READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE
CHAPTER IX.
IT is a commonplace
to contrast the political condition of Germany on the eve of the Reformation
with that of the great national States of Western Europe. In Germany the
dangerous confusion of the national monarchy with the tradition of the Roman
Empire had continued fatal to the German Kingdom, even after the imperial idea
had ceased to exert any commanding influence over men's minds. The royal power
in consequence became the merest shadow of its former self. Central
organization ceased to exist. Private war and general anarchy were chronic. The
national life waxed cold, when uncherished by a strong national monarchy; and
in the end salvation was to come from the development of the rude feudal
nobility of the Middle Ages into an order of small independent rulers, so extraordinarily
tenacious of their sovereign rank that more than a score of them have preserved
it even amidst the changed conditions of the nineteenth century. While in
France, Spain, and England national monarchies, both autocratic and popular,
were establishing national unity, ordered progress, and strong administration,
Germany was forced to content herself with the loosest and most impotent of
federal governments.
Looking at the
course of German history in the fifteenth century with knowledge of what happened
later, it would be hard to deny the strength of this contrast. Yet there was no
very great or essential dissimilarity between the condition of Germany under
Frederick III and that of the France of the Armagnac and Burgundian feuds. The
elements of political life were in each case the same. There was a monarchy
whose great history was still remembered even in the days of its impotence and
ruin. There was a real sense of national life, a consciousness so strong that
it could bend even the selfish instincts of feudal nobles into cherishing an
ambition wider and more patriotic than that of making themselves little kings
over their own patrimony. The strongest of the German feudal houses was less
well organized on a separatist basis than the Duchy of Britanny or the Duchy of
Burgundy. And few indeed of them could base their power on any keenly felt
local or national tradition, or upon anything more solid than the habit of
respect for an ancient house. Moreover, the ecclesiastical States might have
been, and both the small nobility and the wealthy numerous and active free
towns actually were, permanent counterpoises to the absolute supremacy of the
greater feudatories in a way to which French history supplies no parallel. All
medieval history shows how the possibilities of despotism lurked even in the
most decrepit of feudal monarchies, and how the most disorderly of feudal
barons could be constrained to use their swords to further national ends.
Even in its worst
decay the German kingship still counted for something. “The King of the
Romans”, as the German King was styled before the papal coronation gave him the
right to call himself “Roman Emperor”, was still the first of earthly
potentates in dignity and rank. The effective intervention in European affairs
of a German King so powerless as Sigismund of Luxemburg would have been
impossible but for the authority still associated with the imperial name. The
German Kings had indeed no longer a direct royal domain such as gave wealth and
dignity to the Kings of France or England. They were equally destitute of the
regular and ample revenue which ancient custom or the direct grant of the
Estates allowed the Kings of France and England to levy in every part of their
dominions. But the habit was now established of electing on each occasion a
powerful reigning prince as Emperor, and a virtually hereditary empire was
secured for the House of Luxemburg and afterwards for its heir and sometime
rival, the House of Habsburg.
The Emperors thus
possessed in their personal territories some compensation for their lack of
imperial domain proper. And feudalism was still sufficiently alive in Germany
to make the traditional feudal sources of income a real if insufficient
substitute for grants and taxes of the more modern type. The imperial Chancery
issued no writ or charter without exacting heavy fees. No family compact
between members of a reigning house, no agreement of eventual succession
between neighboring princes, was regarded as legitimate without such dearly
purchased royal sanction. Even where the Emperor’s direct power was slight his
influence was very considerable. He no longer controlled ecclesiastical
elections with a high hand; but there were few bishoprics or abbeys in which he
had not as good a chance of directing the course of events as the strongest of
the local lords, and his influence was spread over all Germany, while the
prince was powerless outside his own neighborhood. All over Germany numerous
knights, nobles, ecclesiastics, and lawyers looked forward to the Emperor's
service as a career, and hope of future imperial favor often induced them to do
their best to further the imperial policy. If indirect pressure of this sort
did not prevail, the Roman Court more often than not lent its powerful aid
towards enforcing imperial wishes. There was no great danger that the feeble
monarchs of this period would excite general opposition by flagrant attacks on
the traditional authority of their vassals; and in smaller matters it was more
to the interest even of the greater princes to keep on good terms with Caesar,
than to provoke his hostility by wanton and arbitrary opposition to his wishes.
Another weighty
advantage accrued to the German monarch from the circumstance that his chief
rivals were every whit as badly off in dealing with their vassals as he was
with his. The well-ordered territorial sovereignties of a later generation had
not yet come into existence. The strongest of the imperial vassals were still
feudal lords and not sovereign princes. The resources at their disposal were
those of a great feudal proprietor rather than those of an independent ruler.
Outside their own domains they had few means of exercising any real power.
Their vassals were as hard to keep in hand as they were themselves impatient of
control by their sovereign. When even the imperial Court was destitute of the
appliances of a modern State, the smaller princes could only govern in a still
ruder and more primitive fashion. Their revenue was uncertain; their means of
raising money were utterly inadequate; their army consisted of rude feudal
levies ; and they had no police, no civil or diplomatic service. Although they
could be trusted to struggle stoutly and unscrupulously for their immediate
interests, they were the last body of men to frame a general policy or depart
from their traditional principles in order to suit the temper of the coming
age. The very numerous small princes were infinitely worse off than their
greater brethren. The free towns, though much better able to protect themselves
than the weaker princes, were powerless for aggression.
The Diet of the
Empire (Reichstag) was the ancient and traditional council of the
Emperor. It remained a purely feudal body in which none save tenants-in-chief (Reichsunmittelbare)
had any right to appear. Its powers were sufficiently extensive, but its
constitution was only very gradually settled, and there was no real means of
carrying out its resolutions. The method of its convocation was extraordinarily
cumbrous. Besides sending out regular writs, it was the custom for the Emperor
to dispatch various officials throughout the Empire to request the magnates’
personal appearance at the Diet. In the case of the more important princes,
this process was often several times repeated. Yet it was seldom, save perhaps
at the first Diet of a new King or when business of extraordinary importance
was to be discussed, that many princes condescended to appear in person. In
their absence they were represented by commissioners, who often delayed
proceedings by referring to their principals all questions on which they had
not been sufficiently instructed. This habit was so strong with the delegates
of the towns that it seriously delayed their recognition as an Estate of the
realm, which they had claimed as a right more than fifty years before it was
formally conceded. When the preliminaries were over, there was always, in
consequence of the lateness of the appearance of some of the representatives, a
considerable delay before proceedings could be opened. Very often the early comers
went home before the last arrivals appeared at all. Proceedings began when the
Emperor or his commissioners laid the royal proposition before the Estates. For
ordinary debates the Diet was divided into three curiae, colleges, or Estates.
But it was not
until 1489 that the Estate of the free and imperial towns definitely secured
its right to appear in all Diets beside the higher Estates of Electors and
princes. Procedure was extraordinarily complicated and cumbrous. It was not
until the end of the fifteenth century that such elementary principles as the
right of the majority to bind a minority, or the obligation of absent members
to abide by the proceedings of those that were present, were definitely
established. It was often after many months' discussion that the imperial
recess (Abschied) was issued, which concluded the proceedings; and the
great expense involved in prolonged residence at the seat of the Diet was a
real burden even on the richest princes. In all the colleges voting was by
individuals; but so personal was the right of representation, that the
splitting up of a principality among the sons of a prince gave each ruler of a
part a voice equal to that of the ruler of the whole. The smaller
tenants-in-chief, the imperial knights, were not regarded as an Estate of the
Empire and were excluded from all part in the Diet. Neither the custom which
secured that the voting power of a much divided house should be no greater than
that of a family whose power was vested in a single hand, nor that which gave
only collective votes to the counts, prelates and towns, had as yet sprung into
existence.
The incompetence
and costliness of the Diet made it very ineffective in practice. The Emperors
hesitated to convoke an assembly which, by its theoretical powers, might
effectually tie their hands, while the Estates were averse to wasting time and
money in fruitless and unending deliberations. Side by side with the
constitutional representation of the Empire, divers local and private
organizations had gradually come into being to discharge efficiently some at
least of the duties that the Estates were incompetent to perform. The oldest
among these was the meeting of the six Electors (Kurfürstentag). Of
these high dignitaries the three Archbishops of Mainz, Cologne and Trier and
the Count Palatine of the Rhine commonly acted together, while the two eastern
Electors, the Duke of Saxony and the Margrave of Brandenburg, had more
discordant interests. The seventh Elector, the King of Bohemia, was excluded as
a foreigner from all electoral functions save the actual choice of the King.
The Golden Bull
of 1356 had given privileges which raised the Electors above their brother
princes into the first Estate of the Empire. They had such full jurisdiction
over their territories that it became the ideal of all other princes to obtain
the electoral privileges. Succession to their lands was to go by primogeniture,
and every Easter they were to hold an electoral Diet. Regular yearly meetings
of the Electors as prescribed by the Golden Bull did not become the fashion;
but the habit of common deliberation became firmly established, and the
carelessness of the Luxemburg Emperors, as to all matters not affecting their
hereditary dominions, gave the Electoral College an opportunity of playing a
foremost part in national history. The Electors claimed to be the successors of
the Roman Senate, if not the representatives of the Roman people as well. The
attitude of a Wenceslas, a Sigismund, or a Frederick made possible a real
sharing of the functions of government between Emperor and Senate, such as is
imagined to have existed in the primitive division of power between Augustus
and the Senate of his day.
The six Electors
deposed the incompetent King Wenceslas in 1399, and formed in 1424 the Electoral
Union (Kurfürstenvereiri) of Bingen in which they pledged themselves and
their successors to speak with one voice in all imperial affairs. Fourteen
years later the same Electoral Union was strong enough to adopt for imperial
elections the precedent, already commonly set in ecclesiastical elections, of
prescribing the direction of the policy of their nominee. The conditions
imposed on Albert II before his election prepared the way for the formal Wahlkapitulation which assumes so great an importance in imperial history with the election of
Charles V in 1519. In the same way it was the close understanding between the
Electors that made possible the programme of imperial reformation championed by
Berthold of Mainz. It was only after grave differences of policy had
permanently divided the Electors that Berthold's dream of a united Germany
became impossible.
Less
constitutional were the extra-legal combinations of those minor Estates whose
members found that without corporate union they were powerless to resist their
stronger neighbors. Before the end of the fourteenth century the Imperial
Knights had formed a number of clubs or unions, each with its captain, and
regular assemblies, to which King Sigismund had given a formal legitimation. Of
these the most important were the Knights of St George, an organization of the
chivalry of Swabia which took conspicuous part in creating the Swabian League.
Even earlier were the associations of the towns. Of the unions of the
thirteenth century, the Hanse League alone remained, and this was now steadily
on the decline. But the southern and western cities formed local leagues with
periodical deliberative assemblies. In course of time other general Diets of
town representatives were established. Even after the cities had definitively
won their right to a limited representation in the Diets these meetings
continued, being held often, for the saving of expense and trouble, side by
side with the imperial assemblies. It was well for the princes that the
antagonism of knights and cities was as a rule too strong to enable them to
work together. The strength of the Swabian League was in no small measure due
to the fact that towns and knights had both cooperated with the princes in its
formation.
Neither Emperors,
nor Diets, nor the voluntary associations of classes and districts sufficed to
give peace and prosperity to the Empire. The unwieldy fabric had outgrown its
ancient organization and no new system had arisen capable of supplying its
needs. Every aspect of fifteenth century history shows how overwhelming and
immediate a need existed for thoroughgoing and organic reform. The area of
imperial influence was steadily diminishing. Italy no longer saw in the Emperor
anyone but a foreigner, who could sometimes serve the turn of an ambitious
upstart by selling him a lawful title of honor that raised him in the social
scale of European rulers. Even the Hundred Years’ War did not prevent the
spread of French influence over the Middle Kingdom, and the Arelate was now no
more an integral part of the Empire than was Italy. But parts of the old German
kingdom were falling away. The outposts of Teutonic civilization in the east
were losing all connection with the Power which had established them. Imperfect
as the union established between the Scandinavian kingdoms at Calmar proved to
be, it had dealt a mighty blow to the power of the Hansa, while the choice of
the Danish king as Duke of Schleswig and Count of Holstein had practically
extended the Scandinavian Power to the banks of the Elbe. In the north-east the
Teutonic Knights had been forced by the Treaty of Thorn to surrender West
Prussia to the Polish kings outright, and to hold as a fief of the Slavonic
kingdom such part of Prussia as the Poles still allowed them to rule. Bohemia
under George Podiebrad had become an almost purely Slavonic State, whose
unfriendliness to German nationality and orthodox Catholicism might well
threaten the renewal of those devastating Hussite invasions from which Germany
had been saved by the Council of Basel. In Hungary German influence had
disappeared with the extinction of the House of Luxemburg; the Magyar King
Matthias Corvinus conquered the Duchy of Austria from the Habsburg Emperor, and
died master of Vienna. The Swiss Confederacy was gradually drifting into
hostility to the Empire; and the House of Burgundy was building up a great
separatist State in the Low Dutch and Walloon provinces of the Netherlands. The
utter defenselessness of Germany was seen by the devastations of the Armagnacs
in Elsass. No prince of the Empire arrested their progress. The stubborn
heroism of the Swiss League alone stayed the plague. And beyond all these
dangers loomed the terrible spectre of Ottoman aggression.
Matters were
equally unsatisfactory in the heart of Germany. Private war raged unchecked,
and the feeble efforts made from time to time to secure the Public Peace (Landfriede)
were made fruitless by the absence of any real executive authority. The robber
knights waylaid traders, and great princes did not scruple to abet such
lawlessness. The very preservation of the Public Peace had long ceased to be
the concern of the Emperor and Empire as a whole, and local and voluntary
unions (Landfriedensvereine) had sought with but scant result to uphold
it within the limits of local and precarious conditions. The lack of imperial
justice brought about such grave evils that the Estates sought to provide some
sort of substitute for it by private agreements (Austäge) referring
disputed matters to arbitration, and by that quaint etiquette which made it a
breach of propriety for a prince to prefer the solemn judgment of his suzerain
to such arbitration of his neighbors. The beginnings of an economic revolution
threatened the ancient rude prosperity of the peasant, and embittered the relations
of class and class within the towns.
The
policy of Frederick III.
The need for
reform was patent. From what source however was the improvement to come? Little
was to be expected from the Emperors. Yet even the careless Wenceslas of
Bohemia had prepared the way for better things when he not only renewed once
more the publication of a universal Landfriede, but also invested with
imperial authority the local assemblies representative of the various Estates
that were entrusted with its execution. Things were worse under Sigismund
(1410-37), who could find no middle course between fantastic schemes for the
regeneration of the universe and selfish plans for the aggrandizement of his
own house. When his inheritance passed to his son-in-law Albert II of Austria
(1438-9), the union of the rival houses of Habsburg and Luxemburg at least
secured for the ruler a strong family position such as was the essential
preliminary for the revival of the imperial power.
Albert II’s
device for securing the general Public Peace of Germany rested upon an
extension and development of the local executive authorities, and thus
contained the germ of the future system of dividing the Empire into great
territorial circumscriptions known as Circles (Kreise), destined ultimately to
become one of the most lasting of imperial institutions. But Albert passed away
before he was so much as able to visit the Empire, and in the long reign of his
kinsman and successor Frederick III (1440-93) the imperial authority sunk down
to its lowest point. A cold, phlegmatic, slow and unenterprising prince,
Frederick of Austria busied himself with no great plans of reform or
aggression, but seemed absorbed in gardening, in alchemy, and in astrology
rather than in affairs of State. Under his nerveless rule the Luxemburg claims
over Bohemia and Hungary passed utterly away. A large proportion of the
Habsburg hereditary lands, including Tyrol and the scattered Swabian estates,
were ruled by a rival branch of the ruling house represented by the Archduke Sigismund,
while Austria itself fell into the hands of Matthias Corvinus.
Yet in his
cautious and slow-minded fashion Frederick was by no means lacking in ability
and foresight. If he were indifferent to the Empire, he looked beyond the
present distress of his house to a time when politic marriages and cunningly
devised treaties of eventual succession would make Austria a real ruler of the
world. Even for the Empire he did a little by his proclamations of a general Landfriede,
while his settlement of the ecclesiastical relations of Germany after the
failure of the Conciliar movement at Basel implied, with all its renunciation
of high ideals, the establishment of a workable system that kept the peace
until the outbreak of the Reformation. The Vienna Concordat of 1448 put an end
to that tendency towards the nationalization of the German Church which had
been promoted so powerfully by the attitude of the prelates of the German
nation at the Council of Constance, and which had been maintained so long when,
under the guidance of Emperor and Electors, the Germans had upheld their
neutrality between both the disorderly fathers at Basel and the grasping papal
Curia at Rome. In the long run this nationalizing tendency must have extended
itself from ecclesiastical to political matters. Even in the decline of the
Middle Ages the union within the Church might well have prepared the way to the
union of the State. In accepting a modus vivendi which gave the Pope greater
opportunities than now remained to the Emperor of exercising jurisdiction and
levying taxation in Germany, Frederick proved himself a better friend to
immediate peace than to the development of a national German State.
Three signal
successes gilded the end of Frederick’s long reign. The power of the House of Burgundy
threatened to withdraw the richest and most industrial parts of the Empire from
the central authority. But the sluggish Emperor and the inert Empire were at
last roused to alarm, when Charles the Bold made the attack on their territory
that began with the siege of Neuss. It was an omen of real possibilities for
the future when a great imperial army gathered together to relieve the burghers
of the Rhenish town. The New League of the Alsatian cities which was
formed to ward off Charles’ southern aggressions was a step in the same
direction. And even the Old League of the Swiss Highlanders, which
finally destroyed the Burgundian power, was not as yet avowedly anti-German in
its policy. But, as in Church affairs, Frederick stepped in between the nation
and its goal. At the moment of the threatened ruin of his ancient enemy’s
plans, he cleverly negotiated the marriage of his son Maximilian with Mary, the
heiress of Charles the Bold. Soon after the last Duke of Burgundy had fallen at
Nancy, Maximilian obtained with the hand of his daughter the many rich
provinces of the Netherlands and the Free County of Burgundy (1477). It was not
however for the sake of Germany or the Empire that Frederick sought a new
sphere of influence for his son. The Burgundian inheritance remained as
particularistic and as anti-German under the Habsburgs as it had ever been
under Valois rule. But the future fortunes of Austria were established by an
acquisition which more than compensated the dynasty for the loss of Hungary and
Bohemia.
The other late
successes of Frederick were likewise triumphs of Austria rather than victories
of the Empire. The Duke of Bavaria-Munich had profited by the internal
dissensions of the House of Habsburg and won the goodwill of the aged Archduke
Sigismund of Tyrol. It was arranged that, on Sigismund's death without
legitimate issue, Tyrol and the Swabian and Rhenish Habsburg lands should pass
to the lord of Munich. Frederick bitterly resented this treason, but alone he
could hardly have prevented its accomplishment. Yet the prospect of such an
extraordinary extension of the Wittelsbach power frightened every petty
potentate of Bavaria and Swabia. In 1487 the princes and bishops, abbots and
counts, knights and cities of Upper Germany united to form the Swabian League,
to maintain the authority of the Emperor and to prevent the union of Bavaria
and Tyrol. Its action was irresistible. Tyrol passed quietly under Frederick's
direct rule, and an armed Power was set up in the south which enormously
strengthened the effective authority of the Emperor. The subsequent expulsion
of the Hungarians from Vienna after the death of Matthias (1490), followed as
it was by a renewal of the ancient contracts of eventual succession with
Wladislav of Bohemia, who now succeeded Matthias in Hungary, restored the might
of Habsburg in the east as effectively as the Burgundian marriage had extended
it in the west. It was characteristic of the old Emperor that he grudged his
son any real share in his newly won power. The third Habsburg triumph, the
election of Maximilian as King of the Romans, was carried through the Diet of
1486 in despite of the opposition of the Emperor. In consequence Maximilian
entered upon his public career, as the leader of the opposition, and as
favoring the plans of imperial reform to which Frederick had long turned a deaf
ear.
The purely
dynastic ambitions of Frederick were reflected in the policy of the strongest
princes of the Empire. We have seen how anti-German were the ideals of such
great imperial vassals as Charles the Bold of Burgundy, and the Dukes of
Bavaria. Equally anti-national was the policy of the elder or Palatine branch
of the Wittelsbach House, then represented by the Elector Frederick the
Victorious (1449-76). A magnificent and ambitious ruler, who gathered round his
Court doctors of Roman law and early exponents of German humanism, Frederick
pursued his selfish aims with something of the strength and ability as well as
with something of the recklessness and unscrupulousness of the Italian despot.
He made friends with the Czech Podiebrad and with the Frenchman Charles of
Burgundy. He was not ashamed to lure on the Bohemian with the prospects of the
Imperial Crown, and anticipated the Emperor Frederick's boldest stroke in his
scheme to marry his nephew Philip to Mary of Burgundy. Not even Albert IV of
Munich was more clearly the enemy of the Empire than his kinsman the “Wicked
Fritz”. The dominions of the Elector Palatine were indeed scattered and
limited. Yet he was not only the strongest but the most successful of the
imperial vassals of his time. The failure of his dearest projects showed that
the day of princely autocracy had not yet come.
The
Houses of Hohenzollern and Wettin.
Two great
families had won a prominent position in northern Germany in the early years of
the fifteenth century, and had somewhat pushed aside more ancient houses, such
as the Guelfs of Brunswick, whose habit of subdividing their territories for a
long time grievously weakened their influence. The financial distress of the
Emperor Sigismund had forced him to pledge his early acquisition, Brandenburg,
to the wealthy and practical Frederick of Hohenzollern, who as Burgrave of
Nürnberg was already lord of Kulmbach and of a considerable territory in Upper
Franconia. Despairing of redeeming his debt, Sigismund was in 1417 compelled to
acquiesce in the permanent establishment of that house in the electorate of
Brandenburg. Albert Achilles, Frederick's younger son, had shown in his long
strife against Nürnberg and the Wittelsbachs rare skill as a warrior and shrewd
ability as a statesman, even when his material resources were limited to his
ancestral Kulmbach possessions. Called to the electoral dignity in Brandenburg
after his brother Frederick II’s death in 1471, Albert held a position among
the northern princes only paralleled by that of Frederick of the Palatinate
among the lords of the Rhine. As long as he lived he made his influence felt
through his rare personal gifts, his courage, and his craft, and his fantastic
combination of the ideals of the knight-errant with those of the statesman of
the Renaissance. The welfare of Germany as a whole appealed to him almost as
little as to Frederick the Victorious. All his pride was in the extension of
the power of his house, and his most famous act was perhaps that Dispositio
Achillea of 1473 which secured the future indivisibility of the whole Mark
of Brandenburg and its transmission to the eldest male heir by right of
primogeniture. Yet Albert died half-conscious that his ambition had been
ill-directed. All projects and all warlike preparations, declared the dying
hero, were of no effect so long as Germany as a whole had no sound peace, no
good law or law-courts, and no general currency. But with Albert’s death in
1486 the power of Brandenburg, based purely on his individuality, ceased to
excite any alarm among the princes of the north.
The House of
Wettin, which had long held the margravate of Meissen, acquired with the
district of Wittenberg and some other fragments of the ancient Saxon duchy, the
electorate and duchy of Saxony (1423). The dignity and territories of the House
now made it prominent among the princes of Germany, but the division of its
lands, finally consummated in 1485, between Ernest and Albert, the grandsons of
the first Wettin Elector, Frederick the Valiant, limited its power. The
singular moderation and the conservative instincts of the Saxon line saved it
from aspiring to rival Albert Achilles or Frederick the Victorious. The most
illustrious representative of the Ernestine House, Frederick the Wise, who
became Elector in 1486, was perhaps the only prince of the first rank who,
while giving general support to the Emperor, ultimately identified himself with
the plans of imperial reform which were now finding spokesmen among the princes
of the second class. As a rule, however, the princes of strongest resources and
most individual character were precisely those who were most quickly realizing
the ideals of localized and dynastic sovereignty, which, in the next century,
became the common ambition of German rulers of every rank.
Though the power
of the strongest of the German princes was thus limited, yet it was in regions
under the influence of such great feudatories that the nearest approach to
order prevailed. Habsburg rule in the south-east, Burgundian rule in the
north-west, were establishing settled States, though rather at the expense of
Germany as a whole than by way of contributing to its general peace. In a
similar fashion Bavaria and the north-eastern Marchland between Elbe and Oder
attained comparative prosperity under Wittelsbachs, Wettins, and Hohenzollerns.
But in the other parts of Germany affairs were far worse. Even in the ancient
duchy of Saxony the dissipation of the princely power had become extreme: but
the Rhineland, Franconia, and Swabia were in an even more unhappy condition.
The scattered Estates of the four Rhenish Electors, and powers such as Cleves
and Hesse, were in no case strong enough to preserve general order in the
Rhineland. The Elector of Mainz, the bishops of Würzburg and Bamberg, and the
abbot of Fulda were, save the Kulmbach Hohenzollerns, the only rulers over even
relatively considerable territories in Franconia. Würtemberg and Baden alone
broke the monotony of infinite subdivision in Swabia. The characteristic powers
in all these regions were rather the counts and the knights, mere local lords
or squires with full or partial princely authority over their petty Estates. In
such regions as these economic prosperity and ordered civil existence depended
almost entirely on the number and importance of the free imperial cities.
Neither from the
lesser immediate nobility nor from the city communities was any real
contribution to be expected towards imperial reform. The counts and knights
were too poor, too numerous, and too helpless, to be able to safeguard even
their own interests. Their absurd jealousies of each other, their feuds with
the princes and the towns, their chronic policy of highway robbery, made them
the chief difficulty in the way of that general Landfriede which had
been proclaimed so often but never realized. The towns were almost equally
incompetent to take up a general national policy. They were indeed wealthy,
numerous, and important but despite their unions with each other they never
advanced towards a really national line of action. Their intense local
patriotism narrowed their interest to the region immediately around their
walls, and their parochial separatism was almost as intense as that of their
natural enemies the lesser nobles. While they had thus scanty will to act,
their power to do so was perhaps much less than is often imagined.
Machiavelli’s glowing eulogies of their liberty and capacity of resistance has
misled most moderns as to the true position of the German cities. In no way is
their position comparable to that of the towns of Italy.
The great Italian
cities largely owed their political influence to the fact that they ruled
without a rival over districts as large as most German principalities. But in Germany
the territory of many of the strongest among the free cities, such as Augsburg,
was almost confined to the limits of their city walls. There were very few
towns which dominated so wide a stretch of the countryside as Nürnberg, but how
insignificant was the Nürnberg territory as compared with that of Florence!
Even the population and wealth of the German towns have probably been
exaggerated. Careful statistical investigation suggests that none of the cities
of upper Germany had more than 20,000 inhabitants, and those which may have
been of larger size, such as Cologne or Bremen or Lübeck, are of more
importance in the commercial than in the political history of Germany. Though
the financiers of Augsburg and Frankfort, and the merchants of Nürnberg or Basel
or Cologne, were acquiring vast wealth, building palaces for their residence
and through their luxurious ways raising the standard of civilization and
comfort for all ranks of Germans, they were not yet in a position so much as to
aspire to political direction. Yet it was in the towns only that there could be
found any non-noble class with even the faintest interest in politics. The
condition of the country population was steadily declining. Feudalism still
kept the peasant in its iron grip, and the rise in prices which opened the
economic revolution that ushered in modern times was now beginning to destroy
his material prosperity. In the upper Rhineland the condition of the
agricultural population seems to have been very similar to that of the French peasantry
before the outbreak of the Revolution. While their Swiss neighbors were free
and prosperous, the peasant of Alsace or of the Black Forest was hardly able to
make a living through the over-great subdivision of the little holdings. It was
in this region that the repeated troubles of the Bundschuh and the revolts of
“Poor Conrad” showed that deep-seated distress had led to the propagation of
socialistic and revolutionary schemes among men desperate enough and bold
enough to seek by armed force a remedy for their wrongs. Outside this region
there was very little active revolutionary propaganda, or actual peasant
revolt. However, in 1515, formidable disturbances broke out in Styria and the
neighboring districts.
The beginnings of
a more national policy at last came from some of the princes of the second
rank. Counts, knights, towns, and peasants were too poor, divided, and limited
in their views, to aim at common action. But among the princes of secondary
importance were men too far-seeing and politic to adopt a merely isolated
attitude, while their consciousness of the limitation of their resources left
them without so much as the wish of aspiring to follow from afar the example of
Charles the Bold or Albert IV of Munich. To the abler German lords of this type
the feudal ideal of absolute domination over their own fiefs was less
satisfying in itself and moreover less probable of realization. Their
territories were so small, and so scattered, their resources were so meagre and
so precarious, that feudal independence meant to them but a limited, localized,
and stunted career, and afforded them few guarantees of protection against the
aggressions of their stronger neighbors. In such men there was no strong bias
of self-interest to prevent their giving rein to the wholesome sentiment of
love of fatherland which still survived in German breasts. But personal pride,
traditional feuds with neighboring houses, the habit of suspicion, and a
general low level of political sagacity and individual capacity made it difficult
for this class as a whole to initiate any comprehensive movement. All through
the weary years of Frederick's reign projects of reform had been constantly
shattered by the violence and jealousy of the greater princes and by the
indifference and want of unanimity of the petty ones. A leader of ability and
insight had long been wanted to dominate their sluggish natures and quicken
their slow minds with worthier ideals. Such a leader was at last found in Count
Berthold of Henneberg, who in 1484 became Elector of Mainz at the age of 42. He
soon made himself famous for the vigour, justice, and sternness, with which he
ruled his dominions, for his eloquence in council, and for the large and
patriotic views which he held on all broad questions of national policy. With
him the movement for effective imperial reform really begins.
Berthold of Mainz
had little of the churchman about him, and his life was in nowise that of the
saint; but he stands out among all the princes of his time as the one statesman
who strove with great ability and consummate pertinacity to realize the ideal
of a free, national and united German State. His courage, his resourcefulness,
his pertinacity, and his enthusiasm carried for a time everything before them.
But soon grave practical difficulties wrecked his schemes and blasted his
hopes. It is even possible to imagine that his policy was vicious in principle.
It was a visionary and an impossible task to make petty feudalists champions of
order, law, and progress. It involved moreover an antagonism to the monarchy,
which after all was the only possible centre of any effective national
sentiment in that age. But whatever may be thought of Berthold’s practical
insight, the whole history of Frederick III and of his successors shows clearly
that the German monarchy, far from being as in England or France the true
mainspring of a united national life, persistently and by deliberate policy
operated as the strongest particularistic influence. After all, Germany was a
nation, and Berthold strove by the only way open to him to make Germany what
England and France were already becoming. It was not his fault that the method
forced upon him was from the beginning an almost hopeless one.
1484-5]
Policy of the German reformers.
To students of
English medieval history Berthold’s position seems perfectly clear. His
ambition was to provide Germany with an efficient central government; but also
to secure that the exercise of this authority should be in the hands of a
committee of magnates, and not under the control of the German monarch. This
design has been described as an attempt at federalism; but the word suggests a
more conscious partition of power between central and local authority, and a
more organized and representative control of the supreme power than ever
Berthold or his associates dreamed to be necessary. A more complete analogy
with Berthold's ideals is to be found in the policy of the great prelates and
earls of England against the more neglectful or self-seeking kings of the
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. The Clares and the Montforts, the Bohuns,
Bigods, and Lancasters, the Cantilupes, the Winchelseas, and the Arundels of
medieval England had no trace of properly feudal ambition. They accepted the
centralized institutions of the monarchy as ultimate facts, and aspired only to
keep the centralized power under their own control. The heroes of the
Provisions of Oxford, the Lords Ordainers, and the Lords Appellant, while
upholding the representative legislative and taxative body by frequent sessions
of Parliament, sought to put the executive power which properly belonged to the
Crown into the hands of a commission roughly representative of the great
houses. It was a nobler ambition and a finer career for a Clare or a Bohun or a
Fitzalan to take his share in controlling the central power than to strive to
put a ring fence round his estates and govern them as he had long administered
his Welsh Marcher lordships. Even the lord of a great Palatinate might prefer
to have his share in ruling England as a whole, rather than limit his ambition
to playing the part of a petty king on his own estates. An Anthony Bek was a
greater man as minister of Edward I than as the mere sovereign of the lands of
St Cuthbert.
Berthold and his
associates were in the same position as the English baronial leaders. As
Archbishop of Mainz Berthold might either be a petty prince holding sway over
scattered regions of the Rhineland and of Franconia, or a great political
ecclesiastic like Arundel or Wykeham or George of Amboise. The wider career
appealed alike to his patriotism, his interests, and his ambition. As feudal
sovereigns the Rhenish Electors stood but in the second rank of German rulers.
As prelates, as councillors of their peers, as directors of the Diets, and as effective
and not merely nominal Chancellors of their suzerain’s domains, they might well
emulate the exploits of a Hanno or a Rainald of Dassel. Under the guidance of
an aristocracy that was neither feudal nor particularist, and in which the
ecclesiastical element was so strong that the dangers of hereditary influence
were reduced to a minimum, a German State might have arisen as united and
strong as the France of Louis XI or Francis I, while as free as Lancastrian
England. Rude facts proved this ambition unworkable. Monarchy, and monarchy
only, could be practically efficient as the formative element in national life.
Since German monarchy refused to do its duty, German unity was destined not to
be achieved. Nevertheless the attempt of Berthold is among the most interesting
experiments in history, and the spectacle of the feudal potentates of Germany
reversing the role of their French or Spanish compeers and striving to build up
a united German nation, despite the separatist opposition of the German monarch,
shows how strong were the forces that made for nationality during the
transition from medieval to modern times. And it was no small indication of the
practical wisdom of Berthold that he won over the whole Electoral College to
his views. Less dignified princes were as a rule content to follow their lead.
Only the Dukes of Bavaria held aloof, obstinately bent upon securing Bavarian
interests alone. But perhaps the greatest triumph of the reformers was to be
found in the temporary adhesion of the young King of the Romans to their plans.
Berthold of Mainz
laid his first plan of reform before the Diet of Frankfort of 1485. He proposed
a single national system of currency, a universal Landfriede, and a
Supreme Court of Justice specially charged with the carrying out of the Public
Peace. After the election of Maximilian in 1486, the demand of a special grant
to carry on war against the Turks gave a new opportunity for insisting on the
policy which the cold and unsympathetic Emperor had done his best to shelve. But
the princes now rejected the proposed tax, on the ground that the cooperation
of the cities was necessary towards granting an aid, whereas no cities had been
summoned to this Diet. The result was before long the final establishment of
the right of the cities to form an integral part of every assembly of the
German national council. The Diet of 1489 saw every imperial town summoned to
its deliberations. Within a generation the city representatives had become the
Third Estate of the Empire side by side with Electors and princes.
Frederick gave
way both on the question of the rights of the cities and on the programme of
reform. He procured his Turkish grant in return for the promise to establish
the Landfriede and an imperial court of justice. But he did nothing to
give effect to his general assurances; and the Estates, closely brought
together by their common aim, continued to press for the carrying out of
Frederick's concessions. Their first real victory was at the Diet of Frankfort
in 1489, when Maximilian, intent on getting help to make himself master of the
Netherlands, and now also involved in his fantastic quest of the hand of Anne
of Britanny, promised the Diet to do his best to aid it in obtaining an
effective constitution of the imperial court of justice. A further step in
advance was made at the important Diet of Nürnberg of 1491, where Maximilian
declared that the Landfriede, already proclaimed for ten years, should
be proclaimed forever, and that for its execution a competent tribunal should
be set up at his father's Court.
Even Maximilian’s
adhesion failed to secure the lasting triumph of the Estates. So long as the
old Emperor lived, nothing practical was done; but on Frederick’s death in 1493
the open-minded heir became the actual ruler of the Empire. Maximilian was
young, restless, ambitious, and able. He had already embarked in those
grandiose schemes of international intervention which remained the most serious
political interest of the rest of his life. To these he now added his father's
care for the development and consolidation of a great Austrian State. Having
however nothing of Frederick’s self-restraint, he ever gave free rein to the
impulse of the moment, and was willing not only to sacrifice the Empire, to
whose interests he was indifferent, but even his own Austrian lands to obtain
some immediate military or diplomatic advantage in the prosecution of his more
visionary ideals. Since he had become King of the Romans he had won his share
of successes; but his incurable habit of keeping too many irons in the fire
made it impossible for him to prevail in the long run. It was something that,
despite the recent ignominy of his Bruges captivity, he was steadily increasing
the influence which he wielded in the Netherlands on behalf of his young son,
Philip. But he was still involved in great difficulties in that quarter, and
the hostility of France, which had robbed him of his Breton wife, still excited
powerful Netherlandish factions against him.
A new trouble
arose with Charles VIII’s expedition to Italy in 1494. The triumphant progress
of the French King gave the last blow to the imagined interests of the Empire
in the Peninsula. Maximilian who had at first hoped to fish on his own account
in the troubled waters, became intensely eager to afford all the help he could
to the Italian League which was soon formed against the French. In 1495 he
formally adhered to the confederacy. But effective assistance to the Italians
could only be given by Maximilian as the price of real concessions to the party
of imperial reform. Though the promises made by him in his father's lifetime
sat but lightly on the reigning monarch, impulse, ambition, and immediate
policy all combined to keep him in this case true to his word.
1493-5]
Maximilian's early attitude towards imperial reform
On March 26,
1495, Maximilian laid his first proposition before a Diet at Worms, to which
despite the urgency of the crisis the princes came slowly and negligently. He
appealed strongly to the Estates to check the progress of the French in Italy.
An immediate grant for the relief of Milan, a more continued subsidy that would
enable him to set up a standing army for ten or twelve years, could alone save
the Empire from dishonor.
It was the
opportunity of the reformers, and on April 29 Elector Berthold formulated the
conditions upon which the Diet would give the King efficient financial and
military support. The old ideas - Public Peace, imperial Court of Justice and
the rest - were once more elaborated. But Berthold’s chief anxiety was now for
the appointment of a permanent imperial Council, representative directly of the
Electors and the other Estates of the Empire, without whose approval no act of
the King was to be regarded as valid. The only solid power Berthold wished to
reserve to the King was that of supreme command in war; but no war was to be
declared without the sanction of the Council. Matters of too great difficulty
for the Council to determine were to be referred not to the King alone, but to
the King and Electors in conjunction; and both here and on the projected
Council the King counted but as a single vote. If Maximilian accepted this
scheme, a Common Penny was to be levied throughout the Empire and an army
established under the control of the Council.
To Maximilian Berthold’s
proposals must have seemed but a demand for his abdication. But he cleverly
negotiated instead of openly refusing, and finally made a counter-proposal,
which practically reduced the suggested Council to a mere royal Council, whose
independent action was limited to the periods of the King's absence, and which
otherwise sat at the King's Court and depended upon the King's pleasure. Long
and wearisome negotiations followed, but a final agreement issued on August 7
showed that Berthold's plan had essentially been abandoned in favor of
Maximilian’s alternative propositions. The reformers preferred to give up their
Executive Council altogether rather than allow it to be twisted into a shape
which would have subordinated it to the royal prerogative! They went back on
the old line of suggestions,-Public Peace, Common Penny, imperial Court of
Justice, and the rest. Maximilian had already professed his acceptance of these
schemes, so that on such lines agreement was not difficult. Even this mutilated
plan of reform was sufficiently thorough and drastic. It makes the Diet of 1495
one of the turning-points in the constitutional history of the Empire.
The Landfriede was proclaimed without any limitation of time, and private war was forbidden to
all Estates of the Empire under pain of the imperial ban. A special obligation
to carry out this Public Peace was enjoined on those dwelling within twenty
miles of the place of any breach of it. Were this not enough, the vindication
of the peace rested with the Diet. Law was now to supersede violence, and an
adequate Supreme Court was at last to be established. Frederick III had
converted his traditional feudal Court (Hofgericht) into an institution
styled the Cameral Tribunal (Kammergericht), without in any very
material way modifying its constitution. A very different Imperial Cameral
Tribunal (Reichsltarnmergericht) was now set up. Its head, the Kammerrichter,
was indeed the King's nominee, but the sixteen assessors, half doctors of law,
half of knightly rank, who virtually overshadowed his authority, were to be
directly nominated by the Estates. The law which the new Court was to
administer was the Roman Law, whose doctrines soon began to filter downwards
into the lower Courts, with the result that its principles and procedure
speedily exercised a profound influence on every branch of German
jurisprudence. The new Court was not to follow the King, but to sit at some
fixed place (at first Frankfort), which could only be changed by vote of the
Estates. Its officers were to be paid not by the Emperor but by the Empire.
Thus independent of the monarch and responsible to the Estates alone, they were
to exercise supreme jurisdiction over all persons and in all causes, and
immediate jurisdiction over all tenants-in-chief. The Diet was henceforth to
meet annually, and no weighty matters were to be decided, even by the King,
without the counsel and consent of the Estates. This was practically the
compensation which Maximilian offered to the reformers for rejecting their plan
of a permanent executive Council. Frequent parliaments might be endured; but a
cabinet council, dependent upon the Estates, was, as Maximilian saw, fatal to
the continuance of his authority. A general tax called the Common Penny (Gemeline Pfennig) was to be levied throughout the Empire. This was a roughly assessed
and rudely graduated property-tax, which had also some elements of an
income-tax and a poll-tax. It was now established for four years, and was to be
collected by the local princely or municipal authorities, but to be handed over
to officials of the Empire and ultimately entrusted to seven imperial
Treasurers, appointed by King and Estates and established at Frankfort. Max was
authorized to take 150,000 florins from the Common Penny to defray the expenses
of his Italian expedition.
In September the
Estates separated. Both King and Diet were mutually satisfied, and it seemed as
if brighter days were to dawn for the Empire. But dark clouds soon began to
gather on every side. Maximilian was bitterly disappointed with his unfortunate
Italian campaign of 1496. The German reformers soon found that it was easier to
draw up schemes of reform than to carry out even the slightest improvement.
It was not that
the Edict of Worms was wholly inoperative. The proclamation of the Landfriede was a real boon, though of course it did not change by magic a lawless into a
law-abiding society. The Kammergericht provided justice in many cases
where justice would have been impossible before. But the collection of the
Common Penny proved the real difficulty. Even princes who were well disposed
towards Berthold’s policy showed no eagerness to levy a tax which other men
were to spend. In many districts nothing whatever was done to collect the
money. The knights as a body refused all taxation, inasmuch as their service
was military and not fiscal. The abbots declined to recognize the jurisdiction
of a court so exclusively secular as the Kammergericht. The princes not
represented at Worms repudiated altogether laws passed by an assembly in which
they had taken no part.
The weak point of
the new constitution was its lack of any administrative authority. Maximilian
was in Italy, and his representatives ostentatiously stood aloof from any
effort to enforce the new laws. Events soon showed that Berthold was right in
demanding the establishment of an executive Council. The yearly Diets were too
cumbrous, expensive, and disorganized, to be of any value in discharging
administrative functions. The first Diet under the new system, which was to meet
in February, 1496, and complete the new constitution, never came into being,
neither Maximilian nor the princes thinking it worth their while to attend.
Before long want of money and want of coercive power vitiated the whole scheme
of reform. The imperial Chamber ceased to be efficient when its decisions could
not be enforced, and when its members, seeing no prospect of their promised
salaries from an empty treasury, compensated themselves by taking bribes from
suitors or transferred themselves to more profitable employments.
The next few
years were marked by a series of strenuous efforts on the part of Berthold to
carry through in practice what had already been accepted in name. Max's need
for money soon gave him his chance. The Diet was summoned to meet the Emperor
at Chiavenna; and, when the princes refused to cross the Alps, its
meeting-place was fixed for Lindau on the Lake of Constance. The remote and
inconvenient little island city was, to the great disgust of the Estates,
selected because of its nearness to Italy. The princes were ordered to bring
with them their share of the Common Penny and their quota of troops to support
the Emperor in Italy. But the Diet, which was opened in September, 1496, was
very scantily attended. The princes who appeared came to Lindau without either
money or men. In Maximilian’s absence Berthold of Mainz stood forth more
conspicuously than ever as the leader of the Estates. He passionately exhorted
the Germans to follow the example of the Swiss, who through union and trust in
one another had made themselves respected and feared by all the world. His
special object was to insist upon the execution of the Edict of Worms in the
Austrian hereditary dominions, where but slight regard had hitherto been paid
to it. He also secured the passing of a resolution that the Common Penny should
be paid to the imperial Treasurers by March, 1497, and that its disposition
should be determined by a new Diet to be summoned for the spring. By promptly
providing for the salaries of its members, Berthold also prevented the
dissolution of the Kammergericht, which the Diet now transferred to
Worms, because that city was regarded as a more accessible place than Frankfort
for the doctors of the Rhenish Universities.
The Diet
reassembled in the spring of 1497 at Worms; but again the Emperor did not
appear. Despite the Landfriede the Elector of Trier waged a fierce war
against Boppard, and with the help of his neighbours reduced the town to his
obedience. The Swiss refused to recognize a decision of the Kammergericht.
The Common Penny came in but slowly. But external political complications once
more helped forward the schemes of the German reformers. Louis XII succeeded
Charles VIII as King of France. Before long he had occupied the Milanese and
forced Maximilian's own son Philip, as ruler of the Netherlands, to make a
separate peace with him by which the young Archduke formally left Burgundy in
French hands for Louis's life. Reduced to desperation by these troubles,
Maximilian was again forced to have recourse to the Estates. The Diet, which
had been dragging on its lengthy and unimportant sittings at Worms, was
transferred at the Emperor’s request to his own city of Freiburg in the
Breisgau. Max complained bitterly that the Estates were indifferent to his
foreign policy and careless of the glories of the Empire.
“I have been
betrayed by the Lombards”, he declared, “I have been abandoned by the Germans.
But I will not again suffer myself to be bound hand and foot as at Worms. I
will carry on the war myself, and you can say to me what you will. I would
sooner dispense myself from my oath at Frankfort; for I am bound to the House
of Austria as well as to the Empire”."
With King and
Estates thus utterly at variance, no great results were to be expected. Maximilian
desired to carry out his spirited foreign policy: the Estates wished to secure
the peace and prosperity of Germany. It was to little purpose that Berthold and
many of the cities brought in their contributions towards the Common Penny.
Maximilian betook himself to the Netherlands to wage war against Charles, Count
of Egmont, the self-styled Duke of Gelderland, who upheld the French cause on
the Lower Rhine. With war everywhere it was useless to go on with the farce of
assembling the Estates. In 1499 an attempt to hold a Diet at Worms broke down,
and, though Maximilian went back from Gelderland to Cologne to meet the
Estates, the rump of a Diet assembled at Worms refused to transfer its sittings
to Cologne. Berthold lay dangerously sick. The helplessness and disorder of the
Empire were as great as ever.
A trouble that
had long been imminent now came to a head. The Swiss Confederacy, though still
nominally a part of the Empire, had long been drifting into independence. It
now refused to be bound by the new policy of strengthening the links that
connected the various parts of the Empire with each other. The Swiss who had
recently given great offence by declining to join the Swabian League, now
forbade the collection of the Common Penny and rejected the jurisdiction of the Kammergericht. They renewed their connection with France at the very
moment when France went to war with the Empire, and threatened to absorb the
confederated towns of Alsace, as in 1481 they had absorbed Freiburg and
Solothurn. The eagerness of Max's Tyrolese government now forced him into open
war with the Swiss. But the princely champions of reform would not lift a hand
against the daring mountaineers who defied the authority of the Empire. Only
the Swabian League gave Maximilian any real help. Before long his armies were
beaten and there was no money to raise fresh ones. In despair Maximilian
concluded the Peace of Basel (1499) in which he gave the Swiss their own terms.
They were declared freed from the Common Penny and from the imperial Chamber
and all other specific imperial jurisdiction. A vague and undefined
relationship between the Swiss and the Empire was still allowed to remain until
the Peace of 1648. And in the following years matters were made worse by the
constant tendency of the south German States to fall away from the Empire and
attach themselves to the Confederacy, of which in 1501 Basel and Schaffhausen,
and Appenzell in 1513, were formally admitted as full members. It was the mere
accident of some unsettled local disputes as to criminal jurisdiction over the
Thurgau that prevented Constance from following in their steps. Such of the
Estates of Upper Swabia as had hitherto preserved their freedom now hastened to
become “confederate” or “protected” or allied to the strenuous Confederacy,
which now dominated the whole region between the Upper Rhine and the Alps, and
had also established friendly relations with the Rhaetian Leagues that were now
taking shape.
It cost
Maximilian little to renounce the rights of the Empire over the Swiss. He
looked upon the Confederates as most useful to him in helping his designs on
Italy, and now trusted with their assistance to restore his father-in-law to
Milan. But in 1500 came the second conquest of Milan by the French, and
Ludovico’s lifelong captivity in a French dungeon. In the same year the
agreement between Louis and Ferdinand of Spain for the partition of Naples
still further isolated Maximilian. He was as unsuccessful in his schemes of
foreign conquest as was Berthold in his plans of internal reformation. Within a
few years he had fought against Florentines and French, against Gelderland and
Switzerland, and on each occasion had lost the day. And each failure of
Maximilian threw him more and more completely on the mercy of the German reformers.
In April, 1500,
the Diet assembled at Augsburg. Maximilian himself now offered important
concessions. Everybody hated the Common Penny, and neither the princes nor the
cities were so rich or public-spirited as to submit permanently to the waste of
money and time, and to the withdrawal from their own proper local work,
involved in the assembling of annual Diets. As an alternative to the first of
these hitherto necessary evils the King revived a proposal made at Frankfort in
1486, by which the Estates were to set on foot a permanent army of 34,000 men,
and to provide means for its maintenance. In place of the annual Diets a
permanent committee might be established. On this basis the Estates began to
negotiate with the King, and by July 2 an agreement was arrived at. In this,
instead of the standing army suggested by Maximilian, an elaborate scheme was
devised for setting on foot an army for six years. Every four hundred
property-holders or householders were to combine to equip and pay a foot-soldier
to fight the King's battles. For the assessment of this burden the parochial
organization was to be employed, and the sums levied were to be roughly
proportionate to the means of the contributor. The clergy, the religious
Orders, and the citizens of imperial towns were to pay one florin for every 40
florins of income. The Jews were taxed at a florin a head. Counts and barons of
the Empire were to equip a horseman for each 4000 florins of income, while
knights were to do what they could. The princes of the Empire were to provide
at least 500 cavalry from their private resources. It was hoped that these
arrangements would give the King an army of 30,000 men; and the leaders of the
Diet probably thought it a clever stroke of policy that, while they were themselves
let off very lightly, the greater part of the burden fell upon the smaller
property-owners.
The obligation to
summon a yearly Diet was not formally repealed, but, while legislation and
supreme control of finance still remained the special functions of the
assembled Estates, the executive business with which they were so incompetent
to deal devolved upon a Council of Regency (Reichsregiment). This was to
consist of twenty-one members. At its head was the King or a deputy appointed
by the King. The further representation of the King's interests was provided
through an Austrian and a Netherlandish member of the Council. But the other
eighteen Councillors were entirely outside the King’s control. Each of the six
Electors had an individual voice in the Council. One of them was always to be
present in person, being replaced by a colleague after three months. Each of
the five absent Electors personally nominated a member of the Regency. The
representation of the other Estates was divided into two categories. Certain
eminent imperial vassals were singled out and granted a personal right of
occasional appearance. Thus twelve princes, six spiritual and six lay, were
specified as having the privilege of sitting in the Council, by two at a time.
Similarly there were one representative of the prelates (abbots and other
lesser dignitaries), one of the Counts and two of the Free and Imperial Towns,
arranged in groups for the purpose. Besides the six Councillors chosen from
this first category, there were six others representing the Estates of six
great circumscriptions or Circles into which Germany, excluding the electoral
lands, was now for this purpose divided. No names were given to these
districts, but roughly they corresponded to the later Circles of Franconia, Bavaria,
Swabia, the Upper Rhine, Lower Saxony and Westphalia. The whole constitution
was so arranged that the preponderance of power was altogether with the
princes, and especially with the Electors. The inferior Estates were as
scantily represented as was the King himself.
15oo]
The Council of Regency.
The establishment
of the Council of Regency marks the highest moment of Berthold’s triumph.
Germany had obtained her centralized institutions, her Kammergericht,
her annual Diets, her national army, and her imperial taxation. She now also
had an executive government as directly dependent upon the Estates as a modern
English Cabinet or as the royal Councils, nominated in the English Parliament,
in the days before the Wars of the Roses had destroyed Lancastrian
constitutionalism. The events of the last five years had demonstrated that,
without such executive authority, the reforms were unworkable. But did the
circumstances and temper of the times allow such a system as this any
reasonable prospects of success? Lancastrian constitutionalism had failed
miserably and had but paved the way to Tudor monarchy. What chance was there of
Berthold's system prevailing under far worse conditions in Germany?
Maximilian was
not likely to acquiesce in being deprived of all that made monarchy a reality.
The knights with their passion for lawless freedom, the cities with their
narrow outlook and strong local prejudices, might be likewise expected to have
no good will towards a system in which the former had no part and the latter
but a very small one. But a still greater difficulty lay in the princes, whose
sectional ambitions and want of settled national policy wholly unfitted them
for carrying out so delicate and difficult a task. Could a group of turbulent
nobles, trained in long traditions of private warfare and personal
self-seeking, provide Germany with that sound government which lands with
better political prospects could only obtain from the strong hand of an
individual monarch? The answer to these questions was not long in coming. In a
few years the Council of Regency broke down utterly, bearing with it in its
fall the strongest pillars of the new German constitution.
A final struggle
between Maximilian and the Estates arose as to the meeting-place of the Council
of Regency. But Maximilian had gone too far on the way of concession to be able
to succeed in enforcing his wish that the Council should follow the Court. The
Estates resolved that it should meet in the first instance at Nürnberg. Full of
anger and scorn the King left Augsburg, seeking the consolations of the chase
in Tyrol. Berthold betook himself to Nürnberg, in order to take his turn as
resident Elector on the Council of Regency. The choice of Frederick, Elector of
Saxony, as the imperial deputy, made Berthold's task as easy as was possible.
But Frederick was very commonly absent from the Council. He was too great a
prince to be able to devote his whole time to the reform of the Empire. Upon
Berthold alone fell the burden of the new system. Yet he was broken in health
and spirits, and even at best only one prince among many. It was due to him
that the Council had so much as a start. No political genius could have given
it a long life.
Difficulties
arose almost from the beginning. Maximilian grew indignant when he discovered
that there was no probability of an army being levied to fight the French, and
still more wrathful when the Council entered into negotiations on its own
account with Louis XII, with whom it concluded a truce without any reference
whatever to Italy. This seemed, and perhaps was, treason. But Maximilian was at
the same time treating with Louis, and, though for a long time he refused to
ratify the compact between the French King and the Estates, he made a truce on
his own behalf and finally accepted also that arranged by the Council. But a
new difference of opinion at once arose as to the proclamation of the papal
Jubilee of 1500 in Germany. King and Council opened separate negotiations with
Cardinal Perraudi the papal Legate, and Maximilian much resented the agreement
made between Legate and Council, that the profits derived from the Jubilee in
Germany should be devoted exclusively to the Turkish War. He avenged himself by
allowing the Pope to proclaim the Jubilee without reservation and by quarrelling
with the Legate. Meanwhile the Council was failing in the impossible task of
governing Germany. The crisis came to a head in 1501 at the Diet of Nürnberg,
from which Maximilian was absent. The King now broke openly with the Council,
and did his best to make its position impossible. Not only did he refuse to
attend its sittings, but he neglected to appoint a deputy to preside in his
absence. He would not even nominate the Austrian representative. He denounced
Berthold as a traitor and schemer, and strove to raise an army, after the
ancient fashion, by calling upon the individual princes to supply their
contingents.
In the struggle
that ensued both King and reformers gave up any attempt to observe the new
system. Berthold fell back upon the venerable expedient of a Union of Electors
(Kurfurstenverein). He has been reproached with lack of policy in thus
abandoning the infant constitution, but his action was probably the result of
inevitable necessity. As he had to fight the King, he naturally chose the most
practical weapon that lay to hand.
After the fashion
of the Luxemburg period, an Electoral Diet was now held at Frankfort. The
Elector Palatine Philip (1476-1508), nephew and successor of Frederick the
Victorious, who had hitherto been at feud with the Elector of Mainz, now made
terms with him and attended the meeting. Alarmed at the unity of the Electors,
Maximilian ordered them to adjourn to Speyer, where he would meet them in
person. But the Electors quitted Frankfort before the King's messenger could
arrive. Before separating, however, they renewed the ancient Union of the
Electors, and pledged each other to act as one man in upholding the reforms of
1495 and 1500. It was afterwards believed that the Electors talked of deposing
Maximilian, or at least of obtaining still more drastic reforms. This however
does not seem to have been the case. It was futile to seek further changes,
when the innovations already approved of could not be carried out in practice.
The Electors
resolved that, if the King did not summon a Diet, they would themselves meet in
November at Gelnhausen, and invite the other Estates to join them. Before this
parliamentary convention of the German Estates, they resolved to lay a
programme of policy that far surpassed in comprehensiveness any previous plan
of reformation. This scheme provided not merely for the maintenance of the Landfriede,
the restoration of the Kammergericht, and the strengthening of the Reichsregiment.
It distinguished itself from its predecessors by going beyond the interests of
the princes and taking some thought of the welfare of the ordinary poor man,
whom it sought to protect from the personal services, taxes, ecclesiastical
Courts and other grievances weighing heavily upon him. But a body which could
not carry through a simple political programme showed temerity in dealing with
schemes of social reformation. Meanwhile the relations between King and princes
became more and more embittered. “The King” said a Venetian ambassador, “speaks
ill of the princes, and the princes speak ill of the King”.
Maximilian had
grown wiser with experience. He at last saw that to maintain a stiff attitude
of resistance and to dwell upon his prerogative only served to unite his
vassals against him. About this time he gradually drifted into a more
temporizing, but also a more dangerous, attitude. He was now content to bide
his time and wait on events. In the long run the single will of the King was
more likely to prevail than the divided wills of a host of magnates. Maximilian
now endeavored to break up the Electoral Union, and to make a party for himself
among the younger princes. He employed all his rare personal talents, all the
charm and fascination which belonged to him, in order to attract to himself on
personal grounds the devotion of the rising generation. He cleverly sowed
dissension between the mass of the immediate nobility and the little knot of
reformers, who practically controlled the whole of the opposition. Why should a
small ring of elderly princes of the second rank deprive the younger generation
of all power at home or prospect of distinction abroad? He appealed to the
particularistic interests, which were endangered, like his own, by the unionist
policy of the Electors. He invoked the chivalrous and adventurous spirit which
might well find a more glorious career in fighting Turks and French under the
brilliant ruler than in wrangling about constitutional reform at home. He
exerted all his interest at episcopal and abbatial elections, and not seldom
succeeded in carrying his candidate. He sought to win over Alexander VI to his
side, and with that object did not hesitate to negotiate directly with the
papal Curia over the head of the Legate. A few years of hard work in these
directions wrought a surprising difference in Maximilian’s position. With
increasing prosperity he grew more cheerful and good-tempered. Only against
Berthold of Mainz did he show any great bitterness, and he now sought to obtain
the Archbishop’s resignation on the ground of ill-health in favor of one of his
young followers, the Margrave Casimir of Brandenburg-Kulmbach. The very
Electors began to despair of their policy of opposition. They resolved that it
was but a waste of time and money to hold Diets in the absence of the King. Two
years before it had been the highest goal of their ambition to summon the
Estates without waiting for the formality of the royal writ.
Concurrently with
these new developments, Maximilian forged other weapons against the reforming
oligarchy. So long as he possessed but a purely personal authority, he was
powerless against the new system. He therefore resolved to start
counter-organizations, emanating from the royal prerogative, which might be
taken into account against those established by the Estates at the expense of
his supreme authority. Besides this general motive, he found a particular
object for such action in the condition of his Austrian territories, which were
as disunited and disorderly as feudal States were ever wont to be. He had
already begun to combine the ordered administration of his hereditary lands
with a rival imperial system that sprang from the royal initiative. The first
great step was Maximilian’s Hofrathsordnung of 1497. Since the ancient Hofrath of the Middle Ages had been merged in the Hammergericht of Frederick
III, which had in its turn been superseded by the Reichskammergericht of
the reformers, there was no royal Court adequate to support and represent the
Crown either in the Empire or the hereditary lands of the House of Austria.
Maximilian now set up a permanent Aulic Council (Hofrath), competent to
deal with “all and every business that can flow in from the Empire, Christendom
at large, or the King’s hereditary principalities”. This body was to follow the
royal Court, was to be appointed by the King, and was to decide on all matters
by a majority. It was not only a High Court of Justice, exercising concurrent
jurisdiction with the Reichskammergericht. It was also a supreme
administrative body. It was to stand to the Empire and the Estates as the Concilium
Ordinarium of the late medieval English Kings stood to England and the
English Parliament. Next year, Maximilian further improved his executive
government. The Hofkammerordnung of 1498 set up a separate financial
administration, dependent on the Emperor, and subordinated also to the Aulic
Council, which heard appeals from its decisions. This body, which was to sit at
Innsbruck, was to centralize the financial machinery of Empire and hereditary
dominions alike under four Treasurers, one for the Empire, one for Burgundy,
and two for Austria. About the same date the Hofkanzleiordnung completed
these monarchical reforms by setting up a Chancery or Office of State on modern
lines and with powers such as could never be given to hereditary Chancellors
like the Rhenish Archbishops. In these measures the King offered to his
subjects rival guarantees for order, peace, and prosperity to those procured
for them by the Diet. After the Gelnhausen meeting he proceeded still further
on the same course. He set up a new Kammergerickt, consisting of judges
appointed by himself, and this body actually had a short and troubled life at
Ratisbon. He also talked of a new Reichsregiment, which was to be a
Privy Council dependent on King alone; but this scheme never came into being.
Had Max been a
great statesman, aiming at one thing at a time, this system might have been the
beginning of a centralized bureaucracy that would have soon pervaded the whole
Empire with monarchical ideas of administration. But he was neither persevering,
nor wholehearted, nor far-seeing enough to pursue deliberately the policy of
making himself a despot; and his reforms soon showed themselves to be but the
temporary expedients of an ingenious but superficial and temporizing waiter on
events. In a few years fresh royal ordinances upset the system as easily as it
had been called into being; and in practice Maximilian’s reforms were not much
better carried out than those of the Diet. The Aulic Council ceased to exist,
and its revival was only forced upon Maximilian by the Estates of his own
dominions, which saw in a standing council of this sort a means of checking
arbitrary prerogative. Maximilian died before the renewed Aulic Council came
into working order. Later, its permanent establishment was secured, and as time
went on it proved a rather formidable rival to the imperial Chamber. In after
ages it was found more advantageous to take suits before the Emperor's Court
than before the Court of the Empire, because justice was cheaper, quicker, and
more certain in the Aulic Council than in the imperial Chamber.
The
Diet of Innsbruck. [1501-18
Maximilian soon
ceased to take much interest in reforming the Empire by royal prerogative. But
he continued to busy himself with schemes for strengthening and unifying the
administration of his hereditary dominions. He had long ago chased away the
Hungarian conquerors of Vienna, and put an end to the division of the Austrian
lands between two rival branches of the Habsburg House. The Aulic Council and
the Innsbruck Chamber had a less direct bearing on the Empire than on the
hereditary dominions, for the whole of which the Chamber might well have been
the source of a single financial system. But Maximilian soon set up, in place
of the single Hofkammer, two Chambers sitting at Vienna for Lower
Austria (i.e. Austria, Carinthia, Carniola, Styria and Istria), and at
Innsbruck for Upper Austria (Tyrol, Vorarlberg and East Swabia), with perhaps a
third organization for the scattered Vorlande in the Black Forest and Alsace.
In 1501 followed
an elaborate plan of administrative reform for Lower Austria, which established
six executive, judicial, and financial bodies at Linz, Vienna, and Wiener
Neustadt. These are the first signs of a reaction from Maximilian's
centralizing policy which became stronger towards the end of his reign. It is
hard to determine how far this proceeded from his instability, and how far from
the pressure of the local Estates of the Austrian dominions to which his
financial embarrassments ever made him peculiarly liable. In the end, however,
it was the Estates that took the lead, in Austria as in the Empire. The meeting
at Innsbruck in 1518, famous in Austrian history, of deputations from the
various Landtage of the hereditary lands, is justly regarded as the
first establishment of any organic unity within the Austrian dominions.
Maximilian shared with the Estates the merit of convoking the meeting; and it
was this body that sanctioned the scheme for the erection of a Reichshofrath,
to which reference has already been made. Of the eighteen members of this Aulic
Council of the Empire, five were to be presented by the Empire, nine by the
various Austrian lands, and the remainder were to consist of great officials.
Side by side with it a Chancery for the Empire and hereditary lands was
erected, whose Chancellor was to act with the help of three secretaries, one
for the Empire, one for Lower, and one for Upper Austria. Finance was once more
to be reorganized, and the Innsbruck Chamber restored to something of its old
position. Tribunals were instituted to hear complaints against officials; the
prince's domain was not to be alienated, and three local administrations were
set up, at Bruck on the Mur for Lower Austria, at Innsbruck for Upper Austria,
and at Ensisheim for the Vorlande. Maximilian’s death within a few months
prevented these schemes from being carried out, and the history of the
Emperor's Austrian, as of his German policy, ends with the characteristic note
of failure. Nevertheless he had truly won for himself the position of founder
of the unity of the Austrian dominions. If he accomplished little for Germany,
he had done much for Austria.
The soundness of
the newer imperial policy of Maximilian was soon to be tested. On the death of
George the Rich, Duke of Bavaria-Landshut (1504), a contest arose as to the
succession. By family settlements and by the law of the Empire, the next heirs
to the deceased Duke were his kinsmen, Albert and Wolfgang, Dukes of
Bavaria-Munich. But differences had arisen between the Munich and Landshut
branches of the ducal House of Wittelsbach, and George, in the declining years
of his life, had formed a scheme for the succession of his nephew and
son-in-law, the Count Palatine Rupert, second son of the Elector Palatine
Philip, by his wife, George's sister, and the husband of Elizabeth, the Duke of
Landshut’s only child. On his death he left his wealth and dominions to Rupert
and Elizabeth, who at once entered into possession of their inheritance.
The Dukes of
Munich immediately appealed to Maximilian, and the newly-constituted royal Kammergericht speedily issued a decision in their favor. All the dominions of Duke George
were to go to the Dukes of Munich, except those in which the King had an
interest. Maximilian at once put Rupert and his wife under the ban of the
Empire, and prepared to vindicate by arms the decision of his lawyers. For the
first time since his accession the young princes of Germany flocked to his
standard. It was in vain that the Elector Palatine appealed to his French and
Swiss allies to help his son. A few French nobles fought on his side; but Louis
XII preferred to profit by Maximilian's need to obtain recognition as Duke of
Milan. The struggle was too one-sided to be of long duration, and the death of
Rupert and his wife made its termination the more easy. The mass of the
Landshut dominions was now secured to the Dukes of Munich, henceforth the sole
lords of the Bavarian duchy. But Maximilian himself appropriated considerable
districts for himself, while he compensated the Elector Palatine by the region
of Sulzbach and Neuburg-the so-called Junge Pfalz. With Maximilian's triumph in
the Landshut Succession War died the last hopes of the constitutional reformers
of the Empire. Their best chance had ever been the necessities of their King’s
enterprising foreign policy; but these years also saw the realization of the
brightest dreams of the House of Austria. The Archduke Philip was wedded to
Joanna, the heiress of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. On Isabella’s death in
1504 Philip became King of Castile. To this great dignity was added the
prospect of the inheritance of the aged Ferdinand in Aragon and in Naples. With
such an extension of his European influence it seemed unlikely that Maximilian
would again come before his Estates the helpless suitor that he had been of
old.
The
Diet of Cologne. [1505
The history of
the Diet of Cologne of 1505 brings out clearly the different position now
attained by King and Estates respectively. To this Diet Maximilian came triumphant
from his hard-earned victory in Gelderland, attended by a great crowd of
enthusiastic nobles and soldiers. He had no longer to face his ancient enemies.
Berthold of Mainz had died in the midst of the Landshut troubles, worn out with
disease and anxiety, and already conscious of the complete failure of his
plans. His former ally, John of Baden, Elector of Trier, had died before him in
1503. Their successors, Jacob of Liebenstein at Mainz and Jacob of Baden, at
Trier, were mere creatures of the King, and the latter Maximilian's near
kinsman. Hermann of Hesse, the Elector of Cologne, had never been of much
personal importance, and was now quite content to float in the royalist tide.
The Count Palatine Philip, the chief of the secular opposition since his
reconciliation with Berthold, had suffered so severely during the Landshut
Succession War that he dared no longer raise his voice against the King. The
young Elector Joachim of Brandenburg, who had succeeded to his dignity in 1499,
was eager to put his sword at the service of Maximilian. Of the old heroes of
the constitutional struggle only Frederick the Wise of Saxony remained, and
without Berthold's stimulus Frederick was too passive, too discreet, and too
wanting in strenuousness to take the lead. Yet his pleading for the disgraced
Elector Palatine, unsuccessful as it was, was the only sign of opposition
raised from among the Electors in this Diet. Even more devoted to the Crown
were the princes who had won their spurs in the Bavarian War, and the prelates
who owed their election to Court influence. Well might the Venetian ambassador
report to his Republic, that his imperial Majesty had become a true Emperor
over his Empire.
Encouraged by the
prospect of the unwonted support of his Estates, Maximilian took a real
initiative in the question of imperial reform. In a speech in which he could
not conceal his bitter hatred of the dead Elector of Mainz, he urged the
establishment of a new Council of Regency, dependent upon the Crown, resident
at the imperial Court, and limited to giving the King advice and acting under
his direction. But the Diet had had enough of new-fangled reforms. “Let his
Majesty” said the Estates, “rule in the future as he has ruled in the past”.
They also rejected the scheme when Maximilian put it before them in a modified
form, which allowed the Electors and princes a large voice in the appointment
of the Council. Equally averse was the Diet to the novel method of taxation.
Maximilian soon withdrew a proposal for a new Common Penny, and cheerfully
contented himself with the proffer of an army of 4000 men, which he proposed to
employ to protect his ally Ladislas of Hungary from the revolted Hungarian
nobles under John Zapolya. For the expenses of this and for other supplies,
money was to be raised by the matricula, that is by calling upon the
various Estates of the Empire to pay lump sums according to their ability. The matricula ignored the union of the Empire and the obligation of the individual subject,
which had been emphasized by the Common Penny. But King and subjects had alike
ceased to look upon the Empire as anything but a congeries of separate States.
Save in the
matters of the Council of Regency and the Common Penny, the Augsburg reforms
were once more confirmed by King and Estates. The Landfriede of 1495 was
solemnly renewed, and orders were given to revive the Kammergericht,
which had ceased to meet during the recent troubles. For two years, however,
the restoration remained on paper, until at last the Diet of Constance of 1507,
which in more than one way completed the work of the Diet of Cologne, approved
of an elaborate scheme for its reconstitution. By this ordinance the imperial
Chamber took its permanent shape. At its head was still to be a Kammerrichter chosen by the King, and sixteen assessors representative of the Estates. But
while at Worms in 1495 the assessors had been appointed by the King with the
counsel and consent of the Estates, the method by which their election was now
arrived at was particularist rather than national. The assessors were
henceforth to be nominated by the chief territorial powers. Two were named by
Maximilian as Duke of Austria and Lord of the Netherlands. The six Electors
similarly had each a nomination to a seat, and the remaining eight assessors
were to be appointed by the rest of the Estates, grouped for the purpose into
six large Circles. The place for the session of the Court was still to be fixed
by the Estates. After a year at Regensburg it was to be established at Worms.
To please Maximilian, who preferred an ecclesiastic, the Bishop of Passau was
the first Kammerrichter. His successor, however, was to be a count or a
secular prince. The judge was to be paid by the King, and the assessors by the
authorities that presented them to their offices. Thus the Kammergericht became a permanent institution, which, after various wanderings and a long stay
at Speyer, finally settled down at Wetzlar, where it remained until the final
dissolution of the Empire. But no care was taken to secure that the Court
should administer a reasonable law or adopt a rapid or an economical procedure.
The delays of the Kammergericht soon became a bye-word, and the
ineffectiveness of its methods very materially attenuated the permanent gain
accruing from the establishment of an imperial High Court. Nor were any
efficient means taken at Cologne or Constance to secure the execution of the
sentences of the imperial Chamber. Max himself was not chiefly to blame for
this. He renewed at Constance a wise proposal that had fallen flat at Cologne.
This was a plan for the nomination by the King of four marshals to carry out
the law in the four districts of the Upper Rhine, Lower Rhine, Elbe and Danube
respectively. Each marshal was to be assisted by twenty-five knightly subordinates
and two councillors. An under-marshal, directly dependent on the Chamber, was
to execute criminal sentences. But the princes feared lest this strong
executive should intrench upon their territorial rights. Now that the Emperor
and not the Estates controlled the Empire, a prince had every inducement to
give full scope to his particularistic sympathies. Very weak, however, was the
system of execution that found favor at Constance. It was thought enough that
the Kammerrichter should be authorized to pronounce the ban of the
Empire against all who withstood his authority. If the culprit did not yield
within six months, the Church was to put him under excommunication. If this did
not suffice, then Diet or Emperor was to act. In other words, there was no practical
way of carrying out the sentence of the Chamber against over-powerful
offenders.
The Diet of
Constance placed on a permanent basis the closely allied questions of imperial
taxation and imperial levies of troops. Brilliant though the prospects of the House
of Austria now seemed, Maximilian's personal necessities only increased with
the widening of his hopes. It cost him much trouble to maintain Wladislav of
Hungary on his throne, though in the end he succeeded; and the betrothal of
Anne, Wladislav’s daughter and heiress, to one of Maximilian’s grandsons, an
infant like herself, further guaranteed the eventual succession of the
Habsburgs in Hungary and Bohemia (March, 1506). The death in the same year
(September) of his son Philip of Castile, had involved him in fresh
responsibilities. Philip’s successor, the future Charles V, was only six years
old, and it taxed all Maximilian’s skill to guard the interests of his
grandson. He now felt it urgently necessary that he should cross the Alps to
Italy, and should receive the imperial Crown from the Pope. With this object he
besought the Estates at Constance for liberal help. He gave his word that, if
an army of thirty thousand men were voted to him, all conquests he might make
in Italy should remain for ever with the Empire; that they should not be
granted out as fiefs without the permission of the Electors; and that an
imperial Chamber should be established in Italy to secure the payment by the
Italians of their due share in the burdens of the Empire. But these glowing
promises only induced the Diet to make a grudging grant of twelve thousand men
with provision for their equipment. The matricular system, already adopted at
Cologne, was again employed to raise the men and the money. Henceforward, so
long as imperial grants continued, this method alone was employed. But grave
difficulties arose as to the quotas to be contributed by the various States.
One of the chief among these related to princes, who were tenants-in-chief for
some part of their territories, while they held the rest mediately of some
other vassal of the Empire. None of these problems was settled during
Maximilian's life.
The chief
interest of German history shifts for the next few years more and more to
questions of foreign policy. Maximilian's War with Venice, his share in the
League of Cambray and the renewal of hostilities with France, which followed
the dissolution of that combination and the establishment of the Holy League,
absorbed his energies and exhausted his resources. Very little success attended
his restless and shifting policy. He did not even obtain the imperial Crown for
which he sought. Unable to wait patiently until the road to Rome was open to
him, Max took on February 4, 1508, a step of some constitutional importance. He
issued a proclamation from Trent, where he then was, declaring that
henceforward he would use the title of Roman Emperor Elect, until such time as
he received the Crown in Rome. Julius II, anxious to win his support, formally
authorized the adoption of this designation. For the next few years the
Venetian War blocked his access to Rome, and later he made no effort to go
there. He was now universally addressed as Emperor; and the time had passed
when the form of papal coronation could be expected to work miracles. Maximilian's
assumption of the imperial title without coronation served as a precedent to
all his successors. Henceforward the Elect of the seven Electors was at once
styled Roman Emperor in common phrase, Roman Emperor Elect in formal documents.
During the three centuries through which the Empire was still to endure,
Maximilian’s grandson and successor was the only Emperor who took the trouble
to receive his Crown from the Pope. As time went on, the very meaning of the
phrase “Emperor Elect” became obscure, and was occasionally thought to point to
the elective nature of the dignity rather than to the incomplete status of its
uncrowned holder.
During these
years of trouble in Italy, Maximilian was constantly demanding men and money
from the German Estates and was involved in perpetual bickering with the
numerous Diets which received his propositions coldly. The royal influence,
which had become so great after 1504, broke down as hopelessly as had the
authority of the Estates. The conditions of the earlier part of the reign were
renewed when the Emperor's financial necessities once more led him to make
serious proposals of constitutional reform. The most important of them was the
scheme which in March, 1510, Maximilian laid before a well-attended Diet at
Augsburg. As usual the Emperor wished for a permanent imperial army, and long
experience had convinced him that this could only be obtained by great
concessions on his part. He now suggested that a force of 40,000 foot and
10,000 horse should be raised by the Estates of the Empire, including in them
the Austrian hereditary dominions. In return for this he promised once more to
establish an efficient imperial executive. The Empire was to be divided into
four Quarters, over each of which a Captain (Hauptmann) was to be appointed as
responsible chief of the administration. From these Quarters eight princes,
four spiritual and four temporal, were to be chosen, who, under the presidency
of an imperial Lieutenant, were to act as a central authority. This body was to
sit during the Emperor's absence in the same place as the imperial Chamber.
While the Emperor was in the Empire, he had the right to summon it to take up
its residence at his Court.
This proposal,
although it has been described as the most enlightened plan of fundamental
imperial reform that the age produced, nevertheless found little favor with the
Diet of Augsburg, which shelved it after the traditional fashion by referring
its further consideration to another Diet. Fears for their territorial
sovereignty may have partly induced the princes to bring about this result. But
it seems probable that distrust of Maximilian was the real motive which led to
the rejection of the scheme. Bitter experience had taught the Estates that the
Emperor could be tied down to no promises, and could be entrusted with the
execution of no settled policy. The best proof of this is that, as soon as
Maximilian died, the Diet went back to the ideas of Berthold of Mainz and
restored the Reichsregiment.
The obligations
involved by Maximilian's participation in the Holy League speedily forced upon
him once more the necessity of consulting his Estates. In April, 1512, the
Emperor travelled to Trier to meet the Diet. Much time was now wasted and
finally Max, in despair as to any transaction of business, went to the
Netherlands, taking with him many of the assembled princes. A remnant of the
Diet lingered on at Trier until Maximilian, returning from the Netherlands,
prorogued it to Cologne. Here the Emperor once more brought forward the plan of
1510. As it met with little approval, he proposed as an alternative that a
Common Penny should once more be levied after the fashion adopted at Augsburg
in 1500, and that, by way of improvement on the Augsburg precedent, a levy of
one man in a hundred should provide him with an adequate army. It was
ridiculous to expect that the Estates would grant an army four times as large
as the levy of 1500, when no great concession like that of the Reichsregiment was offered in return. The Emperor gradually reduced his terms, but after much
haggling obtained no permanent assistance and only inadequate temporary help.
One result of
future importance came from the Diet of Cologne. This was a scheme for the
extension of the system of Circles into which portions of the Empire had been
divided since 1500. Maximilian now proposed to add to the existing six further
new Circles, formed from the electoral and Habsburg territories which had been
excluded from the earlier arrangement. A seventh Circle, that of the Lower Rhine,
was to comprise the dominions of the four Rhenish Electors. An eighth Circle of
Upper Saxony took in the lands of the Electors of Saxony and Brandenburg,
together with those of the Dukes of Pomerania and some other minor Powers
transferred from the original Saxon Circle. Archbishop Berthold's greatest wish
was realized in the proposal to include Max's hereditary dominions in the ninth
and tenth Circles of Austria and Burgundy. Thus every large tract of imperial
territory became part of a Circle, save only the foreign kingdom of the Czechs.
Definite names were given to the older Circles, and in each Circle a Captain
appointed by it was empowered to carry out with the help of a force of cavalry
the decisions of the imperial Chamber. The Estates however took alarm at the
proposal to put the Captains of the Circles at the head of an armed force; and
the result was that the division of the Empire into ten Circles never came into
working order until after Maximilian's death, and even then certain small
districts were left outside the system.
The Diet of 1512
was practically the last of the reforming Diets. The chief interest in the
immediately succeeding period centred round the renewal of the Swabian League.
This confederacy had for a generation powerfully contributed towards the peace
and welfare of South Germany. It had extended its limits, until it included not
only the Estates of Swabia, but Rhenish and Franconian magnates such as the
Elector Palatine, the Elector of Mainz, and the Bishop of Würzburg. But it comprehended
within it very diversified elements, and the lesser Estates looked with
jealousy upon the increasing influence of the greater princes upon its policy.
Conspicuous among these magnates was Ulrich, the turbulent and unruly young
Duke of Wurtemberg. The split declared itself when the princes refused to take
a share even in paying the cost of the destruction of the robber-nest of
Hohenkrahen in the Hegau, which the League, inspired by the Emperor, now
captured after a short siege. Accordingly when the League was renewed for ten
years in October, 1512, the Duke of Wurtemberg with his allies, the Elector
Palatine, the Bishop of Wurzburg, and the Margrave of Baden, were excluded from
it. The excluded princes promptly set up a counter-league, which in 1515
received the adhesion of Frederick the Wise of Saxony. Thus the element of
disunion, which had prevented any organized combination of the Empire as a
whole, now also threatened to destroy the most successful of the local unions
of parts of the Empire. In the midst of this confusion, the last Diets of
Maximilian's reign were even more incompetent than their predecessors. The
characteristic features of these years were the war of Franz von Sickingen
against Worms and the feud between Ulrich of Wurtemberg and the Swabian League.
The Emperor was now conscious of his impending end. In the hope of furthering
his grandson's election as his successor, he relieved Sickingen from the ban
which had been pronounced against him. The aggrieved Estates refused in their turn
their help against the disobedient Ulrich. New troubles now arose to complicate
the situation. The early triumphs of Francis I deprived Maximilian of his last
hopes of acquiring influence or territory in Italy. After Marignano his
military impotence was clearly demonstrated to all the world, while his shifty
and tortuous diplomacy became a bye-word for incompetence. Since 1517
ecclesiastical troubles had assumed an acute shape by the crusade of Martin
Luther against papal Indulgences. But the old Emperor still calmly pursued his
way, finding amusement with his literary and artistic schemes, and occupying
himself more solidly in preparing the way for the world-Empire of his grandson
Charles, and in setting the administration of the Austrian hereditary lands on
a more satisfactory basis. He was still as full of dreams as ever and talked so
late as 1518 of leading a crusade against the Infidel. But the contrast between
his projects and achievements was never more strikingly brought out than in the
last months of his life. The great schemes of the Diet of Innsbruck were in no
wise carried out. The imperial coffers were so empty that Maximilian could not
pay the tavern bills of his courtiers. Bitterly vexed at the indignities to
which his poverty exposed him, he left Tyrol and travelled down the Inn and
Danube to Wels. There, prostrated by a long-threatened illness, he breathed his
last on January 19, 1519.
Death,
character and policy of Maximilian. [1517-19
A review of the
political history of Germany brings out Maximilian's character almost at its
weakest. Yet the impression derived from his calamitous European wars, his
ineffective negotiations, and his pitiable shifts for raising money is even
more unfavorable. Nevertheless the unsuccessful ruler was a man of rare gifts
and many accomplishments. “He was”, says a Venetian, “not very fair of face,
but well proportioned, exceedingly robust, of sanguine and choleric complexion,
and very healthy for his age”. His clear-cut features, his penetrating glance,
his dignified yet affable manner, marked him as a man of no ordinary stamp. He
lived simply and elegantly, loving good cheer and delicate meats, but always
showing the utmost moderation, and being entirely free from the hard drinking
habits of most of the German rulers of his time. He was the bravest and most
adventurous of men, risking his life as freely in the rough chase of the
chamois among the mountains of Tyrol as in the tiltyard or on the field of
battle. He was an admirable huntsman, and a consummate master of all knightly
exercises. Good-humoured, easy-going, and tolerant, he possessed in full
measure the hereditary gift of his house for combining kingly dignity with a
genial kindliness that took all hearts by storm. He was equally at home with
prince, citizen, and peasant. He had so little gall in his composition that,
save Berthold of Mainz, he had hardly ever made a personal enemy. Frederick of
Saxony eulogized him as the politest of men, and the Countess Palatine found
him the most charming of guests. The personal devotion of the younger
generation of princes to the Emperor did more than anything else to break up
the party of constitutional reform. The rough Landsknechte called him
their father; the artists and scholars looked to him for liberal support and
discriminating sympathy; the Tyrolese peasantry adored him, and he was ever the
favorite of women, whether of high-born princesses, or of the patrician ladies
of Augsburg or Nurnberg. He relieved the tedium of his attendance at long Diets
by sharing fully in the life of the citizens of the town at which the assembly
was held. He attended their dances, their mummings, their archery-meetings,
himself often winning the prize through his skill with the cross-bow and
arquebus. Yet he was as readily interested in serious subjects as in his
pleasures. His quickness was extraordinary, and the range of his interests
extremely wide. He could discuss theology with Geiler and Trithemius, art with
Dürer or Burgkmaier, letters with Celtes or Peutinger. On all matters of
horsemanship, hunting, falconry, fortification, and artillery, he was himself
an authority. Yet all these gifts were rendered ineffective by his want of
tenacity and perseverance, by his superficiality, and by his strange inability
to act with and through other men.
Maximilian was
ever restless, a hard and quick, though by no means a thorough, worker, with
real insight into many knotty problems and no small power of judging and
knowing men. Keenly conscious of his own ability, and morbidly jealous of his
own authority, he strove to keep the threads of affairs in his own hands, and
seldom or never gave implicit confidence even to his most trusted ministers. He
was a good-humoured and indulgent master, blind to the vices of his servants so
long “as they pleased him or were found useful to him”. But the same habit of
mind that impelled him to act on his own initiative led him to prefer ministers
of lowly origin who owed everything to his favor. These he treated indulgently
and well, but regarded as mere secretaries, or agents for carrying out the
policy which his master mind had conceived. Few princes of the Empire enjoyed
his confidence, and among these none of the first rank. Yet among his better
known servants were two Counts of the Empire, Henry of Fürstenberg, and
Eitelfritz of Hohenzollern, Swabians both, as were so many of Maximilian’s
favorites. As diplomatists he preferred Burgundians to Germans. The smaller
posts he commonly filled up with his favourite Tyrolese. But the most famous of
his ministers was Matthaeus Lang, an Augsburg burgher’s son, by profession a
churchman and a lawyer, who early became his secretary, and served him with
great fidelity for the rest of his life. Maximilian rewarded him nobly, forced
the well-born Canons of Augsburg to accept their social inferior as Provost,
and soon procured for him the bishopric of Gurk, the archbishopric of Salzburg,
and a Cardinal’s hat. Leo X compared Lang to Wolsey, and wrongly supposed that
both ruled their masters. Like Wolsey, Lang was accused of arrogance and
venality, and became exceedingly unpopular. A like fate befel Maximilian’s
minor ministers, the Tyrolese Serntein and Lichtenstein, and the Augsburger
Gossembrot, head of the Tyrolese financial administration. Public opinion
regarded them as corrupt and greedy and as ill-advisers of the popular Emperor.
“His counsellors
were rich”, said a contemporary, “and he was poor. He who desired anything of
the Emperor took a present to his Council and got what he wanted. And when the
other party came, the Council still took his money and gave him letters
contrary to those issued previously. All these things the Emperor allowed”.
The removal of
Maximilian’s counsellors was one of the conditions imposed on Charles V before
his election. Nor was their lot an easy one during the life of their lord. They
often had a very hard task in finding out what the wishes of their fickle and
inconstant master really were, and they were sometimes quite at a loss as to
the direction of the policy which they were expected to carry out. Yet the
Emperor was ever ready to trim the sails of his statecraft to suit any passing
wind of casual counsel. As Machiavelli said of him, he took advice of nobody
and yet believed everybody, and was in consequence badly served. His mind was
always running over with fresh ideas and impulses, which, when half carried
out, were displaced by other whims of the moment. What he said at night he
repudiated in the morning. No promises could bind him ; not even self-interest
could keep him straight in a single course for any length of time. True child
of the Renaissance as he was, his emotional, sensitive, superficial,
susceptible, and capricious nature stood in the strongest contrast to the
pursuit of statecraft for its own sake by the politic and self-seeking princes
of Italy, who used the giddy and volatile Caesar as an easy tool of their
purposes. Yet few of the most ruthless of Italians had occasion to stoop to
greater meanness, more wanton lying, and more barefaced deceit, than this model
of honor and chivalry. And Maximilian's wiles were easily seen through and
seldom effected their object. Too open-minded to hold strongly to his opinions,
too versatile and universal in his tastes to deal with any subject thoroughly,
he remained to the end of his life a gifted amateur in politics. He was at his
best when strong personal interest gave free scope to his individuality.
As a general
Maximilian was scarcely more successful than he was as a statesman. But as a
military organizer he did much to further the revolution in the art of war that
attended the growth of the modern system of States. He improved the weapons and
equipment of his cavalry, though the lightly armored horsemen of the Empire
never seem in his days to have been able to hold their own against the heavier
cavalry of France and Italy. More famous by far was the rehabilitation of
German infantry, which owed so much to his personal impulse. In his early
Burgundian Wars, he began the reorganization of the German foot-soldier, which
soon made the German Landsknecht a terror to all Europe. Turbulent,
undisciplined, and greedy, Maximilian’s infantry proved admirable fighting
material, brave in battle, patient of hardship, and passionately devoted to the
King, whom they regarded as their father. For their equipment he discarded the
useless and cumbersome shield, and gave them as their chief weapon an ashen
lance, some eighteen feet long, though a certain proportion were armed with
halberds, and others with firearms that were portable and efficient, at least
as compared with earlier weapons of the same sort. The rejection of the heavy
armor that still survived from former days made Maximilian’s infantry much more
mobile than most of the cumbrous armies of the time, while, when they stood in
close array, their forest of long spears easily resisted the attacks of
cavalry. However disorderly after victory, the Landsknecht preserved admirable
discipline in the field. Maximilian's inventive genius was at its best in
improving the artillery of his time. However poor he was, he always found the
means for casting cannon of every calibre. He invented ingenious ways of making
cannon portable, and it was largely through his talents as a practical
artillerist that light field-pieces were made as serviceable in pitched battles
in the open as heavy pieces of ordnance had long been in the siege of fortified
places.
Maximilian played
no small part in the intellectual and artistic life of his time. The religious
movement which burst out at Wittenberg and Zurich in the last years of his life
lay outside his sphere. Though he was wont to discuss theological problems with
interest and freedom, he was in his personal life, as in his ecclesiastical
policy, orthodox and conservative. Yet this orthodox Emperor discussed the
temporal dominion of the Popes as an open question, and argued that the Lenten
fast should be divided or mitigated, since the rude German climate made the
rigid observance of the laws of the Church dangerous to health. He urged on the
Papacy the reformation of the Calendar very much on the lines afterwards
adopted by Gregory XIII. He was pious and devout after his fashion, and was
specially devoted to the Saints whom he claimed as members of the House of
Habsburg. He had also inherited some of his father's love for astrology. More
important, however, than these things is the large share taken by him in the
spread of the New Learning of the humanists in Germany. He reorganized the
University of Vienna, and established there chairs of Roman law, mathematics,
poetry, and rhetoric. He fostered the younger Habsburg university at Freiburg
in the Breisgau. Under the direction of Conrad Celtes, he set up a college of
poets and mathematicians as a centre for liberal studies in Vienna. He called
Italian humanists over the Alps to his service. He was the friend of
Pirkheimer, Peutinger and Trithemius. He was devoted to music, and his
Court-chapel was famous for its singing. In art he was a most magnificent
patron of the wood engraver. He had friendly relations with Durer, while
Burgkmaier did some of his best work for him. He loved history, and was a great
reader of romances. He regretted that the Germans were not in the habit of
writing chronicles, and interested himself in the printing and composition of
works illustrating the history of Germany and especially that of his own House.
His vanity, perhaps the most constant feature in his character, led him to
project a long series of literary and artistic undertakings; but, as was usual
with him, his designs were far too comprehensive to be ever carried out. One
only of his literary enterprises saw the light during his lifetime. This was
The Dangers and Adventures of the famous Hero and Knight, Sir Teuerdank, which
Melchior Pfintzing published in 1517 at Nürnberg, and which sets forth in dull
and halting German verse, illustrated by Schaufelein's spirited woodcuts, an
allegorical account of Maximilian's own exploits during the wooing of Mary of
Burgundy. What part of the composition belongs to Maximilian himself and what the
final redaction owed to the earlier designs of his secretary, Max
Treitzsaurwein, and of his faithful counsellor Sigismund von Dietrichstein, is
not clear, but at least the general scheme and many of the incidents are due to
the Emperor. At his death, he left behind him masses of manuscripts, fragments
of proofs, and great collections of drawings and wood-blocks to represent the
other compositions which he had contemplated. In comparatively recent times the
piety of his descendants has given these works to the world in sumptuous form.
Weisskunig, drawn up by Treitzsaurwein and illustrated by Burgkmaier, describes
in German prose the education and the chief exploits of Maximilian. In the
Triumph of Maximilian the vast resources of Albert Dürer's art nobly commemorate
the Emperor in one of the most grandiose compositions that the wood-engraver
has ever produced. In Freydal Maximilian’s joustings and mummeries are depicted
with the help of Burgkmaier's pencil. Other literary projects, such as the
lives of the so-called “Saints of the House of Habsburg”, were only very
partially carried out. In the last years of his life Maximilian planned the
erection of a splendid tomb for himself at Wiener Neustadt, and called upon the
best craftsmen of Tyrol to adorn it with a series of bronze statues. The
Austrian lands were not able to supply his wants, and before long he was
ransacking Germany for artists capable of carrying out his ideas. To this
extension of his plan we owe the magnificent statues of Theodoric and Arthur,
which Peter Vischer of Nürnberg cast by his orders. But this scheme too
remained incomplete at his death. His last wishes were carried out as
imperfectly as he had himself carried out his designs during his life. His
request to be buried at Wiener Neustadt, the town of his birth, was forgotten.
But, among the ornaments of the sumptuous tomb erected over his remains by his
grandsons in the palace chapel at Innsbruck, room was found for the works of
art which he himself had collected to adorn his last resting-place. In the
heart of his favorite Tyrol, under the shadow of the mountains that he loved,
the most glorious monument of the German Renaissance worthily enshrines the
prince, who, with all his faults and failures, had no small share in bringing
his country into the full blaze of modern light.
Was any real
progress achieved by Germany during the reign of Maximilian? The failure both
of the Emperor and of the Estates is painfully obvious; yet so much strenuous
activity, so much preaching of new political doctrine could not pass away
without leaving its mark in history. Very few actual results were at the moment
obtained; but the ideal was at least set up, which later generations were able
in some slight measure to realize. The policy of imperial reform seemed to have
hopelessly broken down; but it was something gained that the Landfriede had been proclaimed, the constitution and powers of the Diet settled, and the Kammergericht established. The next generation took up and made permanent some of the measures
which during Maximilian's lifetime had been utterly abandoned. The division of
the Empire into ten Circles was actually carried out. The Aulic Council became
the rival of the imperial Chamber. Even the Council of Regency was for a short
time revived. In the worst days of disunion these institutions remained, the
decrepit survivals of the age of abortive reformation, which with all their
feebleness at least faintly embodied the great idea of national union that had
originally inspired them. And if all these institutions -such as they were-
made for order and progress, the peace and well-being of Germany were much more
powerfully secured by the strengthening of the territorial sovereignties which
accompanied the reaction from the reformer’s policy. The example set by
Maximilian in unifying and ordering the government of the Austrian dominions
was faithfully followed by his vassals, both great and small. The stronger
princes become civilized rulers of modern States. The lesser princes at least
abandon their ancient policy of warfare and robbery. The improved condition of
Germany displays itself most clearly in the extraordinary development of the
towns, which Maximilian had himself helped to foster. Thus the population of
Nürnberg seems to have doubled during the sixteenth century; while the growth
of material comfort, and of a high standard of living, were as marked as was
the undoubted advance in spiritual and intellectual interests, in art and in
letters. But most important of all was the great fact that the national idea
had survived all the many failures of the attempts made to realize it. Nowhere
was its force felt more strongly than in Alsace and along the Rhine, where a
genuine though mainly literary enthusiasm responded to Maximilian’s efforts at
keeping a watch over the national borderlands. And if the age of the collapse
of the German State was simultaneously the period of the revival of national
scholarship, historical learning, literature, art, and language, it was the
national idea that gave unity of direction and aim to the German Renaissance,
and inspired all that was best in German Protestantism. To this national idea
the Reformation, while completing the political break-up of the German national
State, gave new life, endowing Germany with a common language and inspiring her
with fresh motives for independence. It was in no small measure due to these
influences-the influences of Maximilian's time and in a measure of Maximilian
himself-that in the long and dreary centuries when there was no German State
there remained a German nation, able to hand on the great traditions of the
past to a happier age which could realize, though in a fresh shape, the ancient
ideal of Berthold of Mainz, that side by side with the German nation there
should also be a German National State.
CHAPTER X
HUNGARY AND THE SLAVONIC
KINGDOMS
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