Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2009
In his classic analysis of state building by the Austrian Habsburgs in early modern Central Europe, R. J. W. Evans argues that the dynasty's eventual success in asserting its will over a conglomerate of separate, coherent territories with time-honored claims to political liberties followed the sometimes troubled trajectory of crown-aristocratic relations. The cultural impetus for political centralization was the mix of reform within the Catholic Church and counterreform measures taken against powerful Protestant subjects among the nobles and civic elites. By the 1650s the ability of Habsburg officials in Vienna to govern effectively the dynasty's various holdings rested firmly on a dyarchy of the ruling house and regional nobles who shared a common baroque Catholic faith and an investment in a system of court patronage that fostered collaboration rather than resistance in the far-flung empire.
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24 Between the constitutional reforms of 1554 and the end of the Thirty Years' War, at least thirty-seven noblemen served in Freiburg's civic regime. Several families were reservoirs for officials: von Sickingen (4), Stürtzel von Buchheim (3), von Wangen (3), von Reinach (3), Snewlin von Kranznau (2), Snewlin Bärlapp von Bollschweil (2), von Blumeneck (2), von Bernhausen (2), Summerau zu Pressburg (2), von Lichtenfels (2), von Hohlandsberg (2), von Wessenberg (2), and von Ampringen (2). In addition, several other families had one member appear on the electoral rolls: Philip von Schwalpach, Eucharius von Reischach, Hans Thüring Reich von Reichenstein, Marx Joachim Schenk von Castell, Joachim Adolph von Sandizell, Adam von Pforr, JohannChristoph von Baden, and Adolph Rau von Weinenthal. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 3 β, passim.
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28 StAFr, Al Va, June 15,1579.
29 StAFr, Al Va, 30,1596 and Va, 31, Oct. 23,1598. Conditions had returned to normal by 1600 as the Statthalter from Ensisheim, Hans Christoph von Ramstein, and the chancellor, Dr. Andreas Harsch, attended the civic elections, where Hans Wendel von Bernhausen, assumed the office of Bürgermeister and Ulrich Srürtzel von Buchheim became Schultheiss; joining them on the Standing Council were Gabriel Snewlin Bärlapp von Bollschweil, Hans Thüring Reich von Reichenstein, Hans Caspar von Ampringen, and Hans Philip Vogt von Alten Sumerau und Pressberg. StAFr, B5 (P), la Nr. 6, p. 88.
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