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Thirty Years' War

The Thirty Years' War[j] was one of the longest and most destructive conflicts in European history, lasting from 1618 to 1648. Fought primarily in Central Europe, an estimated 4.5 to 8 million soldiers and civilians died as a result of battle, famine, or disease, while parts of present-day Germany reported population declines of over 50%.[19] Related conflicts include the Eighty Years' War, the War of the Mantuan Succession, the Franco-Spanish War, the Torstenson War, the Dutch-Portuguese War, and the Portuguese Restoration War.

Thirty Years' War
Part of the European wars of religion and French–Habsburg rivalry

Left to right:
Date23 May 1618 – 24 October 1648
(30 years, 5 months and 1 day)
Location
Result Peace of Westphalia
Territorial
changes
Belligerents
Anti-Imperial alliance prior to 1635[a] Imperial alliance prior to 1635[b]
Post-1635 Peace of Prague Post-1635 Peace of Prague
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Maximum actual[c][d]
  • 100,000–140,000 Swedish[5][6]
  • 27,000 Danes (1626)[7]
  • 70,000–80,000 French[8]
  • 80,000–90,000 Dutch[9][e]
Maximum actual
Casualties and losses
Combat deaths:[g]
110,000 in Swedish service[14]
80,000 in French service[15][h]
30,000 in Danish service[15]
50,000 other[15]
Combat deaths:
120,000 in Imperial service[15]
30,000 in Bavarian service[15]
30,000 other[15]
Military deaths from disease: 700,000–1,350,000[i]
Total civilian dead: 3,500,000–6,500,000[16]
Total dead: 4,500,000–8,000,000[17][18]

The war was traditionally viewed as a continuation of the religious conflict initiated by the 16th-century Reformation within the Holy Roman Empire. The 1555 Peace of Augsburg attempted to resolve this by dividing the Empire into Catholic and Lutheran states, but over the next 50 years the expansion of Protestantism beyond these boundaries destabilised the settlement. However, while differences over religion and Imperial authority were important factors in causing the war, most contemporary commentators suggest its scope and extent were driven by the contest for European dominance between Habsburg-ruled Spain and Austria, and the French House of Bourbon.[20]

Its outbreak is generally traced to 1618,[k] when Emperor Ferdinand II was deposed as king of Bohemia and replaced by the Protestant Frederick V of the Palatinate. Although Imperial forces quickly suppressed the Bohemian Revolt, Frederick's participation expanded the fighting into the Palatinate, whose strategic importance drew in the Dutch Republic and Spain, then engaged in the Eighty Years' War. Rulers like Christian IV of Denmark and Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden also held territories within the Empire, giving them and other foreign powers an excuse to intervene. The result was to turn an internal dynastic dispute into a broader European conflict.

The first phase from 1618 until 1635 was primarily a civil war between German members of the Holy Roman Empire, with support from external powers. After 1635, the empire became one theatre in a wider struggle between France, supported by Sweden, and Emperor Ferdinand III, allied with Spain. This concluded with the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, whose provisions included greater autonomy within the empire for states like Bavaria and Saxony, as well as acceptance of Dutch independence by Spain. The conflict shifted the balance of power in favour of France, and set the stage for the expansionist wars of Louis XIV which dominated Europe for the next sixty years.

Structural origins edit

The 1552 Peace of Passau sought to resolve the issues that led to conflict between Protestants and Catholics within the Holy Roman Empire. The 1555 Peace of Augsburg tried to prevent their recurrence by fixing boundaries between the two faiths, using the principle of cuius regio, eius religio. This categorised individual states as either Lutheran, then the most usual form of Protestantism, or Catholic, based on the religion of their ruler. Other provisions protected substantial religious minorities in cities like Donauwörth, and confirmed Lutheran ownership of property taken from the Catholic Church since Passau.[21]

These agreements were undermined by the post-1555 expansion of Protestantism into areas previously designated as Catholic. Another factor was the growth of Protestant faiths not recognised by Augsburg, especially Calvinism, which was viewed with hostility by both Lutherans and Catholics.[22] The Peace of Augsburg also gave individual rulers within the empire greater political autonomy and control over the religion practised in their domains, while weakening central authority. Conflict over economic and political objectives frequently superseded religion, with Lutheran Saxony, Denmark-Norway and Sweden[l] competing with each other and Calvinist Brandenburg over the Baltic trade.[24]

Managing these issues was hampered by the fragmented nature of the empire. Its representative institutions included 300 Imperial Estates distributed across Germany, the Low Countries, Northern Italy, and present-day France.[m] These ranged in size and importance from the seven prince-electors who voted for the Holy Roman Emperor, down to prince-bishoprics and Imperial cities like Hamburg.[n] Each also belonged to a regional grouping or "Imperial circle", which primarily focused on defence and operated as autonomous bodies. Above all of these was the Imperial Diet, which only assembled on an irregular basis, and then largely served as a forum for discussion, rather than legislation.[26]

Although, in theory, emperors were elected, the position had been held by the House of Habsburg since 1440. The largest single landowner within the Holy Roman Empire, they controlled lands containing over eight million subjects, including Austria, Bohemia and Hungary.[27] The Habsburgs also ruled the Spanish Empire until 1556, when Charles V divided the two empires between different branches of the family. This bond was reinforced by frequent inter-marriage, while Spain retained Imperial territories such as the Spanish Netherlands, Milan and Franche-Comté. Although these links meant the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs often worked together, their objectives did not always align. Spain was a global maritime superpower, whose possessions stretched from Europe to the Philippines, and much of the Americas. In contrast, Austria was a land-based power, focused on ensuring their pre-eminence within Germany and securing their eastern border against the Ottoman Empire.[28]

Before Augsburg, unity of religion compensated for lack of strong central authority; once removed, it presented opportunities for those who sought to further weaken it. These included ambitious Imperial states like Lutheran Saxony and Catholic Bavaria, as well as France, confronted by Habsburg lands on its borders to the North, South, and along the Pyrenees. Since many foreign rulers were also Imperial princes, divisions within the empire drew in external powers like Christian IV of Denmark, who joined the war in 1625 as Duke of Holstein-Gottorp.[23]

Background: 1556 to 1618 edit

 
Map of the Thirty Years' War

Disputes occasionally resulted in full-scale conflict like the 1583 to 1588 Cologne War, caused when its ruler converted to Calvinism. More common were events such as the 1606 "Battle of the Flags" in Donauwörth, when riots broke out after the Lutheran majority blocked a Catholic religious procession. Emperor Rudolf approved intervention by the Catholic Maximilian of Bavaria. In return, he was allowed to annex the town, and as agreed at Augsburg, the official religion changed from Lutheran to Catholic.[29]

When the Imperial Diet opened in February 1608, both Lutherans and Calvinists sought formal re-confirmation of the Augsburg settlement. In return, the Habsburg heir Archduke Ferdinand required the immediate restoration of all property taken from the Catholic Church since 1555, rather than the previous practice whereby the court ruled case by case. This demand threatened all Protestants, paralysed the diet, and removed the perception of Imperial neutrality.[30]

Loss of faith in central authority meant towns and rulers began strengthening their fortifications and armies; outside travellers often commented on the growing militarisation of Germany in this period.[31] In 1608, Frederick IV, Elector Palatine formed the Protestant Union, and Maximilian responded by setting up the Catholic League in July 1609. Both were created to support the dynastic ambitions of their leaders, but combined with the 1609 to 1614 War of the Jülich Succession, the result was to increase tensions throughout the empire.[32] Some historians who see the war as primarily a European conflict argue Jülich marks its beginning, with Spain and Austria backing the Catholic candidate, France and the Dutch Republic the Protestant.[33]

 
The Spanish Road
Purple: Spanish dependencies
Green: Ruled by Austria
Brown: Ruled by Spain

External powers became involved in what was an internal German dispute due to the imminent expiry of the 1609 Twelve Years' Truce, which suspended the Eighty Years' War between Spain and the Dutch Republic. Before restarting hostilities, Ambrosio Spinola, commander in the Spanish Netherlands, needed to secure the Spanish Road, an overland route connecting Habsburg possessions in Italy to Flanders. This allowed him to move troops and supplies by road, rather than sea where the Dutch navy was dominant; by 1618, the only part not controlled by Spain ran through the Electoral Palatinate.[34]

Since Emperor Matthias had no surviving children, in July 1617 Philip III of Spain agreed to support Ferdinand's election as king of Bohemia and Hungary. In return, Ferdinand made concessions to Spain in Northern Italy and Alsace, and agreed to support their offensive against the Dutch. Doing so required his election as emperor, which was not guaranteed; Maximilian of Bavaria, who opposed the increase of Spanish influence in an area he considered his own, tried to create a coalition with Saxony and the Palatinate to support his candidacy.[35]

Another option was Frederick V, Elector Palatine, a Calvinist who succeeded his father in 1610, and in 1613 married Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of James I of England. Four of the electors were Catholic, and three were Protestant; if this balance changed, it would potentially result in the election of a Protestant emperor. When Ferdinand became king of Bohemia in 1617, he also gained control of its electoral vote; however, his conservative Catholicism made him unpopular with the predominantly Protestant nobility, who were also concerned about the erosion of their rights. These factors combined to bring about the Bohemian Revolt in May 1618.[36]

Phase I: 1618 to 1625 edit

Bohemian Revolt edit

 
"Winter's King", Frederick V of the Palatinate, whose acceptance of the Bohemian Crown sparked the conflict

Ferdinand once claimed he would rather see his lands destroyed than tolerate heresy within them. Less than 18 months after taking control of Styria in 1595, he had eliminated Protestantism in what had been a stronghold of the Reformation.[37] Absorbed by their war in the Netherlands, his Spanish relatives preferred to avoid antagonising Protestants elsewhere. They recognised the dangers associated with Ferdinand's fervent Catholicism, but supported his claim due to the lack of alternatives.[38]

On being elected king of Bohemia in May 1617, Ferdinand reconfirmed Protestant religious freedoms, but his record in Styria led to the suspicion he was only awaiting a chance to overturn them. These concerns were heightened after a series of legal disputes over property were all decided in favour of the Catholic Church. In May 1618, Protestant nobles led by Count Thurn met in Prague Castle with Ferdinand's two Catholic representatives, Vilem Slavata and Jaroslav Borzita. In what became known as the Third Defenestration of Prague, both men were thrown out of the castle windows along with their secretary Filip Fabricius, although all three survived.[39]

Thurn established a Protestant-dominated government in Bohemia, while unrest expanded into Silesia and the Habsburg heartlands of Lower and Upper Austria, where much of the nobility was also Protestant. Losing control of these threatened the entire Habsburg state, while Bohemia was one of the most prosperous areas of the Empire and its electoral vote crucial to ensuring Ferdinand succeeded Matthias as Emperor. The combination meant their recapture was vital for the Austrian Habsburgs but chronic financial weakness left them dependent on Maximilian and Spain for the resources needed to achieve this.[40]

Spanish involvement inevitably drew in the Dutch, and potentially France, although the strongly Catholic Louis XIII of France faced his own Protestant rebels at home and refused to support them elsewhere. The revolt also provided opportunities for external opponents of the Habsburgs, including the Ottoman Empire and Savoy. Funded by Frederick and Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy, a mercenary army under Ernst von Mansfeld was sent to support the Bohemian rebels. Attempts by Maximilian and John George of Saxony to broker a negotiated solution ended when Matthias died in March 1619, since many believed the loss of his authority and influence had fatally damaged the Habsburgs.[41]

By mid-June 1619, the Bohemian army under Thurn was outside Vienna and although Mansfeld's defeat by Imperial forces at Sablat forced him to return to Prague, Ferdinand's position continued to worsen.[42] Gabriel Bethlen, Calvinist Prince of Transylvania, invaded Hungary with Ottoman support, although the Habsburgs persuaded them to avoid direct involvement; this was helped when the Ottomans became involved in the 1620 Polish war, followed by the 1623 to 1639 conflict with Persia.[43]

On 19 August, the Bohemian Estates rescinded Ferdinand's 1617 election as king; on the 26th, they formally offered the crown to Frederick. Two days later, Ferdinand was elected emperor, making war inevitable if Frederick accepted the Bohemian Crown. Most of Frederick's advisors urged him to reject it, as did the Duke of Savoy, and his father-in-law James I.[44] The exceptions included Christian of Anhalt and Maurice of Orange, for whom conflict in Germany was a means to divert Spanish resources from the Netherlands. The Dutch offered subsidies to Frederick and the Protestant Union, helped raise loans for Bohemia, and provided weapons and munitions.[45]

 
The Catholic counter-offensive; Tilly's campaign during the Bohemian revolt and Palatine campaign

However, wider European support failed to materialise, largely due to lack of enthusiasm for removing a legally elected ruler, regardless of religion.[44] Although Frederick accepted the crown and entered Prague in October 1619, his support eroded over the next few months. In July 1620, the Protestant Union proclaimed its neutrality, while John George of Saxony backed Ferdinand in return for the cession of Lusatia, and a guarantee of Lutheran rights in Bohemia. Maximilian of Bavaria funded a combined Imperial-Catholic League army led by Count Tilly and Charles of Bucquoy, which pacified Upper and Lower Austria and occupied western Bohemia before marching on Prague. Defeated by Tilly at the Battle of White Mountain in November 1620, the Bohemian army disintegrated, and Frederick was forced to flee the country.[46]

Palatinate Campaign edit

By abandoning Frederick, the German princes hoped to restrict the dispute to Bohemia, but Maximilian's dynastic ambitions made this impossible. In the October 1619 Treaty of Munich, Ferdinand transferred the Palatinate's electoral vote to Bavaria, and allowed Maximilian to annex the Upper Palatinate.[47] Many Protestant rulers had supported Ferdinand against Frederick because they objected to deposing the legally elected king of Bohemia. On the same grounds, they viewed Frederick's removal as an infringement of "German liberties", while for Catholics, it presented an opportunity to regain lands and properties lost since 1555. The combination destabilised large parts of the Empire.[48]

 
Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria whose seizure of the Palatinate expanded the war

At the same time, the strategic importance of the Spanish Road to their war in the Netherlands, and its proximity to the Palatinate, drew in the Spanish. When an army led by Córdoba occupied the Lower Palatinate in October 1619, James I responded to this attack on his son-in-law. English naval forces were sent to threaten Spanish possessions in the Americas and the Mediterranean, while James announced he would declare war if Spanish troops were not withdrawn by spring 1621. These actions were primarily designed to placate his opponents in Parliament, who considered his pro-Spanish policy a betrayal of the Protestant cause.[49] However, Spanish chief minister Olivares correctly interpreted them as an invitation to open negotiations, and in return for an Anglo-Spanish alliance offered to restore Frederick to his Rhineland possessions.[50]

Since Frederick's demand for full restitution of his lands and titles was incompatible with the Treaty of Munich, hopes of a negotiated peace quickly evaporated. Despite defeat in Bohemia, Frederick's allies included Georg Friedrich of Baden and Christian of Brunswick, while the Dutch provided him with military support after the Eighty Years' War restarted in April 1621 and his father-in-law James funded an army of mercenaries under Mansfeld. However, their failure to co-ordinate effectively led to a series of defeats by Spanish and Catholic League forces, including Wimpfen in May 1622 and Höchst in June. By November 1622, the Imperials controlled most of the Palatinate, apart from Frankenthal, which was held by a small English garrison under Sir Horace Vere. The remnants of Mansfeld's army took refuge in the Dutch Republic, as did Frederick, who spent most of his time in The Hague until his death in November 1632.[51]

At a meeting of the Imperial Diet in February 1623, Ferdinand forced through provisions transferring Frederick's titles, lands, and electoral vote to Maximilian. He did so with support from the Catholic League, despite strong opposition from Protestant members, as well as the Spanish. The Palatinate was clearly lost; in March, James instructed Vere to surrender Frankenthal, while Tilly's victory over Christian of Brunswick at Stadtlohn in August completed military operations.[52] However, Spanish and Dutch involvement in the campaign was a significant step in internationalising the war, while Frederick's removal meant other Protestant princes began discussing armed resistance to preserve their own rights and territories.[53]

Danish intervention (1625–1629) edit

 
 
Bremen
 
Osnabrück
 
Halberstadt
 
Lübeck (Duchy of Holstein)
 
Magdeburg
 
Hamburg
 
Lutter
 
Verden
 
Kassel
 
Wolfenbüttel
class=notpageimage|
Key locations, 1625–1629 on the map of the modern federal state Lower Saxony

With Saxony dominating the Upper Saxon Circle and Brandenburg the Lower, both kreise had remained neutral during the campaigns in Bohemia and the Palatinate. However, Frederick's deposition in 1623 meant John George of Saxony and the Calvinist George William, Elector of Brandenburg became concerned Ferdinand intended to reclaim formerly Catholic bishoprics currently held by Protestants. These fears seemed confirmed when Tilly restored the Roman Catholic Diocese of Halberstadt in early 1625.[54]

As Duke of Holstein, Christian IV was also a member of the Lower Saxon circle, while the Danish economy relied on the Baltic trade and tolls from traffic through the Øresund.[55] In 1621, Hamburg accepted Danish "supervision", while his son Frederick became joint-administrator of Lübeck, Bremen, and Verden; possession ensured Danish control of the Elbe and Weser rivers.[56]

Ferdinand had paid Albrecht von Wallenstein for his support against Frederick with estates confiscated from the Bohemian rebels, and now contracted with him to conquer the north on a similar basis. In May 1625, the Lower Saxony kreis elected Christian their military commander, although not without resistance; Saxony and Brandenburg viewed Denmark and Sweden as competitors, and wanted to avoid either becoming involved in the empire. Attempts to negotiate a peaceful solution failed as the conflict in Germany became part of the wider struggle between France and their Habsburg rivals in Spain and Austria.[7]

In the June 1624 Treaty of Compiègne, France had agreed to subsidise the Dutch war against Spain for a minimum of three years, while in the December 1625 Treaty of The Hague, the Dutch and English agreed to finance Danish intervention in the Empire.[o] Hoping to create a wider coalition against Ferdinand, the Dutch invited France, Sweden, Savoy, and the Republic of Venice to join, but it was overtaken by events.[58] In early 1626, Cardinal Richelieu, main architect of the alliance, faced a new Huguenot rebellion at home and in the March Treaty of Monzón, France withdrew from Northern Italy, re-opening the Spanish Road.[59]

 
Danish intervention

Dutch and English subsidies enabled Christian to devise an ambitious three part campaign plan; while he led the main force down the Weser, Mansfeld would attack Wallenstein in Magdeburg, supported by forces led by Christian of Brunswick and Maurice of Hesse-Kassel. The advance quickly fell apart; Mansfeld was defeated at Dessau Bridge in April, and when Maurice refused to support him, Christian of Brunswick fell back on Wolfenbüttel, where he died of disease shortly after. The Danes were comprehensively beaten at Lutter in August, and Mansfeld's army dissolved following his death in November.[60]

Many of Christian's German allies, such as Hesse-Kassel and Saxony, had little interest in replacing Imperial domination with Danish, while few of the subsidies agreed to by the Treaty of The Hague were ever paid. Charles I of England allowed Christian to recruit up to 9,000 Scottish mercenaries, but they took time to arrive, and while able to slow Wallenstein's advance were insufficient to stop him.[61] By the end of 1627, Wallenstein occupied Mecklenburg, Pomerania, and Jutland, and began making plans to construct a fleet capable of challenging Danish control of the Baltic. He was supported by Spain, for whom it provided an opportunity to open another front against the Dutch.[62]

On 13 May 1628, his deputy von Arnim besieged Stralsund, the only port with facilities large enough to build this fleet. However, this threat led Gustavus Adolphus to send several thousand Scots and Swedish troops to Stralsund, commanded by Alexander Leslie who was also appointed governor.[63] Von Arnim was forced to lift the siege on 4 August, but three weeks later, Christian suffered another defeat at Wolgast. He began negotiations with Wallenstein, who despite his recent victories was concerned by the prospect of Swedish intervention, and thus anxious to make peace.[64]

 
Albrecht von Wallenstein achieved great military success for the Empire but his power threatened both Ferdinand and the German princes

With Austrian resources stretched by the outbreak of the War of the Mantuan Succession, Wallenstein persuaded Ferdinand to agree with relatively lenient terms in the June 1629 Treaty of Lübeck. Christian retained his German possessions of Schleswig and Holstein, in return for relinquishing Bremen and Verden, and abandoning support for the German Protestants. While Denmark kept Schleswig and Holstein until 1864, this effectively ended its reign as the predominant Nordic state.[65]

Once again, the methods used to obtain victory explain why the war failed to end. Ferdinand paid Wallenstein by letting him confiscate estates, extort ransoms from towns, and allowing his men to plunder the lands they passed through, regardless of whether they belonged to allies or opponents. In early 1628, Ferdinand deposed the hereditary Duke of Mecklenburg, and appointed Wallenstein in his place, an act which united all German princes in opposition, regardless of religion. This unity was undermined by Maximilian of Bavaria's desire to retain the Palatinate; as a result, the Catholic League argued only for a return to the position prevailing pre-1627, while Protestants wanted that of 1618.[66]

Made overconfident by success, in March 1629 Ferdinand passed an Edict of Restitution, which required all lands taken from the Catholic church after 1555 to be returned. While technically legal, politically it was extremely unwise, since doing so would alter nearly every single state boundary in North and Central Germany, deny the existence of Calvinism and restore Catholicism in areas where it had not been a significant presence for nearly a century. Well aware none of the princes involved would agree, Ferdinand used the device of an Imperial edict, once again asserting his right to alter laws without consultation. This new assault on "German liberties" ensured continuing opposition and undermined his previous success.[67]

At the same time, his Spanish allies were reluctant to antagonise German Protestants as their war in the Spanish Netherlands had now shifted in favour of the Dutch Republic. The financial predicament of the Spanish Crown steadily deteriorated in the 1620s, particularly after the Dutch West India Company captured their treasure fleet at Matanzas in 1628. The War of the Mantuan Succession further diverted Spanish resources from the Netherlands,[68] while the loss of 's-Hertogenbosch to the Dutch Army under Frederick Henry in 1629 caused dismay in Madrid.[69]

Swedish intervention; 1630 to 1634 edit

 
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, known as the "Lion of the North", at the Battle of Breitenfeld in 1631

From 1626 to 1629, Gustavus was engaged in a war with Poland–Lithuania, ruled by his Catholic cousin Sigismund, who also claimed the Swedish throne and had Imperial support. Once this conflict ended, and with only a few minor states like Hesse-Kassel still openly opposing the Emperor, Gustavus became an obvious ally for Richelieu.[70] In September 1629, the latter helped negotiate the Truce of Altmark between Sweden and Poland, freeing Gustavus to enter the war. Partly a genuine desire to support his Protestant co-religionists, like Christian he also wanted to maximise his share of the Baltic trade that provided much of Sweden's income.[71]

Following failed negotiations with the Emperor, Gustavus landed in Pomerania in June 1630 with nearly 18,000 Swedish troops. Using Stralsund as a bridgehead, he marched south along the Oder towards Stettin and coerced Bogislaw XIV, Duke of Pomerania, into agreeing an alliance which secured his interests in Pomerania against his rival Sigismund.[72] As a result, the Poles turned their attention to Russia, initiating the 1632 to 1634 Smolensk War.[73]

However, Swedish expectations of widespread German support proved unrealistic. By the end of 1630, their only new ally was the Administrator of Magdeburg, Christian William whose capital was under siege by Tilly.[74] Despite the devastation inflicted by Imperial soldiers, Saxony and Brandenburg had their own ambitions in Pomerania, which clashed with those of Gustavus; previous experience also showed inviting external powers into the Empire was easier than getting them to leave.[75]

 
The Sack of Magdeburg in 1631

Gustavus put pressure on Brandenburg by sacking Küstrin and Frankfurt an der Oder, while the Sack of Magdeburg in May 1631 provided a powerful warning of the consequences of Imperial victory.[76] Once again, Richelieu used French financial power to bridge differences between the Swedes and the German princes; the 1631 Treaty of Bärwalde provided funds for the Swedes and their Protestant allies, including Saxony and Brandenburg.[77] These amounted to 400,000 Reichstaler per year, or one million livres, plus an additional 120,000 for 1630. While less than 2% of total French income, these payments boosted that of Sweden by more than 25%, and allowed Gustavus to maintain 36,000 troops.[78]

Gustavus used this army to win victories at Breitenfeld in September 1631, then Rain in April 1632, where Tilly was killed.[79] Ferdinand turned once again to Wallenstein, who realised Gustavus was overextended and established himself at Fürth, from where he could threaten his supply lines. The largest battle of the war took place in late August, when an assault on the Imperial camp outside the town was bloodily repulsed, arguably the greatest blunder committed by Gustavus during his German campaign.[80]

 
Campaigns during the Swedish phase

Two months later, the Swedes and Imperials met at Lützen, where both sides suffered heavy casualties; Gustavus himself was killed, while some Swedish units incurred losses of over 60%.[81] Fighting continued until dusk when Wallenstein retreated, abandoning his artillery and wounded.[81] Despite their losses, this allowed the Swedes to claim victory, although the result continues to be disputed.[82][83]

After his death, Gustavus' policies were continued by his Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna, and with French backing, Sweden and their German allies formed the Heilbronn League in April 1633. In July, their combined forces defeated an Imperial army led by the Bavarian general Bronckhorst-Gronsfeld at Oldendorf.[84] Critics claimed this defeat was caused by Wallenstein's failure to support the Bavarians, while rumours spread that he was preparing to switch sides. As a result, Emperor Ferdinand ordered his arrest in February 1634, and on 25th, he was assassinated by his own officers in Cheb.[85]

The loss of Wallenstein and his organisation left Emperor Ferdinand reliant on Spain for military support. Since their main concern was to re-open the Spanish Road for their campaign against the Dutch, the focus of the war now shifted from the north to the Rhineland and Bavaria. Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria, new Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, raised an army of 18,000 in Italy, which met up with an Imperial force of 15,000 at Donauwörth on 2 September 1634. Four days later, they won a decisive victory at Nördlingen which destroyed Swedish power in Southern Germany and led to the defection of their German allies, who now sought to make peace with the Emperor.[86]

Phase II: French intervention, 1635 to 1648 edit

Swedish defeat at Nördlingen triggered direct French intervention and thus expanded the conflict rather than ending it. Richelieu provided the Swedes with new subsidies, hired mercenaries led by Bernard of Saxe-Weimar for an offensive in the Rhineland, and in May 1635 declared war on Spain, starting the 1635 to 1659 Franco-Spanish War.[87] A few days later, the German states and Ferdinand agreed to the Peace of Prague; in return for withdrawing the Edict of Restitution, the Heilbronn and Catholic Leagues were dissolved and replaced by a single Imperial army, although Saxony and Bavaria retained control of their own forces. This is generally seen as the point when the war ceased to be a primarily inter-German religious conflict.[88]

 
Cardinal Richelieu, French chief minister from 1624 until 1642, and creator of the anti-Habsburg alliance

In March 1635, French soldiers entered the Valtellina, cutting the link between Spanish controlled Milan and the Empire.[89] In May, their main army of 35,000 invaded the Spanish Netherlands, but withdrew in July after suffering 17,000 casualties. In March 1636, France joined the Thirty Years War as an ally of Sweden, whose loss of most of the territories gained by Gustavus and their taxes made it increasingly reliant on French financing.[p] The Spanish then invaded Northern France, causing panic in Paris before lack of supplies forced them to retreat.[91] A Swedish army under Johan Banér defeated the Imperials at Wittstock on 4 October, and re-established their predominance in North-East Germany, despite the defection of most of their German allies.[92]

Ferdinand II died in February 1637, and was succeeded by his son Ferdinand III, who faced a deteriorating military position. Although Matthias Gallas and the main Imperial army had forced Banér back to the Baltic, in March 1638, Bernard destroyed an Imperial army at Rheinfelden. His capture of Breisach in December secured French control of Alsace and severed the Spanish Road, forcing Gallas to divert resources there. Although von Hatzfeldt defeated a combined Swedish-German force at Vlotho in October, lack of supplies forced Gallas to withdraw from the Baltic.[93]

In April 1639, Banér defeated the Saxons at Chemnitz, then entered Bohemia in May.[94] To retrieve the situation, Ferdinand diverted Piccolomini's army from Thionville, ending direct military cooperation between Austria and Spain.[95] Pressure grew on Olivares to make peace, especially after French and Swedish gains in Germany cut the Spanish Road, forcing Madrid to resupply their armies in Flanders by sea. However, their attempts to re-assert maritime control ended when the Dutch fleet under Maarten Tromp won a significant victory at the Downs in October 1639.[96][97]

Spanish inability to adequately supply their troops allowed the French to over-run Artois in 1640. At the same time, continuing Dutch attacks on Portuguese colonies and opposition to heavy taxes led to revolts in both Portugal and Catalonia.[98] Olivares now argued Spain should accept Dutch independence, and focus on preventing further French gains in the Spanish Netherlands.[99] This appeared achievable since most of the Dutch regenten believed the war was won, the only question being the price of peace. They therefore reduced the army budget for 1640, despite objections from Frederick Henry.[100]

 
 
Breitenfeld
 
Wolfenbüttel
 
Wittstock
 
Nördlingen
 
Breisach
 
Rheinfelden
 
Zusmarshausen
 
Münster
 
Freiberg
 
Herbsthausen
 
Vlotho
 
Osnabrück
 
Tuttlingen
 
Hamburg
 
Prague
 
Kempen
 
Leipzig
 
Thionville
 
Chemnitz
 
Regensburg
 
Halberstadt
 
Freiburg[q]
class=notpageimage|
Key locations 1635 to 1648 mentioned in text

After Bernard died in July 1639, his troops joined Banér's Swedish army on an ineffectual campaign along the Weser, the highlight being a surprise attack in January 1641 on the Imperial Diet in Regensburg.[101] Forced to retreat, Banér reached Halberstadt in May where he died, and despite beating off an Imperial force at Wolfenbüttel in June, his largely German troops mutinied due to lack of pay.[102] The situation was saved by the arrival of Lennart Torstensson in November with 7,000 Swedish recruits and enough cash to satisfy the mutineers.[103]

French victory at Kempen in January 1642 was followed by Second Breitenfeld in October 1642, where Torstensson inflicted almost 10,000 casualties on an Imperial army led by Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria.[104] The capture of Leipzig in December gave the Swedes a significant new base in Germany, and despite their failure to take Freiberg,[105] by 1643 the Saxon army had been reduced to a few isolated garrisons.[106] While Ferdinand accepted a military solution was no longer possible, by fighting on he hoped to prevent the Imperial Estates joining his peace negotiations with France and Sweden, thus preserving his authority by allowing him to represent the Empire as a whole.[107]

This seemed more likely when Richelieu died in December 1642, followed by Louis XIII in May 1643, leaving his five-year-old son Louis XIV as king. However, Richelieu's policies were continued by his successor Cardinal Mazarin, while gains in Alsace allowed France to focus on the war against Spain. In 1643, the Army of Flanders invaded Northern France hoping to relieve pressure elsewhere, but were decisively beaten by Condé at Rocroi on 19 May.[108] Defeat ended any prospect of re-opening the Spanish Road, and Madrid finally accepted the war against the Dutch could not be won.[109]

 
Campaigns during the Franco-Swedish phase (until 1642).

However, Condé was unable to fully exploit his victory due to factors affecting all combatants. The devastation inflicted by 25 years of warfare meant armies spent more time foraging than fighting, forcing them to become smaller and more mobile, with a much greater emphasis on cavalry. Difficulties in gathering provisions meant campaigns started later, and restricted them to areas that could be easily supplied, usually close to rivers.[110] In addition, the French had to rebuild their army in Germany after it was shattered by an Imperial-Bavarian force led by Franz von Mercy at Tuttlingen in November.[111]

Soon after Rocroi, Ferdinand invited Sweden and France to attend peace talks in the Westphalian towns of Münster and Osnabrück,[112] but negotiations were delayed when Christian of Denmark blockaded Hamburg and increased toll payments in the Baltic.[113] This severely impacted the Dutch and Swedish economies, and in December 1643 the Torstensson War began when the Swedes invaded Jutland with Dutch naval support. Ferdinand pulled together an Imperial army under Gallas to attack the Swedes from the rear, which proved a disastrous decision. Leaving Wrangel to finish the war in Denmark, in May 1644 Torstensson marched into the Empire; Gallas was unable to stop him, while the Danes sued for peace after their defeat at Fehmarn in October 1644.[114]

In August 1644, the French and Bavarian armies met in the three day Battle of Freiburg, in which both sides suffered heavy casualties. Convinced the war could no longer be won, Maximilian now put pressure on Ferdinand to end the conflict.[115] Shortly after peace talks restarted in November, Gallas' Imperial army disintegrated and the remnants retreated into Bohemia, where they were scattered by Torstensson at Jankau in March 1645.[116] In May, a Bavarian force under von Mercy destroyed a French detachment at Herbsthausen, before he was defeated and killed at Second Nördlingen in August.[117] Deprived of Imperial support, John George of Saxony signed a six-month truce with Sweden in September, and in the March 1646 Treaty of Eulenberg agreed to remain neutral until the end of the war.[118]

 
The final battle of the war; the Swedish Siege of Prague in 1648

Under Turenne, French commander in the Rhineland, and Wrangel, who had replaced Torstensson, the French and Swedes separately invaded Bavaria in the summer of 1646.[119] Maximilian was soon desperate to end the war he was largely responsible for starting, at which point the Spanish publicised a secret offer by Mazarin to exchange French-occupied Catalonia for the Spanish Netherlands. Angered by this duplicity, the Dutch agreed a truce with Spain in January 1647 and began to negotiate their own peace terms.[120] Having failed to acquire the Netherlands through diplomacy, Mazarin decided to do so by force. To free up resources for the attempt, on 14 March 1647 he signed the Truce of Ulm with Bavaria, Cologne and Sweden.[121]

The planned offensive fell apart when Turenne's mostly German troops mutinied, while Bavarian general Johann von Werth refused to comply with the truce.[122] Although the mutinies were quickly suppressed, Maximilian felt obliged to follow Werth's example and in September ordered Bronckhorst-Gronsfeld to combine the remnants of the Bavarian army with Imperial troops under von Holzappel.[123] Outnumbered by a Franco-Swedish army led by Wrangel and Turenne, they were defeated at Zusmarshausen in May 1648 and von Holzappel was killed. Although the bulk of the Imperial army escaped thanks to an effective rearguard action by Raimondo Montecuccoli, Bavaria was left defenceless once again.[124]

The Swedes sent a second force under von Königsmarck to attack Prague, seizing the castle and Malá Strana district in July. The main objective was to gain as much loot as possible before the war ended; they failed to take the Old Town but captured the Imperial library, along with treasures including the Codex Gigas, now in Stockholm. When a Spanish offensive in Flanders ended with defeat at Lens in August 1648, Ferdinand finally agreed terms and on 24 October, he signed peace treaties with France and Sweden, ending the war.[125]

Conflict outside Germany edit

Northern Italy edit

 
 
Montferrat
 
Turin
 
Mantua
 
Casale
 
Milan
 
Genoa
 
Pinerolo
class=notpageimage|
Northern Italy

Northern Italy had been contested by France and the Habsburgs since the end of the 15th century. One reason was control of this area allowed opponents to threaten the southern borders of France and Austria. In addition, it contained large sections of the Spanish Road, which allowed Spain to safely move recruits and supplies from their Italian possessions to support their war against the Dutch. This reliance on long exterior lines of communication was a strategic weakness, which the French sought to exploit by disrupting the Road. This usually involved attacks on the Spanish-held Duchy of Milan, or blocking the Alpine passes.[126]

Montferrat and its fortress of Casale Monferrato were subsidiary territories of the Duchy of Mantua and their possession allowed the holder to threaten Milan. This meant when the last duke in the direct line died in December 1627, France and Spain backed rival claimants, resulting in the 1628 to 1631 War of the Mantuan Succession.[127] The French-born Duke of Nevers was backed by France and the Republic of Venice, his rival the Duke of Guastalla by Spain, Ferdinand II, Savoy and Tuscany. While a relatively minor conflict, the struggle had a disproportionate impact on the Thirty Years War, since Pope Urban VIII viewed Habsburg expansion in Italy as a threat to the Papal States. His opposition to Ferdinand II divided the Catholic powers, and made it acceptable for France to employ Protestant allies against Austria.[128]

In March 1629, the French stormed Savoyard positions in the Pas de Suse, lifted the Spanish siege of Casale and captured Pinerolo.[129] The Treaty of Suza then ceded the two fortresses to France and allowed their troops unrestricted passage through Savoyard territory, giving them control over Piedmont and the Alpine passes into Southern France.[130] However, as soon as the main French army withdrew in late 1629, the Spanish and Savoyards besieged Casale once again. At the same time, the Spanish employed mercenaries paid for by Ferdinand II in an offensive which routed the main Venetian field army and forced Nevers to abandon Mantua. By October 1630, the French position seemed so precarious their representatives agreed the Treaty of Ratisbon, but it was never ratified as Richelieu claimed he had never approved the terms.[131]

Several factors restored the French position in Northern Italy, notably a devastating outbreak of plague; between 1629 and 1631, over 60,000 died in Milan and 46,000 in Venice, with proportionate losses elsewhere.[132] Richelieu took advantage of the diversion of Imperial resources to fund a Swedish invasion of Germany, whose success forced the Spanish-Savoyard alliance to withdraw from Casale and sign the Treaty of Cherasco in April 1631. Nevers was confirmed as Duke of Mantua and although Richelieu's representative, Cardinal Mazarin, agreed to evacuate Pinerolo, it was later secretly returned under an agreement with Victor Amadeus I, Duke of Savoy. With the exception of the 1639 to 1642 Piedmontese Civil War, this secured the French position in Northern Italy for the next twenty years.[133]

 
Siege and capture of Casale Monferrato by French troops, 1630

After the outbreak of the Franco-Spanish War in 1635, Richelieu supported a renewed offensive by Victor Amadeus against Milan to tie down Spanish resources. These included an unsuccessful attack on Valenza in 1635, plus minor victories at Tornavento and Mombaldone.[134] However, the anti-Habsburg alliance in Northern Italy fell apart when first Charles of Mantua died in September 1637, then Victor Amadeus in October, whose death led to a struggle for control of the Savoyard state between his widow Christine of France and brothers, Thomas and Maurice.[135]

In 1639, their quarrel erupted into open warfare, with France backing Christine and Spain the two brothers, and resulted in the Siege of Turin. One of the most famous military events of the 17th century, at one stage it featured no less than three different armies besieging each other. However, the revolts in Portugal and Catalonia forced the Spanish to cease operations in Italy and the war was settled on terms favourable to Christine and France.[136]

In 1647, a French-backed rebellion succeeded in temporarily overthrowing Spanish rule in Naples. The Spanish quickly crushed the insurrection and restored their rule over all of southern Italy, defeating multiple French expeditionary forces sent to back the rebels.[137] However, it exposed the weakness of Spanish rule in Italy and the alienation of the local elites from Madrid; in 1650, the governor of Milan wrote that as well as widespread dissatisfaction in the south, the only one of the Italian states that could be relied on was the Duchy of Parma.[138]

Catalonia edit

Throughout the 1630s, tax increases levied to pay for the war led to protests throughout Spanish territories, which in 1640 resulted in revolts: first in Portugal, then in the Principality of Catalonia. Backed by France as part of Richelieu's 'war by diversion', in January 1641 the rebels proclaimed a Catalan Republic.[139] The Madrid government quickly assembled an army of 26,000 men to crush the revolt, which defeated the rebels at Martorell on 23 January 1641. The French now persuaded the Catalan Courts to recognise Louis XIII as Count of Barcelona, and ruler of Catalonia.[99]

On 26 January, a combined French-Catalan force routed a larger Spanish army at Montjuïc and secured Barcelona. However, the rebels soon found the new French administration differed little from the old, turning the war into a three-sided contest between the Franco-Catalan elite, the rural peasantry, and the Spanish. There was little serious fighting after France took control of Perpignan and Roussillon, establishing the current-day Franco-Spanish border in the Pyrenees. The revolt ended in 1651 with the Spanish capture of Barcelona.[140]

Outside Europe edit

 
The Iberian Union; Spain's inability to protect Portuguese interests in the 1602 to 1663 Dutch–Portuguese War was a key factor in the 1640 Portuguese Restoration War

In 1580, Philip II of Spain also became ruler of the Portuguese Empire, creating the Iberian Union; long-standing commercial rivals, the 1602 to 1663 Dutch–Portuguese War was an offshoot of the Dutch fight for independence from Spain. The Portuguese dominated the trans-Atlantic economy known as the Triangular trade, in which slaves were transported from West Africa and Portuguese Angola to work on plantations in Portuguese Brazil, which exported sugar and tobacco to Europe. Known by Dutch historians as the 'Great Design", control of this trade would not only be extremely profitable but also deprive the Spanish of funds needed to finance their war in the Netherlands.[141]

In 1621, the Dutch West India Company was formed to achieve this, and a Dutch fleet captured the Brazilian port of Salvador, Bahia in 1624. After it was retaken by the Portuguese in 1625, a second fleet established Dutch Brazil in 1630, which was not returned until 1654.[142] In 1641, the Dutch seized Portuguese slave trading hubs in Angola and São Tomé, with support from the kingdoms of Kongo and Ndongo,[143] whose position was threatened by Portuguese expansion.[144] Although those gains proved short-lived, the Dutch retained territories elsewhere, like the Cape Colony, as well as Portuguese trading posts on the Gold Coast, in Malacca, on the Malabar Coast, the Moluccas and Ceylon.[145]

Peace of Westphalia (1648) edit

 
Holy Roman Empire after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648

The Peace of Westphalia actually consisted of three separate agreements; the Peace of Münster between Spain and the Dutch Republic, the Treaty of Osnabrück between the Empire and Sweden, plus the Treaty of Münster between the Empire and France. Preliminary discussions began in 1642 but only became serious in 1646; a total of 109 delegations attended at one time or other, with talks split between Münster and Osnabrück. After the Swedes rejected Christian of Denmark as mediator, the negotiators finally agreed on Papal Legate Fabio Chigi and the Venetian envoy Alvise Contarini.[146]

The first to be signed on 30 January 1648, the Peace of Münster forms part of the Westphalia settlement since the Dutch Republic was still considered Imperial territory. Although it officially confirmed Dutch independence, the Imperial Diet did not formally accept it was no longer part of the Empire until 1728.[147] The Dutch were also given a monopoly over trade conducted through the Scheldt estuary, ensuring the commercial ascendancy of Amsterdam. Antwerp, capital of the Spanish Netherlands and previously the most important port in Northern Europe, would not recover until the late 19th century.[148]

The terms of the separate treaties with France and Sweden had first to be agreed by Ferdinand and the Imperial Estates. It has been argued they were a "major turning point in German and European...legal history", because they went beyond normal peace settlements and effected major constitutional and religious changes to the Empire itself.[149] Since they required changes to the structure and governance of the Empire, these negotiations were complex, with states like Saxony and Bavaria having very different views on desired outcomes. Ferdinand finally signed the Peace on 24 October, after a crushing French victory over Spain at Lens, and with Swedish troops on the verge of taking Prague.[150][151]

Key elements of the Peace were provisions confirming the autonomy of states within the Empire, including Ferdinand's acceptance of the supremacy of the Imperial Diet, and those seeking to prevent future religious conflict. Article 5 reconfirmed the Augsburg settlement, established 1624 as the basis, or "Normaljahr", for determining the dominant religion of a state and guaranteed freedom of worship for religious minorities. Article 7 recognised Calvinism as a Reformed faith and removed the ius reformandi, the requirement that if a ruler changed his religion, his subjects had to follow suit. These terms did not apply to the hereditary lands of the Habsburg monarchy, such as Lower and Upper Austria.[152]

 
Signing of the Peace of Münster between Spain and the Dutch Republic, 30 January 1648.

In terms of territorial concessions, Brandenburg-Prussia received Farther Pomerania, and the bishoprics of Magdeburg, Halberstadt, Kammin, and Minden. Frederick's son Charles Louis regained the Lower Palatinate and became the eighth Imperial elector, although Bavaria kept the Upper Palatinate and its electoral vote.[147] Externally, Spain acknowledged the independence of the Dutch Republic, while the Emperor confirmed that of the Old Swiss Confederacy, effectively an autonomous part of the Empire since 1499. In Lorraine, the Three Bishoprics of Metz, Toul and Verdun, occupied by France since 1552, were formally ceded, as were the cities of the Décapole in Alsace, with the exception of Strasbourg and Mulhouse.[118] Sweden received an indemnity of five million thalers, the Imperial territories of Swedish Pomerania, and the Prince-bishoprics of Bremen and Verden, which also gave them a seat in the Imperial Diet.[153]

The Peace was later denounced by Pope Innocent X, who regarded the bishoprics ceded to France and Brandenburg as property of the Catholic church, and thus his to assign.[154] It also disappointed many exiles by accepting Catholicism as the dominant religion in Bohemia, Upper and Lower Austria, all of which were Protestant strongholds prior to 1618. Fighting did not end immediately, since demobilising over 200,000 soldiers was a complex business, and the last Swedish garrison did not leave Germany until 1654.[155] In addition, Mazarin insisted on excluding the Burgundian Circle from the treaty of Münster, allowing France to continue its campaign against Spain in the Low Countries, a war that continued until the 1659 Treaty of the Pyrenees. The political disintegration of Poland-Lithuania led to the 1655 to 1660 Second Northern War with Sweden, which also involved Denmark, Russia and Brandenburg, while two Swedish attempts to impose its control on the port of Bremen failed in 1654 and 1666.[156]

It has been argued the Peace established the principle known as Westphalian sovereignty, the idea of non-interference in domestic affairs by outside powers, although this has since been challenged. The process, or 'Congress' model, was adopted for negotiations at Aix-la-Chapelle in 1668, Nijmegen in 1678, and Ryswick in 1697; unlike the 19th century 'Congress' system, these were to end wars, rather than prevent them, so references to the 'balance of power' can be misleading.[157]

Human and financial cost of the war edit

The Thirty Years' War forms part of what historians sometimes call "The General Crisis" of the mid-17th century. This term refers to a period of sustained conflict and unrest in areas ranging from Ming China to the British Isles, Tsarist Russia and the Holy Roman Empire. In each of these, fighting combined with famine and disease inflicted severe losses on local civilian populations.[158] While the war certainly ranks as one of the worst of these events, 19th century German nationalists often exaggerated its impact to illustrate the dangers of a divided Germany.[159]

 
Population declines within Germany, 1618 to 1648
Note; Decline includes factors such as emigration from rural to more secure urban areas and does not equate to deaths
  33–66%
  >66%

Suggestions of up to 12 million deaths from a population of 18 million are no longer considered accurate. In addition, upper estimates of material losses are not supported by contemporary evidence, or in some cases exceed prewar tax records.[160] Regardless, modern commentators agree the war was a mortality disaster previously unknown in Europe. Estimates of total deaths range from 4.5 to 8 million, most incurred after 1630 when Sweden entered the war, the vast majority of which were civilian.[161]

Battles generally featured armies of around 13,000 to 20,000 each, one of the largest being Alte Veste in 1632 with a combined 70,000 to 85,000. Estimates of the total deployed by both sides within Germany range from an average of 80,000 to 100,000 from 1618 to 1626, peaking at 250,000 in 1632 and falling to under 160,000 by 1648.[6]

Casualty rates among those who actually did serve in the military could be extremely high. Of 230 men conscripted from the Swedish village of Bygdeå between 1621 and 1639, 215 are recorded as dead or missing, while another five returned home crippled.[14] Aggregating figures from known battles and sieges, historian Peter Wilson estimates those either killed or wounded in combat totalled around 450,000. Since research shows disease either killed or incapacitated two to three times that number, that would suggest military casualties ranged from 1.3 to 1.8 million dead or otherwise rendered unfit for service.[13] Although his methodology has been disputed, Pitirim Sorokin calculates an upper limit of 2,071,000 military casualties.[162]

Based on local records, military action accounted for less than 3% of civilian deaths, with the major causes being starvation (12%), bubonic plague (64%), typhus (4%), and dysentery (5%).[163] Although regular outbreaks of disease were common for decades prior to 1618, the conflict greatly accelerated their spread, due to the influx of soldiers from foreign countries, the shifting locations of battle fronts and displacement of rural populations into already crowded cities.[164] This was not restricted to Germany; disease carried by French and Imperial soldiers allegedly sparked the 1629–1631 Italian plague. Described as the "worst mortality crisis to affect Italy during the early modern period",[165] it resulted in some 280,000 deaths, with higher estimates of around 1 million.[166] Poor harvests throughout the 1630s and repeated plundering of the same areas led to widespread famine; contemporaries record people eating grass, or too weak to accept alms, while instances of cannibalism were common.[167]

The contemporary consensus is the population of the Holy Roman Empire declined from 18 to 20 million in 1600 to 11 to 13 million in 1650, and did not regain pre-war levels until 1750.[168] Nearly 50% of these losses appear to have been incurred during the first period of Swedish intervention from 1630 to 1635. The high mortality rate compared to the Wars of the Three Kingdoms in Britain may partly be due to the reliance of all sides on foreign mercenaries, often unpaid and required to live off the land.[169] Lack of a sense of 'shared community' resulted in atrocities such as the destruction of Magdeburg, in turn creating large numbers of refugees who were extremely susceptible to sickness and hunger. While flight saved lives in the short-term, in the long run it often proved catastrophic.[170]

 
Soldiers plundering a farm

In 1940, agrarian historian Günther Franz published a detailed analysis of regional data from across Germany covering the period from 1618 to 1648. Broadly confirmed by more recent work, he concluded "about 40% of the rural population fell victim to the war and epidemics; in the cities,...33%".[17] These figures can be misleading, since Franz calculated the absolute decline in pre and post-war populations, or 'total demographic loss'. They therefore include factors unrelated to death or disease, such as permanent migration to areas outside the Empire or lower birthrates, a common but less obvious impact of extended warfare.[171] There were also wide regional variations; some areas in Northwest Germany were relatively peaceful after 1630 and experienced almost no population loss, while those of Mecklenburg, Pomerania and Württemberg fell by nearly 50%.[160]

Although some towns may have overstated their losses to avoid taxes, individual records confirm serious declines; from 1620 to 1650, the population of Munich fell from 22,000 to 17,000, that of Augsburg from 48,000 to 21,000.[172] The financial impact is less clear; while the war caused short-term economic dislocation, especially in the period 1618 to 1623, overall it accelerated existing changes in trading patterns. It does not appear to have reversed ongoing macro-economic trends, such as the reduction of price differentials between regional markets, and a greater degree of market integration across Europe.[173] The death toll may have improved living standards for the survivors; one study shows wages in Germany increased by 40% in real terms between 1603 and 1652.[174]

Military developments edit

Innovations made by Gustavus in particular are considered part of the tactical evolution known as the "Military Revolution", although whether tactics or technology were at the heart of these changes is still debated.[175] Introduced by Maurice of Orange in the 1590s, these sought to increase infantry firepower by moving from massed columns to line formation. Gustavus further reduced the ten ranks used by Maurice to six, and increased the proportion of musketeers to pikemen. He also enhanced their firepower by providing each unit with quick-firing light artillery pieces on either flank. The best example of their tactical application was in the victory over Tilly's traditionally organised army at Breitenfeld in September 1631.[176]

 
Breitenfeld 1631; Tilly's army (left) are deployed two companies deep, the Swedes (right) just one company deep

Line formations were often harder to co-ordinate, as demonstrated by the victory of the supposedly obsolete Spanish tercios over the "new model" Swedish army at Nördlingen in 1634.[177] They lacked the offensive impact of columns, and Gustavus therefore compensated by requiring his cavalry to be far more aggressive, often employing his Finnish light cavalry or Hakkapeliitta as shock troops. He also used columns on occasion, including the failed assault at Alte Veste in September 1632. The line versus column debate continued into the early 19th century, and both were employed during the Napoleonic Wars.[178]

Such tactics needed professional soldiers, who could retain formation, reload and fire disciplined salvos while under attack, as well as the use of standardised weapons. The first half of the 17th century saw the publication of numerous instruction manuals showing the movements required, thirty-two for pikemen and forty-two for musketeers.[179] Training an infantryman to operate in this way was estimated as six months, although in reality many went into battle with far less experience.[180] It also placed greater responsibility on junior officers who provided the vital links between senior commanders and the tactical unit. One of the first military schools designed to produce such men was set up at Siegen in 1616 and others soon followed.[180]

On the other hand, strategic thinking failed to develop at the same pace. Historian Jeremy Black claims most campaigns were "inconclusive" and almost exclusively concerned with control of territory, rather than focused strategic objectives. The lack of connection between military and diplomatic goals helps explain why the war lasted so long and why peace proved so elusive.[181] There were a number of reasons for this. When the war ended in 1648, the Franco-Swedish alliance still had over 84,000 men under arms on Imperial territory, their opponents around 77,000. While relatively small in contemporary terms, such numbers were unprecedented at the time.[182] With the possible exception of Spain, the 17th century state could not support armies of this size, forcing them to depend on "contributions" levied or extorted from areas they passed through.[183]

Obtaining supplies thus became the limiting factor in campaign planning, an issue that grew more acute later in the war when much of the Empire had already been fought over. Even when adequate provisions could be gathered, the next problem was getting them to the troops; to ensure security of supply, commanders were forced to stay close to rivers, then the primary means of bulk transportation, and could not move too far from their main bases.[184] Many historians argue feeding the troops became an objective in itself, unconnected to diplomatic goals and largely uncontrolled by their central governments. The result was "armies increasingly devoid of intelligible political objectives...degenerating into travelling armed mobs, living in a symbiotic relationship with the countryside they passed through".[185] This often conflicted with the political aims of their employers; the devastation inflicted in 1628 and 1629 by Imperial troops on Brandenburg and Saxony, both nominally their allies, was a major factor in their subsequent support for Swedish intervention.[186]

Social and cultural impact edit

It has been suggested the breakdown of social order caused by the war was often more significant and longer lasting than the immediate damage.[187] The collapse of local government created landless peasants, who banded together to protect themselves from the soldiers of both sides, and led to widespread rebellions in Upper Austria, Bavaria and Brandenburg. Soldiers devastated one area before moving on, leaving large tracts of land empty of people and changing the ecosystem. Food shortages were worsened by an explosion in the rodent population, while Bavaria was overrun by wolves in the winter of 1638, and its crops destroyed by packs of wild pigs the following spring.[188]

 
A peasant begs for mercy in front of his burning farm; by the 1630s, being caught in the open by soldiers from either side was "tantamount to a death sentence".[164]

Contemporaries spoke of a 'frenzy of despair' as people sought to make sense of the relentless and often random bloodshed unleashed by the war. Attributed by religious authorities to divine retribution for sin, attempts to identify a supernatural cause led to a series of witch-hunts, beginning in Franconia in 1626 and quickly spreading to other parts of Germany.[189] They began in the Bishopric of Würzburg, an area with a history of such events going back to 1616 and now re-ignited by Bishop von Ehrenberg, a devout Catholic eager to assert the church's authority in his territories. By the time he died in 1631, over 900 people from all levels of society had been executed.[190]

The Bamberg witch trials, held in the nearby Bishopric of Bamberg from 1626 to 1631, claimed over one thousand lives; in 1629, 274 died in the Eichstätt witch trials, plus another 50 in the adjacent Duchy of Palatinate-Neuburg.[191] Elsewhere, persecution followed Imperial military success, expanding into Baden and the Palatinate following their reconquest by Tilly, then into the Rhineland.[192] However, the extent to which they were symptomatic of the impact of the conflict on society is debatable, since many took place in areas relatively untouched by the war. Concerned their brutality would discredit the Counter-Reformation, Ferdinand ensured active persecution largely ended by 1630.[193]

Although the war caused immense destruction, it has also been credited with sparking a revival in German literature, including the creation of societies dedicated to "purging of foreign elements" from the German language.[194] One example is Simplicius Simplicissimus, often suggested as one of the earliest examples of the picaresque novel; written by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen in 1668, it includes a realistic portrayal of a soldier's life based on his own experiences, many of which are verified by other sources.[195] Other less famous examples include the diaries of Peter Hagendorf, a participant in the Sack of Magdeburg whose descriptions of the everyday brutalities of the war remain compelling.[196]

For German, and to a lesser extent Czech writers, the war was remembered as a defining moment of national trauma, the 18th century poet and playwright Friedrich Schiller being one of many to use it in their work. Variously known as the 'Great German War,' 'Great War' or 'Great Schism', for 19th and early 20th century German nationalists it showed the dangers of a divided Germany and was used to justify the creation of the German Empire in 1871, as well as the Greater Germanic Reich envisaged by the Nazis.[197] Bertolt Brecht used it as the backdrop for his 1939 anti-war play Mother Courage and Her Children, while its enduring cultural resonance is illustrated by the novel Tyll; written by Austro-German author Daniel Kehlmann and also set during the war, it was nominated for the 2020 Booker Prize.[198]

Political consequences edit

 
Europe after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648

The Peace reconfirmed "German liberties", ending Habsburg attempts to convert the Holy Roman Empire into a more centralised state similar to Spain. Over the next 50 years, Bavaria, Brandenburg-Prussia, Saxony and others increasingly pursued their own policies, while Sweden gained a permanent foothold in the Empire. Despite these setbacks, the Habsburg lands suffered less from the war than many others and became a far more coherent bloc with the absorption of Bohemia, and restoration of Catholicism throughout their territories.[199]

 
Swedish sovereignty over Western Pomerania (in blue) was confirmed in 1653, and finally ended only in 1815

By laying the foundations of the modern nation state, Westphalia changed the relationship between subjects and their rulers. Previously, many had overlapping, sometimes conflicting, political and religious allegiances; they were now understood to be subject first and foremost to the laws and edicts of their respective state authority, not the claims of any other entity, religious or secular. This made it easier to levy national forces of significant size, loyal to their state and its leader; one lesson learned from Wallenstein and the Swedish invasion was the need for their own permanent armies, and Germany as a whole became a far more militarised society.[200]

For Sweden, the benefits ultimately proved short-lived. Unlike French gains which were incorporated into France, Swedish territories remained part of the Empire, and they became members of the Lower and Upper Saxon kreis. While this provided both seats and influence in the Imperial Diet, it also brought Sweden into direct conflict with Brandenburg-Prussia and Saxony, their competitors in Pomerania. The income from their German possessions was relatively minor, and although parts of Pomerania remained Swedish until 1815, much of it was ceded to Prussia in 1679 and 1720.[201]

France arguably gained more from the conflict than any other power, and by 1648, most of Richelieu's objectives had been achieved. These included separation of the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs, expansion of the French frontier into the Empire, and an end to Spanish military supremacy in Northern Europe.[202] Although the Franco-Spanish war continued until 1659, Westphalia allowed Louis XIV to begin replacing Spain as the predominant European power.[203]

While religion remained a divisive political issue in many countries, the Thirty Years' War is arguably the last major European conflict where it was a primary driver. Future conflicts were either internal, such as the Camisards revolt in South-Western France, or relatively minor, like the 1712 Toggenburg War.[204] The war created the outlines of a Europe that persisted until 1815 and beyond, most significantly the nation-state of France, along with the start of a split between Germany and a separate Austro-Hungarian bloc.[201]

Notes edit

  1. ^ States that fought against the Emperor at some point between 1618 and 1635.
  2. ^ States that allied at some point between 1618 and 1635.
  3. ^ Since officers were paid for each man "present", the numbers Reported frequently differed from Actual, or those available for duty. Variances between Reported and Actual are estimated as averaging up to 25% for the Dutch, 35% for the French and 50% for the Spanish.[3] Most battles of the period were fought between opposing forces of 13,000 to 20,000 men, so the numbers reflect Maximum at any one time, and exclude citizen militia, who often formed a large proportion of garrisons.
  4. ^ These figures show numbers "In Service of", rather than ethnicity, since all armies were multinational. An estimated 60,000 Scottish, English or Irish individuals fought on one side or the other during the period, while a high proportion were German. Based on an analysis of a mass grave discovered in 2011, a high proportion of "Swedish" forces at Lützen were ethnic Germans, while less than 50% even came from Scandinavia.[4]
  5. ^ Approved 120,000, actual 80,000 to 90,000[9]
  6. ^ 1640 figures for the Army of Flanders, when it was at its maximum strength; these are Reported numbers, so as mentioned elsewhere, the actual number of soldiers would have been considerably lower.[11] The Spanish army officially had more than 200,000 soldiers in 1640, but most were second line troops in garrisons elsewhere in Europe, not facing the Dutch.[12]
  7. ^ Wilson estimates a total of 450,000 combat deaths on all sides, the vast majority of whom were German. By one calculation, four times as many Germans died fighting for Sweden as Swedes, and so casualties are referred to as being "In service", rather than by nationality.[13]
  8. ^ France lost another 200,000 to 300,000 killed or wounded in the related Franco-Spanish War.[15]
  9. ^ Wilson estimates that three soldiers died of disease for every one killed in combat.[13]
  10. ^ German: Dreißigjähriger Krieg, pronounced [ˈdʁaɪ̯sɪçˌjɛːʁɪɡɐ kʁiːk]
  11. ^ Some commentators argue it began with the War of the Jülich Succession in 1609.
  12. ^ As explained below, the rulers of Denmark-Norway and Sweden also held territories within the Empire, which allowed them to intervene in Imperial affairs [23]
  13. ^ Although there were nearly 1,800 separate Imperial Estates, only 300 were represented in the Imperial Diet or Circles. Most of the remaining 1,500 were Imperial Knights or individual members of the lower nobility, who were excluded.[25]
  14. ^ Its official title remains Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg
  15. ^ As well as being brother-in-law to Frederick of the Palatinate, James I was also linked to Christian IV of Denmark, having married his elder sister Anne of Denmark (1574–1619).[57]
  16. ^ While the death of Gustavus was greeted with dismay by most European Protestants, Richelieu was more ambivalent. The two were increasingly at odds over strategic objectives, and contemporary rumours claimed Richelieu was involved in the king's death, although there is no evidence for this.[90]
  17. ^ Not to be confused with Freiberg in Saxony.

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  • Wilson, Peter H. (2018). Lützen: Great Battles Series. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199642540.
  • Wilson, Peter (2008). "The Causes of the Thirty Years War 1618–48". The English Historical Review. 123 (502): 554–586. doi:10.1093/ehr/cen160. JSTOR 20108541.
  • Zaller, Robert (1974). "'Interest of State': James I and the Palatinate". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 6 (2): 144–175. doi:10.2307/4048141. JSTOR 4048141.

Further reading edit

  • Åberg, A. (1973). "The Swedish Army from Lützen to Narva". In Roberts, M. (ed.). Sweden's Age of Greatness, 1632–1718. St. Martin's Press.
  • Benecke, Gerhard (1978). Germany in the Thirty Years War. St. Martin's Press.
  • Dukes, Paul, ed. (1995). Muscovy and Sweden in the Thirty Years' War 1630–1635. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45139-0.
  • Grosjean, Alexia (2003). An Unofficial Alliance: Scotland and Sweden, 1569–1654. Leiden: Brill.
  • Kamen, Henry (1968). "The Economic and Social Consequences of the Thirty Years' War". Past and Present. 39 (39): 44–61. doi:10.1093/past/39.1.44. JSTOR 649855.
  • Langer, Herbert (1980). The Thirty Years' War (1990 ed.). Dorset Press. ISBN 978-0-88029-262-7.
  • Lynn, John A. (1999). The Wars of Louis XIV: 1667–1714. Harlow, England: Longman.
  • Murdoch, Steve (2001). Scotland and the Thirty Years' War, 1618–1648. Brill.
  • Polišenský, J. V. (1954). "The Thirty Years' War". Past and Present. 6 (6): 31–43. doi:10.1093/past/6.1.31. JSTOR 649813.
  • Polišenský, J. V. (1968). "The Thirty Years' War and the Crises and Revolutions of Seventeenth-Century Europe". Past and Present. 39 (39): 34–43. doi:10.1093/past/39.1.34. JSTOR 649854.
  • Polisensky, Joseph (2001). "A Note on Scottish Soldiers in the Bohemian War, 1619–1622". In Murdoch, Steve (ed.). A Note on Scottish Soldiers in the Bohemian War, 1619–1622 in 'Scotland and the Thirty Years' war, 1618–1648. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-12086-0.
  • Prinzing, Friedrich (1916). Epidemics Resulting from Wars. Clarendon Press.
  • Rabb, Theodore K. (1962). "The Effects of the Thirty Years' War on the German Economy". Journal of Modern History. 34 (1): 40–51. doi:10.1086/238995. JSTOR 1874817. S2CID 154709047.
  • Reilly, Pamela (1959). "Friedrich von Spee's Belief in Witchcraft: Some Deductions from the 'Cautio Criminalis'". The Modern Language Review. 54 (1): 51–55. doi:10.2307/3720833. JSTOR 3720833.
  • Ringmar, Erik (1996). Identity, Interest and Action: A Cultural Explanation of the Swedish Intervention in the Thirty Years War (2008 ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-02603-1.
  • Roberts, Michael (1958). Gustavus Adolphus: A History of Sweden, 1611–1632. Longmans, Green and Co.
  • Schiller, Frederic (1799). The History of the Thirty Years War in Germany. London, printed for W. Miller. in 2 vols; translation by William Blaquiere.
  • Steinberg, S. H. (1966). The 'Thirty Years War' and the Conflict for European Hegemony 1600–1660. Edward Arnold.
  • Theibault, John (1997). "The Demography of the Thirty Years War Re-revisited: Günther Franz and his Critics". German History. 15 (1): 1–21. doi:10.1093/gh/15.1.1.
  • Ward, A.W. (1902). The Cambridge Modern History. Vol. 4: The Thirty Years War. Cambridge University Press. from the original on 28 June 2011. Retrieved 16 September 2017.

thirty, years, other, uses, thirty, years, disambiguation, longest, most, destructive, conflicts, european, history, lasting, from, 1618, 1648, fought, primarily, central, europe, estimated, million, soldiers, civilians, died, result, battle, famine, disease, . For other uses see Thirty Years War disambiguation The Thirty Years War j was one of the longest and most destructive conflicts in European history lasting from 1618 to 1648 Fought primarily in Central Europe an estimated 4 5 to 8 million soldiers and civilians died as a result of battle famine or disease while parts of present day Germany reported population declines of over 50 19 Related conflicts include the Eighty Years War the War of the Mantuan Succession the Franco Spanish War the Torstenson War the Dutch Portuguese War and the Portuguese Restoration War Thirty Years WarPart of the European wars of religion and French Habsburg rivalryLeft to right The Defenestration of Prague 23 May 1618 The death of Gustavus Adolphus at Lutzen 16 November 1632 Dutch warships prior to the Battle of the Downs 21 October 1639 The Battle of Rocroi 19 May 1643 Date23 May 1618 24 October 1648 30 years 5 months and 1 day LocationCentral EuropeResultPeace of WestphaliaTerritorialchangesFrance annexes the Decapole and Sundgau 1 Sweden gains Wismar Wollin Western Pomerania and Bremen Verden 2 Brandenburg Prussia obtains Eastern Pomerania 2 Old Swiss Confederacy gains independence from the Holy Roman EmpireBelligerentsAnti Imperial alliance prior to 1635 a Kingdom of Bohemia Sweden Palatinate Savoy Transylvania Dutch Republic Denmark Norway Heilbronn League Hesse Kassel Brandenburg Prussia SaxonyImperial alliance prior to 1635 b Habsburg Monarchy Spanish Empire Bavaria Catholic LeaguePost 1635 Peace of Prague France Sweden Dutch Republic Hesse KasselPost 1635 Peace of Prague Holy Roman Empire Spanish Empire Denmark NorwayCommanders and leadersGustavus Adolphus Oxenstierna Baner Torstensson Wrangel Alexander Leslie Louis XIII Richelieu Mazarin Grand Conde Turenne Maurice of Orange Frederick Henry Maarten Tromp Frederick V von Mansfeld Jindrich Thurn Christian of Anhalt Christian IV Christian WIlliam John George I Bernard of Saxe Weimar Christian of Brunswick Gabriel Bethlen George WilliamFerdinand II Ferdinand III Wallenstein X Gallas Archduke Leopold von Hatzfeldt von Holzappel Piccolomini Philip IV Olivares Cordoba Spinola Cardinal Infante Ferdinand Maximilian of Bavaria Tilly Pappenheim Charles of Lorraine von Mercy Montecuccoli von WerthStrengthMaximum actual c d 100 000 140 000 Swedish 5 6 27 000 Danes 1626 7 70 000 80 000 French 8 80 000 90 000 Dutch 9 e Maximum actual110 000 Imperial 10 90 000 Spanish 11 f 20 500 Bavarians 12 Casualties and lossesCombat deaths g 110 000 in Swedish service 14 80 000 in French service 15 h 30 000 in Danish service 15 50 000 other 15 Combat deaths 120 000 in Imperial service 15 30 000 in Bavarian service 15 30 000 other 15 Military deaths from disease 700 000 1 350 000 i Total civilian dead 3 500 000 6 500 000 16 Total dead 4 500 000 8 000 000 17 18 The war was traditionally viewed as a continuation of the religious conflict initiated by the 16th century Reformation within the Holy Roman Empire The 1555 Peace of Augsburg attempted to resolve this by dividing the Empire into Catholic and Lutheran states but over the next 50 years the expansion of Protestantism beyond these boundaries destabilised the settlement However while differences over religion and Imperial authority were important factors in causing the war most contemporary commentators suggest its scope and extent were driven by the contest for European dominance between Habsburg ruled Spain and Austria and the French House of Bourbon 20 Its outbreak is generally traced to 1618 k when Emperor Ferdinand II was deposed as king of Bohemia and replaced by the Protestant Frederick V of the Palatinate Although Imperial forces quickly suppressed the Bohemian Revolt Frederick s participation expanded the fighting into the Palatinate whose strategic importance drew in the Dutch Republic and Spain then engaged in the Eighty Years War Rulers like Christian IV of Denmark and Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden also held territories within the Empire giving them and other foreign powers an excuse to intervene The result was to turn an internal dynastic dispute into a broader European conflict The first phase from 1618 until 1635 was primarily a civil war between German members of the Holy Roman Empire with support from external powers After 1635 the empire became one theatre in a wider struggle between France supported by Sweden and Emperor Ferdinand III allied with Spain This concluded with the 1648 Peace of Westphalia whose provisions included greater autonomy within the empire for states like Bavaria and Saxony as well as acceptance of Dutch independence by Spain The conflict shifted the balance of power in favour of France and set the stage for the expansionist wars of Louis XIV which dominated Europe for the next sixty years Contents 1 Structural origins 2 Background 1556 to 1618 3 Phase I 1618 to 1625 3 1 Bohemian Revolt 3 2 Palatinate Campaign 3 3 Danish intervention 1625 1629 3 4 Swedish intervention 1630 to 1634 4 Phase II French intervention 1635 to 1648 5 Conflict outside Germany 5 1 Northern Italy 5 2 Catalonia 5 3 Outside Europe 6 Peace of Westphalia 1648 7 Human and financial cost of the war 8 Military developments 9 Social and cultural impact 10 Political consequences 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further readingStructural origins editThe 1552 Peace of Passau sought to resolve the issues that led to conflict between Protestants and Catholics within the Holy Roman Empire The 1555 Peace of Augsburg tried to prevent their recurrence by fixing boundaries between the two faiths using the principle of cuius regio eius religio This categorised individual states as either Lutheran then the most usual form of Protestantism or Catholic based on the religion of their ruler Other provisions protected substantial religious minorities in cities like Donauworth and confirmed Lutheran ownership of property taken from the Catholic Church since Passau 21 These agreements were undermined by the post 1555 expansion of Protestantism into areas previously designated as Catholic Another factor was the growth of Protestant faiths not recognised by Augsburg especially Calvinism which was viewed with hostility by both Lutherans and Catholics 22 The Peace of Augsburg also gave individual rulers within the empire greater political autonomy and control over the religion practised in their domains while weakening central authority Conflict over economic and political objectives frequently superseded religion with Lutheran Saxony Denmark Norway and Sweden l competing with each other and Calvinist Brandenburg over the Baltic trade 24 Managing these issues was hampered by the fragmented nature of the empire Its representative institutions included 300 Imperial Estates distributed across Germany the Low Countries Northern Italy and present day France m These ranged in size and importance from the seven prince electors who voted for the Holy Roman Emperor down to prince bishoprics and Imperial cities like Hamburg n Each also belonged to a regional grouping or Imperial circle which primarily focused on defence and operated as autonomous bodies Above all of these was the Imperial Diet which only assembled on an irregular basis and then largely served as a forum for discussion rather than legislation 26 Although in theory emperors were elected the position had been held by the House of Habsburg since 1440 The largest single landowner within the Holy Roman Empire they controlled lands containing over eight million subjects including Austria Bohemia and Hungary 27 The Habsburgs also ruled the Spanish Empire until 1556 when Charles V divided the two empires between different branches of the family This bond was reinforced by frequent inter marriage while Spain retained Imperial territories such as the Spanish Netherlands Milan and Franche Comte Although these links meant the Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs often worked together their objectives did not always align Spain was a global maritime superpower whose possessions stretched from Europe to the Philippines and much of the Americas In contrast Austria was a land based power focused on ensuring their pre eminence within Germany and securing their eastern border against the Ottoman Empire 28 Before Augsburg unity of religion compensated for lack of strong central authority once removed it presented opportunities for those who sought to further weaken it These included ambitious Imperial states like Lutheran Saxony and Catholic Bavaria as well as France confronted by Habsburg lands on its borders to the North South and along the Pyrenees Since many foreign rulers were also Imperial princes divisions within the empire drew in external powers like Christian IV of Denmark who joined the war in 1625 as Duke of Holstein Gottorp 23 Background 1556 to 1618 edit nbsp Map of the Thirty Years War Disputes occasionally resulted in full scale conflict like the 1583 to 1588 Cologne War caused when its ruler converted to Calvinism More common were events such as the 1606 Battle of the Flags in Donauworth when riots broke out after the Lutheran majority blocked a Catholic religious procession Emperor Rudolf approved intervention by the Catholic Maximilian of Bavaria In return he was allowed to annex the town and as agreed at Augsburg the official religion changed from Lutheran to Catholic 29 When the Imperial Diet opened in February 1608 both Lutherans and Calvinists sought formal re confirmation of the Augsburg settlement In return the Habsburg heir Archduke Ferdinand required the immediate restoration of all property taken from the Catholic Church since 1555 rather than the previous practice whereby the court ruled case by case This demand threatened all Protestants paralysed the diet and removed the perception of Imperial neutrality 30 Loss of faith in central authority meant towns and rulers began strengthening their fortifications and armies outside travellers often commented on the growing militarisation of Germany in this period 31 In 1608 Frederick IV Elector Palatine formed the Protestant Union and Maximilian responded by setting up the Catholic League in July 1609 Both were created to support the dynastic ambitions of their leaders but combined with the 1609 to 1614 War of the Julich Succession the result was to increase tensions throughout the empire 32 Some historians who see the war as primarily a European conflict argue Julich marks its beginning with Spain and Austria backing the Catholic candidate France and the Dutch Republic the Protestant 33 nbsp The Spanish Road Purple Spanish dependencies Green Ruled by Austria Brown Ruled by Spain External powers became involved in what was an internal German dispute due to the imminent expiry of the 1609 Twelve Years Truce which suspended the Eighty Years War between Spain and the Dutch Republic Before restarting hostilities Ambrosio Spinola commander in the Spanish Netherlands needed to secure the Spanish Road an overland route connecting Habsburg possessions in Italy to Flanders This allowed him to move troops and supplies by road rather than sea where the Dutch navy was dominant by 1618 the only part not controlled by Spain ran through the Electoral Palatinate 34 Since Emperor Matthias had no surviving children in July 1617 Philip III of Spain agreed to support Ferdinand s election as king of Bohemia and Hungary In return Ferdinand made concessions to Spain in Northern Italy and Alsace and agreed to support their offensive against the Dutch Doing so required his election as emperor which was not guaranteed Maximilian of Bavaria who opposed the increase of Spanish influence in an area he considered his own tried to create a coalition with Saxony and the Palatinate to support his candidacy 35 Another option was Frederick V Elector Palatine a Calvinist who succeeded his father in 1610 and in 1613 married Elizabeth Stuart daughter of James I of England Four of the electors were Catholic and three were Protestant if this balance changed it would potentially result in the election of a Protestant emperor When Ferdinand became king of Bohemia in 1617 he also gained control of its electoral vote however his conservative Catholicism made him unpopular with the predominantly Protestant nobility who were also concerned about the erosion of their rights These factors combined to bring about the Bohemian Revolt in May 1618 36 Phase I 1618 to 1625 editBohemian Revolt edit Main article Bohemian Revolt nbsp Winter s King Frederick V of the Palatinate whose acceptance of the Bohemian Crown sparked the conflict Ferdinand once claimed he would rather see his lands destroyed than tolerate heresy within them Less than 18 months after taking control of Styria in 1595 he had eliminated Protestantism in what had been a stronghold of the Reformation 37 Absorbed by their war in the Netherlands his Spanish relatives preferred to avoid antagonising Protestants elsewhere They recognised the dangers associated with Ferdinand s fervent Catholicism but supported his claim due to the lack of alternatives 38 On being elected king of Bohemia in May 1617 Ferdinand reconfirmed Protestant religious freedoms but his record in Styria led to the suspicion he was only awaiting a chance to overturn them These concerns were heightened after a series of legal disputes over property were all decided in favour of the Catholic Church In May 1618 Protestant nobles led by Count Thurn met in Prague Castle with Ferdinand s two Catholic representatives Vilem Slavata and Jaroslav Borzita In what became known as the Third Defenestration of Prague both men were thrown out of the castle windows along with their secretary Filip Fabricius although all three survived 39 Thurn established a Protestant dominated government in Bohemia while unrest expanded into Silesia and the Habsburg heartlands of Lower and Upper Austria where much of the nobility was also Protestant Losing control of these threatened the entire Habsburg state while Bohemia was one of the most prosperous areas of the Empire and its electoral vote crucial to ensuring Ferdinand succeeded Matthias as Emperor The combination meant their recapture was vital for the Austrian Habsburgs but chronic financial weakness left them dependent on Maximilian and Spain for the resources needed to achieve this 40 Spanish involvement inevitably drew in the Dutch and potentially France although the strongly Catholic Louis XIII of France faced his own Protestant rebels at home and refused to support them elsewhere The revolt also provided opportunities for external opponents of the Habsburgs including the Ottoman Empire and Savoy Funded by Frederick and Charles Emmanuel I Duke of Savoy a mercenary army under Ernst von Mansfeld was sent to support the Bohemian rebels Attempts by Maximilian and John George of Saxony to broker a negotiated solution ended when Matthias died in March 1619 since many believed the loss of his authority and influence had fatally damaged the Habsburgs 41 By mid June 1619 the Bohemian army under Thurn was outside Vienna and although Mansfeld s defeat by Imperial forces at Sablat forced him to return to Prague Ferdinand s position continued to worsen 42 Gabriel Bethlen Calvinist Prince of Transylvania invaded Hungary with Ottoman support although the Habsburgs persuaded them to avoid direct involvement this was helped when the Ottomans became involved in the 1620 Polish war followed by the 1623 to 1639 conflict with Persia 43 On 19 August the Bohemian Estates rescinded Ferdinand s 1617 election as king on the 26th they formally offered the crown to Frederick Two days later Ferdinand was elected emperor making war inevitable if Frederick accepted the Bohemian Crown Most of Frederick s advisors urged him to reject it as did the Duke of Savoy and his father in law James I 44 The exceptions included Christian of Anhalt and Maurice of Orange for whom conflict in Germany was a means to divert Spanish resources from the Netherlands The Dutch offered subsidies to Frederick and the Protestant Union helped raise loans for Bohemia and provided weapons and munitions 45 nbsp The Catholic counter offensive Tilly s campaign during the Bohemian revolt and Palatine campaign However wider European support failed to materialise largely due to lack of enthusiasm for removing a legally elected ruler regardless of religion 44 Although Frederick accepted the crown and entered Prague in October 1619 his support eroded over the next few months In July 1620 the Protestant Union proclaimed its neutrality while John George of Saxony backed Ferdinand in return for the cession of Lusatia and a guarantee of Lutheran rights in Bohemia Maximilian of Bavaria funded a combined Imperial Catholic League army led by Count Tilly and Charles of Bucquoy which pacified Upper and Lower Austria and occupied western Bohemia before marching on Prague Defeated by Tilly at the Battle of White Mountain in November 1620 the Bohemian army disintegrated and Frederick was forced to flee the country 46 Palatinate Campaign edit By abandoning Frederick the German princes hoped to restrict the dispute to Bohemia but Maximilian s dynastic ambitions made this impossible In the October 1619 Treaty of Munich Ferdinand transferred the Palatinate s electoral vote to Bavaria and allowed Maximilian to annex the Upper Palatinate 47 Many Protestant rulers had supported Ferdinand against Frederick because they objected to deposing the legally elected king of Bohemia On the same grounds they viewed Frederick s removal as an infringement of German liberties while for Catholics it presented an opportunity to regain lands and properties lost since 1555 The combination destabilised large parts of the Empire 48 nbsp Maximilian I Elector of Bavaria whose seizure of the Palatinate expanded the war At the same time the strategic importance of the Spanish Road to their war in the Netherlands and its proximity to the Palatinate drew in the Spanish When an army led by Cordoba occupied the Lower Palatinate in October 1619 James I responded to this attack on his son in law English naval forces were sent to threaten Spanish possessions in the Americas and the Mediterranean while James announced he would declare war if Spanish troops were not withdrawn by spring 1621 These actions were primarily designed to placate his opponents in Parliament who considered his pro Spanish policy a betrayal of the Protestant cause 49 However Spanish chief minister Olivares correctly interpreted them as an invitation to open negotiations and in return for an Anglo Spanish alliance offered to restore Frederick to his Rhineland possessions 50 Since Frederick s demand for full restitution of his lands and titles was incompatible with the Treaty of Munich hopes of a negotiated peace quickly evaporated Despite defeat in Bohemia Frederick s allies included Georg Friedrich of Baden and Christian of Brunswick while the Dutch provided him with military support after the Eighty Years War restarted in April 1621 and his father in law James funded an army of mercenaries under Mansfeld However their failure to co ordinate effectively led to a series of defeats by Spanish and Catholic League forces including Wimpfen in May 1622 and Hochst in June By November 1622 the Imperials controlled most of the Palatinate apart from Frankenthal which was held by a small English garrison under Sir Horace Vere The remnants of Mansfeld s army took refuge in the Dutch Republic as did Frederick who spent most of his time in The Hague until his death in November 1632 51 At a meeting of the Imperial Diet in February 1623 Ferdinand forced through provisions transferring Frederick s titles lands and electoral vote to Maximilian He did so with support from the Catholic League despite strong opposition from Protestant members as well as the Spanish The Palatinate was clearly lost in March James instructed Vere to surrender Frankenthal while Tilly s victory over Christian of Brunswick at Stadtlohn in August completed military operations 52 However Spanish and Dutch involvement in the campaign was a significant step in internationalising the war while Frederick s removal meant other Protestant princes began discussing armed resistance to preserve their own rights and territories 53 Danish intervention 1625 1629 edit nbsp nbsp Bremen nbsp Osnabruck nbsp Halberstadt nbsp Lubeck Duchy of Holstein nbsp Magdeburg nbsp Hamburg nbsp Lutter nbsp Verden nbsp Kassel nbsp Wolfenbuttelclass notpageimage Key locations 1625 1629 on the map of the modern federal state Lower Saxony With Saxony dominating the Upper Saxon Circle and Brandenburg the Lower both kreise had remained neutral during the campaigns in Bohemia and the Palatinate However Frederick s deposition in 1623 meant John George of Saxony and the Calvinist George William Elector of Brandenburg became concerned Ferdinand intended to reclaim formerly Catholic bishoprics currently held by Protestants These fears seemed confirmed when Tilly restored the Roman Catholic Diocese of Halberstadt in early 1625 54 As Duke of Holstein Christian IV was also a member of the Lower Saxon circle while the Danish economy relied on the Baltic trade and tolls from traffic through the Oresund 55 In 1621 Hamburg accepted Danish supervision while his son Frederick became joint administrator of Lubeck Bremen and Verden possession ensured Danish control of the Elbe and Weser rivers 56 Ferdinand had paid Albrecht von Wallenstein for his support against Frederick with estates confiscated from the Bohemian rebels and now contracted with him to conquer the north on a similar basis In May 1625 the Lower Saxony kreis elected Christian their military commander although not without resistance Saxony and Brandenburg viewed Denmark and Sweden as competitors and wanted to avoid either becoming involved in the empire Attempts to negotiate a peaceful solution failed as the conflict in Germany became part of the wider struggle between France and their Habsburg rivals in Spain and Austria 7 In the June 1624 Treaty of Compiegne France had agreed to subsidise the Dutch war against Spain for a minimum of three years while in the December 1625 Treaty of The Hague the Dutch and English agreed to finance Danish intervention in the Empire o Hoping to create a wider coalition against Ferdinand the Dutch invited France Sweden Savoy and the Republic of Venice to join but it was overtaken by events 58 In early 1626 Cardinal Richelieu main architect of the alliance faced a new Huguenot rebellion at home and in the March Treaty of Monzon France withdrew from Northern Italy re opening the Spanish Road 59 nbsp Danish intervention Dutch and English subsidies enabled Christian to devise an ambitious three part campaign plan while he led the main force down the Weser Mansfeld would attack Wallenstein in Magdeburg supported by forces led by Christian of Brunswick and Maurice of Hesse Kassel The advance quickly fell apart Mansfeld was defeated at Dessau Bridge in April and when Maurice refused to support him Christian of Brunswick fell back on Wolfenbuttel where he died of disease shortly after The Danes were comprehensively beaten at Lutter in August and Mansfeld s army dissolved following his death in November 60 Many of Christian s German allies such as Hesse Kassel and Saxony had little interest in replacing Imperial domination with Danish while few of the subsidies agreed to by the Treaty of The Hague were ever paid Charles I of England allowed Christian to recruit up to 9 000 Scottish mercenaries but they took time to arrive and while able to slow Wallenstein s advance were insufficient to stop him 61 By the end of 1627 Wallenstein occupied Mecklenburg Pomerania and Jutland and began making plans to construct a fleet capable of challenging Danish control of the Baltic He was supported by Spain for whom it provided an opportunity to open another front against the Dutch 62 On 13 May 1628 his deputy von Arnim besieged Stralsund the only port with facilities large enough to build this fleet However this threat led Gustavus Adolphus to send several thousand Scots and Swedish troops to Stralsund commanded by Alexander Leslie who was also appointed governor 63 Von Arnim was forced to lift the siege on 4 August but three weeks later Christian suffered another defeat at Wolgast He began negotiations with Wallenstein who despite his recent victories was concerned by the prospect of Swedish intervention and thus anxious to make peace 64 nbsp Albrecht von Wallenstein achieved great military success for the Empire but his power threatened both Ferdinand and the German princes With Austrian resources stretched by the outbreak of the War of the Mantuan Succession Wallenstein persuaded Ferdinand to agree with relatively lenient terms in the June 1629 Treaty of Lubeck Christian retained his German possessions of Schleswig and Holstein in return for relinquishing Bremen and Verden and abandoning support for the German Protestants While Denmark kept Schleswig and Holstein until 1864 this effectively ended its reign as the predominant Nordic state 65 Once again the methods used to obtain victory explain why the war failed to end Ferdinand paid Wallenstein by letting him confiscate estates extort ransoms from towns and allowing his men to plunder the lands they passed through regardless of whether they belonged to allies or opponents In early 1628 Ferdinand deposed the hereditary Duke of Mecklenburg and appointed Wallenstein in his place an act which united all German princes in opposition regardless of religion This unity was undermined by Maximilian of Bavaria s desire to retain the Palatinate as a result the Catholic League argued only for a return to the position prevailing pre 1627 while Protestants wanted that of 1618 66 Made overconfident by success in March 1629 Ferdinand passed an Edict of Restitution which required all lands taken from the Catholic church after 1555 to be returned While technically legal politically it was extremely unwise since doing so would alter nearly every single state boundary in North and Central Germany deny the existence of Calvinism and restore Catholicism in areas where it had not been a significant presence for nearly a century Well aware none of the princes involved would agree Ferdinand used the device of an Imperial edict once again asserting his right to alter laws without consultation This new assault on German liberties ensured continuing opposition and undermined his previous success 67 At the same time his Spanish allies were reluctant to antagonise German Protestants as their war in the Spanish Netherlands had now shifted in favour of the Dutch Republic The financial predicament of the Spanish Crown steadily deteriorated in the 1620s particularly after the Dutch West India Company captured their treasure fleet at Matanzas in 1628 The War of the Mantuan Succession further diverted Spanish resources from the Netherlands 68 while the loss of s Hertogenbosch to the Dutch Army under Frederick Henry in 1629 caused dismay in Madrid 69 Swedish intervention 1630 to 1634 edit Main article Swedish intervention in the Thirty Years War nbsp Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden known as the Lion of the North at the Battle of Breitenfeld in 1631 From 1626 to 1629 Gustavus was engaged in a war with Poland Lithuania ruled by his Catholic cousin Sigismund who also claimed the Swedish throne and had Imperial support Once this conflict ended and with only a few minor states like Hesse Kassel still openly opposing the Emperor Gustavus became an obvious ally for Richelieu 70 In September 1629 the latter helped negotiate the Truce of Altmark between Sweden and Poland freeing Gustavus to enter the war Partly a genuine desire to support his Protestant co religionists like Christian he also wanted to maximise his share of the Baltic trade that provided much of Sweden s income 71 Following failed negotiations with the Emperor Gustavus landed in Pomerania in June 1630 with nearly 18 000 Swedish troops Using Stralsund as a bridgehead he marched south along the Oder towards Stettin and coerced Bogislaw XIV Duke of Pomerania into agreeing an alliance which secured his interests in Pomerania against his rival Sigismund 72 As a result the Poles turned their attention to Russia initiating the 1632 to 1634 Smolensk War 73 However Swedish expectations of widespread German support proved unrealistic By the end of 1630 their only new ally was the Administrator of Magdeburg Christian William whose capital was under siege by Tilly 74 Despite the devastation inflicted by Imperial soldiers Saxony and Brandenburg had their own ambitions in Pomerania which clashed with those of Gustavus previous experience also showed inviting external powers into the Empire was easier than getting them to leave 75 nbsp The Sack of Magdeburg in 1631 Gustavus put pressure on Brandenburg by sacking Kustrin and Frankfurt an der Oder while the Sack of Magdeburg in May 1631 provided a powerful warning of the consequences of Imperial victory 76 Once again Richelieu used French financial power to bridge differences between the Swedes and the German princes the 1631 Treaty of Barwalde provided funds for the Swedes and their Protestant allies including Saxony and Brandenburg 77 These amounted to 400 000 Reichstaler per year or one million livres plus an additional 120 000 for 1630 While less than 2 of total French income these payments boosted that of Sweden by more than 25 and allowed Gustavus to maintain 36 000 troops 78 Gustavus used this army to win victories at Breitenfeld in September 1631 then Rain in April 1632 where Tilly was killed 79 Ferdinand turned once again to Wallenstein who realised Gustavus was overextended and established himself at Furth from where he could threaten his supply lines The largest battle of the war took place in late August when an assault on the Imperial camp outside the town was bloodily repulsed arguably the greatest blunder committed by Gustavus during his German campaign 80 nbsp Campaigns during the Swedish phase Two months later the Swedes and Imperials met at Lutzen where both sides suffered heavy casualties Gustavus himself was killed while some Swedish units incurred losses of over 60 81 Fighting continued until dusk when Wallenstein retreated abandoning his artillery and wounded 81 Despite their losses this allowed the Swedes to claim victory although the result continues to be disputed 82 83 After his death Gustavus policies were continued by his Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna and with French backing Sweden and their German allies formed the Heilbronn League in April 1633 In July their combined forces defeated an Imperial army led by the Bavarian general Bronckhorst Gronsfeld at Oldendorf 84 Critics claimed this defeat was caused by Wallenstein s failure to support the Bavarians while rumours spread that he was preparing to switch sides As a result Emperor Ferdinand ordered his arrest in February 1634 and on 25th he was assassinated by his own officers in Cheb 85 The loss of Wallenstein and his organisation left Emperor Ferdinand reliant on Spain for military support Since their main concern was to re open the Spanish Road for their campaign against the Dutch the focus of the war now shifted from the north to the Rhineland and Bavaria Cardinal Infante Ferdinand of Austria new Governor of the Spanish Netherlands raised an army of 18 000 in Italy which met up with an Imperial force of 15 000 at Donauworth on 2 September 1634 Four days later they won a decisive victory at Nordlingen which destroyed Swedish power in Southern Germany and led to the defection of their German allies who now sought to make peace with the Emperor 86 Phase II French intervention 1635 to 1648 editSwedish defeat at Nordlingen triggered direct French intervention and thus expanded the conflict rather than ending it Richelieu provided the Swedes with new subsidies hired mercenaries led by Bernard of Saxe Weimar for an offensive in the Rhineland and in May 1635 declared war on Spain starting the 1635 to 1659 Franco Spanish War 87 A few days later the German states and Ferdinand agreed to the Peace of Prague in return for withdrawing the Edict of Restitution the Heilbronn and Catholic Leagues were dissolved and replaced by a single Imperial army although Saxony and Bavaria retained control of their own forces This is generally seen as the point when the war ceased to be a primarily inter German religious conflict 88 nbsp Cardinal Richelieu French chief minister from 1624 until 1642 and creator of the anti Habsburg alliance In March 1635 French soldiers entered the Valtellina cutting the link between Spanish controlled Milan and the Empire 89 In May their main army of 35 000 invaded the Spanish Netherlands but withdrew in July after suffering 17 000 casualties In March 1636 France joined the Thirty Years War as an ally of Sweden whose loss of most of the territories gained by Gustavus and their taxes made it increasingly reliant on French financing p The Spanish then invaded Northern France causing panic in Paris before lack of supplies forced them to retreat 91 A Swedish army under Johan Baner defeated the Imperials at Wittstock on 4 October and re established their predominance in North East Germany despite the defection of most of their German allies 92 Ferdinand II died in February 1637 and was succeeded by his son Ferdinand III who faced a deteriorating military position Although Matthias Gallas and the main Imperial army had forced Baner back to the Baltic in March 1638 Bernard destroyed an Imperial army at Rheinfelden His capture of Breisach in December secured French control of Alsace and severed the Spanish Road forcing Gallas to divert resources there Although von Hatzfeldt defeated a combined Swedish German force at Vlotho in October lack of supplies forced Gallas to withdraw from the Baltic 93 In April 1639 Baner defeated the Saxons at Chemnitz then entered Bohemia in May 94 To retrieve the situation Ferdinand diverted Piccolomini s army from Thionville ending direct military cooperation between Austria and Spain 95 Pressure grew on Olivares to make peace especially after French and Swedish gains in Germany cut the Spanish Road forcing Madrid to resupply their armies in Flanders by sea However their attempts to re assert maritime control ended when the Dutch fleet under Maarten Tromp won a significant victory at the Downs in October 1639 96 97 Spanish inability to adequately supply their troops allowed the French to over run Artois in 1640 At the same time continuing Dutch attacks on Portuguese colonies and opposition to heavy taxes led to revolts in both Portugal and Catalonia 98 Olivares now argued Spain should accept Dutch independence and focus on preventing further French gains in the Spanish Netherlands 99 This appeared achievable since most of the Dutch regenten believed the war was won the only question being the price of peace They therefore reduced the army budget for 1640 despite objections from Frederick Henry 100 nbsp nbsp Breitenfeld nbsp Wolfenbuttel nbsp Wittstock nbsp Nordlingen nbsp Breisach nbsp Rheinfelden nbsp Zusmarshausen nbsp Munster nbsp Freiberg nbsp Herbsthausen nbsp Vlotho nbsp Osnabruck nbsp Tuttlingen nbsp Hamburg nbsp Prague nbsp Kempen nbsp Leipzig nbsp Thionville nbsp Chemnitz nbsp Regensburg nbsp Halberstadt nbsp Freiburg q class notpageimage Key locations 1635 to 1648 mentioned in text After Bernard died in July 1639 his troops joined Baner s Swedish army on an ineffectual campaign along the Weser the highlight being a surprise attack in January 1641 on the Imperial Diet in Regensburg 101 Forced to retreat Baner reached Halberstadt in May where he died and despite beating off an Imperial force at Wolfenbuttel in June his largely German troops mutinied due to lack of pay 102 The situation was saved by the arrival of Lennart Torstensson in November with 7 000 Swedish recruits and enough cash to satisfy the mutineers 103 French victory at Kempen in January 1642 was followed by Second Breitenfeld in October 1642 where Torstensson inflicted almost 10 000 casualties on an Imperial army led by Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria 104 The capture of Leipzig in December gave the Swedes a significant new base in Germany and despite their failure to take Freiberg 105 by 1643 the Saxon army had been reduced to a few isolated garrisons 106 While Ferdinand accepted a military solution was no longer possible by fighting on he hoped to prevent the Imperial Estates joining his peace negotiations with France and Sweden thus preserving his authority by allowing him to represent the Empire as a whole 107 This seemed more likely when Richelieu died in December 1642 followed by Louis XIII in May 1643 leaving his five year old son Louis XIV as king However Richelieu s policies were continued by his successor Cardinal Mazarin while gains in Alsace allowed France to focus on the war against Spain In 1643 the Army of Flanders invaded Northern France hoping to relieve pressure elsewhere but were decisively beaten by Conde at Rocroi on 19 May 108 Defeat ended any prospect of re opening the Spanish Road and Madrid finally accepted the war against the Dutch could not be won 109 nbsp Campaigns during the Franco Swedish phase until 1642 However Conde was unable to fully exploit his victory due to factors affecting all combatants The devastation inflicted by 25 years of warfare meant armies spent more time foraging than fighting forcing them to become smaller and more mobile with a much greater emphasis on cavalry Difficulties in gathering provisions meant campaigns started later and restricted them to areas that could be easily supplied usually close to rivers 110 In addition the French had to rebuild their army in Germany after it was shattered by an Imperial Bavarian force led by Franz von Mercy at Tuttlingen in November 111 Soon after Rocroi Ferdinand invited Sweden and France to attend peace talks in the Westphalian towns of Munster and Osnabruck 112 but negotiations were delayed when Christian of Denmark blockaded Hamburg and increased toll payments in the Baltic 113 This severely impacted the Dutch and Swedish economies and in December 1643 the Torstensson War began when the Swedes invaded Jutland with Dutch naval support Ferdinand pulled together an Imperial army under Gallas to attack the Swedes from the rear which proved a disastrous decision Leaving Wrangel to finish the war in Denmark in May 1644 Torstensson marched into the Empire Gallas was unable to stop him while the Danes sued for peace after their defeat at Fehmarn in October 1644 114 In August 1644 the French and Bavarian armies met in the three day Battle of Freiburg in which both sides suffered heavy casualties Convinced the war could no longer be won Maximilian now put pressure on Ferdinand to end the conflict 115 Shortly after peace talks restarted in November Gallas Imperial army disintegrated and the remnants retreated into Bohemia where they were scattered by Torstensson at Jankau in March 1645 116 In May a Bavarian force under von Mercy destroyed a French detachment at Herbsthausen before he was defeated and killed at Second Nordlingen in August 117 Deprived of Imperial support John George of Saxony signed a six month truce with Sweden in September and in the March 1646 Treaty of Eulenberg agreed to remain neutral until the end of the war 118 nbsp The final battle of the war the Swedish Siege of Prague in 1648 Under Turenne French commander in the Rhineland and Wrangel who had replaced Torstensson the French and Swedes separately invaded Bavaria in the summer of 1646 119 Maximilian was soon desperate to end the war he was largely responsible for starting at which point the Spanish publicised a secret offer by Mazarin to exchange French occupied Catalonia for the Spanish Netherlands Angered by this duplicity the Dutch agreed a truce with Spain in January 1647 and began to negotiate their own peace terms 120 Having failed to acquire the Netherlands through diplomacy Mazarin decided to do so by force To free up resources for the attempt on 14 March 1647 he signed the Truce of Ulm with Bavaria Cologne and Sweden 121 The planned offensive fell apart when Turenne s mostly German troops mutinied while Bavarian general Johann von Werth refused to comply with the truce 122 Although the mutinies were quickly suppressed Maximilian felt obliged to follow Werth s example and in September ordered Bronckhorst Gronsfeld to combine the remnants of the Bavarian army with Imperial troops under von Holzappel 123 Outnumbered by a Franco Swedish army led by Wrangel and Turenne they were defeated at Zusmarshausen in May 1648 and von Holzappel was killed Although the bulk of the Imperial army escaped thanks to an effective rearguard action by Raimondo Montecuccoli Bavaria was left defenceless once again 124 The Swedes sent a second force under von Konigsmarck to attack Prague seizing the castle and Mala Strana district in July The main objective was to gain as much loot as possible before the war ended they failed to take the Old Town but captured the Imperial library along with treasures including the Codex Gigas now in Stockholm When a Spanish offensive in Flanders ended with defeat at Lens in August 1648 Ferdinand finally agreed terms and on 24 October he signed peace treaties with France and Sweden ending the war 125 Conflict outside Germany editNorthern Italy edit nbsp nbsp Montferrat nbsp Turin nbsp Mantua nbsp Casale nbsp Milan nbsp Genoa nbsp Pineroloclass notpageimage Northern Italy Northern Italy had been contested by France and the Habsburgs since the end of the 15th century One reason was control of this area allowed opponents to threaten the southern borders of France and Austria In addition it contained large sections of the Spanish Road which allowed Spain to safely move recruits and supplies from their Italian possessions to support their war against the Dutch This reliance on long exterior lines of communication was a strategic weakness which the French sought to exploit by disrupting the Road This usually involved attacks on the Spanish held Duchy of Milan or blocking the Alpine passes 126 Montferrat and its fortress of Casale Monferrato were subsidiary territories of the Duchy of Mantua and their possession allowed the holder to threaten Milan This meant when the last duke in the direct line died in December 1627 France and Spain backed rival claimants resulting in the 1628 to 1631 War of the Mantuan Succession 127 The French born Duke of Nevers was backed by France and the Republic of Venice his rival the Duke of Guastalla by Spain Ferdinand II Savoy and Tuscany While a relatively minor conflict the struggle had a disproportionate impact on the Thirty Years War since Pope Urban VIII viewed Habsburg expansion in Italy as a threat to the Papal States His opposition to Ferdinand II divided the Catholic powers and made it acceptable for France to employ Protestant allies against Austria 128 In March 1629 the French stormed Savoyard positions in the Pas de Suse lifted the Spanish siege of Casale and captured Pinerolo 129 The Treaty of Suza then ceded the two fortresses to France and allowed their troops unrestricted passage through Savoyard territory giving them control over Piedmont and the Alpine passes into Southern France 130 However as soon as the main French army withdrew in late 1629 the Spanish and Savoyards besieged Casale once again At the same time the Spanish employed mercenaries paid for by Ferdinand II in an offensive which routed the main Venetian field army and forced Nevers to abandon Mantua By October 1630 the French position seemed so precarious their representatives agreed the Treaty of Ratisbon but it was never ratified as Richelieu claimed he had never approved the terms 131 Several factors restored the French position in Northern Italy notably a devastating outbreak of plague between 1629 and 1631 over 60 000 died in Milan and 46 000 in Venice with proportionate losses elsewhere 132 Richelieu took advantage of the diversion of Imperial resources to fund a Swedish invasion of Germany whose success forced the Spanish Savoyard alliance to withdraw from Casale and sign the Treaty of Cherasco in April 1631 Nevers was confirmed as Duke of Mantua and although Richelieu s representative Cardinal Mazarin agreed to evacuate Pinerolo it was later secretly returned under an agreement with Victor Amadeus I Duke of Savoy With the exception of the 1639 to 1642 Piedmontese Civil War this secured the French position in Northern Italy for the next twenty years 133 nbsp Siege and capture of Casale Monferrato by French troops 1630 After the outbreak of the Franco Spanish War in 1635 Richelieu supported a renewed offensive by Victor Amadeus against Milan to tie down Spanish resources These included an unsuccessful attack on Valenza in 1635 plus minor victories at Tornavento and Mombaldone 134 However the anti Habsburg alliance in Northern Italy fell apart when first Charles of Mantua died in September 1637 then Victor Amadeus in October whose death led to a struggle for control of the Savoyard state between his widow Christine of France and brothers Thomas and Maurice 135 In 1639 their quarrel erupted into open warfare with France backing Christine and Spain the two brothers and resulted in the Siege of Turin One of the most famous military events of the 17th century at one stage it featured no less than three different armies besieging each other However the revolts in Portugal and Catalonia forced the Spanish to cease operations in Italy and the war was settled on terms favourable to Christine and France 136 In 1647 a French backed rebellion succeeded in temporarily overthrowing Spanish rule in Naples The Spanish quickly crushed the insurrection and restored their rule over all of southern Italy defeating multiple French expeditionary forces sent to back the rebels 137 However it exposed the weakness of Spanish rule in Italy and the alienation of the local elites from Madrid in 1650 the governor of Milan wrote that as well as widespread dissatisfaction in the south the only one of the Italian states that could be relied on was the Duchy of Parma 138 Catalonia edit Main article Reapers War Throughout the 1630s tax increases levied to pay for the war led to protests throughout Spanish territories which in 1640 resulted in revolts first in Portugal then in the Principality of Catalonia Backed by France as part of Richelieu s war by diversion in January 1641 the rebels proclaimed a Catalan Republic 139 The Madrid government quickly assembled an army of 26 000 men to crush the revolt which defeated the rebels at Martorell on 23 January 1641 The French now persuaded the Catalan Courts to recognise Louis XIII as Count of Barcelona and ruler of Catalonia 99 On 26 January a combined French Catalan force routed a larger Spanish army at Montjuic and secured Barcelona However the rebels soon found the new French administration differed little from the old turning the war into a three sided contest between the Franco Catalan elite the rural peasantry and the Spanish There was little serious fighting after France took control of Perpignan and Roussillon establishing the current day Franco Spanish border in the Pyrenees The revolt ended in 1651 with the Spanish capture of Barcelona 140 Outside Europe edit nbsp The Iberian Union Spain s inability to protect Portuguese interests in the 1602 to 1663 Dutch Portuguese War was a key factor in the 1640 Portuguese Restoration War In 1580 Philip II of Spain also became ruler of the Portuguese Empire creating the Iberian Union long standing commercial rivals the 1602 to 1663 Dutch Portuguese War was an offshoot of the Dutch fight for independence from Spain The Portuguese dominated the trans Atlantic economy known as the Triangular trade in which slaves were transported from West Africa and Portuguese Angola to work on plantations in Portuguese Brazil which exported sugar and tobacco to Europe Known by Dutch historians as the Great Design control of this trade would not only be extremely profitable but also deprive the Spanish of funds needed to finance their war in the Netherlands 141 In 1621 the Dutch West India Company was formed to achieve this and a Dutch fleet captured the Brazilian port of Salvador Bahia in 1624 After it was retaken by the Portuguese in 1625 a second fleet established Dutch Brazil in 1630 which was not returned until 1654 142 In 1641 the Dutch seized Portuguese slave trading hubs in Angola and Sao Tome with support from the kingdoms of Kongo and Ndongo 143 whose position was threatened by Portuguese expansion 144 Although those gains proved short lived the Dutch retained territories elsewhere like the Cape Colony as well as Portuguese trading posts on the Gold Coast in Malacca on the Malabar Coast the Moluccas and Ceylon 145 Peace of Westphalia 1648 editMain article Peace of Westphalia nbsp Holy Roman Empire after the Peace of Westphalia 1648 The Peace of Westphalia actually consisted of three separate agreements the Peace of Munster between Spain and the Dutch Republic the Treaty of Osnabruck between the Empire and Sweden plus the Treaty of Munster between the Empire and France Preliminary discussions began in 1642 but only became serious in 1646 a total of 109 delegations attended at one time or other with talks split between Munster and Osnabruck After the Swedes rejected Christian of Denmark as mediator the negotiators finally agreed on Papal Legate Fabio Chigi and the Venetian envoy Alvise Contarini 146 The first to be signed on 30 January 1648 the Peace of Munster forms part of the Westphalia settlement since the Dutch Republic was still considered Imperial territory Although it officially confirmed Dutch independence the Imperial Diet did not formally accept it was no longer part of the Empire until 1728 147 The Dutch were also given a monopoly over trade conducted through the Scheldt estuary ensuring the commercial ascendancy of Amsterdam Antwerp capital of the Spanish Netherlands and previously the most important port in Northern Europe would not recover until the late 19th century 148 The terms of the separate treaties with France and Sweden had first to be agreed by Ferdinand and the Imperial Estates It has been argued they were a major turning point in German and European legal history because they went beyond normal peace settlements and effected major constitutional and religious changes to the Empire itself 149 Since they required changes to the structure and governance of the Empire these negotiations were complex with states like Saxony and Bavaria having very different views on desired outcomes Ferdinand finally signed the Peace on 24 October after a crushing French victory over Spain at Lens and with Swedish troops on the verge of taking Prague 150 151 Key elements of the Peace were provisions confirming the autonomy of states within the Empire including Ferdinand s acceptance of the supremacy of the Imperial Diet and those seeking to prevent future religious conflict Article 5 reconfirmed the Augsburg settlement established 1624 as the basis or Normaljahr for determining the dominant religion of a state and guaranteed freedom of worship for religious minorities Article 7 recognised Calvinism as a Reformed faith and removed the ius reformandi the requirement that if a ruler changed his religion his subjects had to follow suit These terms did not apply to the hereditary lands of the Habsburg monarchy such as Lower and Upper Austria 152 nbsp Signing of the Peace of Munster between Spain and the Dutch Republic 30 January 1648 In terms of territorial concessions Brandenburg Prussia received Farther Pomerania and the bishoprics of Magdeburg Halberstadt Kammin and Minden Frederick s son Charles Louis regained the Lower Palatinate and became the eighth Imperial elector although Bavaria kept the Upper Palatinate and its electoral vote 147 Externally Spain acknowledged the independence of the Dutch Republic while the Emperor confirmed that of the Old Swiss Confederacy effectively an autonomous part of the Empire since 1499 In Lorraine the Three Bishoprics of Metz Toul and Verdun occupied by France since 1552 were formally ceded as were the cities of the Decapole in Alsace with the exception of Strasbourg and Mulhouse 118 Sweden received an indemnity of five million thalers the Imperial territories of Swedish Pomerania and the Prince bishoprics of Bremen and Verden which also gave them a seat in the Imperial Diet 153 The Peace was later denounced by Pope Innocent X who regarded the bishoprics ceded to France and Brandenburg as property of the Catholic church and thus his to assign 154 It also disappointed many exiles by accepting Catholicism as the dominant religion in Bohemia Upper and Lower Austria all of which were Protestant strongholds prior to 1618 Fighting did not end immediately since demobilising over 200 000 soldiers was a complex business and the last Swedish garrison did not leave Germany until 1654 155 In addition Mazarin insisted on excluding the Burgundian Circle from the treaty of Munster allowing France to continue its campaign against Spain in the Low Countries a war that continued until the 1659 Treaty of the Pyrenees The political disintegration of Poland Lithuania led to the 1655 to 1660 Second Northern War with Sweden which also involved Denmark Russia and Brandenburg while two Swedish attempts to impose its control on the port of Bremen failed in 1654 and 1666 156 It has been argued the Peace established the principle known as Westphalian sovereignty the idea of non interference in domestic affairs by outside powers although this has since been challenged The process or Congress model was adopted for negotiations at Aix la Chapelle in 1668 Nijmegen in 1678 and Ryswick in 1697 unlike the 19th century Congress system these were to end wars rather than prevent them so references to the balance of power can be misleading 157 Human and financial cost of the war editSee also Second plague pandemic The Thirty Years War forms part of what historians sometimes call The General Crisis of the mid 17th century This term refers to a period of sustained conflict and unrest in areas ranging from Ming China to the British Isles Tsarist Russia and the Holy Roman Empire In each of these fighting combined with famine and disease inflicted severe losses on local civilian populations 158 While the war certainly ranks as one of the worst of these events 19th century German nationalists often exaggerated its impact to illustrate the dangers of a divided Germany 159 nbsp Population declines within Germany 1618 to 1648 Note Decline includes factors such as emigration from rural to more secure urban areas and does not equate to deaths 33 66 gt 66 Suggestions of up to 12 million deaths from a population of 18 million are no longer considered accurate In addition upper estimates of material losses are not supported by contemporary evidence or in some cases exceed prewar tax records 160 Regardless modern commentators agree the war was a mortality disaster previously unknown in Europe Estimates of total deaths range from 4 5 to 8 million most incurred after 1630 when Sweden entered the war the vast majority of which were civilian 161 Battles generally featured armies of around 13 000 to 20 000 each one of the largest being Alte Veste in 1632 with a combined 70 000 to 85 000 Estimates of the total deployed by both sides within Germany range from an average of 80 000 to 100 000 from 1618 to 1626 peaking at 250 000 in 1632 and falling to under 160 000 by 1648 6 Casualty rates among those who actually did serve in the military could be extremely high Of 230 men conscripted from the Swedish village of Bygdea between 1621 and 1639 215 are recorded as dead or missing while another five returned home crippled 14 Aggregating figures from known battles and sieges historian Peter Wilson estimates those either killed or wounded in combat totalled around 450 000 Since research shows disease either killed or incapacitated two to three times that number that would suggest military casualties ranged from 1 3 to 1 8 million dead or otherwise rendered unfit for service 13 Although his methodology has been disputed Pitirim Sorokin calculates an upper limit of 2 071 000 military casualties 162 Based on local records military action accounted for less than 3 of civilian deaths with the major causes being starvation 12 bubonic plague 64 typhus 4 and dysentery 5 163 Although regular outbreaks of disease were common for decades prior to 1618 the conflict greatly accelerated their spread due to the influx of soldiers from foreign countries the shifting locations of battle fronts and displacement of rural populations into already crowded cities 164 This was not restricted to Germany disease carried by French and Imperial soldiers allegedly sparked the 1629 1631 Italian plague Described as the worst mortality crisis to affect Italy during the early modern period 165 it resulted in some 280 000 deaths with higher estimates of around 1 million 166 Poor harvests throughout the 1630s and repeated plundering of the same areas led to widespread famine contemporaries record people eating grass or too weak to accept alms while instances of cannibalism were common 167 The contemporary consensus is the population of the Holy Roman Empire declined from 18 to 20 million in 1600 to 11 to 13 million in 1650 and did not regain pre war levels until 1750 168 Nearly 50 of these losses appear to have been incurred during the first period of Swedish intervention from 1630 to 1635 The high mortality rate compared to the Wars of the Three Kingdoms in Britain may partly be due to the reliance of all sides on foreign mercenaries often unpaid and required to live off the land 169 Lack of a sense of shared community resulted in atrocities such as the destruction of Magdeburg in turn creating large numbers of refugees who were extremely susceptible to sickness and hunger While flight saved lives in the short term in the long run it often proved catastrophic 170 nbsp Soldiers plundering a farm In 1940 agrarian historian Gunther Franz published a detailed analysis of regional data from across Germany covering the period from 1618 to 1648 Broadly confirmed by more recent work he concluded about 40 of the rural population fell victim to the war and epidemics in the cities 33 17 These figures can be misleading since Franz calculated the absolute decline in pre and post war populations or total demographic loss They therefore include factors unrelated to death or disease such as permanent migration to areas outside the Empire or lower birthrates a common but less obvious impact of extended warfare 171 There were also wide regional variations some areas in Northwest Germany were relatively peaceful after 1630 and experienced almost no population loss while those of Mecklenburg Pomerania and Wurttemberg fell by nearly 50 160 Although some towns may have overstated their losses to avoid taxes individual records confirm serious declines from 1620 to 1650 the population of Munich fell from 22 000 to 17 000 that of Augsburg from 48 000 to 21 000 172 The financial impact is less clear while the war caused short term economic dislocation especially in the period 1618 to 1623 overall it accelerated existing changes in trading patterns It does not appear to have reversed ongoing macro economic trends such as the reduction of price differentials between regional markets and a greater degree of market integration across Europe 173 The death toll may have improved living standards for the survivors one study shows wages in Germany increased by 40 in real terms between 1603 and 1652 174 Military developments editInnovations made by Gustavus in particular are considered part of the tactical evolution known as the Military Revolution although whether tactics or technology were at the heart of these changes is still debated 175 Introduced by Maurice of Orange in the 1590s these sought to increase infantry firepower by moving from massed columns to line formation Gustavus further reduced the ten ranks used by Maurice to six and increased the proportion of musketeers to pikemen He also enhanced their firepower by providing each unit with quick firing light artillery pieces on either flank The best example of their tactical application was in the victory over Tilly s traditionally organised army at Breitenfeld in September 1631 176 nbsp Breitenfeld 1631 Tilly s army left are deployed two companies deep the Swedes right just one company deep Line formations were often harder to co ordinate as demonstrated by the victory of the supposedly obsolete Spanish tercios over the new model Swedish army at Nordlingen in 1634 177 They lacked the offensive impact of columns and Gustavus therefore compensated by requiring his cavalry to be far more aggressive often employing his Finnish light cavalry or Hakkapeliitta as shock troops He also used columns on occasion including the failed assault at Alte Veste in September 1632 The line versus column debate continued into the early 19th century and both were employed during the Napoleonic Wars 178 Such tactics needed professional soldiers who could retain formation reload and fire disciplined salvos while under attack as well as the use of standardised weapons The first half of the 17th century saw the publication of numerous instruction manuals showing the movements required thirty two for pikemen and forty two for musketeers 179 Training an infantryman to operate in this way was estimated as six months although in reality many went into battle with far less experience 180 It also placed greater responsibility on junior officers who provided the vital links between senior commanders and the tactical unit One of the first military schools designed to produce such men was set up at Siegen in 1616 and others soon followed 180 On the other hand strategic thinking failed to develop at the same pace Historian Jeremy Black claims most campaigns were inconclusive and almost exclusively concerned with control of territory rather than focused strategic objectives The lack of connection between military and diplomatic goals helps explain why the war lasted so long and why peace proved so elusive 181 There were a number of reasons for this When the war ended in 1648 the Franco Swedish alliance still had over 84 000 men under arms on Imperial territory their opponents around 77 000 While relatively small in contemporary terms such numbers were unprecedented at the time 182 With the possible exception of Spain the 17th century state could not support armies of this size forcing them to depend on contributions levied or extorted from areas they passed through 183 Obtaining supplies thus became the limiting factor in campaign planning an issue that grew more acute later in the war when much of the Empire had already been fought over Even when adequate provisions could be gathered the next problem was getting them to the troops to ensure security of supply commanders were forced to stay close to rivers then the primary means of bulk transportation and could not move too far from their main bases 184 Many historians argue feeding the troops became an objective in itself unconnected to diplomatic goals and largely uncontrolled by their central governments The result was armies increasingly devoid of intelligible political objectives degenerating into travelling armed mobs living in a symbiotic relationship with the countryside they passed through 185 This often conflicted with the political aims of their employers the devastation inflicted in 1628 and 1629 by Imperial troops on Brandenburg and Saxony both nominally their allies was a major factor in their subsequent support for Swedish intervention 186 Social and cultural impact editIt has been suggested the breakdown of social order caused by the war was often more significant and longer lasting than the immediate damage 187 The collapse of local government created landless peasants who banded together to protect themselves from the soldiers of both sides and led to widespread rebellions in Upper Austria Bavaria and Brandenburg Soldiers devastated one area before moving on leaving large tracts of land empty of people and changing the ecosystem Food shortages were worsened by an explosion in the rodent population while Bavaria was overrun by wolves in the winter of 1638 and its crops destroyed by packs of wild pigs the following spring 188 nbsp A peasant begs for mercy in front of his burning farm by the 1630s being caught in the open by soldiers from either side was tantamount to a death sentence 164 Contemporaries spoke of a frenzy of despair as people sought to make sense of the relentless and often random bloodshed unleashed by the war Attributed by religious authorities to divine retribution for sin attempts to identify a supernatural cause led to a series of witch hunts beginning in Franconia in 1626 and quickly spreading to other parts of Germany 189 They began in the Bishopric of Wurzburg an area with a history of such events going back to 1616 and now re ignited by Bishop von Ehrenberg a devout Catholic eager to assert the church s authority in his territories By the time he died in 1631 over 900 people from all levels of society had been executed 190 The Bamberg witch trials held in the nearby Bishopric of Bamberg from 1626 to 1631 claimed over one thousand lives in 1629 274 died in the Eichstatt witch trials plus another 50 in the adjacent Duchy of Palatinate Neuburg 191 Elsewhere persecution followed Imperial military success expanding into Baden and the Palatinate following their reconquest by Tilly then into the Rhineland 192 However the extent to which they were symptomatic of the impact of the conflict on society is debatable since many took place in areas relatively untouched by the war Concerned their brutality would discredit the Counter Reformation Ferdinand ensured active persecution largely ended by 1630 193 Although the war caused immense destruction it has also been credited with sparking a revival in German literature including the creation of societies dedicated to purging of foreign elements from the German language 194 One example is Simplicius Simplicissimus often suggested as one of the earliest examples of the picaresque novel written by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen in 1668 it includes a realistic portrayal of a soldier s life based on his own experiences many of which are verified by other sources 195 Other less famous examples include the diaries of Peter Hagendorf a participant in the Sack of Magdeburg whose descriptions of the everyday brutalities of the war remain compelling 196 For German and to a lesser extent Czech writers the war was remembered as a defining moment of national trauma the 18th century poet and playwright Friedrich Schiller being one of many to use it in their work Variously known as the Great German War Great War or Great Schism for 19th and early 20th century German nationalists it showed the dangers of a divided Germany and was used to justify the creation of the German Empire in 1871 as well as the Greater Germanic Reich envisaged by the Nazis 197 Bertolt Brecht used it as the backdrop for his 1939 anti war play Mother Courage and Her Children while its enduring cultural resonance is illustrated by the novel Tyll written by Austro German author Daniel Kehlmann and also set during the war it was nominated for the 2020 Booker Prize 198 Political consequences edit nbsp Europe after the Peace of Westphalia 1648 The Peace reconfirmed German liberties ending Habsburg attempts to convert the Holy Roman Empire into a more centralised state similar to Spain Over the next 50 years Bavaria Brandenburg Prussia Saxony and others increasingly pursued their own policies while Sweden gained a permanent foothold in the Empire Despite these setbacks the Habsburg lands suffered less from the war than many others and became a far more coherent bloc with the absorption of Bohemia and restoration of Catholicism throughout their territories 199 nbsp Swedish sovereignty over Western Pomerania in blue was confirmed in 1653 and finally ended only in 1815 By laying the foundations of the modern nation state Westphalia changed the relationship between subjects and their rulers Previously many had overlapping sometimes conflicting political and religious allegiances they were now understood to be subject first and foremost to the laws and edicts of their respective state authority not the claims of any other entity religious or secular This made it easier to levy national forces of significant size loyal to their state and its leader one lesson learned from Wallenstein and the Swedish invasion was the need for their own permanent armies and Germany as a whole became a far more militarised society 200 For Sweden the benefits ultimately proved short lived Unlike French gains which were incorporated into France Swedish territories remained part of the Empire and they became members of the Lower and Upper Saxon kreis While this provided both seats and influence in the Imperial Diet it also brought Sweden into direct conflict with Brandenburg Prussia and Saxony their competitors in Pomerania The income from their German possessions was relatively minor and although parts of Pomerania remained Swedish until 1815 much of it was ceded to Prussia in 1679 and 1720 201 France arguably gained more from the conflict than any other power and by 1648 most of Richelieu s objectives had been achieved These included separation of the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs expansion of the French frontier into the Empire and an end to Spanish military supremacy in Northern Europe 202 Although the Franco Spanish war continued until 1659 Westphalia allowed Louis XIV to begin replacing Spain as the predominant European power 203 While religion remained a divisive political issue in many countries the Thirty Years War is arguably the last major European conflict where it was a primary driver Future conflicts were either internal such as the Camisards revolt in South Western France or relatively minor like the 1712 Toggenburg War 204 The war created the outlines of a Europe that persisted until 1815 and beyond most significantly the nation state of France along with the start of a split between Germany and a separate Austro Hungarian bloc 201 Notes edit States that fought against the Emperor at some point between 1618 and 1635 States that allied at some point between 1618 and 1635 Since officers were paid for each man present the numbers Reported frequently differed from Actual or those available for duty Variances between Reported and Actual are estimated as averaging up to 25 for the Dutch 35 for the French and 50 for the Spanish 3 Most battles of the period were fought between opposing forces of 13 000 to 20 000 men so the numbers reflect Maximum at any one time and exclude citizen militia who often formed a large proportion of garrisons These figures show numbers In Service of rather than ethnicity since all armies were multinational An estimated 60 000 Scottish English or Irish individuals fought on one side or the other during the period while a high proportion were German Based on an analysis of a mass grave discovered in 2011 a high proportion of Swedish forces at Lutzen were ethnic Germans while less than 50 even came from Scandinavia 4 Approved 120 000 actual 80 000 to 90 000 9 1640 figures for the Army of Flanders when it was at its maximum strength these are Reported numbers so as mentioned elsewhere the actual number of soldiers would have been considerably lower 11 The Spanish army officially had more than 200 000 soldiers in 1640 but most were second line troops in garrisons elsewhere in Europe not facing the Dutch 12 Wilson estimates a total of 450 000 combat deaths on all sides the vast majority of whom were German By one calculation four times as many Germans died fighting for Sweden as Swedes and so casualties are referred to as being In service rather than by nationality 13 France lost another 200 000 to 300 000 killed or wounded in the related Franco Spanish War 15 Wilson estimates that three soldiers died of disease for every one killed in combat 13 German Dreissigjahriger Krieg pronounced ˈdʁaɪ sɪcˌjɛːʁɪɡɐ kʁiːk Some commentators argue it began with the War of the Julich Succession in 1609 As explained below the rulers of Denmark Norway and Sweden also held territories within the Empire which allowed them to intervene in Imperial affairs 23 Although there were nearly 1 800 separate Imperial Estates only 300 were represented in the Imperial Diet or Circles Most of the remaining 1 500 were Imperial Knights or individual members of the lower nobility who were excluded 25 Its official title remains Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg As well as being brother in law to Frederick of the Palatinate James I was also linked to Christian IV of Denmark having married his elder sister Anne of Denmark 1574 1619 57 While the death of Gustavus was greeted with dismay by most European Protestants Richelieu was more ambivalent The two were increasingly at odds over strategic objectives and contemporary rumours claimed Richelieu was involved in the king s death although there is no evidence for this 90 Not to be confused with Freiberg in Saxony References edit Croxton 2013 pp 225 226 a b Heitz amp Rischer 1995 p 232 Parrott 2001 p 8 Nicklisch et al 2017 Wilson 2009 p 484 a b Clodfelter 2008 p 40 a b Wilson 2009 p 387 Parrott 2001 pp 164 168 a b Van Nimwegen 2014 p 166 Wilson 2009 p 395 a b Parker 2004 p 231 a b Clodfelter 2008 p 39 a b c Wilson 2009 p 791 a b Parker 1997 p 173 a b c d e f g Wilson 2009 p 790 Wilson 2009 p 787 a b Outram 2002 p 248 Wilson 2009 pp 4 787 Parker 1997 p 189 Sutherland 1992 pp 589 590 Parker 1997 pp 17 18 Sutherland 1992 pp 602 603 a b Hayden 1973 pp 1 23 Wedgwood 1938 pp 22 24 Wilson 2009 p 21 Wilson 2009 pp 17 22 Wedgwood 1938 p 24 Wedgwood 1938 pp 159 161 Wilson 2009 p 222 Wilson 2009 p 224 Parker 1997 p 11 Wedgwood 1938 pp 47 49 Wilson 2008 p 557 Wedgwood 1938 p 50 Wedgwood 1938 pp 63 65 Wilson 2009 pp 271 274 Bassett 2015 p 14 Wedgwood 1938 pp 74 75 Wedgwood 1938 pp 78 79 Bassett 2015 pp 12 15 Wedgwood 1938 pp 81 82 Wedgwood 1938 p 94 Baramova 2014 pp 121 122 a b Wedgwood 1938 pp 98 99 Israel 1995b p 469 Wedgwood 1938 pp 127 129 Stutler 2014 pp 37 38 Wedgwood 1938 p 117 Zaller 1974 pp 147 148 Zaller 1974 pp 152 154 Spielvogel 2017 p 447 Pursell 2003 pp 182 185 Wedgwood 1938 pp 162 164 Wedgwood 1938 pp 179 181 Lockhart 2007 pp 107 109 Murdoch 2000 p 53 Wilson 2009 p 382 Davenport 1917 p 295 Wedgwood 1938 p 208 Wedgwood 1938 p 212 Murdoch amp Grosjean 2014 pp 43 44 Wilson 2009 p 426 Murdoch amp Grosjean 2014 pp 48 49 Lockhart 2007 p 170 Lockhart 2007 p 172 Wedgwood 1938 pp 232 233 Wedgwood 1938 pp 242 244 Israel 1995b p 497 Israel 1995b p 511 Maland 1980 pp 98 99 Wedgwood 1938 pp 385 386 Norrhem 2019 pp 28 29 Porshnev 1995 p 106 Parker 1997 p 120 O Connell 1968 pp 253 254 Parker 1997 p 128 O Connell 1968 p 256 Porshnev 1995 p 38 Wedgwood 1938 pp 305 306 Brzezinski 2001 p 4 a b Wilson 2018 p 89 Wilson 2018 p 99 Brzezinski 2001 p 74 Wilson 2009 p 523 Wedgwood 1938 pp 220 223 Kamen 2003 pp 385 386 Parker 1997 pp 132 134 Bireley 1976 p 32 Kamen 2003 p 387 Wedgwood 1938 p 328 Israel 1995a pp 272 273 Murdoch Zickerman amp Marks 2012 pp 80 85 Wilson 2009 pp 595 598 Wilson 2009 p 615 Wilson 2009 pp 661 662 Bely 2014 pp 94 95 Israel 1995b p 537 Costa 2005 p 4 a b Van Gelderen 2002 p 284 Algra amp Algra 1956 pp 120 Parker 1997 p 150 Wedgwood 1938 p 446 Wedgwood 1938 p 447 Clodfelter 2008 p 41 Wilson 2009 pp 636 639 Wilson 2009 pp 641 642 Milton Axworthy amp Simms 2018 pp 60 65 Parker 1997 p 154 Parker 1997 p 171 Wilson 2009 p 587 Wilson 2009 pp 643 645 Wilson 2009 p 671 Wilson 2009 p 687 Wedgwood 1938 pp 472 473 Croxton 1998 p 273 Wilson 2009 pp 693 695 Bonney 2002 p 64 a b Wilson 2009 p 711 Wedgwood 1938 pp 493 494 Wedgwood 1938 pp 495 496 Wilson 2009 p 716 Wedgwood 1938 p 496 Wilson 2009 p 726 Wilson 2009 pp 740 741 Wedgwood 1938 p 501 Hanlon 2016 pp 118 119 Wedgwood 1938 pp 235 236 Wedgwood 1938 p 247 Thion 2008 p 62 Ferretti 2014 pp 12 18 Wedgwood 1938 pp 263 264 Kohn 1995 p 200 Ferretti 2014 p 20 Duffy 1995 p 125 Wilson 2009 p 259 Hanlon 2016 p 124 Kamen 2003 p 406 Kamen 2003 p 407 Parker 1997 p 153 Mitchell 2005 pp 431 448 Thornton 2016 pp 189 190 Van Groesen 2011 pp 167 168 2020 amp Thornton p sfn error no target CITEREF2020Thornton help Thornton 2016 pp 194 195 Gnanaprakasar 2003 pp 153 172 Croxton 2013 pp 3 4 a b Wilson 2009 p 746 Israel 1995a pp 197 199 Lesaffer 1997 p 71 Wedgwood 1938 pp 500 501 Wilson 2009 pp 746 747 The Peace of Westphalia PDF University of Oregon Archived PDF from the original on 17 June 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2021 Wilson 2009 p 707 Ryan 1948 p 597 Wedgwood 1938 p 504 Wilson 2009 p 757 Croxton 2013 pp 331 332 Parker 2008 p 1053 Wedgwood 1938 p 510 a b Parker 1997 pp 188 189 Outram 2001 pp 156 159 Levy 1983 pp 88 91 Outram 2001 pp 160 161 a b Outram 2002 p 250 Alfani amp Percoco 2019 p 1175 Hays 2005 p 103 Wilson 2009 p 345 Parker 2008 p 1058 Parker 1997 p 122 Outram 2002 pp 245 246 Outram 2001 p 152 Wedgwood 1938 p 512 Schulze amp Volckart 2019 p 30 Pfister Riedel amp Uebele 2012 p 18 Sharman 2018 pp 493 495 Parker 1997 p 185 Parker 1976 p 200 Chandler 1990 pp 130 137 Parker 1976 p 202 a b Parker 1997 p 184 Croxton 1998 p 254 Wilson 2009 p 770 Parker 1997 p 177 Croxton 1998 pp 255 256 O Connell 1990 p 147 Wedgwood 1938 pp 257 258 Wedgwood 1938 p 516 Wilson 2009 p 784 White 2012 p 220 Jensen 2007 p 93 Trevor Roper 2001 pp 83 117 Briggs 1996 p 163 Briggs 1996 pp 171 172 Friehs Talbott 2021 pp 3 4 Helfferich 2009 pp 283 284 Cramer 2007 pp 18 19 Talbott 2021 p 6 McMurdie 2014 p 65 Bonney 2002 pp 89 90 a b McMurdie 2014 pp 67 68 Lee 2001 pp 67 68 Storrs 2006 pp 6 7 Gutmann 1988 pp 752 754 Sources editA Mears John 1988 The Thirty Years War the General Crisis and the Origins of a Standing Professional Army in the Habsburg Monarchy Central European History 21 2 122 41 doi 10 1017 S0008938900012711 JSTOR 4546115 S2CID 144482963 Alfani Guido Percoco Marco 2019 Plague and long term development the lasting effects of the 1629 30 epidemic on the Italian cities The Economic History Review 72 4 1175 1201 doi 10 1111 ehr 12652 ISSN 1468 0289 S2CID 131730725 permanent dead link Algra Hendrik Algra Ale 1956 Dispereert niet Twintig eeuwen historie van de Nederlanden Despair not Twenty centuries of the history of the Netherlands in Dutch T Wever 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1996 Witches amp Neighbors The Social And Cultural Context of European Witchcraft Viking ISBN 978 0 670 83589 8 Brzezinski Richard 2001 Lutzen 1632 Climax of the Thirty Years War The Clash of Empires Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 552 4 Chandler David 1990 The Art of Warfare in the Age of Marlborough Spellmount Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 0946771424 Clodfelter Micheal 2008 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 2017 ed McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 7470 7 Costa Fernando Dores 2005 Interpreting the Portuguese War of Restoration 1641 1668 in a European Context Journal of Portuguese History 3 1 Cramer Kevin 2007 The Thirty Years War amp German Memory in the Nineteenth Century University of Nebraska ISBN 978 0 8032 1562 7 Croxton Derek 2013 The Last Christian Peace The Congress of Westphalia as A Baroque Event Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 33332 2 Croxton Derek 1998 A Territorial Imperative The Military Revolution Strategy and Peacemaking in the Thirty Years War War in History 5 3 253 279 doi 10 1177 096834459800500301 JSTOR 26007296 S2CID 159915965 Davenport Frances Gardiner 1917 European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies 2014 ed Literary Licensing ISBN 978 1 4981 4446 9 Duffy Christopher 1995 Siege Warfare The Fortress in the Early Modern World 1494 1660 Routledge ISBN 978 0415146494 Ferretti Giuliano 2014 La politique italienne de la France et le duche de Savoie au temps de Richelieu Franco Savoyard Italian policy in the time of Richelieu Dix septieme Siecle in French 1 262 7 doi 10 3917 dss 141 0007 Friehs Julia Teresa Art and the Thirty Years War Die Welt der Habsburger Archived from the original on 8 August 2021 Retrieved 8 August 2021 Hays J N 2005 Epidemics and pandemics their impacts on human history ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1851096589 Gnanaprakasar Nalloor Swamy 2003 Critical History of Jaffna The Tamil Era Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 81 206 1686 8 Gutmann Myron P 1988 The 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Effects ofCorpus Christianum s Defining Conflict MA thesis George Fox University Archived from the original on 7 April 2022 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Milton Patrick Axworthy Michael Simms Brendan 2018 Towards The Peace Congress of Munster and Osnabruck 1643 1648 and the Westphalian Order 1648 1806 in A Westphalia for the Middle East C Hurst amp Co Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 1 78738 023 3 Mitchell Andrew Joseph 2005 Religion revolt and creation of regional identity in Catalonia 1640 1643 PhD thesis Ohio State University Archived from the original on 17 April 2023 Retrieved 15 December 2022 Murdoch Steve 2000 Britain Denmark Norway and the House of Stuart 1603 1660 Tuckwell ISBN 978 1 86232 182 3 Murdoch S Zickerman K Marks H 2012 The Battle of Wittstock 1636 Conflicting Reports on a Swedish Victory in Germany Northern Studies 43 Archived from the original on 8 July 2022 Retrieved 28 December 2014 Murdoch Steve Grosjean Alexia 2014 Alexander Leslie and the Scottish generals of the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 London Pickering amp Chatto Nicklisch Nicole Ramsthaler Frank Meller Harald Others 2017 The face of war Trauma analysis of a mass grave from the Battle of Lutzen 1632 PLOS ONE 12 5 e0178252 Bibcode 2017PLoSO 1278252N doi 10 1371 journal pone 0178252 PMC 5439951 PMID 28542491 Norrhem Svante 2019 Mercenary Swedes French subsidies to Sweden 1631 1796 Translated by Merton Charlotte Nordic Academic Press ISBN 978 91 88661 82 1 O Connell Daniel Patrick 1968 Richelieu Weidenfeld amp Nicolson O Connell Robert L 1990 Of Arms and Men A History of War Weapons and Aggression OUP ISBN 978 0195053593 Outram Quentin 2001 The Socio Economic Relations of Warfare and the Military Mortality Crises of the Thirty Years War PDF Medical History 45 2 151 184 doi 10 1017 S0025727300067703 PMC 1044352 PMID 11373858 Archived PDF from the original on 25 June 2022 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Outram Quentin 2002 The Demographic impact of early modern warfare Social Science History 26 2 245 272 doi 10 1215 01455532 26 2 245 inactive 31 January 2024 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Parker Geoffrey 2008 Crisis and Catastrophe The global crisis of the seventeenth century reconsidered American Historical Review 113 4 1053 1079 doi 10 1086 ahr 113 4 1053 Parker Geoffrey 1976 The Military Revolution 1560 1660 a Myth The Journal of Modern History 48 2 195 214 doi 10 1086 241429 JSTOR 1879826 S2CID 143661971 Parker Geoffrey 1997 1984 The Thirty Years War Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 12883 4 with several contributors Parker Geoffrey 2004 1972 Army of Flanders and the Spanish Road 1567 1659 The Logistics of Spanish Victory and Defeat in the Low Countries Wars CUP ISBN 978 0 521 54392 7 Parrott David 2001 Richelieu s Army War Government and Society in France 1624 1642 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79209 7 Pazos Conde Miguel 2011 El tradado de Napoles El encierro del principe Juan Casimiro y la leva de Polacos de Medina de las Torres 1638 1642 The Treaty of Naples the imprisonment of John Casimir and the Polish Levy of Medina de las Torres Studia Historica Historia Moderna in Spanish 33 Pfister Ulrich Riedel Jana Uebele Martin 2012 Real Wages and the Origins of Modern Economic Growth in Germany 16th to 19th Centuries PDF European Historical Economics Society 17 Archived from the original PDF on 11 May 2022 Retrieved 6 October 2020 Porshnev Boris Fedorovich 1995 Dukes Paul ed Muscovy and Sweden in the Thirty Years War 1630 1635 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 45139 0 Pursell Brennan C 2003 The Winter King Frederick V of the Palatinate and the Coming of the Thirty Years War Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 3401 0 Ryan E A 1948 Catholics and the Peace of Westphalia PDF Theological Studies 9 4 590 599 doi 10 1177 004056394800900407 S2CID 170555324 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Schmidt Burghart Richefort Isabelle 2006 Les relations entre la France et les villes hanseatiques de Hambourg Breme et Lubeck Moyen Age XIXe siecle Relations between France and the Hanseatic ports of Hamburg Bremen and Lubeck from the Middle Ages to the 19th century Direction des Archives Ministere des affaires etrangeres in French Schulze Max Stefan Volckart Oliver 2019 The Long term Impact of the Thirty Years War What Grain Price Data Reveal PDF Economic History Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 6 October 2020 Sharman J C 2018 Myths of military revolution European expansion and Eurocentrism European Journal of International Relations 24 3 491 513 doi 10 1177 1354066117719992 hdl 10072 385454 S2CID 148771791 Spielvogel Jackson 2017 Western Civilisation Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 978 1 305 95231 7 Storrs Christopher 2006 The Resilience of the Spanish Monarchy 1665 1700 OUP ISBN 978 0 19 924637 3 Stutler James Oliver 2014 Lords of War Maximilian I of Bavaria and the Institutions of Lordship in the Catholic League Army 1619 1626 PDF PhD thesis Duke University hdl 10161 8754 Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 21 September 2020 Sutherland NM 1992 The Origins of the Thirty Years War and the Structure of European Politics The English Historical Review CVII CCCCXXIV 587 625 doi 10 1093 ehr cvii ccccxxiv 587 Talbott Siobhan 2021 Causing misery and suffering miserably Representations of the Thirty Years War in Literature and History Sage 30 1 3 25 doi 10 1177 03061973211007353 S2CID 234347328 Thion Stephane 2008 French Armies of the Thirty Years War Auzielle Little Round Top Editions Thornton John 2016 The Kingdom of Kongo and the Thirty Years War Journal of World History 27 2 189 213 doi 10 1353 jwh 2016 0100 JSTOR 43901848 S2CID 163706878 Trevor Roper Hugh 2001 1967 The Crisis of the Seventeenth Century Religion the Reformation and Social Change Liberty Fund ISBN 978 0 86597 278 0 Van Gelderen Martin 2002 Republicanism and Constitutionalism in Early Modern Europe A Shared European Heritage Volume I Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 80203 1 Van Groesen Michiel 2011 Lessons Learned The Second Dutch Conquest of Brazil and the Memory of the First Colonial Latin American Review 20 2 167 193 doi 10 1080 10609164 2011 585770 S2CID 218574377 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2010 The Dutch Army and the Military Revolutions 1588 1688 Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 575 2 Wedgwood C V 1938 The Thirty Years War 2005 ed New York Review of Books ISBN 978 1 59017 146 2 White Matthew 2012 The Great Big Book of Horrible Things W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0 393 08192 3 Wilson Peter H 2009 Europe s Tragedy A History of the Thirty Years War Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9592 3 Wilson Peter H 2018 Lutzen Great Battles Series Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199642540 Wilson Peter 2008 The Causes of the Thirty Years War 1618 48 The English Historical Review 123 502 554 586 doi 10 1093 ehr cen160 JSTOR 20108541 Zaller Robert 1974 Interest of State James I and the Palatinate Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 6 2 144 175 doi 10 2307 4048141 JSTOR 4048141 Further reading editAberg A 1973 The Swedish Army from Lutzen to Narva In Roberts M ed Sweden s Age of Greatness 1632 1718 St Martin s Press Benecke Gerhard 1978 Germany in the Thirty Years War St Martin s Press Dukes Paul ed 1995 Muscovy and Sweden in the Thirty Years War 1630 1635 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 45139 0 Grosjean Alexia 2003 An Unofficial Alliance Scotland and Sweden 1569 1654 Leiden Brill Kamen Henry 1968 The Economic and Social Consequences of the Thirty Years War Past and Present 39 39 44 61 doi 10 1093 past 39 1 44 JSTOR 649855 Langer Herbert 1980 The Thirty Years War 1990 ed Dorset Press ISBN 978 0 88029 262 7 Lynn John A 1999 The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 Harlow England Longman Murdoch Steve 2001 Scotland and the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 Brill Polisensky J V 1954 The Thirty Years War Past and Present 6 6 31 43 doi 10 1093 past 6 1 31 JSTOR 649813 Polisensky J V 1968 The Thirty Years War and the Crises and Revolutions of Seventeenth Century Europe Past and Present 39 39 34 43 doi 10 1093 past 39 1 34 JSTOR 649854 Polisensky Joseph 2001 A Note on Scottish Soldiers in the Bohemian War 1619 1622 In Murdoch Steve ed A Note on Scottish Soldiers in the Bohemian War 1619 1622 in Scotland and the Thirty Years war 1618 1648 Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12086 0 Prinzing Friedrich 1916 Epidemics Resulting from Wars Clarendon Press Rabb Theodore K 1962 The Effects of the Thirty Years War on the German Economy Journal of Modern History 34 1 40 51 doi 10 1086 238995 JSTOR 1874817 S2CID 154709047 Reilly Pamela 1959 Friedrich von Spee s Belief in Witchcraft Some Deductions from the Cautio Criminalis The Modern Language Review 54 1 51 55 doi 10 2307 3720833 JSTOR 3720833 Ringmar Erik 1996 Identity Interest and Action A Cultural Explanation of the Swedish Intervention in the Thirty Years War 2008 ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 02603 1 Roberts Michael 1958 Gustavus Adolphus A History of Sweden 1611 1632 Longmans Green and Co Schiller Frederic 1799 The History of the Thirty Years War in Germany London printed for W Miller in 2 vols translation by William Blaquiere Steinberg S H 1966 The Thirty Years War and the Conflict for European Hegemony 1600 1660 Edward Arnold Theibault John 1997 The Demography of the Thirty Years War Re revisited Gunther Franz and his Critics German History 15 1 1 21 doi 10 1093 gh 15 1 1 Ward A W 1902 The Cambridge Modern History Vol 4 The Thirty Years War Cambridge University Press Archived from the original on 28 June 2011 Retrieved 16 September 2017 Portals nbsp Christianity nbsp Europe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thirty Years 27 War amp oldid 1222918288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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