READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CHAPTER VIII.RELIGIOUS WAR IN GERMANY
CHARLES V achieved a masterpiece of unscrupulous
statecraft when he extricated himself from his war with France and left his
English ally entangled in its toils. Cogent military reasons for the peace
concluded at Crépy could doubtless be alleged; the
position of the imperial army in the heart of France was more imposing than
secure, and the disasters of the retreat from Marseilles in 1524 might have
been repeated in Champagne or Picardy. But there were deeper motives at work;
however promising the military situation might have been, no prosecution of the
war could have been attended with greater advantages than was its conclusion at
that juncture. Charles was left with a freer hand to deal with Germany than he
had ever had before. He had been more brilliantly victorious in 1530, but
England and France were then at peace, and at liberty to harass him with
underhand intrigues. Now, they were anxious suitors for his favor, ready,
instead of reluctant, to purchase his support against each other by furthering
the Emperor's efforts to cope with his remaining difficulties. These were now
three, Turkish, Lutheran, and papal; with the two latter he must deal to some
extent simultaneously; the Turkish problem he was enabled by the friendly
offices of Francis I to postpone.
Few historical points are so hard to determine as
Charles’ real intentions with respect to the religious situation in Germany in
1545. Was it to be peace or was it to be war? We have much of the Emperor’s
correspondence to guide us, but its help is by no means decisive. Charles was
constitutionally hesitating; it was his habit to dally with rival schemes until
circumstances compelled a choice. On the eve of war he was still weighing the
merits of peace, and it was always possible that an unexpected development in
any one of his heterogeneous realms might disturb all past calculations. Yet
there can be little doubt as to Charles’ ultimate aim in 1545 or at any other
date. The original dynastic objects of his policy had been achieved with
wonderful success, and the subordinate but still powerful motive of religion
came more prominently into action. His religious ideas were comparatively
simple; he adhered to medieval Catholicism because he could comprehend no other
creed and conceive of no other form of ecclesiastical polity. As well let there
be two Emperors as two independent standards of faith. The Church like the
Empire must be one and indivisible, and he must be the sovereign of the one and
the protector of the other.
With these ideas it was impossible for Charles even to
contemplate a permanent toleration of schism or heresy. His concessions to the
Lutherans from 1526 to 1544 were not made with any such intention; they were
simply payments extorted from Charles by necessity for indispensable services to
be rendered against the Turks and the French; they were all provisional and
were limited in time to the meeting of a General Council. That they sprang from
necessity and not from any reluctance of Charles to persecute is proved by his
conduct in other lands than Germany. He did not attempt a policy of toleration
or comprehension in Spain or in the Netherlands; there his methods were the
Inquisition and the stake. Wherever he had the power to persecute he
persecuted; he abstained in Germany only because he had no other choice and
because he thought his abstention was not for ever; and in the end the most
powerful motive for his abdication was his desire to escape the necessity of
countenancing permanent schism.
Throughout, Charles was steadfast to the idea of
Catholic unity; but his determination to enforce it at the cost of war was the
growth of time and the result of the gradual course of events. He is credited
with a desire to effect his end by the method of comprehension ; but room for
the Lutherans in the Catholic Church was to be found not so much by widening
the portals of the Church as by narrowing Lutheran doctrine, by the partial
submission of the Lutherans and not by the surrender of current Catholicism. It
soon became obvious that the Lutherans would never be brought to the point of
voluntary submission; and so early as 1531 the Emperor would have resorted to
persecution if he had had the means. But from persecution to war was a long
step, and he would have shrunk from war at that date even if it had been in his
power to wage it. Before 1545, however, this reluctance had been removed. The
logic of facts had proved that it was a death-struggle in Germany between the
medieval Church and Empire on the one hand and Protestant territorialism on the
other. The fault was partly the Emperor’s; by making himself the champion of
the old religion he had forced an alliance between the anti-Catholic Reformers
and the anti-imperial Princes; and from 1532 onwards territorial and Protestant
principles had made vast strides at the expense of Catholicism and the Empire.
It is not necessary, nor is it possible, to determine which advance alarmed
Charles most; both were equally fatal to the position which he had adopted. The
threatened secularization of the ecclesiastical electorates would have
converted Germany from a Catholic monarchy into a Protestant oligarchy; and
such was the meaning of the proposal of the Lutheran Princes in 1545 to revive
the dignity of the Electorate, when by the evangelization of Cologne and of the
Palatinate they had acquired a majority of votes in the Electoral College. Nor
was that the only danger. A portion of the Netherlands would naturally follow
the religious lead of its metropolitan city, Cologne; the accession of the
Palatinate to the Lutheran cause threatened the Habsburg lands in Alsace; and a
majority of Protestant Electors might mean a Protestant Emperor at the next
vacancy.
These perils, and the persistency with which the
Lutherans turned the Empire's necessities to their own advantage, convinced
Charles that the issues at stake were worth the risks of war. He was sure that
there was no remedy but force, without perhaps being certain that force was any
remedy. At the same time his experience in Germany from 1541 to 1544 had shown
him how those risks might be minimized. The Landgrave’s bigamy had driven a
wedge into the Protestant ranks; and the success with which the Emperor had
widened the breach between Electoral Saxony and Hesse had opened the prospect
of further divisions among the Lutheran Princes. Charles declares in his Commentaries that
his success in isolating Cleves proved to him the lack of coherence among his
enemies, and made him hope for victory in case of war; and that he intended in
1544 if not earlier to make war on the Lutherans is hardly a matter of doubt.
He would not have made such great concessions at the Diet of Speier in 1544, had he not foreseen that a final
settlement of accounts with France would enable him to render those concessions
nugatory; and the fact that the Lutherans fell so easily into the trap has been
considered the most conclusive proof of their political incapacity. Within
three months from the date of the truce with France Charles was discussing with
the Pope details of a war against the Lutherans. People would be glad, he
wrote, if the Pope devoted to that object the vast sums he had amassed for a
war against the Turks, “especially if the undertaking against the Turk had
ceased to be a pressing necessity”; he declared that one of his chief objects in
concluding peace with France was to be able to conduct these two wars against
Turks and Lutherans successfully; and there was a secret stipulation that
Francis I should assist in his endeavors. The war against the Turks had been
one of the pretexts for requiring Lutheran aid at the Diet of Speier; but Charles was taking care that it should “cease
to be a pressing necessity” or to stand in the way of the other war he had in
his mind.
Yet it would be a mistake to represent a religious war
as the Emperor’s prime object. It would in any case be only the means to an
end, and he was still seeking if not hoping to attain that end by other means.
He had moreover greater schemes in view than a mere conquest of the Lutherans.
He was, though to a less extent than his grandfather Maximilian, subject to
dreams, and his dream from 1545 to the disasters of 1552 was to assemble a
General Council by means of which he would reduce the Lutherans to Catholicism
and the Pope to reform; then having united and purified Western Christendom he
would march at its head against the Infidel, regain the East for the orthodox
faith, and be crowned in Jerusalem. Maximilian had contemplated all these
achievements, and had also hoped to encircle his brow with the tiara of a Pope
and the halo of a saint; but Charles would have been content to crown his life
with monastic retirement. The object immediately under consideration in 1545
was the General Council for which he had labored so long in vain. By this means
he hoped to work his will both with the Pope and with the Protestants. The
Lutherans had for many years expressed a desire for a General Council; if it
met and they accepted its decrees, unity would be achieved: if they refused to
be bound by them, the refusal would be a justification for war and a good
ground on which to appeal for help to the Catholic Powers. Secondly, the mere
fact of its meeting would annul the concessions which Charles had made; and
thirdly, the demand of a free General Council from an obstructive Pope would
enhance the illusion under which the Lutherans labored that Charles was their
ally against the Papacy. In August, 1544, Paul III had denounced the Emperor's
compliance at Speier, had reminded him of the
fate of his predecessors, from Nero to Frederick II, who had persecuted the
Church, and had threatened him with an even more terrible doom; and Luther and
Calvin had thereupon seized their pens in his defence.
The Pope in fact was the chief obstacle to the Council; but the peace between
Charles and Francis destroyed all chance of successful resistance; and Paul III
made a virtue of necessity by summoning a Council to meet at Trent in December.
As the Edict of Worms had been dated the same day as Charles’ alliance with Leo
X, so the summons to the Council of Trent was dated the same day as the Peace
of Crépy (November 19, 1544).
If Charles hoped for Protestant submission to the
Council of Trent he was speedily undeceived. The choice of Trent was a
concession to German sentiment, but was nevertheless a tricky gift. Trent was
only nominally a German city; in feeling it was almost purely Italian, and, on
account of its proximity to Italy, Italian Bishops would swamp the Council
almost as completely as if it had met within Italian borders. The practical
exclusion of deputies made the adequate representation of non-Italian sees
impossible; and the choice of monastic theologians ruined the prospect of an
accommodation with Lutheran doctrine. The authority of the universal Church was
assumed by a gathering of Italian and Spanish Bishops, who would unite to
maintain the extreme Catholic theology, and would only be divided by the
political question of papal or imperial predominance. Even in the more
favorable event of Charles prevailing, the Protestants had little to hope; a few
practical abuses might be removed, but the medieval Church would remain in
essence the same, and an attempt would be made to force them within its pale.
Hence they repudiated the Council from the beginning; they denied that it was
free, Christian, or General, the three conditions upon which alone they would
recognize its authority; and at the Diet of Worms, which met in the spring of
1545, they demanded from Charles a permanent religious security quite
independent of what the Council might decree. Nothing would ever have induced
the Emperor to grant such terms; they would have involved him in the sin of
schism and cut away the ground on which his whole position and policy were
based; the one weapon with which he now hoped to effect his aims would have
broken in his hands. So Ferdinand, who represented Charles, unhesitatingly
rejected the petition; there was nothing, he truly said, in the decisions
of Speier in the previous year to justify
it.
War thus became inevitable, but Charles still sought
to postpone it. He was not yet sure of peace with the Turks, of the Pope, or of
the allies he hoped to win from the Lutheran side. Although the Spaniards at
his Court spoke openly of the approaching extirpation of Protestantism, and
although his confessor, Domenico de Soto,
reinforced by the influence of Peter Canisius and other early missionaries of
the Company of Jesus in Germany, was constantly urging him to take the decisive
step, Granvelle and
even Alva were still for peace, and the Emperor halted between the two
opinions. To bring the Pope to terms he again made show of listening to the
Lutherans. He expressed his intention of carrying out the decisions of the Diet
of Speier, and annoyed the Catholics by again
holding out the prospect of a national Council on religion, in case the General
Council at Trent proved abortive. To this national assembly was also postponed
the consideration of the various projects of reform which had been drawn up as
a result of the Diet of Speier. The most
notable of them was the “Wittenberg Reformation”, which was drawn up by the
Elector John Frederick, and signed by Luther, Bugenhagen, Cruciger, and Melanchthon, although it contains few
traces of Luther’s spirit. It recommended the establishment of a Protestant
episcopacy on the ground that Princes were too much immersed in secular affairs
to exert a proper supervision over those of the Church; possibly also it was
intended to reconcile the great Catholic Bishops to a change of faith.
During 1545, however, the last reasons for hesitation
vanished. The Turks, threatened with war in Persia and with a dynastic dispute
between Roxolana and
Mustapha, listened to the mediation of Francis I, and concluded a truce with
Charles and Ferdinand in October. The Emperor had nothing to fear from the Kings
of France and England, who were then engaged in a bitter war; and Christian III
of Denmark had been alienated by the Schmalkaldic Leaguers
refusal to assist him in 1544, and alarmed by the admission into it of the
Elector Palatine, who had claims to the Danish throne through his wife
Dorothea, Christian II’s daughter. The Council of Trent actually met in
December, and Paul III offered 12,000 foot, 500 horse, a loan of 200,000 crowns
and half-a-year’s ecclesiastical revenues in Spain for the purposes of the war.
At the same time the Emperor's personal efforts to check the Reformation in
Cologne had failed; Hermann von Wied defied
both the imperial Ban and the papal Bull, and was taken under the wing of
the Schmalkaldic League. The primate,
Albrecht of Mainz, died in September; Charles’ candidate for the vacant
Archbishopric received not a single vote; and Sebastian von Heusenstamm was an Erasmian Catholic who owed
his election to Philip of Hesse’s aid
rendered in return for Heusenstamm’s promise
to purify his see. Duke Henry of Brunswick was defeated in an attempt in
September to regain his duchy with the help of mercenaries under Christopher
von Wrisberg; the
sequestration of his territories arranged at Speier and
Worms was set aside; and they were appropriated by the Schmalkaldic League, an act of violence which Charles
expressed his intention of using as a pretext for a religious war.
In these circumstances the doctrinal discussions which
the Emperor renewed in the winter can be regarded as little more than a blind
to delude the Protestants or a screen behind which he made his preparations for
war. His representatives at the conference, Cochlaeus, Eberhard Billick,
and Malvenda all
held extreme views, and their arguments were principally aimed against the
compromise of 1541. They revived the scholastic dogmas which had then been
abandoned; and the interest of their discussions consists, for English readers
at any rate, mainly in the fact that Malvenda based his defence on the teaching of a forgotten English Dominican, Robert Holcot (d. 1349). Charles’
real efforts were directed towards the more useful work of consolidating the
Catholic and disintegrating the Protestant party. The leading Catholic opponent
of the Habsburgs, Duke William III of Bavaria, who ruled the whole duchy since
the death of his younger brother Ludwig, was won over to something more than
benevolent neutrality by the alliance between Pope and Emperor, by the marriage
of his son with Ferdinand's eldest daughter, and a promise of the throne of
Bohemia for their descendants if Ferdinand's male issue failed, and by the
offer of the coveted hat of the Elector Palatine, if the latter sided openly
with Charles' enemies.
Still more important were the divisions among the
Protestants. The imprisonment of Duke Henry of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and
the seizure of his duchy had alienated his Protestant as well as his Catholic
kinsfolk, including the Duchess Elizabeth of Brunswick-Calenberg, her son Duke Eric, and Duke Henry’s
son-in-law Margrave Hans of Brandenburg-Cüstrin,
who were detached from the Schmalkaldic League
by the promise of Henry’s restoration. Margrave Hans’ elder brother, the
Elector Joachim of Brandenburg, was already pledged to neutrality, and his
cousin Margrave Albrecht Alcibiades of Brandenburg-Culmbach was also brought into the Emperor’s
net. But these accessions of strength were trifling compared with the
advantages secured by Charles through the reconciliation of Duke Maurice of
Saxony.
Maurice’s uncle Duke George (1500-39), the main
representative of the Albertine branch of
the House of Wettin,
had been the staunchest Catholic in the north of Germany; but his father Duke
Henry (1539-41) had been a no less zealous Protestant. Maurice, who succeeded
to the duchy in 1541, when twenty-one years of age, was neither. The hereditary
jealousy between the Albertine and
Ernestine Houses of Saxony was neutralized to some extent by Duke Henry’s
adoption of the Protestant cause and by Maurice’s marriage with Agnes, the
daughter of Philip of Hesse. But Maurice was less influenced perhaps by
religious motives than any other Prince of the age; and he poured scorn on
those who thought that the interests of the State should be subordinate to
theological dogma. His Protestant education at the Elector John Frederick's
Court did not prevent his recalling the Catholic counselors of his uncle Duke
George. He readily followed his father-in-law, Philip of Hesse, in making a
compact with Charles in 1541, though he had not Philip's personal motive of
fear; and he assisted the Emperor to reduce John Frederick's brother-in-law,
Duke William of Cleves. This first aroused enmity between him and the Elector;
the dispute concerning the bishoprics of Meissen and Merseburg increased
it; and a fresh source of discord arose in the question of the protectorate of
the sees of
Magdeburg and Halberstadt, which Maurice wanted for
himself and declared that John Frederick coveted. Carlowitz, an old adviser of Duke George and a
member of one of the noble families of Meissen, which had sided against John
Frederick as to the question of the bishopric, was untiring in his efforts to
win over Maurice from the Elector's side to that of the Emperor; and the
attempts of the Archbishop of Cologne to reconcile the cousins in the summer of
1546 proved futile. Luther had succeeded in allaying their quarrels about
Meissen; but Luther was now no more. He passed away on February 18,1546, full
of forebodings of evil to come, and more dominated than ever by wrath
against Sacramentaries on
the one hand and the Pope on the other; and revenge was taken for his diatribes
against Rome by the invention of a legend that the great reformer died by his
own hand.
Luther had ample justification for gloomy vaticinations, and the internal weakness of the Schmalkaldic League was doubtless one of Maurice’s
most powerful motives for refusing to trust his fortunes in so ill-found a
vessel. Bucer proposed
a dictatorship as the only cure, and Philip of Hesse would naturally be his
choice for the office. Maurice, on the other hand, who could not expect to rank
above Philip or John Frederick, suggested a triumvirate, and refused Philip’s
invitation to enter the League as it was then constituted. A prolonged diet of
the League was held at Frankfort from December, 1545, to February, 1546,
without resulting in harmony between Philip and John Frederick or in the
adoption of satisfactory financial or military preparations for war. Philip had
been alarmed early in 1545 by rumors of the approaching peace with the Turks, and
wished to send embassies to England, France, and Denmark, to form an alliance
with the Swiss and with Holland, and to take the offensive before Charles’
measures were complete. But John Frederick believed in peace to the last. He
was deluded by Charles' assurances that he meant no war on the Lutherans, but
rather another expedition against Algiers, and by the Emperor's apparent
confidence in peace, evinced by his crossing Germany almost unattended from the
Netherlands to Ratisbon, which base it was in fact essential for Charles to
reach.
1545-6] The Diet of Ratisbon. Charles V’s diplomacy
So the time passed until the opening of the Diet at
Ratisbon in June, 1546. Eric of Brunswick, Margrave Hans of Cüstrin, and some other
Protestants whom Charles had won over were present; but Philip and John
Frederick were absent. Maurice, who was still ostensibly on the best of terms
with his cousin and his father-in-law, was told by Granvelle that he must come to Ratisbon to
conclude his agreement with the Emperor. Maurice came, but he was determined
not to sell himself too cheaply. Besides the grant of the practical
administration of Magdeburg and Halberstadt, a demand
which ran counter to all the principles Charles was bent on enforcing, he
required the transference to himself of his cousin’s electoral dignity and what
cost Charles a greater effort to concede immunity from the decrees of the
Council of Trent, so far as they might touch the doctrine of justification by
faith, clerical marriages, and communion in both elements. Without these
concessions Maurice despaired of maintaining his position in Protestant Saxony,
and with some modifications they were all granted by Charles. The Emperor’s
confessor had advised him to tempt some of the Protestant Princes with the bait
of their neighbors’ vineyards; but it was a sore test for Charles when, in
order to attain his purpose, he had to grant in private to particular Princes
terms which he refused to them all in public, and to surrender that principle
of submission to the Church on which the whole war was based.
Somewhat similar verbal assurances were made to Hans
of Cüstrin, Albrecht
of Culmbach, and Eric
of Brunswick. On June 7 the treaty with Bavaria was formally signed, and two
days later that with the Pope. But the Diet still continued; and on the 13th
the Protestants repudiated the Council of Trent and demanded instead a national
Council. Pending its decisions the compromise of Speier should
remain in force. Charles laughed; he had already given orders for mobilization.
Encouraged by the success of his diplomacy in dividing the Protestants and by
the singularly favorable aspect of foreign affairs, urged on by the exhortation
of his Spanish subjects, possibly carried away to some extent by the rising
theological temper, of which the murder of an unfortunate Protestant, Juan
Diaz, and its official approval, were signs, Charles had taken the plunge, and
on May 24 he had announced to his sister Maria his resolve to begin the war of
religion.
The Elector of Saxony must have been the only leading
Protestant who was surprised by the decision. Philip of Hesse had long been
seeking in vain to awake the Schmalkaldic League
from its lethargy. But, expected or not, the war certainly found the Protestants
unfitted if not unprepared to cope with the crisis. Long immunity had created a
false sense of security; and the League, whose military strength appeared
imposing, was honeycombed with disaffection. It had not escaped the workings of
that particularism which had proved fatal to the Swabian League and to
the Reichsregiment;
and its members were discontented because it could not grind all their private
axes. The cities, and still more the knights, were hostile as ever to the
encroaching territorial power of the Princes, among whom Philip of Hesse was
considered the protagonist. At his door was laid the ruin of Sickingen,
and Sickingen’s son
mustered many a knight to Charles’ standard. Charles moreover could appeal to
public opinion as the champion of the imperial constitution, which the Lutheran
Princes attacked without suggesting a substitute. They had repudiated the Kammergericht, protested
against the Diet’s recesses whenever they pleased, and denied the authority of
General Councils and of the Emperor himself; he was no longer Emperor, they
said, but a bailiff of the Pope. But if authority were denied to all these
institutions, where was the bulwark against anarchy? They might seem to have
resolved that the Empire should not exist at all unless it served their
particular purpose.
It was this aspect of lawlessness which enabled
Charles to pretend that the war was waged, not against any form of religion,
but against rebellion. When Hans of Cüstrin’s chaplains were preaching the purest
word of Lutheranism within the lines of the Emperor's camp, who could say that
Charles was warring on Lutheran doctrine? Henry VIII told the Schmalkaldic envoys that if they were threatened on
account of religion he would come to their aid, but he could not see that such
was the case when so many Protestant Princes were fighting on Charles’ side.
The Emperor spared no pains to foster this public impression. On this ground he
persuaded the Swiss to remain neutral, and endeavored to detach the south
German towns from the cause of the Princes. He sought, in fact, to isolate
Philip and John Frederick as he had isolated William of Cleves in 1543, and to
represent his offence and theirs as the same. In the ban which was proclaimed
against them on July 20 he recalled the Pack conspiracy of 1528, the invasion
of Württemberg in 1534, and the two wars in Brunswick; and held up the Princes
to reprobation as condemners of public authority and disturbers of the peace of
the Empire.
And yet Paul III was declaring at the same moment that
the war was due to injuries done to the Church and to the Princes’ refusal to
acknowledge the Council of Trent. He sent the cross to his Legate Alessandro
Farnese, and offered indulgences to all who assisted in the extirpation of
heresy. In his eyes at least the war was a crusade, and as such he commended it
to the Catholic Swiss. The Emperor himself in his private utterances confirmed
this view. To his sister he admitted that the charges against Philip and John
Frederick were a pretext intended to disguise the real issue of the war. To his
son he wrote that his intention had been and was to wage war in defence of religion, and that the public declarations about
punishing disobedience were only made for the sake of expediency; and when the
war was over he told the Diet of Augsburg that the disturbance had originated
in religious schism.
There was no irreconcilable contradiction between the
two contentions. To repudiate Charles’ religion was a civil as well as an
ecclesiastical offence, because it was impossible to distinguish in Charles the
person of the Emperor from the person of the protector of the Church, just as
Henry VIII made it impossible for men to distinguish in him the Supreme Head
from the sovereign. Henry utilized the divinity which hedged a king to combat
the divinity of Rome; Charles employed the remnants of respect for the imperial
authority to extinguish Lutheran doctrine. It was always possible to represent
heresy as treason so long as Church and State were but two aspects of one body
politic; it was always expedient to do so because the State in the sixteenth
century was a more popular institution than the Church; numbers confessed to
heresy, but few would confess to treason.
The Schmalkaldic War.
[1546
To all these advantages the Schmalkaldic League
could oppose in July, 1546, an undoubted superiority of military force. Charles
would depend mainly upon troops from the Netherlands, and his own and the papal
levies from Spain and Italy. But the whole breadth of Germany separated him
from the one and the Alps from the other; and prompt offensive action on the
part of the League would have ended the war in a month. Promptness and boldness
were, however, the last qualities to be expected from the League. Every
question had to be referred by the commanders in the field to the League’s
council of war, where it was generally made the subject of acrimonious
discussion between representatives of the south German cities and the Princes,
or between the adherents of the adventurous Philip of Hesse and the sluggish
Elector of Saxony. They were afraid to take the offensive lest it should damage
their cause in public opinion. In particular they would not violate Bavarian
territory, wherein Charles was established at Ratisbon, lest Bavaria should be
driven into the Emperor’s arms, where as a matter of fact it was already
reposing. This timidity ruined their best chance of success. Schärtlin, the ablest of the
League's commanders, who led the forces of Ulm and Augsburg, had conceived the
bold plan of marching south-west, and closing the Tyrolese passes against
Charles’ Spanish and Italian levies. This could probably have been effected
without much difficulty, and the Emperor would thus have been rendered
powerless in Germany; for the Tyrolese peasantry had sympathies with the
Protestant cause, and their experience of Spanish and Italian mercenaries in
1532 made them anxious to keep them at a distance. Schärtlin actually crossed the Danube,
seized Füssen and
the Ehrenberg pass; but the League based fond hopes upon Ferdinand’s
conciliatory attitude, and its reluctance to offend him spoilt Schärtlin’s plan, as its
fear of Bavaria had prevented the proposed seizure of Ingolstadt and march on
Ratisbon.
Recalled from the south, Schärtlin occupied Donauwörth, a city where the Catholic Fuggers were strong; and
here he was joined by the Elector and the Landgrave. The total force now
amounted to fifty thousand foot and seven thousand horse, but this formidable
army wasted the whole month of August, while Charles advanced to Landshut with
little more than six thousand men, and effected a junction with his Italian and
Spanish troops. He then moved on to Ingolstadt and threatened to cut the
Protestant communications with Upper Swabia, whence they drew their supplies.
On the last day of August the two armies were only separated by a few miles of
swamp. Philip of Hesse succeeded in planting a hundred and ten guns within
range of the imperial camp; but the bombardment failed to compel Charles either
to attack or to evacuate, while the Protestants, for reasons which were
afterwards disputed between Philip and Schärtlin, declined to risk an assault on Charles’
entrenchments. The only result was a series of indecisive skirmishes between
the light horse of either party; but the Emperor gradually extended his control
up the banks of the Danube in the direction of the forces from the Netherlands
under van Buren, who crowned a brilliant march across Germany by eluding the
main Protestant army and uniting with Charles at Ingolstadt on September 17.
The Emperor could now assume the offensive. The Neumark territories of the Count Palatine Otto Henry, a
zealous Protestant, were overrun, and the imperial army made for Nördlingen. The Protestants,
however, keeping to the high ground and resisting all Alva’s temptations to
come down and fight, headed Charles off, and he thereupon turned south-west
towards Ulm. Again he was anticipated; Ulm was too strong to be taken by
the camisado which Charles
proposed, and the climate and lack of money began to tell heavily upon his
southern troops. Three thousand Italians deserted in one day, and death thinned
the Emperor’s ranks as fast as desertion. The term during which the papal
auxiliaries were bound to serve would expire in the winter, and the Protestants
thought the imperial cause would collapse without a battle. But their own
difficulties were hardly less than those of Charles. Their German troops were
more inured to the climate, but money and food were equally scarce; and it has
been contended that the League’s abandonment of southern Germany was due to
financial straits and not to Maurice’s attack on John Frederick. The cities
were frightened by the loss of their trade; the Protestant lands of the Baltic,
the French, and the Swiss showed no disposition to intervene. The Leaguers
therefore made proposals of peace; but Charles rejected their terms, refusing
to regard them as aught but rebellious vassals.
He had reasons for confidence unknown to the enemy.
His diplomacy had in fact made victory certain almost before the war began. On
October 27, in his camp at Sontheim,
he signed the formal transference of the Saxon Electorate from John Frederick
to Maurice, and a few days later Maurice and Ferdinand entered upon the
conquest of Ernestine Saxony. The partnership was the result of mutual
distrust. Maurice would have held aloof, could he have obtained his ends by
peaceful means. But he could not hope for the Electorate unless he won it by
arms. Ferdinand was preparing for war in Saxony; and if Maurice remained
inactive, he might find himself in as evil a plight as John Frederick, and at
the mercy of a victorious Habsburg army. His desire to remain neutral was
overcome by force of circumstances; and the most favorable view of his conduct
is that in self-defence he
was driven to attack his still more defenseless cousin.
However this may be, Maurice had experienced great
difficulty in inducing his Lutheran Estates to concur in an attack on his
cousin’s lands. His preachers had declared that Charles was warring on the
Gospel, and that whoever abetted him would incur everlasting damnation. To
discount these denunciations Maurice produced a declaration from the Emperor
that religion should remain untouched where it was established; he represented
to his Estates that if he did not execute the ban against John Frederick,
Ferdinand would, and that it would be much safer for them politically and
theologically that Electoral Saxony should fall into his Protestant hands than
into the Catholic hands of Ferdinand. The counterpart of the argument was
employed by Ferdinand to secure the co-operation of his Bohemian nobles; it
would, he said, be fatal to Bohemia’s claims on Saxon lands if Maurice were to
execute the ban alone. So each Prince joined to execute the ban ostensibly as a
check upon the other, and they agreed on a partition of the spoils. On October
30 Bohemian troops crossed the Saxon frontier and terrified the neighboring
towns. Maurice undertook to defend them on condition that they did him homage,
while he promised to protect their religion and to treat the Elector with every
respect consistent with his own obligations to the Emperor. Zwickau, Borna, Altenburg, and Torgau all accepted these terms, and the
greater part of the Electorate passed into Maurice’s possession.
The news of these events reached the armies on the
Danube early in November and exercised a decisive influence over the campaign
in southern Germany. On the 23rd the Protestant army broke up, and John
Frederick hastened to the defence of his Electorate.
The League’s plan was to leave an army of observation in the south to protect
the Protestant cities if attacked, and to occupy the Franconian bishoprics
while the Elector reconquered Saxony. Only the last part of the programme was carried out.
The departure northwards of the main army was followed by a stampede among the
south German cities. The Protestant light horse went home for want of pay, and
the army of observation came to nothing. Philip of Hesse failed to raise the peasants
and artisans in Franconia and practically retired from the contest; while Giengen, Nördlingen, and Rothenburg rapidly fell into the Emperor’s power. The
moment had come for breaking up the disjointed League. The southern cities had
never forgotten their Zwinglian leanings
or been happy in their political and religious relations with the north German
princes. They at least had no territorial ambitions to gratify, and, if Charles
could give them security for their religion, there was no reason for them to
continue the struggle. Nürnberg, in spite of its strong Lutheranism, had from
the first refused to fight. Granvelle,
always peaceably inclined, pressed on Charles the dangers of war, and the
Emperor himself had not the personal feeling against the cities which he
exhibited towards the Landgrave and the Elector.
Negotiations were first opened with Ulm, which stood
out strongly for a religious guarantee, but was ultimately satisfied with a
verbal promise that it should enjoy the same advantages in that respect as
Maurice of Saxony and the Hohenzollerns. The agreement was concluded on
December 23, and similar terms were soon arranged with Memmingen, Biberach, Heilbronn, Esslingen, and Reutlingen, all
of them among the original fourteen Protestant cities of 1529. Frankfort
submitted two days before the end of the year, and Augsburg and Strasburg in
January, 1547. Augsburg was moved by the influence of the big trading families;
Anton Fugger conducted the negotiations; and the city contented itself with Granvelle’s oral promise of
religious toleration. Next came Strasburg, the surrender of which caused Bucer and Jacob Sturm some
bitter pangs; but the dangerous proximity of the city to France and Switzerland
induced Charles to offer exceptionally liberal terms. The others were all
compelled to contribute as much to the Emperor’s war expenses as they had paid
to his opponents. By February all the south German cities had yielded with the
exception of Constance; and the Protestant Princes of the south could no longer
hold out. Charles’ old friend the Elector Palatine, Frederick II, the lover of
his sister and the husband of his niece, and his old enemy, Ulrich of
Württemberg, both came to crave his forgiveness. The Elector suffered nothing
beyond reproaches; but Ulrich was forced to pay an indemnity of three hundred
thousand crowns, to surrender some of his strongest fortresses to permanent
imperial garrisons, and to engage in service against his former allies. He was
fortunate to escape so lightly; he had not learnt wisdom with years, and his
people detested his rule. Ferdinand pressed for the abrogation of the Treaty
of Cadan and the
restitution of the duchy, but Charles was afraid that such a step would revive
Bavarian and other jealousies of the Habsburg power.
In the north-west, too, the imperial cause made
strides. At the end of January imperial commissioners were sent to enforce the
long-threatened Catholic restoration in Cologne. The Protestant Archbishop,
Hermann von Wied, had
been suspended by the Pope, and his offer to abdicate in return for a guarantee
for the maintenance of Protestantism was rejected; Count Adolf of Schaumburg
was elected coadjutor; on February 25 Hermann resigned and Catholicism was
forcibly re-established. In the same month Duke Henry of Brunswick captured
Minden and regained his duchy. For these successes the inactivity of Landgrave
Philip was largely responsible. At the critical moment his former vigour was lost in
vacillation. His son-in-law Maurice was seeking to separate him from the
Elector, and Philip gave Maurice warning when John Frederick marched against
him. But he could not make up his mind to accept the terms that were offered,
and the final catastrophe, which he did nothing to avert, left him at
Charles' uncovenanted mercy.
The Landgrave and the Elector seemed to have exchanged
their accustomed parts, for while Philip was wasting the precious moments John
Frederick was exerting himself with unwonted resolution and success. Maurice’s
treachery had alienated the whole of Saxony; and John Frederick’s appearance at
the beginning of December, 1546, was the signal for a great outburst of
enthusiasm for his cause. He rapidly recovered the whole of his own
territories, extended his influence over the sees of Merseburg, Halberstadt, and Magdeburg, and invaded Albertine Saxony. He defeated and captured Margrave
Albrecht of Culmbach at Rochlitz, and overran all
Maurice’s lands with the exception of Leipzig. His cousin complained that most
of his subjects favored John Frederick, and thought of fleeing to Konigsberg.
The Lutherans of Lusatia and Silesia and the Utraquists of Bohemia refused to follow
Ferdinand in support of Maurice. They were much more anxious to preserve their
own lands from Spanish troops; they entered into negotiations with John
Frederick, threatened to withdraw their allegiance from Ferdinand, whose hold
on the Bohemian throne was at that moment weakened by the death of his wife,
the daughter of Wladislaw II, and received
John Frederick with open arms when he crossed the frontier. North Germany
seemed at last to be roused to a sense of danger; a league was in course of
formation including Magdeburg, Bremen, Brunswick, and Hamburg, and Christopher
of Oldenburg and Albrecht of Mansfeld were prepared to support it.
The campaign of Muhlberg. [1547
At this moment, when the fortune of war seemed to be
turning, the tide began to set against Charles in other quarters. The spiritual
and the temporal head of Christendom could never agree long together even when
fighting a common foe, and Charles V and Paul III were now at enmity. The
Emperor had demanded the Council of Trent because a Council was essential to
his policy; the Pope had summoned the Council because he could not help it.
Charles wanted to reform the Papacy, Paul did not. Paul desired an emphatic
restatement of dogma; Charles, with his eye on wavering Lutherans, required a
discreet silence; and this fundamental difference between the imperial and
papal parties soon provoked a breach. So early as July, 1546, there were rumors
that the Pope would remove the Council to an Italian city where it would be
under his exclusive control, and against this proposal Charles protested in
October. His concessions to his Lutheran allies and to the southwestern cities
offended papal orthodoxy, while his success in the field alarmed a Pope who
dreaded nothing so much as a drastic reform of the Church at the hands of a
militant Emperor. In January, 1547, the publication of the decrees of the
Council on the question of Justification by Faith extinguished Charles’ chances
of conciliating the Lutherans; and at the same moment Paul did what he could to
prevent their subjection by recalling the papal contingent. To such a pass had
things come that the Pope was rejoicing at the Elector’s successes; and in
March the Council of Trent, on the pretext of the plague, removed to Bologna.
The Emperor now joined the Lutherans in refusing to recognize the Council’s
authority; while papal agents stirred up plots against the imperialists in
Siena and Venice, Genoa and Naples. Charles overwhelmed the Pope and his legate
with abuse, and his threats to find a remedy for this evil again turned men’s
thoughts back to 1527.
But first he must deal with the successful rebel in
northern Germany. John Frederick, however, was not really dangerous, and the
successive deaths of Henry VIII (January 28) and Francis I (March 31)
guaranteed Charles immunity from external complications. Charles rose to the
crisis and wisely determined, in spite of Granvelle’s protests, to march north himself.
He spent Easter at Eger, and on April 13 crossed the Saxon frontier. The
Elector had formed a prudent plan of avoiding pitched battles, retiring to
Magdeburg, and leaving Charles to fritter away his strength in sieges; but
unfortunately for himself John Frederick could not resist the temptation to
keep in touch with Bohemia, whence he expected material help. So he stationed
part of his forces on the Bohemian frontier, and with the rest occupied Meissen
on the right bank of the Elbe. Charles advanced by rapid marches through Flauen, Altenburg, and Kolditz, cut off the Elector
from Thuringia, and threatened his communications with the north, where he
trusted, in case of defeat, to find refuge. Alarmed by this movement John
Frederick broke up his camp at Meissen and made his way down the Elbe towards
Wittenberg. He hoped that Charles would march on Meissen and thus give him time
to escape; but the Emperor went straight for Mühlberg,
where he found the Elector at nine a.m. on April 24. A bridge of boats was
moored to the right bank of the Elbe, but some Spaniards swam the river with
swords in their mouths, cut down the guards, and secured the bridge. By it the
bulk of the infantry crossed, while the cavalry found a ford higher up. Without
attempting to defend his position the Elector commenced a retreat to the north.
About sunset the imperialists overtook him and routed his slender forces with
great slaughter. John Frederick fought with conspicuous courage, and was
brought into the Emperor's presence with blood streaming from a wound in his
cheek. Charles was not generous in the hour of victory; he taunted the Elector
with his previous disobedience, while Ferdinand demanded his execution. A
sentence of death was actually passed, but it was only used to extort the
surrender of Wittenberg, which the Spanish troops were afraid to storm. By the
capitulation of Wittenberg Maurice received his cousin’s electoral dignity, and
a considerable slice of his territories, while Sagan and the Voigtland fell to the share
of Ferdinand. John Frederick was carried about a prisoner in the Emperor’s
suite; but no threats could shake his steadfast adherence to the Lutheran
faith, and three years later Charles secretly decreed that his detention should
last as long as his life.
From the Elector he turned to the Landgrave, whose
submission was delayed by the successful resistance of Bremen to Eric of
Brunswick and Christopher von Wrisberg,
and by the defeat, much more sanguinary than the battle of Mühlberg,
which Christopher of Oldenburg and Albrecht of Mansfeld inflicted upon the
imperialists near the Drakensberg. But these victories only saved the Baltic
lands; in the west Philip could find no support, and after much hesitation he
was induced to surrender by Maurice and Joachim of Brandenburg. The two Princes
pledged their word to Philip that he should not be imprisoned, but for this
they apparently had no warrant. The popular legend that the term without
any imprisonment was altered by a secretary to without
perpetual imprisonment has no satisfactory basis; but it is clear that
both Philip and the two Princes understood that the Landgrave should go free,
and there were high words between them and Alva, when, after Philip had made
his submission (June 20), the Duke placed him under arrest. Such had been
Charles’ intention throughout; he does not appear to have encouraged any
deception, and subsequently the two Princes admitted that the mistake had been
theirs. It was an unfortunate mistake for Charles’ reputation; but for the rest
Philip escaped more lightly than John Frederick, a circumstance which he owed
to Maurice, and not to his deserts. In 1550 his term of detention was fixed at
fifteen years; he was to dismantle all his fortresses save one, and to give up
his artillery; his territories were to remain intact and his people unmolested
on account of their religion; though subsequently half of Darmstadt was
transferred from Hesse to the House of Nassau.
In the north-east of Germany the Dukes of Pomerania
made peace with Charles through their agent Bartholomew Sastrow, whose memoirs present a
gloomy picture of the condition of Germany during the war. Bremen held out, but
more important was the resistance of Magdeburg, which ultimately defied all the
force which Maurice was able or willing to bring against it. A proposal to
bring Albrecht of Prussia to terms was rejected lest warlike measures should
precipitate a conflict with his suzerain Sigismund of Poland; but in Bohemia
Ferdinand used his opportunity to crush its remaining constitutional liberties,
and to reduce it to a footing more nearly resembling that of his own hereditary
lands.
Except for Constance and these outlying regions on the
Baltic, Charles was now dictator in Germany. No Emperor since Frederick II had
wielded such power, and at the Diet of Augsburg which was opened on September
1, 1547, he endeavored to reap the fruits of his victory. He never had a
greater opportunity, but the inherent antagonism between the aims of the
Habsburg dynasty and those of the German nation was too fundamental to be
eradicated by the defeat of a section of Lutheran Princes. The constitutional
reforms which he laid before the Diet were inspired by the same family motives
which actuated Charles in 1521, and they provoked the same kind of national and
territorial opposition. Bavaria reverted to its natural attitude, partly
because Charles had quarreled with the Pope, but more because he had not repaid
Bavaria for her exertions in the war by an increase of territory, nor shown any
inclination to transfer the Electoral dignity of the Palatinate from his old
friend, the Elector Frederick II, to Duke William. Maurice was not satisfied
with the partial ruin of his cousin, and felt that Charles had purposely left
his position insecure.
The Emperor’s first object was to strengthen the
executive with a view to preventing such outbreaks as the Peasants’ War, the
Anabaptist revolt, the lawless enterprises of Lübeck, and Philip of Hesse’s conquests of Württemberg and Brunswick. A
proposal for the preservation of peace would naturally meet with much support;
but that support was neutralized by the conviction that the League, which
Charles proposed to establish on the model of the old Swabian League, was
really designed to strengthen the Habsburgs against other Princes and against
the nation itself. The League was to embrace the whole of Germany, to be
directed by a number of permanent officials who although representative of the
various orders would tend to fall under government influence, and to have at
its disposal an efficient military force. This League and its organization was
to lie entirely outside the ordinary constitution of the Empire; and the
Electors discovered the chief motive for it in the fact that the Habsburgs
would command a far greater share of influence in it than they did in the three
Councils which constituted the Diet. However, the real flaw in the
Emperor’s plan was that he did not seek to reform the Diet, but left it
standing, while a new organization was introduced which was bound to come into
conflict with existing institutions and could only supersede them after a long
and wearisome constitutional struggle. Both its good points and its defects
excited discontent. The territorial Princes feared to lose their hold over
mediate lords when the latter would look not to them but to the League for
protection; the cities dreaded the expense of having to keep internal and
external peace in outlying lands like Burgundy and the Austrian Duchies.
Bavaria had resolved to refuse, even if all the other Estates agreed; the
College of Electors was unanimously hostile; the Diet as a whole disliked a
measure which would bring its own authority into dispute, and Charles dropped the
proposal without a struggle.
He was more fortunate in his reconstitution of
the Reichskammergericht;
he arrogated to himself the immediate nomination of its judges, reserved to his
own Hofgericht questions
of Church property and episcopal jurisdiction, and persuaded the Diet to adopt
a codification of the principles by which the action of the Court should be
governed, and to promise contributions for the Court’s support. He was able to
defy the remonstrances addressed to him on
account of the Spanish troops, which, contrary to his election pledges, he had
quartered in the Empire. He secured the establishment of a fund for the
maintenance of internal and external peace, which was not, however, to be used
without the Diet’s consent; and obtained preferential treatment for the
Netherlands by means of a perpetual treaty between them and the Empire. They
were to contribute to national taxation but to be exempt from the national
jurisdiction; they were thus partly removed from imperial control, though
Germany was perpetually bound to the arduous task of their defence;
the transfer of Utrecht and Gelders to
the Burgundian circle was a mark of their incorporation in the Habsburg
inheritance.
Meanwhile religion naturally occupied much of the
attention of Charles and the Diet. The Emperor vowed that even when in the
field against his enemies he had thought more about the Church than the war;
and it was incumbent upon him to attempt some sort of solution at the Diet of
Augsburg. The problem, difficult in any case, was rendered infinitely more so
by his strained relations with the Pope; which the murder of Paul’s son, Pierluigi Farnese, on
September 10, 1547, with the suspected connivance of Ferrante di
Gonzaga, the governor of Milan, of Granvelle,
and even of Charles himself, did nothing to improve. The Pope was hardened in
his determination not to let the Council leave Bologna. The Emperor obtained a
unanimous recognition from the Estates to the effect that the prelates
remaining at Trent constituted the only true Council. They also approved of
Charles’ refusal to publish the Tridentine decrees;
and, going further than he desired, they demanded that Scripture, should be the
test applied to all doctrines, and that the members of the Council should be
released from their oaths to the Pope, in order that they might more
effectually reform the Papacy. In the name of the German nation Charles
formally required the return of the Council to Trent; and when this was
refused, his two representatives, Vargas and Velasco, solemnly protested on
January 18, 1548, against all future acts of the Council at Bologna, declaring
them null and void.
The Interim. [1548
Was Charles also among the prophets? He, even as
Philip of Hesse and John Frederick of Saxony, had protested against a General
Council and refused to be bound by its decrees. Had he been as devoid of
religious scruples as Maurice of Saxony or Henry of Navarre, and had he had
only German feelings to consult, he would in 1548 have become an ostensible
Protestant. But Charles would never have bought a kingdom with a Mass; he
preferred to lose a kingdom for a Mass, and, in spite of his enmity with the
Papacy, he was bent on making Germany Catholic, and on using his victory to
decide questions upon which he had declared the struggle would not be fought.
At the same time his refusal to accept the Tridentine decrees
as the standard of faith made it necessary for him to evolve some criterion of
his own which should serve its purpose during the interval until a General
Council should formulate conclusions acceptable both to him and the Pope. With
this object in view, after a fruitless discussion by a committee consisting of
representative laymen as well as ecclesiastics, he took into consultation
Michael Helding,
the suffragan Bishop of Mainz, who
represented the high Catholic point of view, the Erasmian Julius von Pflug, whom the result of the Schmalkaldic War had at last established as Bishop of Naumburg, and John Agricola, whose views were
Lutheran, of a moderate type. The compromise, known as the Interim,
which this commission drew up, conceded clerical marriages, the use of the cup
by the laity, and accepted a modification of the doctrine of justification by
faith. Pflug also
explained away enough of the sacrificial character of the Mass to satisfy some
of the Lutherans, and denied some of the prerogatives claimed by the Pope. On
the other hand the Interim retained all the seven Sacraments, the worship of
the Virgin and the Saints, fasts, processions, and other Catholic ceremonies,
and reaffirmed the dogma of transubstantiation.
The reception of the Interim by the
College of Electors was on the whole favorable. Joachim of Brandenburg rejoiced
to see included in it the three concessions which formed the basis of his
compact with Charles in 1541; the Elector Palatine concurred. Maurice wanted to
consult his Estates, but Charles represented to him that no provincial assembly
could override the decisions of a Diet. The Emperor had more to fear from the
College of Princes, where the Bishops and Bavaria were preponderant on the
Catholic side. The Count Palatine Wolfgang of Neumark and Margrave Hans of Cüstrin,
as zealous Lutherans, offered a strenuous opposition. Duke William of Bavaria
had Catholic and other scruples, and referred them to the Pope. Paul III had
also conscientious scruples and remembered Pierluigi. He replied that the Emperor had nothing
to do with matters of doctrine, which must be reserved for the Council at Bologna;
points on which the Council had already decided should be adopted without
alteration by the Diet; and on questions, which the Council had not yet
settled, the Interim contained several assertions repugnant to
the Catholic faith. Armed with this opinion the College of Princes resolved
that all Church property must be restored, that the concession of the Cup to
the laity and of clerical marriages could only be made effective by papal
dispensation, and above all that the Interim must not apply to
Catholic territories. In other words, the compromise was to bind one party but
not the other, and Lutherans were to accept such concessions as they had
obtained subject to the Pope’s grace and favor. Charles was incensed at this
attempt to spoil the concordat, and told the Princes that they must accept the
articles as they stood. This they refused to do. The Emperor was compelled to
give an assurance that the Interim had no other object than the conversion of
backsliders from the faith; and several alterations were made in its wording
without the knowledge of the Protestants. In this form the Interim was
proclaimed as an edict on May 15, 1548; but the vague terms in which the
Elector of Mainz expressed the Diet’s concurrence did not imply that unanimous
concurrence which Charles read into its declaration.
It needed more than sleight of hand to compel the
edict’s observance, but Charles was resolved to stick at no measures, however
violent. He disregarded the oral assurances given to the cities before their
surrender, and his councilor Hase averred
that Spanish troops should teach them Catholic truth. At Augsburg and Ulm the
city franchises were violated, the democratic Councils purged of refractory
members, and their places supplied by rich Catholic merchants like the Fuggers and Welsers. Constance yielded after
a brilliant defence of its bridge which recalled the
exploit of Horatius Codes, and surrendered its privileges as an imperial city
to be merged in the Habsburg domains. Divines who refused to submit became
exiles. Osiander left Nürnberg, Brenz left Swabian Hall,
and Blarer Constance; Schnepf was driven
from Tübingen, and Bucer and Fagius from Strasburg. The last two found a
home in Cambridge, and many others came to spread the doctrines of reform in
England; over four hundred divines are said to have left southern Germany.
In northern Germany the rulers who had submitted to
Charles generally accepted the Interim, but Maurice was compelled
to pay tribute to Lutheran sentiment, and employed for this purpose
Bishop Pflug of Naumburg, the most conciliatory of Catholic divines. He was
met in the same spirit by Melanchthon, who, much to the Emperor’s annoyance,
still enjoyed safety and power in Wittenberg. Melanchthon’s attitude was
similar to that of 1530, and aroused much discontent among the bolder
Lutherans; his criticisms of Luther and John Frederick seemed oblivious of his
former relations with them and of the facts that one was dead and the other in
prison. At a conference with the Catholics at Pegau he
gave away much of the Lutheran case; but the Interim met with
greater resistance at a second debate at Torgau in October, 1548, and was likened to
the forbidden fruit with which Eve tempted Adam. At Celle, however, in the
following month its advocates once more prevailed, and the formulary which they
drew up was adopted at a Saxon Diet at Leipzig; thence it took the name of
the Leipzig Interim and became the rule for Saxon lands.
Over almost the whole of Germany the Interim was
now enforced, and Charles was so elated by his success that he thought of
pressing its acceptance upon the Scandinavian kingdoms, upon England, and even
upon Russia. Yet his triumph was illusory and short-lived; even Melanchthon,
who conformed, secretly counseled resistance, and people followed his private
precept rather than his public example. Three years later two English
ambassadors at Charles’ court gave a description of the situation in Augsburg.
An imperial commission had charged the ministers of that city with preaching
against the Interim and refusing to say Mass in their
churches. The divines replied that they durst say none, being more loth to
offend God than willing to please man; the Apostles had neither said nor heard
Mass; and for themselves if they were in fault the fault was no new one, for
they had said no masses for fourteen years. They were then compelled to leave
the city, which remained disconsolate; there were few shops in which people
might not be seen in tears; a hundred women besieged the Emperor’s gates
“howling and asking in their outcries where they should christen their
children”, and where they should marry. “For all this the Papist churches have
no more customers than they had; not ten of the townsmen in some of their
greatest synagogues. The churches where the Protestants did by thousands at
once communicate are locked up, and the people, being robbed of all their godly
exercises, sit weeping and wailing at home”. Strasburg and Nürnberg were in no
better mood; when Charles required the young Duke Christopher of Württemberg to
expel John Brenz, he
replied that he was as willing as the Emperor to do so, but it was not in his
power unless he could expel all his subjects with him.
Against a spirit like this the Emperor labored in
vain. It availed him little that Paul III in his dying days recognized
the Interim and dissolved the Council at Bologna; that Julius
III repaired his predecessor’s error and sent his prelates to Trent where
Charles’ Bishops still kept up the continuity of the Council; or that in
January, 1552, some Protestant delegates appeared there and reinforced the
opposition to the Pope. The reunion did not assuage the struggle between papal
and imperial influence. In the demand that the points already decided must be
reconsidered, Vargas, Charles V’s representative, concurred with the
Protestants, and wrote to the Emperor a series of letters exposing the papal
intrigues at the previous sessions of the Council, which has been used with
effect by Protestant historians. He even welcomed the proposal of Maurice’s commissioners
that doctrines should be tested by the Scriptures, and pressed hotly for a
practical reformation of the Papacy. It was Charles’ view that if the Lutherans
would come within the pale of the Church as he defined it, they would be useful
allies against the Pope. But his definition was the Interim, and
the effort to force that definition on his subjects electrified the atmosphere
and prepared it for the storm which Charles’ dynastic and absolutist projects
brought down upon his head.
1548-51] The question of the imperial succession
Nothing illustrates more vividly Charles’ incurable
want of sympathy with his German subjects or the incompatibility of his family
ambitions with the national tendencies of the age than his attempt to force his
son Philip into the seat of the German Emperors. National antipathy to France
had contributed more than anything else to his own election, yet he thought he
could defy a far deeper hostility to the Spaniards. The foreign character of
his own aims had been responsible for much of the opposition he experienced in
Germany, though he had at least been brought up in nominally imperial
territory. Yet he imagined that Philip could succeed who had lived all his life
in Spain and was purely Spanish in feeling. No Spaniard had hitherto ruled in
Germany, for Alfonso of Castile can scarcely be cited as an exception, and the
Reformation, added to other causes, made it impossible that a Spaniard should
ever rule there in the future. Spain and Germany represented opposite poles of
religious and political ideals, and the attempt to unite them under one rule
would inevitably have proved as disastrous in Germany as a similar attempt did
in the Netherlands. Charles in fact was a hybrid physically, politically, and
to some extent ecclesiastically; and the parts of his cosmopolitan Empire
necessarily reverted to their original national types.
In his endeavour to
perform the impossible Charles nearly produced a rupture in the Habsburg
family, and alienated all the German Princes. His plan was that Philip should
be elected King of the Romans when Ferdinand became Emperor, and that thus
after Ferdinand’s death the Empire should remain with the elder line of the
family. Ferdinand was led to believe, however, that the design extended to
Philip’s immediate succession and his own exclusion from the throne, and this
was the current suspicion in Germany. He long and strenuously opposed his
brothers plan; and the quarrel between them was only patched up by the
intervention of their sister Maria from the Netherlands. Eventually it was agreed
(1551) that Philip should succeed Ferdinand, but that Ferdinand’s son
Maximilian should succeed Philip. This healed the family breach but had no
effect on the other German Princes; and the Electors, with wise regard for
their own interests and national liberties, unanimously refused even to
consider the scheme.
The whole nation in fact was growing day by day more
hostile to Charles and his Spanish troops. The garrisons scattered throughout
the Empire, few though they were in numbers, created the impression that
Germany was a conquered country; and Spanish arrogance lost no opportunity of
bringing this sense home to the German mind. Granvelle was suspected of harboring a design
for the partition of Germany. Hatred, which was at first limited to the Spaniards
themselves, began to embrace the Emperor as he repeatedly refused to listen to
the Diet’s complaints of their conduct and of his infraction of his
engagements. He also wounded military feelings by forbidding the service of
German mercenaries in foreign armies, a practice which he had often licensed
himself, and by summarily hanging Sebastian Vogelsberger for defying his commands.
Discontent was expressed with Charles’ proposal to invest his son with the
Netherlands on terms which rendered those provinces an hereditary appanage of the Habsburg family, independent of the
Empire and transmissible to female heirs; and even Catholics were offended at
the persecution to which Philip of Hesse and John Frederick were subjected. The
former believed that the Emperor intended to carry him off to Spain, and when
he attempted to escape his German guards were exchanged for Spaniards. The
three lay Electors, most of the Princes, and even Ferdinand, petitioned for
Philip’s release; but Charles turned a deaf ear and decided that his detention
should last for fifteen years, though he was afraid to publish the sentence.
While Charles’ popularity in Germany was being thus
undermined, his prestige abroad was rapidly waning. His power in Germany from
1547 to 1550 had really rested upon a fortunate coincidence of external
circumstances, the absorption of England and France in their mutual struggles
and the diversion of the Turks to the East. But such a combination of
propitious conditions could not last. By 1550 France had recovered Boulogne,
established her influence in Scotland, and compelled England to make peace; and
it was generally anticipated that this peace would be followed by war with the
Emperor. The naval warfare in the Mediterranean between Dragut and Charles’ admirals
began to go against the imperialists; and the loss of Tripoli (August, 1551)
more than counterbalanced the previous gain of Mehedia. The Turk again turned his attention
towards Hungary, where the remnants of Zapolya’s kingdom acknowledged the nominal sway
of his son but the real rule of George Martinuzzi.
His domination proving intolerable to Zapolya’s widow, she appealed to the Sultan,
while Martinuzzi sought to make terms with Ferdinand.
Ferdinand’s request for assistance from the Diet was coldly received by
Charles, and his envoy in Transylvania, Castaldo,
suspecting that Martinuzzi intended treachery, had
him murdered with Ferdinand’s connivance (December, 1551). The Turks thereupon
began to advance, while the disputes of the Farnese in Italy, where France
supported Orazio and
the Emperor Ottavio,
brought Henry II and Charles to the verge of war.
Under these circumstances men began to desert the
Emperor’s failing cause. Maurice, who had betrayed his cousin, would not adhere
too scrupulously to Charles; he was highly unpopular in Saxony on account of
his religious backsliding and his political treachery, and unless he found
independent means of support he would go down with the Emperor’s ruin; his own
subjects were already thinking of placing his brother Augustus in his place,
and his nobles declined to assist him in the siege of Magdeburg. So gradually
he began to dissociate himself from the Emperor’s fortunes; he supported
Maximilian in his opposition to Philip’s succession, and the Landgrave’s sons in
their attempt to secure some mitigation of their father’s lot. He obtained in
the autumn of 1550 a useful basis of operations, being entrusted by the Diet,
in spite of the reluctance of Charles, who already suspected his intentions,
with the conduct of the siege of Magdeburg. That city had been placed under the
ban of the Empire for its continued resistance to Charles and to his religious
measures; on September 22, 1550, its troops had been defeated by Duke George of
Mecklenburg, but the citizens spurned all proposals for submission. Their
indomitable resistance had stirred a fever of enthusiasm in Lutheran Germany;
and the acceptance of the task of subduing them evoked renewed taunts of
“Judas” against the Saxon usurper.
But it was not Protestantism which Maurice intended to
betray this time. His character remains to this day an enigma; elaborate
attempts have been made to represent him not merely as the ablest statesman of
his age but as the champion of German Protestantism, consistently working in
its interest. According to this theory his original desertion of the Schmalkaldic League was only a necessary step towards
his ultimate victory over Charles and the forces of reaction. To others his
career appears to be a masterpiece of treachery, and Maurice himself a subtle
intriguer comparable only with his contemporary the Duke of Northumberland, who
like him played an unscrupulous and selfish part under the mask of religion. In
Maurice the territorial ambition of German Princes found its most skilful exponent: his
religious creed was but an accident of circumstances. No pronounced Catholic
could have maintained himself in ducal Saxony or held the Ernestine electorate;
but Charles’ help was indispensable for the overthrow of John Frederick, and
Charles’ help could not be purchased without some concessions to orthodoxy.
This object having been achieved Maurice proceeded to rid himself of a
dangerously unpopular ally; and he was as successful in choosing the right
moment for leaving Charles as he had been when he deserted the Schmalkaldic League.
The popular antipathy to Charles and his Spaniards,
the genuine devotion of the middle classes to Lutheranism, were the levers
which Maurice and his fellow-Princes used for their own ends. They rebelled
neither to free the German nation, nor to redeem the true religion. Their real
motive was fear lest Charles should establish a strong monarchy, and reduce
their oligarchy to the impotence to which they had endeavored to reduce his
sovereignty. This apprehension had begun to work soon after the battle of Mühlberg. As early as 1548 Otto of Brunswick-Harburg was intriguing in
France with Henry II, who suggested a North-German-Polish league, the germ of
the later alliance between France and Poland against the House of Habsburg. Negotiations
were soon in train between the young Landgrave William of Hesse, Margrave Hans
of Cüstrin, Duke
Albrecht of Prussia, and his suzerain Sigismund Augustus, the King of Poland.
The soul of the movement was Hans of Cüstrin, whose refusal to acknowledge the Interim
had provoked the wrath of Charles V, and whose dominions in Cottbus and Crössen, the one surrounded and
the other bounded by Ferdinand’s lands, excited that King’s desires. In
February, 1550, a defensive league was formed between Hans of Cüstrin, Johann Albrecht of
Mecklenburg, and Duke Albrecht of Prussia at Konigsberg; and secret agents were
busy in foreign lands, Schärtlin in
Switzerland and George von Heideck,
a cadet of the House of Württemberg, in England and the Hanse towns.
Maurice had early information of these movements, but
his advances were viewed with suspicion. Hans of Cüstrin wished to exclude him and the young
Margrave Albrecht Alcibiades of Brandenburg-Culmbach from the league on account of their
religious indifference; but the threats of the Emperor against Hans and Johann
Albrecht of Mecklenburg, and Maurice’s success in enticing to his banners the
military forces of northern Germany induced them to listen to his overtures.
For this purpose his command gave Maurice every opportunity; in September,
1550, he won over the troops of Duke George of Mecklenburg; in January, 1551,
he secured the Protestant levies of George von Heideck; and in the following month Hans came to
terms at Dresden. The deposed and imprisoned Elector was the chief difficulty
in Maurice’s path. John Frederick vowed he would rather end his days in
captivity than owe freedom to his godless and traitorous cousin; but Maurice
carried his point with his allies; and in May Hans of Cüstrin, Johann Albrecht of Mecklenburg, and
Landgrave William of Hesse consented to threaten the young Ernestines with open
hostility unless they would join the league or at least undertake to remain
neutral. Maurice also secured Duke Albrecht of Prussia, and an envoy was sent
to France to request a monthly contribution of a hundred thousand crowns. In
August, 1551, the Bishop of Bayonne came to Hesse, and in the autumn the terms
of an alliance between Henry II and the German Princes were outlined. On
November 3 Magdeburg capitulated. To Charles Maurice represented the surrender
as a complete imperial victory; but in reality the terms of the capitulation
guaranteed to the townsfolk the religion they desired, and secured to Maurice
control of the city and a basis of operations.
1550-2] Agreement with Henry II of France.
The appeal to France involved a radical alteration of
Hans of Cüstrin’s original
plan. His object had been merely defence against the
threatening aspect assumed by Charles V, but mere defence was of no use to Henry II. French support could only be bought by making the
league offensive, and offence was also Maurice’s plan. Chagrined at having to
yield the first place in the league to Maurice, and alarmed, perhaps, by the
terms which Henry II demanded, Hans broke away from the league. A German who
was both a patriot and a Protestant could indeed have been offered no more
painful choice. The French stipulations were that the Princes should undertake
to vote as Henry wished at the next imperial election, and connive at his
conquest and administration as imperial vicar of the bishoprics of Metz, Toul, Verdun, and Cambray. The
imperial lands were to be sacrificed as the price of religious security, or
rather of princely privilege. Particularism was at least as strong a motive
with the Princes as Protestant or patriotic feeling. They had not crushed the
knight, the peasant, and the Anabaptist in order to smooth Charles1 path to
absolutism, but their own. The Emperor was the last obstacle to the full
development of territorial despotism, and the real inwardness of the struggle
is illustrated by the fact that the cities, Protestant though they were, for
the most part stood aloof or sided with the Emperor. The Lutheran North
remained passive, and the so-called war of liberation presents many of the
features of an oligarchic plot.
The treaty between the German Princes and the King of
France was signed at Chambord and at Friedwald in January, 1552. Henry intervened
in Germany, as he did in Italy, as the champion of national liberties against
the Emperor; and while in March he threw thirty-five thousand men into Lorraine
he hardened his heart against the heretics in France. In fact his devotion to
German freedom although more specious was no more real than his love of
toleration; and the German lands which fell into his power fared at least as
ill as ever they would have done under Charles V. The double face which France
showed from 1532 to 1648, Catholic at home and Protestant abroad, was a
religious guise adopted to help her in her secular rivalry with the House of
Austria, and never did it stand her in better stead than in 1552. In that year
Henry II avenged the defeats and imprisonment inflicted on his father by
Charles V and thus embittered the close of the Emperor’s life with failure and
humiliation.
As the French troops crossed the frontier, Maurice,
William of Hesse and Margrave Albrecht Alcibiades concentrated thirty thousand
men in Franconia. The Emperor was not so ignorant of Maurice’s designs as has
often been supposed. His commissioner, Lazarus Schwendi, had sounded warning notes from the camp
at Magdeburg; but success had made Charles confident and careless, and he
failed to realize the danger until it was too late to organize resistance. On
April 6 he was thinking of flight to the Netherlands, but the way was blocked
already. He suspected Ferdinand’s loyalty, and others have believed that the
King of the Romans had a secret understanding with Maurice. Ferdinand had ample
grounds for discontent, but there seems to be no proof of treason on his part.
Maurice, who had outwitted the keenest diplomats at Charles’ Court, may well
have duped his brother; he had promised to meet the King at Linz on April 4,
but Ferdinand was not prepared for the guise in which he came. On that day
Augsburg fell before the Princes; the resistance of Nürnberg, Ulm, and
Strasburg alone marred the completeness of their victory, for Bavaria and
Württemberg were their secret allies. On the 18th Maurice was at Linz.
Ferdinand sought to negotiate an armistice, but Maurice refused to date it
earlier than May 26, and used the interval to draw his net round Charles. In
spite of the words attributed to him, that he had no cage big enough for such a
bird, Maurice did not shrink from pressing his illustrious fugitive, and hoped,
as he said, to run the fox to earth. On the nights of May 18-19 he seized the
pass of Ehrenberg. Twelve days earlier Charles had been foiled in an attempt to
escape to Constance and to pass on thence to the Netherlands. He had no troops
to withstand Maurice; but a mutiny in the Elector’s forces gave him a few
hours’ respite, and towards evening, with a few attendants, he fled amid rain
and snow across the Brenner. The victor of Mühlberg was an almost solitary fugitive in his Empire; the assembled Fathers at Trent
broke up in dismay, having, it was said, no mind to argue points of doctrine
with soldiers in arms; and the Emperor’s soaring plans dissolved like castles
in Spain.
It was the darkest hour in Charles’ career, but soon
the twilight began to glimmer. The Emperor found a refuge at Villach in
Carinthia, while Maurice went to the conference at Passau, where his own
troubles began to gather. He demanded as the price of peace security against
Habsburg aggression in Germany, restoration of princely privilege, and a
guarantee of the Lutheran religion irrespective of the decrees of the Council
of Trent. The Catholic Princes assembled at Passau were disposed to concede
these terms, but to connive at permanent schism was incompatible with Charles’
rigid Catholic conscience. Nothing could bend his iron will, not the advance of
the Turk nor the success of the French in Italy nor his own personal peril. He
insisted that the question of religious peace must be referred to a Diet. On
that point he refused to yield an inch; and among the circumstances which
preserved so large a portion of Germany to the Roman Catholic faith not the
least is the unshaken constancy which Charles V evinced at the sorest crisis of
the Catholic cause in Germany.
His courage had its reward. Margrave Albrecht had
separated from his allies and was pursuing a wild career of murder and
sacrilege in Franconia, where he dreamt of carving a secular duchy out of the
Bishops’ spiritualities; in six weeks he
extorted nearly a million crowns by way of ransom. Maurice failed in his attack
on Frankfort, where he lost one of his ablest lieutenants by the death of
George of Mecklenburg. The advance of Henry II had been checked by the valor of
Strasburg; Charles had released John Frederick, and with a little help the
Ernestine Wettin could
raise a storm which would drive his cousin from Saxony; while Hans of Cüstrin would willingly
join in the fray in return for a share of the Albertine lands.
Conscious that the nation was not really behind him and that he would lose his
all by defeat, Maurice reluctantly yielded to Charles’ demand that the
religious question should be left to a Diet. Margrave Albrecht roughly refused
to accept the peace; and when Maurice marched to help Ferdinand against the
Turks, many of his troops mutinied and took service with Albrecht. The
Margrave’s disgust was not due to zeal for the Protestant faith, but to the
fact that Maurice had played both hands in the game and reduced his partner to
a dummy. Fortune seemed to be turning and Charles thought of refusing to ratify
the treaty, delayed the liberation of Philip of Hesse, and returned to his
schemes for creating a friendly league and securing the Empire for his son. He
appeared to have learnt and forgotten nothing, but his advisers were more
amenable. Queen Maria opposed these plans, Ferdinand denounced them, and the
fear lest his obstinacy should drive his brother into Maurice’s arms induced
Charles to submit and sign the Treaty of Passau.
Siege of Metz. League of Heidelberg. [1552-3
Reluctantly the Emperor surrendered for the moment his
dynastic projects and assumed the part of the champion of Germany against the
French invader. Emerging from Villach and journeying by way of Augsburg, where
he could not refrain from once more overthrowing the democratic government and
expelling some of the more obnoxious preachers who had returned in Maurice’s
train, Charles appeared on the Rhine determined to wrest Metz, Toul, and Verdun from the French. Metz was the key of the
situation, and it had been amply provisioned and skillfully fortified by the
Duke of Guise. On the last day of October, 1552, the siege was formally opened,
and Charles strengthened his forces by an unscrupulous alliance with Albrecht
Alcibiades. The Margrave’s brutalities had roused all Franconia against him and
he had been forced to flee to the Court of Henry II; but Court life had no
attractions for him, and the French King hesitated to entrust so doubtful an
ally with important commands. So Albrecht escaped, captured the Duke of Aumale, and with this
peace-offering came into Charles’ camp. His terms were the imperial sanction of
his spoliation of the Bishops of Würzburg and Bamberg. “Necessity knows no
law”, wrote Charles to his sister, as he struck his bargain with the worst
law-breaker in Germany and sanctioned his sacrilegious plunder of Bamberg and
Würzburg. But Albrecht could not remedy the defects of Alva’s generalship,
produce harmony between Germans and Spaniards in the Emperor’s army, or make
any impression on Metz. For a month after his generals had recognized that
success was impossible. Charles refused to admit his defeat. But at length the
havoc wrought among his Italian and Spanish troops by a mid-winter siege
conquered even his obstinacy. With a grumble at the fickleness of Fortune who
preferred a young King to an old Emperor, he raised the siege on January 1,
1553, and turned his back on his German dominions for ever. Success in the war with France would have
meant a renewed effort to divide and crush the Lutheran Princes, to rivet the
Spanish succession on Germany, and to restore the Catholic faith. Charles’
failure left Germany free to settle these questions herself. Already meditating
abdication and retirement from the world, the Emperor journeyed to Brussels; he
was cheered by the capture of Térouanne from the
French and the triumph of Mary in England, but German affairs were resigned
into the hands of the King of the Romans.
The evil which Charles had done by his bargain with
Albrecht survived his departure, and it is a lurid comment upon the Emperor’s
reign that its last days were characterized by as wild an anarchy as Germany
had known in all her turbulent history. The Margrave, having performed a last
service to Charles by saving his guns during the retreat from Metz, proceeded
once more to trouble his foes in Germany; and, as nearly all Germany hated the
Emperor, Albrecht was free to turn his arms in whatever direction he chose. The
League of Heidelberg, formed in March, 1553, for the preservation of the peace
and prevention of Philip’s election, consisted of Catholics and Protestants and
was too general to be very effective. Moreover Albrecht’s onslaughts on Bishops
and priests won him a good deal of secret sympathy. The situation was full of
confusion; the Emperor, the extreme Protestants, and the Ernestine Wettins and Margrave
Albrecht, were all in more or less open opposition to the Albertine Maurice, King Ferdinand, and the Heidelberg
League. Charles had more than once divided the Lutherans; he had now divided
the House of Habsburg.
Maurice alone could restore peace to the Empire. His
campaign in Hungary had not been successful, and Zapolya’s widow with Solyman’s help retained control of
Transylvania. But Persia once more diverted the Turk’s attention from west to
east, and gave Maurice and Ferdinand respite to deal with Albrecht and his
notorious lieutenant, Wilhelm von Grumbach. Maurice,
who had posed as the liberator of Germany from Spanish tyranny, was now to play
the part of savior of society from princely anarchy. Charles had left the
Empire to its fate, the Heidelberg League was powerless, and a decree of
the Reichskammergericht against
Albrecht would be a mere form of words. Could Maurice succeed amid this maze of
impotence, no prize might be beyond his reach. At Eger he concerted measures
with Ferdinand and despatched his
brother for Danish aid. Albrecht, after winning another victory at Pommersfelden on April 11,
renewed his ravages in Franconia, and his excesses were worse than those of the
Peasants’ War. He then turned against the Catholic Duke Henry of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, and thought of
utilizing John Frederick's hatred of Maurice and Elector Joachim’s friendship
with Charles to draw them both to his side; even Landgrave Philip of Hesse was
loth to assist his son-in-law against so good an enemy of the priests. On July
9, 1553, at Sievershausen,
the forces of Albrecht and Maurice met. It was the fiercest battle fought in
German lands for many a day; beside it Mühlberg was
the merest skirmish. Maurice won the day, but lost his life; a wound from a
musket-ball proved fatal on the 11th, and one of the most extraordinary careers
in history was cut short at the age of thirty-two years.
The death of Maurice brought no redress to his injured
and aged cousin. The Saxon Electorate continued in the Albertine branch of the family, passing to Maurice’s
brother Augustus, a man of conciliatory temper, who had incurred none of the
odium attaching to Maurice and could look for support to his Danish
father-in-law Christian III. Charles V had no longer a private grudge to
revenge by restoring his former captive. John Frederick did not survive the
disappointment by many months. He died on March 3, 1554, a classic instance of
fortune’s perversity. He suffered more severely than any Prince of his age, and
his coveted electoral dignity passed into a rival House, never to be restored;
and the only solace vouchsafed to the Ernestine branch was the restitution of
Altenburg, Neustadt, and some other districts
ceded to Maurice in 1547. Yet John Frederick was the most blameless of men,
“the example of constancy and very mirror of true magnanimity in these our days
to all Princes”. Such is the verdict of one contemporary; better known is the
glowing description by Roger Ascham : “one in all fortunes desired of his
friends, reverenced of his foes, favored of the Emperor, loved of all”.
With the disappearance of Maurice the Emperor’s
interest in Albrecht Alcibiades waned. It was in vain that the Margrave beat
the anti-ecclesiastical drum more furiously than ever, or that many a north
German Prince and city came to secret terms. Duke Henry of Brunswick displayed
unwonted vigour and
defeated Albrecht at Steterburg on
September 12, 1553. On December 1 the long-delayed ban was proclaimed, and a
second victory won by Duke Henry at Schwarzach on June 13, 1554, drove Albrecht
again as a fugitive to the French Court. Peace was at length restored, and
Germany prepared for that Diet which was to settle its religious affairs for
two generations. Permanent toleration of heresy was inevitable in the existing
condition of German politics, and the prospect of such unwelcome violence to
his conscience determined the Emperor definitely to withdraw from his imperial
responsibilities. His formal abdication of the Empire was not made till three
years later; his relinquishment of the Netherlands only took place in 1555, and
that of his Spanish kingdoms in 1556; but the end of his reign in Germany may
be dated from the summer of 1554, when he empowered Ferdinand to settle the
question of religion with the Diet, but not in his name.
Diet of Augsburg. [1554-5
The city which had witnessed the birth of the Lutheran
Faith was also to see its legitimation, and on February 5, 1555, Ferdinand
opened another great Diet at Augsburg. No Elector was present in person; of the
ecclesiastical Princes only two, the Bishops of Augsburg and Eichstadt,
attended, and of temporal Princes only four, the young Archduke Charles, the
Dukes of Bavaria and Württemberg, and the Margrave of Baden. The Catholics
still had a majority in the Diet, and it cost them a severe mental struggle to
relinquish the fundamental position of Catholicism, the seamless unity of the
Christian Church. But common action with Protestants in opposition to the
Spanish Succession, in defence of princely privilege
against Charles and of public peace against Albrecht, had paved the way, not to
an agreement in religious matters, but to an agreement to differ about them.
Yet even this compromise was not reached till Ferdinand had made one more
effort to save ecclesiastical unity. He proposed that the Diet should first
deal with the question of public peace and refer religion to a Council or to a
conference. Duke Christopher of Württemberg and the Elector of Brandenburg were
not averse to the idea, and the latter even suggested the Interim as the basis
of an agreement. But the hand of the Diet was forced by the Lutheran Convention
at Naumburg, which was attended by more German
Princes than the Diet itself. Here it was determined to abide by the Confession
of Augsburg, and this decision was upheld by the Elector Augustus, the sons of
John Frederick, and the Landgraves of Hesse, while the Elector Joachim hastily
withdrew his ill-advised suggestion with regard to the Interim.
Thereupon the Electoral College at Augsburg decided to
deal with the religious question at once and demanded religious peace at any
price. The Catholic Princes, led by the Cardinal Archbishop of Augsburg,
protested; but Christopher of Württemberg came over to the Protestant side, and
presently the Bishop of Augsburg was summoned to Conclaves at Rome,
necessitated by the successive deaths of Julius III and Marcellus II. The
Protestants now put forward their full demands. They required security not
merely for all present but all future subscribers to the Confession of
Augsburg, and liberty to enjoy not only such ecclesiastical property as had
already been secularized but all that might be confiscated hereafter; Lutherans
in Catholic States were to have complete toleration, while no such privilege
was to be accorded to Catholics in Lutheran territories. They sought in fact to
reduce the Catholics to the position to which they had themselves been reduced
by the Recess of Speier in 1529; every
legal obstacle to the Lutheran development was to be removed, while Catholics
were deprived of their means of defence.
The Catholics were not yet brought so low as to submit
to such terms; for months the struggle of parties went on, and it seemed
possible that another religious war might ensue. Eventually a compromise was
arranged mainly by Ferdinand and Augustus of Saxony. Security was granted to all
Lutheran Princes; episcopal jurisdiction in their lands was to cease; and they
might retain all ecclesiastical property secularized before the Treaty of
Passau (1552), provided it was not immediately subject to the Empire. For the
future each territorial secular Prince might choose between the Catholic and
Lutheran faith, and his decision was to bind all his subjects. If a subject
rejected his sovereign’s religion the only privilege he could claim was liberty
to migrate into other lands. There remained two all-important points in
dispute. The Lutherans still required toleration for the adherents of their
confession in Catholic States; and the Catholics demanded that any
ecclesiastical Prince, who abjured Catholicism, should forfeit his lands and
dignities. The Catholic objections to the first demand were insuperable; and
the Lutherans were compelled to content themselves with an assurance by
Ferdinand, which was not incorporated in the Recess, did not become law of the
Empire, and of which the Reichskammergericht could
therefore take no cognizance. The Catholic requirement about spiritual Princes
was met by the famous “ecclesiastical reservation” which imposed forfeiture of
lands and dignities on Bishops who forsook the Catholic faith. This was
incorporated in the Recess ; but the Lutherans made their own reservation, and
declared that they did not consider themselves bound by the proviso.
The so-called Peace of Augsburg, embodied in the
Recess which was published on September 25,1555, thus rested upon a double
equivocation, and contained in itself the seeds of the Thirty Years’ War. It
was in fact no more than a truce concluded, not because the two parties had
decided the issues upon which they fought, but because they were for the moment
tired of fighting; and no half-measure was ever pursued by a more relentless
Nemesis. The “ecclesiastical reservation” has been condemned as the worst sin
of omission of which Protestant Germany was guilty, as a criminal and cowardly
evasion of a vital decision, which delay could only make more difficult. The
artificial perpetuation of spiritual principalities only served to buttress the
Habsburg power and postpone the achievement of national unity. In the other
scale a Catholic would place the fact that to the rescue of the ecclesiastical
Electorates from the rising tide of Protestantism must be attributed in no
small measure the hold which Catholicism still retains on western Germany.
This lame and halting conclusion of nearly forty
years’ strife has been hailed as the birth of religious liberty; but it is
mockery to describe the principle which underlay the Peace of Augsburg as one
of toleration. Cujus regio ejus religio is
a maxim as fatal to true religion as it is to freedom of conscience; it is the
creed of Erastian despotism, the formula
in which the German territorial Princes expressed the fact that they had
mastered the Church as well as the State. Even for Princes religious liberty
was limited to the choice of one out of two alternatives, the dogmas of Rome or
those of Wittenberg. The door of Germany was barred against Zwingli, Calvin,
and Socinus; and in neither the Lutheran nor the Roman Church was there the
same latitude that there was in the Catholic Church of the Middle Ages. The
onslaughts of her enemies compelled Rome to define her doctrines and to narrow
her communion; if the Catholic Church was purified in the process, it was also
rendered more Puritan; it became exclusive rather than comprehensive, Roman
rather than Catholic. To define the faith is to limit the faithful; the age was
one of definitions, and it destroyed for ever the hope of a real Catholicism.
But even this meager liberty of choice between two
exclusive communions was denied to the mass of the German people. For them the
change consisted in this, that instead of having their faith determined for
them by the Church, it was settled by their territorial Princes; instead of a
clerical, there was a lay persecution; instead of a remote prospect of being
burnt, the German dissenter, after 1555, enjoyed a much more imminent prospect
of being banished; for the tyranny of Wittenberg, if it was less than that of
Rome after the Council of Trent, was certainly greater than that of the
Catholic Church before the appearance of Luther. Luther enunciated the
principle of religious liberty, of individual priesthood. But he and his
followers imposed another bondage, which went far to render this declaration
ineffectual. The chief actual contribution of the Lutheran Reformation to
religious liberty was thus indirect, almost undesigned.
It produced the first Church independent of Rome, and prepared the way for
countless other religious communities, which, however narrowly they may define
their individual formularies, tend by their number to enforce mutual
toleration. Private morality has been evolved out of the conflicting interests
of an infinite mass of individuals; international law depends upon the
multiplicity of independent States; and the best guarantee for the freedom of
conscience consists in the multitude and relative impotence of the Churches.
There is no more disappointing epoch in German history
than the reign of Charles V; if in its course it shattered some idols, it also
shattered ideals. It began full of hope, and the nation seemed young. There
were plans for reforming the Church and renewing the Empire; no one dreamt of
dividing the one and destroying the other. Yet such was the result. The
Reformation began with ideas and ended in force. In the Germany of the
sixteenth, as in that of the nineteenth century, an era of liberal thought
closed in a fever of war; the persuasions of sweetness and light were drowned
by the beat of the drum and the blare of the trumpet; and methods of blood and
iron supplanted the forces of reason. No ideas, it was found, in religion or
politics, could survive unless they were cast in the hard material mould of German
territorialism.
The triumph of this principle is really the dominant
note of the period. Territorialism ruined the Empire, captured the Reformation,
crushed the municipal independence of the cities, and lowered the status of the
peasant. The fall of the imperial power was perhaps inevitable, but it was
hastened by Charles V. In the first place, his dynastic and Spanish policy
weakened his authority as a national monarch; in the second, his adoption of
the cause of the Church threw the Reformers into the arms of the territorial
Princes. The success of the Reformation thus meant that of the oligarchic
principle and the ruin of German monarchy. The Reformation of the Empire became
incompatible with the Reformation of the Church; and the seal on Charle’ failure was set by the
Diet of Augsburg, which, besides concluding a truce of religion, removed
the Reichskammergericht,
the organization of the Circles, and the preservation of the peace from the
sphere of imperial influence. Henceforward Germany was not a kingdom, but a
collection of petty States, whose rulers were dominated by mutual jealousies.
From the time of Charles V to that of Frederick the Great, Germany ceased to be
an international force; it was rather the arena in which the other nations of
Europe, the Spaniard, the Frenchman, the Swede, the Pole, and the Turk, fought
out their diplomatic and military struggles.
The Kaisertum was
but one of the Princes’ victims; the Bürgertum also fell before them. The
vigorous city life of the Middle Ages was a thing of the past; in many a German
town the representative of the territorial sovereign domineered over the elect
of the burghers, interfered in their administration, and even controlled their
finances. On the shores of the Baltic the destruction of town independence
involved the loss of Germany's maritime power, and not till our own day has
this eclipse begun to pass. With the decay of civic life went also the ruin of
municipal arts and civilization, and in its stead there was only the mainly
formal culture of the petty German Court. No age in Germany was more barren of intellectual
inspiration than that which succeeded the Peace of Augsburg. The internecine
struggles of the reign of Charles V had exhausted all classes in the nation,
and an era of universal lassitude followed : intellectually, morally, and
politically, Germany was a desert, and it was called Religious Peace.
CHAPTER IXREFORMATION IN FRANCE
|