the Imperial Crown, he also succeeded to the sole possession of
          the Austrian lands; for Maximilian established the right of primogeniture in his
          hereditary dominions. Rodolph, however, intrusted the
          Austrian administration to his brother, the Archduke Ernest, and took up his
          own residence for the most part at Prague. His pursuits indisposed him to take
          any active share in affairs of state. Although of an indolent temperament, and
          of a feeble will, which rendered him often the tool of others, Rodolph
          possessed considerable abilities, which, however, were chiefly applied to the
          idle studies of alchemy and astrology. The latter, which was dignified with the
          name of astronomy, incidentally proved of some advantage, by leading him
          to patronize the eminent astronomers Kepler and Tycho Brahe.
   The bigotry of
          Rodolph II, and still more of his brother Ernest, formed a striking
          contrast to the tolerant spirit of their father Maximilian, and may be
          said to have laid the foundation of the war which in the next century
          desolated Germany during thirty years. The effects of the new reign were
          soon visible in Austria, then for the most part Lutheran. In 1578 Rodolph
          determined to celebrate Corpus Christi Day at Vienna with more than usual
          solemnity. As the long-drawn procession was passing over the Peasants'
          Market it was found necessary to remove a few stalls, when a tumult
          immediately arose,with cries of "To arms! we are
          betrayed!" At these menacing symptoms, the clergy and choristers
          abandoned the Host and fled; they were followed by the guards and
          halberdiers, and Rodolph found himself in the midst of an infuriated mob,
          from which he was protected only by the princes and nobles, who drew their
          swords and closed around him. This incident made a deep impression on the
          Emperor, whose education had imbued him with a Spanish dignity and stateliness.
          The suppression of Protestantism at Vienna was immediately resolved. Joshua
          Opitz, a Lutheran of the Flaccian schism, the
          most popular preacher in that capital, distinguished by his eloquent, but
          violent, sermons against the Papists, was ordered, together with his
          assistants in church and school, to leave Vienna that day, and the
          Austrian dominions within a fortnight. This measure was followed up by
          restraints on Protestant worship throughout Austria; and in the following
          year (1579) it was ordained that none but Roman Catholic teachers and
          books should be allowed in Austrian schools.
   Bavaria.
           A rapid reaction
          in favour of the Roman Church also took place in
          Bavaria after the accession of Duke William II, who succeeded his father
          Albert III in 1579. William was a warm supporter of the Jesuits, and
          erected for them at Munich a college more splendid than his own palace. He employed
          for the furtherance of the Roman faith all that pomp and that love of art
          by which he was characterized; and in order to draw the public mind back
          to the ancient creed, those religious spectacles and processions were
          instituted which still subsist in Bavaria. At the dedication of the
          Jesuits' College a grand dramatic and musical entertainment was exhibited, representing
          the combat of the Archangel Michael. Nothing could exceed the magnificence of
          the scenery and costumes; a choir of 900 voices chanted the progress of the
          action; and the multitudes shuddered with affright when they beheld the rebel
          angels hurled into the deep and undulating abyss of hell. Duke William also
          instituted the procession which still takes place at Munich on Corpus Christi
          Day, but with diminished splendour and less
          characteristic appliances.
   On the other hand,
          an attempt to extend Protestantism in Germany proved a failure; and its origin
          merited no better fate. Gebhard Truchsess of Waldburg, who at the age of of thirty had become Archbishop and Elector of
          Cologne, while walking in a procession during the congress in that city, beheld
          at a window the Countess Agnes of Mansfeld, a daughter of that noble house at
          Eisleben which had befriended Luther. Agnes was of extraordinary beauty, but
          her family had fallen into poverty : Truchsess prevailed on her to live with him as his mistress. The brothers of Agnes,
          having learnt their sister's shame, accompanied by some armed followers,
          surprised the Elector in his palace at Bonn, and compelled him, by threats of
          death if he refused, to promise that he would marry Agnes. The first thought of Truchsess after this occurrence was to resign his
          archbishopric; but from this he was diverted by Counts Nuenar and Solms, and others of the nobility, as well as by
          the exhortations of Agnes. In the autumn of 1582 he openly professed his
          adherence to the Confession of Augsburg, and in the following February, in
          spite of an admonition from the Pope, he was married to Agnes by a Protestant
          minister. Gregory XIII now fulminated against him a bull of excommunication,
          depriving him of all his offices and dignities; and the Chapter of Cologne, who
          had viewed with displeasure the secession of their Archbishop from the orthodox
          Church, although he had promised not to interfere with the exercise of their
          religion or to restrict them in the choice of his successor, proceeded to elect
          in place of Truchsess Prince Ernest of Bavaria,
          Bishop of Freising, who had formerly competed with him for the see. The troops
          of Ernest, assisted by some Spaniards lent to him by the Prince of Parma after
          the conquest of Zutphen, drove Truchsess from Cologne. Of the Protestant Princes of Germany whose help he had
          sought, John Casimir of the Palatinate alone lent him some feeble aid. The
          deposed Elector retired into Westphalia and sent his wife to England to implore
          the interference of Queen Elizabeth, Agnes, however, incurred the jealousy and
          anger of the Queen by her supposed familiarity with Leicester, and was
          dismissed from Court. Truchsess then sought the
          protection of the Prince of Orange, and finally retired to Strassburg,
          where he lived sixteen years as dean, till his death in 1601, without
          renouncing his title of Elector. For nearly two centuries after this event, the
          Chapter of Cologne continued to elect its Archbishops from the Bavarian family.
   Diets of
          the Empire
   Germany, almost
          isolated at this period from the rest ofEurope, was
          the scene of a few political events of any importance. The Diets of the Empire
          were chiefly occupied with matters of internal police. That held at Frankfurt
          in 1577 published some regulations which exhibit in a curious light the manners
          of the higher classes of the Germans. The oaths and blasphemies of the nobles
          are denounced; the Electors and Princes of the Empire, ecclesiastical as well
          as secular, are alone authorized to keep buffoons, and at the same time
          forbidden to get drunk themselves or to intoxicate others. These regulations
          are accompanied with many more, respecting dress, the table, the rate of
          interest, monopolies, &c.
   Poland
           The death of
          Stephen Bathory in December, 1586, having again rendered vacant the throne of
          Poland, Rodolph's brother, the Archduke Maximilian, proposed himself as a
          candidate. But the choice of the majority of the Electors fell upon the son of
          John, King of Sweden, by Catharine, a sister of the last Jagellon;
          and that young Prince ascended the throne with the title of Sigismund III.
          Maximilian, however, prepared to contest it with him, and entering Poland with
          a small body of troops, penetrated to Cracow, at that time the capital, to
          which he laid siege. But Zamoisky, Grand Chancellor
          of the Crown, illustrious by his learning and researches, as well as by his
          military exploits, who had embraced the party of Sigismund, compelled
          Maximilian to raise the siege; and in the following year (January 24th, 1588)
          defeated him in a battle near Bitschin in Silesia.
          Maximilian was soon afterwards captured in that town, and was detained
          more than a twelvemonth prisoner in a castle near Lublin, till at length the
          Emperor Eodolph was obliged to obtain his liberation
          by paying a large ransom, and ceding to the Poles the Hungarian county of Zips,
          which had been formerly pledged to them by the Emperor Sigismund.
   Hungary
           The Hungarians
          were at this time almost independent,though ostensibly Rodolph II was represented in that country by his brother the
          Archduke Ernest. When, in 1592, Ernest was called by Philip II to the
          government of the Netherlands, and Rodolph could not prevail upon himself
          to quit his retirement at Prague, the incompetent Matthias was sent into Hungary;
          as, of the other two brothers of the Emperor, Maximilian was employed in
          administering Inner Austria and Tyrol, while Albert was in Spain. The
          proceedings of the Jesuits and reactionary party, both in Hungary and
          Transylvania, occasioned the greatest discontent. After the election of Stephen
          Bathory to the Polish Crown, the government of Transylvania had been
          conducted by his brother Christopher, who, on Stephen's death was succeeded by
          his youthful son Sigismund Bathory, a person of weak character, and the mere
          tool of the Jesuits, by whom he had been educated. Soon afterwards,
          however, the Protestant party gained the ascendancy, and in 1588 the Jesuits
          were banished by the States of Transylvania, much against the will of
          Sigismund. On account of the constant border warfare with the Turks, the Emperor,
          the Pope, and the King of Spain naturally had much influence with
          Sigismund, as the only allies to whom he could look for assistance against
          the Osmanlis, whom he regarded with aversion, though he owed to them his
          throne. But these circumstances had not much effect on the state of parties
          in Transylvania till the breaking out of a regular war between the Turks
          and Hungarians in 1593.
   Turkey
           The affairs of
          Turkey have been brought down in a former chapter to the death of Sultan
          Selim II in 1574. The Grand-Vizier, Mahomet Sokolli,
          concealed the death of the Sultan, as he had previously done that of Solyman II. till Selim's son and successor, Amurath III, arrived at Constantinople from his government
          of Magnesia, to take possession of the throne (December 22nd, 1574). Amurath's first act was to cause five brothers, all
          mere children, to be strangled. The Janissaries had then to be conciliated
          by an augmented donative of fifty ducats a man, and costly gifts were distributed
          among the great officers of state. Amurath III was
          now about twenty-eight years of age. His person was small, his features good,
          his complexion pale and yellow from the baneful effects of opium. In his youth
          a favourable estimate was taken of his character; for though of a studious and somewhat melancholy
          disposition, he had not shown himself averse from, or incapable of, military
          achievements. But from these good qualities he rapidly degenerated after his
          accession, becoming avaricious, fickle, mistrustful, cowardly; and at length he
          wholly secluded himself in the seraglio.
   The religious
          troubles in France tended to diminish the influence of that country with
          the Porte. The help of the Turks against the House of Austria was no
          longer necessary to France, while the Guises and the League were in close alliance
          with Philip II. On the other hand the Huguenots had secret dealings with
          the Porte, and Coligni sent several nobles of
          his party to Constantinople; but it does not appear that these
          negotiations had any result. It may be remarked, however, that the
          Protestants were much more acceptable to the Turks than the Papists, as
          approaching more nearly to their own faith, which rejected with abhorrence
          any semblance of idolatry; and it was, perhaps, partly from this cause
          that English influence made at this period so surprising an advance at
          Constantinople.
   Towards the end of
          1578 William Harebone, or Harburn, an English
          merchant, presented himself before Sultan Amurath III
          with a letter from Queen Elizabeth, in which she besought the friendship
          of the Porte, and requested permission for her subjects to trade under their
          own flag; for although the English had opened a commerce in the Levant before
          the capture of Cyprus by Selim II, they had hitherto been obliged to sail
          in those waters under French colours. The Sultan
          did not vouchsafe an answer to this application; but Harburn, nothing
          daunted, opened private communications with the Grand Vizier, Mahomet Sokolli; and as the merchandize of England, and
          especially its metals, was much prized in Turkey, Harburn soon made great
          progress, in spite of the efforts of Germigny, the
          French ambassador to the Porte, to counteract him. Germigny,
          indeed, succeeded at first in getting a treaty cancelled which Harburn had
          effected in 1580, and which allowed the English to trade under their own flag;
          but in May, 1583, Elizabeth's indefatigable ambassador obtained a rescript from
          the Sultan, granting English commerce in the Levant the same privileges as the
          French. A Turkey company had already been incorporated in London by royal
          charter in 1581. Sir William Monson assigns the following reasons for England
          having embarked so late in the Levant trade: the want of ships, the danger from
          the Moorish pirates on the coast of Barbary, and the monopoly of the trade by
          the Venetians, whose argosies brought the merchandize of the East to Southampton.
          The last argosy which visited our shores was unfortunately wrecked near the
          Wight in 1587, and her valuable cargo lost.
   In her
          negotiations with the Porte Elizabeth used the plea of religion, styling
          herself in her letter the protectrix of the true faith
          against idolaters. Indeed the English agents seem to have assumed an
          attitude of slavish submission towards the Porte which somewhat moved the
          contempt of the Turks; and the Grand Vizier Sinan Pasha derisively observed to
          the Emperor's ambassador, "that the English wanted nothing of being true
          Moslems except to raise the finger on high and cry Esched"
          (the formulary of faith). This was contrary to the practice of the Venetians,
          who in treating with the Porte had learned from experience that it was necessary
          to assume an air of dignity. Nevertheless, the advantages of trade, the
          interests of policy, and above all a common hatred of the Pope and the King of
          Spain, soon cemented the alliance between England and the Turks; though Harburn
          in vain tried to persuade them to attack the Spanish coasts at the time of the
          Armada.
   Edward Burton was
          an able successor of Harburn as English ambassador to the Porte, and till his
          death, in 1598, very much increased the influence of England in Turkey. He found
          a powerful friend in Seadeddin, the celebrated
          Turkish historian, minister, and general, whom during the Hungarian war
          he accompanied on the expedition against Erlau in
          1596. The counsels of England now began to have weight even in the
          Divan. After the accession of Henry IV to the throne of France, a rivalry
          had ensued between him and Elizabeth for the precedence of their flags in
          the Levant, in which Burton gradually prevailed; and at length the English
          flag instead of the French became the covering ensign of foreign vessels
          in that quarter.
   Henry IV resumed
          the traditional policy of France to break the power of Spain with the
          assistance of the Osmanlis; but he could never obtain from them any
          effectual help. His abjuration of Protestantism filled the Porte with
          suspicion; and after the peace of Vervins he no
          longer wanted its aid. Henry, however, always maintained an honourable and dignified attitude towards the Sultan; he became the special guardian
          of the rights and liberties of the Christians in the East, as Francis I
          had been before him; and he procured the restoration of the privileges of
          the monks of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem.
   War between the
          Emperor and the Turk
   Of the Turkish
          relations at this period, however, the most mportant were those with Austria and Hungary. The truce concluded between Austria
          and Selim II had been frequently renewed; yet the border warfare grew
          every year more bloody, and the relations with the Porte daily more
          precarious. In 1592 the Grand-Vizier Sinan Pasha was highly offended by an
          intercepted letter of Kreckwitz, the Imperial ambassador,
          in which the Vizier was denounced as the cause of the misunderstanding
          which had so long prevailed. While he was in this temper an event occurred
          which afforded a pretence to declare open war.
          Hassan, the Turkish Governor of Bosnia, having, in June, 1593, crossed the
          Culpa with 30,000 men, was defeated near Sissek with great slaughter and the loss of all his baggage and guns by only
          5,000 Germans and Hungarians. Amurath could now
          no longer resist the counsels of his Vizier and the importunities of Hassan,
          and of two Sultanas who had lost their sons at Sissek,
          to wipe out this disgrace to his arms. War was declared against the Emperor
          at Constantinople, and Kreckwitz and his suite were
          thrown into prison. Sinan Pasha left Constantinople with an army in
          August, 1593, amid the tricks and howlings of
          dervishes, carrying with him Kreckwitz in chains, who
          died upon the march. Crossing the Drave at Essek and
          passing Stuhlweissenburg, Sinan appeared before
          Veszprem, which surrendered October 13th. On the other hand, after the Turkish
          army had retired into winter quarters, the Imperialists gained a signal victory
          over the Pasha of Buda, November 23rd, which struck the Turks with
          consternation. During the winter the Archduke Matthias, who commanded the
          Imperial troops in the northern part of Hungary, received considerable
          reinforcements, and laid siege in the spring of 1594 to Gran, which, however,
          he was obliged to abandon. The Archduke Maximilian was not more successful in
          the south, while Sinan, after taking Tata and Eaab,
          was repulsed at Komorn.
   The ensuing
          campaign seemed to open under better auspices for the Emperor. The Diet,
          assembled at Ratisbon in 1594, had voted Rodolph large succours of men and money. His hereditary dominions, as well as Bohemia and
          Hungary, came forward with assistance; from other parts of Europe he
          received promises which were not fulfilled. But what principally alarmed the
          Sultan was the revolt from him of the three tributary provinces of
          Moldavia, Wallachia, and Transylvania, the Voyvodes of which, after either slaying or driving out the Turks, entered into an
          alliance with the Emperor. In Transylvania the young Prince Sigismund
          himself, influenced by the Jesuits and the Catholic party, was for
          Austria, while the greater part of the Protestants preferred the Turks for their
          masters; and, as since the breaking out of open war it became necessary
          that the province should declare for one side or the other, a coup
            d'état was resolved on.
   At a Diet held at Klausenburg, in August, 1594, some of the principal leaders
          of the Protestant party were seized and put to death, and a treaty was entered
          into with Rodolph, which was ratified at Prague, January 28th, 1595, and
          confirmed by the Hungarian Diet. The chief conditions were, mutual aid against
          the Turks, and the reversion of Transylvania to Austria in case Sigismund died
          without male heirs. The Jesuits now returned into the land, and ruled the
          weak-minded Sigismund more absolutely than ever. He even thought of entering a
          convent, and proceeded to Prague to entreat the Emperor to procure him a
          cardinal's hat. Rodolph, however, dissuaded him from these projects, and
          prevailed on him to return into Transylvania. The indifferent success of the
          campaign of 1594, and above all the revolt of the three provinces, filled Amurath with consternation, and, for the first time, he
          sent for the holy standard from Damascus, the palladium of the faithful in
          their contests with the infidels. Death, however, released him from his
          anxieties. Amurath III died January 16th, 1595, and
          was succeeded by his son, Mahomet III. The death of the Sultan was concealed,
          as usual, till Mahomet could arrive from his government of Magnesia. He was the
          last heir of the Turkish throne who enjoyed before his accession an independent
          government; in future all the Sultan's children were educated exclusively in
          the Seraglio. The Janissaries had to be conciliated with a donative of 660,000
          ducats, and it was also necessary to pacify a revolt of the discontented sipahis.
   Mahomet III
           In spite of the
          holy standard, the campaign of 1595 was highly unfavourable to the Turks. Sinan, in attempting to gain possession of Wallachia, was driven
          back with great slaughter by Prince Michael the Voyvode.
          The Turkish arms were not more fortunate in Hungary. The Imperialists had now
          received some of the German contingents, the Pope and other Italian Princes had
          forwarded contributions in money, and a more able general, Count Mansfeld, who
          had been despatched from the Netherlands by Philip
          II, commanded the forces of Rodolph. In September, Mansfeld took the important
          town of Gran. Shortly after Vissegrad and Waitzen also yielded to the Imperialists, and the Turks
          lost several places on the Danube. So great was the alarm at Constantinople
          that prayers were offered up in the mosques for the success of the arms of the
          faithful, a step never resorted to except in cases of the utmost danger; and
          the un-warlike Mahomet III felt himself compelled to revive the spirits of his
          troops by heading them in person. His departure was delayed by the death of his
          Grand-Vizier Sinan; but in April, 1596, he commenced with great pomp his
          expedition against Erlau, accompanied by his
          newly-appointed Grand-Vizier Ibrahim Pasha, and by Seadeddin,
          who occupied a conspicuous place in the council of war. The Imperialists did
          not attempt to arrest his march, which was directed by Belgrade, Peterwardein, and Szegedin on Erlau. A week sufficed for the capture of Erlau, when, in spite of the capitulation, the garrison of
          5,000 men was cut down by the Janissaries. The Archduke Maximilian, and
          Sigismund, Prince of Transylvania, now hastened with their forces to recover Erlau, and in October they met the Turks on the plain of Keresztes, where a bloody battle was fought which lasted
          three days. Victory seemed at first to favour the Christians.
          Emboldened by their success, they ventured, on the third day (October 26th), to
          attack the Turkish camp; but they were repulsed with great loss, and, being
          seized with a panic, took to a disorderly flight, in which 50,000 men are said
          to have been killed, and 100 guns and the military chest were captured by the
          Turks. Maximilian, who was one of the first to fly, escaped to Kaschau, and Sigismund with his force retreated through
          Tokay into Transylvania. Mahomet then marched back to Constantinople, which he
          entered in triumph. This signal defeat occasioned the greatest alarm and
          anxiety at Vienna, and, indeed, throughout Europe.
   The Sultan,
          however, did not derive that advantage from his success which might have been
          expected. In the campaign of 1597 nothing decisive was achieved, while that of
          1598 was highly adverse to the Turkish arms: Raab,
          Tata, Veszprém, Tschambock,
          besides several fortresses, were taken by the Imperialists, and the operations
          of the Turkish Sera- skier Saturdschi were so unfortunate
          as to cost him his dismissal and his life. Both sides were now exhausted, and
          eager to conclude a peace if satisfactory terms could be obtained. In 1599 the
          Grand-Vizier, Ibrahim Pasha, who commanded the Turkish forces in Hungary, made
          proposals to the Imperial general, Nicholas Palfy;
          but nothing was effected: the demands on both sides were too high, and the war
          was continued six years longer. We shall not, however, enter into the details
          of a struggle which was feebly carried on with varying success, and which gave
          birth to no events of decisive importance. Even the death of Mahomet III,
          December 22nd, 1603, had little effect on the war, except that it served still
          further to exhaust the resources of the Porte by the payment of the accustomed
          donative to the Janissaries. Mahomet was quietly succeeded by his son Achmet I, then hardly fourteen years of age. The renewal of
          the war between the Sultan and the Shah of Persia in 1603 tended still further
          to dispose the Porte to close the struggle in Hungary; and the
          negotiations were facilitated by a revolution in Transylvania.
   Sigismund Bathory
           The weak and
          simple-minded Sigismund Bathory was persuaded in 1597 by the Jesuits, as well
          as by his wife—Maria Christina, daughter of Charles, Duke of Styria—who wanted
          to get rid of him, to cede Transylvania to Rodolph II, in exchange for the
          Silesian principalities of Oppeln and Ratibor, and a large pension. In the spring of 1598
          Sigismund proceeded into Silesia, where he soon found that he had been deceived
          in the bargain which he had made; and before the end of August he returned to Klausenburg at the invitation of Stephen Bocskai, a Hungarian noble, and one of the leaders of the
          liberal and Protestant party in that country. A counter-revolution now took
          place. The Austrian commissioners who had been sent to take possession of
          Transylvania were seized and imprisoned; Sigismund took a new oath to the
          States that he would make no innovations in religion, and the Jesuits were
          again sent into banishment. But they soon recovered their influence. Sigismund
          was induced to relinquish his authority to his fanatical kinsman, Cardinal
          Andrew Bathory, and retired into Poland to live in a private station. At the
          same time his wife entered a convent at Hall in Tyrol, where she passed
          twenty-two years, the remainder of her existence. Cardinal Andrew Bathory
          having been recognized by the States as Prince of Transylvania, in 1599, the
          Emperor Rodolph commissioned his general, Basta, as well as Michael, Voyvode of Wallachia, to overthrow him, and the Cardinal
          was soon after killed by Michael's troops. Sigismund now regained for a short
          time possession of Transylvania, but in 1602 was once more compelled to
          abdicate, and never again appeared on the political scene. About eight years afterwards,
          having incurred the suspicion of the Emperor, he was summoned to Prague, where
          he soon after died in his forty-first year.
   Stephen Bocskai, King of Hungary
           Stephen Bocskai now set up pretensions of his own, not only to
          the Principality of Transylvania, but even to the Crown of Hungary. In
          June, 1605, he entered into an alliance with the Grand-Vizier Lala
          Mohammed, commander of the Turkish army in Hungary, and assisted him in
          the campaign of that year, in which Gran, Vissegrad, Veszprém, and other places were taken by their
          united forces. Bocskai had already been invested
          with Transylvania, and on November 11th, Lala Mohammed solemnly crowned
          him King of Hungary on the field of Rakosch,
          presenting him at the same time with a Turkish sword and colours,
          in token that he was the Sultan's vassal. It would seem, however, that Bocskai had only been set up as a man of straw by the
          Turks, in order to obtain better conditions in the treaty of peace which was
          still negotiating between them and Rodolph II. The Archduke Matthias was first
          of all commissioned to treat with Bocskai, who was
          easily persuaded to renounce the Crown of Hungary; and by a treaty signed at
          Vienna (July 23rd, 1606) he was allowed to retain Transylvania, besides several
          places in Hungary. This was the prelude to another treaty with the Turks,
          concluded at Sitvatorok November 11th.
   The PEACE OF SITVATOROK, which was to
          last twenty years from January 1st, 1607, made but slight alterations in
          the territorial possessions of the contracting parties; but it is
          remarkable for what may be called the moral and diplomatic concessions on
          the part of the Porte. It was arranged in the preliminaries that the
          Emperor should no longer be insulted with the title of "King of
          Vienna", but that both he and the Sultan should be treated with the
          Imperial title; and the diplomatic intercourse between the two nations was
          henceforth to be conducted on an equal footing. But a still more important
          concession was the abandonment by the Porte of the tribute hitherto paid
          by Austria; in consideration of which, however, the Emperor was to pay
          down, once for all, a sum of 200,000 florins, besides making valuable
          presents. Such an abatement of the haughty tone in which the Turkish
          Sultans had hitherto spoken betrays a consciousness of inward weakness.
          The Osmanlis had, indeed, now passed the zenith of their power, and had
          arrived at the limits of their conquests; yet their Empire still embraced
          an extent unparalleled since that of ancient Rome. In Asia, the Tigris
          and Mount Ararat separated the dominions of the Ottoman Sultan and the
          Shah of Persia; Bagdad, Van, and Erzeroum were
          Turkish governments; between the Black Sea and the Caspian, the Georgians,
          Mingrelians, and Circassians, though free, were tributary; the south and west coasts
          of the Black Sea, from the Caucasus to the Dnieper, Anatolia, Caramania, Armenia, Kurdistan, Mesopotamia, Syria,
          Palestine and Arabia obeyed the Sultan. In Africa he possessed Egypt, and was
          lord of the whole coast from the delta of the Nile to the Straits of Gibraltar,
          with exception of a few places held by the Spaniards. In Europe he ruled,
          besides Greece and its archipelago and the islands of Cyprus, Rhodes, and
          Chios, Thrace, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Wallachia, Moldavia, Transylvania, the
          greater part of Hungary, Bosnia, Servia, and Albania.
   
 CHAPTER XXVIII.RELIGION AND COMMERCE | 
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