Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE ECONOMY OF EUROPE 1559–1609
- CHAPTER III THE PAPACY, CATHOLIC REFORM, AND CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
- CHAPTER IV PROTESTANTISM AND CONFESSIONAL STRIFE
- CHAPTER V SOCIAL STRUCTURE, OFFICE-HOLDING AND POLITICS, CHIEFLY IN WESTERN EUROPE
- CHAPTER VI INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMACY AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
- CHAPTER VII ARMIES, NAVIES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER VIII THE BRITISH QUESTION 1559–69
- CHAPTER IX WESTERN EUROPE AND THE POWER OF SPAIN
- CHAPTER X THE AUSTRIAN HABSBURGS AND THE EMPIRE
- CHAPTER XI THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE 1566–1617
- CHAPTER XII POLAND AND LITHUANIA
- CHAPTER XIII SWEDEN AND THE BALTIC
- CHAPTER XIV EDUCATION AND LEARNING
- CHAPTER XV SCIENCE
- CHAPTER XVI POLITICAL THOUGHT AND THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF TOLERATION
- CHAPTER XVII COLONIAL DEVELOPMENT AND INTERNATIONAL RIVALRIES OUTSIDE EUROPE
CHAPTER X - THE AUSTRIAN HABSBURGS AND THE EMPIRE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE ECONOMY OF EUROPE 1559–1609
- CHAPTER III THE PAPACY, CATHOLIC REFORM, AND CHRISTIAN MISSIONS
- CHAPTER IV PROTESTANTISM AND CONFESSIONAL STRIFE
- CHAPTER V SOCIAL STRUCTURE, OFFICE-HOLDING AND POLITICS, CHIEFLY IN WESTERN EUROPE
- CHAPTER VI INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMACY AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
- CHAPTER VII ARMIES, NAVIES AND THE ART OF WAR
- CHAPTER VIII THE BRITISH QUESTION 1559–69
- CHAPTER IX WESTERN EUROPE AND THE POWER OF SPAIN
- CHAPTER X THE AUSTRIAN HABSBURGS AND THE EMPIRE
- CHAPTER XI THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE 1566–1617
- CHAPTER XII POLAND AND LITHUANIA
- CHAPTER XIII SWEDEN AND THE BALTIC
- CHAPTER XIV EDUCATION AND LEARNING
- CHAPTER XV SCIENCE
- CHAPTER XVI POLITICAL THOUGHT AND THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF TOLERATION
- CHAPTER XVII COLONIAL DEVELOPMENT AND INTERNATIONAL RIVALRIES OUTSIDE EUROPE
Summary
The Peace of Augsburg in 1555 marked a pause for breath in German affairs, with the failure of the Emperor Charles V either to establish an effective monarchy in the empire or to suppress the Lutheran heresy. Rather than be a party to the registration of the double defeat, Charles relinquished the authority to promulgate the legislation implementing the peace to his brother Ferdinand, the first of a line of rulers whose authority was to endure on the eastern marches of Germany for some three and a half centuries. The basis of Ferdinand's power lay in the lands that had been ceded to him and his descendants by his brother: the Austrian archduchy proper with its double set of institutions ‘above and below the Enns’, the various Alpine provinces extending from Tyrol and Vorarlberg to Styria, Carinthia and Carniola, and the scattered remnants of the ancient Habsburg patrimony in Swabia and along the upper Rhine. In addition, Ferdinand by his marriage to the heiress of the Jagiellons had acquired a claim to the crowns of Bohemia and Hungary with their dependencies, a claim subsequently fortified by a show of election by the parliaments of the two kingdoms, though there was some opposition in Bohemia and a great deal in Hungary. The possessions over which he directly asserted his sway thus extended impressively over much of central Europe, from Alsace to the Carpathians, from Silesia and Lusatia in the north German plain southwards to the Adriatic.
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- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 319 - 346Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1968