CHAPTER VII.
WALLENSTEIN AND BERNARD OF WEIMAR
1.
WALLENSTEIN'S END. (1632-4.)
During the winter months which followed on the
battle of Lützen neither of the hosts which contended for victory there
maintained possession of Saxony or engaged in important operations beyond its
borders. While Wallenstein, after evacuating the electorate, set up his winter
quarters at Prague, and there collected the forces with which in May he joined
Gallas in Silesia, the Swedish army broke up again into several divisions. That
commanded by Bernard of Weimar, after clearing Saxony of Holk’s and other
Imperialist soldiery, passed into Thuringia and Franconia. In March Bernard
pushed forward as far as the river Altmühl in the Ansbach territory, and, after
a brush with the redoubtable Bavarian cavalry general, Johann von Werth,
united his forces south of Donauworth with those of Horn, who had, in the last
month of 1632 conquered nearly the whole of Alsace.
The
expectant character of these movements on the one and the other side is
explained by the fact that Lützen had virtually been a drawn battle. But in the
summer of 1633 they came more or less to a standstill—Wallenstein’s by his own calculated inaction, Bernard
of Weimar’s because of an agitation (it can hardly be called a mutiny) in the
Swedish army, which was only with some difficulty repressed. Broadly speaking,
we may regard this standstill as reflecting the doubts and difficulties which,
after the death of the great King, pressed upon some of the chief combatants.
The
Swedes, though resolved not to break off except on their own terms the struggle
of which their King had, first and last, so clearly defined the ends,
could no longer exercise over its progress the controlling influence
proper to his mighty personality. Gustavus Adolphus was succeeded on the
Swedish throne by his daughter Christina, a child of six years of age; and, so
long as she remained in tutelage, the government, as will be shown in a later
chapter, was practically carried on by a small committee directed by the strong
will of, the Chancellor, Axel Oxenstierna. The widow of
Gustavus, Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg, was not included among the regents and
guardians. Although the system of government during the minority of the
“Elected” Queen—a
designation partly intended to repress any pretensions on the part of the
Polish Vasas—was not approved by the Swedish Diet till January, 1634,
Oxenstierna secured a twelvemonth earlier the confirmation of his commission as
“Legate” of the Crown, with full powers in the Holy Roman Empire and as
regarding all Swedish, armies. Thus there was preserved to these armies in
Germany that unity of control which had given them so inestimable an advantage
over their adversaries, and to which it had been the constant purpose of
Gustavus to subject the military affairs of his German allies. To his position
of trust, for which it might be difficult to find a parallel, Oxenstierna
brought, besides a perfect knowledge of his late master’s mind, the insight and
judgment of a great statesman. He proved, indeed, unable to solve the perennial
problem of a working control of the military executive by the civil authority.
Beneath his methodical ways and a phlegmatic temperament that provoked the wit
of the young Queen, there burnt a flame of patriotic ambition and incorruptible
loyalty, to which a series of eminent commanders proved responsive; but the
union of military and political leadership, and the enthusiasm which the great
King's personality had communicated to the Swedish armies and nation, had
perforce become things of the past.
Though
the relaxation of the bond between the Swedes and the chief Protestant Princes
was in agreement with the usual policy of John George of Saxony, a warlike
impulse had momentarily seized upon him, due, it would seem, to a visionary
scheme of securing the Bohemian Crown to his son and namesake. The unlucky
Frederick, who had so long worn the empty title of King of Bohemia, had died at
Mainz on November 29, 1632, still awaiting—though with drooping hopes—his restoration to his
Palatine inheritance, now, with the exception of Heidelberg, reconquered from
the foe. But neither Oxenstierna, who had arrived in Dresden on Christmas Day,
nor the military chiefs of the Swedish armies, fell in with John George’s
design. He was all the more unwilling to yield to the Chancellor’s demand that
the entire body of Protestant Estates should be placed under the direction of
Sweden, and adhered to his view that Saxony was their proper head. At Berlin,
whither Oxenstierna next repaired, he found George William in a more yielding
mood; he was well aware at whose expense Sweden would in any treaty of peace
seek to obtain her “satisfaction”, and was naturally anxious to conciliate the
Chancellor. The project of a marriage between George William’s heir (afterwards
the Great Elector) and Queen Christina had not yet been laid aside. But soon
after this George William showed signs of falling back into line with Saxony,
and committed the command of his troops in Silesia, where old Count Thurn had been made Swedish commissioner, to Arnim, now a Saxon
Field-Marshal (February—March).
John Greorge hereupon began once more to incline to think of concluding peace
without Sweden. Though nothing as yet came of the idea, he was encouraged in it
both by Wallenstein’s former agent Sparre, and by Christian IV of Denmark, who
eagerly proffered a not wholly disinterested mediation.
1633] Military
dispositions.—Alliance of
Heilbronn.
In
January, 1633, Oxenstierna had divided the main Swedish army, giving the
command of the larger half to Duke George of Lüneburg, who, with Kniphausen
under him, occupied the Weser lands, and that of the smaller to Bernard of
Weimar, to the dissatisfaction of his elder brother, Duke William. Oxenstierna
was well aware of the difficulty which must beset any attempt to secure the
adhesion of the Protestant Estates at large to an alliance directed by Sweden,
against the wishes of Saxony, so long as Brandenburg remained lukewarm and most
of the Lower Saxon Estates only wished for a safe neutrality. Sweden’s one
trustworthy friend was Landgrave William of Hesse-Cassel; and his troops were
needed for the defence of his own territory. Perceiving that in the present
instance the half was greater than the whole, Oxenstierna therefore fell back
upon those portions of the Empire—the
Franconian, the Swabian, and the two Rhenish Circles—which had been placed under his direct control by King Gustavus. United
with these Estates by means of a separate alliance under her own direction,
Sweden must endeavor to carry on the war side by side with another combination
of Estates under Saxon leadership; and perhaps in time the weaker might be
absorbed by the stronger body.
The
alliance concluded at Heilbronn (Ulm having seemed too remote a place of
meeting) on April 23, 1633, was accordingly one of those compromises which
deserve to be regarded as great political achievements because they avert
paralysis. In order to reach a conclusion, Oxenstierna consented to important
sacrifices; and, though Sweden obtained the direction of the alliance,
especially in military affairs, a Federal Council was established, of which
seven members were to be nominated by the Estates of the four Circles, and only
three by Sweden. The functions of this Council were to be consultative rather
than executive; but it was likely to find many opportunities for interference.
These chances were not ignored by Richelieu, who, desirous as he was of
securing the continuance of hostilities between Sweden and the House of Austria,
jealously watched Sweden’s intervention in what he regarded as the French
sphere of influence on the Rhine. While, therefore, the conclusion of the
Heilbronn Alliance was furthered by the French ambassador at the Convention,
Manasses de Pas, Marquis de Feuquières, who had in 1633 been sent on an
extraordinary mission to the Emperor and the Catholic and Protestant Estates of
the Empire, his efforts were also directed to the diminution within that
alliance of the dominant influence of Sweden. For the rest, the annual war
contributions of the four Circles were fixed at no
less a sum than 2,500,000 dollars; and before the Convention separated it
resolved on the restoration of the Palatinate to Frederick’s heir, Charles
Lewis. Frederick’s brother, Lewis Philip,
undertook the administration of the country, to which, after the easy recapture
of Heidelberg (May 24, 1633), prosperity began to return.
Oxenstierna’s
rapid conclusion of the Heilbronn Alliance, however much it left to be desired
from the Swedish point of view, had successfully isolated the Elector of
Saxony, especially after the Elector of Brandenburg had come into the new
league. But the Chancellor could not shut his eyes to the fact that his achievement was quite as
advantageous to France as it was to Sweden. Richelieu, for reasons explained
elsewhere, and because he wished to prepare his ground before proceeding to
action, continued to defer any direct French intervention in the German War. In
1631, the Peace of Cherasco, which secured an open way into Italy for France,
had enabled him to devote a closer attention to her relations with the Empire.
Its eights or claims over Lorraine he treated with contempt; but when, in
obliging Duke Charles to conclude the disastrous and humiliating Treaty of
Liverdun (June, 1632), Richelieu imposed upon him as one of its conditions
neutrality during the continuance of the German War, he saw that the course of
that war would furnish him with opportunities of mixing up the question of
Lorraine with that of Alsace, now almost entirely in Swedish hands; and he was
therefore most desirous that the war should continue. His action towards the
Spiritual Electors on the left bank of the Rhine has already been noted in a
previous chapter. On the approach of Gustavus, and the occupation of Mainz, the
Electors of Cologne and Trier had appealed to France for the protection of
their neutrality; and though this appeal had remained unanswered, the
quick-witted Philip Christopher of Trier had admitted French garrisons both into
the fortress of Ehrenbreitstein opposite his residence of Coblenz, and into
Trier itself, previously occupied by Spanish troops. The footing thus gained by
France she was unlikely to relinquish to either friend or foe. Thus, after the
death of Gustavus, Richelieu’s most pressing interest was to keep together the
offensive alliance against the House of Austria, now once more in close
cooperation with Spain, and to preclude. the possibility of the withdrawal of
the Swedish army, which had been actually threatened by Oxenstierna. On the
other hand, Richelieu was ready to take immediate advantage of the removal of
Gustavus himself, before whose commanding personality his own indomitable will
had found itself obliged to bend. Hence the twofold activity of Feuquières at
Heilbronn in favor of the compact concluded there; while at the same time the
hands of Oxenstierna were bound as far as possible by a renewal of the
Franco-Swedish alliance, on terms essentially the same as those of the Treaty
of Barwalde, and renewing the promise of a French subsidy (April 19,
1633).
Horn and Bernard of Weimar.
Inasmuch
as the Heilbronn Alliance placed all the military forces of the, west under
Swedish control, it was upon the commanders of those forces that the mantle of
the conquering Gustavus may be said to have fallen. After their junction near
Donauworth (April, 1633), Horn and Bernard of Weimar alternately, held the
chief command, neither of them consenting to regard himself as the subordinate
of the other, and Oxenstierna being desirous of offending neither. Though both
had high qualities as commanders, the want of unity in their counsels made
itself at times disadvantageously felt in the course of the next campaigns.
Gustaf Karlsson Horn, Count of Bjorneborg, who sprang from a family of high
distinction in the Swedish service, had, after talking a prominent part in the
Polish War, during Gustavus’ German campaigns held the position of the King’s
Field-Marshal (lieutenant-general). He had materially contributed to the
victory of Breitenfeld, and had subsequently been named “Director of the
Wurzburg principality”. He was a commander of much circumspection, learned in
the theory as well as experienced in the practice of war, and a strict
disciplinarian. Within the last months of 1632 he had conquered the whole of
Alsace, with the exception of Hagenau. In the personality of Bernard of Weimar
there was something which more nearly resembled that of the great King, whose
last battle he had fought to a conclusion. From his Ernestine ancestors he had
inherited a passionate disposition—which in one of his brothers, the unhappy John Frederick, swerved into
madness, but in Bernard was disciplined into a noble ardor. His own statement,
that from his youth upwards his thoughts, had been bent upon doing service to
God and his beloved country, was no mere profession. His intellectual tastes
(he was a lover of books) and his modest simplicity invested him with a
chivalrous charm; in the field he was all eagerness for battle. Unfortunately
for himself, he was, like Duke George of Lüneburg, who commanded in the Lower
Saxon Circle and its vicinity, only a younger brother in a princely House—a
position which, while it aroused in him a strong dynastic ambition, left him unable
to meet on an independent footing the great Powers whose support was
indispensable to the cause of Protestantism and of “German liberty”.
Once
more, then, the Swedish army stood at the gate of Bavaria; and once more
Maximilian was soliciting the aid of Wallenstein, who remained immovable in
Bohemia. The Swedish forces seem to have numbered about 18,000 men; and if, as
Bernard expected, Wallenstein marched to offer them battle, he could not be met
without Saxon assistance. But before long a new difficulty arose, the inner
history of which remains to some extent obscure.
Since
the Swedish army had landed at Usedom, it had changed in its composition, and
to some extent in its character. Losses, made good by reinforcements of which
only a fraction was derived from Sweden, while they mainly
consisted of soldiery levied heat and far, land in all the regions of the
Empire through which the troops had passed during their ceaseless marches and
counter-marches, had changed the very texture of the army. The disproportion
between Swedes and soldiers of other nationalities was much greater than
before, more especially in the divisions detached from the force commanded by
the King in person. As has been already seen, the principle of making war pay
for itself had been more and more fully adopted by Gustavus. But even during
his lifetime, notwithstanding the heavy contributions exacted and requisitions
made, and (when they had been received) the French subsidies, it
had been found impossible to provide the full pay of the soldiery, especially
in the detached divisions. The King had thus fallen into debt with his troops,
but more especially with the colonels who
commanded, and had frequently themselves levied, regiments, advancing
sums for their pay in the expectation of being-duly repaid with interest. Here
and there in the conquered territories, especially in Franconia, some of the
officers had been compensated by the grant or promise of landed estates. For many
reasons, the death of the King inevitably impaired the cohesion and the general
discipline of the army. During the winter of 1682-8, the commanding officers
took to levying contributions on their own account, while the soldiers seized
the goods and chattels of the inhabitants, and committed all kinds of
depredations and other excesses. The general discontent grew apace; and, when
it was found that the Convention of Heilbronn, on which great hopes had been
placed, was more anxious for the “reformation” of the army than for its
“contentment”, the accumulated dissatisfaction burst forth. A remonstrance was
drawn up by two officers of the Franconian army—one of them the Colonel Mitzlaff who had commanded
the remnants of Mansfeld’s troops in Silesia and had then passed first into the
Danish, and then into the Swedish, service. Quite in the style of the English
“agitators” of a rather later date, this document insisted on the payment
within four months of the outstanding balances; failing which, instead of continuing
to fight the enemy, the officers and troops would establish themselves as a corpus in the conquered lands, and hold these in pledge for their pay. The paper
was numerously signed by the officers; but there is no trace of an organized
mutiny among the common soldiery.
The attitude of Horn and Bernard of Weimar
toward this agitation is obscure. While they protested against the menaces of
the officers, they were found willing to advocate the claims preferred; and,
while Horn insisted on carrying the remonstrance in its crude and unamended
form to Heilbronn, Bernard, who was certainly to benefit by the movement, and
who may (as Pufendorf hints) have helped to set it on foot, wrote in support of
the demands. Oxenstierna in his turn was so much impressed by the gravity of
the situation that he persuaded the Estates at Heilbronn, before separating, to
agree to the principle of a month’s immediate pay to the
troops, and resolved upon bestowing estates in the conquered lands as Swedish
Crown fiefs upon the chief commanders— Bernard in particular—in return for their
undertaking to, satisfy the claims of officers and men.
On
these lines the grievances of the army were settled in the course of
the summer and autumn of 1633. Bernard, who during Horn’s absence had employed
the troops in seizing the bishopric of Eichstedt, which they were freely
allowed to loot, in May held an interview with Oxenstierna at Frankfort to,
arrange his share—the lion’s share—of the
settlement. About the middle of June the document was signed in which the Crown
of Sweden, by its own authority and without the concurrence of any of the
Estates of the Empire, created Bernard Duke of Franconia in his own right.
Bernard,
who had hitherto held no independent, position of his own, had long desired a
hereditary principality; and some promise of the kind may have been made to him
by Gustavus Adolphus. His further wish to become, not only, as he now did, a
member of the Heilbronn Alliance, but also the commander-in-chief of its
forces, was frustrated by the jealousy of Horn, and perhaps also by the
foresight of Oxenstierna. The new duchy of Franconia included, in substance,
only those, parts of the Franconian Circle which, had formed the sees of
Wurzburg and Bamberg; and even here the Crown of Sweden reserved to itself the
fortresses of Wurzburg and Konigshofen. Bernard was not declared an immediate
Prince of the Empire—the comparison between
his dukedom and Wallenstein’s in Mecklenburg is therefore imperfect; on the
contrary, he had to renounce all connection with the Empire and declare himself
explicitly a vassal of the Crown of Sweden, to whom in the event of his dying
without male issue the duchy was to escheat.
In this
new character Bernard, with Oxenstierna, made his appearance at an assembly of
the chief princes of the Heilbronn Alliance, held later in June, 1633, at
Heidelberg. The capital of the Palatinate, the last place in it held by the
Imperialists, had on May 24 capitulated to Count Palatine Christian of
Birkenfeld. The assembly agreed to levy in all the lands included in the
alliance a 10 per cent, tax on the produce of all fields and vineyards; and,
the means being thus provided, a settlement was arranged here and completed at
Frankfort (July), which at last put an end to the critical condition of affairs
in the army.
Bernard’s
absence from the army was prolonged during July, while he was taking possession
of his new duchy and establishing his brother Ernest there as regent. In the
meantime Horn held the command without making much progress, though in the
course of the month he took Pappenheim, and then Neumarkt (near Landshut),
having advanced from Donauworth with his main force. He was beginning to lose
all control over his troops; villages were destroyed; the peasantry was
maltreated. The officers neglected their soldiery; and the men, provided with
sham passes, roamed over the country in quest of plunder. The old discipline
had fallen out of gear; and the Swedish name was beginning to be associated in
the mind of the German population with the worst horrors of war. But Bernard’s
return was still delayed—this
time by intrigues between his brother Duke William and John George of Saxony.
At last Bernard induced William to allow part of his troops to reinforce the
army of the Danube, which he rejoined early in August and which now seems to
have reached a total of 12,000 horse and nearly as many foot. Commissaries of
the Swedish Crown had already arrived at Augsburg. While, with some demur, the
officers and men accepted a month’s pay from the Heilbronn Alliance, the
commanders of regiments consented to accept in satisfaction of their claims
grants of land which, though guaranteed by the Swedish Crown, purported to be
bestowed as hereditary fiefs of the Empire. The grantees had to pay the war contributions
already fixed or to be eventually imposed by the Alliance, and bound themselves
to “depend” on Oxenstierna as Legate of the Swedish Crown. The value of the
lands thus granted in the south-west was estimated at over four millions of
dollars.
The
army having thus been “contented”, and measures taken to prevent further
excesses (August—September), it
once more became possible to contemplate offensive operations on a larger
scale. Although the division of the supreme command boded ill for the maintenance
of the requisite unity of design, the general condition of affairs was
favorable to the allies of Heilbronn. Alsace had been almost entirely conquered
by Horn. In August Christian of Birkenfeld defeated the Duke of Lorraine at
Pfaffenhofen when advancing to defend Hagenau in Alsace, over which he had
certain rights. The favorable opportunity for reopening hostilities against
Lorraine was at once seized by France, under whose protection the Elector of
Trier had now openly placed himself. Frederick Henry of Orange had taken
Rheinberg; and in Switzerland also French influence was active. The whole line
of the Rhine was thus held by the United Provinces, France, and Sweden; and the
alliance between the latter two Powers was nearer than ever to becoming an
alliance in the field.
Arrival of Feria. Fall of Ratisbon.
While
the Austrian possessions in Alsace were thus in hostile hands, Spain too had
every reason for breaking the existing control of the line of the Rhine. The
peace negotiations opened in 1632 between her and the United Provinces had led
to no result; and, as the days of the Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia drew to a
close, the hopes of a pacific settlement dwindled. Philip IV had some time
since resolved on sending his youngest brother Ferdinand, who, though
Archbishop of Toledo and a Cardinal, was full of secular ambition, into the
Spanish Netherlands, where he was in time to succeed the Archduchess as
Governor. As the Dutch were masters of the sea, the Cardinal Infante would,
when the time came, have to proceed to the Provinces by land; and the Spanish Government proposed to clear the way for
him by means of a force of 24,000 men to be levied in Italy. They were to be
commanded by the Duke of Feria, Governor of Milan, who had already had some
experience of the German War. It will be seen how this Spanish expedition, even
while still remote, excited the jealousy of Wallenstein, and how his
displeasure was intensified by the Emperor consenting, against the tenor of the
agreement between them, to place Aldringer and his force at the disposal of
Maximilian of Bavaria, for the defence of his electorate. Bernard had steadily
kept in view an attack upon Ratisbon; but, on his return to Donauworth, he
found that Horn had already departed with, part of the army to lay siege to
Constance.
In the
middle of September Feria actually appeared at Innsbruck, though with a force
of only 8000 foot and 1200 horse, and not in very good case. But he managed to
effect his junction with Aldringer and to relieve Constance and Breisach,
before Horn and Bernard had united their forces. In October the two armies lay
close to each other, near the Lake of Constance, neither side caring to risk a
battle, when, direct hostilities having at last broken out between
Wallenstein’s troops and Arnim’s Saxo-Swedish forces in Silesia, Oxenstierna
instructed Bernard to create a diversion in their favor by invading either
Bavaria or Bohemia, and leaving Horn to deal with Feria and Aldringer. Bernard
could thus at last carry out his long-cherished design against Ratisbon.
Disregarding
the successful operations of Johann von Werth and the insecure condition of his
own duchy of Franconia, Bernard with characteristic impetuosity now moved
direct upon his goal. Starting with ten thousand men from Donauworth, he
executed a rapid march between the Soylla of Ingolstadt and the Charybdis of
Eichstedt to the Altmühl, and thence direct upon Ratisbon. In vain at the last
moment Maximilian applied for aid to Feria and Aldringer—they were too far away; to Gallas, who
had succeeded Hoik, and whom Wallenstein would not allow to move from the
Bohemian frontier; and to Wallenstein himself, who had no intention of coming
to the Elector’s aid. Ratisbon was garrisoned by two thousand Bavarian troops
under Colonel Troibreze; but notwithstanding a powerful and active Catholic
clergy, the sympathies of the majority of the citizens, and of a minority of
the town council, were Protestant, and with Maximilian the city had a
long-standing quarrel. Ratisbon, which lay on the right bank of the Danube, was
completely blocked by Bernard; Johann von Werth’s horse were kept at a
distance; and the bombardment, begun on November 10, 1633, having after two
days’ intermission been resumed with great vigor on the 13th, the garrison capitulated
on the following day. It was allowed free departure with the honors of war; but
the majority of the garrison proposed to come over to Bernard. Hereupon, he
held his entry into Ratisbon, amidst the rejoicings of the population; and on
November 16, the anniversary of the battle of Lützen, a solemn Protestant
service was held in the Cathedral. No excesses dishonored Bernard of Weimar’s brilliant achievement, which at once made
him the hero of the Protestant west. Not only had he succeeded while others—at Constance
and at Breisach—had failed, but he had
carried out a difficult design with dazzling promptitude; and while “the
bulwark of Bavaria” had fallen, the line of the Danube—the road to Vienna
itself—lay open before him. In the meantime,
the Bishop and the Catholic clergy of Ratisbon were heavily fined; while the latter were for the most part
expelled and their domains sequestrated. The burghers were organized for
defence; and the free and Imperial city, so
intimately associated with many notable vicissitudes in the history of
the Empire, was enrolled in the Heilbronn Alliance.
Ratisbon, then, had not been relieved by
Wallenstein; and no coals of fire had been heaped by him on the head of
Maximilian of Bavaria for the action of the Diet held in that city three years
before. How is the quiescence of
Wallenstein—if quiescence it was—during the twelvemonths which had
elapsed since the battle of Lützen to be explained?
For him, too, the situation had been changed by that
battle and the death of Gustavus Adolphus. Hitherto he had committed no
disloyal act, and had in all probability entertained no definitely disloyal
intentions. His general scheme of policy had been to aid the Emperor in
restoring the Imperial authority and in bringing about a settlement which, while leaving that authority unimpaired,
should be acceptable to the Protestant Princes and include conditions favorable
to his personal interests. No side, however, trusted him, because he was
identified with no party or interest, because he was at any time ready to
exchange combination for combination, and because, as his occasional abrupt and passionate utterances indicate, the outlines
of his successive schemes were apt to lose themselves in the mists of a
vague and boundless ambition. His withdrawal into Bohemia after the battle of
Lützen was hardly reconcilable with his
official announcement of a complete Imperialist victory, and his prestige as a general suffered in consequence; indeed
there was some gossip among the courtiers at Vienna as to his being
superseded in the command. Fortunately for
him, Bernard of Weimar had declined to follow the Imperialist army,
still numerically the stronger, into Bohemia.
Thus Wallenstein had time for augmenting his army at
Prague and restoring its efficiency. In the campaigns of 1633 he seems to have
intended to play a vigorous part, both by putting an end to the alliance between Saxony and Sweden, and by saving Breisach
and if possible recovering the Austrian lands in Alsace—a task which he
had no intention of leaving the Spaniards to accomplish. Franconia and Bavaria,
as well as the Weser lands, he proposed to leave more or less to themselves.
Still, being unable to place in the field an army so preponderant in strength as to ensure success, and habitually
preferring diplomatic to military measures in the first instance, he
continued to keep in view the alternative of peace. He was
probably quite sincere in telling Count Wartensleben, whom Christian IV of
Denmark had sent to push negotiations for peace between Vienna and Dresden,
“that he was growing old, was plagued by bad health and in want of rest; that
he was quite satisfied with his present position; and that from the continuance
of war he could look for no increase of reputation—rather for the contrary”. The Emperor was
duly informed of Wallenstein’s views; and peace negotiations with Saxony and
Brandenburg ensued, turning on the withdrawal of the Edict of Restitution and
the Catholic interpretation of the reservatum ecclesiasticum, on the
rights of the Bohemian Protestants, and on the restoration of the Elector
Frederick’s son in part at least of the Palatinate. The Emperor would not hear
of any concessions in Bohemia; but the negotiations continued with
Wallenstein’s cognizance and general approval, and it was well understood that
in the meantime he would not molest Saxony, if her troops in return left
Bohemia untouched. In all this there was nothing either disloyal or illogical;
but now there came into the web a strand of intrigue of which the importance
cannot be mistaken. The involutions of Wallenstein’s course of action, and the
motives which determined it, often defy analysis. But there are certain
connecting threads which, if the story is to be understood at all, must be
throughout kept in view.
Wallenstein,
however wide the range of his statesmanship, was at all times sensible of the
ties of nationality, family history, the associations of descent and early
life. He was born a Bohemian noble and bred a utraquist. The leaders of the
Bohemian insurrection, who after the catastrophe of the White Hill had become
exiles from their country, had never abandoned the hope of re-establishing the
ancient Bohemian constitution in Church and State under an elected King of
their own choice. As the star of this or that Protestant leader had been in the
ascendant, his possible claims had been considered - Bethlen Gabor was thought
of at one time, and even Mansfeld at another. Wallenstein’s position differed
widely from theirs; but he was a Bohemian magnate, and of Catholic intolerance
at least there had never been any trace in his conduct. This had not been
overlooked by the Swedes in their negotiations with Wallenstein both before and
after the death of Gustavus Adolphus. The Swedish troops in Silesia were in the
main officered by Bohemian Protestant exiles, with Count Thura at their head as
royal commissary; and Bohemian agents in plenty were at hand to take part in
secret negotiations, from Major-General Bubna to Sezyma Rasin, who in the end
turned Crown witness against Wallenstein and contributed more than any man to
make the record of his last years a perplexing tangle of truth and fiction. Of
a different type was Count William Kinsky, a Bohemian noble who had contrived
to preserve his ample estates from confiscation, but was obliged to reside at
Dresden, the ordinary place of refuge for his exiled compatriots. He was brother-in-law to Count Adam Erdmann Trezka, another
Bohemian noble, who had himself married a younger sister of Wallenstein’s
second wife, commanded a regiment under him and enjoyed his confidence. Kinsky
kept himself closely informed of all Wallenstein’s movements; and was consulted
by Feuquières, when, after influencing the deliberations at Heilbronn (April,
1633), he paid a visit to Dresden.
Wallenstein’s negotiations with the Bohemians.
By the
middle of May, and probably earlier, the Bohemian malcontents were in
communication with Nicolai, the Swedish resident at Dresden, as to the revived
project of placing Wallenstein on the Bohemian throne; which, on being reported
to Oxenstierna, received his general approval. Hereupon Kinsky furnished
Nicolai with a list of the commanders fully trusted by Wallenstein. Whether or
not this list, in which both Holk and Gallas figured; had been obtained at
first hand, Wallenstein about this time actually had an interview with Bubna at
Gitschin. It seems certain that Wallenstein here made no declaration as to his
intentions with regard to the Bohemian Crown, and that his present object was
to become enabled by a junction between Thurn’s army and his own to dictate
peace. There was as yet no question of his abandoning the Emperor, but he
obviously meant to leave both Saxony and Bavaria out in the cold. Oxenstierna,
though he had no intention of binding himself, was prepared to carry on
negotiations, like Gustavus Adolphus before him, in furtherance of the Bohemian
project.
But in
the meantime matters had assumed a different aspect in Silesia. Here, with the
opening of the summer of 1633, some military action had become unavoidable; and
in May Wallenstein began operations against the combined army of Saxons,
Brandenburgers, and Swedes. Their commander, Arnim, had as has been seen,
always advocated an accommodation with the Emperor, and was practically the
head of the peace party at the Saxon Court. But Wallenstein had a special
reason for desiring not to prolong the campaign which he had just begun.
Official news had reached him from Vienna that Feria, instead of merely passing
through the western borderlands of the Empire, was to be instructed to operate
there against the French, and that Aldringer was to be placed under his supreme
command. Thus, not only was Spain to control Alsace but Wallenstein’s own
position as generalissimo of all Imperialist and Spanish troops in the
Empire was to be impaired.
Early
in June, when a decisive battle, was supposed to be imminent between
Wallenstein and Arnim, a fortnight’s truce was agreed upon between them, to the
bitter disappointment of the Bohemians. Feuquières, who had been intriguing to
secure the Saxon army for France, began to fear that Wallenstein intended to
attack Bavaria; and Richelieu as well as Oxenstierna came to the conclusion
that any agreement with Wallenstein must be conditional upon his open
abandonment of the Emperor. But, although in the concessions which he offered as to the
Palatinate Wallenstein went beyond the Emperor’s wishes, and although he placed no restraint upon his cavils against the
Jesuits and their religious policy, the negotiations which he carried on with
Arnim during the truce had the Emperor’s distinct sanction. Had they been
successful, Wallenstein might possibly have in the end, without either France
and Bavaria or Spain, have dictated a peace which would have brought back the
Empire to a condition of things resembling that before 1618. But, though
Brandenburg was willing, John George of Saxony, who hoped with the aid of
Denmark to settle matters in his own way at a “composition” meeting to be
summoned to Breslau, was not to be persuaded.
When,
after the trace had come to an end, Wallenstein, notwithstanding his
superiority in numbers, went on negotiating with Arnim (July), the Court of
Vienna no longer heeded protests made by him against Feria’s march. If,
therefore, Wallenstein still meant to impose a pacific settlement at the head
of an overpowering military force he had no time to lose. Holk’s renewed raid
into the Voigtland (the south-western part of the Saxon Electorate), which was
even more savage than the first, and in the course of which he contrived to
frighten the Leipzigers out of their wits, seems to have been intended by his
chief to prevent a Saxon invasion of Bohemia; and it was only his fear of
Bernard of Weimar’s marching against him at the Elector of Saxony’s request
that caused Holk to withdraw his army, which was suffering terribly from the
plague. On his way back to Bohemia, Holk, who had not yet completed his
fortieth year, fell a victim to the disease at Adorf (September 19); and the most
faithful of Wallenstein’s lieutenants was inopportunely lost to the
commander-in-chief, to whom in his own phrase he “belonged”. His place was ill
supplied by Gallas.
On
September 19 Arnim, as to the course of whose latest negotiations with
Wallenstein nothing is known, reached Gelnhausen (near Hanau), whither
Oxenstierna had come from Frankfort to meet him. Arnim’s account to the Swedish
Chancellor of Wallenstein’s view of the situation was that the Emperor had
always aimed at a separate peace with Saxony and her German allies, but this
Sweden could not allow Saxony to accept. On the other hand Wallenstein himself
would not submit to a repetition, with Spanish aid, of the Ratisbon proceedings
of 1630. He was not quite sure of all his officers, but had already removed
some whom he could not trust; if Sweden would support him he would break with
the Emperor, lead his army, after uniting it to the Swedish force, from Silesia
into Bohemia, and invade Austria. France (with whose ambassador Arnim avoided
contact at Gelnhausen) was to be induced by Sweden to resume the offensive
against Spain in Italy.
Although
the complement and crown of these vast designs, the accession of Wallenstein to
the Bohemian throne, remained as yet unmentioned, they suggest the inspiration
of Thurn and his Bohemian fellow-partisans; and,
indeed, they breathe the spirit of Anhalt and of the early years of the war.
They were received with approval by Oxenstierna, though with his usual caution,
he for the present made no change in his course of action. The Swedish
diplomatists, at Dresden and Berlin mistrusted Wallenstein; and Bernard of
Weimar shrewdly questioned whether his control over his army was such that he
could induce it to abandon the Emperor. But Arnim, though even he had his
doubts, persuaded the Electors of Saxony and Brandenburg to unite their armies
in Silesia with Wallenstein’s. The armies under Arnim’s command were to meet
for a general muster on October 11; and he had pointed out to Oxenstierna that
a junction of the Saxons, and Brandenburgers with Wallenstein’s troops would
not signify a rupture between Saxony and Sweden. But just before the intended
juncture, Duwall, who under Thurn commanded the Swedish force in Silesia,
refused to move without direct instructions from the Chancellor or from
Stettin. And Arnim found to his dismay and indignation that Wallenstein himself
had taken up a new attitude, and one in the circumstances more incomprehensible
than ever. He, now refused to join the Saxons and Brandenburgers, unless their
common action were directed against the Swedes—or, if Duke Francis Albert of Lauenburg’s report of a
passionate altercation between him and Wallenstein is authentic, against the
enemies of the Empire, the Swedes and the Bavarians (October). The reasons for
this extraordinary change are unknown. Not long before this (September)
Wallenstein must have received a memorandum, written in Kinsky’s hand at the
dictation of Feuquières, in which he was urged to make common cause with the
Emperor’s foes, now stronger than ever, thanks to the League of Heilbronn, and
with their aid to place the Crown of Bohemia upon his head. As about this time
he seems to have positively declined to enter into any dealings with France, so
he drew back from alliance with Sweden and immediate rupture with the Emperor.
He was, in short, not prepared to sacrifice the strength of his personal
position by attaching himself to either of the foreign Powers, and enabling
them to pursue their own ambitious policy. Yet how could he, without the
alliance of one or both of them, force the Emperor to a peace which would
either satisfy the Protestants or meet his personal ends? By seeking to play a
double game he was accomplishing nothing, and at the same time making himself
so generally distrusted that, as Irmer well puts it, when at last he determined
to break with the Emperor, not one of the Emperor’s adversaries would credit
his intention.
1633] Wallenstein\ advances, and returns into
Bohemia.
Arnim
having refused Wallenstein’s demand that the Saxons should march with him to
the Rhine—a movement which in any case would hardly
have been executed so late in the year—negotiations between them were entirely
broken off. But Wallenstein seems still to have cherished hopes of bringing
about a peace with Saxony and Brandenburg from
which the Swedes should be excluded; and to this end resolved on driving them
from Silesia. In October, the Swedish camp at Steinau capitulated to him; a
large proportion of the 6000 troops, according to the easy fashion of the age,
accepting service under his standard. Count Thurn, who had been taken prisoner,
was liberated by Wallenstein without ransom; and his long political career was
now virtually at an end. Liegnitz and Glogau followed suit; and very soon
Silesia was clear of all Swedish soldiery. Wallenstein, instead of taking heed
of the sore straits of his old adversary the Elector of Bavaria, hereupon
proceeded to put pressure upon Brandenburg and Saxony. His forces invaded
Brandenburg, where Frankfort-on-the-Oder and other places speedily surrendered;
and he then advanced into Lusatia, as far as Gorlitz and Bautzen, while in the
rear of Arnim, whose army had withdrawn to the neighborhood of Dresden, Gallas
approached with the force formerly commanded by Holk (November).
The
effect of these successes was undoubtedly great; once more it seemed as if
Wallenstein were about to become the arbiter of northern Germany, and as if his
desire of bringing about an equitable political and religious peace for the
Empire at large were after all to be realized. Victory was the best assurance
of the fidelity of his army; and, with this assured, his dictatorship must
become irresistible. But at this point, when it was too late to save Ratisbon
from the approach of Bernard of Weimar, the Emperor joined in solicitations
with Maximilian of Bavaria, and Wallenstein gave way. Leaving Gallas with 4000
men at Leitmeritz, he started on November 18 with the bulk of his army to meet
Bernard of Weimar, whose advance upon Ratisbon he had insisted upon
disbelieving. Undeceived by the news of its fall, he hoped for a moment either
to retake it, or, by intercepting Bernard’s march along the line of the Danube
upon Passau, to prevent him from invading Upper Austria and even menacing
Vienna. Ordering Baron de Suys to post himself with a couple of regiments in
Upper Austria, Wallenstein directed his own march upon the Upper Palatinate,
where he halted at Fürth, in an angle between the Bohemian and Bavarian
frontiers, in order to take Cham, about ten miles further south, where lay a
small Swedish garrison (end of November).
Bernard
of Weimar, delighted to have drawn Wallenstein at last, and believing that
Gallas with his whole division had reinforced the garrison of Passau, was
retracing his steps in order to relieve Cham, when the astounding news reached
him that Wallenstein had given up the investment of Cham and led his army back
into Bohemia. The immediate reason for this movement, one of the most perplexing
of all the shifts and turns in Wallenstein’s career, seems to have been that,
with Arnim advancing on the Oder and the Swedish Marshal Kniphausen advancing
from the Weser, he feared, for his own rear; moreover, the season was certainly
far advanced.
Bernard,
on learning that Wallenstein had returned to Bohemia, himself fell back upon
Ratisbon. When hereupon Feria and Aldringer approached to carry out the
protection of Bavaria which Wallenstein had abandoned, Horn, instead of uniting
with, Bernard against them, maneuvered separately in the rear of Feria’s
advance. In the end the Spanish-Bavarian forces took up their winter-quarters
to the south-west of the great lakes which themselves lie south-west of Munich,
and Horn led his own force into southern Swabia. The line of the Danube still
remained in Bernard’s hands. It was while thus holding their ground with the western section of their adversaries
between their own two armies, that the Swedes received the news of the
catastrophe of Wallenstein.
At
Vienna the indignation aroused against Wallenstein by his retreat had passed
all bounds. The partisans of Bavaria and Spain were up in arms against him and
his decision to let his army whiter in the Emperor’s own lands, instead of in
Franconia and Thuringia. Even Eggenberg, hitherto Wallenstein’s best friend at
Court, declared; “Amicus Socrates; amicus Plato; amiciar autem religio et
patria”. The Emperor himself, complaining that he seemed to have another
sovereign by his side, issued an order, bidding Wallenstein return at once into
Bavaria, and refused point-blank his request that the defence of the electorate
should be committed to Aldringer with part of Feria’s troops. At the same time
Suys was instructed to move back towards the Inn. Finally, two Imperial councilors,
Trautmansdorff and Questenberg, were sent to Wallenstein in his camp at Pilsen,
to impress upon him the Emperor’s “categorical commands”.
Wallenstein
could not but recognize that a crisis had been reached in his relations with
the Emperor and the Imperial Government. With Count Schlick, the President of
the Hofkriegsrath, he had
for some time been on unfriendly terms; and he had another influential
adversary in Baron von Stadion, the Grand Master of the German Order. Together
with Eggenberg, Bishop Anton of Vienna was passing into the ranks of his
opponents, who continued to be urged on by the Jesuits, and in particular by
the Emperor’s Walloon confessor, Father Lamormain. Maximilian of Bavaria was
well served by his ambassador Richel, whose correspondence with his master
supplies much information as to the course of things at Vienna. All these
agencies, as Wallenstein knew, were at work to break down his absolute
authority as commander-in-chief, on which the whole strength of his position
and political influence depended. But most formidable of all was the influence
of Spain, represented at Vienna by Castaneda, and from October, 1633, also by
Oñate, whose efforts were systematically directed towards bringing about a
joint action between the two Habsburg Courts not less intimate, and more
effective, than that which he had negotiated at the beginning of the war. The
circumstances of the times were propitious; for an heir had recently (September
8) been born to the young King Ferdinand of Hungary
and his Spanish consort Maria Anna, and the dynastic interests of the two lines
seemed more closely blended than ever. But Wallenstein had persistently
withstood the proposal of levying an army in the Empire to fight on the Rhine
under Spanish direction; and he would not even listen to the young King’s wish
to hold a command in the Imperial forces. The policy of Spain, ran directly
counter to Wallenstein’s; while the latter aimed at an equitable peace in the
Empire, the former was wholly directed to uniting Austria with Spain in the war
against France. The commander in such a war could not be Wallenstein, who was,
among many other things, accused of having entered into treasonable correspondence
with Richelieu. The Bavarian ambassador had already suggested to the Emperor
that the obnoxious general should be removed from the supreme command. Oñate
now threatened that unless this were done the Spanish subsidies would be
stopped—and at the same time,
no doubt, the private pensions paid under Olivares’ reckless system of
expenditure, not only to the King of Hungary, who was wholly in the Spanish
interest, but also to other personages of note. Before the close of the year
the Emperor sent secret communications to Gallas, Aldringer, and some of the
commanders in Moravia; but the purport of these remains unknown.
It
seems to have been while Trautmahsdorff and Questenberg were still awaiting
Wallenstein’s answer at Pilsen that the young King of Hungary’s confessor,
Father Quiroga—one of the Capuchin
diplomatists—proposed to the Commander-in-chief, by way of testing his
intentions, that he should send a division of 6000 horse to Alsace, to
accompany the Cardinal Infante on his march to the Netherlands. In Pilsen
rumors were rife that Wallenstein intended to resign his command; indeed he
had talked in this vein to Quiroga, though probably only by way of ruse. He
had, in any case, made up his mind to yield neither to the unwarranted orders
of the Emperor nor to Quiroga’s insulting suggestion. Acting strictly within
his rights, he sent explicit orders to Suys not to move. Then, on January 11,
1634, he, notwithstanding Trautmansdorff’s protests, called together a Council
of War consisting of his principal commanders. About fifty attended, including
Piccolomini (Gallas and Aldringer were not at Pilsen); and Field-Marshal Ilow
laid the Imperial demands before the meeting on Wallenstein’s behalf, and
stated his intention, as matters stood, to resign. The commanders declared the
Imperial demands impracticable, and sent two successive deputations to
Wallenstein entreating him to remain. On January 12 he consented, and on the
same day, at a banquet given by Ilow, a resolution of inviolable fidelity to
him was signed by the commanders in the midst of a drunken uproar. According to
Oñate, a clause in the copy of this resolution first shown to the officers,
which limited their oath of fidelity by the words “so long as he remains in the
Emperor’s service” was struck out by Wallenstein with his own hand; clearly, the resolution would have been of little use to him had the clause
remained in it. Basing his refusal on this resolution, and on the fact that the
safety of the Emperor and his House depended on the preservation of his army,
Wallenstein apprised the Imperial Commissioners that the winter-quarters of
his troops must be mainly in Bohemia, Silesia, Moravia, and Upper Austria. The
resolution of the commanders was circulated for further signatures in Austria
and Silesia, and also sent to Dresden; for the idea of a peace with the Protestant
Electors, which so late as December had still found favor at Vienna, was still
uppermost with Wallenstein. During January he was through Kinsky (whom the
Emperor had now allowed to reside on his Bohemian estates), and then through
other agencies and to some extent with the Emperor’s cognizance, seeking to
reopen direct negotiations with Arnim, who in his turn had persuaded both the
Electors to seek a pacific settlement through Wallenstein, if it could not be
obtained direct from the Emperor. But Wallenstein was at the same time seeking
through his secret agents to ascertain from Oxenstierna and Feuquières what
sacrifices would content Sweden and France respectively in the event of a
pacification. As yet he had formed no design of treason, or of cooperation with
Sweden, and still less with France; but he clearly meant to force the Emperor’s
hand.
The removal of Wallenstein determined. [1633-4
While
thus the Protestant Electors and even the cautious Oxenstierna continued to
recognize Wallenstein’s importance for a possible settlement, and Richelieu’s
agent had not ceased to hold out to him the prospect of the Bohemian Crown, his
own position was being gradually undermined. We cannot say how and to what
extent the fidelity of Gallas, Piccolomini, and Aldringer to their chief had
already been tampered with before the final step was taken; but it can hardly
have been a surprise to Gallas. Before the end of the year 1633 the Emperor had
appointed a secret commission to consult about the measures to be taken against
Wallenstein. It consisted of Eggenberg, Trautmansdorff, and the Bishop of
Vienna. Oñate, who had made up his mind that everything depended upon not
allowing Wallenstein to “leap the ditch”—i.e., settle the problem by his own
action—was, with the King of Hungary, admitted to the sittings of the
commission, and hinted at the most expeditious way out of the difficulty. The
news of the Pilsen resolution, by which Wallenstein had hoped to safeguard his
position, finally made it untenable.
On
January 24 a patent (perhaps post-dated) was drawn up, which deposed
Wallenstein and appointed the King of Hungary commander-in-chief of the
Imperial armies, while absolving all superior and inferior officers from their
obedience to Wallenstein and assigning independent commands to Gallas and
Aldringer. The patent also referred to the dismissal and penal prosecution of
two of Wallenstein’s chief officers (Trezka and Ilow being those intended); and
named Piccolomini and Colloredo as Field-Marshals. This patent was not as yet
made public; but on February 3 and 4 it was communicated
through Wallmerode to Piccolomini and Aldringer, and doubtless also to Gallas.
These men had no doubt been in some measure prepared for what was to follow;
but it was not till they were made acquainted with the patent and with the
verbal instructions brought by Wallmerode that they began to look the situation
in the face, Piccolomini coolly proposing to arrest or kill Arnim and Francis
Albert if they should come to negotiate at Pilsen. Still, though the necessary
measures seem to have been left by the anxious Emperor to the generals, there
was much hesitation on their part, due partly to the belief that the army as a
whole would adhere to Wallenstein, partly to a faint hope that Wallenstein might
peaceably throw up the command. Aldringer, having paid a visit to Vienna, and
been informed there through Oñate that the Imperial instructions were to seize
Wallenstein dead or alive, the three generals formed a secret plan to arrest
him at Pilsen. But the design broke down, and Aldringer preferred not to
re-enter the town. On February 13 Gallas, and on the 17th Piccolomini, took
their departure, leaving behind them a general order declaring Wallenstein’s
command, and those of Trezka and Ilow, vacant and referring the commanding
officers of the army to themselves and Aldringer for directions. After their
departure this order was transmitted to the commanding officers, a copy having
been already on the 15th sent to the garrison at Prague. On February 18 a second
patent was issued from Vienna (although, like the first, it did not bear the
Imperial signature) denouncing the resolution of the commanders at Pilsen as a
plot against the Emperor, confirming the deposition of the “late”
commander-in-chief, as guilty of a design to seize and despoil the Emperor and
his House of their hereditary kingdoms and crowns, and to extirpate the House
of Austria. At the same time a commission was secretly appointed for the
confiscation of all the estates of Wallenstein, How, and Trezka.
Two
days later a second “resolution” was signed by the commanders at Pilsen, who,
this time, however, numbered not more than thirty. One of the generals—Diodati—had already taken his departure
without orders. This resolution was in response to Wallenstein’s promise to
relieve them of their commands should he (“which had never entered into his
mind”) undertake aught against the Emperor, and to his declaration that he
desired to secure himself against the machinations of his adversaries. It promised
that the signatories, should he remain with the army, would hold out by him to
the last. Wallenstein sent word of this resolution to Vienna, intending himself
to march on Prague, there carry through the negotiations with Arnim, and
conclude peace with Saxony. He believed himself still strong enough to force
the Emperor to do his bidding, but sought to keep open a door of retreat by a
series of messages of which one, offering to resign the command if no force
were used against him, was actually delivered to Ferdinand by the Duke’s cousin Maximilian von Wallenstein. At the same time
he sent Francis Albert of Lauenburg to Bernard of Weimar at Ratisbon, requesting
the Swedish general to move a few thousand horse to the Bohemian frontier. But
while he was thus seeking to safeguard himself front and rear the ground
crumbled away under his feet.
On
February 24, 1634, the whole of Wallenstein’s army was to have assembled on the
White Hill at Prague, there, on conditions which still remained untold, to
dictate peace. Before that day arrived—if an insignificant movement in Wallenstein’s favor in Silesia be left
out of account—the whole of that army had fallen away from him, with the
exception of Ilow’s and Trezka’s regiments. The garrison of Prague, upon which
troops had been concentrated even before the issue of the patent, set the
example by renouncing its obedience. The commanding officers, returning to
their various stations from Pilsen, heard the news; and the defection set in.
At Pilsen Wallenstein announced to the officers around him that he proposed to
muster all his forces at Laun, near the Saxon frontier, and bade them meet him
in person at Eger, whither he was about to proceed. Fresh messages were sent to
Bernard of Weimar, who received these overtures very coolly, both suspecting
their authenticity and doubting the fidelity of Wallenstein’s troops; nor did
he advance upon Bohemia till all was over.
On
February 24 Wallenstein held his entry into Eger, Trezka’s and Ilow’s regiments
pitching their tents round the place. Baffled and abandoned, Wallenstein
deceived himself even as to the fidelity of those upon whom his personal
security at Eger depended. The chief officers of the fortress, Gordon and
Leslie, were two Protestant Scotchmen, whose sense of military honor seems to
have revolted against the arguments pressed on them by Trezka and Ilow.
Colonel Walter Butler, whom Wallenstein had half accidentally invited to
accompany him, was an Irish Catholic of a similarly conscientious frame of
mind. At a banquet given by Gordon to the officers, Kinsky, Trezka, and Ilow
were massacred. After a last hesitation whether it would suffice to arrest the
traitor-in-chief, it was resolved to kill him; and some of Butler’s Irish
dragoons, with their captain Devereux in command, accomplished the deed
(February 25).
Francis
Albert of Lauenburg, returning from his bootless errand to Bernard of Weimar
was taken prisoner; so were Colonel von Schlieff, who had been sent to warn
Wallenstein’s faithful adherent General von Schaffgotsch in Silesia, with
Schaffgotsch himself, and Wallenstein’s Chancellor Elz. All the threads of the
great politician’s intrigues were severed; and the whole of his mighty army had
fallen away from the famous commander who had created it. He died as an outlawed
traitor.
No
personality occupies a place in the history of the Thirty Years’ War at once so
characteristic of that war and so unique in itself as that of Wallenstein. But
his greatness—if such it was—lies not
in his achievements either as a creator or as a leader of
armies, though this “general without victories” both crushed Mansfeld and
foiled Gustavus. Nor does it lie in his consummate insight and capacity as a
politician, who could use all circumstances and all conjunctures, and would not
permit himself to be used by any of his fellow-players in the game. It lies
rather in the innermost purposes of his statesmanship, and above all in his
supreme ambition to become the pacificator of the Empire, in the interests of
that Empire as a whole, and to liberate it both from the encroachments of the
foreigner and from the internal dominion of the Reaction. Herein he showed a
farsightedness due to the inspiration of a grand self-reliance rather than to
communings with the stars. The Peace of Prague, as will be seen, differed from
the settlement which Wallenstein would have concluded on behalf of, or even
without, the Emperor; but he was fully justified as against that Emperor and
his Spanish and Bavarian allies by the treaties which France and Sweden
enforced at Minister and Osnabruck, and of which the bitterness remained with
the Empire for many generations. Moreover, the gain for religious freedom
secured by the peace which ended the war could not have been achieved, had
Wallenstein’s sword, when the issues of the conflict so largely depended upon
it, been thrown into the scale of an uncompromising intolerance.
2.
NORDLINGEN AND PRAGUE.
(1634-5)
After
Bernard of Weimar, uncertain whether Ilow’s news from Pilsen were true or
merely intended to mask some movement of Wallenstein, had quitted Ratisbon to
protect his Franconian duchy, the news reached him of the catastrophe at Eger.
He then changed his course for Bohemia, proposing to “take advantage for the
common weal of the massacre and its consequences”; but, on meeting with no
response from Arnim, whom he had summoned to join him with the Saxon army, he
fell back on the Upper Palatinate. Arnim, now that Wallenstein and his projects
of peace were no more, would gladly have fallen in with Oxenstierna’s policy of
including Saxony in the Alliance of Heilbronn and thus once more restoring the
complete ascendancy of Sweden; but John George once more refused to follow his
Field-Marshal’s advice, and, while the members of the Heilbronn Alliance
assembled at Frankfort, engaged in separate negotiations with the Emperor’s
envoys at Leitmeritz (March, 1634). The efforts of Oxenstierna to expand the
Heilbronn Alliance, to strengthen its relations with Sweden, and to correct the
defects in its military organization, were very coldly received by its members.
The suggestion of the Saxon ambassadors that negotiations for peace should be actively pursued, and that the two
Saxon Circles should carry on the war in alliance with Sweden, but not under
her direction, was indeed waved aside. When, however, in a discussion as to the
“satisfaction of Sweden in the event of a peace”, Oxenstierna, mindful of the
safety of the Baltic coast as Sweden’s irreducible requirement, made it clear
that this satisfaction would have to be sought in Pomerania, Brandenburg went
over to the Saxon scheme of a “separate conjunction”. Bernard, who had come to
Frankfort in the hope of being appointed to the undivided chief command of the
Alliance, returned, bitterly disappointed, to his army (May).
The
Saxons under Arnim about this time defeated the Imperialists at Lieghitz; and
Bernard still hoped for a joint invasion of Bohemia. But he soon learnt that
the tables had been turned upon him. By the middle of May, King Ferdinand of
Hungary, eager for his first military laurels, with Gallas in command under
him, advanced with an army of 25,000 men from Pilsen, while Aldringer stood
with nearly 8000 more at Straubing on the Danube, below Ratisbon. Their object
was the recovery of that city, whose capture had been Bernard’s most glorious
achievement. He lost no time in coming to the rescue, crossing the river at
Kelheim above Ratisbon; but he ran short of supplies, and was obliged to fall
back towards Nurnberg. In the middle of July he at last effected his junction
with Horn at Augsburg. It was too late to save Ratisbon, which, on July 22,
1634, capitulated to King Ferdinand. The free city had once more to swear
allegiance to the Emperor, but was treated with consideration, while the
garrison were allowed to march out with all the honors of war.
The
movements of Bernard and Horn, whose only chance of arresting the enemy’s
progress was now an open battle, were terribly impeded by heavy rains; they were
forced to separate once more, and, before they reunited at Günzburg in Upper
Swabia (August), Donauworth had been taken by Ferdinand. The Imperialists
hereupon occupied the Swabian lands to the south, and the Franconian to the
north, of the river, Johann von Werth’s horse and Isolani’s Croatians carrying
fire and sword through the country, while the main body of the army moved upon
Nordlingen (north-west of Donauworth). Perceiving the strategic value of
Nordlingen as a base whence the enemy could distribute his troops through
comfortable quarters in Swabia, Bernard induced the inhabitants to fortify
their town, and, promising speedy relief, placed in it a Swedish garrison of
between four and five hundred men, under a brave commander, Eric Debitz. On August
23 the Swedish army under Bernard and Horn reached the neighborhood of the
town.
The
course of the ensuing operations is in many respects obscure. But it is clear
that, had the attack been made at once, as Bernard desired, the besieging army
of the Imperialists would have been weaker by some 15,000 troops, which the
Cardinal Infante brought up on September 3. On
the other hand it is certain that, had the attack been delayed, as Horn wished,
till a day or two after it was actually made, the 6000 troops of the Swabian
Circle, which were approaching under the Rhinegrave, Otto Lewis, would have
been on the spot. As it was, the Imperialist forces outnumbered by nearly
one-third the Swedish, whose total is variously stated, but can hardly have
reached 25,000. With the King of Hungary were Gallas, the actual commander of
the Imperialist forces, Johann von Werth, the dashing Bavarian leader of horse,
and Duke Charles of Lorraine, who was at the head of 6000 troops.
After
Horn had contrived to throw a small additional number of men into Nördlingen,
the Swedes crossed to the right bank of the river Eger, where the Imperialists
had occupied the heights south of the town. Bernard had undertaken to relieve
Nördlingen by September 6; the concerted signal had appeared on the church
tower; and the brave Debitz, hard pressed by the besiegers, had agreed to
capitulate, unless relieved by the promised date. On the afternoon of September
5—(when in accordance with the system of
alternating command Bernard led the van)—the Swedish army ascended the wooded
ridge of the Arnsberg, and issuing forth from it suddenly directed their attack
upon the trenches constructed by the Imperialists immediately before
Nördlingen. In Horn’s judgment, the combat had begun too soon; but it was fiercely
carried on till deep into the night. On the following morning (September 6,
1634) Horn was in command on the right wing, and, having been overruled on the
previous night, gave battle along the whole line of the Imperialists. The
attack lasted six hours, but failed; and Horn was in danger of being cut off
from Bernard on the left wing till he came up about noon—too late in Horn’s
judgment;—and covered Horn’s retreat. But Bernard’s own troops were thrown back
in confusion upon Horn’s in their rear by a charge of Johann von Werth’s
cavalry; and the result was a general flight. In the midst of it both Horn and
Bernard were taken prisoners, but the latter escaped. Many superior officers,
the whole artillery, the standards and the baggage of the Swedish army were
captured; 6000 men fell. Nördlingen surrendered, moderate terms being granted
to the town by King Ferdinand, while the gallant garrison were allowed to
depart, though without their arms.
The
remnant of the Swedish troops, temporarily reinforced after the event by the
Rhinegrave, rallied at Heilbronn; whence, in the hope of something being done
to reorganize the army by the Convention still sitting at Frankfort, they were
moved on to the neighborhood of that city. Meanwhile, as Oxenstierna had
foreseen, all Wurttemberg fell without a blow into the hands of the
Imperialists, the young Duke Eberhard taking refuge at Strasbourg: and thus one
of the chief members of the Heilbronn Alliance came under the heel of the
Reaction. Piccolomini and other generals occupied Bernard’s Franconian duchy,
Wurzburg capitulating in October, though the citadel held out three months longer; and Johann von Werth dashed forward to the
west, with the intent of securing Heidelberg for his master Maximilian. The
south-west, which had so recently witnessed the victorious progress of Gustavus
Adolphus, was virtually once more in Imperial hands; and the Cardinal Infante
could signalize the successful entente between the Spanish and the
Austrian branches of the House of Habsburg by pursuing unhindered his march to
the Low Countries. Nor were these merely transitory results. Nördlingen was, in
a scarcely less degree than Breitenfeld, one of the decisive battles of the
war. It moved the real centre of gravity of the struggle to the west, and
transferred the dominant partnership in the undertaking against the House of
Habsburg from Sweden to France. It closed the prospect of the conflict being
settled by the German Protestants under Swedish leadership; thus making it
inevitable that, while Saxony and with her the large majority of the Estates
abandoned the alliance with Sweden in order to conclude a separate peace with
the Emperor, Bernard of Weimar and his army should pass out of Swedish control
and into the service of France. Nördlingen, in a word, broke down the Heilbronn
Alliance.
The
first step in the tortuous and unedifying process by which the Alliance was
actually brought to an end was taken, a few days before the battle of
Nördlingen, by the compact concluded at the Frankfort Convention between the
representatives of the Heilbronn Alliance and Feuquières. After France had, in
1632, acquired the control of the electorate of Trier and had by the capture of
Nancy become mistress of Lorraine, the designs of her Government had begun to
extend from the line of the Moselle to that of the Rhine. In the winter of
1633-4 French troops occupied a succession of places in Alsace and thus came
face to face with the Spaniards under the command (till his death in January,
1634) of Feria; but Richelieu was still anxious to avoid a “rupture” with the
House of Austria, and to confine the French sphere of military action to the
left bank of the river. On the other hand, in order to prevent the Imperialists
in their turn from operations on that bank, it was necessary to secure as
outworks on the right bank, at the two ends of the line of defence, the
fortresses of Breisach and Philippsburg. The latter of these, situate above
Speier, was, like Ehrenbreitstein opposite Coblenz, a creation of the warlike
Bishop Philip Christopher, afterwards Archbishop and Elector of Trier. After
many vicissitudes Philippsburg had, in January, 1634, fallen into Swedish
hands. Its transfer into French hands had been pressed in the early sittings of
the Frankfort Convention, and, after the fall of Ratisbon, was granted on terms
which saved the credit of the Alliance, Feuquières promising in return French
aid, to consist, if necessary, not only in the 6000 foot demanded, but in the
advance to the Rhine of the whole French force of 25,000 men (August 30).
1634] The Frankfort Convention and the Paris
Treaty.
For the
immediate necessities of the army of the Alliance the Convention
had done next to nothing; and, already before the catastrophe of Nördlingen,
Oxenstierna’s soul had been full of bitterness. No sooner had the news arrived,
than the Convention prepared to break up with a general declaration in favor of
the maintenance of the Alliance, and the provision of a due satisfaction for
the Swedish Crown; but time was found by some of the members for secret offers
to Feuquières. Informed of these, Oxenstierna resolved to outbid them by a
direct offer to Louis XIII of Alsace, so far as it was in Swedish hands. With
this offer, the Chancellor's agent, the experienced Wurttemberg official
Loffler, was sent to Paris, to find that most of what he was offering to France
was already in her grasp (September—October).
Bernard’s
beaten army could not be reorganized without money, which the Frankfort
Convention had been unwilling and which Oxenstierna was unable to provide; nor
could it be once more made an effective force unless by accessions from one or
more of the armies which in different parts of the Empire held out for the
Protestant cause. Field-Marshal Bauer, who, after the battle of Liegnitz and
the death of Duwall, had succeeded to the command of the Swedish division in
Silesia, had, after separating from Arnim and threatening Prague, advanced into
Thuringia, where he and Duke William of Weimar had enough to do to hold their
own against the Imperialists. Landgrave William of Hesse-Cassel’s general
Melander (Count von Holzapfel) had considerable difficulty in maintaining his
position in Westphalia. A handful of troops was furnished by Duke George of
Luneburg, the general of the Lower Saxon Circle, which he had nearly cleared of
Imperialist troops; but this wary prince had even before Nördlingen been
impatient of Swedish control, and curtly refused to make any further exertion
on Bernard’s behalf. In these circumstances, Oxenstierna with some acerbity
opposed any movement and insisted on Bernard’s army, which in September had
reached Frankfort, remaining within reach of the expected French support.
Frankfort
seeming no longer safe, the army, early in October, moved on to Mainz, whither
Oxenstierna and the Council of the Heilbronn Alliance also hurriedly
transferred their quarters. But the troops, still left without pay, were soon
allowed by Bernard to cross to the left bank of the Rhine, where in the Lower
Palatinate and its vicinity they hoped for better quarters—an object which, in the Thirty Years’
War, determined many “strategic” movements. Disregarding Oxenstierna’s
disciplinary ordinance, and enraged at the scant welcome offered them by the
population, the troops ravaged the unhappy Palatinate, as Rusdorf complained to
Elizabeth, more savagely than had any of its enemies. The administrator, Count
Palatine Lewis Philip, with whom Feuquières had placed himself in
communication, saw no way of protecting the country but by admitting French garrisons
into the fortress of Mannheim and one or two smaller places (October).
About
the same time, a more important step forward was taken by France, when the
Rhinegrave Otto Lewis, who had detached himself again from Bernard’s army in
order to secure Kehl opposite Strasbourg, and was threatened by a strong
Imperialist force moving upon Colmar and Schlettstadt, concluded with the
French Marshal de La Force an agreement placing practically the whole of Upper
Alsace under French protection. The Rhinegrave died soon afterwards; but the
treaty had been approved both by Louis XIII and by Oxenstierna. Hereupon, while
Bernard’s army was still left without the promised 6000 French troops,
Feuquières was ordered to raise a force of more than twice that number to guard
the course of the river from Mainz upwards. Clearly, when the intervention of
France actually took place, it would not confine itself to a mere support of
the Swedish army.
When,
early in November, Johann von Werth, after surprising the town of Heidelberg,
began to lay siege to its castle, of which Bernard declined to attempt the
relief as beyond his strength, the aid of the French Marshals de La Force and
de Brézé from Landau and Speier was invited. But, after they had actually
started for the deliverance of the Palatinate, they were detained by
Feuquières, who was anxious to avoid precipitating a rupture; and a joint
demonstration across the Rhine on the part of the French and Bernard induced
the Bavarian general to let go the prize so persistently coveted by his master.
Thus,
while Bernard’s army, now again amounting to about 18,000 troops, was in its
position between Main and Rhine threatened by the advance from Franconia and
Swabia of his old victorious Nördlingen adversaries, Gallas and Charles of Lorraine,
with a superior force of 14,000 horse and 16,000 foot, France remained in
possession of Upper Alsace. In any bargain to be struck by Oxenstierna’s agent
with Richelieu in Paris, the French Minister could accordingly impose his own
terms. This explains the treaty signed by Loffler at Paris on November 1,
whereby France entered into an alliance with Sweden and her Heilbronn
confederates for securing a good and enduring peace in the Empire, on condition
that the Catholic religion should be restored in all lands conquered by the
Swedes or their allies, and that the neutrality of any Prince or city that
should accept the protection of France should be assured. She would maintain an
army of her own on the left bank of the Rhine and pay 1,000,000 livres as
an annual subsidy to the combatants on the right. If she declared war against
the House of Austria, she would, so long as the war lasted, maintain 12,000
troops, natives of Germany or any other country but France, under the command
of one of the Princes of the Heilbronn Alliance, but with a French Marshal in
his Council of War, entitled, in the case of a combination of armies, to a
share in the supreme command. In this event the subsidy of a million would be
stopped. But France entered into no obligation to declare war; and it was left
to her discretion, whether she would take part as a
combatant in the conflict now in progress, or continue to pay subsidies.
1634-5] The Worms Convention.
Meanwhile
Oxenstierna had summoned the Heilbronn Allies to meet at Worms (November 30).
He was so incensed by the Paris Treaty that he dismissed Loffler from the
Swedish service, and turned his back upon the German members of the Alliance,
who, though uneasy about the clause as to the Catholic religion, were willing
to proceed. Nearly the whole of December passed in discussion and altercation;
but Oxenstierna could not be persuaded to ratify the treaty until he should be
convinced that France actually intended the rupture. At the same time the breach
was widening between him and Bernard, who openly sought to obtain from the
Worms Convention a definite commission as general of the forces of the
Alliance, which would have transferred to him its direction, hitherto in the
hands of the Swedish Chancellor. The French Government had for some time been
seeking to attach Bernard more closely to itself; but neither Richelieu nor
Feuquières had as yet resolved upon accepting him as commander of a combined
army; indeed Feuquières would have preferred William of Hesse-Cassel, who was
already in receipt of a French pension.
After
Johann von Werth’s enforced departure, the castle of Heidelberg was once more
besieged, this time by an Imperialist force of 6000 troops; and, while Bernard
was slowly coming to a conclusion with Feuquières as to the terms on which he
would relieve the place, the whole French army, nearly 30,000 strong, crossed
the Rhine at Mannheim, and a division of it numbering 12,000 relieved
Heidelberg Castle, allowing the besiegers to depart. Bernard with his army
arrived a day too late; but the French success, incomplete as it was, seemed at
last to have made a rupture with the Emperor inevitable. Those of the Princes
who remained at Worms—for
the Imperial Towns characteristically held back—ratified the Paris Treaty. But
Oxenstierna persistently refused to sign the new compact, maintaining that it
put an end to the old Suedo-French subsidy treaty, concluded at Bärwalde and
renewed at Heilbronn.
As for
the Heilbronn Alliance proper, it seemed to have been superseded by the Paris
Treaty and by the actual interference of France in arms, which must assuredly
be soon followed by a declaration of war on her part against the Emperor. The
Worms Convention, which had adjourned to January, was not actually reopened by
Oxenstierna till February 17, 1635, under the depressing influence of the
extensive Spanish preparations for the coming campaign and of the progress of
the Saxon endeavors (to be described immediately) for a separate peace with the
Emperor. He could only exhort his allies in their turn to sign no separate
treaties with France, and to be careful in any common negotiations to accept no
proposition from the Emperor that was not confirmed by Spain. Bernard’s
reiterated arguments in favor of an unfettered chief military command he could
only meet by a compromise which, while leaving the
Duke the choice of his officers, reserved the decision of the most important
movements to the Directory and Council, and excepted Landgrave William of
Hesse-Cassel from the Commander-in-chief’s authority (March 12). As a matter of
fact, both the control of Sweden and the cohesion of the Alliance were fast
giving way; on the right bank of the Rhine few of its members retained
possession of their lands, while the left was flooded by an ill-equipped
soldiery. No prospect of aid remained from within or without, except from
France.
This
was so clearly perceived by Oxenstierna that, so early as December, 1634, he
sent to Paris a resident of special ability and distinction, who had been
highly valued by King Gustavus Adolphus. After his vicissitudes in his native
country, Hugo Grotius had found a refuge in France, and had there written the
great work On the Law of War and Peace which was to immortalize his
name. Unfortunately for the course of the present negotiations, he was not a persona
grata with Richelieu. But the Cardinal knew that a solution must be found
for the difficulties which had arisen in the relations between France and
Sweden. He was intent on war with Spain, and there must be no gap in the great
coalition which he contemplated against her and her ally the Emperor. The
reconciliation between the King and Orleans had secured the French monarchy at
home; but its defence against the combined efforts of the two Habsburg
dynasties on the Rhine could no longer be left to the Suedo-German arms without
open and continuous French support. In the early part of 1635 two important
successes were gained by the Imperialists. Philippsburg, the recent acquisition
of France, was captured with all the supplies of money and material accumulated
there (January 24); and Johann von Werth took Speier (February 2). Shortly
afterwards Duke Charles of Lorraine crossed the Rhine to lay siege to Colmar.
The French forces consequently, so soon as the weather permitted, withdrew to
the left bank (February 22); and before long Bernard, upon whose position near
Darmstadt Gallas and Count Philip von Mansfeld were closing in, likewise
crossed the river, and induced the French Marshals to aid him in bringing about
the capitulation of Speier (March 21). Clearly, unless the Spaniards from
Luxemburg were to join hands with the Imperialists from the Upper and Middle
Rhine, France, besides concluding an offensive and defensive alliance with the
States General (February) must see to carrying out the treaty of November,
1634, and overcome Oxenstierna's repugnance to that agreement.
1635] Treaty of Compiègne.
Thus in
the new negotiations Father Joseph and his fellow diplomatists exerted all
their ingenuity to combat the objections of Grotius to the acceptance of the
Paris Treaty; till in the end the Swedish Chancellor journeyed in person to
Compiègne, which he reached on April 20. He had the satisfaction of finding
that the progress of the Spaniards, who had just by a raid from Luxemburg taken Trier (March
26) and carried off the Elector Philip Christopher, the protégé of
France, had materially altered the tone of the French Court and of the great
Minister. The Act of Alliance rapidly concluded at Compiègne on April 28
renewed the obligations of the two Powers not to make peace with the House of
Austria, “with which they were at present at war”, unless by mutual consent,
while each Power was to support the German Protestants according to its
individual obligations. It assured to Sweden the restoration of her conquests
on the Rhine, in case they should be recovered by French arms; and it conceded
to France the principle that the Catholic religion should be exercised wherever
it had been before 1618. But, while the Treaty of Compiègne amounted generally
to a renewal of the obligations of the compacts of Bärwalde and Heilbronn, its
advantages remained with Oxenstierna. The obnoxious Paris Treaty was now a
dead letter, and the future relations between France and Sweden were left open
to further arrangement. Further, Oxenstierna safeguarded himself by the
stipulation that the treaty was to require ratification by his Queen; which it
was of course in his power to reserve till France should have broken with the
House of Austria. Thus in this struggle between the two great statesmen the
hand of France had been more distinctly forced than that of Sweden.
The
settlement with Sweden completed Richelieu’s dispositions for the war which
France actually declared against Spain on May 19, 1635. Preparations on a great
scale had long been in progress, and were substantially complete in April.
While two armies were to take the offensive in the Low Countries and in Italy,
and a third was to occupy the passes of the Valtelline, a fourth, under Marshal
de La Force, was to cooperate with Bernard of Weimar in covering the
Palatinate, Alsace, and Lorraine. About Langres was placed a reserve force,
commanded first by the Marquis de Sourdis, and afterwards by Cardinal La
Valette. Much remained unsettled in the relations between France and the allies
with whom she was united by the mutual tie of necessity, more especially as to
the position of their leading general, Bernard of Weimar; and she was still free
to choose her own time for declaring her rupture with the Emperor. But in the
spring of 1635 she definitely entered into the great German War.
Not
without reason had Oxenstierna admonished the Heilbronn Alliance at Worms
against the seductions of separate pacifications. While the interests of Sweden
and of her German associates had begun to diverge, and the Heilbronn Alliance
under the guidance of the half-discredited Loffler was on the brink of final
dissolution, the Elector John George had brought to a successful issue his
long-cherished plan of a separate peace with the Emperor. Though the settlement
achieved by him was far more restricted in its scope than that which had been
in the mind of Wallenstein, it was readily accepted by nearly the whole of Protestant
Germany.
It has
been seen how in March, 1634, the Saxon Government had entered into peace
negotiations with the Emperor at Leitmeritz. Oxenstierna, who detested these
negotiations, had sought to interrupt them by ordering Banér to invade Bohemia,
and John George had actually joined with the Swedes in a futile march upon
Prague. Leitmeritz being in Swedish hands, the negotiations were at the end of
July transferred to Pirna near Dresden, and here they continued after the
battle of Nördlingen. From the first they addressed themselves to two sets of
questions—the one turning,
without any actual mention of the Edict of Restitution, on the religious
settlement in the Empire at large; the other affecting specifically Saxon
interests, the possession of Lusatia and the see of Magdeburg. At Pirna Arnim
still took part in the transactions, but they were in the main conducted by the
official commissioners on both sides, the Emperor’s chief representative being
Trautmansdorff; for Eggenberg, his most trusted councilor, died in October, 1634. Landgrave George of Hesse-Darmstadt, John George’s son-in-law, was, according
to his wont, largely instrumental in bringing the negotiations to a successful
conclusion. On November 24 an armistice was formally agreed upon between the
Imperialist and Saxon forces at Laun, which lasted till the actual conclusion
of peace.
After
the settlement of the conditions of peace at Pirna, proceedings had been
adjourned to the middle of January; but it was not till Aprils, 1635, that
they were actually resumed at Prague. In the meantime the Emperor had asked the
approval of the Catholic Electors, but had met with difficulties on the part of
Maximilian of Bavaria, who was desirous of further advantages for himself, and
of his brother of Cologne, who had religious scruples; the Elector of Mainz
soon waived his objections. He had further consulted twenty Viennese
theologians, among whom four Jesuits gave their opinion, in which Father
Lamormain concurred, against the peace and the implied suspension of the Edict
of Restitution. Finally, a Committee of Imperial Councilors had approved of the
adoption, with certain modifications, of the proposed settlement.
1635] Peace of Prague.
The
final discussions were not brought to a conclusion till May 30, when the Peace
was actually signed, the ratification following on June 15. The Peace of Prague
purported, in so far as its conditions were not of a specific nature, to
include any Estate of the Empire by whom it was accepted. The following are the
most important of the terms of the treaty itself, and of the supplementary
pronouncements by which it was accompanied.
As to
the fundamental question of the ownership of ecclesiastical lands, it was
settled that any such lands held on November 12, 1627 (the date of the
Muhlhausen meeting noted above), whether acquired before or after the Religious
Peace of Augsburg, should continue so to be held for forty years, or restored
for such a period if they had been taken away. Within that period an amicable
arrangement was to be made, or the question of
ownership was to be decided by the Emperor on a suit at law. While it was laid
down that the Catholic Church was henceforth to suffer no loss of property, and
the principle of the reservation ecclesiasticum was once more asserted,
it was honored in the breach rather than the observance by the virtual
suspension of the Edict of Restitution for a period of forty years. This was
the point on which the conscience of Ferdinand had specially desired theological
satisfaction. A standing Protestant grievance in the matter of the supreme
tribunals, which would now once more finally decide questions as to the
ownership of ecclesiastical lands, was to be remedied in the case of the Reichskammergericht by its being composed half of Catholic, half of Protestant judges; the
composition of the Reichshofrath was to be settled by the Emperor.
The
main demand of Saxony—the
cession of Lusatia in compensation for the aid afforded to the Emperor during
the Bohemian troubles—was granted under certain conditions of reversion which
long remained without practical significance. The see of Magdeburg (whose
territory was still in Swedish hands) was to be held by its Protestant
Archbishop, the Saxon Prince Augustus, certain districts being detached from it
as hereditary possessions of the Saxon Elector. The former Administrator,
Christian William of Brandenburg, was assigned an annual pension of 12,000
dollars. The rights of the Emperor’s son Leopold William as Bishop of Halberstadt
were confirmed.
The
Emperor had declined to tolerate the exercise of their religion by the
adherents of the Augsburg Confession in his own dominions, except in parts of
Silesia. In his other lands he reserved for himself the right of regulating
their religious condition.
Any
territories taken from the Emperor or his allies (among whom the Duke of
Lorraine was included) since the Swedish landing were to be restored to him.
The same provision was to apply to adherents of the Augsburg Confession, among
whom special mention was made of the Dukes of Mecklenburg. Saxony, and
implicitly all other Estates who adhered to the Peace, bound themselves to
assist the Emperor in arms to recover such conquered territories. Thus the
Peace constituted a direct challenge to Sweden, and also to France.
As to
the Palatinate, Saxony, after at first making, sincerely or otherwise, some
efforts on behalf of the expelled dynasty, accepted the Imperial view that both
the Electoral dignity and the lands were forfeited by Frederick V’s
descendants; the Emperor however undertook, should they conduct themselves
loyally, to provide for them as princes. For the present they were excluded
from the general amnesty announced in the Peace, and with them those who had
incurred punishment by taking part in the Bohemian and Upper Austrian
insurrections at the outset of the war. Landgrave George had not succeeded in
bringing about the exclusion of his kinsman of Hesse-Cassel, whose military
force made him worth conciliating. A similar consideration was
shown to the Weimar Dukes, to whom pardon was assured if they would transfer
their forces to the Imperial side. The Duke of Wurttemberg and the Margrave of
Baden-Durlach were excluded, subject to an act of grace on the Emperor’s part.
All
leagues, alliances, and associations in arms were dissolved. The army that was
henceforth to withstand the common enemy was to be the army of the Emperor and
the Empire, and to be placed under an Imperial commander-in-chief. A division
estimated at a quarter of the entire force (or 20,000 men) was, however, to be
under the special command of the Elector of Saxony.
Such
were the provisions of a Peace which, with all its shortcomings and blemishes,
corresponded on the whole, not only to the interests of the contracting parties
but to those of a large majority of the Protestant Princes and Free Cities of
the Empire and to the yearnings of all its suffering populations. Inasmuch as
this agreement was of a nature to call forth the determined opposition of both
Sweden and France, whose expulsion from the Empire it was intended to bring
about, the efforts of these Powers were naturally exerted to prevent its
acceptance by the more important Princes of the Empire. French diplomacy,
though very active at Dresden, was too late in seeking to divert John George,
by the illusive prospect of an elective Bohemian Crown, from a policy to which
in his heart he had always been inclined. Maximilian of Bavaria, whom the terms
of the compact could not altogether suit, and to whose authority as head of the
Catholic League it put an end, refused to accept the Peace until he had been
placed in the same position as the Elector of Saxony by being assured the
command of a quarter of the Imperial army. Oxenstierna attempted to prevent the
adhesion of George William of Brandenburg by holding out the bait of Silesia,
and by the more practical suggestion of a curtailment of the Swedish claim on
Pomerania. But the feeling of the Brandenburg Estates was unanimously in favor
of following the Saxon lead; and, being a Calvinist himself, George William may
have felt well advised in securing the benefits of the treaty. For there were
ominous doubts, which orthodox Lutherans showed no disposition to conceal,
whether the Peace covered the Calvinists. In the end George William accepted
the treaty, though, as will be seen, not unconditionally. Thus by the end of
August, 1635, nearly all the more important Princes and larger Free Towns had
accepted the Peace of Prague. Among them were, besides the Elector of Brandenburg,
the Dukes of Holstein-Gottorp, Pomerania, Wurttemberg, and Brunswick, together
with several of the Ernestine Dukes. The Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt might
himself be called one of the authors of the Peace; it was also accepted by
Margrave William of Baden-Baden, by the Princes of Anhalt, including Christian,
as well as by the Free Cities of Hamburg, Lübeck,
Frankfort-on-the-Main, Ulm, and—remarkably enough—by Strasbourg and other Rhenish cities. The
Archbishop of Bremen, Prince Frederick of Denmark, was not restrained from
following their example by gratitude to Sweden for leaving him in the enjoyment
of his see. Thus no reigning Princes remained outside the pale, except the
still unpardoned Landgrave William of Cassel, and Duke William of Weimar. But
these were prepared to accept the Peace if it were made more acceptable to
France and Sweden. So was Duke
George of Lüneburg, who, instead of following the example of Bernard of Weimar,
and placing his sword at the service of France, skillfully contrived to
maintain for some time a profitable neutrality.
If John
George could have followed up the Peace of Prague by a settlement with Sweden,
he would have issued forth from the conflict as master of the political
situation ; for during the Prague negotiations he had maintained an
understanding with Spain, and France could not have intervened alone against
the combination which would have confronted her. But in this additional
attempt the Saxon policy of peace which had achieved so notable a first
success, broke down. Oxenstierna, who had failed in detaching Brandenburg from
Saxony, was not to be brought to a distinct renunciation of Sweden’s Pomeranian
claim. At a conference held at Magdeburg, early in August, 1635, between the
Chancellor, Marshal Banér, who commanded the Swedish force in this quarter, and
Saxon ambassadors, Oxenstierna’s refusal was found to have the warm support of
the Swedish army. Attracted by a suggestion from John George that Sweden should
temporarily hold Stralsund in pledge, Oxenstierna sought to reopen negotiations
on the basis of the immediate transfer of the see of Magdeburg into Saxon
hands. But, prompted by the Brandenburg Elector, who made the refusal of any
part of Pomerania to Sweden the sine qua non of his acceptance of the Peace
of Prague, John George refused to budge. Hereupon Oxenstierna, fearing that
Sweden and her army might be left in the lurch, offered a moderate ultimatum,
demanding for Sweden only a money compensation and the payment in full of the
demands of her army, together with the tenure of some towns in pledge. The
dispute had all but narrowed itself to the question as to what should be the
amount of the money payment, and whether it should cover the claims of the
Swedish as well as the German officers of the Swedish army, when John George,
by the Emperor's advice, broke off the negotiation, and in the middle of
October, 1635, ordered his troops to recommence hostilities against Banér.
Thus,
in this eventful year, after the war had under new conditions reopened on the
Rhine, it once more broke out on the Elbe; and the advent of peace, for which
the whole nation longed, and on whose conditions Emperor and Empire had agreed
among themselves, seemed as distant as ever.