MODERN HISTORY LIBRARY |
CHAPTER XII. AUSTRIA,
POLAND, AND TURKEY.
The second half of the seventeenth century is perhaps the most critical period in
the history of Austria, as it certainly is in the history of the great House of
Habsburg, with whose fortunes those of Austria have for ages been inextricably
intertwined. The Spanish monarchy, in the hands of the elder branch, was
steadily sinking through impotence towards partition. Portugal had to be surrendered
in 1668; and the feeble throne of Charles II was only preserved till the close
of the century by constant cessions of territory to French greed and by the
costly aid of European coalitions. The Austrian Habsburgs seemed to be
threatened with a similar fate. Their dreams of a revived Imperial control over
Germany, which might have been realised if FerdinandII could have heen his own
Wallenstein, instead of having to employ so unmanageable an agent, were
shattered by the victories of Gustavus Adolphus, by the disintegrating
diplomacy of Richelieu, and in the end by the military strength of France. The
Treaty of Westphalia not only transferred the Habsburg rights in Elsass to the
Bourbon, but, by securing to the Princes of the Empire the independent control
of their foreign relations, it made Germany the loosest and most impotent of
federations. Nothing held it together except the survival of a great tradition
and a grandiose title, together with the more practical unifying force of the
dread of Turkish aggression. This danger enabled Leopold I, the son and
successor of Ferdinand III, to obtain his election to the Imperial dignity in
1658, in spite of the intrigues of Mazarin. But, with the aid of French gold,
the Electors were induced to extort from the young Emperor in his capitulation
a pledge that he would abstain from sending assistance to Spain. And France
gave added force to the pledge by joining in the same year the League of the
Rhine, formed by those Electors and Princes whose territories would have to be
traversed by troops on their way from Austria to the Netherlands.
In face of
the League of the Rhine and the continued danger of cooperation between France
and Sweden, it was impossible to gain substantial power for the German
monarchy. If the Austrian Habsburgs
Critical period in Austrian history. [1658-99 In spite of
all her difficulties, external and internal, Austria, unlike Spain, emerged
from the critical half century, not only with undivided dominions, but on the whole
with increased strength and prestige. In the series of coalitions which first
checked and then foiled the ambitious designs of Louis XIV the Austrian ruler
played a part hardly second to that of William III of Orange. But for the
momentous decision of Leopold I to come to the assistance of the sorely-pressed
Dutch in 1673, the French King, with the interested connivance of the
degenerate Stewarts, and with the help of Turenne, Condé, and Luxembourg, must
have firmly founded his supremacy in western Europe. Without Austria and Prince
Eugene, no league could have been formed strong enough to prevent the retention
by Philip of Anjou of the whole dominions of Spain. The western policy of
Austria in this period, though chequered by reverses and leading to some bitter
disappointments, is in itself no discreditable part of Austrian history. And
any apparent discredit is removed when it is remembered that, all the time, the
Habsburgs were fighting a double battle against domestic disaffection and
Turkish aggression. Moreover, from this eastern struggle, of which only one
salient episode, the relief of Vienna in 1683, has succeeded in fixing the
attention of western Europe, Austria emerged victorious. By the end of the
century Transylvania had been reunited to the Hungarian Crown, the Turks had
been driven from almost the whole of Hungary, and that kingdom had been
permanently subjected to the House of Habsburg. It is this eastern side of
Austrian history which is the subject of the present chapter. The interest and
importance of the events narrated in it may appear slight to the western
reader, and the policy of Austria may often be blamed as vacillating,
short-sighted and oppressive. But how different would have been the history of
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, if Austria had fallen from her rank
among the foremost Powers of Europe!
The ruler
whose long reign witnessed some of the most critical moments in the fortunes of
Austria, was singularly unfitted by nature and training to guide the State
through troubled times. Leopold I, “the little Emperor in red stockings,” was
the second son of Ferdinand III and the Infanta Maria Anna of Spain. He was
originally brought up for the Church until the death (from small-pox) in 1654
of his elder brother made him heir to the Austrian dominions. He
The Turkish power. Decline and revival [1566-1663 The clue to
the difficulties and dangers of Leopold I in the east, and also to such success
as he ultimately achieved, is to be found in his relations with the Ottoman
Turks. Throughout the sixteenth century the Austrian dominions had been the
most substantial barrier between central Europe and the threatened advance of
Turkish power; and this had done more than anything else to secure the election
of successive Habsburgs to the Imperial throne. Fortunately for Europe, the
unique opportunity offered by the Thirty Years’ War had been lost by the Turks,
in consequence of the internal decline of their State. Since the death of
Solyman the Magnificent in 1566 the iron discipline which held together the
Turkish forces had been sensibly relaxed. Degenerate Sultans ceased to lead
their armies into the field, passed their lives in the enervating atmosphere of
the harem, and became the puppets of female intrigue. The constitution of the
once invincible army
The revival
of Turkey, which was contemporaneous with the accession of Leopold I,
constituted a danger of the first magnitude to Austria, and also to two other
eastern States, Russia and Poland, which, in spite of mutual rivalry, were
forced by common defensive interests into cooperation with Austria. Russia
under the House of Romanoff had recovered unity after the internal disturbances
at the beginning of the seventeenth century, and in the reign of Alexis
(1645-76) was beginning to feel her way towards a place among European Powers.
Her progress westwards was barred by Sweden and Poland, and southwards by the
Tartar tribes of the Crimea and the Kuban, which had been under vassalage to
Turkey since the fifteenth century. But, though Russian aggrandisement was
destined to be ultimately ruinous to Poland, her most immediate enemies were
Sweden, which blocked the way to the Baltic, and Turkey, which stood between
Russia and the Black Sea. And both Sweden and Turkey were the enemies of
Austria. Poland was in a somewhat similar position as regards external
relations, though her domestic government was wholly different. For centuries
Poland had been the foremost Slav State in Europe, but she had begun to decline
since 1572 when, on the extinction of the male line of Jagello, she had made
her monarchy elective and adopted a constitution which transformed the kingdom
into an oligarchical republic. Geography made Poland the enemy of Turkey; the
history of the State had involved it in a prolonged and bitter quarrel with
Sweden. In 1587 the Poles had elected as King the Roman Catholic Sigismund
Vasa, whose mother was a Jagello princess and who in 1592 inherited the Swedish
Meanwhile,
Mohammad Kiuprili had found in this war the pretext which he desired for
intervention in eastern Europe. He had no reason to support the integrity of
Poland or to desire the victory of the Poles; but he was determined to restore
Turkish control over Transylvania, and he had reason to suspect Rákóczy of
tampering with the fidelity of the rulers of Wallachia and Moldavia. On the
pretext that the invasion of Poland was a breach of Rákóczy’s obligations
as a vassal, he decreed his deposition and ordered the Estates to choose a
successor. They submissively chose Francis Redei; but Rákóczy speedily
deposed his feeble rival, in the confident hope that the Turks would be too
fully occupied in Crete to pay much attention to the affairs of a distant province.
In August,
after an obstinate resistance, Grosswardein was forced to surrender to the
Turks. But the patriots were not yet reduced to despair. In January, 1661, John
Keményi was chosen Prince of Transylvania; and soon afterwards Achatius
Barczai, whose troubled reign was identified in the people’s mind with
humiliating submission to the oppressive invader, was put to death. Keményi
renewed the appeal for help to Vienna, where, as a bom Hungarian, he was more
acceptable than Rákóczy had been. The appeal was supported by the Palatine and
the chief nobles of Hungary, and Leopold could hardly refuse to help in the
defence of his own kingdom, which was now threatened by the victorious Turks,
though he was still desirous of avoiding any open declaration of war. In 1661
Montecuculi was sent into Hungary with the wholly inadequate force of 10,000
men, which were to be reinforced by Hungarian levies. This was a virtual
recognition of Keményi; and the Turks replied by forcing the Estates of
Transylvania to accept another nominee of their own, Michael Apaffy, the fifth
holder of the perilous dignity within three years. Meanwhile Montecuculi’s
campaign had produced little result. His original plan of diverting the Turks
from Transylvania by an attack upon Buda was overruled from Vienna, and he was
ordered to effect a junction with Keményi on the Theiss in Upper Hungary.
Together they advanced into Transylvania as far as Klausenburg (Kolozsvár);
but the population gave them a cold welcome. The Turks refused to fight a
battle, and the army was seriously weakened by disease and privation.
Montecuculi, a cautious
Austria involved in war with the Turks. [1661-3 After the
death of Keményi hostilities languished for a year; Mohammad Kiuprili had
died in November, 1661, and the Sultan gave the vacant office to his son Ahmad
Kiuprili, the ablest and most famous Turkish commander of the century. The
success which had attended the father’s severity enabled the son to rule with
greater leniency; and for a time Europe hoped that the Porte under new guidance
might abandon its aggressive policy. The Hungarians demanded the withdrawal of
the German troops, whom they had called to their assistance. The Protestants
clamoured for the redress of their grievances and resisted all proposals in the
Diet for a reasoned plan of defence. The Austrian Ministers were so irritated
by what they considered gross ingratitude that they opened negotiations with
the Turks; and the Vezir was only too glad to lull suspicions while he made
preparations for a campaign on a grand scale, which was intended to complete
the conquest of Hungary and to carry the Crescent to the walls of Vienna. The
result was a futile congress at Temesvar, and a complete neglect of military
preparations on the part of Austria. In 1663 the Turks threw off all
concealment, and commenced open war against the Emperor. At Adrianople Ahmad
Kiuprili received the sacred standard from the hands of the Sultan, and in June
he led an imposing army of over 120,000 men to Belgrade. In face of such a
force it was hopeless to think of defending Transylvania. Klausenburg opened
its gates to Apaffy, whose authority remained undisputed till his death.
Meanwhile, the Vezir had advanced from Belgrade to Buda, whence his army threw
itself like a slow but irresistible flood upon western Hungary. The Austrian
Government was wholly unprepared for resistance. Leopold was ill with
small-pox, and all that the Ministers could do was to send Montecuculi with
some 6000 troops to “play the Croat” in face of the overwhelming enemy.
Fortunately the Turks, in spite of their strength, were delayed by the
necessity of capturing the various fortresses which defended the course of the
Danube and its tributaries. One of these, Neuhausel (Ursek Ujvar), offered an
invaluable resistance, and it was not till September 25 that the garrison
surrendered with the honours of war. Montecuculi, too weak to attempt the
relief of Neuhausel, sought to cover Pressburg and the eastern frontier of
Austria by throwing himself into the long island of Schutt, formed by two
channels of the Danube, where he was joined by the tardy levies of
1664] Battle of St Gothard. The news
that, after the interval of a century, a Turkish army comparable to that of
Solyman the Magnificent was advancing westwards under a young and capable
leader, made a profound impression in Europe, and woke some faint echo of the
old crusading ardour. Hungarian malcontents rallied to the House of Habsburg
when they found their homes desolated by the Tartar bands, whose predatory
instincts were imperfectly restrained by the discipline enforced among the
regular troops of Turkey. The sluggish Diet at Ratisbon, to which Leopold
appealed in person, voted a levy of money and troops from the Empire. Even Louis
XIV, abandoning the selfish alliance with the Turks which his predecessors had
maintained, and not unwilling to pose as the disinterested protector of a rival
State, sent 4000 men under General Jean de Coligny to serve with Montecuculi.
The prospect of external assistance encouraged the Austrian troops to begin the
campaign instead of waiting to be attacked. The cavalry under Souches defeated
and harassed the outlying forces on the right wing of the Turks, and even
recovered some of the forts which had been taken in the previous year. Kiuprili
was slow to commence his march, and his delay enabled the French and German
auxiliaries to effect their junction with the main army. When the Turks
advanced, it was seen that they kept to the southern side of the Danube, and
that they were diverging from the main valley towards Styria in order to turn
the defences of Pressburg. Montecuculi waited for them behind the Raab. As the
Turks marched south-westwards along the right bank of the river, the Christians
kept pace with them on the other side. At last, under the convent of St
Gothard, Kiuprili found a convenient angle of the river at which the passage of
troops could be protected by artillery placed at the two comers of the arc.
Here he determined to brush away the one serious obstacle to his advance. A
victory would give him unimpeded entry into the main Austrian dominions; and
already the Imperial Court was preparing to abandon Vienna for greater safety
in Linz. On August 1 large bodies of Janissaries were thrown across the Raab
and began to fortify a position on the left bank. Montecuculi, unable to
dispute the actual passage, drew up his army in three divisions. The centre was
formed by the troops of the Imperial Diet, the French were on the left wing,
and the Austrians and Hungarians were on the right. Their great advantage was
that the Turks could only cross in detachments, and were therefore unable to
make full use of their superior numbers. But the first onslaught of the
infidels, delivered with the
The battle of
St Gothard is of supreme importance in the light of future events, because it
gave the first proof that the Turks had lost their military superiority. Their
courage and their obstinate fighting power were as indisputable as ever; but
their arms and their tactics were those of the time of Solyman, and they had
made no progress in the art of war. On the other hand, the Christian troops had
profited by the lessons and experience of the Thirty Years’ War. In artillery,
in cavalry, and above all in the use of the pike, the supreme infantry weapon
of that day, they were the masters of their opponents. The great achievement of
Montecuculi foreshadowed the later victories of Charles of Lorraine and Prince
Eugene. But while Europe was exulting at the disappearance of a great danger,
it was astounded to learn that the victor had made a hasty and not very
creditable peace. Montecuculi’s army was too exhausted and too ill-united to
attempt the arduous task of driving the Turks out of Hungary; and there were
Ministers in Vienna who held that the continuance of the Turkish peril served a
useful purpose in making Hungary dependent upon Austria. By the Treaty of
Vasvar, signed on August 10, a truce for twenty years was arranged between
Austria and the Turks. Apaffy was recognised as Prince of Transylvania; the free
election of his successor was guaranteed, and the principality was to be
evacuated both by Turkish and Austrian troops; but the Sultan’s suzerainty over
it was maintained. The Turks kept their most important conquests, Grosswardein
and Neuhausel; but, in compensation for the latter, the Emperor was to be
allowed to build a new fortress on the Waag. Finally, a sum of 200,000 florins
was to be given to the Porte. The Austrians called it a gift; but it was easy
to regard it in Constantinople as a tribute. Ahmad Kiuprili, in spite of his
defeat, was able to return with the credit of one who had enlarged the bounds
of Turkish rule, and he set himself to maintain and enhance his reputation by
bringing the long war of Candia to an end. In 1666 he took the command in
person, and against his iron determination the heroic efforts of the great
Venetian general, Francesco Morosini, and of the volunteers who flocked from
all countries to the service of the Republic proved unavailing. In September,
1669, the defenders of Candia capitulated, and the whole island of Crete, with
the exception
1648-69] Austria, France, and Poland. While the
Turks were restoring and strengthening their ascendancy in the Mediterranean,
the Austrian Government had three difficult questions to deal with. The War of
Devolution, provoked by the preposterous claims of Louis XIV in the
Netherlands, led to the earliest proposals of a European coalition to check the
ambition of France. Of such a coalition Leopold I, who had just married the
Infanta Margaret, the presumptive heiress of her brother Charles II, was the natural
leader, and its most energetic advocate was the Austrian ambassador, Francis de
Lisola, who was the first to formulate that policy of vigorous opposition to
Louis XIV which was afterwards pursued hy his master and by William of Orange.
But at this time the Austrian Ministers, the Princes von Auersperg and
Lobkowitz, were dominated by the French envoy, Bretel de Gremonville. Not only
did Leopold remain neutral in the Netherlands war, but on January 19,1668, he
was induced by his love of peace to conclude a secret treaty with France for
the eventual partition of the Spanish inheritance. By this he virtually
admitted the force of Louis XIV’s contention that his wife’s renunciation of
her claims was invalid.
As against
this weakness of Austrian policy in the west must be set a strenuous struggle
to oppose the dangerous growth of French influence in Poland. John Casimir, the
last of the Vasa Kings, had in 1648 renounced his Orders, to succeed his
brother on the Polish throne and to marry his widowed sister-in-law, Mary di
Gonzaga, daughter of the Duke of Nevers. On his death the right of election
would be freed from any strong dynastic claims, and the prize of the Polish
Crown would be thrown open to unlimited competition. The reign of John Casimir
was a time of unrest. Poland was saved by its allies from the attack of Charles
X of Sweden; but the Peace of Oliva was followed by a renewal of the long
struggle with Russia for the hazardous right of ruling the turbulent Cossacks
of the Ukraine. During the Swedish war Poland had relied upon the Emperor’s
help, and Austrian influence had been so predominant at Warsaw that schemes
were entertained for adding the great Slav kingdom to the possessions of the
House of Habsburg. But since 1660 the influence of the Queen had been actively
exerted on the side of France, and a strong party was formed to support the
candidature of a French prince as John Casimir’s successor. In 1663 Mary
brought about a marriage between her favourite niece, Anne of Bavaria, and the
Due d’Enghien, son of the great Conde. A strenuous effort was now made to
induce the Poles to elect either Enghien or his father during the lifetime of
the reigning King. As soon as this should be done, John Casimir pledged himself
to abdicate and to retire to a more congenial
Alike in his
relations with France and with Poland, the Emperor was constantly hampered by
the continuance of dangerous discontent in Hungary. Any gratitude which might
have been felt for the great service rendered at St Gothard was obliterated by
the hasty conclusion of the Peace of Vasvar. The treaty itself was denounced,
not only as a betrayal of Hungarian interests, but as a breach of the
coronation oath, by which Leopold was pledged not to make peace or war without
consulting the Estates. The fortress of Leopoldstadt, erected on the Waag
So vast and
many-sided a plot—resembling in many ways the Jacobite organisation in England
in the early eighteenth century— could hardly have escaped detection, if all
the parties had been loyal and disinterested. Its disclosure became certain,
when a jealous rivalry grew up among the leaders, when personal ambition became
stronger than devotion to a common cause, and when the failure to gain any
assurance of foreign aid began to excite disappointment and alarm. Apaffy’s
zeal rapidly cooled, as he saw in the young Rákdózy a dangerous
On the
suppression of the famous conspiracy of the Hungarian magnates followed a reign
of terror, which has loaded the name of Lobkowitz with obloquy in Hungarian
tradition. All the designs which had been attributed to the Austrian Government
were now put into practice. The nobles could only escape suspicion and trial by
the most abject submission. The Protestants were punished for treason as well
as for heresy. Their preachers were sent to the galleys, and their churches
were either closed or handed over to the Catholics. The time-honoured office of
Palatine was suppressed; and Caspar von Ampringen, High Master of the German
Order, was sent with full powers as Governor to Pressburg. The Jesuit advisers
of Leopold believed that Hungary might be reduced by the methods which had
proved successful in Bohemia. The Magyar, though inferior as a plotter, is,
however, a more resolute rebel than the Slav. Possibly, if there had been no
external difficulties, his obstinacy might have been overcome. But European
affairs at this time
1672-4] War between Poland and Turkey. This conflict
had its origin in the Ukraine, which in 1667 had been divided between Russia and
Poland, the whole district on the left bank of the Dnieper being assigned to
Russia, while the town of Kieff was to remain in her occupation for two years.
The partition was a grievance to the turbulent Cossacks, who desired to recover
their unity and who equally resented control from Warsaw or from Moscow. After
two years of desultory warfare the Cossack Hetman Doroszenko appealed for aid
to the Turks. Ahmad Kiuprili responded to the appeal in 1672 by once more
leading an imposing army northwards. The Sultan was induced to accompany his
troops on what was little more than a triumphant march. Kameniec was carried by
storm; Lemberg surrendered; and the whole of Podolia was at the mercy of the
invaders. The timid King Michael became a supp liant for peace, and agreed by
the Treaty of Buczácz (October 18,1672) to cede Podolia, to acknowledge
Turkish suzerainty over the Ukraine, and to pay an annual tribute of
But the
elation of the Turks was premature. The haughty spirit of the Poles was roused
by the news of the King’s abject surrender. In response to the fiery appeals of
Sobieski, the shameful treaty was repudiated. Kiuprili had to return
northwards, where he threw a strong
As might have
been anticipated, the choice of the Diet fell upon the vigorous champion of the
nation’s honour, John Sobieski (May 21, 1674). His accession was a triumph for
Louis XIV, as that of his predecessor had been for the Emperor. Sobieski was
bound to France by early associations, by the influence of his wife, Mary
d’Arquien, and by his identification during recent years with the French party
in Poland. Louis naturally sought to make the most of what might prove
invaluable assistance in the east. He sent the Marquis of Béthune, who had
married an elder sister of the new Queen of Poland, to carry his congratulations
to Sobieski; and on June 11,1675, a treaty of alliance was signed between
France and Poland. The Polish King was to receive a subsidy of 200,000 crowns,
and French assistance in the design of restoring Polish suzerainty over East
Prussia. In return, he was to allow recruiting in his dominions for the French
service and to give a helping hand to the Hungarian rebels. Thus Louis had it
in his power to stir up formidable difficulties which would divert the forces
of Austria and also those of the Elector of Brandenburg, who had rejoined the
coalition against France. On May 27,1677, Bethune signed a treaty with Apafty
and his allies by which, in return for French subsidies tnd aid from Poland, an
army of 15,000 men was to make war upon the Emperor
In spite of
all this diplomatic activity, the Hungarian revolt gained little from foreign
assistance, and exerted far less influence upon the western war than had been
anticipated at Versailles. Apaffy found it necessary to regulate his actions in
accordance with the will of the Porte, which was not yet prepared for an open
rupture with Austria. Ahmad Kiuprili, who had extended the empire of Turkey to
its furthest bounds in Europe by the inclusion of Neuhausel in its Hungarian
dominions and by the acquisition of Podolia and Crete, died a few days after the
signing of the Treaty of Zurawna. His successor, Kara Mustafa, had by his
energy and strength of will gained the confidence of the two Kiuprilis and the
favour of the Sultan. He had become son-in-law of Mohammad, and thus
brother-in-law of Ahmad Kiuprili. In all his actions he displayed that hatred
and haughty contempt for the Giaours which had been handed down from the days
of Turkish triumph. Already, as Kamakam (deputy of the Vezir), he had persuaded
Mohammad IV to express to the French Minister his willingness to make war upon
the Emperor as soon as peace was made with Poland. This momentous decision was
formally approved by the French Council of State, and the conclusion of the
Treaty of Zurawna was welcomed with enthusiasm at Versailles. But, though Kara
Mustafa never abandoned his design, he was compelled to postpone its execution.
The Cossack Hetman Doroszenko, profoundly disappointed by the Treaty of
Zurawna, appealed to the Tsar for assistance against his recent allies. In 1677
the Turks found themselves involved in a war with Russia—the one Christian
Power for which they entertained a vague but real respect. So long as this war
continued, it was hopeless for France or any other Power to expect Turkish
intervention. Apaffy found it advisable to restrain his enthusiasm for the
Hungarian rebels. In 1678 his representative, Teleki, withdrew of his own
accord from the command of the insurgent forces and adroitly suggested as his
successor Emeric Tokolyi, who was betrothed to his daughter. The new Hungarian
leader possessed all the personal qualities which gain affection and loyalty;
and his name still holds a high place in the traditions of his countrymen.
But, in spite of his fiery courage, his persuasive eloquence, his constancy in misfortune, and the dramatic vicissitudes of his career, it is clear that the hatred of Austria which he inherited from his father was stronger than his devotion to the real interests of his country, and that his action on more than one momentous occasion was determined by personal ambition. It was of evil omen that he celebrated his acceptance of the national leadership by the issue of coins which had on their reverse the legend, “Tokolyi princeps partium Hungariae dominus,” and on their obverse, “Ludovicus XIV, Galliae Rex, Protector Hungariae” The
disappointment caused in France by the failure of the Turks to take up arms
against Austria was neither so bitter nor so lasting as the resentment excited
by the defection of Poland. Both personal and political motives combined to
bring this about. The grasping Mary d’Arquien complained that the pension given
her as Queen was no larger than that which she had received as the wife of the
Grand Hetman, and demanded the elevation of her father, a dissipated elderly
nobleman, from the rank of marquis to that of duke and peer of France. Louis
XIV refused to grant this impudent request, and excused his apparent parsimony
by recalling the large sums which he had expended in the Polish election.
Sobieski himself, while as a doting husband he supported his wife’s demands,
felt that Louis had, for his own reasons, urged him into the Treaty of Zurawna,
though he could have extorted better terms if he had waited for Russian
assistance. Besides, Poland was overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, and its clergy,
as well as the Pope, opposed the giving of aid to the Hungarian Protestants.
In truth, had Sobieski followed the dictates of France, he must have incurred
the hostility of his subjects. Although he received the crown on less onerous
terms than his predecessor, he was only the first magistrate of a republic.
Thus, in spite of the efforts of Béthune, the Polish King drifted further from
France and nearer to the Emperor, who held out a prospect of his daughter’s
hand being given to Sobieski’s son, and of the King’s father-in-law becoming a
Prince of the Empire and being endowed with lands in Silesia. In 1677 Sobieski
pledged himself to give no aid to Leopold’s rebellious subjects, and went so
far as to prohibit the departure of troops which Bethune had recruited in
Poland for aiding the Hungarians.
1679-81] Religious toleration in Hungary. In 1679
Leopold, after a good deal of hesitation, followed the example set by his
allies, Holland and Spain, in making the Treaty of Nymegen with France. His
troops had at the end of 1678 driven Tokolyi from his strongholds in Upper
Hungary; he was secure from opposition on the part of either Poland or Turkey;
and, now that his hands were free in the west, it was naturally expected that
he would complete the task of subjugating Hungary, which he had begun in 1670
and which had been interrupted in 1673 by his war with France. But the Emperor,
though slow and timid, was not without intelligence, and what his mind had once
grasped was not readily forgotten. He had learned
Substantial
as these concessions were, and extremely distasteful to the Catholic party,
they failed to satisfy either the extreme Protestants or the extreme
nationalists. Emeric Tokolyi declined to attend the Diet at Oedenburg, rejected
its decrees as inadequate and insincere, and at the close of 1681 sent three
envoys to Constantinople to offer to the Sultan the suzerainty over Hungary.
His motives and their justification will always be open to dispute. From the
Austrian point of view, he acted as the hireling of France and as an ambitious
and unscrupulous rebel who was resolved at all costs to gain a principality for
himself. From the opposite point of view, he was the resolute defender of
political and religious liberty who refused to be deluded by the deceptive
promises of an intolerant despot—promises which were only extorted by the fear
of France and Turkey and would be withdrawn as soon as that fear had
disappeared. The truth probably lies between the two extremes, and the desire
to avenge the deaths of his father’s associates in 1671 may
The conduct
of the Imperial Government in the year 1682 displayed equal short-sightedness
and irresolution. In the previous year the Turks had concluded the war with
Russia by abandoning the Ukraine and leaving Kieff to be a Russian city. In
January, 1682, the envoys of Tokolyi received the definite assurance of Turkish
support. Kara Mustafa never wavered in his intention of undertaking the direct
attack upon Vienna which he had planned six years before. The very fact that
the plan was opposed by rival aspirants to the Sultan’s favour made him the
more resolute to insist upon a policy which had become essential to the
maintenance of his own ascendancy. But, in spite of warnings, Leopold and his
Ministers refused to believe in the imminence of danger from the east. They had
decided at the end of 1681 to send Count Albert Caprara as a special envoy to
demand the prolongation of the Truce of Vasvar, which would expire in 1684.
Although their resident ambassador warned them that a special mission would be
interpreted as a proof of fear and weakness, they had little doubt as to the
acceptance of their demand. They continued the policy of conciliation in
Hungary, and carried complaisance so far as to give approval to a marriage
between Tokolyi, who had repudiated his betrothal to Teleki’s daughter, and
Helen Zrinyi, the widow of Francis Rákdózy. A representative of the Emperor
attended the wedding, which was celebrated on June 15, 1682, at the bride’s
castle of Munkács. By this marriage Tokolyi strengthened his hold upon the
patriotic party, and brought under Ids control not only the greatest
inheritance in Hungary but also the person of his stepson, Francis Rdkdczy II,
the heir to a great name and an inspirng tradition.
Louis XIV and the Turks. In the summer
the confidence of the Austrian Ministers received a rude shock. Caprara
reported that the Turks evaded his demands by suggesting impossible conditions
for the renewal of the treaty, and that in his opinion the Vezir was resolved
upon war. Tokolyi, once secure of his bride (who was fourteen years his
senior), concluded a treaty with the Pasha of Buda, raised the standard of
revolt in the name of “God and liberty,” and overpowered the surprised
garrisons in Upper Hungary. But blindness still prevailed in Vienna. In
September the truce with Tokolyi was renewed, leaving him in possession of his
recent conquests; and the triumphant rebel was actually accepted as mediator to
endeavour to bring about the prolongation of peace with the Turks. Under the
influence of the Spanish ambassador, Marquis Borgomainero, more time was spent
in discussing the measures for checking the distant aggressions of Louis XIV
than in providing for the defence of Austria and its capital. Meanwhile Kara
Mustafa was deceiving Caprara by artfully spaced-out interviews, and was
employing the time in making elaborate preparations for a campaign
which might, so far as official
Once
convinced that Austria was again threatened with a Turkish invasion, the
Imperial Ministers showed no lack of energy. Agents were sent to all Christian
States to urge them to combine their efforts against the common foe. Although,
as Louis XIV sneeringly remarked, crusades had gorfe out of fashion since the
days of St Louis, the response was not wholly discreditable to the
fellow-feeling which still feebly survived in Christendom. It is true that some
States held selfishly aloof. Charles II of England was the pensioner of France,
and had had quite enough of wars and of parliaments. William of Orange was
powerless, against the opposition of the republican party, to send aid to an
ally whose overthrow would be as fatal to Holland as to Austria itself.
Frederick William of Brandenburg was playing his own game, and it was not the
correct move at the moment to support a prince who disputed his claims in
Silesia and who would not agree to help him to drive the Swedes from Pomerania.
Spain was too anxiously watching France to be able to spare assistance even for
her closest ally. But Innocent XI worthily discharged the duties of the first
bishop of western Christendom. He sent money to Austria, and fatherly exhortations
to all the rulers who belonged to his communion. Venice eagerly promised help
against its old oppressor. The sluggish Germanic Diet voted money, and among
the Princes who promised to lead their troops to the defence of their suzerain
were Maximilian Emanuel of Bavaria, Leopold’s prospective son-in-law, John
George of Saxony, and the young George Lewis of Brunswick-Lüneburg, afterwards
King George I of Great Britain (four of whose brothers likewise served against
the Turks). But the nearest and most invaluable ally was the most experienced
and successful of living combatants against the Turk, the King of Poland. On
March 31, 1683, John Sobieski signed the momentous treaty by which he undertook
to furnish a force of 40,000 men. The French envoy, Vitry, resorted to the
tactics which Louis XIV bad prescribed as the only safeguard, if Poland were
alienated from
The criminal
blindness of the Austrian Government had delayed the appeal for help so long
that it nearly came too late. For some months the Habsburg dominions had to
provide their own defence. The veteran Montecuculi, who had so often urged the
maintenance of a standing army as the one defence against the Turks, had died
in 1681. His last service was to persuade his master to retain some 30,000 of
the troops which had been raised in the recent war with France. These formed
the nucleus of the Imperial army which was placed under the command of
Leopold’s brother-in-law, Charles of Lorraine, and which was joined by the
youthful Eugene of Savoy, among other volunteers. For a moment the Imperial general
meditated aggression as the best method of defence and advanced to attack
Neuhausel. But the risk of being cut off from the Austrian frontier was too
great, and the Duke fell back to cover Vienna. On July 7, the Emperor with his
wife and family quitted his capital amidst the murmurs of his subjects, to seek
a safer refuge in Fassau. Only at the last moment were measures taken to
destroy the defenceless suburbs and to strengthen the neglected fortifications
of the city. If Kara Mustafa had hurried his advance, he could hardly have
failed to carry Vienna by storm. But he lost several precious days on the way,
and it was not till July 17 that he completed the blockade of
1683] Siege of Vienna. The story of
the defence of Vienna is the most heroic page in the stirring annals of the
city. Grateful recollection has preserved the memory of all who played a
prominent part in the obstinate resistance which was offered to the
overwhelming force of the enemy, from the Governor, Count Rudiger Starhemberg,
to the leader of the corps of University volunteers. Local tradition preserved
a record of every sally, of the desperate struggles which raged round each
bastion. Kara Mustafa might have taken the city over and over again, if he had
pressed the attack with that obstinate determination and that disregard of
human life which had been shown by Mohammad II in the storming of
Constantinople. But he preferred to wait until exhaustion, plague, and famine
compelled an unconditional surrender. And even so he came within measurable
distance of success. The limits of human endurance had almost been reached,
when on September 11 the relieving army appeared on the slopes of the
Kahlenberg. Charles of Lorraine had played his part manfully. He had impeded
the supplies and interrupted the communications of the besiegers, and he had
successfully defended Pressburg from the attack of Tokolyi. But his chief care
had been to hasten the assembling, of the relieving forces from Germany and
from Poland. In response to the Duke’s urgent appeals, John Sobieski commenced
his march with only 26,000 men, instead of waiting for the collection of the
full contingent fixed by the treaty. At Hollabrunn he was joined by Charles of
Lorraine, who accompanied him to Tuln, where a bridge of boats had been
carefully protected to secure the crossing of the Danube. To Tuln came the
Bavarians and Saxons with a number of German volunteers, who had already
assembled at Krems. On the southern bank of the river the whole Christian
force, numbering nearly
It was no
easy task which lay before them; but it was facilitated by the gross ignorance
and incompetence of Kara Mustafa. He had refused to believe till the last
minute in the arrival of the Poles, and he had taken no precautions to cover
the besieging army. He could easily have detached sufficient troops to destroy
the bridge at Tuln or to hold the passes of the Wiener Wald. Even when the
enemy was in sight, he refused to follow the advice of Ibrahim, the Pasha of
Buda, to withdraw his seasoned troops from the trenches and to fortify a strong
position on his western front. Between the Kahlenberg and the plain were a
number of valleys formed by streams running into the Danube. Each of the intervening
slopes might have been held by the Turks, and days must then have been spent in
forcing an arduous path to the city walls. But all precautions had been
neglected. The left wing of the allies, which had the hardest task, swept away
the Moldavian and Wallachian auxiliaries, and the whole line threw itself with
the impetuosity of assured success upon the Turkish camp. The Vezir was carried
away with his panic-stricken troops. The Janissaries, surprised in the trenches
between the relieving vanguard and the exultant garrison, were cut to pieces.
Darkness was setting in, when the eight hours combat came to an
end, and the relief of Vienna was accomplished. The victors had so little
anticipated such a speedy and complete triumph that they remained under arms
all night, in the belief that the Turkish retreat must have been of the nature
of a stratagem. It was not till day dawned that they discovered that the vast
encampment which surrounded Vienna was deserted. As a matter of fact the flight
of the Turks was so hasty that by 10 o’clock the next morning the foremost
fugitives had reached Raab, a journey which it had taken the army eight days to
cover on its advance.
It is
saddening to turn from a heroic deed of arms, in which all worked together with
complete enthusiasm and harmony, to the pitiful misunderstandings which
followed. To a coalition success is almost as disintegrating as defeat. The
Elector of Saxony stayed to escort the Emperor to the thanksgiving service in
St Stephen’s on the 14th, but started homewards with his troops that very
eveniug, declaring that Protestants were regarded with little favour in Vienna
and that the Saxons had no share in the spoils. He had some grounds for the coplaint
that the saving of Vienna was celebrated rather as a Roman Catholic than as a
Christian victory. More serious was the want of concord between the Emperor and
the King of Poland, and yet it was almost inevitable. Leopold, grateful as he
was, could not but feel that he was dwarfed in his own and in his subjects’
estimation by the magnificent achievements of his preserver. He had been
willing to take the command, but had feared to come forward, lest he should
hurt the susceptibilities of his ally; and now he was an outsider in the
celebration of the defence of his own capital. The susceptible Viennese had
crowded to kiss the hands of Sobieski; they looked with some coldness on the
Incipient
quarrels, and the miasma emitted by the imperfectly cleared battlefield, made it
imperative to remove the troops from Vienna; and on September 18 the pursuit of
the enemy was begun. It was, however, too late to overtake the Turkish army. At
Raab Kara Mustafa had put to death Ibrahim Pasha, whose advice he had rejected,
and whose accusations before the Sultan he had good reason to dread. Thence the
defeated Vezir made his way to Buda. Meanwhile, the Christian army had crossed
the Danube at Pressburg by the bridge of boats which had been brought down from
Tulh, and after a few days’ rest continued their march along the north bank.
Near Parkány the Poles, who were in advance, were routed on October 7 by a
superior Turkish force; but their flight was stopped by the arrival of the
Imperial cavalry under Charles of Lorraine. Two days later, when the infantry
had come up, the Turks were again attacked and completely routed. This victory
was followed not only by the surrender of Parkány, but also by the capture of
Gran, the frontier fortress of the Turkish dominions on the right bank of the Danube.
This disaster, the first in which an actual possession of the Turks had been
regained by a Christian force, completed the alienation of the Sultan from his
Vezir. Kara Mustafa, instead of attempting to relieve Gran, had continued his
retreat to Essek and Belgrade. The blame for the defeat at Parkány he laid
upon Tokolyi, who had been within easy march of the battlefield but had
rendered no assistance to his allies. The Hungarian leader, whose following had
been diminished by a well-timed offer of amnesty from the Emperor, and whose
efforts to make terms for himself through Sobieski had failed, was now
absolutely dependent upon Turkish assistance. To defend himself against the
charges of
The Holy League against the Turks. [1683-98 No sooner had
the glorious campaign of 1683 closed, than the Emperor Leopold was confronted
by the same momentous question which had been so hotly debated by the Austrian
Ministers in the previous year. Were his most vital interests in the east or in
the west? Would he transform a war which had been forced upon him for the
defence of his own dominions into an aggressive crusade for wresting from the
Turks the Christian lands which had so long groaned under their rule? Or would
he make peace with the disappointed invaders of Austria, and turn his whole
strength to the task of resisting Louis XIV, who remained in possession of
Strassburg, and who, at the time when Vienna was in its greatest straits, had
renewed the attack upon Luxemburg, which with a parade of magnanimity he had
suspended in 1682? On the one side was the influence of the Spanish ambassador
at Vienna, Borgomainero, who hoped to gain the support of Charles of Lorraine
for a scheme which might lead to recovering his lost duchy. On the other side
were the urgent representations of Pope Innocent XI and of the victorious
generals, including the chivalrous Duke of Lorraine, who placed the interests
of Christendom far above the recovery of his own inheritance. Leopold, with
equal wisdom and docility, followed the guidance of the Church. On March
5,1684, at Linz, where the Emperor resided while his capital was purified and
rebuilt, was signed the Holy League between Austria, Poland, and Venice. The
three Powers pledged themselves to carry on war against the Turks and to
conclude no separate peace with the infidel. Each State was to retain any
conquests which it might make. The Pope was recognised as the patron and
protector of the League, and a solemn oath to carry out its terms was
transmitted to him from each of the members.
From this
treaty dates the continuous war which lasted till the Peace of Carlowitz
(1684-98), which finally freed Europe from the Turkish terror, and which
assured to the Austrian Habsburgs a foremost place among the Great Powers. The
contributions of the three allies to the ultimate success were unequal in merit
and in extent. That of Poland was unquestionably the least. John Sobieski did
little to maintain, and nothing to enhance, the fame which he had won at
Khoczim, at Lemberg, and in the relief of Vienna. He was not unfaithful to his
allies, but he was fatally hampered by domestic difficulties, by the opposition
of interested partisans of France among the nobles
In the case
of Venice, on the other hand, the war was signalised by many creditable
achievements. Taking full advantage of the fact that the main Turkish forces
were occupied in the north, the Republic organised simultaneous attacks upon
the Dalmatian coast and upon Greece. In the latter the chief command was
entrusted to Francesco Morosini, the hero of the defence of Candia. He began
the campaign in 1684 by capturing the island of Santa Maura and the town of
Prevesa. In 1685, with the help of an army of German mercenaries, he commenced
his great enterprise, the conquest of the Morea, which gave him the name of
“the Peloponnesian.” Koron was taken in August, and the fall of Kalamata made
him master of the peninsula of Maina. In the next year the Turks were defeated
in an attempt to relieve Nauplia by Count Konigsmarck, who commanded the German
troops; and the surrender of the garrison gave to Venice almost complete
mastery of the southern Morea. The campaign of 1687 is the most
famous in the history of the war. In July the Turkish entrenchments near Patras
were carried by storm, and an entry was secured into the gulf of Corinth.
Accompanied by the fleet, the army marched along the coast to Corinth, which was
occupied on August 7. After fortifying the Isthmus, the Venetian forces
proceeded into Attica and laid siege; to Athens. The bombs of the besiegers
reduced to ruin the Parthenon and the Propylaea, and the Turks surrendered the
city on September 28. With the fall of Athens the record of uninterrupted
success came to an end. In 1688 the city was evacuated, partly on account of an
outbreak of plague, and partly in order to concentrate all the forces of the
Republic on the conquest of Negropont. This enterprise ended in complete and
disastrous failure. Konigsmarck died in September; and on their departure from
Negropont in October the German troops were disbanded and sent home. The later
history of the war is comparatively uneventful. Morosini resigned his command
in 1689; and in the next year Monemvasia, the last Turkish stronghold in the
Morea, was starved into surrender. But all attempts to extend or retain
Venetian domination beyond the Isthmus ended in failure. Morosini tried to
encourage his fellow-countrymen by returning to Greece at the age of
seventy-five; but he died at Napoli (January 16, 1694) before he had time to
put his reputation to a new test. His successor Zeno attacked Chios, but was
completely defeated by a Turkish fleet and was punished for his incompetence by
imprisonment in Venice. The Turkish Government
As compared
with her allies, Austria bore the brunt of the war, and to her fell the largest
and the most durable share of the spoils. Four eminent commanders, Duke Charles
of Lorraine, the Elector Max Emanuel of Bavaria, Margrave Lewis of Baden-Baden,
and Prince Eugene of Savoy, had taken part in the relief of Vienna; and they
became the protagonists in the great eastern struggle. With the exception of
1684, when an over-confident attack upon Buda ended in the complete repulse of
the besiegers, each of the early years of the war was marked by at least one
distinguished feat of arms. In fact the superiority of the German arms and
tactics, thanks largely to the teaching of Montecuculi, was so great that some
contemporary critics complained that the successes gained were not more rapid
and complete. For this they blamed the lateness of the season in which the
campaigns were begun, and the jealousy with which both the Elector of Bavaria
and the Margrave of Baden regarded the Duke of Lorraine. But it must also be
remembered that, in addition to the main campaigns, the Austrians were fighting
against rebels in northern Hungary and against the Turks in Slavonia and
Bosnia; that the central war was mainly a war of sieges; and that the Turks, if
inferior in the open field, were still stubborn opponents behind walls or
entrenchments. A series of almost unbroken victories began in 1685 with the
siege of Neuhausel. The Turks, instead of attempting to effect a direct relief,
marched to attack Gran, where they were defeated with great loss by Charles of
Lorraine with his main army (August 16). Three days later Aeneas Caprara, who
had been left with a small force to maintain the siege till the Duke’s return,
succeeded in storming the fortress which had been originally constructed by
Ferdinand I, and had been the great prize of Ahmad Kiuprili in 1663. In the
next year the Imperial army, to which volunteers now flocked from all parts of
Europe, advanced to the second siege of Buda. The garrison offered as obstinate
a defence as before, and the Vezir Kara Ibrahim led a large army to its
succour. But the Duke of Lorraine pressed his attack in spite of many
disappointments, and on September 2, after a siege of ten weeks, the ancient
capital of Hungary was added to the dominions of the Habsburg King. Equally
gratifying to Leopold and almost equally important were the successes gained in
1686 in Upper Hungary. Tokolyi, defeated by General Schulz near Eperies,
appealed for aid to the Pasha of Grosswardein, who received him with royal
honours and then sent him in chains to Adrianople. Although he was subsequently
released and even restored to favour, his cause had suffered a blow from which
it never recovered. By the end of 1686 Eperies, Kaschan, Tokay and a number of
other towns had submitted to the Emperor. Only the fortress of Munkács held out
1687] Austrian ascendancy in Hungary. The campaign
of 1687 opened with a reverse. Max Emanuel of Bavaria had long urged that he
was entitled to a separate command by his rank as a great German Prince and as
the Emperor’s son-in-law. The fear that his discontent might lead to the
withdrawal of the Bavarian contingent compelled the Austrian Government to
divide the army between the Duke of Lorraine and the Elector. Their imperfect
cooperation helped to bring about the repulse of an attack on the important
fortress of Essek, where the great bridge over the marshy valley of the Drave
was the main link in the line of communication between southern Hungary and
Belgrade. But the failure was no unmixed evil, since it encouraged the Vezir
to follow the retreating army and to risk a pitched battle at Harkány, near
Mohács. Here the Turks suffered a crushing defeat (August 12), which did
more than any other single event to overthrow that Turkish ascendancy in
Hungary which had been founded upon Solyman’s great victory at Mohacs more than
a hundred and fifty years before. General Diinewald, following the fleeing enemy,
took Essek and Peterwardein, and thus opened the way into Servia. In the north
Erlau surrendered, and Charles of Lorraine, entering into Transylvania,
received from Apaffy an acknowledgment of vassalage to the Habsburg King of
Hungary. Earlier in the year a special Court had been erected at Eperies under
General Caraffa to enquire into the guilt of Tokolyi’s associates, and its
severity had for the moment intimidated the malcontents. On October 31 a Diet
was opened at Pressburg, which recognised the Hungarian Crown as hereditary in
the male Habsburg line, and repealed the famous clause in the Golden Bull of
1222, supposed to give the Hungarians a right of armed insurrection in defence
of their liberties. The concessions to Protestants made at Oedenburg in 1681
were confirmed. Leopold celebrated his triumph in the formal coronation of his
nine year old son, Joseph, on December 9. A few weeks later Munkacs was at last
forced to surrender, and Helen Zrinyi with her children became the Emperor’s
prisoner.
But the most
important results of the battle of Harkány were felt in Turkey. A mutiny broke
out in the retreating army, and the mutineers demanded the head of the Vezir.
When this was conceded, they proceeded to insist upon the deposition of
Mohammad IV, who had preferred the pleasures of the chase to the tasks of
government and of military command (November, 1687). Solyman II, whose life
had, contrary to all precedents, been Spared by his brother, now emerged from
his prison to mount the throne. He was wholly unable to control the disorderly
troops; and for months Constantinople was given over to anarchy and lawless
pillage, until the citizens themselves rose and put the ringleaders to death.
So great was the disorder that an easy
It was a
courageous but a rash decision. The outbreak of war with France, which
compelled Leopold to send considerable forces under Charles of Lorraine and the
Elector of Bavaria to the Rhine, restored the balance in the eastern struggle which
had hitherto been so decisively adverse to the Turks. In 1689 the change was
not yet apparent. In addition to their wars with Poland and Venice, the Turks
had to face a new enemy in the Russians who invaded the Crimea. Lewis of Baden,
who had succeeded to the command of the Imperial army, was able to overrun
Servia, where he made himself master of Nizza and Widdin. But in the winter the
Sultan gave the office of Vezir to Mustafa Kiuprili, the brother
of the famous Ahmad. Mustafa displayed all the reforming zeal which
characterised the members of his House, while he surpassed them in religious
tolerance. His great desire was to deprive the enemies of the Porte of the
advantages which they had hitherto gained from the discontent of the subject
Christians. At the same time, he set himself to reorganise the military
organisation and to rekindle discord in Hungary. The death of Apaffy in April,
1690, was followed by the
The battle of
Szalankemen marks a turning-point in the history of the war. Both sides relaxed
their efforts. The intrigues of France in Constantinople succeeded in
preventing the conclusion of peace. On the other hand the influence of the
Emperor’s western allies, and especially of William III, induced him to abandon
all ideas of further conquest and to stand on the defensive in Hungary. Lewis
of Baden succeeded in taking Grosswardein in 1692, but in the following year he
was despatched to the Shine. For four years the Imperialists, under the
successive commands of Croy, Caprara and the young Frederick Augustus of
Saxony, achieved practically nothing, and more than once narrowly escaped
disastrous defeat. Meanwhile changes of rulers occurred in Constantinople. On
the death of Solyman II in 1691, his brother Ahmad had ascended the throne. The
latter’s death in 1695 was followed by the accession of his nephew Mustafa II,
the son of the deposed Mohammad IV. The new Sultan was a young man in the prime
of life and eager for military fame. Instead of entrusting all responsibility
to a Vezir he undertook the command of his army in person. The Turks, always
responsive to the call of an energetic leader, displayed their old warlike
spirit. In 1695 and 1696 they defeated the Imperial forces in Hungary and
recovered some of their lost predominance in the JEgean. It seemed as if events
would justify the solemn warning of Montecuculi that his master should never
wage a long war against the Turks, as their power remained unshaken by defeat.
In 1697 the Sultan at the head of a formidable army marched from Belgrade up
the valley of the Theiss in the direction of Szegedin, whence he could throw
himself by way of the Maros into Transylvania. Frederick Augustus of Saxony,
with all his physical strength and courage, possessed neither the character nor
the capacity needed for a, great general, yet it was impossible for the Emperor
to dismiss an ally who had brought an independent force to his
1698-9] The Peace of Carlowitz. Events now
tended rapidly in the direction of peace. In November,
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