| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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| A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
 CHAPTER LXV.
              RISINGS IN SPAIN AND AUSTRIA
           
               AT this period all
          the thrones of Europe had been more or less shaken by Napoleon, except that of
          England, which he could not reach, and that of Spain which had purchased
          exemption from the common lot by a humiliating alliance. The latter also was
          now to feel the shock, but after a different manner. The conquests of Napoleon,
          whatever may be thought of their lawfulness, had hitherto, with the exception,
          perhaps, of Venice, at least been achieved in the open field by military skill
          and force of arms. He was now to show himself a no less consummate master in
          all the arts of intrigue.
               The detested reign
          of Don Emanuel Godoy at length raised up against him at Madrid a party
          determined to rescue the Spanish nation from the disgrace of being governed by
          him. At the head of it were the Duke de l'Infantado,
          of one of the most illustrious families of Castile, and the Canon, Don
          Juan Escoiquiz, who had conducted the education
          of Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, and heir to the crown.
           Ferdinand, who was
          now twenty-three years of age, had espoused, in 1803, a daughter of Queen
          Caroline of Naples. This Princess, whose intriguing character resembled that of
          her mother, soon rendered the Queen of Spain her enemy; Ferdinand naturally
          espoused the quarrels of his wife, and Escoiquiz,
          the confidant of the young Prince, became irrevocably engaged in his cause.
          Thus the royal family was torn by faction, which continued after the premature
          death of the young Princess who had occasioned it. A little knot of
          distinguished persons attached themselves to the heir to the crown, and the
          Court became divided into two parties, that of the Prince of the Asturias, and
          the Prince of the Peace. Godoy, having failed in an attempt to conciliate
          Ferdinand, and to bring about the Prince’s marriage with the sister of his
          wife, saw no hope of safety except in Ferdinand’s ruin. Queen Louisa entered
          warmly into his plans against her own son; and as the feeble health of Charles
          IV foreboded a speedy termination of his life, she conceived the project of
          procuring from him a declaration that his eldest son was unfit to reign, and of
          thus prolonging her authority, with the title of Regent, in concert with Godoy.
          With this view, Ferdinand was painted in the blackest colors, was kept aloof
          from all affairs of state, and surrounded with spies; whilst the favorite, on
          the other hand, was raised to some of the highest and most important dignities
          of the Kingdom, honored with the title of “Royal Highness”, and all the
          prerogatives of the Infants of Spain.
           As the situation
          of Ferdinand seemed to grow still more painful after the Peace of Tilsit, and
          the apparently intimate union which ensued between the Courts of Madrid and the
          Tuileries, Ferdinand was advised by his confidants to supplant Godoy in the favour of the French Emperor, and to seek his protection by
          offering to marry a Princess of the Imperial family. In these plans the Prince
          of the Asturias found a friend and guide in M. de Beauharnais, recently
          appointed French ambassador at Madrid. M. de Beauharnais cast his eyes
          upon Madlle. Tascher de
          la Pagerie, a niece of Josephine’s, a young lady
          of great beauty and accomplishments, and Ferdinand privately wrote to Napoleon
          October 11th, 1807, imploring his protection, and soliciting the hand of a
          Princess of his family. The French Emperor did not commit himself by answering
          Ferdinand’s letter; nevertheless from this period a family alliance with the
          Prince of the Asturias formed part of his political combinations. He did not,
          however, select Madlle. Tascher for
          that purpose. He had now begun to contemplate a divorce from Josephine, and he
          turned his views to the family of his brother Lucien. In an interview which he
          had with Lucien, towards the end of 1807, at Mantua, he offered his brother the
          throne of Portugal, and the hand of the Prince of the Asturias for his daughter
          Charlotte, but on condition that Lucien should divorce his wife, Madame
          de Jauberton. But with Lucien affection proved
          stronger than ambition. He refused to separate from his wife; but consented that
          his daughter should proceed to Paris, to await the splendid destinies that
          seemed in store for her.
           Meanwhile at
          Madrid, Godoy having caused Ferdinand to be arrested, October 29th, on the
          charge of conspiracy, the young Prince was subjected to a searching
          examination, at the end of which he was confined to his own apartments. Papers
          were found in his handwriting in which the crimes of the favorite were
          denounced; also a copy of the letter which he had written to Napoleon, a plan
          for what was to be done on the death of Charles IV, and various decrees, which
          already bore the signature of Ferdinand VII, appointing different nobles of his
          party to various important posts. Aided by Godoy, the Queen extorted from the
          King a proclamation, in which he denounced the conspiracy of his son and his
          advisers. She also persuaded him to write a letter to the French Emperor,
          charging Ferdinand with a plot to dethrone himself and put the Queen to death,
          and promising that the succession to the Spanish crown should be diverted to a
          younger son. Ferdinand, however, totally lacked the courage necessary to a
          conspirator. No sooner was he arrested than he informed his mother that he had
          important revelations to make. Caballero, the Minister of Justice, was sent to
          receive his depositions, in which he gave up the names of all his advisers,
          without the slightest stipulation for their safety. Godoy, however, deemed it
          prudent to adopt the policy of clemency. The minute of the Prince’s letter to
          Napoleon, which seemed to have been written with the knowledge of the French
          ambassador, was a powerful motive to this course. It was evident that the
          Emperor was concerned in the matter, and with him a collision was not to be
          lightly ventured. Godoy counseled pardon, but on condition that Ferdinand
          should make, in writing, an humble confession. The young Prince did not
          hesitate. He not only signed the required confession, but was base enough to
          swear eternal friendship and devotion to the Prince of the Peace. His
          accomplices were subjected to a trial, but acquitted by the judges, to the rage
          of the Queen.
               While these things
          were going on at Madrid, the conquest of Portugal was accomplished, and the
          time had arrived for the division of that Kingdom, according to the Treaty of
          Fontainebleau. But the aspect of affairs had changed, and with them the
          intentions of Napoleon; or rather, the plans which he had long formed now
          appeared ripe for execution. To incorporate with France all the Spanish
          provinces between the Pyrenees and the Ebro, and to give Portugal to Spain, in
          the name of an indemnification, was now the object of the French Emperor.
               Napoleon
          determined to effect his object by stratagem. Towards the end of 1807 large
          divisions of French troops began to enter Spain at different points, apparently
          in a straggling manner. The strongest fortresses in the north of Spain, Figueras, Barcelona, Pamplona, St. Sebastian, were suddenly
          and simultaneously occupied, by surprise or stratagem.
           The entry of the
          French troops into Spain, a decree of the Emperor’s at Milan, December 23rd,
          1807, imposing a contribution of war of a hundred million francs upon Portugal,
          and appointing Junot governor of that country, a demand that the
          execution of the Treaty of Fontainebleau should be suspended, began at length to
          open the eyes of Godoy. He perceived that he had been duped; that the offer of
          the Algarves was a snare; that he had been
          only a tool in the hands of the French despot. At the same time he was
          suspected by the Spanish people of having collusively admitted the French into
          the northern fortresses. Thus while the support of Napoleon was withdrawn from
          him, he fell still deeper into the hatred of his countrymen. The discontent
          and anger of the Spaniards, as well as the fears of the Court, were augmented
          when, early in March, 1808, another French corps of 35,000 men, entered Vittoria.
          The French troops in Spain, numbering 100,000 men, were now put under the
          command-in-chief of Napoleon’s brother-in-law, Murat, Grand Duke of Berg. Murat
          arrived at Burgos March 13th, assumed the direction of the army, and
          immediately marched upon Madrid.
           Flight seemed to
          offer the only chance of safety to Godoy. He counselled the King and
          Queen of Spain to adopt the course of the Portuguese Sovereigns, and take
          refuge in their American possessions. The Queen at once consented. Charles IV
          was more difficult to persuade; he could not believe that Napoleon intended to
          dethrone him. At length he yielded to the entreaties of the Queen and Godoy. It
          was resolved that the King should go first to Seville, from that place should
          demand from the French Emperor an explanation of his motives in assembling so
          large a force in Spain, as well as a guarantee for the security of the Royal
          Family and the independence of the Kingdom. If Napoleon’s answer should be
          unsatisfactory, Charles IV and his family were to proceed to Cadiz and embark for
          America, under the protection of the English fleet which was cruising before
          that port. Charles having announced his determination to his Council, March
          15th, the disposable troops were ordered to be cantoned on the road to
          Andalusia to protect the journey of the Royal Family; but the preparations for
          departure, and especially an order for the garrison of Madrid to proceed
          to Aranjuez, having excited the suspicion of the people, large masses of
          armed men proceeded thither, March 17th, and amid shouts of Death to Godoy,
          mingled with vivas for the King,
          prepared to prevent the departure of the Sovereigns. The King, however, having
          again consulted his council, resolved to proceed. But Ferdinand roused public
          feeling against Godoy, who, with difficulty, was saved from the rage of the
          populace. The reign not only of the favorite but of his master also was now at
          an end. 0n the 19th of March, Charles IV signed at Arajuez a
          solemn abdication of the crown in favour of his son,
          the Prince of the Asturias, who assumed the title of Ferdinand VII.
           Delivered from
          immediate danger, Charles and his Queen began to regret the throne, and
          attempted to recall the Act of Abdication. They sent a message to Murat, then
          some days’ march from Madrid, informing him of the violence they had suffered,
          and conjuring him to hasten to their protection. Charles IV also addressed a
          letter to Napoleon accusing his son Ferdinand of having incited the soldiery
          against him, and robbed him of the crown (March 21st); thus making the Emperor
          the arbiter of his fate. Murat arrived under the walls of Madrid, March 23rd.
          He was in a difficult situation. Conjecturing, however, that the Emperor would
          avail himself of the discord which reigned in the Spanish family to place a
          Prince of his own house on the throne of Spain, a hope began to rise in Murat’s
          breast that this Prince might be himself. The other members of the Imperial
          family were already provided for, except Lucien, who was in disgrace. Hence
          Murat began to regard Ferdinand as a sort of rival. This Prince had entered
          Madrid March 24th amidst the enthusiastic acclamations of the people, and had
          signified to his parents his determination to banish them to Badajoz; but
          Murat, at the instance of Charles and his queen, compelled Ferdinand to abandon
          his design. The Grand Duke of Berg would not recognize the King’s abdication,
          and spoke with contempt of Ferdinand’s claim.
               The revolution at
          Madrid had not entered into Napoleon’s calculations. A very little reflection,
          however, determined him to use the occasion to execute the plans he had already
          formed, and place a Prince of his own dynasty on the Spanish throne. The news
          of the revolution at Aranjuez arrived in Paris March 26th, and on the
          very next day Napoleon addressed a letter to his brother Louis, King of
          Holland, offering to him the crown of Spain. The old Sovereigns and their
          favorite, he reasoned, could not be restored, while Ferdinand was of a
          character too base to be trusted. But in his views of this question Napoleon
          omitted from his considerations a very important element—the Spanish people.
          The apathy of the Spaniards had indeed been so profound, they appeared so
          deeply plunged in ignorance and superstition, so entirely dominated by bigotry
          and prejudice, as to be incapable of forming an opinion or exercising an
          independent will. But among their prejudices was a devoted attachment to the
          reigning dynasty. In a priest-ridden country this feeling had become almost a
          religion. They looked upon their Sovereigns as the heirs of a divine right, and
          felt for the youthful Ferdinand, whose despicable qualities were not publicly
          known, an enthusiastic loyalty.
           Napoleon had
          determined to carry the matter through, as he had begun it, by stratagem and
          fraud. He formed the plan of proceeding to Bayonne, enticing thither both the
          new King and the old, and extorting the resignation of both. The passions by
          which each was devoured were to be the means of their common ruin. The plan,
          however, required dexterous handling. General Savary,
          afterwards Duke of Rovigo, was selected for the purpose; a devoted servant of
          Napoleon, equally clever and unscrupulous in laying such a plot as resolute in
          its execution, who had already served his master but too well in the murder
          of D'Enghien. Savary arrived in Madrid, April 7th, and immediately paid his respects to the
          abdicated King and Queen. On the following day he had an interview with
          Ferdinand himself, in presence of the Canon Escoiquiz,
          the Duke de l'lnfantado, and Don Pedro Cevallos, the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Savary’s conduct was calculated to inspire Ferdinand
          with the belief that Napoleon would recognize his royal title. He succeeded in
          persuading the young Prince and the majority of his counselors that he should
          proceed to meet the Emperor, who, it was represented, must have crossed the
          frontier, and would probably be found between Burgos and Vittoria.
           Ferdinand set off
          with a small suite, including Escoiquiz, the
          Dukes de l'Infantado and San Carlos, Don
          Pedro Cevallos, Counts Altamira and de Labrador,
          and a few other grandees. Savary had also obtained
          permission to accompany him. The travelers arrived at Burgos, April 12th, but
          found no letter from Napoleon, no news of his approach. Savary then persuaded the party to proceed to Vittoria, which was full of French
          troops. It was now resolved that Ferdinand, instead of at once proceeding on
          his journey, should address a letter to Napoleon from Vittoria, announcing
          his arrival at that place, and expressing a wish to see the Emperor. Savary offered his services to convey this letter.
           Napoleon arrived
          at Bayonne on the night of April 14th, and found Savary waiting for him. That general was again dispatched towards Ferdinand early in
          the morning of the 16th with a reply to his letter. Napoleon’s letter to the
          Prince is a strange mixture of brutality and duplicity. He plainly told him
          that he had no legitimate claim to the Spanish throne; that in fact he was not
          the son of Charles IV but of Godoy. Still, if the abdication of Charles was a
          voluntary act, he held out hopes that he would recognize Ferdinand’s accession,
          and expressed a wish to converse with him on the subject. He continued also to
          talk of the marriage with one of his nieces. Yet he had already offered the
          throne of Spain to his brother Louis. Ferdinand hesitated to proceed on his
          journey, but his reluctance was again overcome by the representations of Savary, backed by the advice of the inexperienced and
          simple-minded Canon Escoiquiz. The people
          of Vittoria, more sagacious than their rulers, endeavored to prevent
          Ferdinand’s departure, and cut the traces of his mules. But he rushed blindly
          on to his fate.
           Napoleon could not
          suppress his astonishment on hearing that Ferdinand had actually arrived at
          Bayonne. He treated the royal guest at his chateau of Marac with
          great apparent distinction and cordiality. After a banquet on April 21st, he
          retained the Canon Escoiquiz when the other
          guests were departed; and had with him a celebrated conversation. Napoleon now
          entirely cast off the veil, told the Canon that the House of Bourbon must
          vacate the Spanish throne, directed him to propose to Ferdinand an abdication
          to be compensated by the Kingdom of Etruria and the hand of his niece, and said
          that he would attain his end, even if it should cost him 200,000 men. It is computed
          to have cost him ultimately 300,000! The Canon fought stoutly for his master,
          but without avail. The same Savary, who only a few
          days before had filled Ferdinand with the hopes of his recognition, scrupled
          not to inform him that the Bourbons had ceased to reign in Spain. Of all
          Ferdinand’s counsellors, Cevallos alone
          had courage enough to protest with dignity and vehemence against the perfidy
          that had been employed. He was overheard by Napoleon, who burst into the room
          and loaded him with abuse. Escoiquiz pressed
          his Sovereign to accept the offers made to him; but Ferdinand refused to give
          up any of his rights. He now expressed a wish to depart, but soon discovered
          that he was no longer at liberty.
           Meanwhile Napoleon
          had caused Murat to declare to the Supreme Junta, April 16th, that he
          recognized no other King than Charles IV, whose abdication had been extorted by
          force. A few days after Charles notified that he had again taken possession of
          the crown; and it was arranged that he and the Queen should proceed to Bayonne
          and settle their differences with their son under the mediation of the Emperor.
          To make the scene complete, the Prince of the Peace, who, at the threats of
          Murat, had been released from the castle of Villaviciosa,
          where he had been confined to await his trial, also arrived at Bayonne under an
          escort. Napoleon himself could not refrain from expressing his contempt at the
          mutual recriminations which ensued among this degraded family. While they were
          disputing one another’s claims to govern, the Spanish people rose. The attitude
          of the Grand Duke of Berg, and especially his liberation of Godoy, had excited
          an indescribable indignation at Madrid and other cities, which was increased by
          the news of Ferdinand's arrival at Bayonne. A summons from Charles IV for his
          daughter, the ex-queen of Etruria, his youngest son Don Francisco de Paula, and
          his brother, the Infant Don Antonio, also to repair thither added fresh
          materials for dissatisfaction. Charles’s second son, Don Carlos, had
          accompanied Ferdinand. The people rose to prevent the departure of the Princes.
          Murat dispersed them with musket-bullets and grape-shot, May 2nd. The populace
          of Madrid killed all the French they could lay hands on, even the sick in the
          hospitals. Thus was inaugurated that deadly struggle which was to last several
          years.
           Treaty of Bayonne,
          1808
             Napoleon made use
          of this insurrection to extort from the Spanish Sovereigns a renunciation of
          the crown. He charged Ferdinand with being the author of it; the parents of
          that Prince shared, or affected to share, the convictions of the Emperor. With
          the bitterest reproaches, Charles demanded from his son an unconditional
          abdication. Napoleon closed the scene by declaring that the bloodshed at Madrid
          had put an end to his irresolution, that he would never recognize as King of
          Spain a man who had ordered the massacre of his soldiers. The insurrection at
          Madrid of May 2nd, appears to have been a spontaneous ebullition, caused by the
          departure of the Princes. Ferdinand had indeed given a written authority, May
          5th, for a rising against the French, to two deputies of the Supreme Junta, who
          had contrived to make their way in disguise to Bayonne; but this of course was
          totally unconnected with the insurrection in question. Ferdinand, for whom
          there was no escape, who had lost all, even the kingdom of Etruria, delivered
          his written abdication, May 6th. Charles IV, without waiting for it, had
          concluded with Napoleon the evening before the famous Treaty of Bayonne. For
          the chateau of Chambord, of which he could not take possession, and a pension
          of seven and a half million francs, which was never paid, he exchanged the
          monarchy of Spain and the Indies. Charles stipulated only two conditions: that
          the territorial integrity of Spain should be preserved, and that the Roman
          Catholic religion should be the only one tolerated in the kingdom (Art. 2). A
          few days before signing this act, Charles had appointed the Grand Duke of Berg
          his Lieutenant-general for the government of Spain. Ferdinand having confirmed
          and adhered to the cession of his father by an act signed May 10th, the Emperor
          made over to him the domain and palace of Navarre, and engaged to pay him and
          his descendants out of the French revenues an annual pension of 400,000 francs.
          By a treaty with Joseph Bonaparte, these and other pensions, as well as the
          value of the estates granted, were, however, to be drawn from the Spanish
          revenues. The Infants Don Antonio and Don Carlos adhered to these
          renunciations. To render them complete on the part of the Spanish Bourbons two
          signatures were still wanting: that of Ferdinand IV, King of the Two Sicilies, and brother of Charles IV, and that of Don Pedro,
          son of Gabriel, younger brother of those two Sovereigns. But a still more
          solemn sanction was also wanting—that of the Spanish nation; which, thus
          abandoned by its Sovereigns, rose against foreign intervention. A little after
          the signature of the Treaty, Charles IV, his Queen, the Queen of Etruria and
          the Prince of the Peace, were conducted to Compiegne, which had been assigned
          to them for a residence; but, the climate not agreeing with the old King, he
          subsequently took up his abode at Marseilles. Here he was entirely neglected by
          the French Government, and compelled to sell his diamonds to procure the
          necessaries of life. Ferdinand and Don Carlos, instead of obtaining the castle
          of Navarre, were transferred to the chateau of Valençai as
          the place of their imprisonment.
           Joseph Bonaparte,
          King of Spain
             Murat was
          disappointed of the Crown of Spain, on which he had fixed his hopes. It had
          been refused with surprise and indignation by Napoleon’s brother Louis. Joseph
          Bonaparte, however, consented to abandon his more tranquil throne of Naples for
          the dangers which surrounded that of Spain. Napoleon, who had nominated him to
          it, June 6th, was desirous of procuring at least the apparent consent of the
          Spanish nation. The Council of Castile, the chief political body of Spain, when
          informed of the Treaties of Bayonne, was at last induced to give a cold and
          reluctant assent to the accession of Joseph. Its example was followed by the
          Supreme Junta and the municipality of Madrid. There was, indeed, no alternative
          but war. Ferdinand displayed on the occasion his soul in its true colours. He not only wrote to Napoleon to express his
          satisfaction at the elevation of Joseph, he even addressed a letter of
          congratulation to the man who had usurped his crown. A Junta of 150 Spanish
          notables, which had been summoned to Bayonne, accepted a constitution proposed
          by Napoleon, July 7th, and a day or two after Joseph left Bayonne for Madrid.
          He had signed on the 5th a treaty with his brother Napoleon, by which he
          renounced the Crown of Naples, made, as King of Spain, a perpetual offensive
          alliance with France, fixed the number of troops and ships to be provided by
          each nation, and agreed to the establishment of a commercial system. By an Act
          called Constitutional Statute, July 15th, the vacant throne of Naples was
          bestowed upon Joachim Murat.
           Ferdinand had
          found means to dispatch from Bayonne a proclamation addressed to the Asturians,
          dated May 8th, in which he called upon them to assert their independence and
          never to submit to the perfidious enemy who had deprived him of his rights.
          This letter naturally made a great impression; nor was its effect diminished by
          another proclamation which Ferdinand and his brothers were compelled to sign at
          Bordeaux, May 12th, calling upon the Spaniards not to oppose “the beneficent
          views” of Napoleon. At this last address, evidently extorted from a prisoner,
          the people everywhere flew to arms, except where prevented by the presence of
          the French troops. The city of Valencia renounced its obedience to the
          Government of Madrid, May 23rd; Seville followed its example, and on the 27th,
          Joseph Palafox organized at Saragossa the insurrection of Aragon. As
          these insurrections were accompanied with massacres, principally of persons who
          held high civil or military posts under Charles IV, the better classes, to put
          an end to these scenes, established central Juntas in the principal towns. That
          of Seville, rejecting the authority of the capital, as being in the hands of
          the enemy, assumed the exercise of an independent power in the name of
          Ferdinand VII. On the 29th of May it published a proclamation, calling on the
          people to defend their country, their King, their laws, and property; and on
          the 6th of June it declared war upon Napoleon in the name of Ferdinand VII.
          Addresses of the same kind were published in various other places.
           A popular
          historian has attributed the causes of the calamities which overwhelmed Spain
          entirely to the imbecility, the corruption, and the despotism of the
          Government, and the superstition and bigotry of the people, which “sapped the
          foundation of military and civil virtue, and prepared the way for invasion”.
          These can hardly be the true causes. The Lutheranism and learning of the
          Germans, the Calvinism and Republican principles of the Dutch and Swiss,
          previously two of the freest nations of Europe, did not save them from being
          subjugated by the invader; nay, we think it may be more correctly asserted that
          the adoption of the French revolutionary doctrines by great numbers in those
          countries was much more favorable to an invasion than the disgust with which
          those doctrines were rejected by the Spaniards. The true cause of the
          calamities which overtook Spain was the boundless ambition of Napoleon. And how
          can it be true that the Spaniards were destitute of all civil and military
          virtue? And did not the Spaniards organize a national resistance against
          Napoleon? The Spaniards had at least preserved a national character and a love
          for their country, which in many other nations had been nearly destroyed by the
          new French philosophy. The Spaniards, no doubt, committed many faults in the
          war of liberation. They were, perhaps, proud, boastful, cruel when provoked,
          inconstant, inamenable to discipline; but
          let it be remembered, to their honor, that they were the first Continental
          nation that rose against the tyrant, and initiated a movement by which he was
          at last overthrown.
           Spain, when she
          declared war, had scarcely an army. It is true that, including the provincial
          militias, she had on foot about 100,000 men; but of these 15,000 were in
          Denmark, 35,000 in Portugal, and for the most part under the command of Junot;
          30,000 were absorbed by the garrisons of the fortresses of Africa, the Balearic
          Isles, the Canaries, and the interior. Half of the remaining 20,000 were in
          Galicia, and became the nucleus of the insurrectionary army of the North; the
          other 10,000, destined for the siege of Gibraltar, were in the camp of
          St. Roque, and laid the foundation of the army of Andalusia. But the
          indignation and enthusiasm of the Spaniards permitted them not to count the
          disparity of numbers. On the other hand, they were aware that it was impossible
          for a French army, however numerous, to occupy all the fortresses and ports of
          their extensive country; whose surface, too, as well as climate, present
          formidable difficulties to an invader. Above all, they reckoned on the method
          of conducting the war. They proposed not to meet the enemy in pitched battles
          in the open field, but to harass, wear out, and overcome him by guerilla
          warfare. The supreme Junta issued instructions for conducting this mode of
          warfare. Andalusia was better fitted for organizing the revolt, or rather the
          patriotic rising, than any other province of Spain. Its population formed
          one-fifth of the whole nation, it possessed the sole cannon-foundry in the
          Kingdom, it comprised half the disposable Spanish army, and it could receive
          assistance from the English both by means of Gibraltar, and of Collingwood's
          fleet, which was cruising on the coast.
           One of the first
          feats of arms of the Spaniards was to compel the surrender of five French ships
          of the line and a frigate, which had remained in the port of Cadiz ever since
          the battle of Trafalgar (June 14th). Marshal Moncey was repulsed towards the end of June in an advance upon Valencia, and compelled
          to retreat upon Madrid with a loss of one-third of his men. In the north-west
          the Spaniards were less fortunate. Cuesta, with a corps of 25,000 men, was
          defeated by Marshal Bessières, July 14tli, at Medina
          del Rio Seco. The consequence of this victory was the temporary submission
          of Leon, Palencia, Valladolid, Zamora, and Salamanca to the French. But this
          misfortune was more than counterbalanced by the victory of General Castanos over
          the French in Andalusia a few days after. Generals Dupont and Vedel had
          advanced into that province as far as Cordova, but they were defeated by Castanos with
          the army of Andalusia at Baylen, July 20th. On
          this occasion,—the commencement of the French reverses in Spain,—18,000 French
          soldiers laid down their arms. Joseph Bonaparte found it prudent to leave
          Madrid August 1st, which he had only entered on the day of the battle, and fly
          to Burgos. This important victory not only inspired the Spaniards with
          confidence, but roused the hopes of Central Europe. On the day after the
          battle Castanos issued a proclamation which does him great honor. He
          invoked the Spaniards to show humanity towards the French prisoners of war, and
          threatened to shoot those who should maltreat them. Such, however, was the
          exasperation of the people against their invaders, that numbers of the French
          were massacred on their route to Cadiz for embarkation, and the remainder were
          treated with inhumanity. These cruelties had, however, been provoked by the
          atrocities of the French at the capture and sack of Cordova.
           The campaign in Aragon
          was still more glorious for the Spaniards. Palafox, whether or not he was
          the poltroon described by Napier, had at all events the merit of organizing,
          out of almost nothing, the means by which the French were repulsed in several
          desperate assaults upon Saragossa, and at length compelled to retreat after a
          siege of some weeks (August 14th). The patriot cause was soon after
          strengthened by the arrival at Corunna of General La Romana, with 7,000 of
          his men from Denmark (September 20th). Keats, the English Admiral in the
          Baltic, had informed him of the rising of his countrymen, and provided him the
          means to transport his troops from Nyborg. The
          English Government, soon after the breaking out of the insurrection, proclaimed
          a peace with the Spanish nation (July 4th, 1808), and prepared to assist them
          in their heroic struggle. The example of Spain had also encouraged the
          Portuguese to throw off the insufferable yoke of the French. A Junta was
          established at Oporto, June 6th, and an insurrection was organized in all parts
          of the Kingdom where the French forces were not predominant. Sir Arthur
          Wellesley, with about 10,000 British troops, landed at Mondego Bay,
          July 31st, and being joined by General Spencer from Cadiz, with 5,000 men,
          advanced upon Lisbon. Laborde, who attempted to oppose them at Roliça with a much smaller force but in a very strong
          position, was compelled to retreat after a warm action, and the march was
          resumed. Junot now advanced with his whole disposable force from
          Lisbon, about 14,000 men with 26 guns. The British were stronger by 2,000,
          without including the Portuguese regiments, but were far inferior in cavalry
          and artillery. Sir Harry Burrard, who had now arrived, took the chief
          command of the British, and thwarted all the plans of Sir A. Wellesley. The
          hostile armies met before the town of Vimeira,
          August 21st, when Junot was completely defeated, with the loss of
          2,000 men, 400 prisoners, and 13 guns. But the fruits of the victory were in a
          great measure lost by the refusal of Sir Harry Burrard to pursue the
          enemy. A day or two after Sir Harry was in turn superseded by the arrival of
          Sir Hew Dalrymple from Gibraltar. It was now determined to advance
          against Junot, who had occupied the strong position of Torres Vedras.
          But the French general proposed an armistice; and by the Convention of Cintra,
          August 30th, he was allowed to evacuate Portugal with all his forces, which
          were to be transported to France by the English, and allowed to serve wherever
          they might be required. Before their departure, the French, from the
          General-in-chief down to the private, were compelled to disgorge an enormous
          amount of plunder which they were preparing to carry off. The Convention of
          Cintra was followed by the surrender of Admiral Siniavin and
          the Russian squadron in the Tagus to Admiral Sir Charles Cotton. The Convention
          of Cintra was received with such disapprobation in England that the three
          generals were recalled and arraigned before a court of inquiry. During their
          absence in England, the command of the British forces in Portugal was bestowed
          on Sir John Moore, who had arrived from the Baltic with his division.
           The Congress of
          Erfurt, 1808
             The risings in
          Spain and Portugal required for their suppression large reinforcements to be
          drawn from Napoleon’s veteran troops in Germany. But as this movement might
          expose him to a rising of the Germans, and especially of the Austrians, he
          resolved to guard against that danger by drawing closer his alliance with the
          Emperor of Russia. Alexander accepted an invitation to meet the Emperor of the
          French at Erfurt, at which place the two Sovereigns arrived, September 27th.
          The Congress, which lasted nearly three weeks, was conducted with the greatest
          splendor, and at the same time with marks of the most entire friendship and
          confidence between the two Emperors. It was attended by the Kings of Bavaria,
          Saxony, Wurtemberg, and Westphalia, by
          Alexander’s brother, the Grand Duke Constantine, Prince William of Prussia, the
          Grand Duke of Baden, the Duke of Saxe-Weimar, and most of the principal
          Sovereigns of Germany. The palaces occupied by Alexander and Napoleon were
          furnished in the most splendid and luxurious manner at the expense of France.
          Napoleon entertained every day at dinner the principal Sovereigns, and in the
          evening French plays were performed by the most celebrated actors of the
          Parisian theatres. The entertainments were diversified by a visit to Weimar,
          where Napoleon made the acquaintance of Wieland, Goethe, and other celebrated
          German authors. The political objects of the Conference were arranged by a
          secret convention, signed October 12th. The most important articles were, that
          Alexander consented to Joseph Bonaparte’s elevation to the throne of Spain, as
          well as to the changes which had been made in Italy, and promised to make
          common cause with France in case of a declaration of war by Austria. In return
          for these concessions, Napoleon engaged not to oppose the annexation of
          Moldavia, Wallachia, and Finland to the Russian Empire. The two Monarchs are
          said to have agreed to constitute themselves, at some future time, the one,
          Emperor of the West, the other, Emperor of the East, and that the Elbe should
          form the limit of their respective dominions. The partition of Turkey was
          discussed, but Napoleon represented this enterprise as at present inopportune.
          Alexander obtained for the King of Prussia a reduction of 20,000,000 francs
          from the sum payable by that Sovereign, and the evacuation by the French troops
          of the Prussian dominions.
           Alexander and
          Napoleon, shortly before they quitted Erfurt, addressed a joint note to King
          George III, expressing a desire for peace (October 12th, 1808). This was
          followed up by notes from Count Roumantsov and Champagny, the Russian and French Foreign Ministers, to
          Canning, proposing the uti possidetis as a base of negotiations, and offering
          to confer with the plenipotentiaries of Great Britain in any Continental town.
          The English Government insisted that the Spanish nation, represented by its
          Junta, acting in the name of Ferdinand VII, should be a party to the
          negotiations; but Count Roumantsov rejected
          this admission of what he called the “Spanish insurgents”, announced that his
          master had recognized Joseph Bonaparte as King of Spain, and would not separate
          his interests from those of his ally, Napoleon. The French Minister also
          replied in an insolent note, in which he compared the admission of the
          Spaniards to a congress with that of the insurgent Catholics of Ireland, as if
          Spain had irrevocably become a subordinate part of the French Empire. A peace
          on the terms proposed was, of course, inadmissible. Canning, in his reply
          to Champagny, expressed His Majesty’s firm
          determination not to abandon the cause of the Spanish nation, nor to acquiesce
          in a usurpation unparalleled in the history of the world. The English Cabinet
          was supported in this resolution by the hope that Austria would before long
          declare against Napoleon.
           Meanwhile in
          Spain, a Supreme Central Junta, under the presidency of Count Florida Blanca,
          had been organized at Aranjuez, towards the end of September. It was
          formed of two deputies from each provincial Junta, and it was hoped that by
          this means the insurrection would be conducted with more concert and rigor.
          Unfortunately, however, it had the contrary effect. The provincial Juntas
          entrusted to their deputies only a very limited and subordinate authority, who
          were thus prevented from acting with the vigor and decision required by the
          conjuncture. The armed force was now divided into three corps. The first of
          these, called the “Army of the North”, was commanded by Blake, having under his
          orders the Marquis de la Romana. The Junta gave out that this corps
          consisted of 55,000 men, when it is probable that it did not count more than
          17,000 regular troops. This method of exaggeration, which was systematically
          adopted by the Junta, had the effect of sometimes leading their English allies
          into great difficulties and dangers. In like manner, the Army of the Centre
          under Castanos was rated at 65,000 men, and that of Aragon, under
          Joseph Palafox, at 20,000. The French army, reduced to about 50,000 men,
          had now fixed its head-quarters at Vittoria. Its right was commanded
          by Gouvion St. Cyr, the centre by Marshal Moncey,
          the left by Marshals Ney, Bessières, and Lefebvre.
          The French, however, were rapidly reinforced by the troops withdrawn from
          Prussia, and by auxiliary corps forwarded by King Jerome and other dependent
          German Sovereigns; so that before the end of the year they numbered 180,000
          men. Napoleon placed himself at the head of his armies early in November. A
          succession of victories, achieved by his generals under his direction, opened
          to him the road to the Spanish capital. On the 7th of November, Lefebvre defeated
          Blake and La Romana at Guenez. On the
          10th, Soult gained a victory over the Comte de Belvedere and a division of the
          army of Blake at Gamonal, while on the same and
          following day, Blake and La Romana were defeated by Victor at
          Espinosa. On the 15th, Napoleon’s headquarters were at Burgos. On the
          23rd, Lannes and Victor defeated Castanos at Tudela, and on the 30th, Napoleon in person overthrew the
          reserve of the Spaniards, under Count San Juan, in the defiles of the Somosierra. On the 2nd of December, the fourth anniversary
          of his coronation, the French Emperor appeared under the walls of Madrid, and
          took up his abode at Chamartin, belonging to the
          Duke de l'Infantado. The inhabitants of the
          capital seemed at first disposed to resist, but thought better of it, and
          Madrid was entered by the French troops on the morning of December 4th.
           On the same day
          that he took possession of the Spanish capital Napoleon issued decrees
          abolishing the Inquisition, reducing by two-thirds the number of convents in
          Spain, enabling monks to become secular ecclesiastics, suppressing all feudal
          rights and personal service, abolishing the existing provincial barriers, and
          transferring all custom-houses to the frontiers of the kingdom.
               Meanwhile the
          English were marching into the heart of Spain. Sir David Baird having arrived
          at Corunna, October 13th, with 15,000 men, Sir John Moore, at the head of the
          English troops in Portugal, advanced by Salamanca to form a junction with him, which
          was effected at Mayorga, December 20th. The total number of the British in
          the Peninsula was now 35,000; but some regiments had been left behind, others
          detached, and, deducting the sick, the total of effective men under Sir John
          Moore was only between 23,000 and 24,000, with 60 guns. Moore had been lured to
          advance by false accounts of the position of things, of the resources and
          enthusiasm of the Spaniards. It was still more calculated to deceive him that
          most of the accounts of this nature came from Mr. Frere, the British Minister
          at Madrid. Moore was advancing with his small army to certain destruction
          against Napoleon with eight times his force. At the news of his advance, the
          French Emperor left Madrid, and marched against him at the head of his choicest
          troops. Moore had now no alternative but to commence his famous retreat.
          The manoeuvres of Soult had cut him off
          from the road to Portugal, and the march was, therefore, directed into Galicia.
          Napoleon, having learnt on the road to Astorga of
          the events that were preparing in Germany, and also of a conspiracy in Paris,
          immediately set off for France, leaving the command of the pursuing army to
          Soult. That commander pressed upon and harassed the British; but he ventured
          not to accept the battle which Moore offered him at Lugo. The British, after
          suffering great hardships, arrived at Corunna, January 14th, 1809. Here they
          were detained two or three days by the want of vessels, and meanwhile Soult
          came up. An action was fought before that town, January 16th, in which the
          French were entirely defeated; but this victory was dearly purchased with the
          life of the gallant Sir John Moore, who was mortally wounded with a
          cannon-ball. Sir David Baird had also been disabled. The transports had now
          arrived from Vigo, and the British army was safely embarked. Corunna, which was
          defended a few days by the Spaniards, surrendered January 19th. Soult then
          applied himself to the reduction of Galicia.
           Moore’s expedition
          was undertaken, without proper information, by order of the English Ministry;
          but so far as the general himself was concerned, it was conducted with the
          greatest skill and bravery. Nor, though it failed, was it altogether useless.
          The march of the French into the south of Spain was arrested, and their army
          was fatigued to such an extent that for several months they were unable to
          undertake anything of importance. In the very midst of this misfortune, a
          treaty was concluded between Great Britain and the Supreme Junta, January 14th,
          1809, by which the former Power engaged to assist the Spanish nation with all
          its forces, and to recognize no other King of Spain than Ferdinand VII.
               Napoleon’s
          departure from the Peninsula had been caused mainly by the military
          preparations of Austria. The Peace of Pressburg had
          been so humiliating to that Power as to render it certain that she would seize
          the first favorable opportunity to appeal again to arms. For this appeal she
          had long been silently preparing. She had endeavored, under the administration
          of Count Stadion, to place her finances on a better footing, and she had
          succeeded in reorganizing a formidable military force. The latter task had been
          entrusted to the Archduke Charles, who in the summer of 1808, succeeded in
          establishing the Landivehr, or militia, in the
          Austrian Dominions. The German provinces alone furnished 300,000 men to
          the Landwehr, besides a reserve of 60,000. At the same time the troops of
          the line were carried to 400,000 men, divided into nine corps, each under its
          general-in-chief. The Hungarians, animated by a friendly spirit, had voted in
          1808 an increase of 80,000 troops, and offered besides, in case of need, a
          permanent insurrection of 80,000 more, of which 30,000 were to be cavalry. In
          case of reverses, Komorn in Hungary was
          selected as a place d'armes.
           As nothing could
          be more adverse to Napoleon’s Spanish projects than a war with Austria, he
          attempted to avert it by proposing a triple agreement between France, Russia
          and Austria, which should give to Austria the guarantee of Russia against the enterprises
          of France, and that of France against the attempts of Russia. But this
          proposition was not accepted. At Valladolid, on his way from Madrid, Napoleon
          wrote to the Sovereigns of the Rhenish League to complete and
          mobilize their contingents. Towards the end of February, 1809, the French
          troops were in motion. Austria at the same time was pressing on her armaments.
          On the 27th of March the Austrian Minister delivered to the French Government a
          declaration, in which were enumerated all the insults and injuries Austria had
          suffered at the hands of France since the Peace of Pressburg.
          This was followed soon after by a formal manifesto, and by an admirable order
          of the day addressed to the army by the Archduke Charles, the Generalissimo
          (April 6th). Addresses were also published by the Emperor and the Archduke to
          the Austrians, and to the German nation in general, which were answered by
          counter-proclamations from the Kings of Bavaria, Würtemberg and Saxony, and
          other Sovereigns of the Confederation of the Rhine.
           Six of the nine
          divisions of the Austrian army, comprising upwards of 200,000 men, had been
          assembled in Bohemia under the Archduke Charles, with the intention of
          attacking the French in Germany, and driving them over the Rhine before they
          could receive assistance from France. But, with the usual Austrian slowness,
          the opportunity was lost. Two divisions only, under Bellegarde and Kolowrat, entered the Upper Palatinate and marched
          upon Ratisbon. The main force proceeded into Austria in order to enter
          Bavaria by the accustomed route along the Danube. The seventh Austrian division
          of 36,000 men, under the Archduke Ferdinand d'Este,
          was to enter Poland. The eighth and ninth, commanded in
          chief by the Archduke John, were destined for the invasion of Italy. The French
          had in Germany Davoust's corps at Ratisbon,
          that of Massena at Ulm, that of Oudinot at
          Augsburg, three Bavarian divisions at Munich, Landshut and Straubing, under Marshal Lefebvre, the Würtemberg division
          at Heidenheim commanded by Vandamme, and the Grand Army, whose headquarters were
          at Strassburg: the whole comprising 212,000 men,
          exclusive of the Saxons under Bernadotte, and 12,000 Poles under Prince Poniatowski. The French army in Italy consisted of
          Macdonald’s, Grenier’s, and Baraguay d'Hilliers’
          divisions, 70,000 men, under the command-in-chief of the Viceroy Eugene.
           It was hoped that
          when hostilities commenced, the Germans would rise against their French
          oppressors; but this expectation was realized only in the Tyrol. Some Tyrolese
          went secretly to Vienna, to pledge themselves to that effect; and no sooner had
          the war begun, April 10th, than the insurrection
          broke out. Beacons were lighted on the mountain tops; meal, blood, or saw-dust
          cast upon the streams, carried into every valley the signal for arming. On the
          road between Brixen and Innsbruck the
          French columns were surprised; more than 8,000 of their men were either killed
          or made prisoners. A fight took place in Innsbruck; the Bavarians who
          garrisoned it were driven out, their commander killed. At Wiltau, an entire French brigade was compelled to
          surrender. All this was the work of four days. The leaders of the Tyrolese were
          Andrew Hofer, an innkeeper in the Passeyerthal, Spechbacher, Haspinger, a
          Capuchin monk, Eisenstecken, and Ennemoser. When the Marquis von Chasteler entered
          the Tyrol with a small Austrian corps, the country was already liberated; Kufstein alone remained in possession of the Bavarians.
          The insurrection also spread to the Vorarlberg.
           The main body of
          the Austrian army crossed the Inn and invaded Bavaria, April 10th, 1809. On the
          16th they forced the passage of the Isar and
          entered Munich. The King of Bavaria fled at their approach. Napoleon, on the
          other hand, by April 18th, had carried his headquarters to Ingolstadt. On the
          following day a fierce but indecisive combat took place at Tann; the
          French, however, succeeded in forming a junction with the Bavarians. On the
          20th, Napoleon defeated the Archduke Louis at Abensberg,
          and separated him from the army of the Generalissimo. But on the same day the
          Archduke Charles took Ratisbon, which made him master of the Danube, and
          put him in communication with the corps of Bellegarde, advancing from
          Bohemia. The Archduke then marched down the right bank of the river, and took
          up a position at Eckmuhl. Napoleon, who had
          pursued the Archduke Louis, and again defeated him at Landshut, now turned
          against the Generalissimo and defeated him in a decisive battle at Eckmuhl, April 22nd. The Austrians having retreated
          into Ratisbon, which was entered by the French the following day, a battle
          ensued, during which a great part of the town was burnt. The Archduke Charles
          now retreated through the Upper Palatinate, while Napoleon, instead of pursuing
          him, directed his forces against Vienna. General Hitler with an Austrian corps
          was attacked and defeated at Ebelsberg near
          Linz, May 3rd, by the divisions of Bessières and Oudinot. During the battle the town took
          fire, and many of the combatants perished in the flames. On May 10th,
          Marshal Lannes appeared before Vienna. The
          Archduke Maximilian, brother of the Empress, after a vain attempt to defend
          it, passed the Danube with 4,000 men on the night of the 11th, and next day
          Vienna capitulated. Napoleon now for the second time took up his residence
          at Schonbrunn, Hence he issued an order
          dissolving the Landwehr, and granting a pardon to all who should return to
          their homes within a fortnight. He also published a proclamation addressed to
          the Hungarians, May 15th, in which he called upon them to renounce their
          allegiance to the House of Austria, promised them freedom and independence, and
          exhorted them to choose a king of their own. But the Hungarians were at that
          time well affected towards the Imperial family, and this proclamation had no
          effect.
           War in the Tyrol
          and Poland
             In the Tyrol and
          Poland subsidiary operations were carried on. The sudden success of the
          Tyrolese was but of short duration. Marshal Lefèbvre compelled
          them to relinquish the siege of Kufstein,
          defeated the Austrians at Morgel, May 13th,
          took Schwaz by assault, 15th, and on the
          19th occupied Innsbruck. The Tyrolese, yielding to superior force, feigned
          submission, and sent deputies to Munich to solicit a pardon. But no sooner had
          the French and Austrians withdrawn, leaving behind only Deroy’s division, than the Tyrolese again flew to
          arms, attacked Deroy, and compelled him to
          retreat to Kufstein. Chasteler also
          again entered Tyrol to reinforce an Austrian corps which had entrenched itself
          on the Brenner. But these successes were again interrupted by the armistice
          of Znaym, July 11th. On the side of Poland, the
          Archduke Ferdinand, marching from Galicia, occupied Warsaw, April 22nd, and
          penetrated as far as Thorn. The Austrians had brought 100 guns, in the hope of
          inducing the King of Prussia to join them; but without effect. Prince Schwarzenberg had
          been sent on a special mission to St. Petersburg to conciliate the Emperor,
          who, it was hoped, even if he did not actually assist them, would at all events
          remain neutral. But Alexander adhered, though somewhat lukewarmly, to his
          French alliance, and placed a division at Napoleon's disposal, which, with some
          Polish troops, were directed upon Galicia. The Russo-Polish army drove the
          Austrians from Leopol and Sandomierz, and took possession of Galicia, where the
          French eagles were planted by Prince Poniatowski.
          Ferdinand retired into Hungary, and at length the armistice of July 11th,
          between the main armies, put an end also to the war in this quarter. In
          Franconia, the efforts of the Austrians to excite a rising of the population
          proved only partially successful; and they were compelled to evacuate that
          district on the approach of Junot’s division.
           Campaign in Italy
           In Italy,
          hostilities had begun at the same time as in Germany. The Archduke John
          defeated the Viceroy Eugene at in Sacile, April
          16th, who then retired to Caldiero on the Adige. But the arrival of a
          French division from Tuscany, and the news received from Germany, decided the
          Archduke to commence his retreat by the end of April. It was hastened by a
          decisive battle on the Piave, May 8th, in which the Austrians were
          defeated by Eugene. The latter general passed the Isonzo, May 14th, and
          seized Gortz and Laybach.
          Here he was joined by Marmont, the commander of
          the French in Dalmatia; who, leaving only between 4,000 and 5,000 men behind,
          forced with the remainder the passage of the Fiume, and effected a junction
          with the army of Italy. The Archduke John retired into Hungary, where he joined
          the Archduke Palatine, commanding the Hungarian troops, June 13th. But Eugene,
          profiting by the discordant views of those commanders, gained a signal victory
          over them near Raab, June 14th. Raab capitulated on the 22nd, and Davoust bombarded Pressburg on the 26th. The
          Archduke Charles had retired to Komorn, and
          Eugene proceeded to form a junction with the army of Napoleon. "We now
          return to the operations of the main armies.
           The Archduke
          Charles after his defeat at Eckmuhl had
          pursued his march down the left bank of the Danube towards Vienna, and had
          taken up a position to the north of that capital on the plain called the Marchfeld; a spot rendered famous in ancient times by the
          defeat and death of Ottocar, King of Bohemia (August,
          1278), and the triumph of Rudolph of Habsburg, the founder of the House of
          Austria. On this plain the fate of Austria was again to be decided. The
          Archduke had been joined by Hiller with his corps, who had contrived to pass
          the Danube at Krems. The Austrian army after
          this junction numbered about 75,000 men. At the Marchfeld the
          Danube separates into three branches, of which the two northernmost form the
          large and well wooded island of Lobau. Of this
          isle the French had taken possession, in order to throw a bridge over the
          river between the villages of Aspern and Essling. This operation, which was not interrupted by the
          Austrians, was completed on the night of May 20th, and on the 21st and 22nd
          Napoleon engaged the Austrians. These battles, which are called the battles
          of Aspern and Essling,
          or when spoken of jointly the battle of the Marchfeld,
          were fought with great obstinacy and fury, but without any very decided
          advantage on either side. On the whole, however, the Austrians were superior;
          as Napoleon was compelled to abandon the field, and withdraw his troops into
          the isle of Lobau. It was the first repulse
          which he had experienced in Germany. The loss on both sides was enormous. The
          Austrians acknowledge to have had 24,000 men killed and wounded. The loss of
          the French was no doubt a great deal more; yet Napoleon stated it at only 1,100
          killed and 3,000 wounded! Among the killed were Marshal Lannes, and three general officers. Napoleon crossed over
          to the right bank of the Danube, leaving Massena to secure the retreat. The
          Austrians, aided by a rising of the river, succeeded in destroying the two
          bridges which connected the isle of Lobau with
          the right bank and Vienna, and the French were thus left more than two days
          without provisions. But on the 25th they reestablished the bridges, and on the
          following day Eugene, with the army of Italy, passed over the Semmering, and formed a junction with them.
           The Archduke
          Charles continued to maintain a position on the left bank 0f the Danube
          extending from Krems to Pressburg. The two armies lay for some weeks inactive.
          Besides Macdonald, with part of the army of Italy, Napoleon had also been
          joined by Bernadotte with the Saxons, and by Marmont’s corps;
          which raised his forces to an equality with those of the Archduke. On July 1st
          he established his headquarters in the isle of Lobau,
          which had been strongly fortified. On the 4th he battered down the village
          of Enzersdorf, and established a bridge over the
          Danube at that point. On the 5th and 6th was fought the battle of Wagram. Never
          in any battle upon land had so formidable an artillery been employed. The
          Austrians had 500 guns, many of large calibre.
          The French were inferior in this arm, having only about 400. The first day was
          indecisive; on the second the Austrians were defeated. The Archduke Charles,
          mistaking the French plans, had too much weakened his center; and his left wing
          was deprived of the support which he had expected from the Archduke John, who
          did not come up from Hungary till two hours after the battle. On both these
          points the Austrians were turned, but they commenced an orderly retreat by way
          of Guntersdorf towards Bohemia. The defeat
          of their left wing had cut them off from Hungary. Their rear guard was defeated
          at Hollabrunn by Massena, July 10th. On the
          following day Napoleon in person appeared before Znaym,
          where the Archduke Charles had established his headquarters. A severe action
          ensued, in the course of which Prince Liechtenstein obtained from Napoleon an
          armistice. In the battles between the 5th and 11th, both armies had suffered
          terribly. The Austrians had lost 23,000 men killed and 7,000 prisoners; the
          loss of the French was probably about the same.
           By the armistice
          of Znaym, more than a third part of the Austrian
          dominions remained in the occupation of the French, with a population of about
          eight and a half million souls. On these was
          levied a contribution of more than 196,000,000 francs; and as the Poles of
          Galicia, comprising a population of about four millions were exempted, this
          enormous sum was exacted from about four and a half million persons!
           The conferences
          for a peace lasted three months. The Austrian Government purposely interposed
          delays, wishing to await the result of an English expedition against the coasts
          of Holland. Napoleon, on the other hand, alarmed at the state of the Peninsula,
          as anxiously pressed their termination, and threatened, if the negotiations
          remained without effect, to adopt the most rigorous measures against the House
          of Austria, and especially to separate the three crowns. The Treaty op Vienna
          was at length signed, October 14th, 1809.4 By this treaty the Emperor Francis
          engaged to make various cessions to the Confederation of the Rhine, to
          Napoleon, to the King of Saxony, to the same Sovereign as Duke of Warsaw, and
          to the Emperor of Russia. The districts ceded to the Rhenish Confederation
          comprised Salzburg, Berchtesgaden, and part of Upper Austria, viz., the quarter
          of the Inn and half of the Hausrück.
           The cessions made
          directly to Napoleon were the county of Görtz,
          or Goricia, and that of Montefalcone,
          forming the Austrian Friuli; the town and Government of Trieste, Carniola, the
          Circle of Villach in Carinthia, part of Croatia and Dalmatia, and the lordships
          of Rhazuns in the Grison territory. All these
          provinces, with the exception of Rhazuns, were
          incorporated by a decree of Napoleon, with Dalmatia and its islands, into a
          single State with the name of the Illyrian Provinces. They were never united
          with France, but always governed by Napoleon as an independent State. A few districts
          before possessed by Napoleon were also incorporated with them; as Venetian
          Istria and Dalmatia with the Bocca di Cattaro,
          Ragusa, and part of the Tyrol.
           The cessions made
          to the King of Saxony, as such, consisted of only a few Bohemian villages; but,
          as Duke of Warsaw, there were transferred to him all Western or New Galicia,
          with the Circle of Zamosc in Eastern
          Galicia, including the town of Cracow.
           The cessions in favour of Russia comprised a district of Eastern or Old
          Galicia, but exclusive of the town of Brody, the only place which gave it any
          importance.
               The only other
          articles of the treaty of much importance are the recognition by Austria of any
          changes made, or to be made, in Spain, Portugal, and Italy; the adherence of
          the Emperor to the Continental System adopted by France and Russia, and his
          engaging to cease all correspondence and relationship with Great Britain. By a
          Decree made at Ratisbon, April 24th, 1809, Napoleon had suppressed the
          Teutonic Order in all the States belonging to the Rhenish Confederation, reannexed its
          possessions to the domains of the Prince in which they were situated, and
          incorporated Mergentheim, with the rights,
          domains, and revenues attached to the Grand Mastership of the Order, with the
          Kingdom of Würtemberg. These dispositions were confirmed by the Treaty of
          Vienna.
           The effect aimed
          at by the Treaty of Vienna was to surround Austria with powerful States, and
          thus to paralyze all her military efforts. On the south, by the cession in
          Carinthia, she lost the defiles which communicate with Italy and Tyrol, and the
          means of defence afforded by a natural frontier. On
          the west, by the loss of Salzburg and part of Austria, she was deprived of an
          excellent line of operation formed by the Inn in combination with the mountains
          of Bohemia, behind which she could manoeuvre in
          perfect safety. It was only on the north and the east, in which quarters she
          was not so much exposed to attack, that she preserved her natural boundaries.
          These cessions involved a loss of three and a half million subjects. The
          Emperor of Russia, on the other hand, was very ill satisfied with the small
          portion of the spoils assigned to him, and the augmentation awarded to the
          Duchy of Warsaw. Hence the first occasion of coldness between him and
          Napoleon, whom he suspected of a design to reestablish the Kingdom of Poland.
           After the
          armistice of Znaym, Tyrol and the Vorarlberg
          were evacuated by the Austrian troops; but the Tyrolese, led by Hofer, still
          continued the struggle. The Bavarians marched against them; forced the
          important position of Scharnitz, October 25th,
          and on the 13th of November effected their junction with Eugene Beauharnais,
          who had entered Tyrol by Villach. Hofer now announced his submission, and
          directed the Tyrolese to separate. But the Bavarian General d'Erlm having proclaimed that every Tyrolese found
          with arms in his hand should be shot, and that every village where soldiers had
          been maltreated should be burnt, Hofer declared that he had been deceived, and
          again called his countrymen to arms. But resistance now proved useless. The
          executions ordered by the French generals spread terror among the Tyrolese, and
          King Maximilian Joseph having offered a pardon, they a second time submitted.
          Hofer now concealed himself in a log hut in the mountains; but being either
          betrayed or discovered,was carried to Mantua, tried
          before a court-martial, and shot (February 20th, 1810).
           
 
 CHAPTER LXVI.THE PENINSULA WAR AND THE MOSCOW EXPEDITION | 
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