|  |   CHAPTER XLVIII.
              
          THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR (CONCLUDED)
          
           
              
         AT this period of
          the Seven Years’ War two events had occurred which had a remarkable influence
          on the views and operations of the contending Powers. These were the death of
          Ferdinand VI of Spain, August 10th, 1759, and that of George II of England,
          October 25th, 1760. Ferdinand VI, though a weak and hypochondriac, was an
          amiable Prince, whose sole pursuits were music and the chase. He had always
          been inclined to maintain peace with England, and the quiet temper of his wife,
          Barbara, daughter of John V of Portugal, which formed quite a contrast to that
          of Elizabeth Farnese, confirmed him in this disposition. Ferdinand’s chief
          Ministers were the Marquis Villarias and the Marquis
          de la Ensenada; but Villarias was soon supplanted by
          Don Joseph de Carvajal, a younger son of the Duke of Linares, a cold, stiff,
          awkward person, but of a strong understanding. Descended from the House of
          Lancaster, Carvajal, from family traditions, was attached to England, though as
          a statesman, he aimed at keeping Spain politically independent of any other
          country. The King was a good deal governed by his Confessor, Father Ravago,
          a Jesuit. But one of the most influential persons at the Spanish Court
          was Farinelli, a Neapolitan singer, who had achieved a great success at
          the London opera, and realized a considerable fortune. Farinelli had
          been employed by the late Queen of Spain to soothe her husband’s melancholy
          with his songs; he gained Philip’s favour and
          confidence, who settled upon him a pension of £2,000 sterling. After the accession
          of Ferdinand, he rose still higher in the royal favour.
          Both the King and his Consort were fond of music, and Farinelli was
          made director of the opera and of all the royal entertainments. Behind all
          this, however, being a man of sense and of modest and unassuming manners, he
          exercised a material influence at Court; his friendship was sought even by
          Sovereigns, and Maria Theresa had condescended to write to him with her own
          hand.
  
         When the war
          between France and England appeared imminent, both Powers contended for the favour and support of the Court of Madrid. Carvajal had
          died in the spring of 1754; but the English party was supported by the Duke
          de Huescar, afterwards Duke of Alva, and by
          Count Valparaiso. Ferdinand himself was averse to the French alliance. He had
          been offended by the Court of Versailles concluding the preliminaries of the
          Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle without his concurrence, and by its refusal to accept
          his favorite sister, Maria Antonietta, as wife of the Dauphin after the
          death of her elder sister, to whom that Prince had been betrothed. Huescar and Valparaiso succeeded in excluding
          Ensenada, a partisan of France, from the management of the Foreign Office; but
          as neither of those grandees wished to take an active part in the Ministry, Sir
          Benjamin Keene, at that time British Minister at the Court of Madrid, directed
          their attention to Don Ricardo Wall, then Spanish Ambassador at London. Wall
          was an Irish adventurer, who had sought fortune in the Peninsula. He had
          distinguished himself in the action with the British fleet under Byng off
          Sicily in 1718; had subsequently entered the land service, and ultimately the
          Civil Service of Spain; and was now, at the recommendation of Keene, appointed
          Foreign Minister. Ensenada, in order to recover his ascendency, had endeavored
          to plunge Spain into a war with Great Britain by dispatching secret orders to
          the Viceroy of Mexico to drive the English from their settlements at Rio
          Wallis. This attempt ended only in the dismissal and arrest of Ensenada. The neutrality
          of Spain, however, became somewhat dubious. France, after the capture of
          Minorca, had endeavored to lure Spain to her alliance with the offer of that
          island, and with a promise to assist her in recovering Gibraltar; a sort of
          underhand privateering warfare, encouraged by the Spanish underlings, had
          broken out between England and Spain, which, together with the petty
          discussions which ensued, had caused much irritation. Pitt took a very gloomy
          view of matters after the defeat of the Hanoverian army. The English Government
          was particularly alarmed by Maria Theresa having admitted French garrisons into
          Ostend and Nieuport, and looked with great
          suspicion on the plans of Austria in Italy. Under the influence of these
          feelings, and by way of counteracting the offers of France, Pitt authorized Sir
          B. Keene to propose to the Court of Madrid the restoration of Gibraltar, as
          well as the evacuation of the settlements made by the British on the Mosquito
          shore and Bay of Honduras since 1748, on condition that Spain should assist
          Great Britain in recovering Minorca. These injudicious proposals, which were
          highly disapproved of by Keene, were fortunately not accepted by the Spanish
          Court; and Ferdinand preserved his neutrality till his death, an event thought
          to have been hastened by grief at the loss of his queen, Barbara, who had died
          a year before. Ferdinand VI was forty-six years of age at the time of his
          death. His peaceful policy was stigmatized during his lifetime as unpatriotic,
          but has since been recognized as wise and salutary for his Kingdom. During the
          fourteen years of his reign Spain quietly improved her agriculture,
          manufactures, and commerce. The enormous exactions and embezzlements of the
          Court of Rome were also reduced by a Concordat with Pope Benedict XIV, January
          11th, 1755; who, in consideration of a million Roman crowns, the patronage of
          fifty-two benefices, the produce of marriage licences,
          and the perpetuation of the Bull of the Cruzada,
          surrendered all further claims—a tolerably advantageous composition.
  
         Ferdinand, by his
          will, appointed his half-brother Charles, King of Naples, to be his successor,
          and Charles’s mother, Italy. the Queen Dowager Elizabeth, to be Regent till her
          son’s arrival. Yet a good understanding had not subsisted between the brothers
          during Ferdinand’s lifetime. Don Carlos, feeling assured of the Spanish
          Succession, which, in failure of direct heirs, had been guaranteed to him by
          the Peace of Vienna, and Ferdinand’s weak health and the age of his queen
          rendering him pretty certain of it, had affected an independence, had caballed
          with parties in Spain, and in conjunction with his brother, Don Philip, Duke of
          Parma, had, in opposition to the Court of Madrid, formed a close union with
          France. The hopes of that country were therefore revived by his accession to
          the Spanish Throne. His arrival in Spain was, however, delayed by the necessary
          arrangements for settling the succession to the Crown of Naples. At the Peace
          of Vienna it had been arranged that the Two Sicilies should
          always be separated from Spain; and by the Treaty of Aix- la-Chapelle, which
          assigned Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla to
          Don Philip, it was provided that if Don Carlos were called to the Spanish
          Throne, and Philip should succeed his brother at Naples, Parma and Guastalla were to revert to Austria, while the Duchy
          of Piacenza, except the Capital and the district beyond the Nure, was to be ceded to Sardinia. Charles, however, was
          desirous that one of his sons should succeed him in his Neapolitan dominions;
          and the Court of Vienna, wishing to conciliate the new King of Spain, did not
          press its claims to the Italian Duchies; while the King of Sardinia, unable
          singly to assert his rights, was compensated with a sum of money. The
          Austro-Spanish Alliance was consolidated by a marriage between the Archduke
          Joseph and a Princess of Parma, and another between Leopold, successor to the
          Grand Duchy of Tuscany, and a Spanish Infanta. Charles’s eldest son,
          Philip, being imbecile, was entirely set aside; his second son, Charles, was
          declared Heir of the Spanish Monarchy, and Ferdinand, the third son, was
          proclaimed King of the Two Sicilies, with the
          title of Ferdinand IV; but as he was only eight years of age, a Regency was
          appointed to govern the Neapolitan dominions till he should come of age. The
          reign of Don Carlos had been beneficial to Naples, where he was very popular.
          He arrived in Madrid December 9th, 1759. One of his first acts was to
          dismiss Farinelli, who retired to Bologna. Wall and most of the former
          Ministers were retained; Ensenada was pardoned and returned to Court, but not
          to power. Charles caused his second son to be acknowledged as Prince of
          Asturias.
  
         The accession of
          Charles III was followed by a change in the policy of Spain. That King had
          conceived an antipathy against the English for having compelled him to desert
          the cause of his House during the Italian War; and though his prejudices were
          mitigated awhile by his Queen, Amelia, a Saxon Princess, favorable to England,
          yet after her death in 1760 they broke out afresh and were sedulously fomented
          by the French Court.
              
         The signal defeats
          sustained by France at sea, and the almost total loss of her possessions in
          America and the East Indies, had forced upon the attention of the French
          Cabinet the necessity for some change of policy. For the first two or three
          years of the war the French had been successful in America. They had formed a
          plan to reduce all the English forts in the neighborhood of the lakes; and the
          capture of Oswego by the Marquis de Montcalm in 1756, when he seized a great
          quantity of vessels, as well as stores and ammunition, gave them for a while
          the superiority in that quarter. In the following year Montcalm captured Fort
          William Henry on Lake George. But this was the term of the French success. In
          1758 the British besieged and took Louisbourg,
          the Capital of Cape Breton, reduced all that island, and also made some
          conquests on the Lakes and the River Ohio. In the same year, in Africa, they
          took Fort Louis on the Senegal, and the Island of Goree.
          In 1759 the British arms were still more successful. After the reduction of
          Cape Breton, a plan was formed for the conquest of Canada; the French were
          defeated near Quebec by General Wolfe, September 13th, in an action in which
          both that Commander and the French General, Montcalm, lost their lives; a
          victory followed by the surrender of Quebec, and in the following year by the
          capture of Montreal and the occupation of all Canada by the English. In the
          same year Guadaloupe, and some smaller islands
          also surrendered to the British arms. In the East Indies the successes of the
          French and English had been more balanced; but on the whole the British arms
          had the advantage.
  
         Two courses lay
          open to the French minister, Choiseul; either to make a separate peace with
          Great Britain, or to fortify himself by an alliance with Spain, and to draw
          that country into a war with England. He resolved to try the former of these
          courses, and in case of failure to fall back upon the other. The death of
          George II and accession of George III were favorable to his views. The young
          King was governed by Lord Bute, an opponent of Pitt’s policy, who had
          succeeded the Earl of Holdernesse as
          Secretary of State for the Northern Department. George III’s English birth and
          education had weaned him from that fondness for the Hanoverian Electorate which
          had been the mainspring of the continental policy of his two predecessors. He
          had declared in the first speech to his Parliament that he gloried “in the name
          of Briton”, and thus indicated a determination to attend more strictly to the
          insular interests of England. Already, indeed, in the preparing of the speech,
          a difference of opinion had manifested itself in the Council. In the first
          draft the King had been made to declare that he ascended the throne in the
          midst of an expensive war, which he would endeavor to prosecute in the manner
          most likely to bring about an honorable and lasting peace; and Pitt obtained,
          with much difficulty, that, in the printed copy, the words “but just and
          necessary” should be inserted after “expensive”, and “in concert with our
          allies” after  “lasting peace”.
  
         Pitt, however, who
          continued to direct the English counsels during the time that he remained in
          office, resolved to prosecute the war as vigorously as ever, and it was with
          him that Choiseul had to negotiate for a peace. As the war between England and
          France for their possessions beyond sea had really nothing in common with the
          continental war, except that they were simultaneous, Louis XV obtained the
          consent of his allies that he should treat with Great Britain for a separate
          peace; while it was proposed that a Congress should assemble at Augsburg with a
          view to a general pacification. Negotiations were accordingly opened between
          the French and English Cabinets in March, 1761. It must be admitted that in the
          course of them the natural haughtiness of Pitt’s temper sometimes led him to
          reject with disdain proposals which seemed reasonable enough. Thus, the French
          minister offered to treat on the basis of uti possidetis, which was certainly favorable to England,
          as the English conquests had been far more considerable than those of France.
          Pitt did not object to this basis, but to the periods fixed for it: namely, May
          1st for Europe, July 1st for Africa and America, and September 1st for the East
          Indies. To a further French communication Pitt delayed to answer. He was, in
          fact, awaiting the issue of the expedition which he had dispatched against
          Belle Isle. A squadron under Commodore Keppel, with 9,000 troops under General
          Hodgson, effected a landing in that island towards the end of April, but the
          citadel of Palais, the capital, was not finally reduced till June 7th.
          Belle Isle is small and barren; but its situation off the coast of Brittany,
          between L'Orient and the mouth of the
          Loire, seemed to give it importance; and it was thought that such a conquest in
          sight of the French coast might, merely as a point of honor, be set off against
          Minorca. Pitt now consented, in a memorial, dated June 17th, to accept the
          dates of July 1st, September 1st, and November 1st, for the uti possidetis, two
          months later than those proposed by France, evidently for the purpose of
          including Belle Isle. Some discussion ensued, and the French Minister delayed
          his final answer till July 15th. Meanwhile the negotiations which had been for
          some time going on between France and Spain had been brought to maturity; and
          the French memorial alluded to, of July 15th, was accompanied with another
          relating to Spain. Several Spanish demands and alleged grievances against
          England were brought forward for settlement, as the restitution by Great
          Britain of some prizes under the Spanish flag; the liberty of Spanish subjects
          to fish at Newfoundland; and the destruction of English establishments on
          Spanish territory in the Bay of Honduras; and in order that the future peace
          might not be disturbed by the quarrels of these two countries, it was proposed
          that the King of Spain should guarantee the peace between England and France.
          Pitt naturally rejected such a proposal with indignation; he expressed his
          astonishment that disputes between friends should be submitted to the mediation
          of an enemy, and that they should be brought forward by a French envoy, while
          the ambassador of his Catholic Majesty was entirely silent upon the subject!
          The French Minister, in his subsequent correspondence, dropped, indeed, all
          mention of Spain; but the reply to the application which the British Cabinet
          now deemed it prudent to make to that of Spain, showed a perfect understanding
          between the two Bourbon Courts. The Spanish Minister, Wall, declared to Lord
          Bristol, who had succeeded Sir B. Keene as English Ambassador at Madrid, that
          the French memorial concerning Spain had been presented with the entire consent
          of his Catholic Majesty; that nothing would induce his Sovereign to separate
          his counsels from those of France, nor deter him from acting in perfect harmony
          with that country. An unsatisfactory answer was also returned to Lord Bristol’s
          inquiries respecting the warlike preparations in the Spanish ports.
  
         Shortly afterwards
          was signed at Paris, the celebrated treaty between France and Spain, known, like
          two former ones, as the Family Compact (August 15th, 1761). This measure had
          been carried through by the Duke de Choiseul and the Marquis de Osuna, the
          Spanish Ambassador at Paris, in spite of the opposition of Wall. The objects
          held out to Spain were, as before, the restoration of Minorca and the recovery
          of Gibraltar. In the preamble of the treaty, the motives of it were said to be
          the ties of blood and reciprocal esteem. The two Bourbon Monarchs agreed in
          future to consider the enemy of one as the enemy of both. They mutually
          guaranteed each other’s dominions when they should next be at peace with all
          the world—for Spain did not undertake to reconquer the possessions lost by
          France during the war—and stipulated the amount of reciprocal succors. French wars
          on account of the Peace of Westphalia, as well as those arising out of the
          alliances of France with German Princes, were excepted from the operation of
          the treaty unless some Maritime Power should take part in them, or France
          should be invaded by land. The King of the Two Sicilies was
          to be invited to accede to the treaty, and none but a Bourbon Prince was to be
          admitted into the alliance. But neither the King of Naples nor the Duke of
          Parma acceded to it.
  
         On the same day a
          particular Convention was signed by the two Powers, by which Spain engaged to
          declare war ultimatum against Great Britain, on May 1st, 1762, if a peace had
          not been concluded at that date. Louis XV undertook to include Spanish
          interests in his negotiations with England; to assign Minorca to Spain on May
          1st following, and to endeavor that it should be assured to her at the peace.
          Portugal was to be invited to join in the war, it being declared unjust that
          she should remain neutral in order to enrich herself. This Convention related only
          to the present war, while the treaty was to be perpetual. These treaties were
          to be kept secret, in order to afford time for the American treasure-vessels to
          arrive in Spain; but the English Government obtained intelligence of them. Such
          a league, of course, overthrew all hopes of peace; yet the French Cabinet
          continued the negotiations, and in its last memorial, of September 9th,
          repeated its offers of large concessions, though with the renewed intimation
          that it could not evacuate Wesel, Geldern, and the
          Prussian possessions in Westphalia, nor consent that Great Britain should lend
          any help to the King of Prussia after the peace. Pitt, with that high sense
          of honour which distinguished him, and
          which forms so favorable a contrast to the subsequent conduct of Lord Bute,
          would not for a moment entertain the thought of thus deserting an ally. He did
          not even condescend to reply to the French memorial, but instructed Lord
          Stanley, who had conducted the negotiations at Paris, to apply for his
          passports, and the negotiations terminated.
  
         The Congress of
          Augsburg had also no result. The King of Prussia objected to any Imperial
          Ambassador appearing at it, as he denied that he was at war with the Empire;
          nor, through the dissensions between the Catholic and Protestant members, could
          the Emperor obtain from the Diet at Ratisbon authority to conclude a
          peace. The Empress-Queen was for continuing the war; and her party prevailed at
          the Russian Court, while Sweden was in the hands of France. The King of Poland,
          whose Saxon dominions suffered terribly by the war, was sincerely desirous of
          peace; but, by himself, he had little weight, and, for fear of offending his
          powerful allies, he hardly ventured to display his peaceable inclinations.
  
         The war had
          continued during these negotiations. In February, 1761, Prince Ferdinand
          penetrated into Hesse, but being repulsed by the French, under Broglie,
          near Grünberg, March 21st, was compelled to
          evacuate the Landgraviate. During the remainder of the campaign he remained on
          the defensive on the banks of the Lippe. The French, under Soubise and Broglie,
          attacked his right wing near Wellinghausen, July
          15th, but were repulsed, and the campaign had no results, though Ferdinand had
          not half the forces of his opponents. The Austrians, in Silesia, under Loudon,
          assisted by a large Russian force, marched on Breslau; whilst another Russian
          army, supported by the Russian and Swedish fleets, besieged Colberg. Frederick covered Schweidnitz and
          Breslau by establishing a fortified camp, first at Kunzendorf near
          Freiburg, where he lay six or seven weeks, and then at Bunzelwitz.
          Here his small army was surrounded by 140,000 Austrians and Russians; the
          latter, however, were not anxious to fight for the benefit of the Austrians,
          and retired, in September, into Poland. After their departure Frederick marched
          to attack Loudon, who had encamped near Freiburg; when the Austrian commander
          took advantage of his departure to surprise Schweidnitz in
          the night of September 30th, and made the garrison prisoners, to the number of
          3,600 men. This action, and the capture of Colberg by
          the Russians, December 16th, are the only memorable events of the campaign in
          this quarter. Frederick’s brother, Prince Henry, succeeded in maintaining
          himself against Marshal Daun in Saxony.
  
         The year 1762
          opened under gloomy auspices for the Alliance of Hanover. Spain was now added
          to the opposite side. After the conclusion of the Family Compact, Pitt
          had counselled an immediate declaration of war against Spain, before
          her preparations should be completed; but his opinion being overruled by
          Lord Bute and the King, the great Minister resigned (October 5th,
          1761). He was succeeded by the Earl of Egremont, but Bute was
          the virtual director of the English Cabinet. The event showed the wisdom of
          Pitt’s advice. The Cabinet of London demanded, at first in measured terms, that
          Spain should communicate the treaty which she had concluded with France. Wall
          evaded this inquiry till the treasure had arrived from America, and then spoke
          out more boldly, while the English demands also became more peremptory. The passports
          of the English Ambassador were made out and delivered to him in December; on
          January 2nd, 1762, England declared war against Spain; to which the Cabinet of
          Madrid replied by a manifesto of the 18th of the same month.
  
         If matters looked
          threatening for England, they were still more menacing for the King of Prussia.
          The retirement of Pitt had deprived him of his best friend. Bute and
          the Tories denounced the foreign policy of that Minister, and prepared to
          withdraw the subsidies which Frederick had hitherto enjoyed. The King of
          Prussia, they alleged, neither had done, nor could do, anything for Hanover or
          England, and all the resources of the country would be required for the war
          with Spain. Bute was not unwilling to sacrifice Frederick for the
          sake of peace, and he made a proposition to that effect, in 1761, to the
          Austrian Court; but Kaunitz, who took the offer
          for a snare to embroil him with the Court of Versailles, rejected it with the
          more disdain, as the prospects of the Empress-Queen were then so brilliant that
          she confidently anticipated the conquest of Silesia. Nay, so sure was she of an
          easy victory, that she reduced her army by 20,000 men. Frederick’s own
          dominions were exhausted, and he knew not where to look for help. The only
          gleam of hope arose from the uncertain expectation of Turkish aid. He had
          negotiated a treaty with the Porte and with the Elian of Tartary, and he was
          not without hopes that they might be induced to make a diversion in his favor
          by invading Hungary. Frederick’s situation seemed truly desperate. He expressed
          his gloomy forebodings, his almost utter despair, in his correspondence with
          the Marquis d'Argens at this period;
          thoughts of suicide again took possession of his mind, and he is said to have
          earned about with him the poison which was to end his miseries. But in this
          extremity of misfortune he was rescued by the death of the Russian Empress,
          Elizabeth, January 5th, 1762; an event which more than compensated him for the
          change of ministry in England. Her extravagance was as unbounded as her
          idleness and aversion to business. She would neglect all business for months
          together, and could with difficulty be persuaded to affix her signature even to
          letters of necessary politeness to the highest potentates.
  
         The change of
          policy adopted by the Tsar, Peter III, after his accession, was the result of
          private friendship, just as Elizabeth’s hostility to Frederick had been the
          effect of personal hatred, without any regard to objects of State policy.
          Peter, who carried his admiration of Frederick, and of everything Prussian, to
          a ridiculous extent, communicated his aunt’s death to Frederick in an autograph
          letter, written on the very evening that it occurred, and desired a renewal of
          their friendship. He also ordered an immediate suspension of hostilities
          between the Russian and Prussian armies. Peter had formed the design of
          recovering that part of Schleswig and Holstein which Denmark had gained through
          the Northern War; for which purpose he meant to employ the troops opposed to
          the Prussians. A truce with Prussia was accordingly signed at Stargard, in Pomerania, March 16th, 1762, and on May 5th, a
          formal peace was concluded at St. Petersburg, by which the Tsar promised to
          restore, within two months, all the Prussian territories which had been
          conquered. It was also agreed that a treaty for an alliance should be prepared,
          the conditions of which are not known, except that each Power was to aid the
          other with 15,000 men. Lord Bute had endeavored to prevent this
          alliance by proposing to the Tsar to choose for himself any part of Prussia
          that he might desire.
  
         Sweden, which had
          suffered nothing but losses in her war with Prussia, followed the example of
          Russia in reconciling herself with that country. The war had cost Sweden, the
          poorest country in Europe, eight million dollars. Adolphus Frederick, had he
          been so inclined, might easily have overthrown the ruling oligarchy, to which
          the Tsar Peter was hostile; but feelings of piety and honor led him to respect
          the oath which he had taken, and he contented himself with working on its
          fears. The conduct of the negotiations was entrusted to the Queen, Frederick
          II’s sister. An armistice was agreed to, April 7th, followed by the Peace of
          Hamburg, May 22nd, by which everything was replaced in the same state as before
          the war. These events enabled Frederick to concentrate his forces in Saxony and
          Silesia. He had not only got rid of the Russians as opponents, but even
          expected their friendly help; but in this hope he was disappointed by another
          revolution. Peter was deposed through a conspiracy organized by his own wife
          (July 9th), who mounted the throne in his stead with the title of Catharine II.
          In the manifesto which she published on her accession, dated June 28th (O.S.),
          she charged her husband, among other things, with dishonoring Russia by the
          peace which he had made with her bitterest enemy, and Frederick, therefore,
          could only expect that she would revert to the policy of Elizabeth. But
          Catharine, the daughter of a Prussian General, born at Stettin, and married
          into the Russian Imperial family through the influence of Frederick, was not
          hostilely inclined towards her native land; and the King’s alarm at her
          manifesto was soon assuaged by a communication that she intended to observe the
          peace with him, but to withdraw the Russian troops from his service. Frederick,
          however, persuaded Russian General, Czernischeff,
          to remain by him with his corps for three days after the receipt of this
          notice; and during this interval, aided by the support which he derived from
          their presence—for though they took no part in the action, Daun, being ignorant of their recall, was compelled to
          oppose an equal number of men to them—he drove the Austrians from the heights
          of Burkersdorf. Two or three months afterwards
          he took the important town of Schweidnitz (October
          9th), when 9,000 Austrians surrendered themselves prisoners of war. This event
          closed the campaign in Silesia. Prince Henry had succeeded in maintaining
          himself in Saxony; and, on October 29th, he defeated the Austrians and the army
          of the Empire at Freiburg.
  
         In Western
          Germany, Prince Ferdinand had also been, on the whole, successful. He drove the
          French from a strong position which they had taken up near Cassel; and though
          the Hanoverians were defeated at Friedberg, August 30th, they succeeded in
          taking Cassel, October 31st. This was the last operation of the war in this
          quarter, hostilities being terminated by the signing of the preliminaries of
          peace, November 3rd. But before we describe the negotiations for it we must
          advert to the war with Spain.
              
         Portugal had been
          forced into the war through the threats of the Bourbon Courts. Joseph I now
          occupied the throne of that Kingdom. John V died in 1750, and Joseph, then a
          minor, was left under the guardianship of his mother, the Queen Dowager, an
          Austrian Princess. During this period Sebastian Joseph of Carvalho and Melo,
          better known afterwards in European history as the Marquis of Pombai, acquired a complete ascendency over the minds both
          of the young King and his mother, and continued many years to administer the
          affairs of Portugal with absolute authority. He had established his influence
          through his wife, the Austrian Countess Daun, a
          daughter of Marshal Daun, and a friend and
          confidante of the Queen. Pombai introduced
          many searching reforms both in Church and State, which he carried through with
          an arbitrary despotism more resembling a revolutionary reign of terror than the
          administration of a constitutional minister. Like Charles XI of Sweden, he
          impoverished the nobles by revoking all the numerous grants made to them by the
          Crown in the Portuguese possessions in Asia, Africa, and America, for which he
          granted but very slender compensation. Those who ventured to oppose his
          measures were treated with the greatest harshness and cruelty; every lonely
          tower, every subterranean dungeon, was filled with State prisoners. His
          enlightened principles formed a strange contrast to the despotic manner in
          which he enforced them. He abolished the abuses of the middle ages by methods
          which seemed fitted only for that period, and proceeded in his work of reform
          regardless alike of civil and ecclesiastical law. He gave a signal proof of his
          severity after the terrible earthquake which, in 1755, shook Lisbon to its
          foundations. Upwards of 30,000 persons are said to have perished; thousands
          more, deprived of all employment, wandered about homeless and starving; the
          Government stores were opened for their relief, and contributions poured in
          from all parts of Europe. It was not one of the least dreadful features of this
          terrible catastrophe that hundreds of outcasts availed themselves of the
          confusion to plunder and commit all sorts of violence. Pombal put an end to
          these excesses in the most summary manner. Guards were stationed at every gate
          and in every street, and those who could not satisfactorily account for any
          property found upon them, were hanged upon the spot. Between 300 and 400
          persons are said to have been hanged in the space of a few days.
  
         Perhaps the most
          searching and salutary of Pombal’s reforms were those which regarded
          the Church. He abolished the annual autos da fe,
          abridged the power of the Inquisition, and transferred the judgment of accused
          persons to civil tribunals. He especially signalized himself by his hostility
          to the Jesuits, as will be recorded in another chapter. The weak and
          superstitious Joseph was by nature fitted to be the slave and tool of the Romish Church;
          it was only the still greater awe inspired by Pombal, combined with fears for
          his own life, that induced him to banish the Jesuits. The King had formed an
          admiration for the wife of the Marquis of Tavora.
          The Duke of Aveiro, head of the family of Tavora,
          pretended to feel indignant at this conduct, and laid a plot against the King’s
          life. The story is involved in considerable mystery, and political motives were
          probably mixed up in the plot. However this may be, several desperadoes were
          placed in ambush at three different spots of the road traversed by the King in
          his secret visits; and, on September 3rd, 1758, while Joseph was
          proceeding incognito to the house of the Marchioness in the
          carriage of his friend Texeira, an attempt was
          made upon his life. The Duke of Aveiro himself fired the first shot
          at the coachman without effect. The coachman turned back, and thus avoided the
          other ambushes; but those in the first fired after the carriage, and slightly
          wounded the King in the shoulder. The members of the Tavora family
          were now arraigned and condemned. The old Marchioness of Tavora, mother of the King’s mistress, was beheaded; the
          Duke of Aveiro was broken on the wheel; their servants were either
          burnt or hanged; and even those distantly connected with the accused were
          thrown into dungeons. The young Marchioness alone, who was suspected of having
          betrayed her mother and relatives, experienced any lenity. As the family
          of Tavora was closely connected with Malagrida and the Jesuits, Pombal seized the
          opportunity to involve that society in the accusation, and to procure their
          banishment from Portugal, though it seems very doubtful whether they were at
          all connected with the plot. The weak and superstitious King himself was
          blindly devoted to the Jesuits; Pope Clement III took them under his
          protection, and Joseph at length consented to their banishment only from the
          more immediate danger with which, according to his Minister, his life was
          threatened from their machinations.
  
         Pombal, among his
          other reforms, had not overlooked the Earmy; but
          a horde of undisciplined vagabonds, who resembled rather bandits than soldiers,
          cannot be converted all at once into effective troops. Even had the Portuguese
          army been better organized, it could apparently have offered but a slender
          resistance to the military force of Spain, when, early in 1762, Charles III
          marched an army to the frontiers of Portugal, and, in conjunction with Louis
          XV, required Joseph I to join them in the war against England. They offered to
          occupy Portugal with a powerful army, to protect it against the vengeance of
          England; and they required an answer within four days, intimating that they
          should consider any delay beyond that period as a refusal of their demands.
          Joseph answered by declaring war against Spain and France, May 18th, 1762; and
          he applied to England for aid; which Lord Bute, notwithstanding his
          pacific policy, could not of course refuse. This step was immediately followed
          by an invasion of Traz os Montes
          by the Spaniards, who, aided by a French corps, made themselves masters of
          Miranda, Braganza, Chaves, Almeida, and several other places; but the
          assistance of an English force, commanded first by Lord Tyrawley, and afterwards by the celebrated German general,
          the Count of Lippe Schaumburg, and ultimately reinforced by 15,000
          men, under Generals Burgoyne and Lee, turned the scales of fortune in favour of the Portuguese. The Spaniards were not only
          compelled to evacuate Portugal in the autumn, but the allies even crossed the
          Spanish frontier and took several places.
  
         Meanwhile the
          negotiations for a peace between England, France, and Spain were brought to a
          close by the signing of preliminaries at Fontainebleau, November 3rd. They
          would have been completed earlier had not Grimaldi, the Spanish Minister,
          deferred his signature in the hope that the English expedition directed against
          the Havannah would miscarry. It proved
          successful, and the British Cabinet consequently raised its demands. Spain,
          besides the Havannah, had also lost, in her
          short war with England, Manilla and the Philippine Isles, nine ships
          of the line, and three frigates, and treasure and merchandise valued at three
          millions sterling. She was not inclined to prolong the war, even could she have
          reckoned on the continued aid of France, for which country peace was become a
          necessity. France also, in the course of 1761 and 1762, had lost the West India
          Islands of Dominica, Martinique, Grenada, St. Lucie, and St. Vincent, and in
          the East Indies, her important settlement of Pondicherry. But the conclusion of
          a definitive treaty was delayed till the differences between the other
          belligerents were arranged.
  
         Frederick, who had
          concluded an armistice with Austria, but not with the Imperialists, resolved to
          hasten the peace by annoying the Princes of the Empire. In the autumn of 1762 a
          Prussian corps entered Franconia and Bavaria, took Bamberg, menaced Nuremberg,
          and pushed on to the very gates of Ratisbon. The Elector of Bavaria, the
          Bishop of Bamberg, and other Sovereigns now resolved to withdraw their
          contingents from the army of execution, so that Prince Stolberg, who commanded
          it, was compelled to negotiate with the Prussian commanders for a suspension of
          arms. Peace was highly necessary for Prussia; Frederick, therefore, readily
          listened to the overtures of Baron von Fritsch, a counsellor of the
          King of Poland, and a congress assembled at Hubertsburg,
          a hunting seat of Augustus, between Leipsic and Dresden, where the
          Conferences were opened at the end of December.
  
         The definitive
          Peace of Paris, between France, Spain, England, and Portugal, was signed
          February 10th, 1763. Both France and England abandoned their allies, and
          neither Austria nor Prussia was mentioned in the treaty. While Bute expressly
          stipulated that all territories belonging to the Elector of Hanover, the
          Landgrave of Hesse, and the Count of Lippe Bucheburg should
          be restored to their respective Sovereigns, he displayed his enmity to the King
          of Prussia by making no such stipulation with regard to Cleves, Wesel,
          and Geldern, but simply requiring their
          evacuation by the French, who were, therefore, at liberty to make them over to
          Maria Theresa. France ceded to England Nova Scotia, Canada, and the country
          east of the Mississippi, as far as Iberville. A line drawn through the
          Mississippi, from its source to its mouth, was henceforth to form the boundary
          between the possessions of the two nations, except that the town and island of
          New Orleans were not to be included in this cession. France also ceded the island
          of Cape Breton, with the isles and coasts of the St. Lawrence, retaining, under
          certain restrictions, the right of fishing at Newfoundland, and the isles of
          St. Peter and Miquelon. In the West Indies she ceded Grenada and the
          Grenadines, and three of the so-called neuter islands, namely, Dominica, St.
          Vincent, and Tobago, retaining the fourth, St. Lucie. Also in Africa, the river
          Senegal, recovering Goree; in the East Indies,
          the French settlements on the coast of Coromandel made since 1749, retaining previous
          ones. She also restored to Great Britain Natal and Tabanouly,
          in Sumatra, and engaged to keep no troops in Bengal. In Europe, besides
          relinquishing her conquests in Germany, she restored Minorca, and engaged to
          place Dunkirk in the state required by former treaties. Great Britain, on her
          side, restored Belle Isle, and in the West Indies, Martinique, Guadaloupe, Marie Galante, and La Desirade. Spain ceded to Great Britain Florida and all
          districts east of the Mississippi, recovering the Havannah and
          all other British conquests. British subjects were to enjoy the privilege of
          cutting logwood in the Bay of Honduras. Spanish and French troops were to be
          withdrawn from all Portuguese territories; and with regard to the Portuguese
          colonies, matters were to be placed in the same state as before the war. This
          clause involved the restoration of San Sacramento, which the Spaniards had
          seized. By way of compensation for the loss of Florida, France, by a private
          agreement, made over to Spain New Orleans and what remained to her of
          Louisiana.
  
         The Peace op Hubertsburg, between Austria, Prussia, and Saxony, was
          signed February 15th, 1763. Maria Theresa renounced her pretensions to any of
          the dominions of the King of Prussia, and especially those which had been ceded
          to him by the Treaties of Breslau and Berlin; and she agreed to restore to
          Prussia the town and county of Glatz, and the fortresses of Wesel
          and Geldern. These places, as we have seen, were
          held by France, between which country and Prussia no particular peace was
          concluded; but they were restored to Frederick by a Convention between the
          French general, Langeron, and the Prussian Von
          Bauer, in March. The Empire was included in the peace, but the Emperor was not
          even named, the King of Prussia’s object being merely to avoid the unnecessary
          complications and delays which his participation would have occasioned. The
          treaty had two secret articles, by the first of which Frederick promised to
          give his vote for the Archduke Joseph at the next election of a King of the
          Romans. The other article regarded the marriage of one of the younger Archdukes
          with a Princess of Modena, with the expectation of succeeding to that Duchy,
          which Frederick undertook to forward. In the peace with the Elector of Saxony
          Frederick engaged speedily to evacuate that Electorate, and to restore the
          archives, etc.; but he would give no indemnification for losses suffered. The
          Treaty of Dresden of 1745 was renewed.
  
         Thus, after seven
          years of carnage, during which, according to a calculation of Frederick’s,
          886,000 men had perished, hardly any territorial changes were made in Europe.
          The political results were, however, considerable. England, instead of France,
          began to be regarded as the leading Power, and the predominance of the five
          great States was henceforth established by the success of Prussia. This last
          result was wholly due to the genius and enterprise of Frederick II, who, in the
          conduct of the war, displayed qualities which procured for him the title of the
          Great. Everything in this great struggle depended on his own personal
          exertions; and it is impossible to overrate the quickness, and, in general, the
          sureness of his conceptions, the happy audacity of his enterprises, his courage
          and endurance under reverses, and the fertility of his resources in extricating
          himself from them. It must, however, be allowed that his genius must, in all
          probability, have at last succumbed to superior force but for some fortunate
          circumstances. These were, the wretched organization of the French armies, the
          want of cordial cooperation on the part of the Russians, the desire of the
          Austrians in the last years of the war to spare their troops, and, finally, the
          opportune death of the Empress Elizabeth.
              
         The part played in
          the war by the Empress-Queen, though unfortunate in the result, can be
          justified, as her efforts were directed to recover what was lawfully her own.
          But the conduct of France, Sweden, Saxony, and Spain, and especially of France,
          must be condemned as a political blunder. With regard to England, the
          expediency of plunging into a continental war for the sake of the Hanoverian
          Electorate alone may well admit of question. It should, however, be remembered,
          that the struggle also concerned the balance of European power. The English
          help was invaluable to Frederick, and Bute acted no very honorable
          part in abandoning him. The Peace was highly unpopular in England, and Bute resigned
          soon after its conclusion.
  
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