| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER XLII.
             REVIEW OF THE
        PERIOD,
              
          
         AT this epoch it
        may be advantageous to cast a glance on some of the characteristics of the
        period extending from formation the Peace of Westphalia to the first French
        Revolution.
         The wars which
        sprung out of the Reformation were closed by the Thirty Years’ War. So long a
        strife, if it did not extinguish, at least mitigated religious animosity; above
        all, Rome saw that she had no longer the power to excite and nourish it. The
        results, both of the war and the peace, must have convinced the most sanguine
        Pope that no reasonable expectation could any longer be entertained of
        subjugating the Protestants by force. Nearly all Europe had been engaged in the
        struggle, and the cause of Rome had been vanquished. Nay, the Papal Court had
        been even foiled in the more congenial field of negotiation and diplomacy. The
        influence exercised by the Papal Nuncios at the Congress of Munster had been
        quite insignificant. A peace entirely adverse to the Pope’s views had been
        concluded, against which, instead of those terrible anathemas which had once
        made Europe tremble, Innocent X. had contented himself with launching a feeble
        protest, which nobody, not even the Catholic Princes, regarded.
         The Peace of
        Westphalia may, therefore, be considered as inaugurating a new era, whose character
        was essentially political and commercial. It is true that the religious element
        is not altogether eliminated in the intercourse of nations. The Catholic and
        the Protestant Powers have still, in some degree, different interests, and
        still more different views and sentiments; and in the great struggle, for
        instance, between Louis XIV and William III, the former monarch may in some
        measure be regarded as the representative of the Papacy, the latter of the
        Reformation. Yet in these contests political and commercial interests were
        altogether so predominant that what little of religion seems mixed up with them
        was only subservient to them, and a means rather than an end.
         These changes were
        not without their effect on the intellectual condition of Europe. The same
        causes which produced the Reformation had set all the elements of thought in
        motion, and had given rise to great discoveries. The human mind seemed all at
        once to burst its shackles, and to march forth to new conquests. It was the age
        which showed the way. Columbus discovered a new hemisphere, Copernicus a new
        system of the universe, Bacon a new method of all sciences. Boldness and
        originality also characterized literature, and the age of the Reformation
        produced Shakespeare and Rabelais. The period following the treaty of
        Westphalia employed itself in working on the materials which the previous era
        had provided, and in setting them in order. It was the age of criticism and
        analysis. Intellectual efforts, if no longer so daring, were more correct. Science
        made less gigantic, but surer steps; literature, if less original, no longer
        offended by glaring blemishes at the side of inimitable beauties. The spirit of
        the age was best exhibited in France. French modes of thinking, French
        literature, French taste, French manners, became the standard of all Europe,
        and caused the period to be called the Age of Louis XIV. Its influence survived
        the reign of that Monarch, and gave an influence to France, even after her
        political preponderance had declined.
         When we talk of
        the “Age of Pericles”, the “Age of Augustus”, the “Age of Louis XIV”, we
        naturally imply that the persons from whom those periods took their names
        exercised a considerable influence on the spirit by which they were
        characterized. In reality, however, this influence extended no further than to
        give a conventional tone and fashion. The intellectual condition which
        prevailed from about the middle of the seventeenth century till towards the
        close of the eighteenth was the natural result of the period which preceded it;
        and it might, perhaps, not be difficult to show that the same was the case with
        the two celebrated eras of Athens and Rome. It would be absurd to suppose that
        the patronage of the great can call works of genius into existence. Such patronage,
        however, especially where there is no great general public to whom the authors
        of works of art and literature may address themselves, is capable of giving
        such works their form and colour—in short, of
        influencing the taste of their producers; and this is precisely what the Courts
        of Augustus and Louis XIV effected. The literature and art of the Athenian
        Commonwealth were subject to somewhat different conditions. Greek literature
        was not so much the literature of books as the Roman, and still more the modern.
        The appeal was chiefly oral, and made more directly to the public, but a public
        that has not been found elsewhere—a body of judges of the most critical taste
        and discernment. Hence Attic literature and art present an unrivalled
        combination of excellences; all the vigour and
        fire of originality, subdued by the taste of a grand jury of critics. We do not
        mean, however, to assert that the writers of the age of Augustus and Louis
        possessed no original genius, but only that it was kept more in check. It cannot
        be doubted, for instance, that Virgil and Horace, Racine and Moliere, possessed
        great original powers, which, in another state of society, they might probably
        have displayed in a different, and, perhaps, more vigorous fashion, but at the
        sacrifice of that propriety and elegance which distinguish their writings.
   If Louis XIV
        claimed to represent the State in his own person, still more did he represent
        the Court, which set the fashion in dress and manners, as well as in
        literature. There was much, fortunately, in Louis’s character that was really
        refined, and which left an unmistakable impress on the nation. His manner
        towards women was marked by a noble and refined gallantry; towards men, by a
        dignified and courteous affability. He is said never to have passed a woman
        even of the lowest condition without raising his hat. There was no doubt a
        great deal of acting in all this; but it was good acting. He had made it his
        study to support the character of a great king with a becoming dignity
        and splendour, for he felt himself to be
        the centre of Europe as well as of France.
        Hence, as regards merely external manner, his Court has, perhaps, never been
        surpassed, and it is not surprising that it should have become a model to all
        Europe. It combined a dignified etiquette with graceful ease. Every one knew and acquiesced in his position, without
        being made to feel his inferiority. The King exacted that the higher classes
        should treat their inferiors with that polite consideration of which he himself
        gave the example. Thus the different ranks of society were brought nearer
        together without being confounded. The importance of the great nobility was
        reduced by multiplying the number of dukes and peers; while civic ministers and
        magistrates were loaded with titles, and brought almost to a level in point of
        ceremonial with persons of the highest birth. At the same time certain honorary
        privileges were reserved for the latter which afforded some compensation to
        their self-love. They alone could dine in public with the King; they alone
        could wear the cordon bleu and the justaucorps à
          brevet; a sort of costume adopted by the King, which could be worn only by
        royal licence, and established a sort of
        equality among the wearers. All these regulations tended to produce a mutual
        affability between the different classes, which spread from the Court through
        the nation, and produced a universal politeness. Hence French society attained
        an unrivalled elegance of manner, which it retained down to the Revolution.
        There was nothing that could be compared to the Court of France and French
        society. Hence also the French language attained a grace and polish which
        render it so admirable an instrument of polite conversation, and caused its
        general diffusion in Europe. The Courts of Austria and Spain were shackled by a
        cold and formal etiquette, destructive of all wit, taste, and fancy. The only
        Court which approached the French was that of England under Charles II.
        Essentially, perhaps, Charles was not more immoral than Louis; but he wanted
        that refinement which deprives immorality of its grossness. The result is
        manifest in the contemporary literature of the two nations, and especially the
        drama, the best test of the manners of a people.
   In patronizing
        literature and art, Louis XIV only followed the example given by Richelieu,
        with whom it was a part of policy. He knew that literature glorifies a country,
        and gives it a moral strength; that it makes the prince who patronizes it
        popular at home, respected and influential abroad. The benefits which Louis
        bestowed on literary men were not confined to those of his own country. Many
        foreign literati of distinction were attracted to France by
        honorable and lucrative posts; while pensions and flattering letters were
        accorded to others. There were few countries in Europe without some writer who
        could sound the praises and proclaim the munificence of Louis XXV.
   It is impossible
        here to enter into any critical examination of the great writers who adorned
        the reign of Louis. The dramas of Racine and Moliere, the poems of Boileau and
        La Fontaine, the sermons and other writings of Bossuet and Bourdaloue, besides the works of numerous other authors,
        are still read, not only in France, but also throughout Europe.
   If royal patronage
        can give a tone to works of imagination, it can still more directly assist the
        researches of learning and natural science. The King, in person, declared
        himself the protector of the Academie Française,
        the centre and representative of the
        national literature, and raised it, as it were, to an institution of the State,
        by permitting it to harangue him on occasions of solemnity, like the Parliament
        and other superior courts. In the state of society which then existed, this was
        no small addition to the dignity of letters. Under the care of Louis and
        Colbert arose two other learned institutions : the Academie des
          inscriptions et belles lettres, and
        the Academie des sciences.
        The origin of the former was sufficiently frivolous. It was at first designed
        to furnish inscriptions for the public monuments, legends for medals, subjects
        for artists, devices for fêtes, with descriptions destined to dazzle foreign
        nations with the pomp and splendor of French royalty. It was also to record the
        great actions achieved by the King; in short, it was to be the humble handmaid
        of Louis’s glory. But from such a beginning it became by degrees the centre of historical, philological, and archaeological
        researches. The Academie des
          sciences was founded in 1666, after the example of the Royal Society
        of London. In the cultivation of natural science, England had, indeed, taken
        the lead of France, and could already point to many eminent names. The French
        Academy of Architecture was founded in 1671, and the Academy of Painting and
        Sculpture, originated by Mazarin in 1648, received a fresh development at the
        hands of Louis and his ministers.
   If we turn from
        the Court to the Cabinet of Louis, we find him here also affecting the first
        part. But it was in reality by the ability of his ministers, Le Tellier,
        Colbert, Lionne, Louvois,
        that he found the means of sustaining the glories of his reign. After the death
        of Louvois, who, though a detestable politician,
        was an excellent military administrator, the affairs of Louis went rapidly to
        decay. Jean-Baptiste Colbert, one of the ablest ministers that France had ever
        seen, was born in 1619, the son of a trader of Rheims. After receiving the
        rudiments of a commercial education, he became successively a clerk to a
        merchant, a notary, and an attorney, and finally entered the service of the
        Government by becoming clerk to a treasurer of what were called the parties casuelles. Thus Colbert, though subsequently a warm
        patron of art and literature, had not received a classical education, and began
        at the age of fifty to study Latin, to which he applied himself while riding in
        his carriage. He owed his advancement to Le Tellier, who saw and
        appreciated his merit. In 1649 that minister caused him to be appointed a counsellor of
        state, and from this period his rise was rapid. He obtained the patronage of
        Mazarin, for whom, however, he felt but little esteem. The Cardinal on his
        death-bed is said to have recommended Colbert to the King; and, in 1661, after
        the fall of Fouquet, he obtained the management of the finances. He had already
        conducted all the affairs of France during eight years, before he obtained, in
        1669, the office of Secretary of State, with the management of the Admiralty,
        commerce, colonies, the King’s household, Paris, the government of the Isle of
        France and Orleans, the affairs of the clergy, and other departments.
   Colbert had taken
        Richelieu as his model, and like that statesman had formed the grandest plans
        for the benefit of France by promoting her agriculture, manufactures, and
        commerce, and by developing the intellectual as well as the material resources
        of the kingdom. He increased the revenue by making the officers of finance
        disgorge their unjust profits, by reforming the system of taxation, and
        reducing the expenses of collection. He improved the police and the
        administration of justice. He facilitated the internal communications of France
        by repairing the highways and making new ones, and by causing the canal of Languedoc
        to be dug, which connects the Mediterranean with the Atlantic. He also formed
        the scheme of the canal of Burgundy. He caused Marseilles and Dunkirk to be
        declared free ports, and he encouraged the nobility to engage in commerce by
        providing that it should be no derogation to their rank. He formed the harbour of Rochefort, enlarged and improved that
        of Brest, and established large marine arsenals at Brest, Toulon, Havre, and
        Dunkirk; while, by the care which he bestowed upon the fleet, France was never more
        formidable at sea than at this period. His commercial system, however, though
        perhaps suited to the wants and temper of France in those days, would not meet
        the approbation of modern political economists. He adopted the protective
        system, and instead of encouraging private enterprise, established monopolies
        by forming the East and West India Companies, as well as those of the Levant
        and of the North. Colbert retained office till his death, in 1683.
   With regard to the
        political consequences of the Reformation, it is certain that Germany, the
        chief scene of that event, viewed as a confederate State, was much enfeebled by
        it. Had the Empire remained united in its allegiance to Rome, or had it become,
        as it at one time promised, universally Protestant, France and Sweden would not
        have been able to play the part they did in the Thirty Years’ War, and to
        aggrandize themselves at its expense. The bad political constitution of the
        Empire, which contained within itself the seeds of perpetual discord, was
        rendered infinitely more feeble by the introduction of Protestantism. Having
        become permanently divided into two or three religious parties, with opposite
        views and interests, materials were provided for constant internal dissensions,
        as well as for the introduction of foreign influence and intrigues. The same
        was also the case in Poland. On the other hand, in those countries where the
        Reformation was entirely successful, as England and the Scandinavian Kingdoms,
        its tendency was to develop and increase the national power. It is true that
        the different German Princes, and especially the more important ones, grew
        individually stronger by the Thirty Years’ War and the Peace of Westphalia.
        Such was the case even with the House of Habsburg, which, after the battle of Prague,
        in 1620, was enabled to render the Crown of Bohemia hereditary. The maintenance
        of a standing force of mercenaries, which existed in most of the German States
        after the war, contributed to the same result, by enabling the Princes to usurp
        the rights of their subjects. The provisions of the Capitulation extorted from
        the Emperor Leopold, in 1658, had the same tendency, by rendering the
        territorial Princes less dependent on the grants of their people; and, as this
        Capitulation was wrung from Leopold through the influence of France, it must be
        regarded as a direct consequence of the Thirty Years’ War. The enhancement of
        the power of the Electors of Bavaria and Brandenburg by this means, is
        particularly striking. In Bavaria, the States, which were seldom assembled,
        entrusted the administration of financial matters to a committee appointed for
        a long term of years; with which the Elector found the transaction of business
        much more easy and convenient. The power of the Prince made still greater
        progress in Brandenburg under Frederick William, the “Great Elector”. After the
        year 1653 the States of the Mark were no longer assembled. Their grants were
        replaced by an excise and a tax on provisions, which the Elector had introduced
        in 1641, immediately after his accession; and, as these did away with the
        direct taxes levied monthly and yearly, they were popular with the
        householders, and there was no difficulty in making them perpetual. The conduct
        of Frederick William in Prussia was still more arbitrary. When the sovereignty
        of that Duchy was finally confirmed to him by the Peace of Oliva, he put
        an end, though not without a hard struggle, to the authority of the Prussian
        States, by abrogating their right of taxation; and he signalized this act of
        despotic authority by the perpetual imprisonment of Rhode, Burgomaster of
        Konigsberg, and by the execution of Colonel von Kalkstein, another assertor of
        the popular rights.
   But it was in the
        direct ratio of the increase of strength in its separate States, that the
        strength of the Empire as a Confederation was diminished, because the interests
        of its various territorial Princes were not only separate from, but frequently
        hostile to, those of the general Confederation and of the Emperor. The minor
        States, which could not hope to make themselves important and respected alone,
        attained that end by combining together. Hence, the Catholic and Protestant
        Leagues, formed under French influence soon after the Peace of Westphalia, and
        under the pretext of maintaining its provisions. These Leagues became still
        more hostile to the Imperial power, when, soon after the election of Leopold,
        they were united in one under the title of the Rhenish League.
   It must be
        confessed that the personal character of the Emperor Leopold contributed not a
        little to produce this state of things. Leopold, who reigned during forty-seven
        years as the contemporary of Louis XIV, was in every respect the foil of the
        French Monarch. Hence much of the diversity in the political development of
        Germany and France. While the Imperial authority was weakened by
        decentralization, Louis was uniting all the powers of the State in his own
        person. Under Leopold, the Diets, the chief bond of German Federation, lost all
        their importance. That of 1663, summoned on account of the Turkish War, he
        opened not in person; and he afterwards attended it only as a kind of visitor.
        He took no care to terminate its disputes on the important subject of the
        Capitulations of future Emperors, and permitted the Assembly to be
        interminable. Thus the authority and constitution of the Diet became completely
        changed. Henceforth neither Emperor nor Prince of the Empire appeared in it in
        person, and the Imperial Assembly shrank into a mere congress of ambassadors
        and deputies without plenipotentiary authority, who, before they could act,
        were obliged to apply to their principals for instructions. Business was
        reduced to a mere empty observance of forms and ceremonies, and a perpetual
        contest of the most trivial kind arose about degrees of rank and titles. Hence,
        from the Court and Diet, formality penetrated through all the ranks of the
        German people. Even in the promotion of natural science, literature, and art,
        the influence of Leopold, though a more learned Prince than Louis, showed
        itself less judicious and efficient. Louis promoted the vernacular literature
        of France by every means in his power, and with such success that he rendered
        the French tongue the universal language of educated Europe. On the other hand,
        little or no Imperial patronage shone on German literature, because almost all
        the men of genius were Protestants. Leopold, who, being bred up to the Church,
        had received a scholastic education, amused himself by inditing Latin
        epigrams and epistles, and by conversing in that language with the learned;
        while, with his courtiers and family, and in the literary assemblies which he
        held in his apartments in the winter, the conversation was usually in Spanish
        or Italian. Hence German literature was still confined in the chains of
        scholastic bondage.
   France, after the
        Peace of Westphalia, presents a picture the very reverse of this. The scattered
        elements of political power, instead of being divided and dissipated, were
        concentrated in a narrow focus, and an intense nationality was developed. The
        progress of France, like that of Germany, had been arrested by the consequences
        of the Reformation, and by the long wars of religion under the Valois. It was
        Henry IV who first restored tranquillity, and
        prepared France to take that place in Europe to which her resources and
        situation called her. But with the demands for liberty of conscience had been
        mixed up a republican spirit, to which even Henry’s own example as the leader
        of a faction may have contributed; and this was further nourished by the
        immunities which he granted to the Huguenots. It was often difficult to
        distinguish between those who merely desired religious freedom and those who
        wished to overthrow the monarchy. Richelieu subdued this dangerous faction and
        founded the absolute supremacy of the French monarchy. Having thus secured
        domestic unity and strength, he turned his attention to the affairs of Europe;
        and by his able, but unscrupulous policy, well seconded by Mazarin, France
        secured, at the Peace of Westphalia, the advantages already related, which were
        further extended by the Peace of the Pyrenees, in 1658.
   Thus, when Louis
        XIV assumed the reins of government he had only to follow the course marked out
        for him. Without wishing to detract from the merit of that Prince, it may be
        safely affirmed that the state of Europe contributed very much to facilitate
        his political career. It was principally the weakness of Germany, resulting
        from the misfortunes of the Thirty Years’ War, and that of the Spanish branch
        of the House of Austria, which created the strength of France, and helped her
        to become for a while the dictator of Europe. Spain, at the Peace of
        Westphalia, was still, indeed, to all appearance, a great Power. She possessed
        Naples, Sicily, and Milan, Franche-Comté, and Flanders, besides immense
        territories in both the Indies. Yet this vast Empire, from the necessity it
        entailed of defending remote provinces connected with it by no natural tie, was
        a source rather of weakness than of strength. France, entrenched within her own
        boundaries, and with scarce a single foreign possession, was a much more
        formidable Power. Spain was also internally weakened through bad government,
        fanaticism, and bigotry. The spirit of the two neighboring countries was
        entirely opposite. While France was founding a new era of progress, Spain was
        falling back into the middle ages. In spite of the declining condition of the
        kingdom, the number and the wealth of ecclesiastics increased to such a degree
        that, in 1636, the Cortes of Madrid, in return for a grant, obtained from
        Philip IV a promise that for the next six years no more religious foundations
        should be established; yet even this limited promise appears not to have been
        fulfilled. At the same time, while most of the principal towns of Spain had
        lost the greater part of their trade, with a corresponding decay in their
        population; while whole districts were in some instances reduced almost to
        desolation, and the kingdom to a state of universal bankruptcy, the Court of
        Spain, mindful rather of its ancient grandeur than of its present misfortunes,
        kept up a splendour and magnificence far
        above its means, and opened in this way another source of poverty. Add to all
        these evils the revolts of Catalonia and Portugal. The annexation of Portugal
        during a period of sixty years had tended to revive the declining power and
        glory of Spain; and now she was not only deprived of this support, but the long
        wars which she entered into for the recovery of that kingdom also became a
        source of weakness to herself and of strength to her enemies.
   If the condition
        of Germany and Spain favored the progress of France, that of England offered no
        obstruction. Cromwell, who assumed the reins of power soon after the Peace of
        Westphalia, flung his sword into the French scale; and the two succeeding
        Stuarts, the pensioners of Louis, seldom ventured to dispute his behests. It
        was not till the accession of William III that England again became a
        considerable Power in the European system. From this time was established a new
        balance of power, the origin and progress of which system is worthy of
        consideration.
         The first well-marked
        symptoms of that national jealousy which ultimately produced the theory of the
        balance of Power may be traced to the ambition of the House of Austria, and the
        suspicion that it was aiming at a universal monarchy. During the reign of
        Charles V, such a consummation seemed no improbable event. Master of Germany,
        Spain, the Netherlands, a great part of Italy, besides his possessions in the
        Indies, that Monarch seemed to encircle the earth with his power, and to
        threaten the liberties of all Europe. It was natural that France, whose
        dominions were surrounded by those of the Emperor, should first take alarm; and
        hence the struggle between Charles and Francis I recorded in the preceding
        volumes. But France had to maintain the struggle almost alone. She sought, indeed,
        allies, and her treaties with the Porte show how the ideas of religion were
        already beginning to be superseded by political ones; she also allied with the
        German Protestants, and by these means she checked the preponderance in Europe
        of the Habsburg House. The policy of England, then directed by the counsels of
        Wolsey, had for its object, the establishment of a balance of power, though
        Henry VIII, himself was, perhaps, more influenced by a feeling of pride at the
        power he could display by intervening between two such powerful sovereigns as
        Charles and Francis, than by any regard to a political balance. Nay, it may
        well be doubted whether Francis was ever actuated by any abstract ideas of that
        kind, and whether he was not rather governed in his hostility to Charles
        sometimes by ambition and the love of military glory, sometimes by the
        requirements of self-defense, or the cravings of unsatisfied resentment.
         THE BALANCE OF
        POWER
         Nevertheless, it
        is certain that the rivalry between France and Austria first gave rise to the
        idea of a balance of power. So great was the impression of alarm created by the
        exorbitant power of the House of Habsburg, that even the abdication of Charles V,
        and its severance into two branches, could not dissipate it. Half a century
        after that event, Henry IV, or his minister Sully, as we have before related,
        formed the scheme of opposing the Theocratic Monarchy, supposed to be the
        object of that House, by a Christian Commonwealth, in which all the nations of
        Europe should be united; a design in which, however chimerical it may appear,
        we see the first formal announcement of the theory of the balance of power as a
        rule of European policy. After the death of Henry IV, French politics changed
        for a while, and a friendly feeling was even established with Spain; but on the
        accession of Richelieu to power, Henry’s anti-Austrian policy, though not his
        extravagant scheme, was renewed, and was continued by Mazarin.
         We are thus
        brought down to the Thirty Years’ War and Peace of Westphalia, which first in
        any degree practically established the European equilibrium. For although the
        attempt of the House of Austria, during the period of Catholic reaction, to
        extend its power along with that of the Roman Church, and thus to found a
        religious and political absolutism which would have been dangerous to all
        Europe, was chiefly opposed by France and Sweden, yet most of the European
        nations had been more or less directly engaged in the war; and only three
        Powers, England, Russia, and Poland, were absolutely unrepresented in the
        Congresses which assembled to arrange the peace. At no preceding epoch, except,
        perhaps, during the Crusades, had the nations of Europe been so universally brought
        together. The Northern Powers now for the first time became of any importance
        in the European system. Sweden had played a part in the war equal to that of
        France, and had reaped corresponding advantages from the peace; and an intimate
        alliance was contracted between these two Powers which lasted a considerable
        period, and was of great importance in the affairs of Europe. Sweden became a
        leading Power in the North; and she only quitted it in the next century to make
        room for Prussia, whose influence had likewise been founded by the events of
        the Thirty Years’ War. Thus Northern Europe added another member to the
        European system, and another element to the balance of power. The discussion
        and adjustment of the differences which had arisen among these various nations
        in the Congresses of Minister and Osnabrück, and the rules then laid down for
        further observance, naturally drew them closer together, and cemented them more
        into one great commonwealth. It was now that the practice of guaranteeing
        treaties was introduced. Before the Peace of Westphalia it would be difficult
        to point to a treaty formed with a direct view to the balance of power; while
        after that event such treaties are frequent. Such were the Triple Alliance of
        1668, the League of Augsburg in 1687, the Grand Alliance of 1701, and others.
        From the same cause also sprang that more intimate, as well as more extended
        diplomatic intercourse which now arose among the nations of Europe. Permanent
        legations were generally established, and the forms and usages of diplomacy
        were brought to perfection. The French ministerial dispatches of this period
        are among the best models of their kind.
         The changes
        produced in the relative strength of nations through the Thirty Years’ War and
        its consequences materially altered their European relations. Before that event
        the House of Austria had been the dominant Power. But the policy of Henry IV,
        of Richelieu, and Mazarin, against that House, had been so successfully pursued
        and consummated, that it was France herself which became in turn the object of
        jealousy and alarm. Louis XIV, before the close of his reign, was thought to
        aim at being the universal monarch; and Europe, to save herself from his
        extravagant ambition, formed new leagues to regulate the political balance. It
        was not, however, till towards the close of the seventeenth and beginning of
        the eighteenth century that all the materials were provided for this purpose.
        Great Britain finally took her proper station as one of the arbiters of Europe
        only in the reign of William III. Nor was it till about the same period that
        the strength of Prussia and Russia began to be developed, and to complete the
        balance.
         The League of
        Augsburg, formed in 1686 under the auspices of William III, may be regarded as
        inaugurating a system of European policy which lasted far into the present
        century; of which, with some interruptions, the mainspring was the rivalry
        between France and England. The alliance between Great Britain and Austria in
        1689 was purely political. There was no question of trade or commerce between
        the two countries, while their sentiments regarding civil and religious
        government were entirely opposite. Their sole object was to check the
        exorbitant pretensions of France, and preserve the political balance. After the
        war of the Austrian Succession, Maria Theresa, deserted her ally, and formed a
        connection with France which lasted down to the time of the French Revolution.
        The declining state of France, however, at that period rendered this alliance
        less important than it might otherwise have proved.
         After the death of
        Louis XIV Prussia and Russia began to assume the rank of great European Powers,
        though their influence was not fully developed till the latter half of the
        eighteenth century, in the reigns of Frederick the Great and Catharine II. By
        their means the north and east of Europe were brought into closer connection
        with its southern and western nations. By this new state of things both France
        and Sweden began in turn to feel that opposition to their predominance which
        they had themselves carried on against the House of Austria.
         As the intercourse
        between the European States became, after that Peace, more frequent and
        intimate, so a more perfect system of international law grew up, and was,
        indeed, required for its regulation. This science had hitherto been very meagre and
        imperfect. There was no system of public law during the Middle Ages. When
        difficult cases arose, appeals were made, sometimes to the Pope, sometimes to
        the Jurists, and especially to the celebrated School of Bologna. Thus, for
        instance, the question between the Lombard cities and the Emperor Frederick
        Barbarossa, at the famous Diet of Roncaglia, in
        1158, was decided by the opinions of four doctors of Bologna, who appear to
        have been guided by the principles of the Roman law. It was natural, from the
        spirit of those ages, that the Pope should be made the arbiter of secular
        disputes, in which his authority supplied the place of a code of public law.
        For the same reason we are not surprised to find that the science had its
        origin among the monks and clergy, in those times almost the sole depositaries
        of learning, and especially among the casuists of Spain. The bigotry of that
        country and the proceedings of the Inquisition naturally attracted the attention
        of the learned to cases of conscience; and it is an appeal to conscience which
        forms the basis of all international law. Hence Spain became unrivalled, as
        well in the number of her casuists as in their intellectual acuteness. The
        attention of these men was first directed towards the principles of
        international law by the discovery of America, which opened up so many
        questions respecting the conduct to be observed towards the natives. We find
        these principles first touched upon in the writings of Francis de Victoria, who
        began to teach at Valladolid in 1525, and in those of his pupil Dominico Soto. Soto, who was confessor to Charles V,
        dedicated his treatise on Justice and Law to Don Carlos. Soto
        was consulted by Charles V when the conference was held at Valladolid between
        Sepulveda, the advocate of the Spanish colonists, and Las Casas, the humane
        champion of the natives of the West India Islands, respecting the lawfulness of
        enslaving those unhappy people. The opinion of the monk, that no distinction should
        be drawn, as to natural rights, between Christian and Infidel, and that the law
        of nature is the same for all, is highly honorable to him, and shows him far in
        advance of his age. The Edict of Reform of 1543 was founded on Soto’s decision
        in favour of the West Indians, and he
        denounced slavery altogether, in whatever shape.
   The science made
        some progress in the hands of Francis Suarez— Suarez, a Jesuit of Granada, who
        flourished at the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth
        century. One of the books of his Tractatus de Legibus ac Deo Legislatore  is
        devoted to the law of nature and nations. It was Suarez who first perceived
        that the principles of international law do not only rest on the abstract
        principles of justice, but also on usages long observed in the intercourse of
        nations, or what has been called the consuetudinary law. His views on this
        point are even clearer than those of his contemporary, the Italian Alberico Gentili, though the
        latter has been by some considered as the founder of the science of public
        law. Gentili’s father, one of the few
        Italians who embraced the Reformation, was forced to fly his country, and sent
        his son to England, where he ultimately obtained the Chair of Law at Oxford.
        Grotius acknowledges his obligations to Gentili’s treatise De
          Jure Belli, published in 1589, and dedicated to his patron the Earl of
        Essex. He had previously published (1583) a treatise De Legationibus, dedicated to Sir Philip Sidney.
   Balthazar Ayala, a
        Spanish writer who flourished about the same time, was not a casuist but
        a jurisconsult. He was Judge Advocate of the Spanish army in the
        Netherlands, under the Prince of Parma, to whom he addressed, 1581, from the
        camp at Tournai, his treatise De Jure et Officiis Bellicis. It is divided into three books; the first of
        which treats of war as viewed by the law of nations, with examples from Roman
        history and jurisprudence. The second book concerns military policy, and the
        third martial law. The ninth chapter treats of the rights of legation.
   Several other
        authors had written on the subject of public law before the time of Hugo
        Grotius, who enumerates most of them at the beginning of his work De
          Jure Belli ac Pacis. Their treatises,
        however, were fragmentary, and the work of Grotius is the first in which the
        subject is systematically handled. Hence Grotius has been justly considered as
        the founder of the public law of Europe, and his book must be regarded as
        forming an epoch in the history of philosophy. We have already recorded
        Grotius’s flight to Paris on account of the Arminian controversy, and the
        composition of his celebrated book in that capital, where it was published in
        1525. Thus, it was written during the first fury of the Thirty Tears’ War, and
        he announces, as his motive for composing it, the licence of
        wars waged without any adequate pretext. Grotius recognizes, as the foundation
        of public law, along with the law of nature, the right springing from custom
        and the tacit consent of nations. In this respect he differs from Puffendorf, who wrote about half a century later, and his followers
        Wolf, Vattel, and Burlamaqui,
        who found the law of nations entirely on the law of nature. Grotius supported
        his views of natural law by passages drawn from the writers of antiquity, and
        thus gave his work an appearance of pedantry for which he has been sometimes
        unjustly reproached, as if he wished to cite those writers as authorities
        without appeal, instead of mere witnesses to the general sentiments of mankind.
        Few authors have exerted a more extensive influence on opinion than Grotius.
        His work soon became a text-book in foreign universities, though its progress
        was slow in England. Gustavus Adolphus is said to have slept with a copy of it
        under his pillow. It was not, however, till after the Peace of Westphalia that
        sufficient materials were collected to build up a complete system of
        international law. Leibnitz first made a collection of treaties to facilitate
        the study. Hence arose the technical school of publicists as opposed to the
        speculative, showing the last development of the science. Moser first founded
        that practical system of international law which rests on custom alone; in
        which school the works of George Frederick de Martens are the most celebrated
   Among other
        characteristics of the period under consideration was the growth of what has
        been called the financial, or mercantile system. The production of wealth, the
        fostering of trade and commerce, became principal objects with most of the
        European Governments. But these subjects were still imperfectly understood. The
        chief aim was to obtain a favourable balance
        of trade, as it was called. With this view tariffs were framed and commercial
        treaties concluded. Recourse was had to restrictive, monopolizing, and
        prohibitory systems, which tended to produce isolation and even war. It was not
        before the latter half of the eighteenth century that philosophers began to
        promulgate more rational theories, or rather to revise some ancient Italian
        ones, and it was reserved for our own age to see them carried into practice.
        Commerce was now chiefly founded on colonization, which had reached a high
        pitch of development, and exercised a material influence on the prosperity and
        power of some of the leading States of Europe, enriching them both by the
        products of various climates and by the manufactures and other articles of
        native industry exported in return. Vast mercantile navies were thus created,
        the nurseries of hardy seamen; while the large fleets of war required for the
        protection of the colonies supplied a new element of national strength. Hence
        the colonial system has played so important a part in the wars and negotiations
        of the last two or three centuries, that we shall here give such a brief
        connected outline of its progress, down to the Peace of Paris in 1763, as our
        limits will permit.
   SPANISH ANSD
        PORTUGUESE COLONIES
         We have already
        taken a general view of maritime discovery and colonization down to the opening
        of the seventeenth century. The Spaniards and the Portuguese, as they were the
        first ocean navigators and discoverers, so they were the only nations which up
        to that period possessed any settlements out of Europe. The Spanish colonies
        were almost confined to the Western Hemisphere. They comprised, on the North
        American continent, New Spain or Mexico, with all the countries dependent on that
        viceroyalty; viz., California on the west, the vast and undefined
        region called New Mexico on the north, and on the east, Yucatan, Honduras, and
        all the countries on the isthmus which separates the two American continents.
        Some of these, however, and especially the northern and western districts, were
        but scantily settled, and subdued rather than occupied. In South America, Spain
        possessed Peru and its dependency, Chili, the kingdom of New Granada, the
        kingdom of Tierra Firme, stretching from the isthmus of Darien to the
        mouth of the Orinoco, and the southern colony of La Plata, or Paraguay. All
        these vast regions were subject to the Viceroy of Peru. Besides these
        continental possessions Spain also held all the principal islands in the
        Caribbean Sea.
   The maritime
        enterprises of the Portuguese, the rivals of the Spaniards in discovery and
        colonization, were chiefly directed towards the East. We have already indicated
        generally their settlements in Asia and Africa, as well as the foundation of
        the Empire of Brazil in South America. By the conquest of Portugal by Philip II
        in 1580, all the Portuguese colonies fell under the dominion of the Spanish
        Crown; so that at this period Spain was the sole possessor of all the European
        settlements in America and the East Indies. In the latter quarter the only
        Spanish possession, previously acquired, was the Philippine Isles, occupied in
        1564. These were governed by a viceroy; but they were chiefly valued by the
        bigoted Court of Spain as the seat of Catholic missions, and most of the soil
        belonged to the monks. A regular commerce, carried on by a few South Sea
        galleons, had been established between Manilla and Acapulco, which
        diverted to the East much of the Mexican silver. The union of the Portuguese
        colonies in Asia under the Spanish sceptre, by
        exposing them to the attacks of the enemies of Spain, as well as by the neglect
        which they experienced from the Spanish Government, was one of the chief causes
        of their ruin. Nor had they been governed by the Portuguese in a way calculated
        to promote their strength and provide them with the means of resistance. The
        frequent change of viceroys, who were recalled every two or three years,
        prevented the establishment of a strong administration. King Sebastian rendered
        matters still worse by distributing the colonies under the three independent
        governments of Monomotapa, India, and Malacca, and by further lessening
        the authority of the viceroys by the addition of a council. To these sources of
        decay must be added a wretched system of administration, and the depressing
        influence which a bigoted and superstitious church naturally exercised upon all
        enterprise.
   The shutting of
        the port of Lisbon against the Dutch in 1594, and the edict of Philip III
        prohibiting his subjects from all commerce with that people, were followed by
        the most disastrous effects to the Portuguese colonies. The Dutch being thus
        deprived of their customary trade, and having discovered the weakness of the
        Spaniards at sea, resolved to extend their enterprises beyond the bounds of
        Europe, to which they had hitherto confined them, and to seek at the
        fountain-head the Indian trade, of which they had up to this time partaken only
        at second-hand through the medium of the Portuguese. We have already given a
        general sketch of the progress of the Dutch in the East Indies. Batavia,
        founded in 1619, became the centre of their
        commerce and the seat of their government in the East. Trade, not colonization,
        was their aim. They at first avoided the Indian continent, where the Mogul
        dynasty was then very powerful, and sought in preference to establish
        themselves in the islands, with a view especially to the spice trade.
        Throughout the century their power continued to increase in Asia. In 1661 they
        wrested from the Portuguese Palicata on the
        coast of Coromandel, Calicut, Cochin and Cananor in
        Malabar, together with several places in Ceylon, Malacca, etc. The Portuguese
        were also expelled from Japan, and the Asiatic possessions of that nation were
        ultimately reduced to Goa and Diu. The extensive jurisdiction of the Dutch East
        India Company was divided into the five governments of Java, Amboyna, Ternate,
        Ceylon, and Macassar, besides several directories and commanderies;
        the whole under the central government of Batavia. Their colony at the Cape of
        Good Hope, founded in 1653, constituted a sixth government, and formed a sort
        of defensive outwork to their East Indian possessions.
   The Butch long
        enjoyed their preeminence in the East. The enterprises of the English and
        French, their only rivals in this quarter of the globe, were at first but slow
        and feeble. The attempts of the English East India Company, founded as we have
        said in the year 1600, to open a trade with the Spice Islands, excited the
        jealousy of the Dutch, and the most bloody engagements ensued between the two
        nations in the Indian Ocean and its islands. To put an end to these horrible
        scenes a treaty was concluded in 1619, between James I and the States- General,
        by which the English were to be admitted to a share of the spice trade; but the
        Dutch, by their cruelties at Amboyna, to which we have already referred,
        succeeded in excluding them from the Moluccas. In other respects, also, the
        English East India Company made little progress during the first half of the
        seventeenth century, and seemed on the point of dissolution. It had not attempted
        to make settlements and build forts, and had contented itself with establishing
        a few factories at Bantam, and along the coasts of Malabar and Coromandel. It
        had, however, acquired Madras, by permission of the King of Golcondo (1640). The Protector Cromwell somewhat
        revived the Company, by granting it new privileges (1658). Madras was now
        erected into a presidency. Charles II also enlarged the Company’s political
        privileges, and increased its territorial dominion by assigning to it Bombay
        (1668), which he had acquired as part of the portion of his consort Catharine
        of Portugal. Bombay rapidly increased in importance, and in 1685 the Government
        was transferred thither from Surat. The English power in the East now
        began to make more rapid strides. Before the end of the century, factories and
        forts had been established at Bencoolen in
        Sumatra and at Hooghly; and the district of Calcutta was purchased, and Fort
        William founded in 1699. During this period the French East India Company,
        established by Colbert, had planted a factory at Surat, in Malabar (1675),
        and founded Pondicherry on the coast of Coromandel (1679). Meanwhile, however,
        the Dutch continued to retain their monopoly of the spice trade, the French and
        English commerce chiefly consisting in manufactured articles and raw stuffs.
   The Dutch had not
        confined their enterprises to the East Indies. They had also founded in North
        America, in the in present State of New York, the colony of Nova Belgia, or New Netherlands. Hudson had explored the vast
        regions to the north, and the shores of the great bay which takes its name from
        him; and as Hudson was an Englishman, though he sailed in the Dutch service,
        this circumstance subsequently gave rise to conflicting claims between the two
        nations. The Dutch had also established a West India Company, chiefly with the
        design of conquering Brazil; and in 1630 they succeeded in making themselves
        masters of the coast of Pernambuco. John Maurice, Count of Nassau, who was
        sent thither in 1636, subdued all Pernambuco, as well as some neighboring
        provinces; and by the truce between the States-General and Portugal, in June,
        1641, after the latter country had thrown off the Spanish yoke, it was
        stipulated that the Dutch were to retain these conquests. In spite, however, of
        the peace between the mother countries, the war was renewed in Brazil in 1645;
        the Count of Nassau had been recalled, the Portuguese possessions were
        heroically defended by Don Juan de Vieira; and in January, 1654, the Dutch were
        totally expelled from South America. This was the chief, and, indeed, only
        important reverse which the Dutch, who were now at the height of their
        commercial prosperity, experienced up to this period. Besides their settlements
        in the East Indies, they had extended their trade in the Baltic, and were
        become the chief carriers of Europe. They had also established themselves at
        St. Eustatia, Curaçao, and one or two other
        small West India Islands. The first check to this prosperity was experienced
        from the rivalry of England, and especially from the celebrated Navigation Act,
        to which we have before adverted.
   ENGLIAH
        COLONIZATION IN AMERICA
         The English,
        indeed, under the sway of the pacific James, a instead of opposing the Dutch in
        the East, had chiefly directed their attention to the Western Hemisphere, where
        their establishments made a surprising progress during the first part of the
        seventeenth century. In this period they occupied the Bermudas, Barbadoes, St. Kitt’s, Nevis, the Bahamas, Montserrat,
        Antigua, and Surinam. In 1655, Jamaica fell into their power as it were by an
        accident. But more important than all these settlements was the vast progress
        made in the colonization of the North American Continent, to which a great
        impulse had been given by the voyage of Bartholomew Gosnold,
        in the last year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. By steering due west, instead
        of taking the usual southern route, Gosnold made
        the land at the promontory which he named Cape Cod, thus shortening the voyage
        by a third. The reports which he brought home of the inviting aspect of the
        country created a great sensation in England; and, as they were confirmed by
        other navigators who had been dispatched purposely to ascertain their
        correctness, plans of colonization began to be formed. Richard Hakluyt, a Prebendary of
        Westminster, the publisher of the well-known Collection of Voyages,
        was a distinguished promoter of this enterprise. In 1606 King James I divided
        the whole western coast of America, lying between the 34th and 45th degrees of
        north latitude, into two nearly equal portions; which retained the name of
        Virginia, bestowed on this part of the American continent in honor of Queen
        Elizabeth, in whose reign, as already mentioned, Raleigh had made an
        unsuccessful attempt to colonize it. The two divisions made by James were
        respectively called the First, or South, and the Second, or North Colony of
        Virginia; but the latter portion obtained, in 1614, the name of New England.
        The settlement of Southern Virginia was assigned to a London Company; that of
        the Northern portion to an association formed in the West of England, and
        called the Plymouth Company. James Town, in Virginia, founded by Captain
        Newport, in 1607, was the first English settlement in the New World. It was,
        however, Captain Smith who, by his courage and perseverance in defending the
        infant colony from the attacks of the native savages, and in cheering the
        settlers when dejected by famine and disease, may be regarded as its true
        founder. After an existence of only two or three years, the colony was on the
        point of being abandoned, when the arrival of Lord Delaware with supplies, and
        the wise measures which he adopted as Governor, saved it from dissolution. Soon
        afterwards tobacco began to be cultivated, negro slaves were introduced, the
        colony gradually increased in numbers, and extended its settlements to the
        banks of the Rappahannock and the Potomac. Yet, in 1624, when the London
        Company was dissolved, scarce 2,000 persons survived out of 9,000 who had
        settled in Virginia. Charles I granted the Colony a more liberal Constitution
        in 1639, after which it went on rapidly improving. At the beginning of the
        Civil War it contained 20,000 inhabitants, and by 1688 their numbers exceeded
        60,000.
   If the
        colonization of Virginia was a work of labour and
        of difficulty, that of New England at first proceeded still more slowly. For
        many years the Plymouth Company effected little or nothing. The first permanent
        settlement was made in 1620 at New Plymouth, in the present State of
        Massachusetts, not, however, under the auspices of the Company, but by some
        members of the sect of the Brownists, who had
        proceeded thither of their own accord. A charter was granted in 1627 to a
        company of adventurers, mostly Puritans, for planting Massachusetts Bay, and by
        these Salem was founded. Emigrants now began to pour in, and in a few years
        arose the towns of Boston, Charles Town, Dorchester, and others. That spirit of
        fanaticism and intolerance which had led the Puritans to cross the Atlantic,
        accompanied them in their new abodes, and, by the disputes which it excited
        among themselves, was incidentally the means of extending colonization. Thus
        many of the inhabitants of Salem followed, in 1634, their banished pastor,
        Williams, and founded Providence and Rhode Island; while the secession of one
        of two rival ministers at Massachusetts Bay led to the settlement of
        Connecticut (1696). New Hampshire and Maine were next established, but did not
        obtain a regular Constitution till after the accession of William III. Towards
        the period of the Civil Wars the tide of emigration to the New England colonies
        set in so strongly that masters of ships were prohibited from carrying
        passengers without an express permission. It is computed that by 1640 upwards
        of 21,000 persons had settled in those districts. In 1643 the four settlements
        of Massachusetts, Plymouth, Connecticut, and Newhaven formed a Confederation,
        under the name of the United Colonies of New England. Maryland was settled in
        1632, mostly by Roman Catholics of good family, who proceeded thither under the
        conduct of Lord Baltimore.
   In the latter half
        of the seventeenth century the English began to spread themselves beyond the
        boundaries of New England and Virginia. In 1663 Charles II bestowed the land
        between the 31st and 36th degrees of north latitude on eight lords, who founded
        Carolina, afterwards divided (in 1729) into North and South Carolina. The
        colonization of this district had been previously attempted both by French and
        English settlers, but without success. Locke drew up a plan of government for
        Carolina, based on religious toleration, though its political principles were
        not so liberal. The rulers of the colony became tyrannical; and Granville, who,
        as the oldest proprietor, had become sole Governor in 1705, endeavored to make
        the non-conforming settlers return to the Church of England. All the Governors,
        except Carteret, who retained his eighth share, were stripped of their
        prerogatives in 1728, when the government of the province was vested in the
        Crown. The State of Pennsylvania was settled by Penn, the Quaker, in 1682, the
        land being assigned to him by Charles II for a debt. Thus all the religious
        sects of England had their representatives in the New World. Georgia, the last
        province founded by the mother country, had its origin in 1732. It consisted of
        territory separated from South Carolina. It was first settled, under the
        superintendence of General Oglethorpe, by prisoners for debt, liberated by a
        bequest, and aided by subscriptions and a Parliamentary grant. In 1735 it was
        increased by the arrival of some Scottish Highlanders, and of German
        Protestants from Salzburg and other parts: but it was ill-managed, and never
        attained the prosperity of the other settlements. The erection of this colony
        occasioned disputes with the Spaniards, who claimed it as part of Florida. The
        provinces of New York, New Jersey, and Delaware—which last was subsequently
        incorporated with Pennsylvania—arose out of the conquest of the Dutch
        settlement of Nova Belgia, in 1664, confirmed to
        England by the Treaty of Breda in 1667.
   The French also
        began to turn their attention to colonization early in the seventeenth century,
        but their attempts were not in general so happy as those of other nations.
        Henry IV, indeed, laid claim to all the territory of America situated between
        the 40th and 52nd degrees of north latitude, under the title of New France,
        embracing Newfoundland, Acadia, Canada, etc., besides a great part of the
        subsequent English Colonies. The French first settled in Acadia, in 1604, and
        the more important colony of Canada was founded in 1608. Its progress, however,
        was very slow. In 1626 it had only three wretched settlements, surrounded with
        palisades, the largest of which counted only fifty inhabitants. One of these
        was Quebec, the future capital. The continual attacks to which Canada was
        exposed, both from the English and Iroquois, prevented it from attaining any
        importance till about the middle of the century. Montreal was founded in 1641,
        and in 1658 Quebec became the seat of a bishop. The colony felt the impulse
        given by Colbert to French enterprise. Troops were sent thither, the Iroquois
        were gradually subdued, and in 1687 Canada numbered 11,000 inhabitants. It was
        also under the auspices of Colbert that Louisiana was explored and claimed by
        the French Crown. Cavelier de la Salle, a
        native of Rouen, and celebrated navigator, having discovered the Mississippi,
        descended that river to its mouth in 1682, and claimed for France the tracts
        which it waters, as well as the rich countries on each side, lying on the Gulf
        of Mexico. These vast regions obtained the name of Louisiana, in honor of the
        French King.
   The French also
        made some acquisitions in the West Indian Archipelago. They settled at
        St. Kitt’s in 1625 (though in conjunction with the English) and at Martinique
        and Guadaloupe, ten years later. These islands,
        first occupied by private enterprise, were purchased by Colbert for the French
        Government in 1664, together with several others, as St. Lucie, Grenada,
        Marie Gulante, St. Croix, Tortosa, etc., some of which had belonged to the Maltese. A
        subsequently much more important settlement than these was the French portion
        of St. Domingo, originally formed by the Buccaneers; a band of desperate
        pirates and adventurers, English as well as French, who, about the year 1630,
        had established themselves at Tortuga, a small rocky island on the north coast
        of Hispaniola, for the purpose of preying upon the Spanish trade. Hence they
        began gradually to make settlements in the western part of Hispaniola, or St.
        Domingo. After 1664 these freebooters were recognized and supported by the
        French Government; the right of possession was not contested by Spain, and
        after the accession of a Bourbon Prince to the throne of that country, half St.
        Domingo remained in the hands of France.
   The Dukes The
        Dukes of Courland must also be ranked among the as American colonizers. Duke
        James II, who possessed a considerable fleet, which he employed in discoveries
        and commerce, besides erecting several forts in Africa, encouraged his subjects
        to settle in the Island of Tobago. The flourishing condition to which they
        brought it roused the avidity of the Dutch. Two Dutchmen, the brothers Lambsten, by offering to hold Tobago as a fief under Louis
        XIV, obtained the encouragement of that King. The Duke of Courland claimed the
        protection of Charles II, to whose father he had been serviceable; and, by a
        treaty of November 28th, 1664, he abandoned to England the fort of St. Andrew,
        in Guinea, reserving only some commercial rights to his subjects, and agreed to
        hold Tobago as a fief under the English Crown. The Dutch, however, would not
        surrender the island, which they called New Walcheren. It was taken in 1678 by
        Marshal d'Estrées, who, after reducing it to the
        condition of a desert, abandoned it. After this it was long regarded as
        neutral.
   The colonies of
        the various European nations remained down to the peace of Utrecht, in 1713,
        much in the same relative condition that we have described, though they
        increased, of course, in wealth and importance. The chief feature of the
        Spanish colonies was the progress made by the Jesuit missions in Paraguay. The
        Portuguese, more fortunate in Brazil than the East Indies, enlarged their
        possessions by founding San Sacramento on the Plata (1681); subsequently,
        however, the source of bitter disputes with Spain. They were also enriched by
        the discovery of gold mines near Villa Rica in 1696. The Dutch had added to
        their possessions in America Surinam, Essequibo, and Berbice.
   The Treaty of
        Utrecht gave a great impulse to the English colonies and trade. The Asiento,
        or right of supplying the Spanish colonies with slaves, and the privilege of
        visiting the fair of Vera Cruz, proved very profitable, though rather by the
        opportunities which they afforded for contraband trade than by the direct
        advantages which they offered. Almost all the trade of Spanish South America
        now fell into the hands of the English. The South Sea Company, founded in 1711,
        began to flourish apace. The questions, however, which arose out of this
        traffic respecting the right of search occasioned a war with Spain, as we shall
        have to relate in another chapter. Spain had beheld with bitter, but helpless
        jealousy, the colonial progress of England. By the donation of Pope Alexander
        VI, even as modified by the Treaty of Tordesillas, she conceived herself
        entitled to all the continent of North America, as well as the West India
        Islands. It was not till 1670, in the reign of the Spanish King Charles II,
        during which England and Spain were on a more friendly footing than at any
        other period, that the English possessions in America had been recognized.
        After the accession of his grandson to the Spanish throne, Louis XIV conceived
        the hope of checking the maritime and colonial power of England, which, from an
        early period of his reign, had been the object of his alarm and envy. The
        results of the war of the Spanish Succession were, however, as we have
        seen, favourable to English commerce and
        colonization. Besides the advantages already mentioned, conceded by Spain in
        the Peace of Utrecht, England obtained from France Hudson’s Bay, Newfoundland
        (though with the reservation of the right of fishery), Acadia, now called Nova
        Scotia, and the undivided possession of St. Kitt’s. Thus the sole
        possessions which remained to France in North America were Louisiana, Canada,
        and the island of Cape Breton. The places ceded to Great Britain were, however,
        at that time little better than deserts. The alliance between France and
        England, after the death of Louis XIV, was favourable to
        the progress of the French colonies. Their West India islands flourished, on
        the whole, better than the English, from the greater commercial freedom which
        they enjoyed, as well as from the custom of the French planters of residing on
        their properties. In North America the attempt of the French to connect Canada
        with Louisiana, by means of a line of forts, occasioned a bloody war, as we
        shall have to relate in another chapter.
   In the East Indies
        no material alteration took place either in in the French or English settlements
        till after the fall of the Mogul Empire. The French had taken possession, in
        1690, of the Isle of France, and in 1720 of the Isle of Bourbon, both which
        places had been abandoned by the Dutch. After the death of Aurengzebe in 1707, the Mogul Empire began to decline,
        and the incursion of Nadir Shah in 1739 gave it a death-blow. The subordinate
        princes and governors, the Soubahs and
        Nabobs, now made themselves independent, and consequently became more exposed
        to the intrigues and attacks of Europeans. The most important of these princes
        were the Soubah of Deccan (the Nizam),
        on whom were dependent the Nabob of Arcot, or
        the Carnatic, the Nabobs of Bengal and Oude, and the Rajah of Benares.
   It seemed at this
        period as if the French, under the conduct of Labourdonnais and
        Dupleix, would have appropriated India; but the bad understanding between those
        commanders prevented the success which they might otherwise have
        achieved. Labourdonnais captured Madras in
        1746, which, however, was restored to the English by the Peace of
        Aix-la-Chapelle. The conquests of Dupleix and Bussi were
        still more extensive and important. They obtained the circars or
        circles of Condavir, Mustapha-Nagar, Ellora, Radja-Mundri, and Tehicacobe,
        with Masulipatam as capital, together with
        large districts near Carical and
        Pondicherry, etc.; in a word, the French, about the middle of the eighteenth
        century, held at least a third of India. But the recall of Dupleix, who was
        succeeded by the unfortunate Lally, and the
        appearance of Lawrence and Clive, secured the preponderance of the English
        domination. Masulipatam was taken by the
        English in 1760, Pondicherry in 1761, when its fortifications were razed; and
        though Pondicherry was restored by the peace of 1763, it never recovered its
        former strength and importance. In like manner, the success of the English in
        the war which broke out in America in 1754, and especially the taking of Quebec
        by General Wolfe in 1759, compelled the French to abandon all their possessions
        on the American continent, except Louisiana, at the same peace.
   No great
        alteration was experienced during this period by the colonies of other European
        nations. Though the English had taken Porto Bello and Havannah,
        they were restored to Spain at the Peace of Paris. Brazil, after the Peace of
        Utrecht, had increased in prosperity and wealth. The Dutch experienced no
        sensible diminution of their East India commerce before the Peace of Versailles
        in 1783. The colonial transactions of other nations are unimportant. The Danes,
        who had occupied the West India island of St. Thomas since 1671, purchased St.
        Croix from the French in 1733. In the East Indies they had obtained possession
        of Tranquebar. The Swedes also established an East India Company in 1731,
        but merely for trading purposes.
   With regard to the
        inward and domestic life of the European States after the close of the great
        struggle for religious freedom, it does not appear that the Reformation was
        immediately favourable to civil liberty,
        except in the case of the Dutch Republic. The principles of the Reformation had
        been introduced into Holland against the will of the Sovereign, and while the
        Dutch people had become universally Protestant, their ruler was one of the most
        bigoted Papists in Europe. Hence persecution on the part of the Government,
        resistance on that of the subject, brought the question of civil obedience, as
        well as of religious submission, to an immediate issue. Liberty of conscience
        could not be enjoyed unless supported by political freedom ; and, after a
        glorious struggle of eighty years, both were confirmed to the Dutch by the
        Peace of Westphalia. But in other countries where the principles of the
        Reformation had been generally adopted, they had been introduced at least with
        the connivance, if not with the direct support of the Government. Such was the
        case in England and in the Northern States of Europe. The immediate effect of
        this was to strengthen the power of the Monarch, by throwing into his hands a
        vast amount of ecclesiastical property and patronage. He no longer shared with
        a foreign potentate the allegiance of his subjects, and diverted into his own
        exchequer tributes which had formerly flowed to Rome. Hence it was that the
        Tudors became absolute monarchs. It was also in a great measure from this cause
        that the Electorate of Brandenburg was developed into the powerful Kingdom of
        Prussia. In those countries also where the Reformation, though partially
        introduced, did not succeed in establishing itself, its effects, like the
        quelling of an ineffectual rebellion, were at first favourable to
        the power of the Sovereign. We have already adverted to this effect, in the
        case of some of the German sovereignties; and it has been shown how the
        religious wars of France enabled the King to reduce the power of the great
        nobles, and to concentrate the government of the kingdom in his own hands; a
        work consummated by the policy of Richelieu. Hence, generally speaking, and
        with regard more especially to the European Continent, never was monarchical
        power displayed in greater fullness than in the period extending from the Peace
        of Westphalia to the first French Revolution. Most of the wars of that era were
        waged for dynastic interests and kingly glory.
   It was impossible,
        however, that the impetus given to the human mind by the bursting of its
        religious bonds should be altogether arrested. It could not be that the spirit
        of inquiry, when once awakened, and directed to all the branches of human
        knowledge, should not also embrace the dearest interests of man—the question of
        his well-being in society, of his right to civil liberty. This question, as we
        have said, was first practically solved in Holland. Yet it was not a solution
        calculated to establish a theoretical precedent. The revolt of the Dutch can
        hardly be called a domestic revolution. It was an insurrection against a
        foreign Sovereign; nor was it in its essence an appeal to the people, as the
        only legitimate source of power. To establish a Commonwealth, so far from being
        the object of the Dutch, was not even at first contemplated by them. They
        became republicans only because they could find no eligible master, and because
        it was the only method by which they could maintain their ancient rights. The
        true solution was first given in England. The theories respecting kingly power
        put forward by the first Stuart kings of England, as well as their adoption of
        religious principles at variance with those held by their Puritan subjects,
        cost Charles I his Crown and his life, and ultimately, through a long chain of
        consequences, resulted in establishing constitutional monarchy. It was these
        precedents, and the debates and discussions with which they were attended, the
        free utterances of the only truly national assembly in Europe, and the writings
        of men like Milton, Sidney, Locke, and others, which established not only for
        England, but all Europe, the true model of liberty combined with law and order.
        Thus the most striking instances and most influential examples of civil liberty
        in modern times were mainly the offspring of the Reformation.
         It remains to view
        some religious phases of the period under consideration. In conformity with its
        general spirit, fanaticism itself seemed to assume a milder form than in the
        exciting period of the Reformation. Instead of the Anabaptists and their
        atrocious absurdities, we find the Pietists and the Moravian
        Brethren. Even the Roman Catholic Church had its sects of a somewhat analogous
        kind.
   The Pietists were
        founded by Philip Jacob Spener. Born at Rappoltsweiler in Upper Alsace, in 1635, Spener became a preacher at Strassburg,
        and subsequently principal minister at Frankfurt. Instead of the dogmatical subtleties
        which had been the chief themes of the Lutheran preachers, he endeavored to
        introduce a more practical system of Christianity; and with this view he began,
        in 1670, to hold private prayer meetings, which he called Collegia Pietatis—whence
        the name of his followers. In these meetings, texts from the Bible were
        discussed in a conversational manner. His system, which is explained in his
        work entitled Pia Desideria, was intended to put the finishing
        hand to Luther’s Reformation, which he considered as only half completed. Such
        a system naturally led to separatism, or dissent, which, however, he himself
        disclaimed. His sect may be regarded as a sort of German Methodists, or, as we
        might say, Low Church party. In 1686 John George III, Elector of Saxony,
        invited Spener to Dresden. The old Lutheran
        orthodoxy, by laying too much stress upon the saving power of faith, had caused
        many of its followers to neglect altogether the practice as well as the
        doctrine of good works. If they attended church punctually, communicated
        regularly, and discharged all the other outward observances of religion, they
        considered that they had done enough for their justification, and were not over
        strict about the morality of their conduct. The Elector himself may be included
        in this category, and some remonstrances of Spener’s,
        which were considered too free, caused his dismissal from Dresden in
        1691. Spener now went to Berlin, and in
        1705 he died at Halle.
   One of Spener’s most celebrated followers was Count Nicholas
        Louis von Zinzendorf, born at Dresden in 1700. The inclination which Zinzendorf
        displayed in early youth towards the sect of the Pietists, induced his
        friends to send him to Paris, with the view of diverting his mind from such
        thoughts. But his stay in that capital (1719-21) was precisely the period when
        the Jansenist controversy was at its height; the discussion of which
        subject, as well as his intercourse with Cardinal Noailles, only served to
        increase his religious enthusiasm. After his return to Dresden Zinzendorf began
        to hold Collegia Pietatis in imitation of Spener’s.
        At these meetings he became acquainted with Christian David, a journeyman
        carpenter of Fulneck in Silesia. It was in
        the neighborhood of Fulneck that the
        Bohemian Brethren, the last remnants of the Hussites, had contrived to maintain
        themselves, by ostensibly complying with the dominant Church, whilst in private
        they retained the religion of their forefathers. Some inquisitions, made by the
        Imperial Government in 1720, having compelled the members of this sect to
        emigrate, Christian David proceeded to Dresden, where, as we have said, he
        became acquainted with Count Zinzendorf, and obtained permission to settle with
        some of his brethren on that nobleman’s estate of Bertheldsdorf in
        the neighborhood of Zittau in Lusatia. The
        first colony was planted on the Hutberg in
        1722, and was called Herrn-hut (the
        Lord’s care). The creed of the Moravian Brethren seems to have been an
        indiscriminate mixture of Lutheran and Calvinistic tenets with those of their
        own sect. Count Zinzendorf added to these some peculiar notions of his own;
        establishing as his main dogma the wounds and sacrifice of Christ, or, as he
        styled it, the Blood and Cross Theology. In 1737 he procured himself to be
        named bishop of this new sect. Frederick II of Prussia, after his conquest of
        Silesia, protected the rising colony, and allowed it the open and independent
        exercise of its worship. The numbers of the Herrn-huter,
        or Moravian Brethren (so called from the first members being refugees from
        Moravia), soon wonderfully increased, and they spread themselves in most parts
        of the world. Count Zinzendorf died in 1760, at Herrnhut,
        which is still a flourishing little town.
   Of the sects which
        sprung up in the Roman Catholic Church, the most celebrated was that of
        the Jansenists, so called from its founder, Cornelius Janssen, a Fleming.
        Educated at Louvain, which he quitted in 1617, Janssen ultimately became Bishop
        of Ypres. The distinguishing feature of his system was the adoption in their
        most rigid form of the tenets of St. Augustine respecting predestination and
        absolute decrees. In fact, Jansenius and
        his followers, except that they retained some of the sacraments of the Romish Church,
        and especially that of the Eucharist, approached more nearly the doctrines of
        Calvin than those of Rome. Jansenius explained
        his views in his book entitled Augustinus.
   Jansenism was
        introduced into France by Jean Duvergier de Hauranne, the friend and fellow-collegian of Janssen. Duvergier, by birth a Basque, became abbot of the little
        monastery of St. Cyran, in Provence; an office
        which he refused to exchange for the episcopal mitre.
        In 1635 St. Cyran became the spiritual
        director of Mother Angelica (Angelica Arnaud), the Superior of Port Royal, the
        celebrated Parisian convent of Benedictine nuns. Under the auspices of
        St. Cyran, Jansenism became the creed of the Society.
        Like other apostles, however, St. Cyran had
        to endure persecution. Neither the political nor the religious tenets of
        the Jansenists were agreeable to Cardinal Richelieu. The Bishop of
        Ypres had violently opposed and denounced Richelieu’s designs upon Lorraine and
        the Spanish Netherlands in a pamphlet entitled Mars Gallicus. St. Cyran himself,
        suspected on account of his connection with an enemy of France, had opposed the
        cassation of the marriage of the King’s brother, Gaston d'Orleans, with Margaret of Lorraine.His own
        freely expressed opinions and those of his disciples of Port Royal respecting
        kings were but ill-suited to royal ears in those days. He had also offended
        Richelieu by haughtily repulsing all his advances and repeatedly refusing the
        offer of a bishopric. In May, 1638, a lettre de
          cachet transferred St. Cyran to
        the dungeon of Vincennes. Persecution, however, as usual, served only to
        attract attention and add a new interest to his life and opinions. Port Royal
        acquired more influence than ever. It was now that the distinguished recluses
        began to gather round it to whom it chiefly owes its fame. The first of these
        were kinsmen of the abbess—her nephew Antony Lemaistre,
        her brother Antony Arnaud, the author of the celebrated treatise De
          la fréquente communion. These hermits,
        as they were called, and their pupils, inhabited a separate building
        called La maison des hommes.
        It was Arnaud and his colleague Nicole who published those works on grammar,
        logic, and other branches of education which still preserve their reputation.
        The Jesuits found themselves worsted in their own peculiar domain as
        instructors. A still greater champion appeared rather later in the Society—Blaise Pascal,
        the author of the Pensées, the redoubtable adversary of the Jesuits.
        Pascal, who had become a convert to Jansenism in 1646, entered Port Royal in
        1654. His Lettres Provinciales (Letters to a Provincial) were a
        terrible blow to the Jesuits. It was after this period that they began to
        direct their attention more to worldly affairs and commerce, to their ultimate
        ruin.
   The dangerous
        tendency of Jansenism had not escaped the vigilance of Rome and the more
        orthodox clergy. Jansenius’s work Augustinus was condemned by a bull of Pope
        Urban VIII in 1643. In 1644, at the instigation of the Jesuits, eighty-five
        French bishops presented to Urban’s successor, Innocent X, five
        propositions, extracted, as they said, from the Augustinus,
        for condemnation as heretical. Only a small minority of prelates stood up in
        their defence, but it was not till 1653 that Innocent
        condemned them. The Papal bull was accepted by Anne of Austria and Mazarin, by
        the Bishops and the Sorbonne; Port Royal and the Jansenists seemed on
        the verge of destruction, when they were saved by the Provincial Letters.
   In spite of the
        hostility of Louis XIV, repeatedly manifested, the Jansenists were
        destined to survive his reign, though Port Royal fell before its close. The
        imprudence and disputatious humour of
        the Jansenists brought their doctrines again into question in 1702.
        The King’s antipathy to them was increased by some papers seized at Brussels in
        the house of their chief, Father Quesnel; from which it appeared that they
        had formerly purchased the Isle of Nordstrand,
        on the coast of Holstein, to form an asylum for their sect; and also that they
        had endeavored to get themselves comprised in the truce of Ratisbon in
        1684, under the name of the “Disciples of St. Augustine”, as if they formed a
        political body like Lutherans or Calvinists. Louis, in his own name, and in
        that of Philip V, now besought Pope Clement XI to renew against the Jansenists the
        constitutions of his predecessors. Clement complied by a bull, which was
        accepted by the French clergy, in spite of the opposition of Cardinal de Noailles,
        Archbishop of Paris (1705). To revenge themselves on Noailles, the Jesuists obtained from Clement a condemnation of Quesnel’s Moral
          Reflections on the New Testament; a book of much repute, which had been
        published under the superintendence of the Cardinal, and which Clement himself
        is said to have praised. A ruder stroke was the suppression of the Abbey of
        Port Royal. The nuns had refused to accept the Papal bull of 1705. Le Tellier,
        who had succeeded Père La Chaise as the King’s confessor, resorted to violent
        measures, and the Cardinal de Noailles, to clear himself from the
        suspicion of being a Jansenist, gave his sanction to them. In November,
        1709, the nuns of Port Royal were dragged from their abode and dispersed in
        various convents; and the famous abbey itself, consecrated by the memory of so
        much virtue, piety, and talent, was razed to its foundations.
   Although the
        Cardinal de Noailles had taken part in the persecution of the Port
        Royalists, he refused to retract the approbation which he had given to Quesnel’s book.
        Louis’s Jesuit confessor, Le Tellier, instigated several bishops to
        denounce him to the King as an introducer of new doctrines; the book was
        prohibited by the Royal Council; and Pope Clement XI was requested to give it a
        fresh condemnation in a form which might be received in France. After waiting
        nearly two years, Clement replied by promulgating the famous Bull Unigenitus (September 8th, 1713). Instead of
        the general terms of the former bull, the present instrument expressly
        condemned 101 propositions extracted from the Reflexions Morales.
        Many of these breathe the spirit of true Christianity, and might be found in
        the writings of St. Augustine and even of St. Paul. Noailles and a
        few other prelates protested against the bull; but the King compelled the
        Parliament to register it, and the Sorbonne and other universities to receive
        it, the principal opponents of it being sent into exile. Nevertheless, the
        recusant bishops, who did not exceed fifteen in number, were supported by most
        of the principal religious orders, by the majority of the clergy, and by the
        opinion of the public, always adverse to the Jesuits. Le Tellier now
        endeavored to obtain the deposition of Noailles from the
        Archbishopric of Paris; and he was saved from that degradation only by the
        death of Louis XIV. The disputes proceeded during the Regency. The Jansenists seemed
        to gather fresh strength, and talked of appealing against the bull to a future
        Council. To put an end to the contest, and to save the Parliament, threatened
        with dissolution by the Court for refusing to register a Royal Decree for the
        acceptance of the bull, Noailles at length agreed to subscribe to it,
        with certain modifications. The question, however, was by no means set at rest.
        It was again agitated in the pontificate of Benedict XIII, in 1725; and, in
        1750, it produced a great public scandal and disturbance, as we shall have to
        relate in a subsequent chapter.
   The Quietists,
        another Roman Catholic sect, were much less important than the Jansenists.
        Their mystical tenets—a sort of inward, quiet, contemplation of the Divine
        perfections, a worship of the heart—were too refined and transcendental to attract
        many followers. The founder of the sect in France was Madame Guyon, who
        gave her principles to the world in two works, entitled Le Moyen Court and Les Torrents. The talent and
        enthusiasm of Madame Guyon obtained for her an illustrious disciple
        in Fenelon, Archbishop of Cambrai, the author of Telemachus.
        The sect had previously appeared in Italy, where the doctrines of Quietism had
        been propagated by a Spanish priest named Molinos.
        It had there been found, however—what is not unfrequently the case with
        exalted religious enthusiasm—that these mystical tenets had been productive of
        immorality among his disciples, who imagined that, so long as the soul was
        wrapped up in God, the acts of the body were of little consequence; and, in
        1687, Molinos had been condemned by the
        Inquisition at Rome to perpetual imprisonment. These circumstances at first
        threw a suspicion on the French Quietists, who, however, do not appear to have
        deserved the reproach of immorality. But their doctrines were approved neither
        by the orthodox clergy nor by the Jansenists. Bossuet, the illustrious
        Bishop of Meaux, was their most virulent opponent. He caused Madame Guyon to
        be imprisoned at Vincennes, entered into a violent controversy with Fenelon,
        and procured from Pope Innocent XII a condemnation of that prelate’s work,
        entitled Explication des Maximes des
          Saints sur la Vie Interieure, in
        which he had explained and defended his principles. This affair, as well as the
        publication of Telemachus, entirely ruined Fenelon with Louis XIV and Madame
        Maintenon, and deprived him of all his former influence.
   It is not our
        intention to describe the various religious sects which sprung up in England
        during this period, as the Independents, Quakers, Methodists, and others. As
        the Reformation had a tendency to produce sectarianism in men of enthusiastic
        temperaments, so, on the other hand, among those of more reasoning minds it was
        apt to beget scepticism and infidelity. The
        English School of Freethinkers took its rise in the seventeenth century with
        Hobbes, Shaftesbury, Tindal, Bolingbroke, and others; and hence was derived the
        French sceptical philosophy which produced
        the Revolution.
   
 CHAPTER XLIIITHE INTRIGUES OF ELIZABETH FARNESE,1715-1733
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