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When Brothers Agree: Bohemia, the Habsburgs, and the Schmalkaldic Wars, 1546–15471

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2009

Paula Sutter Fichtner
Affiliation:
Brooklyn college of the city university of new york

Extract

In consolidating his hold over the Austrian, Hungarian, and Bohemian territories which he acquired between 1521 and 1526, Ferdinand I (1521–1564) enjoyed one especially notable success: the suppression in 1547 of a Bohemian uprising during Emperor Charles V's (1519–1556) campaign against the Protestant Schmalkaldic League in Germany. Relying on the promise of the Schmalkaldian leader Elector John Frederick of Saxony to protect them, the Bohemian estates formed a league in 1547 which challenged, among other things, Ferdinand's rights to summon the diet, to have his son crowned during his lifetime, and to oversee the administration of his treasury.

Type
Habsburg Relations with Bohemia in the Sixteenth Century
Copyright
Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 1975

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References

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26 Tomek, , Dějepis Města Prahy, Vol. XI, pp. 340 and 342Google Scholar; Franz Martin Pelzels Geschichie der Bohmen, Vol. II, pp. 560562 and 565–566Google Scholar.

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