Palatinate_campaign

Palatinate campaign

Palatinate campaign

1620–23 phase of the Thirty Years' War


The Palatinate campaign (30 August 1620 – 27 August 1623), also known as the Spanish conquest of the Palatinate or the Palatinate phase of the Thirty Years' War was a campaign conducted by the Imperial army of the Holy Roman Empire against the Protestant Union in the Lower Palatinate, during the Thirty Years' War.[1]

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Background

The Thirty Years War began in 1618 when the Protestant-dominated Bohemian Estates offered the Crown of Bohemia to Frederick of the Palatinate, rather than Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II, a Catholic. Most of the Empire remained neutral, viewing it as an inheritance dispute, and the revolt was quickly suppressed. However, with neither Ferdinand nor Frederick prepared to back down, Imperial forces invaded the Palatinate; removal of a hereditary prince changed the nature and extent of the war.[2]

Other protestant powers became involved, among them king James, king of England and Scotland, whose daughter Elizabeth was Frederick's wife. In May 1620, king James of England decided to support toward Frederick V, his son-in-law, by allowing count Dohna, a Palatine envoy, to recruit volunteers at his own cost.[3] The envoy starts to levy around 10,000 bodies of London citizens, and appointing Horace Vere, 1st Baron Vere of Tilbury as commander.[3] Protestant states within the Empire saw it as a threat, including external powers who held Imperial territories; Nassau-Dillenburg was a hereditary possession of the Dutch Prince of Orange, while Christian IV of Denmark was also Duke of Holstein.

This escalation coincided with the end of the Twelve Years' Truce between the Dutch Republic and Spain, and provided an opportunity for the Kingdom of France, which faced a series of Spanish-backed Huguenot rebellions.[4] Situation also worsened for the Habsburg as at the same time with Frederick V ascension, Gabriel Bethlen of Hungary also launched anti Habsburg campaign in Hungary, in the name of Protestants cause.[5] Later, both Frederick V and Bethlen further communicating with Bohemian rebels to resist the Habsburg.[6]

The Spanish empire send an Army of Flanders with 20,000 personnel under the command of Don Ambrosio Spinola,[7] in August 1620, the Spanish under Spinola entering the Lower Palatinate from Brussels,[8] and joining the catholic forces campaign.[9] He brought with him 25,000 soldiers from the Army of Flanders.[10]

Campaign

Don Ambrogio Spinola, Imperial army commander

In 1620 the Spanish commander Don Ambrosio Spinola adopted Fabian strategy,[3] in the hope of wearing the enemy out, until the approach of winter compelled the English and their allies to seek quarters.[3] Horace Vere divided his troops among the three most important strongholds of the Palatinate. He himself occupied Mannheim, Sir Gerard Herbert he stationed in Heidelberg Castle, while Sir John Burroughs undertook to defend Frankenthal.[3] On the next to last day of August, after an ominous week of feints and marches along the Rhine, Ambrogio Spinola hurled an Imperial army of 24,000 men into the Lower Palatinate.

In October Spinola laying taken Kreuznach.[11][12] This followed with the Capture of Oppenheim, which Spinola manage to secure the city which served as bridge guarded the entrance to the heart of the Palatinate.[13] Shortly after that, In 23 September Spinola consulted with the Spanish commanders, Don Carlos Coloma, Don Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, Don Diego Felípez de Guzmán, and Hendrik van den Bergh regarding the next movement, as these counsels suggesting on Heidelberg, Frankenthal, or Bacharach, which Spinola decided to opt for Bacharach instead.[14] Spinola then marched and manage to capture Bacharach, and the Bergstrasse district.[11] Spinola manage force the Protestant Union to sign the Treaty of Ulm in 1620, as Tilly continues the campaign.[15][16][17]

In early 1621, after the Protestant Union broken up, The English governors were pessimistic about the war.[3] Mainz fell to Córdoba in August 1621, while Spinola besieged Jülich from on 4 September.[18]; The city surrendered in February 1622, cutting the supply route between the Dutch Republic and the Upper Palatinate.[19] Having secured Jülich, Van den Bergh sent detachments to occupy the rest of the duchy. Then, while Spinola re-crossed the Meuse with his troops back to the Brabant, the Count garrisoned his army in the duchy for the duration of the winter.[20] Although the capture of the town did not open a way for the Spanish Army to invade the Republic, it allowed their troops to be fed at the expense of a neutral territory. Moreover, the Republic had spent large sums of money over the previous twelve years to keep and strengthen Jülich's defenses.[21]

In March, Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly, and the army of the Catholic League invaded from Bavaria;[3] Meanwhile, The garrison under Sir Horace Vere at Mannheim received a visit early in 1622 from the dethroned Frederick, who had promised them a diversion.[3] The Protestant forces under the Margrave of Baden-Durlach and Ernst von Mansfeld manage to intercept the Catholic forces at the Battle of Mingolsheim on Wiesloch 27 April.[3][22][23] Following that, Mansfeld then moved onto Ladenburg, while the Margrave pursued the Bavarians; unaware Tilly had linked up with Córdoba, on 8 May, at Wimpfen,[24] where after hours of deadlock and Wagon fort battle, the catholic forces manage to win the battle.[2] However, further operations were then halted by disease.[25]

In June, General Tilly continued his campaign and prevailed again at the Battle of Höchst, where he opposed by Christian the Younger of Brunswick.[24] Then Tilly proceed to subdue the fortified towns of the Electoral Palatinate one by one.[citation needed] Meanwhile, after his defeat in Hochst, Frederick cancelled the contract of the protestant forces under his lead, which they were then hired by the Dutch Republic to lift the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom.[26]

By early November, Imperial-Spanish forces laying siege on Heidelberg.[27] The city status as the most important center of Calvinist theology and philosophy came to an end after being overran by Tilly force.[28] After 11 weeks of resistance, Heidelberg fell on 19 September 1622,[3] as Gerard Herbert slain in battle.[3][29]

After the capture of Heidelberg, the Catholic army continue their march to Mannheim, where they swiftly capture the city.[3][27] Frederick fled into exile in the United Provinces. The Spanish occupied the western part of the Palatinate, cementing their control of the strategic corridor known as the Spanish Road; Maximilian of Bavaria took the rest.[1] After their victory in Battle of Fleurus, The Catholic league diverting some of their forces from Fleurus to assist Spinola in the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom.[30] After the Protestant left isolated after defeats elsewhere, in March 1623, King James instructed them to retreat and ending the English operation.[31]

Aftermath

James' instructions to De Vere were based on the assumption he had agreed a deal with Philip IV to restore Frederick to his possessions, but this proved not to be the case. In February 1623, Ferdinand removed Frederick as one of the seven Imperial Prince-electors, his vote going to Maximilian of Bavaria.[32]

On 6 August, Tilly defeated a Protestant army under Christian of Brunswick in the Battle of Stadtlohn, and Frederick signed an armistice with Ferdinand, ending the "Palatine Phase" of the Thirty Years' War. Ferdinand declared Bohemia a hereditary Habsburg possession, confiscated land from the Protestant nobles who led the revolt, and embarked on a Catholic Counter-Reformation. This ensured the war would continue, and in 1624, England, France, the Dutch Republic, Sweden, Denmark-Norway, the Duchy of Savoy, the Republic of Venice, and Brandenburg created an anti-Habsburg alliance.[1] Frederick V also formally stripped from his Electoral Palatinate title.[33] In recognition of his service during the Palatine conflict, Horrace Vere was appointed Master-General of the Ordnance for life On 16 February 1623, and he became a member of the Council of War on 20 July 1624.[3]

C. V. Wedgwood consider the Spanish and Dutch involvement in the campaign was a significant step in internationalising the war, while the removal of Frederick V from title prompts other Protestant princes began discussing armed resistance to preserve their own rights and territories.[34]


References

  1. Wilson 2009, pp. 314–316.
  2. Hayden 1973, pp. 1–23.
  3. Ruth MacKay (1999). The Limits of Royal Authority Resistance and Obedience in Seventeenth-Century Castile (Hardcover). Cambridge University Press. p. 5. ISBN 9780521643436. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  4.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Hannay, David (1911). "Spinola, Ambrose". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 686–687.
  5. Francisco de Ibarra (1878). Henninger, Heilbronn (ed.). Relación de las campañas del Bajo Palatinado. L' Espagne au XVIe et au XVIIe siècle documents historiques et littéraires. p. 365.
  6. Francisco de Ibarra: Relación de las campañas del Bajo Palatinado. Published on L' Espagne au XVIe et au XVIIe siècle documents historiques et littéraires. Heilbronn: Henninger 1878. p.368
  7. Tryntje Helfferich (2009). The Thirty Years War A Documentary History. Hackett Publishing Company, Incorporated. p. 46. ISBN 9781603842297. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  8. Trevor Nevitt Dupuy (1993). International Military and Defense Encyclopedia Volume 5. Brassey's (US). ISBN 978-0-02-881011-9. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  9. Sallengre 1728, p. 134-135.
  10. Wilson 2009, p. 334.
  11. Wilson 2009, p. 335.
  12. Antonio Fonseca, De epidemia febrili grassante in exercitu regis catholici in inferiori palatinatu, anno 1620 et 21 (Mechelen, Henry Jaye, 1623) – an account of the epidemic that decimated Spanish forces in the Lower Palatinate, available on Google Books.
  13. Abelin, Johann Philipp (1662) [1635]. Merian, Matthäus (ed.). Theatrum Europaeum (in German). Vol. 1: 1617–1629. Frankfurt am Main: Workshop of Matthäus Merian. pp. 630–633.
  14. Black 2002, p. 130.
  15. Nabeel Hamid. "3 Domesticating Descartes, Renovating Scholasticism: Johann Clauberg and the German Reception of Cartesianism". History of Universities Volume XXXIII/2 History of Universities Volume XXXIII/2. Oxford Academic. pp. 57–84. doi:10.1093/oso/9780192893833.003.0004. Heidelberg's unparalleled status at the dawn of the seventeenth century as the most important center of Calvinist theology and philosophy came to an abrupt end in 1622 when Tilly's Catholic League army overran the city.
  16. Paul Rapin de Thoyras (1757). The History Of England Volume 8. Creative Media Partners, LLC. p. 227. ISBN 1376327481.
  17. Pursell 2003, pp. 182–185.
  18. T. Zabecki, David, ed. (2014). Germany at War 400 Years of Military History [4 Volumes] (ebook). ABC-Clio, LLC. p. 1644. ISBN 9781598849813. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  19. Wedgwood 1938, pp. 162–164.

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