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CHAPTER XXXIX.
EUROPEAN OPPOSITION TO FRANCE
THE ambition of
Louis was not satisfied with the Peace of Nimeguen.
He contemplated it, like those of Westphalia and the Pyrenees, only as a
stepping-stone to further acquisitions, which were to be made by means of the
very treaties themselves. Disputes had been going on the last twenty years
between France and the Empire as to the extent of the cessions made by the
Treaty of Westphalia. Louis XIV contended that the cession of the three
bishoprics, Metz, Toul, and Verdun, with their dependencies, included the
sovereignty of the German fiefs which held under them; thus identifying
vassalage with the sovereignty of the feudal lord—a principle at variance with
the public law of Germany. The Imperial plenipotentiaries had neglected to
discuss the principle at Nimeguen, and Louis now
proceeded to reopen the whole question; not only with regard to the bishoprics,
but also his more recent acquisitions of Alsace and Franche-Comté. In 1680 were
established in the Parliaments of Metz, of Besançon,
in Franche-Comté, and in the Sovereign Council of Alsace, then sitting at Breisach, certain Chambers called Chambres Royales de Réunion,
in order to examine the nature and extent of the cessions made to France by the
Treaties of Westphalia, the Pyrenees, and Nimeguen.
The researches of these Chambers were carried back to the times of the Frankish
kings. The Alsatian Chamber, whose decisions seem to have been justified by the
text of the Treaty of Westphalia, adjudicated to France the bishopric of Strassburg, the abbeys of Murbach,
Lure, Andlau, and Weissemburg,
a great part of the bishopric of Spires, and the counties of Horburg, Lichtenberg, and other places. The Chamber of
Metz, though with less appearance of equity, went still further, and reunited
to the French Crown all the Hundsruck, the Duchy
of Zweibrucken, or Deux-Ponts,
the counties of Saarbruck, Veldenz, and Salm, the Lordships of Bitsche, Sarreburg, Homburg,
part of the states of the Rhinegraves and Counts of Linange, and a number of immediate territories and
lordships. Nay, this Chamber eventually adjudged to Louis the dependencies of
the county of Chiny, comprising a full third of
the Duchy of Luxembourg, besides the sovereignty of the Duchy of Bouillon, of
the territory between the Sambre and the Meuse, and of some other
districts in the Bishopric of Liege. The Chamber of Besançon,
although Franche-Comté had been but so recently annexed to the French Crown,
was as zealous for its interests as the others, and adjudged to it the county
of Montbeliard, and four lordships holding of
the county of Burgundy. These assignments affected the domains of several
considerable potentates; as the Elector of Treves, the Elector Palatine, the
Duke of Wurtemberg, the King of Sweden for the
Duchy of Deux-Ponts, and others of less name.
The King of Sweden remonstrated, but without effect. The Chamber of Metz
decreed that if homage were not rendered within a certain time, the Duchy
of Deux-Ponts would be reunited to the
Crown; and as Charles XI refused thus to abase his royal dignity, the duchy was
confiscated, and Louis XIV invested with it as a fief the Prince Palatine
of Birkenfeld.
The possession of
the Imperial city of Strassburg was a
principal object with Louis. Till that city was in his hands, Alsace could
never be considered in safety, and the passage of the Rhine might at any time
be secured to the Imperial armies. In the late war Strassburg had
retained a neutral posture, which was regarded by the French as a want of
loyalty, and it was resolved to seize the city on the first opportunity, under
the decree of the Chamber of Breisach. The
municipal government was gained by bribes, and on July 28th, 1681, an army of
35,000 men, concentrated from various quarters with great celerity, appeared
before its walls. Resistance was useless; the Imperial Resident attempted to
raise the people, but the magistrates had taken care to deprive the city of all
means of defence, and no alternative remained but to
accept the favourable capitulation offered
by the French. Strassburg, by recognizing Louis
as its sovereign lord, obtained the confirmation of all its civil and religious
rights and liberties, and continued to form a sort of republic under the
authority of France down to the time of the French Revolution. Louis XIV
entered Strassburg in person, October 23rd.
It was then consigned to the skill of Vauban, who rendered it a fortress of the
first order, and the bulwark of France on the east.
Louis also sought
to make acquisitions in the Spanish Netherlands. By forced interpretations of the
Treaty of Nimeguen, he pretended a right to all
the towns and districts which had been occupied by his troops during the late
war, although these had been withdrawn either at or before the peace, on the
ground that the restitution of such places had not been expressly stipulated.
On this pretext he claimed the Burgraviate, or
ancient borough of Ghent, Beveren, Alost, Gramont, Ninove, and Lessines. The real object of these claims,
however, the granting of which, as Louis himself admitted, would have entirely
compromised the safety of the Spanish Netherlands, was to obtain concessions on
the side of Luxembourg; and therefore to the indignant remonstrances of
the Spanish Cabinet, he coolly replied that he should be ready to listen to any
proposals of exchange. To keep the French out of Flanders, Spain ceded the
county of Chiny, adjudged, as we have said, to
the crown of France by the Parliament of Metz. But it was then asserted that
this inconsiderable domain, whose capital was a mere village, possessed
dependencies which extended to the very gates of Luxembourg; and the King of
Spain was called on to do homage for a multitude of arriere fiefs.
At the same time Louis was seeking to extend his dominions on the side of
Italy. He entertained the project of obtaining Savoy, by procuring the marriage
of the young duke, Victor Amadeus II, who had succeeded to his father, Charles
Emmanuel II, in 1675, with the heiress of Portugal. Victor, it was expected,
would cede his duchy to France on obtaining the Portuguese crown; he had
already been betrothed (March, 1681), and was on the point of setting off for
Lisbon, when he was deterred by the remonstrances and threats of
the Piedmontese from completing the
marriage. Louis, however, was in some degree consoled for this disappointment
by the occupation of Casale in September,
1681, which he had purchased from the profligate and needy Duke of Montferrat.
These pretensions
and acquisitions alarmed all Europe. Louis, it was said, was aiming at a
universal monarchy, and the suspicion was encouraged by his attempts on the
Empire itself. A pretended Imperial capitulation was circulated in Germany in
July, 1681, by which the Dauphin was to be elected King of the Romans, and
consequently the presumptive successor of the Emperor Leopold. Symptoms of
resistance began to appear. In October, 1681, the King of Sweden concluded a
treaty with the United Netherlands to guarantee the Treaties of Münster
and Nimeguen against violation. The Emperor
acceded to this treaty in February, 1682, and Spain in the following May. It
was probably these movements that caused Louis to withdraw the troops which
were blockading Luxembourg, and to offer to refer his claims to the mediation
of the King of England. This appears from a treaty which he concluded about
this time (January 22nd), with the Elector, Frederick William of Brandenburg.
Although many of the German States were joining the league against French
ambition, that politic Prince, from the hope apparently of regaining Pomerania
by the aid of Louis, not only refused to participate in such an alliance, but
also undertook to use his endeavors for a peaceful solution of the points in
question between France and the Empire : in other words, to induce the Emperor
to give up to the French the places which they had occupied. Louis promised in
return to put a stop to further reunions, and not to resort to arms so long as
any hope remained of a friendly settlement. He claimed for his motives the
praise of a disinterested generosity, and he gave out that he had no wish to
disturb the peace of Europe at a moment when it was menaced by the Turks, or to
prevent Spain from succouring the Emperor
against the common enemy of Christendom. His plans, therefore, were for the
present postponed, though not abandoned. But Europe knew how to appreciate his
moderation. The alliances of the German States against France were pushed more
vigorously than ever, and were even joined by the young Elector of Bavaria,
Louis’s son-in-law; and in the spring of 1682, the Emperor, Spain, Sweden and
Holland renewed their conventions for mutual succour.
Louis, however, who, in spite of his pretended generosity, was secretly
encouraging the Turks to attack the Emperor, gave an ostensible colouring to his assertions by bombarding Algiers
(June, 1682), in punishment of the many piracies committed by the Algerines on
French subjects. The bombardment was renewed in the following year; but it was
not till April, 1684, that the Dey was reduced to submission.
Louis invades the
Netherlands
The pretended
forbearance of Louis had come to an end while the motive alleged for it was not
only still in existence but had even become more powerful than ever. In the
summer of 1683, while the Turks were in full march upon Vienna, Louis was
preparing to assert by arms his claims on the Spanish Netherlands. During the
two months, indeed, that the Turks were encamped before Vienna, he suspended
the blow which he was prepared to strike. A certain respect for the public
opinion of Europe, his previous magnanimous declarations, as well, perhaps, as
his treaty with the Elector of Brandenburg, arrested his hand; nay, he even
made a show of offering his forces to the Emperor, who at once declined the aid
of so dangerous an ally. Louis probably expected, as he certainly hoped, that
the Turks would take Vienna, after which blow the States of the Empire would be
compelled to seek his aid. Amid the rejoicings of Europe for the deliverance of
that city, the French Court was remarkable by its sadness. Immediately after
the retreat of the Turks, the French troops entered Flanders and Brabant. The
mediation of Charles II had been without result. Louis had fixed the end of
August as the term for Spain’s reply to his demands; she would yield nothing
except Chiny, and on the 28th of October she
declared war against France, though she was without the means of prosecuting
it. Courtrai and Dixmuyde were taken by the
French early in November. Louis proposed to exchange these places against
Luxembourg, and granted to the Spaniards a suspension of hostilities till the
end of January, 1684, to consider the proposal. Meanwhile the French laid the
districts they had occupied under contribution; and when the garrison of
Luxembourg, by way of reprisal, made some incursions into the French territory,
Marshal Crequi punished that city by a
terrible bombardment.
The Spanish
Cabinet in vain looked around for aid. Neither the King of Sweden, nor the
Emperor, the latter of whom was still embarrassed with the Turkish war, was in
a condition to interfere. The King of England at first showed some disposition
to assist the Spaniards. After the Peace of Nimeguen a
coolness had arisen between Charles and Louis, who would not continue his
subsidies except on terms too onerous to be endured; and in June, 1680, the
English King formed an alliance with Spain to guarantee the treaty. In the
following year, however, the venal Charles promised to abandon his new allies
in consideration of his pension being renewed. Louis, by a verbal agreement,
promised him two million livres for the present year, and 500,000
crowns for the two following years; and Charles now advised the Spaniards to
submit to the demands of France. Even the Dutch Republic, on which Spain most
relied, did nothing. The Stadholder, indeed, strained every nerve to bring an
army into the field, but he could not persuade the States-General to second his
views. The field was thus left open to the operations of the French. In March,
1684, Marshal d'Humieres bombarded Oudenarde; in April, Louis in person took the command of
the army in Hainault; while Marshal Crequi, with
another division of 32,000 men, proceeded to invest Luxembourg, and after a
short siege compelled that city to capitulate (June 4th). Shortly after, Treves
was taken and dismantled, though not occupied, by the French, and a truce of
twenty years was concluded between France Truce of and the States-General.
Louis XIV, at the commencement of the siege of Luxembourg, had given the Dutch
to understand that he should be content with that place, together with Beaumont
in Hainault, Bovines, and Chimai, which would
not compromise their boundary; and that he would restore Courtrai and Dixmuyde to Spain. These conditions were accepted by
the States, who promised to abandon the Spanish alliance if they were not
acceded to, and the truce was accordingly signed June 29th. The Emperor acceded
to the truce at Ratisbon, August 15th, both in his own name and that of
the King of Spain, by whom he had been furnished with plenipotentiary powers
for that purpose. It was agreed, in addition to the articles already mentioned
in the Dutch treaty, that, during the truce, France should remain in possession
of all the places adjudged to her by the Chambres de Réunion up
to August 1st, 1681, including Strassburg, but
should, during the same period, make no further claims on territories belonging
to the Empire.
As these
proceedings display Louis XXV’s unjust and insatiable ambition, so, about the
same time, he gave equally striking examples of his pride and bigotry. The
little Republic of Genoa was to become a victim to the "glory" of the
great King. The alliance of the Genoese with Spain was too intimate to please
Louis; he proposed that they should accept his protectorate instead of that of
the Catholic King, and when this was declined, he sought a pretext for war. The
Genoese were charged with having supplied the Spaniards with four galleys,
contrary to his prohibition; with having furnished the Algerines with
ammunitions of war; with having stopped the passage of French salt through
Savona, etc.; above all, like their brother republicans the Dutch, they had
ventured to talk of the French King with disrespect. Louis treated them like
rebellious vassals instead of an independent people. He imprisoned their envoy
in the Bastille, and sent a fleet to bombard their city, which reduced “Genoa
the Superb”, with its marble palaces, almost to a heap of ruins (May, 1684).
The Genoese, having in vain besought the aid of Spain, implored the mediation
of the Pope, at whose intercession Louis abated many of his demands, but only
on conditions calculated to humiliate the Genoese, and gratify his own
inordinate pride. The Doge of Genoa, whom the laws forbade to leave the city,
was required to appear in person at Versailles, and deliver a speech prepared
for him by one of Louis’s flatterers, in which the King was described as “a
monarch who had surpassed in valour, grandeur,
and magnanimity all the kings of past ages, and who would transmit to his
descendants his unassailable power”. Louis, indeed, who possessed the most
polished manners, affected to alleviate the feelings of the Doge by the
gracious reception he accorded to him; but he could not escape the indignation
of Europe at the barbarities he committed, merely for the barren satisfaction
of gratifying his pride.
About the same
time he gave an equally signal instance of his bigotry and intolerance. During
the latter days of Cardinal Mazarin the liberties granted to the Protestants by
the Edict of Nantes had been gradually curtailed; but when Louis himself
assumed the reins of power, these retrograde acts became still more frequent
and striking. The private meetings, or colloquies, of the Protestants, as well
as their national triennial synods, were suppressed (1661, 1662). In April,
1663, appeared a Royal Declaration, forbidding all Protestants who had become
Catholics to return to the Reformed religion, and all priests or ecclesiastics
to embrace it at all. These were followed by many other decrees of the same
kind; such as the forbidding any but Catholics to be admitted as masters of
trades, except in certain special cases; the allowing of boys of fourteen years
of age, and girls of twelve, to change their religion in spite of their
parents; the prohibiting of Protestants to keep schools of a superior kind for
the education of the higher classes; with others of the like description. These
proceedings were viewed with great sorrow and disapprobation by Colbert, as
they affected the most active and industrious portion of the population, and
consequently the trade and prosperity of the kingdom; and it seems to have been
from his representations, seconded by the remonstrances of the
Elector of Brandenburg, that Louis was induced to put a stop for some years to
these persecutions, or, at all events, to restrain them within moderate bounds;
and from the year 1666 to 1674, the Huguenots enjoyed comparative tranquillity, though the policy of persecution never
ceased. The return to a severer policy has been ascribed to a change in the
domestic life of Louis.
In the year 1666,
Louis, at the recommendation of his mistress, Madame de Montespan, had
allowed her to take as the governess of their children the widow of the
burlesque writer, Scarron. Madame Scarron was descended from a distinguished
Huguenot family, being the grand-daughter of D'Aubigne,
the Protestant historian and friend of Henry IV; but her husband had left her
in the greatest poverty. The house of Scarron was not a school of strict
morality. His wife, who had been converted to the Romish faith, had
made in it some acquaintances of more than doubtful character, and among
them Ninon de l'Enclos; yet she
appears, nevertheless, to have been sincere in the character she had assumed of
a prude and devotee. Madame Scarron, at the middle period of life, had
preserved in a remarkable degree a beauty of no ordinary kind; she had much wit
and many accomplishments, which were enhanced by a grace and dignity of manner.
These qualities made by degrees an irresistible impression on the heart of
Louis; in a few years her empire over the King was completely established, and
in 1675 he created her Marquise de Maintenon. This influence was employed in
conducting Louis back into the paths of morality. His youth had been engrossed
by a succession of mistresses. Elizabeth Tarneaux, Mdlles.
Louise de la Valliere, La Motte d'Argencourt, Fontanges,
and Madame de Montespan, had successively ruled his heart; by the last he
had a numerous offspring whom he had legitimatized and compelled the Queen to
receive. Yet Madame de Maintenon succeeded in reclaiming the affections of the
King even from her haughty patroness, and restoring them to the Queen. Madame
de Maintenon soon found her reward. In 1683 Maria Theresa died, and in the
following year, the King and Madame de Maintenon were privately married in the
chapel at Versailles.
This reform in the
King’s life was accompanied, unhappily for France, with an increase of his
bigotry. To bring back those of his subjects who had wandered from the Church
of Rome appeared to him a work which might merit the redemption of past sins;
and thus his own reformation and the conversion of his heretic subjects became
inseparable ideas. This new bent of his mind was encouraged by those whom he
chiefly consulted in the affairs of his conscience: the illustrious
Bossuet, Harlai, Archbishop of Paris, and Father
La Chaise, the King’s confessor. The renewal of persecution dates, as we have
said, from 1674, and the establishment of Madame de Maintenon's influence.
Naturally gentle and moderate, Madame de Maintenon herself was indeed at heart
averse to the severe measures adopted against her former coreligionists; yet it
appears from her own confession that she was led to encourage them, lest the
King, who had heard that she was born a Calvinist, should suspect her of a want
of zeal. These measures, therefore, were not directly owing to her; but they
were the result of the King's misinterpretation of the principles with which
she had inspired him; a misinterpretation, which, out of interest and
self-love, she encouraged instead of repressing. Louis found in his proud and
unfeeling minister, Louvois, a fitting
instrument of his bigotry. This policy was calculated to strip the Huguenots, one
by one, of all the privileges accorded by the Edict of Nantes, and thus to
prepare the final blow, the revocation of the Edict itself. The Protestant
churches were gradually demolished; the so-called Chambres mi-parties, before
which Protestant suits were pleaded in the Parliaments of Toulouse, Bordeaux,
and Grenoble, were suppressed; Roman Catholics were forbidden to apostatize
under pain of penance, confiscation of goods, and perpetual banishment; mixed
marriages, of Catholics and Protestants, were prohibited, and the children of
such marriages were declared bastards; it was forbidden that Huguenots should
be employed as clerks or otherwise, in the management of the finances; nay,
these savage decrees penetrated into and divided the family household; and by a
royal declaration of June 17th, 1681, it was decreed that children of the
tender age of seven years should be capable of conversion in spite of their
parents, as if already competent to distinguish the true path of salvation.
Such are a few specimens of the numerous edicts published against the
Huguenots. Louvois, who had opposed the King’s
moral conversion, and had caballed with Montespan against Maintenon,
zealously threw himself into the cause of persecution, and effected conversions
by means of his own department. Converted Protestants were exempted from
military billets; while the additional charge which would thus have been thrown
on Catholic householders was diverted by billeting on the richer Huguenots
twice the number of soldiers that fell legally to their share.
Flight was the
only mode of escaping these persecutions. In spite of the surveillance
exercised by the police on the frontiers and in the ports, emigration took
place on a great scale. England, Holland, Denmark offered hospitality to the
emigrants, and were enriched by their industry, skill, and capital. The French
Government endeavored to stop the emigration by forbidding Huguenot families to
leave France under the penalty for the heads of them of perpetual relegation to
the galleys (May, 1682). The stoppage of this outlet occasioned an explosion
within. The Huguenots began to band together in the south of France. Their
prohibited provincial synods were replaced by secret unions; they began to arm,
and in some places it was necessary to suppress their movements by force and
bloodshed. After the death of the wise Colbert in 1683, these persecutions
assumed new vigour. The influence of Louvois, now uncontrolled, was displayed in a multitude of
the most rigorous edicts (1684-1685). Troops were dispatched into the southern
provinces, where the Huguenots were chiefly seated; and though the soldiers
were publicly forbidden to use any violence, their brutalities were secretly
connived at. By these means the Protestants of Bearn, estimated at 22,000, were
converted, within a few hundreds. Terror harbingered the approach of the
dragoons, at whose appearance whole towns hastened to announce their
submission. The same method was used with success in Guienne,
the Limousin, Saintonge, Poitou, Languedoc,
and Dauphine. Conversions were announced by the thousands; though the value of
such a conversion is easily estimated. Louis was quite intoxicated with his
success. It seemed as if he was as great a conqueror over men's souls as over
their bodies and worldly possessions; that he had but to speak the word, and
all those proud and obstinate heretics, who had once almost dictated the law to
his ancestors, must fall down and yield to his infallible genius; a thought
gratifying at once to his bigotry and his pride. And now when the Huguenots
were reduced, in appearance at least, to a small fraction of their former
number, Louis conceived that the time was arrived when he might strike the
final blow by repealing the Edict of his grandfather Henry IV. The Revocation
of the Edict of Nantes, drawn up by the aged Chancellor Le Tellier, father
of Louvois, was signed by the King, October
17th, 1685. 1685. It meant the complete future annihilation of Calvinism in
France. All Protestant churches were to be immediately demolished; the Reformed
worship was forbidden on pain of confiscation and perpetual imprisonment; the
ministers who refused to be converted were to quit the kingdom in a fortnight;
the children of Protestant parents were to be baptized by the curé of the parish, and instructed in the Roman
Catholic faith. Only by the last article some indulgence was shown to those who
still remained unconverted. They were permitted, "till such time as it
should please God to enlighten them like the rest", to remain in France,
and to exercise their callings and professions, without let or molestation on
account of their religion. Such was the text; but the practice hardly
corresponded with it. In fact, Louvois instructed
the leaders of the dragonnades to disregard the last article of the
Declaration, and to treat with the extremity of rigour all
those who should have the absurd vanity of persisting in a religion which
differed from that of His Majesty the King! Louvois gave
the order to let the soldiery live "licentiously". The most horrible
tortures were resorted to. Those Huguenots who had the most influence with
their brethren, either from their character or their social position, were sent
to the Bastille or other state prisons. From Dauphiné the dragonnades were
extended to the Vaudois. At the command of Louis, the Duke of Savoy,
Victor Amadeus II, joined in their persecution; the ministers, or barbes,
of the Vaudois, their schoolmasters, and the French Protestants who had
taken refuge among them, were ordered, under pain of death, to quit the Ducal
territories in a fortnight; while their worship was prohibited, and their
schools were ordered to be closed under the same penalty (February, 1686).
The Vaudois attempted to defend their liberties by arms against the
French troops, led by Catinat, a brave soldier and enlightened man, who
performed the task with reluctance. Many thousands of the Vaudois perished
in this massacre, in which neither age nor sex was spared. A remnant of them
who had managed to defend themselves in the more inaccessible parts of the
mountains, obtained, through the intervention of the Protestant Powers, and
especially of the Swiss, permission to emigrate.
These cruelties
naturally produced a reaction. Emigration became more vigorous than ever, in
spite of all the endeavors of the Government to prevent it, though seamen or
others assisting the emigrants were threatened with fine and corporal
punishment, the galleys, and even death. It is computed that between the
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes and the end of the century between 200,000
and 300,000 persons left France for the sake of their religion. These too, from
their wealth and character, were amongst the most valuable citizens of France,
and included many men of high literary reputation; as Basnage,
the historian of the United Netherlands; Lenfant,
historian of the Councils of Basle and Constance; Beausobre,
author of the History of Manicheism; Rapin,
author of the History of England, and others. It was now that whole colonies of
French established themselves at London, at Berlin, in Holland, and other
places, and planted there the silk manufacture and other arts and trades.
It happened
singularly enough that while Louis was engaged in this crusade against the
Protestants, he was also involved in a warm dispute with Pope Innocent XI
respecting the Régale, in some of the southern
provinces. The matter belongs to the domestic history of France, and is chiefly
remarkable as having produced Bossuet's celebrated Declaration of the Clergy of
France, which forms an epoch in the Gallican Church (March, 1682). The
substance of it is, that the Pope has no power in temporal affairs; that, as
decreed by the Council of Constance, the Pope’s spiritual authority is
subordinate to that of a General Council; that the constitutions of the
Gallican Church may not be subverted; and that, though the Pope has the first
voice in questions of faith, his judgment is not irrevocable unless confirmed
by the Church. This declaration was converted into a law by a royal edict.
The Revocation of
the Edict of Nantes excited unbounded sorrow and indignation in all the Protestant
States of Europe. These feelings were nowhere more conspicuously manifested
than in the Electorate of Brandenburg. Frederick William, a zealous Calvinist,
even overstepped the bounds of Christian moderation by publishing a retaliatory
Edict against his Catholic subjects; but the steps which he took for the
protection of the French refugees were of a nobler character. Partly out of
compassion for his fellow-religionists, partly also perhaps with the politic
view of encouraging arts and manufactures in his dominions, he granted to the
French emigrants more privileges than were enjoyed even by his own subjects; he
gave them ground and materials for building; he supplied them with money to
open manufactories, pay their clergy, and erect their own consistories,
tribunals, schools, and churches. Sweden, the ancient ally of France,
participated in the feeling now awakened against that kingdom, both on
religious grounds and from the personal injury which Charles XI had sustained
at the hands of the French King with regard to his Duchy of Zweibrücken. In the spring of 1686 a secret treaty was
concluded between the King of Sweden and the Elector of Brandenburg, lately
such bitter enemies, for mutual defence and for the
protection of the Empire against the attacks of France. In the United
Netherlands, Louis completely alienated, through his persecution of the
Huguenots, the goodwill of the party which had supported him, and the ancient
adherents of the De Witts now went over to the Prince of Orange. The
anger of the commercial portion of the Dutch nation had been further excited
because Louis, in his indiscriminate hatred of the Calvinists, had not spared
the persons and property of Dutch merchants naturalized in France, and had thus
annihilated the trade between that kingdom and Holland. Thus by an infatuated
policy, the French King, besides weakening his kingdom, and alienating a large
portion of his own subjects, who subsequently fought against him under the
banners of his enemies, also incurred the hostility of every Protestant country
of Europe; while Spain and the Catholic States of the Empire were provoked and
alarmed by his grasping ambition, and even the Pope himself was irrevocably
alienated by the contempt which he displayed for the apostolic chair.
William III and
the League of Augsburg, 1686
There was one
prince whose keen and penetrating glances saw all these mistakes, and whose
hatred of the French King and nation incited him to take advantage of them.
Among the earliest reminiscences of the Dutch Stadholder, William, were the
injuries which his country had received at the hands of Louis XIV. At his
entrance into public life, William had found himself reduced to choose between
submitting to the haughty conqueror, or half ruining his country, perhaps
abandoning it altogether, in order to escape the vassalage of France. These
things had engendered in him an inextinguishable hatred which recent
occurrences had served still further to inflame. Although a Calvinist, William
was a friend of toleration; and, like the rest of his countrymen, had beheld
with disgust the religious persecutions in France. This feeling was increased
by a private injury. Louis had seized his principality of Orange, properly an
Imperial fief, and had annexed it to the French Crown. William had publicly
declared that he would make Louis repent the outrage, and had refused to
retract his words when called upon by D'Avaux,
the French minister in Holland, for an explanation. Thus, by all his steps at
this juncture, Louis was not only embittering the enmity which the Prince of
Orange entertained against him, but also preparing those events which
ultimately enabled William to curb his power and humble his pride. From this
time the Dutch Stadholder must be regarded as the chief opponent of French ambition,
as the man on whose counsels the destiny of Europe hung. It is in this
character, as Lord Macaulay justly remarks, and not as King of England, that
William’s conduct as a statesman should be viewed and estimated. His plans for
wresting the English sceptre from the hands
of his Popish father-in-law were only part of his grand scheme for humiliating
Louis. He wished to reign in England chiefly, if not solely, in order to wield
her power against the French King. In this struggle the principles of Rome and
those of the Reformation are still in presence, however mixed up with political
events and secular ambition. The bigoted Louis XIV, though at enmity with the
actual Pope, is still the representative of those ancient monarchical
traditions which leaned for support on the Church of Rome; while the Calvinist
William, the child and heir of the Reformation, is the champion of religious
toleration and civil liberty. Nature had admirably qualified him for the part
which he had assumed; in which defeat and disappointment were often to be
endured without discouragement, and success at last achieved by long and
complicated combinations, pursued with indomitable perseverance and unflinching
courage.
It was some fresh
symptoms of aggression on the part of Louis which enabled the Stadholder to
unite the greater part Europe in a league against him. The Duke of Orleans, the
French King's brother, had married the sister of the Elector Palatine, the last
of the House of Simmern, who died in May, 1685,
when his next relative, the Count Palatine Philip William, Duke of Neuburg, took possession of the Electorate. The Duchess of
Orleans had by her marriage contract renounced all her feudal rights to the
Palatinate, but not her claims to the allodial property and the
movables of her family. In these latter, Louis, on the part of his
sister-in-law, insisted on including not only the furniture of the electoral
palaces but even the cannon of the fortresses; and the new Elector was forced
to satisfy these claims by the payment of 100,000 livres. The claims of
the Duchess on the allodial property were far more embarrassing.
Under this head were demanded the principalities of Simmern and Lautern, the County of Sponheim,
with numerous other territories, towns, and lordships; in short, the larger
portion of the whole Electorate. Philip William resisted these demands, and
Louis, who was now busy at home with the Huguenots, and who was shortly
afterwards seized with a dangerous illness, did not at present attempt to
assert them by force. He had, however, done enough to arouse general alarm, and
to show that he had not abandoned his designs of enriching himself at the
expense of his neighbors. The new Elector implored the protection of the
Empire, and thus redoubled the uneasiness felt in Germany, and indeed
throughout the greater part of Europe, respecting the schemes of Louis. The
Prince of Orange availed himself of these suspicions to forward his plans
against Louis. He at length succeeded in inducing the Emperor Leopold, the
Kings of Spain and Sweden, as princes of the Empire, the Electors of Saxony and
Bavaria, the Circles of Suabia, Franconia, Upper
Saxony and Bavaria to enter into the celebrated League of Augsburg (July 9th,
1686). The object of this league was to maintain the Treaties of Münster
and Nimeguen and the Truce of Ratisbon.
If any member of it was attacked he was to be assisted by the whole
confederacy: 60,000 men were to be raised, who were to be frequently drilled,
and to form a camp during some weeks of every year, and a common fund for their
support was to be established at Frankfurt. The League was to be in force for
three years, but might be prolonged at the expiration of that term should the
public safety require it.
The Elector
Palatine, who was in fact the party most directly interested, acceded to the
League early in September, as well as the Duke of Holstein-Gottorp.
The Elector of Brandenburg had already made a separate alliance with the
Emperor, by which certain exchanges of territory were made between them; and
the Elector had pledged himself to defend the Empire against all assailants. He
did not, therefore, join the League of Augsburg, to avoid giving any open cause
of offence to the French King. Nor did the Stadholder himself become a party to
it, since it ostensibly professed to be an association only of the members of
the Empire. Most French writers are of opinion that William organized this
league in order to assist his scheme for seizing the Crown of England. It
seems, however, more probable that William, without any definite view of
self-advantage, merely organized the League as part of his general policy
against the French King.
The establishment
of the League of Augsburg gave rise to some sharp correspondence between Louis
and the Emperor; and, by way of defiance, the French King caused a fort to be
built opposite Hüningen, on the right bank of
the Rhine, in the territory of the Margrave of Baden. It was not, however, till
two years afterwards, as we have already said, that war actually broke out
between France and the Empire. The reason why it should have been so long
postponed, or why it should have been entered into at that particular juncture,
it is not easy to explain. Some French writers have attributed it to a quarrel
between Louis and his minister Louvois respecting
the size of a window in the little palace of Trianon; when Louvois, mortified by the hard words which he received from
his master, resolved to divert his attention from such subjects by finding
employment for him in a war. The main grounds its causes, assigned for
declaring war were, that the Emperor intended to conclude a peace with the
Turks in order that he might turn his arms against France; that he had
supported the Elector Palatine in his unjust hesitation to do justice to the
claims of the Duchess of Orleans; and that he had deprived the Cardinal von
Furstenberg, an ally of the French King, who had been elected Coadjutor by part
of the Chapter of the Archbishopric of Cologne, and had procured to be chosen
in his stead the Bavarian Prince, Joseph Clement. Louis also called upon the
Emperor to convert the truce of Ratisbon into a definite peace; or,
in other words, to cede to him in perpetuity the acquisitions which had been
assigned to him only for a limited period. There is little doubt that Louis's
main object in going to war was to compel the Emperor to yield on this point.
With regard to the
first of these charges, it is true, as we have related in another chapter, that
Austria, since the siege of Vienna, had achieved some signal triumphs both over
the Turks and the Hungarians, triumphs which had excited great jealousy and anger
in the French Court, but which can hardly be regarded as affording Louis any
legitimate cause of war against the Emperor. The affair of the Duchess of
Orleans we have already explained. It had been referred, with the consent of
Louis, to the arbitration of the Pope; and the delay which had taken place was,
therefore, imputable to Innocent XI and not to the Emperor. It is certain,
however, that Innocent was the implacable adversary of France. No Pope since
the Reformation had exercised so much political influence as he; and, strange
to say, for the sake of opposing Louis, this influence was ranged on the side
of the heretic William, against his orthodox uncle, James II, the Sovereign
whose devotion to Rome was so blind and implicit that he hesitated not to
sacrifice three kingdoms for a mass. Innocent had also thrown in his weight
against Louis in the affair of the Electorate of Cologne, which requires a few
words of explanation.
The Suabian family of Fürstenberg was entirely devoted to France. Egon von Fürstenberg,
Bishop of Strassburg, had been very instrumental
in putting the French in possession of that city; his brother William had, as
we have seen, been seized by the Emperor at the Congress of Cologne for being
too warm a partisan of French interests, but had subsequently recovered his
liberty at the Peace of Nimeguen. Egon having
died in 1682, Louis obtained for William, who had purposely entered the Church,
the Bishopric of Strassburg, and subsequently a
cardinal’s hat. Nor did the French King's views in his favour stop
here. Louis resolved to procure for him the Archbishopric and Electorate of
Cologne; a step by which the electorate would become almost a French province,
while, at the same time, Louis would obtain through his creature and dependant a voice in the affairs of the Empire. Early
in 1688, Maximilian, the Archbishop-elector of Cologne, and the Chapter being
gained by French money, elected, by nineteen votes out of twenty-four, William
von Fürstenberg Coadjutor; that is, successor to the
archbishopric when it should become vacant by the death of Maximilian, an event
which happened a few months later (June, 1688). But the Pope, who was in the
interests of the Emperor, annulled the election of the Coadjutor; the League of
Augsburg brought forward the Bavarian Prince, Joseph Clement, as a rival
candidate for the Archbishopric and Electorate, and though Clement was only
seventeen years of age, the Pope gave him a dispensation and a brief of
eligibility. As both the candidates possessed bishoprics, they could only be
elected by postulation, for which the canon law requires a majority of
two-thirds of the votes. But of the twenty-four votes, Fürstenberg obtained only fifteen, or one short of the required number. Clement had the
remaining nine; and as he had been declared eligible by the Pope, while Fürstenberg had been rejected, the election fell upon
Clement. Louis, however, declared that he would support Fürstenberg and the majority of the Chapter, and his troops took possession of most of the
places of the electorate.
Thus the enmity
between the Pope and the French King, first excited by the Régale, became irreconcilable. It had been recently
aggravated by another dispute, which had involved the Parliament of Paris in
Innocent's displeasure. The Pontiff, with a view to the better administration
of police in Rome, had abrogated a privilege enjoyed by foreign ambassadors
resident in that capital, by which not only the palace, but even the quarter
which they inhabited, was considered inviolable, and thus afforded an asylum to
malefactors of all kinds. All the other Powers submitted without a murmur to
this wholesome regulation; but Louis haughtily declared "that his Crown
had never been guided by the conduct of others; but, on the contrary, God had
established it to be for them an example, and he was determined, so long as he
reigned, never to forfeit any of its rights". The Marquis of Lavardin, who proceeded to Rome as French ambassador in
November, 1687, was instructed to disregard the Pope's abrogation of the
ambassadorial franchise, although a bull of excommunication had been launched
against all who should neglect it. Lavardin entered
Rome at the head of near a thousand armed men; but Innocent refused to receive
him, and placed the French church of St. Louis, which the ambassador was
accustomed to attend, under an interdict. The matter was taken up by the
Parliament of Paris. Several members, and especially De Harlai, the Procureur-general, and Talon, the Avocat-general,
inveighed vehemently against the Pope, and appealed to a future Council. The
Parliament passed an Arret (January, 1688), that the King should be
supplicated to assemble Provincial Councils, or a National Council, in order to
put an end to the disorder created by the vacancy of bishoprics (through
the Régale); and that all commerce with Rome,
and the remitting of money thither, should be forbidden.
These quarrels
show how near France was to an absolute separation from Rome. Louis's rage and
disappointment are shown in a violent letter which he addressed to the Pope
(September 6th), through the Cardinal d'Estrées,
with orders to communicate it to Innocent and the Consistory. In this letter,
which may almost be regarded as a declaration of the war he was meditating, he
declared that he had lost all hope of reawakening in Innocent the feelings of
the common father of Christendom, or to obtain any justice at his hands; and he
intimated that the Pope's conduct would probably cause a general war in Europe.
He declared that he could no longer recognize Innocent as mediator in the
affair of the Palatine succession, and that he should take care to obtain
justice by the means which God had placed in his hands. He further announced
that he should continue to assist the Cardinal Von Fürstenberg;
and that if his ally, the Duke of Parma, was not immediately put in possession
of the Duchies of Castro and Ronciglione,
withheld from him by the Holy See since the Treaty of Pisa, the French troops
would enter Italy and Avignon would be seized. This last threat was carried
into execution in October.
Innocent XI
replied by proclaiming Clement of Bavaria Archbishop of Cologne, and by
excommunicating the Parliament of Paris and the Advocate-General Talon. Louis,
on his side, followed up his philippic against the Pope by the declaration of
war against the Emperor already mentioned. For some weeks the French troops had
been marching from Flanders towards the eastern frontier. One division,
ostensibly commanded by the Dauphin, but in reality by Marshal de Duras and Vauban, laid siege to Philippsburg early in October; another smaller corps,
under Boufflers, occupied, almost without
resistance, Kaiserslautern, Neustadt, Kreutznach,
Worms, Oppenheim, Bingen, Bacharach—in short,
almost all the possessions of the Elector Palatine and the Elector of Mainz on
the left bank of the Rhine. The latter admitted the French into his capital on
condition that the neutrality of his dominions beyond the Rhine should be
respected.
William III’s
Invasion of England
The joy of the
Dutch Stadholder was boundless when he learnt that the French King had
irrevocably committed him-self to a policy which insured the success of the
Stadholder'’ designs upon England, and would enable him at no distant period to
add the might of that country to the already formidable coalition against
France. Louis, unfortunately for himself, listened to the counsels of Louvois instead of those of D'Avaux.
The latter had advised him to menace the Dutch frontier, and thus keep William
at home. Louvois, on the other hand, represented
that unless a diversion were made by an attack upon the Empire, the Turks,
humiliated by their defeats, and threatened with the loss even of Belgrade,
their frontier town, would be compelled to submit to whatsoever conditions the
Emperor might be pleased to impose upon them, and would thus enable him to
concentrate all his forces against France. This advice coincided with the
policy, long pursued by Louis, of enriching himself at the expense of the
Empire; whose frontiers, but slightly guarded, seemed to offer an easy
conquest. Considerations of a personal nature had also, perhaps, some influence
on the decision of the French King. He had to gratify his own pride, which had
received a wound in the affair of Cologne; and he was, perhaps, also not
unwilling to mortify the pride of the King of England. The blindness and infatuation
of James II in this crisis of his fortunes almost surpasses belief. Ever since
the end of May Louis had been warning that his son-in-law was meditating a
descent upon England. William had formed, near Nimeguen,
a camp of 20,000 men; he was notoriously preparing large quantities of arms and
warlike stores; the Dutch fleet had been put in preparation to sail at a few
days' notice. James, however, refused to believe that these preparations were
directed against himself, and listened to the assurances of William that they
were occasioned by the state of affairs on the Continent. Another notion, that
the States-General would not permit the departure of a force which was
necessary for the defence of the Republic, was better
founded. William himself had assured the States that such was the motive for
his preparations. Nevertheless, had James had the least discernment, he must
have perceived, from the state of feeling among his subjects, that it was not a
moment to reject the aid of France. Louis, who wished to save James in spite of
himself, instructed D'Avaux, his minister at the
Hague, to signify to the States-General, early in September, that he should
consider any act of hostility against his ally, the King of England, as a
declaration of war against himself; at the same time preparations were made to
march a force to the Dutch frontier, and Bonrepaux was
dispatched to England with offers of naval aid. But James, who had formerly
been the pensioner of Louis, now indignantly disclaimed any alliance with him,
thus giving him the lie in the face of Europe; and Skelton, the English
ambassador at Paris, who had been privy to these steps on the part of the
French Court, was recalled and committed to the Tower. James was seized with an
unseasonable fit of pride, and exclaimed that a King of England needed not,
like an Archbishop of Cologne, the patronage of any sovereign. The French King
would have acted more wisely by overlooking James's folly, and listening only
to the dictates of policy. Probably, however, Louis did not anticipate that the
Stadholder would have achieved so speedy and triumphant a success. He might
reasonably have expected that James would have been able to make a better
stand; that a civil war would have ensued, which, for a year or two at least,
might have found employment for all William's resources, and in which he might
have been ultimately baffled by the help of a moderate French force. But when
the crisis actually came, James himself took a juster view
of his position. No sooner were the French troops withdrawn from Flanders than
his desolate situation at once stared him in the face; and especially when
Louis, in his declaration of war against the Emperor, intimated that he meant
to observe the peace with Holland, as well as the twenty years' truce with
Spain. James, in his despair, now almost went the length of declaring war
against France. He assured the States that he had no alliance with that nation;
that he regarded the siege of Philippsburg as
a breach of the Truce of Ratisbon; that he was ready to join Spain and the
States in maintaining the peace of Europe. But the States listened in
preference to William, who opened to them his intended expedition, and
persuaded them that the safety and independence of their religion and country were
involved in its success; and, in their answer to James, instead of entering
into his proposal concerning the peace of Europe, they intimated their desire
to restore peace and confidence in England, by securing the civil and religious
rights of his subjects. William hastened on his preparations, and on November
1st, 1688, he finally sailed with his fleet to seize the Crown of England. The
Spanish ambassador at the Hague caused a grand mass to be performed for his
success. In the same year of the preceding century Spain had fitted out the
Armada, in order to wrest the English sceptre from
the hands of a heretic sovereign and compel the nation to accept the Papal
authority. Now she was favouring and
abetting the attempt of a Calvinist Prince to expel a Roman Catholic King, and
thus to consolidate the civil and religious liberties of England.
William landed
at Torbay on November 5th, the anniversary
of the Popish plot; on December 18th he was at St. James's, his march having
been interrupted only by one or two trifling skirmishes. Meanwhile James had
fled. On December 28th the fugitive monarch arrived at St. Germains, and found in Louis XIV, whom he had rejected as
an ally, a generous protector. On February 13th, 1689, William and his wife
Mary solemnly accepted the English Crown, the Parliament having previously
voted (January 23rd) that James, by withdrawing himself out of the kingdom, had
abdicated the government, and that the throne was thereby vacant. In Scotland
the authority of the new King was established after a slight attempt at
resistance; Ireland, from the religion of the people, was naturally more favourable to James's cause, and it was here that,
with French aid, he was enabled for a year or two to dispute the ground with
William. On March 12th, 1689, James, escorted by a large French fleet, and
accompanied by some 1,200 of his own soldiers, paid by France, landed at Kinsale;
the Irish flocked to his standards, and he soon found himself at the head of a
large, but ill-armed and ill-disciplined force. This hostile act on the part of
Louis caused William, as King of England, to declare war against France, May
17th, 1689. The Irish campaign of that year was indecisive. James was held in
check by the Irish Protestants, and particularly by the heroic defence of Londonderry; and by the landing of Marshal Schomberg, at the head of 10,000 men (August), he was
compelled to retire into winter quarters. That celebrated general, who was a
Protestant, had renounced the service of Louis upon the revocation of the Edict
of Nantes, and, after a short residence in Brandenburg, had entered that of
William, along with many other French refugees. In the campaign of the
following year (1690) William opposed his father-in-law in person, and
completely defeated him at the battle of the Boyne (July 1st). Schomberg fell in this engagement, while animating his
Huguenot troops to avenge themselves on their persecutors. James again escaped
to France, and became a pensioner on Louis's bounty. In the same year a naval
engagement took place off Beachy Head, between the French fleet,
under Tourville, and the combined English and Dutch fleets, under the Earl
of Torrington (June 30th). Victory remained with the French, who, however,
neglected to pursue their advantage, except by the burning of Teignmouth.
In 1691 William proceeded into Holland, to take part in the campaign against
the French; but the Irish were reduced to obedience by his forces under
General Ginkell. They obtained a favourable peace by the treaty called the Pacification
of Limerick (October 3rd), and William was thus enabled to devote his whole
attention to the affairs of the Continent, to which we must now return.
Louis XIV
devastates the Palatinate, 1688
The success of the
English revolution caused a great sensation throughout Europe. The ancient
prejudices of religion, the theories of absolute monarchical power, of the
divine and indefeasible rights of kings all vanished before the political
interests of the moment, and the success of William was hailed with almost
unmixed delight by the Courts of Madrid, of Vienna, and even of Rome. All
nations seemed absorbed in the one thought of repressing the ambition of Louis
XIV; while Louis, on his side, wantonly defied united Europe. One of his first
steps on learning William’s descent on England had been to declare war against
the United Netherlands (November 26th, 1688), and thus to convert the Dutch
from indirect into open and active enemies. This declaration, indeed, was not
founded on William's expedition, but on the intervention of the Dutch in the
affairs of Cologne, to the prejudice of Fürstenberg.
Yet at this moment France was not strong enough to hold the conquests which she
had made. Louis now hearkened to the diabolical counsels of Louvois. From the Court of Versailles, the model of
politeness, the centre of European
refinement, issued a mandate which might have disgraced Attila or Zingis Khan. The French generals were ordered to burn
the towns and villages they could not garrison, lest they should be occupied by
the enemy! Heidelberg, the residence of the Elector Palatine, was one of the
first places abandoned to the flames, and the ruins of the magnificent
electoral palace still attest this act of ferocious barbarity. These orders
were soon afterwards followed by others for a more wholesale
destruction—nothing less than the burning of all the places near the Rhine
between Mainz and Philippsburg! Spires, Worms,
Oppenheim, Frankenthal, Bingen,
and other places, with their beautiful cathedrals and churches and their
ancient medieval monuments, became a prey to the flames, and all that smiling
region assumed the aspect of a desert. Altogether, more than forty towns and
villages were burnt. A hundred thousand houseless human beings wandered about
in search of some refuge for their misery, demanding vengeance at the hands of
the Empire and of Europe. Voltaire suggests, in excuse for Louis, that he would
not have caused this misery could he have seen it with his own eyes. The
exasperation of the Germans may be better imagined than described. The Emperor
Leopold, in confirming the Decree of the Diet of Ratisbon of January
24th, 1689, for war, denounced the King of France as the enemy not only of the
Empire, but of all Christendom, and worthy to be regarded in the same light as
the Turk. The Diet decreed the expulsion of every Frenchman from Germany, and
interdicted, under the penalty of high treason, all commerce with France.
The Grand
Alliance.
It was in the
midst of these horrors and disasters that Leopold extended the bounds of the
coalition against Louis XIV by entering into an offensive and defensive treaty
with the Dutch Republic, May 12th, 1689, in which both parties engaged not to
lay down their arms, or separate from each other, till Louis should have been
deprived of all his conquests, and reduced within the limits of the treaties of
Westphalia and the Pyrenees. William III, as King of England, acceded to the
treaty, December 30th, 1689, and his example was followed by the King of Spain
(June 6th, 1690). The greater part of Europe was thus confederated against
France, and the treaty obtained the name of the Grand Alliance. Frederick III
of Brandenburg—the Great Elector, Frederick William, had died April 29th, 1688—had
also joined the party of his uncle William and the Emperor, and, following the
footsteps of his father as protector of the Reformed Faith, had done all that
lay in his power to promote the success of William's enterprise upon England.
The death of Pope Innocent XI (August, 1689) seemed to be the only event favourable to France. But although Louis XIV expended
three million livres to procure the election of Alexander VIII
(Cardinal Ottoboni), as Innocent's successor,
and though he restored Avignon to that pontiff, and yielded on the subject of
the ambassadorial franchise, yet he did not succeed in gaining his friendship.
Alexander confirmed the election of Clement to the Archbishopric of Cologne,
and continued to refuse bulls of investiture to the French bishops who had been
parties to the declaration of 1682.
Our limits will
not permit us to describe at any length the war between Louis XIV and the Grand
Alliance, which lasted till the Peace of Ryswick, in 1697, but only to note
some of the chief incidents of the different campaigns. The Imperialists had,
in 1689, notwithstanding the efforts it was still necessary to make against the
Turks, brought an army of 80,000 men into the field, which was divided into
three bodies, under the command of the Duke of Lorraine, the Elector of
Bavaria, and the Elector of Brandenburg; while the Prince of Waldeck, in
the Netherlands, was at the head of a large Dutch and Spanish force, composed,
however, in great part of German mercenaries. In this quarter Marshal d'Humieres was opposed to Waldeck, while Duras commanded the French army on the Rhine. In the
south the Duke of Noailles maintained a French force in Catalonia.
Nothing of much importance was done this year; but on the whole the war went
in favour of the Imperialists, who
succeeded in recovering Mainz and Bonn.
Campaign of 1690.—This year
Marshal d'Humieres was superseded by the
Duke of Luxembourg, who infused more vigour into
the French operations. Luxembourg was a general of the school of Condé; that is
to say, he achieved success by vigour and
impetuosity rather than by cautious skill and scientific combinations. On the
other hand, these last qualities, which were the characteristics of Turenne,
were possessed in an eminent degree by Catinat. Belonging to a family of
the Robe, or legal profession, and at first an advocate himself, Catinat had
attained his military rank solely by his merit and almost in spite of the
Court. Mild and simple in his manners, wary and prudent in his manoeuvres, he was beloved by his soldiers, who called him
“Pere La Pensée”. Catinat was sent this year into Dauphiné to watch the movements of the Duke of Savoy,
who was suspected by the French Court, and not without reason, of favouring the Grand Alliance. The extravagant demands
of Louis, who required Victor Amadeus to unite his troops with the army
of Catinat, and to admit a French garrison into Vercelli, Verrua, and even the citadel of Turin itself, till a
general peace should be effected, caused the Duke to enter into treaties with
Spain and the Emperor, June 3rd and 4th; and on October 20th, he joined the
Grand Alliance by a treaty concluded at the Hague with England and the
States-General. This last step was taken by Victor Amadeus in consequence of
his reverses. He had sustained from Catinat in the battle of Staffarda (August 17th) a defeat, which only the skill
of a youthful general, his cousin the Prince Eugene, had saved from becoming a
total rout. As the fruits of this victory, Catinat occupied Saluzzo, Susa, and all the country from the Alps to
the Tanaro. During these operations another
French division had reduced, without much resistance, the whole of Savoy,
except the fortress of Montmelian. The only
other event of importance during this campaign was the decisive victory gained
by Luxembourg over Prince Waldeck at Fleurus,
July 1st. The captured standards, more than a hundred in number, which
Luxembourg sent to Paris on this occasion, obtained for him the name of
the Tapissier de Notre Dame. Luxembourg was, however, prevented from
following up his victory by the orders of Louvois,
who forbade him to lay siege to Namur or Charleroi. Thus, in this campaign,
France maintained her preponderance on land, as well as at sea by the victory
off Beachy Head. The Imperialists had this year lost one of their
best leaders by the death of the Duke of Lorraine (April). He was succeeded as
commander-in-chief by Maximilian Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria; but nothing of
importance took place upon the Rhine.
Campaign 1691.—The
campaign of this year was singularly barren of events, though both the French
and English Kings took a personal part in it. In March, Louis and Luxembourg
lay siege to Mons, the capital of Hainault, which surrendered in less than
three weeks. King William, who was in the neighborhood, could not muster
sufficient troops to venture on its relief. Nothing further of importance was
done in this quarter, and the campaign in Germany was equally a blank. On the
side of Piedmont, Catinat took Nice, but being confronted by superior
numbers, was forced to evacuate Piedmont; though, by way of compensation, he
completed the conquest of Savoy by the capture of Montmelian. Noailles gained
some trifling successes in Spain; and the celebrated French corsair, Jean Bart,
distinguished himself by his enterprises at sea. One of the most important
events of the year was the death of Louvois.
That minister had become altogether insupportable to Louis by his insolence,
and by the errors and even crimes into which he had led him; and the French
King could not help expressing the satisfaction he felt at his death.
Nevertheless, in spite of all his faults, Louvois had
great administrative abilities, and particularly a wonderful talent for
military organization, the loss of which it was impossible to supply.
Campaign of 1692.—Louis had made extraordinary
exertions for the campaign of this year. The French armies were estimated at
nearly 450,000 men, while 100,000 were levied for the navy. So great a force
had never before been raised in France. Enraged by the loss of Ireland in the
preceding year, Louis had resolved to make a grand attempt for the restoration
of James II by a descent upon England. For this purpose, and for an attack upon
the Spanish Netherlands, his whole power was to be concentrated, whilst in
Germany, Piedmont, and Catalonia his armies were to stand on the defensive.
Five hundred transports, calculated to convey 30,000 men, chiefly Irish and
British emigrants, were assembled at La Hogue, Cherbourg, and Havre; and their
passage was to be covered by a French fleet of fifty ships of the line
under Tourville. The failure of this attempt by Admiral Russell's victory
over Tourville, May 19th, and the subsequent destruction of great part of
the French ships which had taken refuge at La Hogue, are well known to the
English reader. With this defeat vanished James's last chance of ever regaining
the English throne. Louis's success on land afforded him some compensation for
this misfortune. In May, the King and Luxembourg undertook the siege of Namur
with upwards of 100,000 men. The town surrendered in less than a week, but one
of the forts constructed for its protection by the celebrated Butch
engineer Cohorn, and defended by himself, held
out nearly a month. William III, who was in the neighborhood with about 70,000
men, was unable to render Namur any assistance. After the fall of that place,
Louis returned to Versailles, leaving Luxembourg with a much reduced force to
make head against William. On August 3rd, he was attacked, almost surprised, by
William, near Steinkirk. The day was obstinately
contested; both sides suffered enormous loss, and though William was at length
obliged to retire, he conducted his retreat in good order and without
molestation. On the side of the Rhine, and on that of the Pyrenees, the war was
altogether insignificant. In the Alps the French suffered some reverses. The
Duke of Savoy crossed into Dauphiné, took Embrun,
burnt Gap, and devastated the surrounding country, by way of reprisal for the
destruction committed by the French in Piedmont and the Palatinate. Here a
youthful heroine, Mdlle. de la Tour-du-Pin, directed against the invaders
a partisan warfare in a way which procured for her a military pension, and a
trophy in St. Denis near that of Joan of Arc.
Battle of Neerwinden 1693.—Early in June, for the campaign opened late,
the kings of France and England found themselves almost in presence in the
neighborhood of Louvain. William III was encamped at the Abbaye du Parck, Louis at Gemblours;
William had scarcely 50,000 men, Louis had more than double that number. The
defeat of William would have insured the conquest not only of Liege and
Brussels, but of the whole Spanish Netherlands. The French army was impatiently
awaiting the order of attack, when Louis suddenly set off for Versailles, and
dismembered his army by dispatching part of it into Germany, under pretence of making a diversion in favour of the Turks. In fact Louis, who was fond of
besieging towns that were sure to be taken, was afraid of risking his military
reputation in the open field, and in spite of the earnest entreaties of
Luxembourg, flung away one of those opportunities which fortune never offers
twice. This conduct, said to have been counselled by Madame de
Maintenon, who had accompanied Louis to Namur, rendered him the object of
derision not only to his enemies, but also to his own subjects, and deprived
him of the confidence and respect of his soldiers. He never again appeared at
the head of his troops. The French army was in some degree compensated for its
disappointment by Luxembourg's victory over William at Neerwinden,
July 29th; purchased, however, by an enormous loss on their side as well as on
that of the allies. William, as usual, conducted his retreat with skill and
safety, so that Luxembourg, who was momentarily expected at Brussels, did not
venture to follow him, and was fain to content himself with the capture of
Charleroi. Meanwhile the campaign in Germany, for the sake of which Louis had
relinquished the prospect of conquering the entire Spanish Netherlands, was
almost null. Here a fine army, nominally under the command of the Dauphin, but
in reality of Marshal De Lorges, achieved only
the reconquest of the ruins of Heidelberg, and disgraced itself by
pillaging and burning what had escaped the former devastation, and by
exercising the most ruthless barbarity on the miserable inhabitants. In
Piedmont, Catinat, now a marshal, gained a great victory over the Duke of
Savoy at Marsaglia, October 4th, but was unable
to follow it up for want of money and siege materials. Prince Eugene commanded
the allied infantry on this occasion. The battle of Marsaglia,
like that of Neerwinden, was in a great measure
decided by charges with the bayonet. In Catalonia, Marshal Noailles captured
Rosas, June 9th. Thus the advantage of this campaign rested with the French,
who were also successful at sea. The battle of La Hogue, though a severe blow,
had not been so fatal to the French navy as represented by some historians.
France had never had larger fleets at sea than in 1693; when she had 93 vessels
afloat, of which 71 were ships of the line, besides 30 galleys. On June
27th, Tourville defeated, in the Bay of Lagos, Admiral Rooke,
who was convoying the English and Dutch Smyrna fleet, of which a great part was
captured or destroyed.
In the midst of
his successes, however, Louis was desirous of peace. By the death of Louvois he had lost a minister who provided him with
the means of winning great victories. The French treasury was exhausted, and
the nation in general in a state of the deepest distress and misery. As
Voltaire remarks, "the people were perishing to the sound of Te Deums”. Even
at the beginning of the war, in 1689, the kingdom was so exhausted by Louis's
wars, by the money spent in bribing foreign princes and ministers, and by his
own profusion and extravagance, that recourse had been had to the disgraceful
expedient of recasting the specie, and reissuing it at an advance of ten per
cent, in its nominal value; while, at the same time, such was the scarcity of
the precious metals, that private individuals were compelled to send their
silver plate and utensils, above a certain weight, to the mint. Louis himself
set the example by melting some of his finest vases and other articles. In
order to meet the current expenses and the growing national debt, absurd taxes
were put upon trade and agriculture, which tended to check production and
augment the public misery. The cultivation of the land was rendered more
difficult and expensive by the large draughts upon the peasantry to recruit the
army; and these artificial causes of distress were aggravated in 1692 and 1693
by two successive deficient harvests. To these domestic motives for peace add
another of foreign aggrandizement. The feeble and childless Charles II of Spain
might die at any moment, and Louis could not hope to reap his succession while
all Europe stood confederated and in arms against him. Denmark and Sweden,
though they had at first furnished some troops to the Coalition, had afterwards
assumed a neutral posture, and had recently entered into a treaty with each
other to make their maritime neutrality respected (March 17th, 1693). Through
these Powers, as mediators, Louis offered to make great concessions to the
Empire; to evacuate almost all his recent acquisitions; to abandon his
sister-in-law's claims on the Palatinate; nay, even to refer the question of
the Réunions, with the exception of Strassburg, to the arbitration of Venice. Louis made
concessions equally ample to Spain and to the Duke of Savoy. But though the two
Northern Powers and the Pope zealously endeavored to effect a peace, the
Emperor and the King of England, who were encouraged by the exhaustion of
France to continue the war, frustrated all their attempts for that purpose. A
new Pontiff now occupied the Apostolic Chair. Alexander VIII had died after a
short reign in February, 1691, and was succeeded by Cardinal Pignatelli,
who assumed the title of Innocent XII. This Pope was of a more placable temper than his predecessors, and Louis XIV
purchased his friendship by what the French call a transaction; that is, a
compromise on the subject of the Declaration of 1682. No retractation was
made of the Gallican doctrines promulgated in the Declaration; but the bishops
who had signed it, made, in their individual capacity, a humble, though
somewhat equivocal, apology, with which Innocent XII professed himself
satisfied, and granted the bulls which had been withheld.
Campaign of 1694.— We now
return to the course of the war. Want of means compelled Louis XIV to remain on
the defensive, except in Catalonia, where, by inflicting some vigorous blows,
he hoped to compel Spain to a peace. Marshal Noailles having forced
the passage of the Ter (May 27th), drove the Spaniards from
their intrenched position on the other side, and captured the towns
of Palamos, Gerona, and Ostalric:
thus threatening Barcelona, which, however, the presence of the English fleet
under Admiral Russell deterred him from attacking. The campaigns in Piedmont
and Germany this year were wholly insignificant. Even that in the Netherlands,
notwithstanding the vast preparations of William III, went off without a
battle, through the skillful manoeuvres of
Luxembourg. The only advantage gained by the allies was the capture of Hui.
This was the last campaign of Marshal Luxembourg, the greatest general then in
the French service, who had gained almost every battle he fought. He died at
the age of sixty-seven, January 4th, 1695, in consequence of his gallantries
and debaucheries, which he still continued to pursue, in spite of his years and
his deformed person.
The naval war this
year was more fertile in incidents than that on land. An attack of the English
and Dutch fleets upon Brest was repulsed with some loss, chiefly through the
treachery of Marlborough, who had privately informed James II of the intended
enterprise, and had thus enabled the French to put themselves in a posture of defence. The combined fleet, in retiring, bombarded Dieppe,
Havre, Dunkirk, and Calais; but, except the burning of Dieppe, without much
effect. Meanwhile, the celebrated French corsairs, Jean Bart, Duguai Trouin, Petit Renau, and others, filled the narrow seas with the renown
of their valour, and the hearts of the Dutch and
English merchants with grief for their losses.
Campaign of 1695.—After the death
of Marshal Luxembourg the command of the French army in the Netherlands was
bestowed on Villeroi, son of Louis's tutor, and
the companion of his youth; a favourite at
Court, but little qualified for the important post with which he was intrusted. His only feat during the campaign was a savage
and useless bombardment of Brussels, which, however, did not save Namur from
falling into the hands of the allies (September 6th). This was almost the only
considerable success of William since the commencement of the war; and as it
was also the first of Louis's conquests retaken from him by force, it produced
a great sensation in Europe. On the banks of the Rhine the French repeated
without hindrance their usual summer ravages, but attempted nothing further. In
Piedmont, Louis and the Duke of Savoy had already come to an understanding with
each other. Victor Amadeus deceived the Imperial and Spanish generals by a
collusion with France, by which it was arranged that Casale should
be surrendered to him by the French commandant after a kind of mock siege, but
on condition that its fortifications should be demolished, and its military
importance thus annihilated. Victor Amadeus contrived, by his dilatoriness, to
make this the only operation of the year. In order, however, to throw dust into
the eyes of the allies, he acceded to the renewal of the Grand Alliance, which
was again signed this year by the Emperor, the King of Spain, the King of
England, the States-General, the Bishop of Münster, the Duke (now Elector) of
Hanover, and the Electors of Bavaria and Brandenburg. The war at sea was
confined to useless bombardments of a few places on the French coast by the
English and Dutch fleets.
Campaign 1696.—The campaign in
Flanders this year was a vast and almost ridiculous display of force, without
the striking of a single blow. Armies of 250,000 men, under William and Vaudemont on one side, Villeroi and Boufflers on the other, watched one another several
months, without coming to an engagement. The campaign in Germany was, as usual,
equally featureless. In Piedmont, Victor Amadeus threw off the mask, and
concluded an advantageous treaty, offensive and defensive, with Louis XIV
(August 29th). The Duke, who was to be allowed a fair and reasonable period to
disengage himself from the Grand Alliance, was to recover, at the general
peace, Pinerolo, the key of Italy, which
Richelieu had been at such pains to acquire; Savoy, Susa, and the county of
Nice were also to be restored to him. The Duke of Burgundy, the eldest of the
French King's grandsons, was to marry the Duke's eldest daughter. If the
neutrality of Italy was not effected by that time, the Duke was to unite his
forces with those of France, to take the command of the combined army, to
receive a subsidy of 100,000 crowns a month, and to be invested with whatsoever
conquests should be made in the Milanese. The Cabinets of Vienna and Madrid,
exasperated by the Duke's treachery, at first refused the neutrality of Italy,
in spite of the instances of the Pope, the Venetians, and other Italian Powers;
but Victor Amadeus, having united his forces with those of Catinat, laid
siege to Valenza, and threatened the invasion of
the Milanese; and the allied generals, finding themselves unable to oppose him,
used the power with which they had been furnished in case of extreme necessity,
to accept the neutrality of the Italian peninsula (October 7th).
Although the
treaty with Victor Amadeus strengthened the hands of Louis by placing another
army at his disposal, he nevertheless made advances to the allies for peace.
William III seemed not disinclined to listen to them. The Dutch and English,
whose commerce bad suffered enormously by the French privateers, had begun to
perceive that they were bearing almost the whole brunt of the war for the
benefit of the Emperor. Leopold alone was averse to a peace for the very same
reason that Louis desired one—the question, namely, of the Spanish Succession.
At length, however, on the intimation of Sweden, the mediating Power, that if
he persisted in his refusal to negotiate, Great Britain and the States-General
would conclude a separate peace with France, he consented to send
plenipotentiaries to Ryswick, a village near the Hague, where a Congress was
opened May 9th, 1697, in William's Chateau of Neuburg Hausen.
While the
negotiations were going on, preparations were made by the French for conducting
on a grand scale the campaign in the Netherlands. They were also pushing
with vigour the war in Catalonia. The Duke
of Vendome, who succeeded Noailles in this quarter in 1695, had not
hitherto been able to effect anything of importance; but this year, being
assisted by the French fleet under D'Estrées, he
laid siege to Barcelona, and compelled it to surrender, August 10th. The fall
of this place, and the distracted and distressed condition of the Spanish
monarchy, induced the Cabinet of Charles II to accept the ultimatum offered by
Louis; and on the 20th of September, three separate treaties were signed
between France on the one side, and Holland, England, and Spain on the other.
The only article of importance in the treaty between France and the
States-General was the restoration by the latter of Pondicherry, which they had
captured, to the French East India Company. The Dutch also concluded on the
same day a very advantageous treaty of commerce with France. By the treaty with
Great Britain, Louis XIV recognized William as the lawful king of that country,
and bound himself to lend no further help to his enemies, that is, to James II;
a step which must have been most painful to Louis, both from his love of the
Stuarts and his hatred of the Prince of Orange. The points in dispute between
William and his father-in-law had, indeed, formed the chief difficulties in the
secret preliminary discussions held this summer at Hall, between Marshal Boufflers and William’s confidant, Bentinck, Earl of
Portland. The only other article of much importance in this treaty was the
restoration, by both parties, of the conquests they had made in America.
By the third
treaty, with Spain, Louis restored to that Power Gerona, Rosas, Cervera, and Barcelona in Catalonia; also, with a few
exceptions, all the places in the Spanish Netherlands which had been taken by
him during the war, as well as all the places in that country which had been
reunited since the Peace of Nimeguen, except
certain towns and villages which Louis pretended to be dependencies of Charlemont, Maubeuge, and
other towns previously ceded to him.
By a separate
article Leopold and the Empire were allowed all the month of October to accede
to the ultimatum, and a suspension of arms was granted for the same period. The
Imperial plenipotentiaries signed a treaty with France, October 30th, on the
basis of those of Westphalia and Nimeguen. Louis
restored all the places which had been reunited to his Crown with the exception
of those in Alsace; and thus the Bishop of Strassburg,
the nobles of Higher and Lower Alsace, the ten Imperial cities, and the immediate
nobility of Lower Alsace, became thenceforward the vassals and subjects of
France. The Duke of Lorraine was restored to his dominions, with the
reservation of Sarre Louis. The Bavarian
Prince, Joseph Clement, remained in possession of the Electorate of Cologne;
while the Elector Palatine engaged to pay the Duchess of Orleans 200,000 francs
per annum till the Pope should have pronounced his arbitration.
At the last moment
before the treaty was signed, the French ministers, under threats of renewing
the war, effected the insertion of the following clause into the fourth
article: "That the Roman Catholic religion should remain, in the places
restored, on the same footing as it then was". In the numerous Protestant
towns and villages which the French had reunited, they had introduced the Roman
Catholic service, and had compelled the Protestants to lend their churches for
that purpose. This clause laid the foundation for new dissensions between the
Catholics and Protestants of Germany.
Thus a war which
had lasted nine years, and which had been carried on with such mighty efforts
on all sides did not produce consequences so important as might have been
expected. For the first time since the ministry of Richelieu France had lost
ground, and, with the exception of Strassburg,
had abandoned the acquisitions of 1684 for the limits prescribed by the Peace
of Nimeguen in 1678. For Europe in general
the most important result was that the Stuarts were for
ever deprived of the throne of England; and that country, liberated
from French influence, became the counterpoise of France in the European
system. From this period the colonial interests of England gradually became of
the first importance; and she adopted, for the most part, the policy of allying
herself with those countries which had reason to dread the ambition of France.
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